Meet George Janji

We recently connected with George Janji and have shared our conversation below.

Hi George , thank you for being such a positive, uplifting person. We’ve noticed that so many of the successful folks we’ve had the good fortune of connecting with have high levels of optimism and so we’d love to hear about your optimism and where you think it comes from.
My background (Chiropractic) lead me to a list of 33 principles. The first one is called the Major Premise, and it reads, “A Universal Intelligence is in all matter and continually gives to it all its properties and actions, thus maintaining it in existence.”

I hadn’t taken the time to sit-down and fully grasp what it means. Four years after graduation, despite my hardest years in business, I found myself being optimistic. It was due to a philosophical shift caused by this premise.

There certainly is a time to be “negative”, per say, but I also noticed I was far more productive when I had control over my mood.

The first principle is about a vital, universal aura that animates organic matter (i.e. a human hand) and inorganic matter (i.e. a desk), which is how it remains in existence. In other words, there is a non-measurable intelligence that nourishes everything you know of as “the world”!

That’s where my optimism comes from. I focused on working diligently for long periods of time, because this Intelligence will reorganize the world in my favor when I set clear intentions and am on purpose.

Thanks for sharing that. So, before we get any further into our conversation, can you tell our readers a bit about yourself and what you’re working on?
There should be a degree called “Masters in Energy” because that best describes who I am. The spine isn’t the hottest topic in media…but postural breakdown is published in western & alternative medicine to be a major cause in a decreased quality of life, and even short-changing the years in one’s life.

That’s because it expresses all of life through nerves: the emotional, private experiences of being human.

I am fortunate to work on people’s nervous systems on a daily basis. I oversee their shift into a higher order being. It’s a commitment they make to themselves prior to every encounter with me.

I started my business 4 years ago. I named it Eclectic because it means “the best of all worlds”, plus it rhymes with Chiropractic! It was destiny – Eclectic Chiropractic.

I’m focused on being an “all-around” chiropractor. I want to be great at adjusting, contribute to discourse in our literature, be a great diagnostician, and teacher. Eventually, I want to express my energy through music. I resonate with Hip-hop a lot. My vision is to go on tour someday to share my work with the world.

Looking back, what do you think were the three qualities, skills, or areas of knowledge that were most impactful in your journey? What advice do you have for folks who are early in their journey in terms of how they can best develop or improve on these?
The most impactful quality in my journey is having an insatiable drive to study the human body. If you know how the body works you experience a level of power that is uncommon. I recommend starting with what you have a natural liking for (beauty, sports-performance) and growing from there! Keep reading 🙂. There are two other skills that have helped: managing stress & learning to communicate about what you do., They both require tons of practice but they go a long way, making it worth it.

Awesome, really appreciate you opening up with us today and before we close maybe you can share a book recommendation with us. Has there been a book that’s been impactful in your growth and development?
The Sociology of Philosophies: A Global Theory of Intellectual Change, by Dr. Randall Collins. I’ve read 150 pages out of 800 so far and it has inspired me to be extraordinary. Basically, people are remembered over time, like Plato & Aristotle, because of high-levels of energy carried in conversations, the contribution they bring to their field, and how they respond to conflict. Basically, your life may be summarized as a perfect pass to someone else (to slam-dunk for your hard work, after your death), or you do the dunking yourself if the field allows, at a ripe point in your career. “Eminence breeds eminence” is a line I’ll never forget. If you want extraordinary results, you need to be “out of this world” sooner than later, and the greater the chances become that you’ll leave behind a baton worth picking up by another individual!

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Image Credits
The eBook covers were made on canva…otherwise everything was taken from a camera…

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