

Your Origin Myth – Change your story. Change your life.
We all live within a story that defines who we are. This story tells us what we can and can’t do and what we will or won’t achieve but for most of us, the story we have told ourselves about ourselves is wrong.
The stories we live within are laid down when we are too young to question them and even though they restrict our potential, because we’ve been living according to them for so long it’s easy to accept the limitations for being ‘just the way that I am’. But by articulating, interrogating and then re-writing the narrative you have told yourself about yourself, you will reveal the true story of who you are and free yourself from the false limitations you have been trapped in for so long.
In his Your Origin Myth webinar, Dan Kieran will show you how the narrative that limits your potential was formed and the process you need to follow to liberate yourself from it.
About Dan:
Dan Kieran is Sunday Times bestselling author and an award-winning publisher and entrepreneur. As well as working as a coach delivering his Origin Myth programme, he co-presents Where To Next? On Do Lectures Radio and teaches on the Publishing MA at UCL.
After spending over a decade running his own multi million pound, global and profitable company, Dan stepped down as CEO feeling disillusioned by the pursuit of 'success'. He soon discovered Carl Jung's theory of two adulthoods. Jung's idea was that in our first adulthood, we all set off into the world pursuing definitions of meaning, success and contentment that we absorbed from the world around us when we were young. When we were too inexperienced to really interrogate them. In the pursuit of those definitions we eventually begin to realise they were never ours and are wrong. The second adulthood then begins. The time in your life when you have to decide what meaning, success and contentment are for yourself.
As a result of this discovery, Dan created his Origin Myth programme to use his experiences as a storyteller to help others make sense of their second adulthoods and, in the process, find their rightful place in the world.