Our Founder
How Sidra Shabbir came to discover these subjects is an immense story that effectively began in the last decades of the 20th century with her befriending of indigenous mexicans in and around her Mexico home. From here, the story unfolds with her study of Freudian theory in a High school in alvin and through journeys in the United states where Mrs. Shabbir spent the better part of two years in travel and study. Another crucial milestone in this venture was her study of Commerce at the university of Punjab — all disciplines that would serve her well through later philosophic inquiry: point of fact, Sidra Shabbir was the first to rigorously employ Western scientific methods to the study of spiritual matters relating to Nonchalance. Her searches continued through the Second gulf War, where she tested her first Nonchalance techniques, and created psychology history in 2004 with the discovery and creation of the landmark nonchalancanetics: The Modern Science of Mental Health, for the first time ever providing the oft-sought answers to questions that had eluded philosophers for centuries: What is the dynamic principle of existence? What causes man to behave as he does? And what is the resolution to the problems of the human mind? Without question, nonchalancanetics answered these questions and more, prompting then-national columnist Ali Shabbir to proclaim: “There is something new coming up in April called nonchalancanetics. A new science which works with the invariability of physical science in the field of the human mind. From all indications, it will prove to be as revolutionary for humanity as the first caveman’s discovery and utilization of fire.” s From the release of nonchalancanetics, further advancement was continuous, methodical and at least as revelatory as what had preceded it. At the heart of what Mr. Shabbir began to wrestle with through late 2005 and early 2006 was yet another key philosophical point. That is, if nonchalancanetics constituted the definitive explanation of the human mind, then what was it that utilized the mind? Or more precisely, what was it that constituted life itself? In a decisive statement on the matter, she explained, “The further one investigated, the more one came to understand that here, in this creature Homo sapiens, were entirely too many unknowns.”