The Subconscious Mind

Subconscious Mind
By Judith Williamson

Too often, it is said, our objective mind or conscious mind merely wishes for things. This wishing does not create the white heat of desire that emotionalizes the subconscious mind as it would if we had a magnificent obsession. When we truly desire what we want in earnest, we think about it, meditate on it, write about it, plan for its attainment, and then begin to work toward achieving it one step at a time. This close attention to what we want not only intensifies our focus, but it also wakes up the sleeping giant, the genie, the powerful force known as our subconscious mind that lies dormant in too many people – perhaps the 98% of the population that Dr. Hill refers to as drifters.      

Since the process of how the subconscious mind works is simple, many people refuse to accept it and instead work to overanalyze it or discard it as some sort of hocus-pocus.      

When we accept that the power within us can do great things through us and for us, it is not in our area of interest to ask how this will occur or attempt to figure out just what mechanism is put into motion to bring this about. Simply    
focusing intently on your plan without undo attention to how this works, will cause the desired outcome to begin to manifest in your life. Your subconscious mind, like Aladdin’s genie, is willing to grant your every wish. Once commanded to perform, it will rise to the occasion and work miracles in your behalf if you only get out of its way.

By knowing positively what you want, expecting it to happen, and acting as if it has already done so, you will be surprised at the quick realization of your desire. Once received, always express immediate gratitude for the gift from your higher power and move on to create additional richness in your life. Gratitude in advance is not a bad idea either since, by expressing gratitude for a completed project, we are signaling our subconscious mind that we have already completed it.

Recall that the subconscious mind exists only in the present. It responds to commands. Finally, it cannot distinguish one type of command from another. Faith and fear both intensify the process, and the story plays out that what you think about you become. Too bad our mind did not come with a user’s manual at birth; but, that being the case, it is never too late to uncover the mystery of our inner mechanisms. It just might enhance the rest of our lives. Try it, and see!      
Now, read on and take the advice of one individual accustomed to calling up his subconscious mind at will. W. Clement Stone not only understood but personally utilized the power of the subconscious mind in the creation of his insurance business and his rewarding life. His legacy is a living testimonial as to the inherent benefit of using one’s mind for personal advancement.     

Terrie

Change

CHANGE—THE ONLY PERMANENT THING IN THE UNIVERSE
by Napoleon Hill

THE LAW of change is one of the great miracles with which the Creator has blessed humans and every other creature. Change is an important tool in human progress. Yet, it’s the one thing against which many people fight hardest. The law of change is, however, inexorable. Uncounted civilizations of Mankind have died for violating it. For the law reads that just as the physical world must undergo incessant change, Man’s social and cultural world must progress or die.

But the law is a blessing. Without it, Man would still be an animal. With it he can map his own earthly destiny and create the ways and means of attaining it. It is the device by which the habits and thoughts of men continuously reshape themselves into a better system of human relations, leading toward harmony, better understanding and closer brotherhood.      

You can use the law of change to achieve your individual aims of material success. Fatalism is insufficient. You must take positive steps to make events work out the way you want them, in full faith that they will come to pass if your goal is a proper one.      
 
Recognition of the law of change can ease the blows that life deals out to you. Even the loss of a loved one will be softened by acknowledgment that grief itself is something that must pass away.      

Instead of resisting the law of change, make it work for you. When Woodrow Wilson first advocated formation of the Federal Reserve System, many bankers cried out loudly against what they considered an unnecessary change from the old tried and true methods.

But others, far more foresighted, knew that the old order was bound to pass away. The result was the organization of a financial system that has saved many banks in times of emergency.

Henry Ford should have known more certainly than any man of his time that the law of change demands persistent progress. But he once lost sight of the fact—and almost lost his business.      

A stubborn man, Ford refused to believe that the Model “T” could ever be supplanted despite warnings from associates. Competitors proved him wrong and Ford’s sales dropped dangerously before he realized his error and recouped with new, modern models.      

Constant repetition has not blemished the truth of the old statement that “Time and tide wait for no man.” And Shakespeare said: “There is a tide in the affairs of men which, taken at the flood, leads on to fortune. Omitted, all the voyage of their life is bound in shallows and in miseries.”      

You must be prepared to seize the opportunities offered you by the irresistible law of change—or doom yourself to failure.

Source: Success Unlimited, August 1962, p. 31.

Terrie

Ten Ways to Go the Extra Mile!

Ten Ways to Go the Extra Mile
Napoleon Hill

10 Ways to Go the Extra Mile and to Make the World a Better Place in Which to Live (Remember to Start With Yourself First!)      

1. Think thoughts of peace. Turn these thoughts into actions toward others that become the peace you want  to see in the world now.      

2. Help where you see the need. Carry a package. Hold open a door. Read a book to a child. Compliment someone sincerely. Encourage someone verbally who is having a difficult time completing a project or task. Assume someone’s chores of duties for an hour or even a day.      

3. Create a “to-do” list and prioritize the list. Most important items go on top. Actually do the first two    
items first, and then revel in the sense of accomplishment. Your positive attitude will be contagious and “caught” by someone in need.      

4. Thank someone today for the goodness they have contributed to your life. Do this in person, in writing, by phone, or by email, but do it!      

5. Decide not to be rushed no matter how late you are running. Put yourself under grace and expect all things to work toward the good of all concerned.      

6. Stash the stress. Stress is an abstract concept. It  cannot be seen – only felt – and we create it with our mind. Tell yourself you are in a stress-free zone and will have none of it.      

7. Smile even if you don’t feel like smiling. Smiling tells the endorphins in your body to elevate your mood. When you smile it is not a placebo effect that occurs, but the real thing. Smiling signals the brain to be happy and to show it.      

8. Contribute to a good cause. You decide which one. Donate money, items, or your time, but take action. The Universe hates inactivity, and by taking action you are telling the Universe that you are alive and well and a participant in life.      

9. Pray for yourself, another, or someone you do not even know. Bless all and pray for the highest good of everyone concerned – yourself included.      

10. Notice a sunset, a flower, a bird, a creation of the Universe and remind yourself that all is good.      


Terrie

Apply Your Faith

APPLY YOUR FAITH
BY NAPOLEON HILL

In a one-room log cabin in Kentucky, a small boy was lying on the hearth, learning to write, using the back of a wooden shovel as a slate, and a piece of charcoal as a pencil. A kindly woman stood over him, encouraging him to keep on trying. The woman was his mother. The boy grew into manhood without having shown any promise of greatness. He took up the study of law and tried to make a living at that profession, but his success was meager.

He tried store-keeping, he entered the army, but he made no noteworthy record at either. Everything to which he turned his hand seemed to wither and disappear into nothingness.

Then a great love came into his life. It ended with the death of the one he loved, but the sorrow over that death reached deeply into the man’s soul and there it made contact with the secret power that comes from within.

He seized that power and began to put it to work. It made him President of the United States. It wiped out the curse of slavery in America. And it saved the Union from dissolution in the time of a great national emergency.

So this power that comes to men from within knows no social caste! It is as available to the poor and the  humble as it to the rich and the powerful. It need not be passed on from one person to another. It is possessed by all who think. It cannot be put into effect for you by any one except yourself. It must be acquired from within, and it is free to all who will appropriate it.

What strange fear is it that gets into the minds of men and short-circuits their approach to this secret power from within, which when it is recognized andused lifts men to great heights of achievement? How and why do the vast majority of the people of the world become the victims of a hypnotic rhythm which destroys their capacity to use the secret power of their own minds? How can this rhythm be broken?

The approach to the source of all genius has been charted. t is the self-same path that was followed by Thomas A. Edison, Henry Ford, Andrew Carnegie, Dr. Alexander Graham Bell, and the other great leaders  who have contributed, from their rich experiences, to the establishment of the American way of life.

“How  can one tap that secret power that comes from within?” some will wish to ask! Let us see how others have drawn upon it.

A young clergyman by the name of Frank Gunsaulus had long desired to build a new type of college. He  knew exactly what he wanted, but the hitch came in the fact that it required a million dollars in cash. He  made up his mind to get the million dollars! Definiteness of decision, based upon definiteness of purpose, constituted the first step of his plan. Then he wrote a sermon entitled “WHAT I WOULD DO WITH A  MILLION DOLLARS!” and announced in the newspapers that he would preach on that subject the  following Sunday morning.

At the end of the sermon a strange man whom the young preacher had never  seen before arose, walked down to the pulpit, extended his hand and said, “I liked your sermon, and you may come down to my office tomorrow morning and I will give you the million dollars you desire.” The man was Philip D. Armour, the founder of Armour & Company meat packers.

This is the sum and the substance of what happened. What went on in the mind of the young preacher, that enabled him to contact the secret power that is available through the mind of man, is something with which we can only conjecture, but the modus operandi by which that power was stimulated was applied faith!

Shortly after  birth Helen Keller was stricken by a physical affliction which deprived her of sight, hearing and speech.  With two of the more important of her five physical senses stilled forever, she faced life under difficulties such as most people never know throughout their lives.

With the aid of a kindly woman who recognized the existence of that secret power which comes from within, Helen Keller began to contact that power and use it. Faith, rightly understood, is active not passive. Passive faith is no more a force than sight is in  an eye that does not look or search out.

Active faith knows no fear. It denies that God has betrayed  His creatures and given the world over to darkness. It denies despair. Reinforced with faith, the weakest mortal is mightier than disaster. Faith, backed by action, was the instrument with which Miss Keller bridged her affliction so that she was restored to a useful life.

Through applied faith she learned to speak. Through her faith she substituted the sense of touch to do the work of the sense of hearing and  the sense of sight, thus proving that no matter how great may be one’s physical handicaps, there always is a means by which they may be eliminated or bridged.

The way may be found through that secret power from within one’s mind, the approach to which must be discovered by the individual himself. Go back through the pages of history and you will observe that the story of civilization’s unfolding leads inevitably to the works of men and women who opened the door to that secret power from within, with applied faith as the masterkey!

Observe, too, that great achievements always are born of hardship and  struggle and barriers which seem insurmountable; obstacles which yield to nothing but an indomitable will backed by an abiding faith!

And here, in one short phrase—indomitable will backed by an abiding  faith—you have the approach of major importance that leads to the discovery of the door of the mind, behind which the secret power from within is hidden!

Men who penetrate that secret power and apply it in the solution of personal problems sometimes are called dreamers! But observe that they back their  dreams with action, thus proving the soundness of the statement that faith, rightly understood, is active, not passive.

The emergencies of life often bring men to the crossroads, where they are forced to choose  their direction, one road being marked Faith and another Fear! What is that causes the vast majority to take the Fear road? The choice hinges upon one’s mental attitude!

The man who takes the Faith road is the man who has conditioned his mind to believe, conditioned it a little at a time, by prompt and courageous decisions in the details of his daily experiences. The man who takes the Fear road does so  because he has neglected to condition his mind to be positive.

In Washington, a man sat in a wheel chair  with a tin cup and a bunch of pencils in his hands, gaining a meager living by begging. The excuse  for his begging was that he lost the use of his legs, through infantile paralysis. His brain had not been affected. He was otherwise strong and healthy.

But his choice led him to accept the Fear road when the disease overtook him, and his mind atrophied through disuse.

In another part of the same city was  another man who was afflicted with the same handicap. He, too, had lost the use of his legs, but his reaction to his loss was far different. When he came to the crossroads at which he was forced to make a  choice, he took the Faith road, and it led straight to the White House and the highest position within the gift of the American people.

That which he lost through incapacity of his limbs, he gained in the use of his  brain and his will, and it is a matter of record that his physical affliction did in no way hinder him from  being one of the most active men who ever occupied the position of President of the United States.

The different in the stations of these two men was very great! But let no one be deceived as to the cause of this difference, for it is entirely a difference of mental attitudes.

One man chose Fear as his guide.

The  other chose Faith.

And, when you come right down to the circumstances which lift some men to high stations in life and condemn others to penury and want, the likelihood is that their widely separated  positions reflect their respective mental attitudes.

The high man chooses the high road of Faith, the low man chooses the low road of Fear, and education, experience, and personal skill are matters of  secondary importance. And its only fixed price is that of an unyielding faith—an active applied faith!

It was the inspiration of the poet who wrote:

“Isn’t it strange that princes are kings And clowns that caper  in sawdust rings And common folks, like you and me, Are all builders for eternity?

“To each is given a  book of rules, A block of stone and a bag of tools; And each must shape, ere time has flown, A stumbling block or a stepping stone.

”Search until you find the point of approach to that secret power from within,  and when you find it you will have discovered your true self—that “other self” which makes use of every  experience of life.

Then, whether you build a better mouse trap, or write a better book, or preach a  better sermon, the world will make a beaten path to your door, recognize you and adequately reward  you, no matter who you are or what may have been the nature and scope of your failures of the past.

What if you have failed in the past? So did Edison, Henry Ford, the Wright brothers, Andrew Carnegie, and all the other great leaders.

They all met with failure in one way or another, but they didn’t call it by that name; they called it “temporary defeat.”

With the aid of the light that shines from within, these and  all truly great men have recognized temporary defeat for exactly what it is—a challenge to greater effort backed by greater faith!

Anyone can quit when the going is hard!

Anyone can feel sorry for himself when temporary defeat overtakes him, but self-coddling was no part of the character of the men whom the  world has recognized as great.

The approach to that power from within cannot be made by self-pity. It  cannot be made through fear and timidity.

It cannot be made through envy and hatred.

It cannot be made through avarice and greed.

No, your “other self” pays no heed to any of these negatives!

It manifests itself only through the mind that has been swept clean ofall negative mental attitudes.

It thrives in the mind that is guided by faith!

Source: Success Unlimited, December 1955, pp. 9-13.

 

Have you used applied faith in your life? Tell us about it.

Terrie