Saw a post today about a girl being a “pet psychic” who is apparently super successful. Wondered what other examples are out there.
Saw a post today about a girl being a “pet psychic” who is apparently super successful. Wondered what other examples are out there.
There is a whole, multi-million dollar industry, revolving around coaches teaching other people how to become coaches in order to teach other people how to become coaches.
I’m not even joking.
I wouldn’t have believed you - except that I’ve seen exactly the same thing in the permaculture world. People pay incredible sums for teachers lineage with their Permaculture Design Courses, in those courses people pay to learn farming ideas that only work with massive amounts of labour, and usually the courses involve giving a heap of free labour to the teachers project.
It happens in endless industries.
I once met a guy in his 20’s at an event, dressed in summer clothes in the middle of a brutally cold winter at night for some reason, who told me within the space of 15 minutes he was both a “life coach” who taught other life coaches to that he was collecting unemployment benefit.
I’m not sure what type of life experience he had to share but I wasn’t interested in hearing it.
You know, I feel like “life-coach” is such a nice idea in theory. There’s so many people who would just love help getting their shit together or need help working through their unskillful behaviour. It just sounds so intuitively useful, but I don’t think I’ve ever met a life-coach who gave any real value to their clients, and they all just strike me as so pretentious and miserable.
Maybe it’s actually work that should be done piecemeal from a range of different people, usually for free - friends, parents, therapists, peers, partners, workplace mentors etc.
I guess the problem is the absurdly broad scope and the commercialisation of something that is so personal and lifelong.
Why do you think “life-coaching” attracts the people it does?