Thought Vibration
The Law of Attraction in the Thought World
THE Universe is governed by Law - one great Law. Its manifestations
are multiform, but viewed from the Ultimate there is but one Law. We are
familiar with some of its manifestations, but are almost totally
ignorant of certain others. Still we are learning a little more every
day - the veil is being gradually lifted.
We speak learnedly of the Law of Gravitation, but ignore that equally
wonderful manifestation, THE LAW OF ATTRACTION IN THE THOUGHT WORLD. We
are familiar with that wonderful manifestation of Law which draws and
holds together the atoms of which matter is composed - we recognize the
power of the law that attracts bodies to the earth, that holds the
circling worlds in their places, but we close our eyes to the mighty
law that draws to us the things we desire or fear, that makes or mars
our lives.
When we come to see that Thought is a force - a manifestation of
energy - having a magnet-like power of attraction, we will begin to
understand the why and wherefore of many things that have heretofore
seemed dark to us. There is no study that will so well repay the student
for his time and trouble as the study of the workings of this mighty law
of the world of Thought - the Law of Attraction.
When we think we send out vibrations of a fine ethereal substance,
which are as real as the vibrations manifesting light, heat,
electricity, magnetism. That these vibrations are not evident to our
five senses is no proof that they do not exist. A powerful magnet will
send out vibrations and exert a force sufficient to attract to itself a
piece of steel weighing a hundred pounds, but we can neither see, taste,
smell, hear nor feel the mighty force. These thought vibrations,
likewise, cannot be seen, tasted, smelled, heard nor felt in the
ordinary way; although it is true there are on record cases of persons
peculiarly sensitive to psychic impressions who have perceived powerful
thought-waves, and very many of us can testify that we have distinctly
felt the thought vibrations of others, both whilst in the presence of
the sender and at a distance. Telepathy and its kindred phenomena are
not idle dreams.
Light and heat are manifested by vibrations of a far lower intensity
than those of Thought, but the difference is solely in the rate of
vibration. The annals of science throw an interesting light upon this
question. Prof. Elisha Gray, an eminent scientist, says in his little
book, "The Miracles of Nature":
"There is much food for speculation in the thought that there exist
sound-waves that no human ear can hear, and color-waves of light that no
eye can see. The long, dark, soundless space between 40,000 and
400,000,000,000,000 vibrations per second, and the infinity of range
beyond 700,000,000,000,000 vibrations per second, where light ceases, in
the universe of motion, makes it possible to indulge in speculation."
M. M. Williams, in his work entitled "Short Chapters in Science,"
says:
"There is no gradation between the most rapid undulations or
tremblings that produce our sensation of sound, and the slowest of those
which give rise to our sensations of gentlest warmth. There is a huge
gap between them, wide enough to include another world of motion, all
lying between our world of sound and our world of heat and light; and
there is no good reason whatever for supposing that matter is incapable
of such intermediate activity, or that such activity may not give rise
to intermediate sensations, provided there are organs for taking up and
sensifying their movements."
I cite the above authorities merely to give you food for thought, not
to attempt to demonstrate to you the fact that thought vibrations exist.
The last-named fact has been fully established to the satisfaction of
numerous investigators of the subject, and a little reflection will show
you that it coincides with your own experiences.
We often hear repeated the well-known Mental Science statement,
"Thoughts are Things," and we say these words over without consciously
realizing just what is the meaning of the statement. If we fully
comprehended the truth of the statement and the natural consequences of
the truth back of it, we should understand many things which have
appeared dark to us, and would be able to use the wonderful power,
Thought Force, just as we use any other manifestation of Energy.
As I have said, when we think we set into motion vibrations of a very
high degree, but just as real as the vibrations of light, heat,
sound, electricity. And when we understand the laws governing the
production and transmission of these vibrations we will be able to use
them in our daily life, just as we do the better known forms of energy.
That we cannot see, hear, weigh or measure these vibrations is no proof
that they do not exist. There exist waves of sound which no human ear
can hear, although some of these are undoubtedly registered by the ear
of some of the insects, and others are caught by delicate scientific
instruments invented by man; yet there is a great gap between the sounds
registered by the most delicate instrument and the limit which man's
mind, reasoning by analogy, knows to be the boundary line between sound
waves and some other forms of vibration. And there are light waves which
the eye of man does not register, some of which may be detected by more
delicate instruments, and many more so fine that the instrument has not
yet been invented which will detect them, although improvements are
being made every year and the unexplored field gradually lessened.
As new instruments are invented, new vibrations are registered by
them - and yet the vibrations were just as real before the invention
of the instrument as afterward. Supposing that we had no instruments
to register magnetism - one might be justified in denying the existence
of that mighty force, because it could not be tasted, felt, smelt,
heard, seen, weighted or measured. And yet the mighty magnet would still
send out waves of force sufficient to draw to it pieces of steel
weighing hundreds of pounds.
Each form of vibration requires its own form of instrument for
registration. At present the human brain seems to be the only instrument
capable of registering thought waves, although occultists say that in
this century scientists will invent apparatus sufficiently delicate to
catch and register such impressions. And from present indications it
looks as if the invention named might be expected at any time. The
demand exists and undoubtedly will be soon supplied. But to those who
have experimented along the lines of practical telepathy no further
proof is required than the results of their own experiments.
We are sending out thoughts of greater or less intensity all the
time, and we are reaping the results of such thoughts. Not only do our
thought waves influence ourselves and others, but they have a drawing
power - they attract to us the thoughts of others, things,
circumstances, people, "luck," in accord with the character of the
thought uppermost in our minds. Thoughts of Love will attract to us the
Love of others; circumstances and surroundings in accord with the
thought; people who are of like thought. Thoughts of Anger, Hate, Envy,
Malice and Jealousy will draw to us the foul brood of kindred thoughts
emanating from the minds of others; circumstances in which we will be
called upon to manifest these vile thoughts and will receive them in
turn from others; people who will manifest inharmony; and so on. A
strong thought or a thought long continued, will make us the center of
attraction for the corresponding thought waves of others. Like attracts
like in the Thought World - as ye sow so shall ye reap. Birds of a
feather flock together in the Thought World - curses like chickens come
home to roost, and bringing their friends with them.
The man or woman who is filled with Love sees Love on all sides and
attracts the Love of others. The man with hate in his heart gets all the
Hate he can stand. The man who thinks Fight generally runs up against
all the Fight he wants before he gets through. And so it goes, each gets
what he calls for over the wireless telegraphy of the Mind. The man who
rises in the morning feeling "grumpy" usually manages to have the whole
family in the same mood before the breakfast is over. The "nagging"
woman generally finds enough to gratify her "nagging" propensity during
the day.
This matter of Thought Attraction is a serious one. When you stop to
think of it you will see that a man really makes his own surroundings,
although he blames others for it. I have known people who understood
this law to hold a positive, calm thought and be absolutely unaffected
by the inharmony surrounding them. They were like the vessel from which
the oil had been poured on the troubled waters - they rested safely and
calmly whilst the tempest raged around them. One is not at the mercy of
the fitful storms of Thought after he has learned the workings of the
Law.
We have passed through the age of physical force on to the age of
intellectual supremacy, and are now entering a new and almost unknown
field, that of psychic power. This field has its established laws and we
should acquaint ourselves with them or we will be crowded to the wall as
are the ignorant on the planes of effort. I will endeavor to make plain
to you the great underlying principles of this new field of energy which
is opening up before us, that you may be able to make use of this great
power and apply it for legitimate and worthy purposes, just as men are
using steam, electricity and other forms of energy today
Thought Waves and their Process of Reproduction
LIKE a stone thrown into the water, thought produces ripples and
waves which spread out over the great ocean of thought. There is this
difference, however: the waves on the water move only on a level plane
in all directions, whereas thought waves move in all directions from a
common center, just as do the rays from the sun.
Just as we here on earth are surrounded by a great sea of air, so are
we surrounded by a great sea of Mind. Our thought waves move through
this vast mental ether, extending, however, in all directions, as I have
explained, becoming somewhat lessened in intensity according to the
distance traversed, because of the friction occasioned by the waves
coming in contact with the great body of Mind surrounding us on all
sides.
These thought waves have other qualities differing from the waves on
the water. They have the property of reproducing themselves; in this
respect they resemble sound waves rather than waves upon the water. Just
as a note of the violin will cause the thin glass to vibrate and "sing,"
so will a strong thought tend to awaken similar vibrations in minds
attuned to receive it. Many of the "stray thoughts" which come to us are
but reflections or answering vibrations to some strong thought sent out
by another. But unless our minds are attuned to receive it, the thought
will not likely affect us. If we are thinking high and great thoughts,
our minds acquire a certain keynote corresponding to the character of
the thoughts we have been thinking. And, this keynote once established,
we will be apt to catch the vibrations of other minds keyed to the same
thought. On the other hand, let us get into the habit of thinking
thoughts of an opposite character, and we will soon be echoing the low
order of thought emanating from the minds of the thousands thinking
along the same lines.
We are largely what we have thought ourselves into being, the balance
being represented by the character of the suggestions and thought of
others, which have reached us either directly by verbal suggestions or
telepathically by means of such thought waves. Our general mental
attitude, however, determines the character of the thought waves
received from others as well as the thoughts emanating from ourselves.
We receive only such thoughts as are in harmony with the general mental
attitude held by ourselves; the thoughts not in harmony affecting us
very little, as they awaken no response in us.
The man who believes thoroughly in himself and maintains a positive
strong mental attitude of Confidence and Determination is not likely to
be affected by the adverse and negative thoughts of Discouragement and
Failure emanating from the minds of other persons in whom these last
qualities predominate. At the same time these negative thoughts, if they
reach one whose mental attitude is pitched on a low key, deepen his
negative state and add fuel to the fire which is consuming his strength,
or, if you prefer this figure, serve to further smother the fire of his
energy and activity.
We attract to us the thoughts of others of the same order of thought.
The man who thinks success will be apt to get into tune with the minds
of others thinking likewise, and they will help him, and he them. The
man who allows his mind to dwell constantly upon thoughts of failure
brings himself into close touch with the minds of other "failure"
people, and each will tend to pull the other down still more. The man
who thinks that all is evil is apt to see much evil, and will be brought
into contact with others who will seem to prove his theory. And the man
who looks for good in everything and everybody will be likely to attract
to himself the things and people corresponding to his thought. We
generally see that for which we look.
You will be able to carry this idea more clearly if you will think of
the Marconi wireless instruments, which receive the vibrations only from
the sending instrument which has been attuned to the same key, while
other telegrams are passing through the air in near vicinity without
affecting the instrument. The same law applies to the operations of
thought. We receive only that which corresponds to our mental
attunement. If we have been discouraged, we may rest assured that we
have dropped into a negative key, and have been affected not only by our
own thoughts but have also received the added depressing thoughts of
similar character which are constantly being sent out from the minds of
other unfortunates who have not yet learned the law of attraction in the
thought world. And if we occasionally rise to heights of enthusiasm and
energy, how quickly we feel the inflow of the courageous, daring,
energetic, positive thoughts being sent out by the live men and women of
the world. We recognize this without much trouble when we come in
personal contact with people and feel their vibrations, depressing or
invigorating, as the case may be. But the same law operates when we are
not in their presence, although less strongly.
The mind has many degrees of pitch, ranging from the highest positive
note to the lowest negative note, with many notes in between, varying in
pitch according to their respective distance from the positive or
negative extreme.
When your mind is operating along positive lines you feel strong,
buoyant, bright, cheerful, happy, confident and courageous, and are
enabled to do your work well, to carry out your intentions, and progress
on your roads to Success. You send out strong positive thought, which
affects others and causes them to co-operate with you or to follow your
lead, according to their own mental keynote.
When you are playing on the extreme negative end of the mental
keyboard you feel depressed, week, passive, dull, fearful, cowardly. And
you find yourself unable to make progress or to succeed. And your effect
upon others is practically nil. You are led by, rather than leading
others, and are used as a human doormat or football by more positive
persons.
In some persons the positive element seems to predominate, and in
others the negative quality seems to be more in evidence. There are, of
course, widely varying degrees of positiveness and negativeness, and B
may be negative to A, while positive to C. When two people first meet
there is generally a silent mental conflict in which their respective
minds test their quality of positiveness, and fix their relative
position toward each other. This process may be unconscious in many
cases, but it occurs nevertheless. The adjustment is often automatic,
but occasionally the struggle is so sharp - the opponents being so well
matched - that the matter forces itself into the consciousness of the
two people. Sometimes both parties are so much alike in their degrees of
positiveness that they fail to come to terms, mentally; they never
really are able to get along with each other, and they are either
mutually repelled and separate or else stay together amid constant
broils and wrangling.
We are positive or negative to everyone with whom we have relations.
We may be positive to our children, our employees and dependents, but we
are at the same time negative to others to whom we occupy inferior
positions, or whom we have allowed to assert themselves over us.
Of course, something may occur and we will suddenly become more
positive than the man or woman to whom we have heretofore been negative.
We frequently see cases of this kind. And as the knowledge of these
mental laws becomes more general we will see many more instances of
persons asserting themselves and making use of their newfound power.
But remember you possess the power to raise the keynote of your mind
to a positive pitch by an effort of the will. And, of course, it is
equally true that you may allow yourself to drop into a low, negative
note by carelessness or a weak will.
There are more people on the negative plane of thought than on the
positive plane, and consequently there are more negative thought
vibrations in operation in our mental atmosphere. But, happily for us,
this is counterbalanced by the fact that a positive thought is
infinitely more powerful than a negative one, and if by force of will we
raise ourselves to a higher mental key we can shut out the depressing
thoughts and may take up the vibrations corresponding with our changed
mental attitude. This is one of the secrets of the affirmations and
autosuggestions used by the several schools of Mental Science and other
New Thought cults. There is no particular merit in affirmations of
themselves, but they serve a twofold purpose: (1) They tend to establish
new mental attitudes within us and act wonderfully in the direction of
character- building - the science of making ourselves over. (2) They
tend to raise the mental keynote so that we may get the benefit of the
positive thought waves of others on the same plane of thought.
Whether or not we believe in them, we are constantly making
affirmations. The man who asserts that he can and will do a thing - and
asserts it earnestly - develops in himself the qualities conducive to
the well doing of that thing, and at the same time places his mind in
the proper key to receive all the thought waves likely to help him in
the doing. If, on the other hand, one says and feels that he is going to
fail, he will choke and smother the thoughts coming from his own
subconscious mentality which are intended to help him, and at the same
time will place himself in tune with the Failure-thought of the world -
and there is plenty of the latter kind of thought around, I can tell
you.
Do not allow yourselves to be affected by the adverse and negative
thoughts of those around you. Rise to the upper chambers of your mental
dwelling, and key yourself up to a strong pitch, away above the
vibrations on the lower planes of thought. Then you will not only be
immune to their negative vibrations but will be in touch with the great
body of strong positive thought coming from those of your own plane of
development. My aim will be to direct and train you in the proper use of
thought and will, that you may have yourself well in hand and may be
able to strike the positive key at any moment you may feel it necessary.
It is not necessary to strike the extreme note on all occasions. The
better plan is to keep yourself in a comfortable key, without much
strain, and to have the means at command whereby you can raise the pitch
at once when occasion demands. By this knowledge you will not be at the
mercy of the old automatic action of the mind, but may have it well
under your own control.
Development of the will is very much like the development of a muscle
- a matter of practice and gradual improvement. At first it is apt to be
tiresome, but at each trial one grows stronger until the new strength
becomes real and permanent. Many of us have made ourselves positive
under sudden calls or emergencies. We are in the habit of "bracing up"
when occasion demands. But by intelligent practice you will be so much
strengthened that your habitual state will be equal to your "bracing up"
stage now, and then when you find it necessary to apply the spur you
will be able to reach a stage not dreamed of at present.
Do not understand me as advocating a high tension continuously. This
is not at all desirable, not only because it is apt to be too much of a
strain upon you but also because you will find it desirable to relieve
the tension at times and become receptive that you may absorb
impressions. It is well to be able to relax and assume a certain degree
of receptiveness, knowing that you are always able to spring back to the
more positive state at will. The habitually strongly positive man loses
much enjoyment and recreation. Positive, you give out expressions;
receptive, you take in impressions. Positive, you are a teacher;
receptive, a pupil. It is not only a good thing to be a good teacher,
but it is also very important to be a good listener at times.
A Talk about the Mind
MAN has but one mind, but he has many mental faculties, each faculty
being capable of functioning along two different lines of mental effort.
There are no distinct dividing lines separating the two several
functions of a faculty, but they shade into each other as do the colors
of the spectrum.
An Active effort of any faculty of the mind is the result of a direct
impulse imparted at the time of the effort. A Passive effort of any
faculty of the mind is the result of either a preceding Active effort of
the same mind; an Active effort of another along the lines of
suggestion; Thought Vibrations from the mind of another; Thought
impulses from an ancestor, transmitted by the laws of heredity
(including impulses transmitted from generation to generation from the
time of the original vibratory impulse imparted by the Primal Cause -
which impulses gradually unfold, and unsheath, when the proper state of
evolutionary development is reached).
The Active effort is new-born - fresh from the mint, whilst the
Passive effort is of less recent creation, and, in fact, is often the
result of vibratory impulses imparted in ages long past. The Active
effort makes its own way, brushing aside the impeding vines and kicking
from its path the obstructing stones. The Passive effort travels along
the beaten path.
A thought-impulse, or motion-impulse, originally caused by an Active
effort of faculty, may become by continued repetition, or habit,
strictly automatic, the impulse given it by the repeated Active effort
developing a strong momentum, which carries it on, along Passive lines,
until stopped by another Active effort or its direction changed by the
same cause.
On the other hand, thought-impulses, or motion-impulses, continued
along Passive lines may be terminated or corrected by an Active effort.
The Active function creates, changes or destroys. The Passive function
carries on the work given it by the Active function and obeys orders and
suggestions.
The Active function produces the thought-habit, or motion-habit, and
imparts to it the vibrations, which carry it on along the Passive lines
thereafter. The Active function also has the power to send forth
vibrations which neutralize the momentum of the thought-habit, or
motion-habit; it also is able to launch a new thought-habit, or
motion-habit, with stronger vibrations, which overcomes and absorbs the
first thought, or motion, and substitutes the new one.
All thought-impulses, or motion-impulses, once started on their
errands, continue to vibrate along passive lines until corrected or
terminated by subsequent impulses imparted by the Active function, or
other controlling power. The continuance of the original impulse adds
momentum and force to it, and renders its correction or termination more
difficult. This explains that which is called "the force of habit." I
think that this will be readily understood by those who have struggled
to overcome a habit which had been easily acquired. The Law applies to
good habits as well as bad. The moral is obvious.
Several of the faculties of the mind often combine to produce a
single manifestation. A task to be performed may call for the combined
exercise of several faculties, some of which may manifest by Active
effort and others by Passive effort.
The meeting of new conditions - new problems - calls for the exercise
of Active effort; whilst a familiar problem, or task, can be easily
handled by the Passive effort without the assistance of his more
enterprising brother.
There is in Nature an instinctive tendency of living organisms to
perform certain actions, the tendency of an organized body to seek that
which satisfies the wants of its organism. This tendency is sometimes
called Appetency. It is really a Passive mental impulse, originating
with the impetus imparted by the Primal Cause, and transmitted along the
lines of evolutionary development, gaining strength and power as it
progresses. The impulse of the Primal Cause is assisted by the powerful
upward attraction exerted by THE ABSOLUTE.
In plant life this tendency is plainly discernible, ranging form the
lesser exhibitions in the lower types to the greater in the higher
types. It is that which is generally spoken of as the "life-force" in
plants. It is, however, a manifestation of rudimentary mentation,
functioning along the lines of Passive effort. In some of the higher
forms of plant life there appears a faint color of independent "life
action" - a faint indication of choice of volition. Writers on plant
life relate many remarkable instances of this phenomenon. It is,
undoubtedly, an exhibition of rudimentary Active mentation.
In the lower animal kingdom a very high degree of Passive mental
effort is found. And, varying in degree in the several families and
species, a considerable amount of Active mentation is apparent. The
lower animal undoubtedly possesses Reason only in a lesser degree than
man, and, in fact, the display of volitional mentation exhibited by an
intelligent animal is often nearly as high as that shown by the lower
types of man or by a young child.
As a child, before birth, shows in its body the stages of the
physical evolution of man, so does a child, before and after birth -
until maturity - manifest the stages of the mental evolution of man.
Man, the highest type of life yet produced, at least upon this
planet, shows the highest form of Passive mentation, and also a much
higher development of Active mentation than is seen in the lower
animals, and yet the degrees of that power vary widely among the
different races of men. Even among men of our race the different degrees
of Active mentation are plainly noticeable; these degrees not depending
by any means upon the amount of "culture," social position or
educational advantages possessed by the individual: Mental Culture and
Mental Development are two very different things.
You have but to look around you to see the different stages of the
development of Active mentation in man. The reasoning of many men is
scarcely more than Passive mentation, exhibiting but little of the
qualities of volitional thought. They prefer to let other men think for
them. Active mentation tires them and they find the instinctive,
automatic, Passive mental process much easier. Their minds work along
the lines of least resistance. They are but little more than human
sheep,
Among the lower animals and the lower types of men Active mentation
is largely confined to the grosser faculties - the more material plane;
the higher mental faculties working along the instinctive, automatic
lines of the Passive function.
As the lower forms of life progressed in the evolutionary scale, they
developed new faculties which were latent within them. These faculties
always manifested in the form of rudimentary Passive functioning, and
afterwards worked up through higher Passive forms, until the Active
functions were brought into play. The evolutionary process still
continues, the invariable tendency being toward the goal of highly
developed Active mentation. This evolutionary progress is caused by the
vibratory impulse imparted by the Primal Cause, aided by the uplifting
attraction of THE ABSOLUTE.
This law of evolution is still in progress, and man is beginning to
develop new powers of mind, which, of course, are first manifesting
themselves along the lines of Passive effort. Some men have developed
these new faculties to a considerable degree, and it is possible that
before long Man will be able to exercise them along the line of their
Active functions. In fact, this power has already been attained by a
few. This is the secret of the Oriental occultists, and of some of their
Occidental brethren.
The amenability of the mind to the will can be increased by properly
directed practice. That which we are in the habit of referring to as the
"strengthening of the Will" is in reality the training of the mind to
recognize and absorb the Power Within. The Will is strong enough, it
does not need strengthening, but the mind needs to be trained to receive
and act upon the suggestions of the Will. The Will is the outward
manifestation of the I AM. The Will current is flowing in full strength
along the spiritual wires; but you must learn how to raise the
trolley-pole to touch it before the mental car will move. This is a
somewhat different idea from that which you have been in the habit of
receiving from writers on the subject of Will Power, but it is correct,
as you will demonstrate to your own satisfaction if you will follow up
the subject by experiments along the proper lines.
The attraction of THE ABSOLUTE is drawing man upward, and the
vibratory force of the Primal Impulse has not yet exhausted itself. The
time of evolutionary development has come when man can help himself. The
man who understands the Law can accomplish wonders by means of the
development of the powers of the mind; whilst the man who turns his back
upon the truth will suffer from his lack of knowledge of the Law.
He who understands the laws of his mental being, develops his latent
powers and uses them intelligently. He does not despise his Passive
mental functions, but makes good use of them also, charges them with the
duties for which they are best fitted, and is able to obtain wonderful
results from their work, having mastered them and trained them to do the
bidding of the Higher Self. When they fail to do their work properly he
regulates them, and his knowledge prevents him from meddling with them
unintelligently, and thereby doing himself harm. He develops the
faculties and powers latent within him and learns how to manifest them
along the line of Active mentation as well as Passive. He knows that the
real man within him is the master to whom both Active and Passive
functions are but tools. He has banished Fear, and enjoys Freedom. He
has found himself. HE HAS LEARNED THE SECRET OF THE I AM
Mind Building
MAN can build up his mind and make it what he wills. In fact, we are
mind-building every hour of our lives, either consciously or
unconsciously. The majority of us are doing the work unconsciously, but
those who have seen a little below the surface of things have taken the
matter in hand and have become conscious creators of their own
mentality. They are no longer subject to the suggestions and influences
of others but have become masters of themselves. They assert the "I,"
and compel obedience from the subordinate mental faculties. The "I" is
the sovereign of the mind, and what we call WILL is the instrument of
the "I." Of course, there is something back of this, and the Universal
Will is higher than the Will of the Individual, but the latter is in
much closer touch with the Universal Will than is generally supposed,
and when one conquers the lower self, and asserts the "I," he becomes in
close touch with the Universal Will and partakes largely of its
wonderful power. The moment one asserts the "I," and "finds himself," he
establishes a close connection between the Individual Will and the
Universal Will. But before he is able to avail himself of the mighty
power at his command, he must first effect the Mastery of the lower
self.
Think of the absurdity of Man claiming to manifest powers, when he is
the slave of the lower parts of his mental being, which should be
subordinate. Think of a man being the slave of his moods, passions,
animal appetites and lower faculties, and at the same time trying to
claim the benefits of the Will. Now, I am not preaching asceticism,
which seems to me to be a confession of weakness. I am speaking of
Self-Mastery - the assertion of the "I" over the subordinate parts of
oneself. In the higher view of the subject, this "I" is the only real
Self, and the rest is the non-self; but our space does not permit the
discussion of this point, and we will use the word "self' as meaning the
entire man. Before a man can assert the "I" in its full strength he must
obtain the complete mastery of the subordinate parts of the self. All
things are good when we learn to master them, but no thing is good when
it masters us. Just so long as we allow the lower portions of the self
to give us orders, we are slaves. It is only when the "I" mounts his
throne and lifts the scepter, that order is established and things
assume their proper relation to each other.
We are finding no fault with those who are swayed by their lower
selves - they are in a lower grade of evolution, and will work up in
time. But we are calling the attention of those who are ready, to the
fact that the Sovereign must assert his will, and that the subjects must
obey. Orders must be given and carried out. Rebellion must be put down,
and the rightful authority insisted upon. And the time to do it is Now.
You have been allowing your rebellious subjects to keep the King from
his throne. You have been allowing the mental kingdom to be misgoverned
by irresponsible faculties. You have been the slaves of Appetite,
Unworthy Thoughts, Passion and Negativeness. The Will has been set aside
and Low Desire has usurped the throne. It is time to re-establish order
in the mental kingdom. You are able to assert the mastery over any
emotion, appetite, passion or class of thoughts by the assertion of the
Will. You can order Fear to go to the rear; Jealousy to leave your
presence; Hate to depart from your sight; Anger to hide itself; Worry to
cease troubling you; Uncontrolled Appetite and Passion to bow in
submission and to become humble slaves instead of masters - all by the
assertion of the "I." You may surround yourself with the glorious
company of Courage, Love and Self-Control, by the same means. You may
put down the rebellion and secure peace and order in your mental kingdom
if you will but utter the mandate and insist upon its execution. Before
you march forth to empire, you must establish the proper internal
condition - must show your ability to govern you own kingdom. The first
battle is the conquest of the lesser self by the Real Self.
AFFIRMATION
I AM Asserting the Mastery of My Real Self
Repeat these words earnestly and positively during the day at
least once an hour, and particularly when you are confronted with
conditions which tempt you to act on the lines of the lesser self
instead of following the course dictated by the Real Self. In the moment
of doubt and hesitation say these words earnestly, and your way will be
made clear to you. Repeat them several times after you retire and settle
yourself to sleep. But be sure to back up the words with the thought
inspiring them, and do not merely repeat them parrot-like. Form the
mental image of the Real Self asserting its mastery over the lower
planes of your mind - see the King on his Throne. You will become
conscious of an influx of new thought, and things which have seemed hard
for you will suddenly become much easier. You will feel that you have
yourself well in hand, and that YOU are the master and not the slave.
The thought you are holding will manifest itself in action, and you will
steadily grow to become that which you have in mind.
EXERCISE
Fix the mind firmly on the higher Self and draw inspiration from it
when you feel led to yield to the promptings of the lower part of your
nature. When you are tempted to burst into Anger - assert the "I," and
your voice will drop. Anger is unworthy of the developed Self. When you
feel vexed and cross, remember what you are, and rise above your
feeling. When you feel Fearful, remember that the Real Self fears
nothing, and assert Courage. When you feel Jealousy inciting, think of
your higher nature, and laugh. And so on, asserting the Real Self and
not allowing the things on the lower plane of mentality to disturb you.
They are unworthy of you, and must be taught to keep their places. Do
not allow these things to master you - they should be your subjects, not
your masters. You must get away from this plane, and the only way to do
so is to cut loose from these phases of thought which have been "running
things" to suit themselves. You may have trouble at the start, but keep
at it and you will have that satisfaction which comes only from
conquering the lower parts of our nature. You have been a slave long
enough - now is the time to free yourselves. If you will follow these
exercises faithfully you will be a different being by the end of the
year, and will look back with a pitying smile to your former condition.
But it takes work. This is not child's play but a task for earnest men
and women, Will YOU make the effort?
The Secret of the Will
WHILE psychologists may differ in their theories regarding the nature
of the Will, none deny its existence, nor question its power. All
persons recognize the power of strong Will - all see how it may be used
to overcome the greatest obstacles. But few realize that the Will may be
developed and strengthened by intelligent practice. They feel that they
could accomplish wonders if they had a strong Will, but instead of
attempting to develop it, they content themselves with vain regrets.
They sigh, but do nothing.
Those who have investigated the subject closely know that Will Power,
with all its latent possibilities and mighty powers, may be developed,
disciplined, controlled and directed, just as may be any other of
Nature's forces. It does not matter what theory you may entertain about
the nature of the Will, you will obtain the results if you practice
intelligently.
Personally, I have a somewhat odd theory about the Will. I believe
that every man has, potentially, a strong Will, and that all he has to
do is to train his mind to make use of it. I think that in the higher
regions of the mind of every man is a great store of Will Power awaiting
his use. The Will current is running along the psychic wires, and all
that it is necessary to do is to raise the mental trolley-pole and bring
down the power for your use. And the supply is unlimited, for your
little storage battery is connected with the great powerhouse of the
Universal Will Power, and the power is inexhaustible. Your Will does not
need training - but your Mind does. The mind is the instrument and the
supply of Will Power is proportionate to the fineness of the instrument
through which it manifests. But you needn't accept this theory if you
don't like it. This lesson will fit your theory as well as mine.
He who has developed his mind so that it will allow the Will Power to
manifest through it, has opened up wonderful possibilities for himself.
Not only has he found a great power at his command, but he is able to
bring into play, and use, faculties, talents and abilities of whose
existence he has not dreamed. This secret of the Will is the magic key
which opens all doors.
The late Donald G. Mitchell once wrote: "Resolve is what makes a man
manifest; not puny resolve, but crude determination; not errant purpose
- but that strong and indefatigable will which treads down difficulties
and danger, as a boy treads down the heaving frost-lands of winter;
which kindles his eye and brain with a proud pulse-beat toward the
unattainable. Will makes men giants."
Many of us feel that if we would but exert our Will, we might
accomplish wonders. But somehow we do not seem to want to take the
trouble - at any rate; we do not get to the actual willing point. We put
it off from time to time, and talk vaguely of "some day," but that some
day never comes.
We instinctively feel the power of the Will, but we haven't enough
energy to exercise it, and so drift along with the tide, unless perhaps
some friendly difficulty arises, some helpful obstacle appears in our
path, or some kindly pain stirs us into action, in either of which cases
we are compelled to assert our Will and thus begin to accomplish
something.
The trouble with us is that we do not want to do the thing enough to
make us exert our Will Power. We don't want to hard enough. We
are mentally lazy and of weak Desire. If you do not like the word Desire
substitute for it the word "Aspiration." (Some people call the lower
impulses Desires, and the higher, Aspirations - it's all a matter of
words, take you choice.) That is the trouble. Let a man be in danger of
losing his life - let a woman be in danger of losing a great love - and
you will witness a startling exhibition of Will Power from an unexpected
source. Let a woman's child be threatened with danger, and she will
manifest a degree of Courage and Will that sweeps all before it. And yet
the same woman will quail before a domineering husband, and will lack
the Will to perform a simple task. A boy will do all sorts of work if he
but considers it play, and yet he can scarcely force himself to cut a
little firewood. Strong Will follows strong Desire. If you really want
to do a thing very much, you can usually develop the Will Power to
accomplish it.
The trouble is that you have not really wanted to do these things,
and yet you blame your Will. You say that you do want to do it, but if
you stop to think you will see that you really want to do something else
more than the thing in question. You are not willing to pay the price of
attainment. Stop a moment and analyze this statement and apply it in
your own case,
You are mentally lazy - that's the trouble. Don't talk to me about
not having enough Will. You have a great storehouse of Will awaiting
your use, but you are too lazy to use it. Now, if you are really in
earnest about this matter, get to work and first find out what you
really want to do - then start to work and do it. Never mind
about the Will Power - you'll find a full supply of that whenever you
need it. The thing to do is to get to the point where you will
resolve to do. That the real test - the resolving. Think of these
things a little, and make up your mind whether or not you really want to
be a Willer sufficiently hard to get to work.
Many excellent essays and books have been written on this subject,
all of which agree regarding the greatness of Will Power, the most
enthusiastic terms being used; but few have anything to say about how
this power may be acquired by those who have it not, or who possess it
in but a limited degree. Some have given exercises designed to
"strengthen" the Will, which exercises really strengthen the Mind so
that it is able to draw upon its store of power. But they have generally
overlooked the fact that in autosuggestion is to be found the secret of
the development of the mind so that it may become the efficient
instrument of the Will.
AUTOSUGGESTION
I AM Using My Will Power
Say these words several times earnestly and positively, immediately
after finishing this article. Then repeat them frequently during the
day, at least once an hour, and particularly when you meet something
that calls for the exercise of Will Power. Also repeat them several
times after you retire and settle yourself for sleep. Now, there is
nothing in the words unless you back them up with the thought. In fact,
the thought is "the whole thing," and the words only pegs upon which to
hang the thought. So think of what you are saying, and mean what you
say. You must use Faith at the start, and use the words with a confident
expectation of the result. Hold the steady thought that you are drawing
on your storehouse of Will Power, and before long you will find that
thought is taking form in action, and that your Will Power is
manifesting itself. You will feel an influx of strength with each
repetition of the words. You will find yourself overcoming difficulties
and bad habits, and will be surprised at how things are being smoothed
out for you.
EXERCISE
Perform at least one disagreeable task each day during the month.. If
there is any especially disagreeable task which you would like to shirk,
that is the one for you to perform. This is not given to you in order to
make you self-sacrificing or meek, or anything of that sort - it is
given you to exercise your Will. Anyone can do a pleasant thing
cheerfully, but it takes Will to do the unpleasant thing cheerfully; and
that is how you must do the work. It will prove a most valuable
discipline to you. Try it for a month and you will see where "it comes
in." If you shirk this exercise you had better stop right here and
acknowledge that you do not want Will Power, and are content to stay
where you are and remain a weakling.
How to become immune to injurious Thought Attraction
THE first thing to do is to begin to "cut out" Fear and Worry.
Fear-thought is the cause of much unhappiness and many failures. You
have been told this thing over and over again, but it will bear
repeating. Fear is a habit of mind which has been fastened upon us by
negative race-thought, but from which we may free ourselves by
individual effort and perseverance.
Strong expectancy is a powerful magnet. He of the strong, confident
desire attracts to him the things best calculated to aid him - persons,
things circumstances, surroundings; if he desires them hopefully,
trustfully, confidently, calmly. And, equally true, he who Fears a thing
generally manages to start into operation forces which will cause the
thing he feared to come upon him. Don't you see, the man who Fears
really expects the feared thing, and the eyes of the Law is the
same as if he really had wished for or desired it? The Law is operative
in both cases - the principle is the same.
The best way to overcome the habit of Fear is to assume the mental
attitude of Courage, just as the best way to get rid of darkness is to
let in the light. It is a waste of time to fight a negative
thought-habit by recognizing its force and trying to deny it out of
existence by mighty efforts. The best, surest, easiest and quickest
method is to assume the existence of the positive thought desired in its
place; and by constantly dwelling upon the positive thought, manifest it
into objective reality.
Therefore, instead of repeating, "I'm not afraid," say boldly, "I am
full of Courage," "I am Courageous." You must assert, "There's nothing
to fear," which, although in the nature of a denial, simply denies the
reality of the object causing fear rather than admitting the fear itself
and then denying it.
To overcome fear, one should hold firmly to the mental attitude of
Courage. He should think Courage, say Courage, act Courage. He should
keep the mental picture of Courage before him all the time, until it
becomes his normal mental attitude. Hold the ideal firmly before you and
you will gradually grow to its attainment - the ideal will become
manifest.
Let the word "Courage" sink deeply into your mind, and then hold it
firmly there until the mind fastens it in place. Think of yourself as
being Courageous - see yourself as acting with Courage in trying
situations. Realize that there is nothing to Fear - that Worry and Fear
never helped anyone, and never will. Realize that Fear paralyzes effort,
and that Courage promotes activity.
The confident, fearless, expectant, "I Can and I Will" man is a
mighty magnet. He attracts to himself just what is needed for his
success. Things seem to come his way, and people say he is "lucky."
Nonsense! "Luck" has nothing to do with it. It's all in the Mental
Attitude. And the Mental Attitude of the "I Can't" or the "I'm Afraid"
man also determines his measure of success. There's no mystery
whatsoever about it. You have but to look about you to realize the truth
of what I have said. Did you ever know a successful man who did not have
the "I Can and I will" thought strong within him? Why, he will walk all
around the "I Can't" man, who has perhaps even more ability. The first
mental attitude brought to the surface latent qualities, as well as
attracted help from outside; whilst the second mental attitude not only
attracted "I Can't" people and things, but also kept the man's own
powers from manifesting themselves. I have demonstrated the correctness
of these views, and so have many others, and the number of people who
know these things is growing every day.
Don't waste your Thought-Force, but use it to advantage. Stop
attracting to yourself failure, unhappiness, inharmony, sorrow - begin
now and send out a current of bright, positive, happy thought. Let your
prevailing thought be "I Can and I Will;" think "I Can and I
Will;" dream "I Can and I Will;" say "I Can and I Will;"
and act "I Can and I Will". Live on the "I Can and I and Will"
plane, and before you are aware of it, you will feel the new vibrations
manifesting themselves in action; will see them bring results; will be
conscious of the new point of view; will realize that your own is coming
to you. You will feel better, act better, see better, BE better in every
way, after you join the "I Can and I Will" brigade.
Fear is the parent of Worry, Hate, Jealousy, Malice, Anger,
Discontent, Failure and all the rest. The man who rids himself of Fear
will find that the rest of the brood has disappeared. The only way to be
Free is to get rid of Fear. Tear it out by the roots. I regard the
conquest of Fear as the first important step to be taken by those who
wish to master the application of Thought Force. So long as Fear masters
you, you are in no condition to make progress in the realm of Thought,
and I must insist that you start to work at once to get rid of this
obstruction. You CAN do it - if you only go about it in earnest. And
when you have ridded yourself of the vile thing, life will seem entirely
different to you - you will feel happier, freer, stronger, more
positive, and will be more successful in every undertaking of Life.
Start it today, make up your mind that this intruder must GO - do not
compromise matters with him, but insist upon an absolute surrender on
his part. You will find the task difficult at first, but each time you
oppose him he will grow weaker, and you will be stronger. Shut off his
nourishment - starve him to death - he cannot live in a thought
atmosphere of Fearlessness. So, start to fill your mind with good,
strong, Fearless thoughts - keep yourself busy thinking Fearlessness,
and Fear will die of his own accord. Fearlessness is positive - Fear is
negative, and you may be sure that the positive will prevail.
So long as Fear is around with his "but," "if," "suppose," "I'm
afraid," "I can't," "what if," and all the rest of his cowardly
suggestions, you will not be able to use your Thought Force to the best
advantage. Once get him out of the way, you will have clear sailing, and
every inch of thought- sail will catch the wind. He is a Jonah.
Overboard with him! (The whale that swallows him will have my sympathy.)
I advise that you start in to do some of the things which you feel
you could do if you were not afraid to try. Start to work to do
these things, affirming Courage all the way through, and you will be
surprised to see how the changed mental attitude will clear away
obstacles from your path, and will make things very much easier than you
had anticipated. Exercises of this kind will develop you wonderfully,
and you will be much gratified at the result of a little practice along
these lines.
There are many things before you awaiting accomplishment, which you
can master if you will only throw aside the yoke of Fear - if you will
only refuse to accept the race suggestion, and will boldly assert the
"I" and its power. And the best way to vanquish Fear is to assert
"Courage" and stop thinking of Fear. By this plan you will train the
mind into new habits of thought, thus eradicating the old negative
thoughts which have been pulling you down, and holding you back. Take
the word "Courage" with you as your watchword and manifest it in action.
Remember, the only thing to fear is Fear, and - well, don't even fear
Fear, for he's a cowardly chap at the best, who will run if you show a
brave front.
The Transmutation of Negative Thought
WORRY is the child of Fear - if you kill out Fear, Worry will die for
want of nourishment. This advice is very old, and yet it is always
worthy of repetition, for it is a lesson of which we are greatly in
need. Some people think that if we kill out Fear and Worry we will never
be able to accomplish anything. I have read editorials in the great
journals in which the writers held that without Worry one can never
accomplish any of the great tasks of life, because Worry is necessary to
stimulate interest and work. This is nonsense, no matter who utters it.
Worry never helped one to accomplish anything; on the contrary, it
stands in the way of accomplishment and attainment.
The motive underlying action and "doing things" is Desire and
Interest. If one earnestly desires a thing, he naturally becomes very
much interested in its accomplishment, and is quick to seize upon
anything likely to help him to gain the thing he wants. More than that,
his mind starts up a work on the subconscious plane that brings into the
field of consciousness many ideas of value and importance. Desire and
Interest are the causes that result in success. Worry is not Desire. It
is true that if one's surroundings and environments become intolerable,
he is driven in desperation to some efforts that will result in throwing
off the undesirable conditions and in the acquiring of those more in
harmony with his desire. But this is only another form of Desire - the
man desires something different from what he has; and when his desire
becomes strong enough his entire interest is given to the task, he makes
a mighty effort, and the change is accomplished. But it wasn't Worry
that caused the effort. Worry could content itself with wringing its
hands and moaning, "Woe is me," and wearing its nerves to a frazzle, and
accomplishing nothing. Desire acts differently. It grows stronger as the
man's conditions become intolerable, and finally when he feels the hurt
so strongly that he can't stand it any longer, he says, "I won't
stand this any longer - l will make a change," and lo! Then
Desire springs into action. The man keeps on "wanting" a change the
worst way (which is the best way) and his Interest and Attention being
given to the task of deliverance, he begins to make things move. Worry
never accomplished anything. Worry is negative and death producing.
Desire and Ambition are positive and life producing. A man may worry
himself to death and yet nothing will be accomplished, but let that man
transmute his worry and discontent into Desire and Interest, coupled
with a belief that he is able to make the change - the "I Can and I
Will" idea - then something happens.
Yes, Fear and Worry must go before we can do much. One must proceed
to cast out these negative intruders, and replace them with Confidence
and Hope. Transmute Worry into keen Desire. Then you will find that
Interest is awakened, and you will begin to think things of interest to
you. Thoughts will come to you from the great reserve stock in your mind
and you will start to manifest them in action. Moreover you will be
placing yourself in harmony with similar thoughts of others, and will
draw to you aid and assistance from the great volume of thought waves
with which the world is filled. One draws to himself thought waves
corresponding in character with the nature of the prevailing thoughts in
his won mind - his mental attitude. Then again he begins to set into
motion the great Law of Attraction, whereby he draws to him others
likely to help him, and is, in turn, attracted to others who can aid
him. This Law of Attraction is no joke, no metaphysical absurdity, but
is a great live working principle of Nature, as anyone may learn by
experimenting and observing.
To succeed in anything you must want it very much - Desire must be in
evidence in order to attract. The man of weak desires attracts very
little to himself. The stronger the Desire the greater the force set
into motion. You must want a thing hard enough before you can get it.
You must want it more than you do the things around you, and you must be
prepared to pay the price for it. The price is the throwing overboard of
certain lesser desires that stand in the way of the accomplishment of
the greater one. Comfort, ease, leisure, amusements, and many other
things may have to go (not always, though). It all depends on what you
want. As a rule, the greater the thing desired, the greater the price to
be paid for it. Nature believes in adequate compensation. But if you
really Desire a thing in earnest, you will pay the price without
question; for the Desire will dwarf the importance of the other things.
You say that you want a thing very much, and are doing everything
possible toward its attainment? Pshaw! You are only playing Desire. Do
you want the thing as much as a prisoner wants freedom - as much as a
dying man wants life? Look at the almost miraculous things accomplished
by prisoners desiring freedom. Look how they work through steel plates
and stonewalls with a bit of stone. Is your desire as strong as that? Do
you work for the desired thing as if your life depended upon it?
Nonsense! You don't know what Desire is. I tell you if a man wants a
thing as much as the prisoner wants freedom, or as much as a strongly
vital man wants life, then that man will be able to sweep away obstacles
and impediments apparently immovable. The key to attainment is Desire,
Confidence, and Will. This key will open many doors.
Fear paralyzes Desire - it scares the life out of it. You must get
rid of Fear. There have been times in my life when Fear would get hold
of me and take a good, firm grip on my vitals, and I would lose all
hope; all interest; all ambition; all desire. But, thank the Lord, I
have always managed to throw off the grip of the monster and face my
difficulty like a man; and lo! Things would seem to be straightened out
for me somehow. Either the difficulty would melt away or I would be
given means to overcome, or get around, or under or over it. It is
strange how this works. No matter how great is the difficulty, when we
finally face it with courage and confidence in ourselves, we seem to
pull through somehow, and then we begin to wonder what we were scared
about. This is not a mere fancy, it is the working of a mighty law,
which we do not as yet fully understand, but which we may prove at any
time.
People often ask: "it's all very well for you New Thought people to
say 'Don't worry,' but what's a person to do when he thinks of all the
possible things ahead of him, which might upset him and his plans? Well,
all that I can say is that the man is foolish to bother about thinking
of troubles to come at some time in the future. The majority of things
that we worry about don't come to pass at all; a large proportion of the
others come in a milder form than we had anticipated, and there are
always other things which come at the same time which help us to
overcome the trouble. The future holds in store for us not only
difficulties to be overcome, but also agents to help us in overcoming
the difficulties. Things adjust themselves. We are prepared for any
trouble which may come upon us, and when the time comes we somehow find
ourselves able to meet it. God not only tempers the wind to the shorn
lamb, but He also tempers the shorn lamb to the wind. The winds and the
shearing do not come together; there is usually enough time for the lamb
to get seasoned, and then he generally grows new wool before the cold
blast comes.
It has been well said that nine-tenths of the worries are over things
which never comes to pass, and that the other tenth is over things of
little or no account. So what's the use in using up all your reserve
force in fretting over future troubles, if this be so? Better wait until
your troubles really come before you worry. You will find that by this
storing up of energy you will be able to meet about any sort of trouble
that comes your way.
What is it that uses up all the energy in the average man or woman,
anyway? Is it the real overcoming of difficulties, or the worrying about
impending troubles? It's always "Tomorrow, tomorrow," and yet tomorrow
never comes just as we feared it would. Tomorrow is all right; it
carries in its grip good things as well as troubles. Bless my soul, when
I sit down and think over the things which I once feared might possibly
descend upon me, I laugh! Where are those feared things now? I don't
know - have almost forgotten that I ever feared them.
You do not need fight Worry - that isn't the way to overcome
the habit. Just practice concentration, and then learn to concentrate
upon something right before you, and you will find that the worry
thought has vanished. The mind can think of but one thing at a time, and
if you concentrate upon a bright thing, the other thing will fade away.
There are better ways of overcoming objectionable thoughts than by
fighting them. Learn to concentrate upon thoughts of an opposite
character, and you will have solved the problem.
When the mind is full of worry thoughts, it cannot find time to work
out plans to benefit you. But when you have concentrated upon bright,
helpful thoughts, you will discover that it will start to work
subconsciously; and when the time comes you will find all sorts of plans
and methods by which you will be able to meet the demands upon you. Keep
your mental attitude right, and all things will be added unto you.
There's no sense in worrying; nothing has ever been gained by it, and
nothing ever will be. Bright, cheerful and happy thoughts attract
bright, cheerful and happy things to us - worry drives them away.
Cultivate the right mental attitude.
The Law of Mental Control
YOUR thoughts are either faithful servants or tyrannical masters -
just as you allow them to be. You have the say about it; take your
choice. They will either go about your work under direction of the firm
will, doing it the best they know how, not only in your waking hours,
but when you are asleep - some of our best mental work being performed
for us when our conscious mentality is at rest, as is evidenced by the
fact that when the morning comes we find troublesome problems have been
worked out for us during the night, after we had dismissed them from our
minds - apparently; or they will ride all over us and make us their
slaves if we are foolish enough to allow them to do so. More than half
the people of the world are slaves of every vagrant thought which may
see fit to torment them.
Your mind is given you for your good and for your own use - not to
use you. There are very few people who seem to realize this and who
understand the art of managing the mind. The key to the mystery is
Concentration. A little practice will develop within every man the power
to use the mental machine properly. When you have some mental work to do
concentrate upon it to the exclusion of everything else, and you will
find that the mind will get right down to business - to the work at hand
- and matters will be cleared up in no time. There is an absence of
friction, and all waste motion or lost power is obviated. Every pound of
energy is put to use, and every revolution of the mental driving wheel
counts for something. It pays to be able to be a competent mental
engineer.
And the man who understands how to run his mental engine knows that
one of the important things is to be able to stop it when the work has
been done. He does not keep putting coal in the furnace, and maintaining
a high pressure after the work is finished, or when the day's portion of
the work has been done, and the fires should be banked until the next
day. Some people act as if the engine should be kept running whether
there was any work to be done or not, and then they complain if it gets
worn out and wobbles and needs repairing. These mental engines are fine
machines, and need intelligent care.
To those who are acquainted with the laws of mental control it seems
absurd for one to lie awake at night fretting about the problems of the
day, or more often, of the morrow. It is just as easy to slow down the
mind as it is to slow down an engine, and thousands of people are
learning to do this in these days of New Thought. The best way to do it
is to think of something else - as far different from the obtruding
thought as possible. There is no use fighting an objectionable thought
with the purpose of "downing" it - that is a great waste of energy, and
the more you keep on saying, "I won't think of this thing!" the more it
keeps on coming into your mind, for you are holding it there for the
purpose of hitting it. Let it go; don't give it another thought; fix the
mind on something entirely different, and keep the attention there by an
effort of the will. A little practice will do much for you in this
direction. There is only room for one thing at a time in the focus of
attention; so put all your attention upon one thought, and the others
will sneak off. Try it for yourself.
Asserting the Life-Force
I have spoken to you of the advantage of getting rid of Fear. Now I
wish to put LIFE into you. Many of you have been going along as if you
were dead - no ambition - no energy - no vitality - no interest - no
life. This will never do. You are stagnating. Wake up and display a few
signs of life! This is not the place in which you can stalk around like
a living corpse - this is the place for wide-awake, active, live people, and a good general awakening is what is needed; although it
would take nothing less than a blast from Gabriel's trumpet to awaken
some of the people who are stalking around thinking that they are alive,
but who are really dead to all that makes life worthwhile.
We must let Life flow through us, and allow it to express itself
naturally. Do not let the little worries of life, or the big ones
either, depress you and cause you to lose your vitality. Assert the Life
Force within you, and manifest it in every thought, act and deed, and
before long you will be exhilarated and fairly bubbling over with
vitality and energy.
Put a little life into your work - into your pleasures - into
yourself. Stop doing things in a half-headed way, and begin to take an
interest in what you are doing, saying and thinking. It is astonishing
how much interest we may find in the ordinary things of life if we will
only wake up. There are interesting things all around us - interesting
events occurring every moment - but we will not be aware of them unless
we assert our life force and begin to actually live instead of merely
existing.
No man or woman ever amounted to anything unless he or she put life
into the tasks of everyday life - the acts - the thoughts. What the
world needs is live men and women. Just look into the eyes of the people
whom you meet, and see how few of them are really alive. The most
of them lack that expression of conscious life which distinguishes the
man who lives from the one who simply exists.
I want you to acquire this sense of conscious life so that you may
manifest it in your life and show what Mental Science has done for you.
I want you to get to work today and begin to make yourselves over
according to the latest pattern. You can do this if you will only take
the proper interest in the task.
AFFIRMATION AND EXERCISE
Fix in your mind the thought that the "I" within you is very much
alive and that you are manifesting life fully, mentally and physically.
And keep this though there, aiding yourself with constant repetitions of
the watchword. Don't let the thought escape you, but keep pushing it
back into the mind. Keep it before the mental vision as much as
possible. Repeat the watchword when you awaken in the morning - say it
when you retire at night. And say it at meal times, and whenever else
you can during the day - at least once an hour. Form the mental picture
of yourself as filled with Life and Energy. Live up to it as far as
possible. When you start in to perform a task say "I AM Alive" and mix
up as much life as possible in the task. If you find yourself feeling
depressed, say "I AM Alive," and then take a few deep breaths, and with
each inhalation let the mind hold the thought that you are breathing in
Strength and Life, and as you exhale, hold the thought that you are
breathing out all the old, dead, negative conditions and are glad to get
rid of them. Then finish up with an earnest, vigorous affirmation: "I AM
Alive," and mean it when you say it too.
And let your thoughts take form in action. Don't rest content with
merely saying that you are alive, but prove it with your acts. Take an
interest in doing things, and don't go around "mooning" or daydreaming.
Get down to business, and LIVE.
Training the Habit-Mind
PROFESSOR William James, the well-known teacher of, and writer upon
Psychology very truly says: "The great thing in all education is to make
our nervous system our ally instead of our enemy. For this we must make
automatic and habitual, as early as possible, as many useful actions as
we can and as carefully guard against growing into ways that are likely
to be disadvantageous. In the acquisition of a new habit, or the leaving
off of an old one we must take care to launch ourselves with as strong
and decided initiative as possible. Never suffer an exception to occur
until the new habit is securely rooted in your life. Seize the very
first possible opportunity to act on every resolution you make and on
every emotional prompting you may experience, in the direction of the
habits you aspire to gain."
This advice is along the lines familiar to all students of Mental
Science, but it states the matter more plainly than the majority of us
have done. It impresses upon us the importance of passing on to the
subconscious mind the proper impulses, so that they will become
automatic and "second nature." Our subconscious mentality is a great
storehouse for all sorts of suggestions from ourselves and others and,
as it is the "habit-mind," we must be careful to send it the proper
material from which it may make habits. If we get into the habit of
doing certain things, we may be sure that the subconscious mentality
will make it easier for us to do just the same thing over and over
again, easier each time, until finally we are firmly bound with the
ropes and chains of the habit, and find it more or less difficult,
sometimes almost impossible, to free ourselves from the hateful thing.
We should cultivate good habits against the hour of need. The time
will come when we will be required to put forth our best efforts, and it
rests with us today whether that hour of need shall find us doing the
proper thing automatically and almost without thought, or struggling to
do it bound down and hindered with the chains of things opposed to that
which we desire at that moment.
We must be on guard at all times to prevent the forming of
undesirable habits. There may be no special harm in doing a certain
thing today, or perhaps again tomorrow, but there may be much harm in
setting up the habit of of doing that particular thing. If you
are confronted with the question: "Which of these two things should I
do?" the best answer is: "I will do that which I would like to become a
habit with me."
In forming a new habit, or in breaking an old one, we should throw
ourselves into the task with as much enthusiasm as possible, in order to
gain the most ground before the energy expends itself when it meets with
friction from the opposing habits already formed. We should start in by
making as strong an impression as possible upon the subconscious
mentality. Then we should be constantly on guard against temptations to
break the new resolution "just this once." This "just once" idea kills
off more good resolutions than any other one cause. The moment you yield
"just this once, you introduce the thin edge of the wedge that will, in
the end, split your resolution into pieces.
Equally important is the fact that each time you resist temptation
the stronger does your resolution become. Act upon your resolution as
early and as often as possible, as with every manifestation of thought
in action, the stronger does it become. You are adding to the strength
of your original resolution every time you back it up with action.
The mind has been likened to a piece of paper that has been folded.
Ever afterwards it has a tendency to fold in the same crease - unless we
make a new crease or fold, when it will follow the last lines. And the
creases are habits - every time we make one it is so much easier for the
mind to fold along the same crease afterward. Let us make our mental
creases in the right direction.
The Psychology of Emotion
ONE is apt to think of the emotions as independent from habit. We
easily may think of one acquiring habits of action, and even of
thinking, but we are apt to regard the emotions as something connected
with "feeling" and quite divorced from intellectual effort. Yet, not
withstanding the distinction between the two, both are dependent largely
upon habit, and one may repress, increase, develop, and change one's
emotions, just as one may regulate habits of action and lines of
thought.
It is an axiom of psychology that "Emotions deepen by repetition." If
a person allows a state of feeling to thoroughly take possession of him,
he will find it easier to yield to the same emotion the second time, and
so on, until the particular emotion or feeling becomes second nature to
him. If an undesirable emotion shows itself inclined to take up a
permanent abode with you, you had better start to work to get rid of it,
or at least to master it. And the best time to do this is at the start;
for each repetition renders the habit more firmly entrenched, and the
task of dislodging it more difficult.
Were you ever jealous? If so, you will remember how insidious was its
first approach; how subtly it whispered hateful suggestions into your
willing ear, and how gradually it followed up such suggestions, until,
finally you began to see green. (Jealousy has an effect upon the bile,
and causes it to poison the blood. This is why the idea of green is
always associated with it.) Then you will remember how the thing seemed
to grow, taking possession of you until you scarcely could shake it off.
You found it much easier to become jealous the next time. It seemed to
bring before you all sorts of objects apparently justifying your
suspicions and feeling. Everything began to look green - the green-eyed
monster waxed fat.
And so it is with every feeling or emotion. If you give way to a fit
of rage, you will find it easier to become angry the next time, on less
provocation. The habit of feeling and acting "mean" does not take long
to firmly settle itself in its new home if encouraged. Worry is a great
habit for growing and waxing fat. People start by worrying about big
things, and then begin to worry and fret about some smaller thing. And
then the merest trifle worries and distresses them. They imagine that
all sorts of evil things are about to befall them. If they start on a
journey they are certain there is going to be a wreck. If a telegram
comes, it is sure to contain some dreadful tidings. If a child seems a
little quiet, the worrying mother is positive it is going to fall ill
and die. If the husband seems thoughtful, as he revolves some business
plan in his mind, then the good wife is convinced that he is beginning
to cease to love her, and indulges in a crying spell. And so it goes -
worry, worry, worry - each indulgence making the habit more at home.
After a while the continued thought shows itself in action. Not only is
the mind poisoned by the blue thoughts, but the forehead shows deep
lines between the eyebrows, and the voice takes on that whining, rasping
tone so common among worry-burdened people.
The condition of mind known as "fault-finding" is another emotion
that grows fat with exercise. First, fault is found with this thing,
then with that, and finally with everything. The person becomes a
chronic "nagger" - a burden to friends and relatives, and a thing to be
avoided by outsiders. Women make the greatest naggers. Not because men
are any better, but simply because a man nagger apt to have the habit
knocked out of him by other men who will not stand his nonsense - he
find that he is making things too hot for himself and he reforms; while
a woman has more of a chance to indulge in the habit. But this nagging
is all a matter of habit. It grows from small beginnings, and each time
it is indulged in it throws out another root, branch, or tendril, and
fastens itself the closer to the one who has given it soil in which to
grow.
Envy, uncharitableness, gossip scandal-mongering, are all habits of
this kind. The seeds are in every human breast, and only need good soil
and a little watering to become lusty and strong.
Each time you give way to one of these negative emotions, the easier
do you make it for a recurrence of the same thing, or similar ones.
Sometimes by encouraging one unworthy emotion, you find that you have
given room for the growth of a whole family of these mental weeds.
Now, this is not a good old orthodox preachment against the sin of
bad thoughts. It is merely a calling of your attention to the law
underlying the psychology of emotion. Nothing new about it - old as the
hills - so old that many of us have forgotten all about it.
If you wish to manifest these constantly disagreeable and unpleasant
traits, and to suffer the unhappiness that comes from them, by all means
do so - that is your own business, and privilege. It's none of mine, and
I am not preaching at you - it keeps me busy minding my own business and
keeping an eye on my own undesirable habits and actions. I am merely
telling you the law regarding the matter, and you may do the rest. If
you wish to choke out these habits, there are two ways open to you.
First, whenever you find yourself indulging in a negative thought or
feeling, take right hold of it and say to it firmly, and vigorously,
"Get out!" It won't like this at first, and will bridle up, curve its
back and snarl like an offended cat. But never mind - just say, "Scat"
to it. The next time it will not be so confident and aggressive - it
will have manifested a little of the fear-habit. Each time you repress
and choke out a tendency of this kind, the weaker it will become, and
the stronger will your will be.
Professor James says: "Refuse to express a passion, and it dies.
Count ten before venting your anger, and its occasion seems ridiculous.
Whistling to keep up courage is no mere figure of speech. On the other
hand, sit all day in a moping posture, sigh, and reply to everything
with a dismal voice, and your melancholy lingers. There is no more
valuable precept in moral education than this, as all who have
experience know: if we wish to conquer emotional tendencies in
ourselves, we must assiduously, and in the first instance,
cold-bloodedly, go through the outward movements of those contrary
dispositions we prefer to cultivate.
Smooth the brow, brighten the eye, contract the dorsal rather than
the ventral aspect of the frame, and speak in a major key, pass the
genial compliment, and your heart must be frigid indeed if it does not
gradually thaw.
Developing new Brain Cells
I have spoken of the plan of getting rid of undesirable states of
feeling by driving them out. But a far better way is to cultivate the
feeling or emotion directly opposed to the one you wish to eradicate.
We are very apt to regard ourselves as the creatures of our emotions
and feelings, and to fancy that these feelings and emotions are "we."
But such is far from being the truth. It is true that the majority of
the race are slaves of their emotions and feelings, and are governed by
them to a great degree. They think that feelings are things that rule
one and from which one cannot free himself, and so they cease to rebel.
They yield to the feeling without question, although they may know that
the emotion or mental trait is calculated to injure them, and to bring
unhappiness and failure instead of happiness and success. They say, "We
are made that way," and let it go at that.
The new Psychology is teaching the people better things. It tells
them that they are masters of their emotions and feelings, instead of
being their slaves. It tells them that brain-cells may be developed that
will manifest along desirable lines, and that the old brain-cells that
have been manifesting so unpleasantly may be placed on the retired list,
and allowed to atrophy from want of use. People may make themselves
over, and change their entire natures. This is not mere idle theory, but
is a working fact which has been demonstrated by thousands of people,
and which is coming more and more before the attention of the race.
No matter what theory of mind we entertain, we must admit that the
brain is the organ and instrument of the mind, in our present state of
existence, at least, and that the brain must be considered in this
matter. The brain is like a wonderful musical instrument, having
millions of keys, upon which we may play innumerable combinations of
sounds. We come into the world with certain tendencies, temperaments,
and pre-dispositions, We may account for these tendencies by heredity,
or we may account for them upon theories of pre-existence, but the facts
remain the same. Certain keys seem to respond to our touch more easily
than others. Certain notes seem to sound forth as the current of
circumstances sweeps over the strings. And certain other notes are less
easily vibrated. But we find that if we but make an effort of the will
to restrain the utterance of some of these easily sounded strings, they
will grow more difficult to sound, and less liable to be stirred by the
passing breeze. And if we will pay attention to some of the other
strings that have not been giving forth a clear tone, we will soon get
them in good working order; their notes will chime forth clear and
vibrant, and will drown the less pleasant sounds.
We have millions of unused brain-cells awaiting our cultivation. We
are using but a few of them, and some of these we are working to death.
We are able to give some of these cells a rest, by using other cells.
The brain may be trained and cultivated in a manner incredible to one
who has not looked into the subject. Mental attitudes may be acquired
and cultivated, changed and discarded, at will. There is no longer any
excuse for people manifesting unpleasant and harmful mental states. We
have the remedy in our own hands.
We acquire habits of thought, feeling, and action, repeated use. We
may be born with a tendency in a certain direction, or we may acquire
tendencies by suggestions from other; such as the examples of those
around us, suggestions from reading, listening to teachers. We are a
bundle of mental habits. Each time we indulge in an undesirable thought
or habit, the easier does it become for us to repeat that thought or
action.
Mental scientists are in the habit of speaking of desirable thoughts
or mental attitudes as "positive," and of the undesirable ones as
"negative." There is a good reason for this. The mind instinctively
recognizes certain things as good for the individual to which it
belongs, and it clears the path for such thoughts, and interposes the
least resistance to them. They have a much greater effect than an
undesirable thought possesses, and one positive thought will counteract
a number of negative thoughts. The best way to overcome undesirable or
negative thoughts and feelings is to cultivate the positive ones. The
positive thought is the strongest plant, and will in time starve out the
negative one by withdrawing from it the nourishment necessary for its
existence.
Of course the negative thought will set up a vigorous resistance at
first, for it is a fight for life with it. In the slang words of the
time, it "sees its finish" if the positive thought is allowed to grow
and develop; and, consequently it makes things unpleasant for the
individual until he has started well into the work of starving it out.
Brain cells do not like to be laid on the shelf any more than does any
other form of living energy, and they rebel and struggle until they
become too weak to do so. The best way is to pay as little attention as
possible to these weeds of the mind, but put in as much time as possible
watering, caring for and attending to the new and beautiful plants in
the garden of the mind.
For instance, if you are apt to hate people, you can best overcome
the negative thought by cultivating Love in its place. Think Love, and
act it out, as often as possible. Cultivate thoughts of kindness, and
act as kindly as you can to everyone with whom you come in contact. You
will have trouble at the start, but gradually Love will master Hate, and
the latter will begin to droop and wither. If you have a tendency toward
the "blues" cultivate a smile, and a cheerful view of things. Insist
upon your mouth wearing upturned corners, and make an effort of the will
to look upon the bright side of things. The "blue-devils" will set up a
fight, of course, but pay no attention to them - just go on cultivating
optimism and cheerfulness. Let "Bright, Cheerful and Happy" be your
watchword, and try to live it out.
These recipes may seem very old and timeworn, but they are
psychological truths and may be used by you to advantage. If you once
comprehend the nature of the thing, the affirmations and autosuggestions
of the several schools may be understood and taken advantage of. You may
make yourself energetic instead of slothful, active instead of lazy, by
this method. It is all a matter of practice and steady work. New Thought
people often have much to say about "holding the thought;" and, indeed,
it is necessary to "hold the thought" in order to accomplish results.
But something more is needed. You must "act out" the thought until it
becomes a fixed habit with you. Thoughts take form in action; and in
turn actions influence thought. So by "acting out" certain lines of
thought, the actions react upon the mind, and increase the development
of the part of the mind having close relation to the act. Each time the
mind entertains a thought, the easier becomes the resulting action - and
each time an act is performed, the easier becomes the corresponding
thought. So you see the thing works both ways - action and reaction. If
you feel cheerful and happy, it is very natural for you to laugh. And if
you will laugh a little, you will begin to feel bright and cheerful. Do
you see what I am trying to get at? Here it is, in a nutshell: if you
wish to cultivate a certain habit of action, begin by cultivating the
mental attitude corresponding to it. And as a means of cultivating that
mental attitude, start in to "act-out " or go through, the motions of
the act corresponding to the thought. Now, see if you cannot apply this
rule. Take up something that you really feel should be done, but which
you do not feel like doing. Cultivate the thought leading up to it - say
to yourself: "I like to do so and so," and then go through the motions
(cheerfully, remember!) and act out the thought that you like to do the
thing. Take an interest in the doing - study out the best way to do it -
put brains into it - take a pride in it - and you will find yourself
doing the thing with a considerable amount of pleasure and interest -
you will have cultivated a new habit.
If you prefer trying it on some mental trait of which you wish to be
rid, it will work the same way. Start in to cultivate the opposite
trait, and think it out and act it out for all you are worth. Then watch
the change that will come over you. Don't be discouraged at the
resistance you will encounter at first, but sing gaily: "I Can and I
Will," and get to work in earnest. The important thing in this work is
to keep cheerful and interested. If you manage to do this, the rest will
be easy.
The Attractive Power - Desire Force
WE have discussed the necessity of getting rid of fear, that your
desire may have full strength with which to work. Supposing that you
have mastered this part of the task, or at least started on the road to
mastery, I will now call your attention to another important branch of
the subject. I allude to the subject of mental leaks. No, I don't mean
the leakage arising from your failure to keep your own secrets - that is
also important, but forms another story. The leakage I am now referring
to is that occasioned by the habit of having the attention attracted to
and distracted by every passing fancy.
In order to attain a thing it is necessary that the mind should fall
in love with it, and be conscious of its existence, almost to the
exclusion of everything else. You must get in love with the thing you
wish to attain, just as much as you would if you were to meet the girl
or man you wished to marry. I do not mean that you should become a
monomaniac upon the subject, and should lose all interest in everything
else in the world - that won't do, for the mind must have recreation and
change. But, I do mean that you must be so "set" upon the desired thing
that all else will seem of secondary importance. A man in love may be
pleasant to everyone else, and may go through the duties and pleasures
of life with good spirit, but underneath it all he is humming to himself
"Just One Girl;" and every one of his actions is bent toward getting
that girl, and making a comfortable home for her. Do you see what I
mean? You must get in love with the thing you want, and you must get in
love with it in earnest - none of this latter-day flirting, "on-today
and off-tomorrow" sort of love, but the good old-fashioned kind, that
used to make it impossible for a young man to get to sleep unless he
took a walk around his best girl's house, just to be sure it was still
there. That's the real kind!
And the man or woman in search of success must make of that desired
thing his ruling passion - he must keep his mind on the main chance.
Success is jealous - that's why we speak of her as feminine. She demands
a man's whole affection, and if he begins flirting with other fair
charmers, she soon turns her back upon him. If a man allows his strong
interest in the main chance to be sidetracked, he will be the loser.
Mental Force operates best when it is concentrated. You must give to the
desired thing your best and most earnest thought. Just as the man who is
thoroughly in love will think out plans and schemes whereby he may
please the fair one, so will the man who is in love with his work or
business give it his best thought, and the result will be that a hundred
and one plans will come into his field of consciousness, many of which
are very important. The mind works on the subconscious plane, remember,
and almost always along the lines of the ruling passion or desire. It
will fix up things, and patch together plans and schemes, and when you
need them the most it will pop them into your consciousness, and you
will feel like hurrahing, just as if you had received some valuable aid
from outside.
But if you scatter your thought-force, the subconscious mind will not
know just how to please you, and the result is that you are apt to be
put off from this source of aid and assistance. Beside this, you will
miss the powerful result of concentrated thought in the conscious
working out of the details of your plans. And then again the man whose
mind is full of a dozen interests fails to exert the attracting power
that is manifested by the man of the one ruling passion, and he fails to
draw to him persons, things, and results that will aid in the working
out of his plans, and will also fail to place himself in the current of
attraction whereby he is brought into contact with those who will be
glad to help him because of harmonious interests.
I have noticed, in my own affairs, that when I would allow myself to
be side-tracked by anything outside of my regular line of work, it would
be only a short time before my receipts dropped off, and my business
showed signs of a lack of vitality. Now, many may say that this was
because I left undone some things that I would have done if my mind had
been centered on the business. This is true; but I have noticed like
results in cases where there was nothing to be done - cases in
which the seed was sown, and the crop was awaited. And in just such
cases, as soon as I directed my thought to the matter the seed began to
sprout. I do not man that I had to send out great mental waves with the
idea of affecting people - not a bit of it. I simply began to realize
what a good thing I had, and how much people wanted it, and how glad
they would be to know of it and all that sort of thing, and lo! My
thought seemed to vitalize the work, and the seed began to sprout. This
is no mere fancy, for I have experienced it on several occasions; I have
spoken to many others on the subject, and I find that our experiences
tally perfectly. So don't get into the habit of permitting these mental
leaks. Keep your Desire fresh and active, and let it get in its work
without interference from conflicting desires. Keep in love with the
thing you wish to attain - feed your fancy with it - see it as
accomplished already, but don't lose your interest. Keep your eye
on the main chance, and keep your one ruling passion strong and
vigorous. Don't be a mental polygamist - one mental love is all that a
man needs - that is, one at a time.
Some scientists have claimed that something that might as well be
called "Love" is at the bottom of the whole of life. They claim that the
love of the plant for water causes it to send forth its roots until the
loved thing is found. They say that the love of the flower for the sun
causes it to grow away from the dark places, so that it may receive the
light. The so-called "chemical affinities" are really a form of love.
And Desire is a manifestation of this Universal Life Love. So I am not
using a mere figure of speech when I tell you that you must love the
thing you wish to attain. Nothing but intense love will enable you to
surmount the many obstacles placed in your path. Nothing but that love
will enable you to bear the burdens of the task. The more Desire you
have for a thing, the more you Love it; and the more you Love it, the
greater will be the attractive force exerted toward its attainment -
both within yourself, and outside of you.
So love but one thing at a time - don't be a mental Mormon.
The Great Dynamic Forces
YOU have noticed the difference between the successful and strong men
in any walk of life, and the unsuccessful weak men around them. You are
conscious of the widely differing characteristics of the two classes,
but somehow find it difficult to express just in what the difference
lies. Let us take a look at the matter.
Burton said: "The longer I live, the more certain I am that the great
difference between men, the feeble and the powerful, the great and the
insignificant, is energy and invincible determination - a purpose once
fixed and then Death or Victory. That quality will do anything that can
be done in this world - and no talents, no circumstances, no
opportunities will make a two-legged creature a man without it." I do
not see how the idea could be more clearly expressed than Burton has
spoken. He has put his finger right in the center of the subject - his
eye has seen into the heart of it.
Energy and invincible determination - these two things will sweep
away mighty barriers, and will surmount the greatest obstacles. And yet
they must be used together. Energy without determination will go to
waste. Lots of men have plenty of energy - they are full to overflowing
with it; and yet they lack concentration - they lack the concentrated
force that enables them to bring their power to bear upon the right
spot. Energy is not nearly so rare a thing as many imagine it to be. I
can look around me at any lime, and pick out a number of people I know
who are full of energy - many of them are energy plus - and yet,
somehow, they do not seem to make any headway. They are wasting their
energy all the time. Now they are fooling with this thing - now meddling
with that. They will take up some trifling thing of no real interest or
importance, and waste enough energy and nervous force to carry them
through a hard day's work, and yet when they are through, nothing has
been accomplished.
Others who have plenty of energy, fail to direct it by the power of
the Will toward the desired end. "Invincible determination" - those are
the words. Do they not thrill you with their power? If you have
something to do, get to work and do it. Marshal your energy, and then
guide and direct it by your Will - bestow upon it that "invincible
determination" and you will do the thing.
Everyone has within him a giant will, but the majority of us are too
lazy to use it. We cannot get ourselves nerved up to the point at which
we can say, truthfully: "I Will. If we can but pluck up our courage to
that point, and will then pin it in place so that it will not slip back,
we will be able to call into play that wonderful power - the Human Will.
Man, as a rule, has but the faintest conception of the power of the
Will, but those who have studied along the occult teachings, know that
the Will is one of the great dynamic forces of the universe, and if
harnessed and directed properly it is capable of accomplishing almost
miraculous things.
"Energy and Invincible Determination: -- aren't they magnificent
words? Commit them to memory - press them like a die into the wax of
your mind, and they will be a constant inspiration to you in hours of
need. If you can get these words to vibrating in your being, you will be
a giant among pygmies. Say these words over and over again, and see how
you are filled with new life - see how your blood will circulate - how
your nerves will tingle. Make these words a part of yourself, and then
go forth anew to the battle of life, encouraged and strengthened. Put
them into practice. "Energy and Invincible Determination" - let that be
your motto in your work-a-day life, and you will be one of those rare
men who are able to "do things."
Many persons are deterred from doing their best by the fact that they
underrate themselves by comparison with the successful ones of life, or
rather, overrate the successful ones by comparison with themselves.
One of the curious things noticed by those who are brought in contact
with the people who have "arrived" is the fact that these successful
people are not extraordinary after all. You meet with some great writer,
and you are disappointed to find him very ordinary indeed. He does not
converse brilliantly, and, in fact, you know a score of everyday people
who seem far more brilliant than this man who dazzles you by his
brightness in his books. You meet some great statesman, and he does not
seem nearly so wise as lots of old fellows in your own village, who
waste their wisdom upon the desert air. You meet some great captain of
industry, and he does not give you the impression of the shrewdness so
marked in some little bargain-driving trader in your own town. How is
this, anyway? Are the reputations of these people fictitious, or what is
the trouble
The trouble is this: you have imagined these people to be made of
superior metal, and are disappointed to find them made of the same stuff
as yourself and those about you. But, you ask, wherein does their
greatness of achievement lie? Chiefly in this: Belief in themselves and
in their inherent power, in their faculty to concentrate on the work in
hand, when they are working, and in their ability to prevent leaks of
power when they are not working. They believe in themselves, and make
every effort count. Your village wise man spills his wisdom on every
corner, and talks to a lot of fools; when if he really were wise he
would save up his wisdom and place it where it would do some work. The
brilliant writer does not waste his wit upon every corner; in fact, he
shuts the drawer in which he contains his wit, and opens it only when he
is ready to concentrate and get down to business. The captain of
industry has no desire to impress you with his shrewdness and
"smartness. He never did, even when he was young. While his companions
were talking and boasting, and "blowing," this future successful
financier was "sawin' wood and sayin' nuthin'."
The great people of the world - that is, those who have "arrived" -
are not very different from you, or me, or the rest of us - all of us
are about the same at the base. You have only to meet them to see how
very "ordinary" they are, after all. But, don't forget the fact that
they know how to use the material that is in them; while the rest of the
crowd does not, and, in fact, even doubts whether the true stuff is
there. The man or woman who "gets there", usually starts out by
realizing that he or she is not so very different, after all, from the
successful people that they hear so much about. This gives them
confidence, and the result is they find out that they are able to "do
things." Then they learn to keep their mouths closed, and to avoid
wasting and dissipating their energy. They store up energy, and
concentrate it upon the task at hand; while their companions are
scattering their energies in every direction, trying to show off and let
people know how smart they are. The man or woman who "gets there,"
prefers to wait for the applause that follows deed accomplished, and
cares very little for the praise that attends promises of what we expect
to do "some day," or an exhibition of "smartness" without works.
One of the reasons that people who are thrown in with successful men
often manifest success themselves, is that they are able to watch the
successful man and sort of "catch the trick" of his greatness. They see
that he is an everyday sort of man, but that he thoroughly believes in
himself, and also that he does not waste energy, but reserves all his
force for the actual tasks before him. And, profiting by example, they
start to work and put the lesson into practice in their own lives.
Now what is the moral of this talk? Simply this: Don't undervalue
yourself, or overvalue others. Realize that you are made of good stuff,
and that locked within your mind are many good things. Then get to work
and unfold those good things, and make something out of that good stuff.
Do this by attention to the things before you, and by giving to each the
best that is in you, knowing that plenty of more good things are in you
ready for the fresh tasks that will come. Put the best of yourself into
the undertaking on hand, and do not cheat the present task in favor of
some future one. Your supply is inexhaustible. And don't waste your good
stuff on the crowd of gapers, watchers and critics who are standing
around watching you work. Save your good stuff for your job, and don't
be in too much of a hurry for applause. Save up your good thoughts for
"copy" if you are a writer; save up your bright schemes for actual
practice, if you are a business man; save up your wisdom for occasion,
if you are a statesman; and, in each case, avoid the desire to scatter
your pears before - well, before the gaping crowd that wants to be
entertained by a "free show."
Nothing very "high" about this teaching, perhaps, but it is what many
of you need very much. Stop fooling, and get down to business. Stop
wasting good raw material, and start to work making something
worthwhile.
Claiming your Own
IN a recent conversation, I was telling a woman to pluck up courage
and to reach out for a certain good thing for which she had been longing
for many years, and which, at last, appeared to be in sight. I told her
that it looked as if her desire was about to be gratified - that the Law
of Attraction was bringing it to her. She lacked faith, and kept on
repeating, "Oh! It's too good to be true - it's too good for me! She had not emerged from the worm-of-the-dust stage, and although she
was in sight of the Promised Land she refused to enter it because it
"was too good for her." l think I succeeded in putting
sufficient "ginger" into her to enable her to claim her own, for the
last reports indicate that she is taking possession.
But that is not what I wish to tell you. I want to call your
attention to the fact that nothing is too good for YOU - no matter how
great the thing may be - no matter how undeserving you may seem to be.
You are entitled to the best there is, for it is your direct
inheritance. So don't be afraid to ask - demand - and take. The good
things of the world are not the portion of any favored sons. They belong
to all, but they come only to those who are wise enough to recognize
that the good things are theirs by right, and who are sufficiently
courageous to reach out for them. Many good things are lost for want of
the asking. Many splendid things are lost to you because of your feeling
that you are unworthy of them. Many great things are lost to you because
you lack the confidence and courage to demand and take possession of
them.
"None but the brave deserves the fair," says the old adage, and the
rule is true in all lines of human effort. If you keep on repeating that
you are unworthy of the good thing - that it is too good for you - the
Law will be apt to take you at your word and believe what you say.
That's a peculiar thing about the Law - it believes - what you say - it
takes you in earnest. So beware what you say to it, for it will be apt
to give credence. Say to it that you are worthy of the best there is,
and that there is nothing too good for you, and you will be likely to
have the Law take you in earnest, and say, "I guess he is right; I'm
going to give him the whole bakeshop if he wants it - he knows his
rights, and what's the use of trying to deny it to him?" But if you say,
"Oh, it's too good for me! The Law will probably say, "Well, I
wouldn't wonder but that that is so. Surely he ought to know, and it
isn't for me to contradict him." And so it goes.
Why should anything be too good for you? Did you ever stop to think
just what you are? You are a manifestation of the Whole Thing, and have
a perfect right to all there is. Or, if you prefer it this way, you are
a child of the Infinite, and are heir to it all. You are telling the
truth in either statement, or both. At any rate, no matter for what you
ask, you are merely demanding your own. And the more in earnest you are
about demanding it - the more confident you are of receiving it - the
more will you use in reaching out for it - the surer you will be to
obtain it.
Strong desire - confident expectation - courage in action - these
things bring to you your own. But before you put these forces into
effect, you must awaken to a realization that you are merely asking for
your own, and not for something to which you have no right or claim. So
long as there exists in your mind the last sneaking bit of doubt as to
your right to the things you want, you will be setting up a resistance
to the operation of the Law. You may demand as vigorously as you please,
but you will lack the courage to act, if you have a lingering doubt of
your right to the thing you want. If you persist in regarding the
desired thing as if it belonged to another, instead of to yourself, you
will be placing yourself in the position of the covetous or envious man,
or even in the position of a tempted thief. In such a case your mind
will revolt at proceeding with the work, for it instinctively will
recoil from the idea of taking what is not your own - the mind is
honest. But when your realize that the best the Universe holds belongs
to you as a Divine Heir, and that there is enough for all without your
robbing anyone else; then the friction is removed, and the barrier
broken down, and the Law proceeds to do its work.
I do not believe in this "humble" business. This meek and lowly
attitude does not appeal to me - there is no sense in it, at all. The
idea of making a virtue of such things, when Man is the heir of the
Universe, and is entitled to whatever he needs for his growth, happiness
and satisfaction! I do not mean that one should assume a blustering and
domineering attitude of mind - that is also absurd, for true strength
does not so exhibit itself. The blusterer is a self-confessed weakling -
he blusters to disguise his weakness. The truly strong man is calm,
self-contained, and carries with him a consciousness of strength which
renders unnecessary the bluster and fuss of assumed strength. But get
away from this hypnotism of "humility" - this "meek and lowly" attitude
of mind. Remember the horrible example of Uriah Heep, and beware of
imitating him. Throw back you head, and look the world square in the
face. There's nothing to be afraid of - the world is apt to be as much
afraid of you, as yell are of it, anyway. Be a man, or woman, and not a
crawling thing. And this applies to your mental attitude, as well as to
your outward demeanor. Stop this crawling in your mind. See yourself as
standing erect and facing life without fear, and you will gradually grow
into your ideal.
There is nothing that is too good for you - not a thing. The best
there is, is not beginning to be good enough for you; for there are
still better things ahead. The best gift that the world has to offer is
a mere bauble compared to the great things in the Cosmos that await your
coming of age. So don't be afraid to reach out for these playthings of
life - these baubles of this plane of consciousness. Reach out for them
- grab a whole fistful - play with them until you are tired; that's what
they are made for, anyway. They are made for our express use - not to
look at, but to be played with, if you desire. Help yourself - there's a
whole shopful of these toys awaiting your desire, demand and taking.
Don't be bashful! Don't let me hear any more of this silly talk about
things being too good for you. Pshaw! You have been like the Emperor's
little son thinking that the tin soldiers and toy drum were far too good
for him, and refusing to reach out for them. But you don't find this
trouble with children as a rule. They instinctively recognize that
nothing is too good for them. They want all that is in sight to play
with, and they seem to feel that the things are theirs by right. And
that is the condition of mind that we seekers after the Divine Adventure
must cultivate. Unless we become as little children we cannot enter the
Kingdom of Heaven.
The things we see around us are the playthings of the Kindergarten of
God, playthings which we use in our game-tasks. Help yourself to them -
ask for them without bashfulness demand as many as you can make use of -
they are yours. And if you don't see just what you want, ask for it -
there's a big reserve stock on the shelves, and in the closets. Play,
play, play, to your heart's content. Learn to weave mats - to build
houses with the blocks - to stitch outlines on the squares - play the
game through, and play it well. And demand all the proper materials for
the play - don't be bashful - there's enough to go round.
But - remember this! While all this be true, the best things are
still only game-things - toys, blocks, mats, cubes, and all the rest.
Useful, most useful for the learning of the lessons - pleasant, most
pleasant with which to play - and desirable, most desirable, for these
purposes. Get all the fun and profit out of the use of things that is
possible. Throw yourself heartily into the game, and play it out - it is
Good. But, here's the thing to remember - never lose sight of the fact
that these good things are but playthings - part of the game - and you
must be perfectly willing to lay them aside when the time comes to pass
into the next class, and not cry and mourn because you must leave your
playthings behind you. Do not allow yourself to become unduly attached
to them - they are for your use and pleasure, but are not a part of you
- not essential to your happiness in the next stage. Despise them not
because of their lack of Reality - they are great things relatively, and
you may as well have all the fun out of them that you can - don't be a
spiritual prig, standing aside and refusing to join in the game. But do
not tie yourself to them - they are good to use and play with, but not
good enough to use you and to make you a plaything. Don't
let the toys turn the tables on you.
This is the difference between the master of Circumstances and the
Slave of Circumstances. The Slave thinks that these playthings are real,
and that he is not good enough to have them. He gets only a few toys,
because he is afraid to ask for more, and he misses most of the fun. And
then, considering the toys to be real, and not realizing that there are
plenty more where these came from, he attaches himself to the little
trinkets that have come his way, and allows himself to be made a slave
of them. He is afraid that they may be taken away from him and he is
afraid to toddle across the floor and help himself to the others. The
Master knows that all are his for the asking. He demands that which he
needs from day to day, and does not worry about over-loading himself;
for he knows that there are "lots more," and that he cannot be cheated
out of them. He plays, and plays well, and has a good time in the play -
and he learns his Kindergarten lessons in the playing. But he does not
become too much attached to his toys. He is willing to fling away the
worn-out toys, and reach out for a new one. And when he is called into
the next room for promotion, he drops on the floor the worn-out toys of
the day, and with glistening eyes and confident attitude of mind,
marches into the next room - into the Great Unknown - with a smile on
his face. He is not afraid, for he hears the voice of the Teacher, and
knows that she is there waiting for him - in that Great Next Room.
Law, not Chance
SOME time ago I was talking to a man about the Attractive Power of
Thought. He said that he did not believe that Thought could attract
anything to him, and that it was all a matter of luck. He had found, he
said, that ill luck relentlessly pursued him, and that everything he
touched went wrong. It always had, and always would, and he had grown to
expect it. When he undertook a new thing he knew beforehand that it
would go wrong and that no good would come of it. Oh, no! There wasn't
anything in the theory of Attractive Thought, so far as he could see; it
was all a matter of luck!
This man failed to see that by his own confession he was giving a
most convincing argument in favor of the Law of Attraction. He was
testifying that he was always expecting things to go wrong, and that
they always came about as he expected. He was a magnificent illustration
of the Law of Attraction - but he didn't know it, and no argument seemed
to make the matter clear to him. He was "up against it," and there was
no way out of it - he always expected the ill luck. and every occurrence
proved that he was right, and that the Mental Science position was all
nonsense.
There are many people who seem to think that the only way in which
the Law of Attraction operates is when one wishes hard, strong
and steady. They do not seem to realize that a strong belief is
as efficacious as a strong wish. The successful man believes in himself
and his ultimate success, and, paying no attention to little setbacks,
stumbles, tumbles and slips, presses on eagerly to the goal, believing
all the time that he will get there. His views and aims may alter as he
progresses, and he may change his plans or have them changed for him,
but all the time he knows in his heart that he will eventually "get
there." He is not steadily wishing he may get there - he simply
feels and believes it, and thereby sets to operation the
strongest forces known in the world of thought.
The man who just as steadily believes he is going to fail will
invariably fail. How could he help it? There is no special miracle about
it. Everything he does, thinks and says is tinctured with the thought of
failure. Other people catch his spirit, and fail to trust him or his
ability, which occurrences he in turn sets down as but other exhibitions
of his ill luck, instead of ascribing them to his belief and expectation
of failure. He is suggesting failure to himself all the time, and he
invariably takes on the effect of the autosuggestion. Then, again, he by
his negative thoughts shuts up that portion of his mind from which
should come the ideas and plans conducive to success and which do come
to the man who is expecting success because he believes in it. A state
of discouragement is not the one in which bright ideas come to us. It is
only when we are enthused and hopeful that our minds work out the bright
ideas which we may turn to account.
Men instinctively feel the atmosphere of failure hovering around
certain of their fellows, and on the other hand recognize something
about others which leads them to say, when they hear of a temporary
mishap befalling such a one: "Oh, he'll come out all right somehow - you
can't down him." It is the atmosphere caused by the prevailing
Mental Attitude. Clear up your Mental Atmosphere!
There is no such thing as chance. Law maintains everywhere, and all
that happens because of the operation of Law. You cannot name the
simplest thing that ever occurred by chance - try it, and then run the
thing down to a final analysis, and you will see it as the result of
law. It is as plain as mathematics. Plan and purpose; cause and effect.
From the movements of worlds to the growth of the grain of mustard seed
- all the result of Law. The fall of the stone down the mountainside is
not chance - forces which had been in operation for centuries caused it.
And back of that cause were other causes, and so on until the Causeless
Cause is reached.
And Life is not the result of chance - the Law is here, too. The Law
is in full operation whether you know it or not - whether you believe in
it or not. You may be the ignorant object upon which the Law
operates, and bring yourself all sorts of trouble because of your
ignorance of or opposition to the Law. Or you may fall in with the
operations to the Law - get into its current, as it were - and Life
will seem a far different thing to you. You cannot get outside of the
Law, by refusing to have anything to do with it. You are at liberty
to oppose it and produce all the friction you wish to - it doesn't'
hurt the Law, and you may keep it up until you learn your lesson.
The Law of Thought Attraction is one name for the law, or rather for
one manifestation of it. Again I say, your thoughts are real things.
They go forth from you in all directions, combining with thoughts of
like kind - opposing thoughts of a different character - forming
combinations - going where they are attracted - flying away from thought
centers opposing them. And your mind attracts the thought of others,
which have been sent out by them conscious or unconsciously. But it
attracts only those thoughts which are in harmony with its own. Like
attracts like, and opposites repel opposites, in the world of thought.
If you set your mind to the keynote of courage, confidence, strength
and success, you attract to yourself thoughts of like nature; people of
like nature; things that fit in the mental tune. Your prevailing thought
or mood determines that which is to be drawn toward you - picks out your
mental bedfellow. You are today setting into motion thought currents
which will in time attract toward you thoughts, people and conditions in
harmony with the predominant note of your thought. Your thought will
mingle with that of others of like nature and mind, and you will be
attracted toward each other, and will surely come together with a common
purpose sooner or later, unless one or the other of you should change
the current of his thoughts.
Fall in with the operations of the law. Make it a part of yourself.
Get into its currents. Maintain your poise. Set your mind to the keynote
of Courage, Confidence and Success. Get in touch with all the thoughts
of that kind that are emanating every hour from hundreds of minds. Get
the best that is to be had in the thought world. The best is there, so
be satisfied with nothing less. Get into partnership with good minds.
Get into the right vibrations. You must be tired of being tossed about
by the operations of the Law - get into harmony with it