Our Story: The Journey to Heart-Based Hospitality with Spiritual Intelligence

 

Act I:  The Awakening (The Gilded Cage of the Five-Star Ceiling)

The chandeliers of the world’s luxury hotels are designed to cast no shadows. In the grand lobbies of Bangkok, London, and New York, everything is calibrated to perfection: the marble is polished to a mirror shine, the linens are crisp, and the staff are trained to speak in the hushed, perfectly modulated tones of corporate luxury. For decades, this was considered the absolute pinnacle of human hospitality. It was the gold standard.

But if you look closely at a perfectly polished mirror, you realize it is entirely cold to the touch.

The journey did not begin with a desire to create a new business model or a slicker training manual. It began with a quiet, persistent ache—a realization that behind the flawless facades of the world’s most celebrated five-star properties, something vital was missing. The industry had perfected the mechanics of service, but it had starved the soul of hospitality. The spirit of hospitality had been drained of its essence in unconditional love, compassion, Metta loving-kindness, and heartwarming care.

In those early days, standing in those magnificent lobbies, the contrast became impossible to ignore. A front desk agent would offer a greeting, flawless in its grammar, accompanied by a smile that met every requirement of the corporate checklist. Yet, the interaction felt empty. It was a transaction disguised as an interaction. The employee was wearing a mask, a beautiful, polite, rigid mask mandated by a Standard Operating Procedure (SOP).

The hotel industry had built a gilded cage. It had confused efficiency with care, and customer satisfaction with genuine human connection. The traditional five-star framework had created a ceiling—a hard, unbreakable boundary of mechanical consistency that prevented staff from ever reaching the true, limitless depths of the human heart. The quest began with a simple, revolutionary question: What happens if we break that ceiling? What happens if we stop training people to be polite robots, and instead invite them to bring their entire spiritual essence to work?

 

Act II: The First Battle (The Betrayal of CTME and the Corporate Machine)

The first major blueprint for this revolution was born under the name CTME: Creating Truly Memorable Experiences. It was a concept designed to breathe life into the cold machinery of standard service. It wasn’t about doing tasks faster; it was about the emotional and energetic resonance left behind after the task was completed.

The early proving grounds for this philosophy were alive with electricity. In the mid-2000s, inside the seminar rooms of the Sheraton Grand Sukhumvit in Bangkok, the energy was palpable. The workshops weren’t typical corporate training sessions filled with PowerPoint slides and metrics. They were spaces of awakening. Hoteliers and staff began to realize that hospitality wasn’t a set of rules to be memorized, but an energetic gift to be given. They began to understand that a truly memorable experience is one that touches the guest’s inner being with the energetic and spiritual essence of hospitality.

The ripples of what was happening in Bangkok reached all the way to the highest corporate echelons of Starwood and Sheraton head office. The corporate machine recognized that something powerful was happening, but like the traditional art critics who first looked at Van Gogh’s vibrant, swirling colours, the executives didn’t know how to handle raw, unadulterated spirit. They were terrified of what they couldn’t measure on a spreadsheet.

The head office took the core of CTME and ran it through the corporate filter. They sterilized it. They stripped away the spiritual elements, the energetic language, and the deep emotional vulnerability, rebranding the hollowed-out shell as Service Plus.

It was a devastating turning point. The industry saw the superficial success of Service Plus and, as it always does, copied it blindly. But in removing the soul of the concept, the industry turned what was meant to be a spiritual liberation back into SOP-Customer Satisfaction. Service Plus became just another checklist, no better or deeper than the old customer satisfaction metrics. The revolution had been commodified, flattened, and rendered toothless. The traditional thinking of the hotel industry had reasserted itself, closing the lid tightly back on the cage, and that mechanical mindset has held the industry captive ever since.

 

Act III: The Years in the Wilderness (The Lonely Crusade against the World Domination of SOP-Customer Satisfaction)

What follows is a period of profound isolation, reminiscent of Vincent writing letters from his small room in Arles, painting masterpieces while the world looked the other way. For years, the crusade continued against a massive, immovable wall of corporate skepticism.

To walk into a boardroom of hospitality executives and speak of “unconditional love,” “loving-kindness,” and “compassion” was to speak a language they considered foreign, even dangerous. “You can’t measure love in a KPI,” they would say. “Softness doesn’t drive quarterly revenue,” others argued. The industry became obsessed with technology, automation, and digital check-ins, falsely believing that convenience could replace connection.

But the vision never wavered. Through articles, manifestos, and tireless advocacy, the message remained clear: the hotel industry was dying from the inside out because it was starving its staff of meaning. Traditional hospitality suppresses the worker’s true personality to fit a corporate mold. It forces a room attendant or a waiter to hide their heart behind a rigid wall of professionalism.

During these years in the wilderness, the philosophy deepened. It wasn’t enough to just talk about “memorable experiences” anymore, because the corporate world had proven it would always find a way to turn an experience into SOP-Customer Satisfaction. The antidote had to be deeper, stronger, and entirely un-copyable by a corporate checklist. The concept had to evolve from a methodology into an undeniable spiritual reality.

 

Act IV: The Evolution (From Heart-Based to Spiritual Intelligence)

Out of the ashes of the corporate co-optation of CTME, Heart-Based Hospitality was born. This wasn’t a refinement of service; it was a total paradigm shift. It anchored hospitality in the pure, energetic, and spiritual concepts of unconditional love, loving-kindness, compassion, and heart-warming care. It demanded that the guest experience be incredibly soft, gentle, and profoundly strong in spirit, and developed the desire and capacity to do this.

Yet, as the world grew more chaotic, fragmented, and digitally isolated, the vision had to climb an even higher peak. That peak is the latest and ultimate evolution: Hospitality with Spiritual Intelligence.

Spiritual Intelligence is the missing bridge to make the spirit of hospitality limitless in unconditional love, compassion, loving-kindness, and heartwarming care by developing the capacities of Spiritual Intelligence. It is the realization that to truly radiate unconditional love and heart-warming care, hotel staff cannot just be told to “be kind.” They must be taught how to develop seven of the spiritual capacities of Spiritual Intelligence and to infuse everything they do with the essential spirit of hospitality more and more as they develop their spiritual capacities. At the same time, they learn to use Heart Intelligence to increase their heart coherence, which not only softens the guest experience but also makes them feel happier.

This is where the story shifts from a business philosophy to a profound human truth. When a hotel employee develops their spiritual capacity, they break through the five-star ceiling entirely. They learn to understand the interconnectedness between their own energetic state and the experience of the guest. They realize that when they clean a room, pour a coffee, or welcome a traveler, they are not just performing labour; they are channeling light, safety, and peace into a physical space.

This concept does not ask staff to submerge their humanity for a paycheck; it liberates them. It turns a hospitality job into a profound spiritual practice.

 

Act V: The Invisible Made Visible (The Living Canvas)

When Van Gogh painted The Starry Night, he didn’t just paint stars as points of light; he painted the air moving in massive, vibrant, spiritual torrents. He made the invisible energy of the universe visible on canvas.

Hospitality with Spiritual Intelligence does exactly the same thing within the walls of a hotel. It takes the invisible warmth of the human spirit and makes it a palpable, living reality.

When a property operates with this intelligence, the atmosphere changes at an atomic level. A guest doesn’t just walk into a beautiful lobby; they walk into an energetic sanctuary. They feel an immediate, inexplicable sense of safety, softness, and profound care. They realize, without quite knowing how to put it into words, that they are being held in a space of genuine unconditional love. It is an experience that leaves people changed, long after they have checked out.

This is the story behind the work. It is a story of a twenty-year journey that began with a refusal to accept the coldness of luxury, survived the heartbreak of corporate betrayal, and ultimately found its truth not in corporate boardrooms, but in the infinite capacity of the human heart. It is a movement dedicated to giving an entire global industry its soul back—one heart, one hotel, and one energetic connection at a time.

 

Act VI: The Future of Heart-Based Hospitality with Spiritual Intelligence (HBH & SQ)

If we treat Spiritual Intelligence (SQ) like a rigid corporate model, we fall right back into the “Service Plus” trap—counting boxes, assigning metrics, and capping the human spirit.

When it comes to hospitality, limiting spiritual capacity to just a fixed number like 7 is far too restrictive. While many traditional psychological frameworks try to neatly package SQ into 7, 12, or 21 core competencies to make them easy for academic textbooks, the reality of developing spiritual capacities and working with heart energy is that it is essentially limitless.

However, if we look at what it takes to completely transform a hotel’s energy and break that five-star SOP ceiling, we can think of spiritual capacity in two ways: The Pillars (The Foundation) and The Infinite Ripples (The Far More).

The Core Pillars of SQ in Hospitality

To give the hotel staff a tangible place to start, there are several foundational spiritual capacities that directly shift the energy of a property. These are the ones that allow an employee to stop acting like a robot and start acting as an energetic healer:

  • The Capacity for Deep Empathy & Compassion: The ability to look past a guest’s outward behavior (even if they are frustrated or demanding) and connect directly with their underlying human need for care and safety.

  • Transcendence of the Ego: The capacity to step out of the “servant vs. master” dynamic that plagues traditional hospitality. The staff member isn’t serving to get a tip or avoid a bad review; they are giving from a place of pure, unconditional love.

  • Energetic Mindfulness & Self-Regulation: The capacity to be acutely aware of one’s own emotional and energetic state. A room attendant with this capacity realizes that if they are angry or stressed, that heavy energy is left behind in the room they just cleaned. They learn to clear and elevate their own heart energy before stepping into a space.

  • A Deep Sense of Purpose (Vocation over Job): Transforming the daily labor of hospitality into a spiritual practice. This is the capacity to see cleaning a glass, opening a door, or cooking a meal as a sacred act of caretaking.

  • Connectedness and Oneness: Recognizing that there is no separation between the staff, the guest, and the environment. When the staff elevates the guest, they elevate themselves.

Why It Is “Far More Than This

While you can list core capacities like the ones above to give people a map, the true nature of Spiritual Intelligence is that it unlocks a limitless reservoir of softness and care.

Once a hotel employee’s heart chakra opens and they begin to understand how to consciously radiate heart energy, you cannot quantify what happens next. It expresses itself in a thousand subtle, unscripted ways that no corporate checklist could ever foresee:

It is a sudden intuition to bring a specific tea to a guest who looks quietly exhausted. It is a softness in the voice that calms a frantic family. It is an energetic warmth that makes a cold, modern lobby feel like a spiritual sanctuary.

If you tell a hotel general manager, “There are exactly 7 spiritual capacities,” they will try to turn those 7 things into a new SOP. They will make a checklist. They will try to audit them.

But if you tell them that Spiritual Intelligence is the key that unlocks the infinite, self-repairing, and limitless capacity of the human heart, you protect the concept from being sterilized by the corporate machine.

In our story, framing it as an infinite, evolving journey—rather than a static list of 7 skills— we aren’t teaching a fixed science; we are awakening a boundless art.

Already, the concept of HBH & SQ goes far, far beyond what the hotel industry is doing currently and can accept. SOP-Customer Satisfaction at the level of CTME is the global standard, and probably will continue to be for many years to come, because the hotel industry’s comfort zone is the Rut of Tradition.

Can you imagine any corporate hotelier saying in a Board meeting: “To increase our revenue, we must develop the Spiritual Intelligence of our employees so that they can infuse their hospitality with unconditional love, compassion, loving-kindness, and heartwarming care limitlessly, and increase their Heart Intelligence too.” The Board members would be horrified.

Just starting with 7 capacities is already too much for hoteliers, especially corporate hoteliers. But I am sure that in the future, hotels HBH & SQ will become the norm, even under different names, because it is the only direction that the hotel industry hasn’t tried. 

People will add more capacities and revolutionise the guest experience more and more. Will I be a participant? … It’s very unlikely because even HBH & SQ is too much for the current generation of hoteliers, and I probably won’t be alive when the hotel industry eventually has the required Eureka moment. The industry is still at the level when I introduced CTME in 2006, and I don’t think this will change for many years to come. 

Whoever takes over from me probably hasn’t even been born yet. I wish the person success and an abundance of blessings!