Hello
We are inviting you into a personal experience. Your personal experience of Money in a group setting and as a Game. Your experience is shaped by your own relationship to money, the good & bad qualities you attach to it and the histories & imagined futures you associate with it. While this can surface discomfort and painful emotions for some, it also creates fertile ground for individual & collective growth.
How it works- the Game takes 3 hours and it is essential that you stay the full time
- we ask you participate with your video and mic on
- the game is played with real money
- it will include several rounds of “play” in a group of about 8 people, interspersed with journaling and reflective dialogue
** but in keeping with tradition of the game, we don’t share all the details in advance.
Play with €
Participants are asked to "bring” a meaningful amount of money in cash that they feel comfortable letting go of, but that is enough to “trigger” their learning. To ensure a meaningful experience, it is important that participants take a few minutes to feel into what this amount might be for them. People have played with anywhere from €10 to over €500.
We'll send instructions about how to transfer "playing with money" once you sign up.
To Play
While we are learning, we are still holding. We suggest an amount of 20€ for your participation in the game that will contribute to the Greaterthan trainers.
Tomomi & Anna
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Timezone converter for May 23rd
Timezone converter for May 30th
Additional Resources:
Happy Money Story [article]
HMS is Greaterthan's preferred way for a group to decide how to split a project budget between the individuals/parties involved. It typically happens after the work is completed, and decoupled from the usual concepts of day rates and hours worked.
Morgan Housel “The Psychology of Money” [book]
This book seems to have hit mainstream consciousness last year, and maybe you also have friends who raved about it! Housel examines the relationship between our financial decisions and the stories we tell ourselves.
Bernard Lietaer “The Future Of Money” [book]
This is a classic on alternative monetary systems, which Lietaeur gets into after drawing four scenarios for the state of the world in 2020. I see all four as our reality in 2023, in the fashion of unevenly distributed futures.
Ramit Sethi “I Will Teach You To Be Rich” [podcast]
Sethi took a page from Esther Perel's megahit Where Should We Begin? and broadcasts coaching sessions with couples about their money problems.