Prosperity Through Thought Force
Bruce Maclelland
1907
Author's Foreword
Less than three years ago I was a poor bookkeeper
earning one thousand dollars per year in a city where living on that
amount
was possible only by the strictest economy.
My personality was buried in a sea of worry, anger, suspicion and
hatred. These
things prevented my evolution to the position
to which my talents entitled me. I knew I should not be under inferior
men,
but did not know why it was so. Smarting
under a sense of injustice, I felt the fiercest antagonism to both
people and things.
My friends were few, my
health poor, hard work and poverty my lot, and there was nothing to
indicate a brighter future. The
thought was brought to my attention that
success in life could be obtained by developing strength of character
and controlling
my mental forces. The idea appealed to me as
possibly true, while if it were not true there would be no injury
resulting from
a trial of it. I worked vigorously to
cultivate strength of character, constantly suggesting courage, peace,
force and decision.
From the awakening in morn until slumber
closed my consciousness the suggestions were incessant. It was a year
and a half
before any financial improvement was noticed,
though it was apparent that I was getting stronger daily.
At the end of the first year
I resigned my position, determined to tolerate existing circumstances
no longer; without money
or friends. I did not know where I was going
or what I would do. I had grown. Where a year before I had worried
myself ill
through fear of losing my position, I now
voluntarily gave it up, knowing and feeling I would do better. Within
twenty-four
hours an offer of one hundred dollars per
month was received and I accepted. In six months my salary was advanced
to eighteen
hundred a year because I was the right man in
the right place and had, during a crisis in the business, in the
absence of
the manager, dared to assume authority and
act independently with a successful outcome.
At the meeting of the Board
of Directors I was regularly elected secretary of the corporation by
which I was employed, and
two months later my salary was advanced
another fifty dollars a month because I conceived and carried out two
ideas which
netted many thousands of dollars to my
employers.
At the end of the second
year of self-suggestions I resigned and, without capital, opened an
office for myself. I was given
credit for over twenty thousand dollars,
mainly on my record of past dealings. These things were attributable to
the fact
that those who had dealt with me had
confidence in my judgment and honesty. They felt the radiations of
honesty, ability and
judgment from my mind. Briefly, in one year I
had paid every dollar I owed and had eleven thousand dollars ahead. I
then quit
the business in order to have leisure to
write the personal experiences upon which the ideas herein contained are
based.
But I must acknowledge that
even now, with plenty of money for all needs, a happy home and
everything one need wish, I have
moments of depression, of loss of confidence
in self, lack of faith in God, as well as the occasional inability to
sustain
a happy buoyancy and contentment of mind.
Then the reaction comes and I regain strength to calmly wait and be led,
strong
in my belief of a guiding hand. I hope to
help those who peruse these pages by instilling courage into them until
they are
strong enough to accomplish their
aspirations.
Readers will not find this a
tale conceived in a fantastic moment of idleness. The writer dislikes
to parade the sanctity
of his inner life to the gaze of those who
mayhap cannot understand, but this work may be the means of bringing
some one out
of the gloom of despond into the happy light
of developed courage where he or she may calmly face the world in
adverse circumstances
and, by rising superior to environment,
acquire happiness, peace and independence.
Bruce MacLelland. New York, January, 1904.
The above was written three years ago. In the light of retrospection I can only add, it is grandly true. Every principle set
forth in this book is based on scientific truth. All are provable from the hypothesis set forth.
I moved to Oklahoma,
Beautiful Land, where amid sunshine and flowers we rub shoulders with
cowboys, Indians, regular soldiers,
gamblers, farmers, business men and trappers,
thrown together in promiscuous confusion incident to the settlement of a
new
country.
If we want to work, we work; if play, we play. The exhilaration of freedom reaches its acme of perfection when, on a good
horse, we fly across the prairies.
I spend my life writing, reading, plowing, riding after cattle, making hay, harvesting corn and cotton, oats and alfalfa (and
attending the county fair, by gosh!).
As to money? There's enough and to spare. Why spend one's life amassing a fortune? Look at the fun one, misses.
We are only here once, at least that's all we know of now. Let's get money enough, then look around a bit and see what people
and things are like.
Bruce MacLelland, January, 1907.Preface
In this little book I have written, in my own way,
hot from the soul, what I know to be true. It is my book pure and
simple,
written from the fullness of a spirit at
peace, written for you because it will do you good and because I could
not get it
off my mind until it was written.
There are many things omitted which should have been included. They may be given to you later.
If the general ideas benefit
you, make your life happier, I am content; if you feel antagonistic to
its teachings, I await
your censure; if it conveys a truth,
opposition cannot kill it; if not truthful, it will die a natural death.
Its future will
depend upon the call for it.
It was written solely to gratify the desire to tell others what has been of benefit to me and as such I leave it with you.Introduction
During the progress of my life some things worth
pondering have come to my observation. Among them was the everywhere
apparent
fact that quiet, forceful workmen who were
always absorbed with their work, enjoyed that work, owned their homes,
had enough
to eat and wear, treated their families
kindly, were respected by superiors (comparative), and their lives
seemed ideal. There
was no straining and striving to outshine
their neighbors, no frantic endeavors to do something or be something
beyond their
simple, homelike, happy selves.
It was also apparent that
when there was a promotion in the shop, these steadfast, silent men were
promoted, while their hustling,
bustling, hurrying, worrying, fault-finding,
snapping and snarling fellow workmen stayed in the ranks and were
swamped by
debts, forever in trouble. As I became
associated with employers there seemed to be a new element in them not
found in the
workmen. This was a feeling of independent
reliance on self, and it occurred to me that perhaps that reliance, or
lack of
it, was the difference between employer and
employee.
Later in life it became
possible for me to closely observe some of the masterminds in the world
of business, and to the qualities
peculiar to each there seemed to be added an
inherent force, a something one could feel distinctly upon coming into
contact
with them. They were able to think of
thousands as others thought of hundreds, and obtained them as easily.
They were broad,
strong, hopeful individuals, who bent their
energies to accomplish vast undertakings, the very thought of which
would frighten
an ordinary man.
It was also noted that the
wisest men, those who could see the farthest into any project, were
quiet, calm men, who could
not be easily disturbed. Some of the wisest
were not capable of making money beyond their barest needs. From which
were deduced
the conclusions that wisdom is induced by
peace or calmness and that wisdom without force is of small value. While
the one
enables the mind to determine what to do, the
other is absolutely necessary to carry out that determination. Force
without
wisdom, while expanding itself largely in
useless and ill-directed efforts, accomplishes little or nothing.
It was also observed that,
as wisdom increased, the mental forces were conserved, not driven to
excess, exercised but not
exhausted, which increased the limit of
force. Accordingly one possessing wisdom and a slight degree of force
could, by properly
directing that force, accomplish more than
one that had greater force and a less degree of wisdom. It was seen that
well-laid
plans and determined efforts often brought
small returns, while the great successes were the outgrowth of small
beginnings.
That there must be reasons for all this is
self-evident. Tracing backward from effect to cause, it was easily
determined that
physical prowess need not be considered,
since some of the greatest leaders have been slight, weak men. Then the
educational
line was carefully investigated, and but a
few of the greatest were college bred, and some were illiterate. It was
evident
that the secret lay not in education.
It was also noticed that
some people had the ability to absorb knowledge as easily as a sponge
absorbs water, yet were unable
to derive any benefit from their learning,
while their classmates who were unable or unwilling to learn often
startled the
world by some great achievement. Negative
natures make the best students, but positive natures produce the most
action. Further
research proved that the most obedient is boy
in school often became a clerk for the worst rascal;
That the educated, independent thinker was the best of all;
That the man who was the most anxious to obtain money had the least; that he whose sole ambition was to own a cottage got
no more;
That the man who hated the most was loved the least; and that the man who tried to frighten others was himself afraid.
It was observed that haters'
bodies were always tensely drawn, the muscles incapable of relaxation,
both mind and body shriveled
and contracted, functions deranged and the
bodies full of aches and pains. The explanation was that hatred;
jealousy and despondency
had an attraction for a tense, inharmonious
frame of mind and produced the corresponding effects in the body.
It was also seen that successful men went in herds, and unsuccessful men did likewise, but in different herds;
That the man who could swear the loudest would run the quickest;
That what constituted success to one was failure and humiliation to another;
That one man would become a victim to circumstances, while his brother laughed at surroundings and suggestions and "sailed
on";
That some men talked of doing great things, while others just did things and said nothing;
That talkative people could not stop their chatter even if they desired; that silent men could talk more interestingly than
the talkers;
That any line of business was a medium for an accumulation of wealth to the right man.
All these things led us to
believe that neither the size of the man nor the learning he possessed
had anything to do with
the accomplishment of his object, but that,
instead, the condition of his mind, coupled with the desire and
expectation of
success, seemed to attract everything to him.
Then followed considerable
research into the psychological makeup of the human mind in order to
determine whether our friend
Cassius was right, when he said, "The fault,
dear Brutus, is not in our stars, but in ourselves, that we are
underlings,"
and if so wherein lay the fault.
The study of mental language
and power of suggestion showed clearly that confidence concerning one's
ability to do could be
developed, and that the belief made the doing
possible. Its demonstration of thought projection opened the way to the
realization
of the fact that thought is a literal
element, and the study of self-demonstrated that "Know thyself" is the
deepest and best
advice ever given to mankind. It embraces the
knowledge that character or self can be strengthened and ennobled; That
force
can be added to one;
That the mind attracts success in all things as it is freed from jealousy, envy, distrust, ill will, anger, haste and fear;
That this study of self, or
introspection, made plain to each his own - strong as well as weak
qualities, or his hold on justice,
force, confidence, determination, etc.
East India philosophy taught
the value and power of the imagination, that one grows like whatever he
thinks of himself as
being, and is literally what he thinks or
what he thinks himself into being. Observation impressed upon us the
constant effect
of the mental images brought to the attention
by surroundings, that through that power some were controlled by
circumstances,
while others, giving less attention to the
surroundings and more to some ambition, are able to rise above
circumstances and
control them.
We mean that a child raised
in poverty is always in touch with poor people, sees in their homes as
well as his own only the
bare necessities of life, hears how hard it
is to get money, knows his father must work hard for little wages, wears
poor
clothing and conforms to all the life of the
poor until it becomes a part of him. The evidence he sees of wealth is
not real.
He feels it is not for him. The things he has
seen all his life, the circumstances with which he has been surrounded,
have
created that frame of mind. Now let him make
mental images of himself occupying a better position in life, having
money and
friends and everything he desires. In time
that becomes the reality, while the old life is the unreal. His
circumstances change
as his mind changes. He has risen above
circumstances, has controlled them.
The study of Nature in all
her forms, the effects of desire in both animals and man, proved the
existence of a Law of Vibration,
and if the law was invoked vigorously to
supply the deficient qualities in each mentality, their inflow followed,
but, if
invoked to bring money and worldly gain,
there would be no response. All good things came to him who built up
purity and strength
of character. This alone was meant when the
Christ said, "Seek ye first the kingdom of God, and his righteousness;
and all
these things shall be added unto you."
It was true then, and is
equally true today. Seeking the Kingdom does not mean faith in any
existing creed. It means to develop
a condition of calmness or peace in the mind
allowing an inflow of Divine Wisdom, when one becomes in rapport with
the Supreme
- dwells in heaven. "Heaven is within you," a
condition and not a place. All this was believed, and the study of
others' thoughts
versus their present condition proved that
their income was the effect of their strength or weakness of character,
which in
turn was due to their manner of thinking and
the nature of their thoughts; but development of self alone gave
demonstration
and established the fact that success in life
is due entirely to the personality of the individual; that through
introspection,
mental suggestions, the Law of Vibration and
the power of imagination, anyone can make of himself whatever he
chooses.
Personality consists of
elements which have been named courage, confidence, judgment, decision,
determination, aspiration
and truth. The degree in which they are
possessed determines the power of the individual. The conditions of
calmness and concentration
allow the best use of these powers.
Thoughts are vital, living,
actual things, as real as oxygen or hydrogen. They come from without,
and their value to any mind
depends on the condition of that mind. If it
is strong and forceful it receives strong and forceful thoughts, which
produce
strength of character; if fretful,
vacillating, uninspiring and cowardly it receives that class of thought
which produces
misery, poverty and poor health, and every
thought received and issued from your mind makes a stronger or weaker
person of
you.
A knowledge of these things
does not produce results, but realization of this truth with the
resulting watchfulness and control
our thoughts does, and the practice of
autosuggestion develops the elements of mind, making the control
possible.
These truths are of the
world of mind, and the grosser condition of mind, in which ordinary
individuals live, can scarcely
believe it possible that there are higher
planes attainable by that particular mind. By planes of mind is meant
the condition
producing the attitude which would cause some
to ridicule any new invention or idea in contrast to the promoter, who
could
see clearly the feasibility of the project,
and the various attitudes are shown by all those taking views between
those two.
It is the ability in one to see a truth when
told of it, the lack of ability in the other to accept any portion of
it.
These planes have existed
since history begun and have been the greatest hindrance to world
betterment, particularly in regard
to morals and religion. The lower attitudes
being numerically greater have obstructed the expression of the thought
of the
lesser number of advanced thinkers. Galileo
was compelled to retract when he advanced the idea that the world is
round, and
the inquisition was instituted by gross
minded churchmen in order to stop freedom of thought.
When, after the practice of
autosuggestion, a higher condition is reached, it is at first but
temporary, and while back in
the original state, which reaction invariably
occurs, one will think, "Oh, it is all nonsense"; and a revulsion, a
sickening
of despair, of hope lost, will hold that mind
in its grasp. This experience will only come after you have
sufficiently grasped
the realization of the idea to give you the
impetus to act, and after perhaps weary months of constant suggestions.
This principle is not based
on your belief or faith - that has nothing to do with it. It is a
scientific truth and it matters
not what you think about it so long as you
work to develop yourself. Study carefully and reflect on these ideas,
one thing
at a time, then do it and keep on doing it.
Believe what you please about it. Keep your own counsel (this is
imperative).
There are those who cannot
believe these truths. Their minds are of the lower order, entirely
occupied with worldly matters.
They are blind to spiritual truths and call
all others visionary in their superb self-sufficiency. If a mind capable
of half
seeing, half-believing these things is
brought into contact with them it will be blinded by their blindness,
and since the
lower order of mind predominates the volume
is on that side, and by telling others of our beliefs when the first
wave of happy
enthusiasm strikes us we are apt to wreck our
own lives by first inciting and then being overwhelmed by their
antagonism.
But if we keep still and work to develop
strength, courage, power, force, push, good will, etc., we shall become
strong enough
to stand on our own feet in spite of any and
all.
When the author was a little
lad blacking boots on the street of his native village, some one asked
him, in a crowd, what
he intended being when grown. He honestly and
earnestly replied, "An attorney"; whereupon an ignorant and
loud-mouthed buffoon
gave a guffaw and said, "You, a lawyer!" then
laughed immoderately. The crowd laughed. His child's soul shrank within
him.
He gave it up. Not until now has the
opportunity occurred. That guffaw cost him thirty years out of his
natural vocation.
Keep your own counsel.
If, however, there are those among our friends who need these truths for their own welfare and are capable of accepting them,
by all means tell them; but do not cast your pearls before swine, for they will turn and rend you.
Be not afraid, do your duty
each instant. Do it as well as you can. Hope and expect better things
and your success is assured.
The hostile action of the combined powers of
earth cannot stop you. You are supreme in your own personality.
Practice economy but not stinginess – freely spend your money for needed things, but everything wanted is not needed.
About Yourself And The Law
Your fortune or lack of fortune is not the result of
chance but of your observance of certain fixed laws. You may not be
aware
of acting in accordance with sharply defined
and active principles, but you do and always have so acted.
You make your own misery;
you make your own unhappiness; you make your own poverty, all by the
attitude of your mind, which
is the result of the reflex action of your
past thoughts. But you say: I was born that way. I was always impatient,
worrying,
anxious. I cannot change it. Yes, probably
you were, but you can change it, unless you determine you cannot and do
not try.
If you do, that settles it. No power
whatever, from God or man, can do anything for you when you assume that
attitude.
Your character, the will
that impels you to be indignant at one thing and pleased at another, has
been formed, as it now is,
by parentage and the thought aura which
surrounded you. It constructed a motor, the subconsciousness, on which
one electric
current of life acts while an equally strong
current of different construction has no effect. The current incapable
of being
useful or harmful to you would be received by
another and the one affecting you would make no impression on him. This
is due
to the different construction in your
mentalities. The one may have been calm, and this will produce wisdom;
the other, hair
brained, and this produces foolishness; and
the one or the other predominating in you brought you to the present
condition
through the attractive power of your
mentality.
A man is the product of his ancestors' thoughts and conditions.
His present condition is the result of past thoughts.
His future condition will be the result of present thoughts.
Your mind is that
all-permeating life which holds the atoms composing the body together,
sends the warm, sparkling life blood
surging through the veins, renews the
tissues, and, if withdrawn, would leave the body, inclusive of brain, a
cold, senseless
mass. Mind is not entirely in the body, but
acts on and through the body both consciously and subconsciously, and
determines
the status of the individual. By mind we do
not here refer to the brain, which is as truly a portion of the body as
are the
nerves, muscles and sinews.
Conscious mind is the
intelligent recognition of self. This will be read by your conscious
mind. Conscious mind is positive
in its relation to subconscious mind and
controls your thoughts through desires, and literally builds into your
subconscious
mind that of which you think. If you are
deficient in courage, or any other quality of mind, by dwelling on
thoughts of courage,
or the other deficient qualities, through
repeating the word which to you is a symbol of the thought, you attract
to the subconsciousness
the element desired, and by so doing build up
your personality, thereby insuring success in both spiritual and
material matters,
in health and wealth.
Passions develop gradually
through generations. A bundle of uncontrolled emotions, your present
self, may have had its birth
generations ago and been handed down from
your ancestors through your parents to you. These may have been foreign
to your
real self but grafted on to your nature
through the aura of thought with which you were surrounded.
This inoculation of success
or failure, of health or disease, is not due to the spoken words or
actions so much as to the
quality of thought coming from a parent's
mind. If the parents are quiet and conservative in disposition, the
child is very
apt to be likewise; if restless, impatient,
anxious, hurrying (which means cowardly), the children will be affected
by it.
They unconsciously receive
the thought and it becomes a part of them. If the parents have a large
degree of courage in themselves,
every thought is tinged with it and the
child, though cowardly in its nature, grows into a vigorous, courageous
man or woman.
Courage is a positive element and, if
developed, overcomes fear, a negative property, in every instance. The
little child
has his own personality and is subject to
grafting just to the extent that the individuality of the parents
exceeds his own.
If receptive, he readily grasps the qualities
of success or failure that are in the parents. If positive in his own
individuality,
he would not be inoculated with the parents'
characteristics to as great a degree. This explains why some children
are so
different from others in the same family.
This subconscious mind is a
magnet of attractive and repellent qualities. It receives thought, a
literal element, and sends
it out again reinforced in volume and
intensity in proportion to the operating power of the will. It is
attractive in its
relation to the Supreme at all times and
receives power from the Force of Nature. It is the operating force which
gains health,
fame and wealth. It is the mind which enables
a sleeping person to do certain things, such as climbing to the top of
high
buildings by the water pipe, swimming rapid
rivers, and other actions impossible while awake.
Subconscious mind has no
volition of its own and only acts on suggestions from your conscious
mind or the Source of Wisdom.
If you say, "I cannot," the subconscious mind
receives the suggestion, assimilates it, and it then becomes a part of
you.
This connects you with other despondent minds
through the quality of your thought, and you feed each other with
failures.
One object of autosuggestion
is to impress upon your subconscious mind the thought that you can and
will, and success follows.
This mind also reacts on your conscious mind.
If you have been an "I cannot" chap for years, every time you think a
vigorous
"I can" thought your other self says, "No,
you cannot," and depresses you, making your efforts spasmodic and
unfruitful. You
must first get that mind trained to feel that
you can, and it will sustain you if you feel discouraged. This takes
time, the
length depending on your receptiveness and
flexibility. There can be no failure.
Every cheerful, happy
thought reaches the subconscious mind, it is digested as thoroughly as
the condition of the mind will
allow, and the remainder is rejected, just as
the stomach digests food. Some stomachs are in such a condition that
they can
only receive liquids; others assimilate solid
foods, while a healthy stomach requires a variety of strong foods. So
with minds.
Some are so burdened by worry (fear) that
thoughts of strength make but light impressions; others can receive a
greater portion,
while the healthy mind accepts it as a matter
of fact. During suggestion the growing mind receives the next, similar
thought
and more thoroughly assimilates it until at
last all such thought is received and retained. Then your progress is
rapid, your
successes are assured, and returns come in
hard cold cash. From that time on you are working out accomplished facts
and you
may tell your friends if you desire, although
gush is detrimental and to be avoided.
So your mind is today your
ancestors' power of love, justice, confidence, truth, determination,
aspiration, and those other
qualities which make up personality,
increased or diminished by the kind of thoughts you have used during
your life, and they
are not names of an indefinable something but
the literal realities which compose individuality.
If parental suggestions and
your surroundings made you believe as you do now believe, would not a
change in surroundings and
different suggestions change your belief? Why
not then make the suggestions yourself? And a change in the improved
mind will
bring improved surroundings.
These elements are not only
received from people but from the Divine Life which surrounds us and
permeates us and of which
we are composed. They flow from one brave man
to another, constantly strengthening them, and both are connected with
the great
body of these elements from which they
receive a constant inflow.
This, we know, may be hard
for our readers to understand and harder to believe. Some cannot believe
it. They are groping in
the dark and do not believe there is anything
to see. The two elements of mind, love and intellect, constitute the
whole mind
of man. Will, affection, emotion, in fact all
sensations, are the divisions of love; while understanding, thought,
language
and instinct are of the intellect.
In the successful man
affection and emotion, and, to a certain extent, sensation, must be
under the control of the will, and
this in turn must be guided by understanding,
from which is evolved harmonious thought, which in turn draws the
material success
that is desired. Therefore, to be successful
you must bring all fear and its resulting emotions under the control of
the will
or destroy them entirely, and to that end we
will devote our attention.
When the mind is in a
condition of harmony, i.e., the emotions under the control of the will,
the will guided by the intellect,
the aim high, it produces a condition of
peace and allows the inflow of wisdom, infinite wisdom which produces
progression;
it will carry one from ill health and poverty
to health and sufficient income for all needs. This is a law, this
progression
or success, and you are being deprived of
your just rights if you do not have every needful thing. It is but
natural for you
to have money, friends and happiness; and any
other state of existence is inharmonious and unnatural.
You have the right to enjoy
life, follow the occupation you choose, do as you please, so long as you
please to injure no one,
either in thought or action. This is your
natural condition and nothing but the action of your own mind can
deprive you of
it. It is a law; live in the law and your
development is assured.
It is literally true that conditions confront one precisely as they are expected. Expect poverty and failure and you will
get them. People think of you just as you think of yourself.
If some position is big for
you, i.e., you fear you cannot hold it because of the great
responsibility, that is the measure
you have put on yourself and others measure
you by that standard and would not let you handle important work for
them even
if you are educated and polished.
We do not mean that if you
think you are smart others will think likewise. If you consider yourself
smart it is because you
have not wisdom enough to realize how little
the wisest men know or can hope to know, and others measure you by what
you are,
i.e., by what you think, and not by what you
think you are, or by what you think you think.
Your attitude of mind in
both particulars is usually a very good guide to your mental state. If
you expect failure, probably
you are deficient in courage,
self-appreciation and that optimistic, happy, loving expectation so
essential to success. Some
have such a wonderful power and determination
that they are successful in spite of all difficulties; but the better
and easier
way is to build up your mind so that it may
expect ease, peace, happiness, health, wealth, and thereby attract them
to you;
for most of us will fall by the wayside if we
depend upon our force alone. And anyway the road is rough and stormy,
and the
degree of attainment, even for those who
succeed, is much lower than it would have been had that force not been
depleted in
fighting obstacles created by that same mind.
If you think you are worth
little or nothing to yourself and the world, others think that of you;
while the fact is you have
some talent, some usefulness, some little
niche to fill peculiar to yourself, and no one else can fill it for you,
and, unless
you occupy it, there will be no occupant. You
are just as much needed in your place as any other man is needed in
his. Have
respect for yourself as one of the forces
used in and by the Supreme to the great end that to us doth not appear
as yet.
Have you ever noticed that
when you are angry or discouraged or sullen, others instinctively avoid
you? That you see every
other sullen man or woman with whom you come
in contact; while a good natured, jolly person is apt, very apt, to
escape your
notice altogether. That is due to the
attractive force of mind. People in similar conditions naturally
gravitate to each other.
If you would make the right kind of friends to assist you in a business way, - no successful business can be conducted without
them, learn to think strong, self-reliant thoughts and they will come to you.
If you want to know just
what you are, notice how strangers act with whom you come in contact. Do
they smile or frown when
they meet you? Are they glad to see you or
anxious to get away? Do they scarcely notice you or seem to recognize
your strength?
If the first, you are a cheery, happy
disposition. If the second, the reverse, and need more good will and
sunshine in your
soul. If the third, you need strength, power
and force. If the last, you are equally as strong or stronger than they,
and
your degree of strength can be determined by
their force of personality.
This Law of Attraction may be limited as follows:
Mind attracts people and things in affinity with its condition.
Gloom brings despondency. Hate brings ill health.
Fear of poverty and lassitude bring destitution.
Hope brings happiness and elasticity. Courage, determination and energy bring success.
Dwelling on any quality of mind adds that quality to you, whether it be helpful or injurious.
The induction of any positive quality, such as courage, decision or aspiration, destroys the opposite negative quality, such
as fear, indecision or gloom.
This is not a theory, but a principle well understood by Joseph, Moses and the Christ of Jewish history. Parts of that history,
called the Bible, contain a true explanation of the power of mind.
These qualities will
strengthen your mind to such an extent that you will attract to you all
good things. There are no mistakes
in the operation of natural laws. Every man,
woman or child gets exactly what he deserves, what he draws to himself.
Your
present position in life is the result of
your past thoughts, and your future position will be the result of your
present
thoughts.
Possibly you may say, "I
don't believe a man can get wealth through his thought power." What
brings wealth? Did you say opportunity?
Do not believe it. I tell you the man makes
the opportunity. Thousands are losing their wealth daily. Other
thousands are
accumulating wealth.
It's all in the man.
Do you know a calm,
courageous, forceful, determined, self-reliant, aspiring man? If so,
what is his financial condition?
He is beyond need, must be. Do you know a
weak, whining, melancholy, morbid, nervous, fretful, vacillating man,
who probably
spends his time pushing one thing today,
another tomorrow, not holding to one idea long enough to drive it to a
successful
conclusion? What is his condition?
Physically, morally, mentally and financially a wreck. Why is he so
useless to himself
and the world? Because his mind does not have
the qualities of wisdom, persistency, determination, aspiration and
courage.
If he had he would not be a failure.
But you say, "I do not
believe these qualities can be developed. I do not believe a coward can
grow into a courageous man,
or a failure into a success." Why not try it
and find out? It certainly is worth a trial. Your progress may be slow
at first,
but remember and realize if you can - you
will in time that you are actually speaking to the source of all wisdom,
which is
prayer - not saying prayers. Also remember
that a lifetime and more has made you what you are and immediate
transformation
is impossible.
Your mind at this moment is
connected with other similar minds, and each reacts on the other. If
yours is strong, forceful
and courageous, it mingles with that class of
mentality, sleeping or waking, constantly invigorating and renewing
every one
with whom you are in touch, while they send
similar strength to you, and all draw through the attractive force of
mind the
same qualities from the source of power. If
weak, get into touch with strong minds by building up your own; then
they will
send strength to you, and you will cease to
starve on the weak elements now received from minds of your present
caliber.
That principle is
demonstrated by the fact that a stranger in any city gravitates toward
people like himself. He finds his
level. Can you conceive of a strong,
vigorous, successful man going among strangers and mingling with
despondent, unsuccessful
people; or one of the latter class finding
congenial friends among the first mentioned who would value his
friendship and
company? Wherever a person is, he or she
associates with similar people, and this must be an association of mind
before there
is any material friendship.
Choose your company is a
useless admonition. The person chosen might object to the choice.
Improve the character of your thoughts
and you will naturally gravitate towards a
better class of friends. Their association will put you in touch with
opportunities
that never would have been yours under the
old conditions. But you say, "How am I to change the character of my
thoughts?"
Just keep the thought of courage, peace,
strength, power, justice, good will, decision, force, confidence,
determination,
etc., before you; live in it, dwell on it,
demand it, pray for it, and these qualities will come to you, slowly at
first,
but every atom gained gives you increased
strength to draw more until at last the added strength attracts a
cleaner, stronger
class of thoughts and they bring you in touch
with successful men.
So with money and continued
prosperity. The attractive force of your mentality will bring you the
opportunity. You need not
seek it. It will seek you, and your mind will
be in condition to recognize the value, will have the decision to force
you
to act and the courage to carry you through.
Using your thought powers to seek an avenue to lead you to wealth is an
error,
and a useless expenditure of energy. No great
success was ever planned but came naturally from following an idea,
working
on it quietly, steadily and courageously, and
usually with little fear of future success or failure. Choose the
occupation
you like. If it were something that you
consider beyond you, and it probably will be, develop yours into a
successful mind
by the methods to be given you, when it will
be commonplace and natural.
One of the first requisites
is a condition of calmness or peace. Many people are today in a chaotic
condition; they cannot
hold their thoughts to one subject for ten
seconds, cannot prevent their darting around with lightning-like
rapidity. If a
successful thought comes they cannot grasp it
firmly enough or hold it long enough to act on it. This condition of
mind weakens
both mental power and physical strength,
renders sleep fitful and subject to fantastic imagining, and prevents
the inflow
of strength and destroys all prospect of
health and success.
You are what you think; not what you think you are.
Concerning Elements
Determination
This quality is usually
confused with stubbornness and that fierce dominating desire to ride
roughshod over every one who
has opposing ideas; the desire to bulldoze,
overpower, tyrannize, without regard to whether right or wrong. That
kind of man
is just as self-willed when shown he is in
the wrong as before, and he will not be moved by reason, logic or
superior wisdom.
He will sacrifice money, friends, home;
plunge his family into want, if by so doing he can only have his own
way. This attitude
of mind is one of ignorance, inelasticity
intense selfishness, and one in which determination has no part. It is
usually brought
about by circumstances controlling the
individual, and by the individual living under circumstances which
produce a narrow
round of duties, of thoughts, or, in other
words, a narrow life. Study, travel, intermingling with all classes and
kinds of
people usually take a great portion of this
characteristic away.
Judicial history is full of
records of families broken up, children scattered, parents made
miserable over some trifle, because
neither would give up to the other. This is
due to inability to control the passions. Those minds were not governed
by determination,
a quality which enables one to see the goal
over a great barrier of obstacles, which makes difficulties but slight
things,
keeps the mind off trouble no matter how
insistent, brings that condition which never knows when it has been
defeated. This
condition is never troubled with doubts of
success, but, after careful consideration, chooses the course to be
pursued and
goes straight to the goal. It readily adopts
any suggestion better than its own ideas which will enable it to avoid
trouble.
The determined mind does not rush pell-mell
along, does not try to force things; but is content to wait, if waiting
will sooner
bring results. It avoids obstacles, makes
friends, seeks the easiest possible road to the goal, but never loses
sight of its
purpose.
It is the determined mind
which calculates, reasons, seeks ideas, uses those which seem better
than its own, and at last lays
its plans and cannot be diverted from them.
This quality well developed produces the desired result in any line of
effort,
and a mind endowed with wisdom enough to
first choose the best method of endeavor and the highest goal can, with
determination,
reach that goal.
This quality can be
developed by thinking of yourself as persistent in the one aim and
purpose; by not allowing others to
determine what you shall do; by not mentally
ceasing effort when obstacles interfere; by repeating the words either
verbally
or mentally: "I am determined; I have
determination; I shall succeed;" until the quality is developed in the
subconscious
mind, when it becomes a part of your
personality. Then the jaw will grow square, the flesh firm, the look
steadfast, mild
and even. The body expresses just what the
mind holds. Indecision and a lack of vigorous life are evidenced by the
loose and
drooping lower jaw, the vacant stare and
ambling, uncertain gait.
Some people think they art determined when they art only bullheaded.
CONCENTRATION is a condition
of mind rather than an element, and may be imposed through the thought
atmosphere of the parental
surroundings; or it may be developed through
the action of the individual mind. This state of mind is an essential
attribute
of success. The biblical wording, "Give no
anxious thought to the morrow," embodies in it a perfect state of
concentrative
power which enables the possessor to give the
whole force of his intellect to whatever he may be doing at each
particular
moment. This enables one to do well whatever
is being done, and constantly adds, through the attractive power of the
mentality,
to the force of personality embodied in that
particular individual.
By holding the thought of
concentration and by building it up through the methods already
outlined, your strength of mind
and force of personality will constantly be
increased; and, on the contrary, if one lacks the power of holding his
thought
entirely focused on one subject about which
he desires to think, the full power of the mind cannot be given to that
subject.
It is like trying to do two or three things
at once, and, as the mind has ability to do only one thing at a time, it
is overwhelmed
by any constant strain and does none of the
things well.
The Law of Attraction holds
good, and, just in that degree in which we lack concentration, we draw
more and more to us the
elements which tend to increase this
deficiency in focalizing. "To him that hath shall be given" simply means
that one who
has any quality of mind also has the ability
to increase that quality; it will grow in him; "and to him that hath not
shall
be taken away even that which he hath" is the
opposite, that is, one loses whatever concentration power he possesses
by the
force of attraction which constantly adds to
the hurrying, scattering condition of mind.
But one says, "How will
concentration help me to get a better position?" or another says, "How
will it bring business to my
store?" Just this way. You are instructed to
do a certain thing, say construct an important business letter, which
you do
as well as you can, but your rattled brain,
slurring through it, leaves out some important sentence which afterwards
involves
the firm in litigation. Do you suppose that
you stand as well with them thereafter, that your recommendation will
have the
same ring as though you had been able to give
your best attention to the letter and been able to use your wisdom and
foresight
in its construction? Would anybody be so apt
to seek you for a trusted helper in some big undertaking in the first
case as
the last? What is here advocated is the
difference between success and failure.
Again, have you ever gone
into a store to buy and found the clerk preoccupied, mind a thousand
miles away, and you have been
compelled to ask a question two or three
times before getting an answer? Do you diligently seek that clerk the
next time or
do you go elsewhere? That's the how.
Every family has a thought
atmosphere, i.e., qualities of mind such as courage, truth, etc., which
form a mental lake, as
it were, and all persons coming into its
proximity can feel its action upon them. Have you ever been in a
household where
you felt uncomfortable and was glad to get
away; where you did not like to go; felt a repulsion at the suggestion
of a visit?
This was because you felt the thought
atmosphere or mental lake of that family, and it was not as peaceful as
your own state
of mind and therefore not congenial.
A practical demonstration of
this power of concentration is shown by the actor who forgets his
audience, his surroundings,
everything, and lives in the life of the
person he is representing; and not until he has this power can he ever
rise to any
great height in his profession. So in
business. When a man has the power to give his whole mind to the
particular idea which
he is at that moment entertaining, he will
sift it, adjust it, assimilate it, and pick out the true and reject the
false,
and will benefit himself through his wisdom,
which is in a very great degree the product of his power of
concentration.
The lack of this quality
produces what a third person would call a scatter-brained man or woman.
Their thought is incessantly
darting here and there, uselessly exhausting
the mentality. In fact, the mind can better stand the strain of
continued thought
on some important, (Important is here used
relatively - material subjects are equally important in the thought
world; the
importance is only in the mind of the
thinker) subject for hours at a time than even a few minutes of such
exhausting misuse
of its powers.
Nervousness is nothing but
the lack of concentration, and concentration is only possible to
courageous people. In fact, half
of the ills the body is heir to are brought
on by weakness due to throwing thoughts around at random, as it were;
for the
body is but an expression of the mind (not
brain, mind or soul), and holding your thoughts to one thing at a time,
then changing
the character by conscious direction of the
will, putting no more power into each thought than is necessary to its
successful
conclusion, enables the mind to gather
strength constantly, and this can be plainly felt throughout the body,
which becomes
more vigorous, elastic, buoyant and healthy.
When you are once started on this line your own mind will show the way
and lead
you on.
Then, again, the
concentrative mind is the mind of power in so much as it carries with it
the ability to take the thought,
examine it, turn it over in mind, then change
it from the subject in hand to some other line of thought at pleasure,
interest
itself in something else and recreate itself.
Constantly dwelling upon any
one idea starts the mind to thinking in a circle and, as it continues
in this method, it gradually
loses all power to get outside of the circle,
until at last it may be but one continual round of hate, revenge,
jealousy and
other deteriorating elements which will act
as an effectual bar to success and lead to insanity. There is also the
condition
of haste and flurry that makes us do foolish
things and feel indignant at ourselves afterwards, yet do something
equally foolish
a little later; wherein we imagine persons
above us, in whose presence we smile and smirk and tremble. All that can
be avoided
by cultivating calmness, which is another
name for courage and concentration.
Methods Of Procedure
Introspection
This study of the condition of the mind enables one to determine in what particular element he may be lacking, to know himself.
Knowing his weak points, he can develop them and round out the mind into a harmonious whole.
It is the projection of thought inward instead of outward, and may be developed by fixing on some weakness of which you may
be aware, then developing that element and watching the effect of your changed mind.
This gives you an insight into an unknown world. It enables you to find some other weakness. Then develop that. Continue until
a harmonious whole is produced, when a new world, the world of mind, is opened to you.
A man's actions under any set of circumstances can be clearly outlined by his facial expression, gait and bearing. Human nature
becomes an open book; your friends a most fascinating study.
The endless pursuit of money and pleasure gives way to a happy contentment. Your soul is satisfied.
From this one reaches up and on seeking the Infinite Life. The whole man, both soul and body, becomes thrilled with It.
You realize the oneness of all and know you will always have enough and to spare.
A young man in our employ said to me, "I cannot hold my position under that superintendent any longer. He is gruff and surly
and insults me."
I said, "Young man, go to your office and concentrate on your work and learn to put forth more energy and tell the truth."
(It was the exact trouble, as Mr. Roth, our superintendent, afterwards told me.)
He immediately informed me that he was an ideal man, worked exceedingly hard and had never told a falsehood in his life.
We let him go.
What can be done for such people? Blind to their own faults, they see their reflection in every one else, and it is always
the other fellow who is in the wrong.
If you are not in harmony with your surroundings, look inside, not outside, for the cause.
Every characteristic of a man is written on his face; is shown by his bearing and his gait.
Liars art all cowards
Autosuggestion
The value of mental suggestion as regards the
subconscious effect was explained in a preceding chapter. The effect
produced
is not to make you believe you are different
from what you are, but to educate your subconscious mind, which now is
what has
heretofore been suggested to it through
sight, hearing and associations, and thereby make you different from
what you are.
It is a question of being, not believing.
We will take the element of
courage in illustrating the actual method of autosuggestion. Let us
suppose you are deficient
in courage. There are no absolutely fearless
people, so do not be ashamed to acknowledge your defect. A man may say
he fears
nothing, yet smiles when he does not feel
like smiling, because some one smiled at him, fearing his or her
displeasure; or
rushes pell-mell in wild confusion at the
simple request for a business paper from an employer, or trembles at his
frown.
Say to yourself, "I have courage, I am fearless, I must have courage, I fear nothing." Repeat it constantly while not otherwise
engaged.
Think of it just before
going to sleep at night. This is important. The thought will rest in
your subconsciousness, while
your positive mind, which never sleeps, is
roaming around the world. Repeat it the very first conscious moment
after awakening.
Continue it now and then during the day. The
effect of self-suggestion is illustrated every day.
A little boy ran laughing
into the house and said, "There is a bear outdoors," and went out again.
This was repeated several
times until at last he was afraid to go out.
He did not believe there was a bear outdoors, but the constant inciting
of the
element of fear brought him into touch with
the great body of fear and engendered fear in him, totally without cause
and due
entirely to his own suggestions.
In the same family a little
girl lived who was afraid to retire alone at night. One evening she had
company, a much younger
girl, and the two forgot their fear in their
talking and went to their room alone. The next day she said, "I am not
afraid
to go alone to bed," in a decisive tone. From
that time on her fears gradually left her until she became almost
fearless instead
of the timid little one of the past.
Suggestions may be verbal or caused by any outside agency and be for one's welfare or injury. Let them cover every defect
in your mind. Make your own forms to cover each case.
Suppose your highest aim in
life is to secure a good position. Let us make an illustration of
supposing that you are a farmer's
hired man, without money, education or
friends, placed in a position where you never meet business men, and,
worse than all,
imbued with the idea that a position of, say,
bookkeeper is beyond you, impossible for you to attain. The first thing
to be
done is to overcome the thought of failure,
the idea that it is beyond you. Think of it often, let the idea sink
into your
mind, grow accustomed to it, see yourself in
such a position, and gradually the thought that you can be something and
do something
will take possession of you. Never mind how
it is to be accomplished - ways and means will be found.
Do your present work, humble
as it may be, as well as you can, and give it your whole attention. It
will grow less irksome
and a certain pleasure will be derived from
it. Soon an opportunity to secure work in a wholesale store or something
similar
will come your way, probably as porter or
teamster, and more than likely through your own exertions. Now keep on
doing each
task as well as you possibly can, giving no
thought to the future. But you say, "I cannot help being worried over
the future";
then repeat to yourself, "I shall never worry
over anything, nothing will burden me." Make your own suggestions
covering any
point in which you feel you are deficient.
Tell no one of your aspirations.
Then study bookkeeping at
home. Do not get in a hurry about it; study it carefully, quietly at
home. An opening will eventually
come. Your past record of faithful service
will prove a boon to you now. Make an application in a manly,
straightforward way.
If you feel faint-hearted about it, say to
yourself, as before suggested, "Confidence, I must have confidence." If
this opportunity
is missed, keep up the suggestions until you
feel confident. It will come and the desired position with it.
This principle is applicable to any walk in life. The bookkeeper who aspires to be owner can employ it as successfully as
the farm hand who aspires to be a bookkeeper.
Suppose, again, you are a
merchant whose business is poor, your shelves full of shopworn goods,
your soul full of rancor and
ill will. Just reverse your thought, stop
talking and thinking of others' faults, the trouble is in yourself.
Develop good
will to all. See yourself in imagination as
successful. Gradually your face will beam with good will and ideas for
pushing
your business will come to you. Your
customers will enjoy dropping in, others will come and stay, and success
will follow.
So with any position or occupation. Be the
man. Build yourself into a man and results will take care of themselves.
Never say, "die." Once the
seed is planted, your progress must continue. Each strong, clean thought
brings you nearer the
goal. When you have brought your mind into a
condition of calmness thoughts will come to you, ideas will suggest
themselves
(for thoughts come from without, you never
generate important ideas yourself then you have accumulated strength
that enables
you to carry out the suggestion to a
successful conclusion.
The Law Of Vibration
As has been previously suggested the subconscious
mind is capable of receiving impressions from the Source of Wisdom, and
if it were not so harassed by restrictions
placed upon it by the parents and by the conscious mind, it would be
controlled
in every action by the Vital Force of Life.
This Force of Life keeps in
motion thought vibrations at all times, and the minds in unison with it
can feel a joyous ecstasy
which, entering the inner mind, sends a glow
of health and strength through the whole being, both spirit and body,
producing
happiness for the present and confidence in
the future.
This Force through the power of thought vibrations leads the individual into the pursuit for which his peculiar composition
fits him.
The longing one may have for
a certain pursuit is this force acting on him, trying to bring him to
his work; but the positive
mind says, "It is too grand for me," or "I
can never do it," instead of leaning on the guiding hand and being led.
This being led is no small
affair. It's easy to say, like our good old Methodist mothers, "He
leadeth me," but that is as
though we had a ring in our nose and were led
by a string attached thereto. Being led means that we follow our
inclinations,
not repress them; that we choose the
occupation we love, watch for the guiding voice within ourselves. Its
manifestation comes
not through a burning bush but through
inclinations to do this or that; by feeling that one thing will not do
even though
it looks to be best, and by cultivating that
guiding intuition with sufficient courage to act on its suggestions and
wisdom
enough to avoid pernicious activity; by
letting events shape themselves and not trying to set the old Hudson
river on fire,
and yet holding that happy enthusiasm which
leads us to be still and do things.
Work, concentrative work, and watchful interest in our own inner guide will do things for us.
We often feel like doing some particular thing but cannot tell why, and it always proves to be the proper thing for us to
do.
The deficiency of any
element could be instantly supplied if the soul were brought at once
into accord with this thought force.
Many so called educated people, having
confined their subconscious mind to the impressions given to them by
teachers and textbooks
and none to their own inner suggestions, have
built up a character so positive that wisdom cannot enter their
subconsciousness.
They are learned know what wise men, who
received their impressions or thoughts in this way, have told them - but
have little
wisdom.
The Law Of Demand
We are often told of some mystical thing, known as
faith, which must be possessed before prayer or demand can be answered.
This is not entirely true, or if true a very
small degree of faith will work most wonderful results. In fact, if a
calm, peaceful
condition of mind is obtained through
autosuggestion without the exercise of any faith, the vibrations of
thought will bring
results.
The spark of divine life is
implanted in all, and in those who have the least degree of sensuality,
fear, rancor, greed and
the host of evils which work havoc in the
lives of men, it shines forth in their face, form and motion, spreading
gladness
wherever its possessor goes. This life is
forever connected with the great body of life, and receives a constant
inflow, which,
as before stated, is sent to the subconscious
mind, guiding and directing it in paths of peace, happiness and
prosperity.
This influence ceases to be a guide whenever
the conscious mind assumes the ascendancy, and directs the efforts along
its
own lines.
The effect of shaping our
own life is shown by our decision to do certain things. Then we rush
about hither and thither in
the fulfillment, and usually fail; or, if
successful, the results are unsatisfactory. We try to guide our guiding
spirit,
our subconsciousness, which should be allowed
to guide us. We produce thereby unrest, suspicion, trouble, which throw
us off
our balance, destroy our poise, just as a
sleeping man standing on the ledge of a high window would immediately
fall if awakened.
His conscious mind would induct fear, with
its accompanying loss of self-control, into the subconsciousness, just
as we, through
our mental suggestions or decisions to do,
destroy the even continuity of progress which otherwise would be ours.
Make changes in life by
natural gravitation, not by mental wisdom. Wisdom is the guiding hand of
God. Be led, for, if you
are not, the spark of Divine Life in you
becomes a force to produce unrest, hurry, haste and strife through its
constant tendency
to bring the individual into those paths in
which he is best fitted to succeed. The mind, unable to accomplish its
results,
tries the harder and exhausts itself in
fruitless efforts, and becomes sullen, angry and rancorous as a result.
If in that
condition a prayer is sent out for some
material object, there will be no result, because the world of mind does
not recognize
money and property.
If, on the other hand, the
prayer be for peace, strength, confidence (or faith), all qualities of
self, an immediate and lasting
result will follow, from which we learn that
confidence in ourselves to produce every needful thing is faith in the
Supreme,
which works through us, directing our efforts
into channels for which we are fitted. We are then led by the God in
self, the
inner consciousness, into that work we can
best do. If you have an ambition, an earnest longing for some vocation
in life,
that is your guide trying to bring you into
it.
Do not quit your present
employment now, posthaste, and rush into something you are sure you
should do. Just hold the thought
of that desired position or vocation; listen
for your guiding impulse and gradually grow into the new life. Do not
try to
shape your own life at all. No great success
ever came through forced effort. It creeps in easily, gently, happily.
Let your
life go on smoothly, feeling and knowing that
you will reach your aim, careless as to the how. This attitude of mind
leads
you to do things instead of wasting energy in
fruitless expectations of some great enterprise you intend carrying out
later
on in life.
Thomas Edison and other
similar men illustrate so well this principle: quiet, concentrative,
patient, wholly absorbed in the
subject at hand. If your mind is in a hasty,
scattered condition, it leads you to shun your present task as perhaps
not of
sufficient importance to enlist your entire
attention. It will attract from the elements around you the thought
force of similar
minds all bent on failure, and draw failure
to you in whatever line of occupation you follow. No one who is
constantly boring
his friends with the great things he expects
to do ever accomplished anything; while the successful man keeps his
ideas to
himself, feeling that this strengthens him.
It comes about through that
great law which does not allow us to know what the future has in store
for us, teaching thereby
that the true life is one of contentment with
present surroundings, aspirations for the future, and faith in our
ability to
attract to us at all times all needful things
through the connection of the God in man, with the Source of all Wisdom
and
Power and the attractive power of mind to
draw from that source all needful things as needed. This is a receptive
state in
which one receives a constant inflow of vigor
and life, thereby increasing the attractive power, and, as the demands
on the
exchequer grow from enlarged ideas of the
proper position one should sustain, the personality has kept pace, and
it will be
as easy for you to maintain your higher mode
of living as it was to maintain your lower.
We know that all advice,
logical or illogical, is a useless waste of energy, and that the
knowledge of these things will not
assist you in the least; that if you are in a
hurrying state now, even if you can recognize the truth in what is said
here,
it would be impossible for you to suddenly
change. The effect of perhaps centuries of heredity cannot be at once
overcome.
But if you desire to change your life, your
mode of thought, and give your earnest attention to it; if you require
peace,
say to yourself, "I must have peace of mind";
think of yourself as peaceful; demand courage (fear is at the bottom of
it)
and it will grow upon you. After a time you
will find yourself becoming absorbed in some work, some study; your mind
will
be at rest; then your face will gradually
fill out with manly strength, your body will grow more symmetrical,
money will come
easily, and the dull, weary grind will cease.
If you are overworked, have
long hours and tasks, either mental or physical, beyond your strength,
in the support of a large
family; worrying as to where you are to get
the money on next rent day; it is because of your condition of mind,
your lack
of courage to calmly, fearlessly face the
world and demand your rightful share. Do not infer that it is meant that
you are
to force the world to give you a living
without labor of any kind. What is meant is that you should expect and
get congenial
employment, not from others, but on your own
responsibility; that this employment should not be beyond your strength
and should
bring you sufficient revenue to keep you in
comfort.
Just reverse your mental
attitude, seek courage, and feel and know your irresistible power to
overcome all material conditions.
Seek peace and wisdom, learn to expect better
things, and soon some little change will occur, naturally, that will
ease your
burden. Others will come from time to time,
until at last you will find yourself where you desired to be and can
hardly tell
how it came about.
Require of the Supreme Life,
as your right, more wisdom. Do not weakly pray for it as a boon.
Determine to have it. Be careful
that you do not insist upon something that
will harm you, for you will get any quality demanded, either good or
bad. Require
wisdom to see your deficiencies Determine to
know your inner self.
Do not force yourself, but expect results if the present condition of your mind will permit. Practice also the forgetting
of self at all times by entirely giving yourself up to the thing you are doing.
Wisdom and Knowledge are not synonymous - not quite.
The Law Of Imagination
That there is a law whereby we grow like whatever we hold in mind is but little known.
This law governs every person and is in constant operation.
Its effects can be seen on every hand by those who are not blind to its existence.
There is a time in infancy
when the mind is purely hereditary. It is undeveloped in its
subconsciousness - a clean phonograph
cylinder, as it were, ready to receive its
first impression. The parents have given it potentiality and hereditary
proclivities,
and the first notice it takes of anything
puts on the first impression. Thereafter every time it takes notice of
an object,
a thought, an animal, additional impressions
are added, while the thought atmosphere in which it lives is unceasingly
writing
upon it. Thus the individuality is formed
without the conscious effort of the child.
At maturity there may be
much undesirable matter recorded. Fear and indecision may be a part. To
put additional impressions
in a lasting way on to the cylinder it is
necessary to first remove the existing matter. If the possessor
concentrates his
attention to the period in life prior to the
first impression, he sees in imagination that period of life. It has a
tendency
to produce a condition similar to the one at
that period. Persistently imagining will remove all early teachings and
the effect
of early surroundings, enabling the character
to be formed by conscious direction as the owner wills.
Every thought now makes a
new impression. Let him see the symbol of the thought before him and the
cylinder receives an impression;
similar thoughts produce deeper impressions.
Holding in mind the kind of person one desires to become builds the necessary elements into the cylinder or subconsciousness
and he grows into that kind of a personality.
The jocular saying, "Think
you are rich and you are rich," which the opponents of Christian Science
so often use, if changed
to read "Think of yourself as being rich and
you will grow rich" would, if backed up by the essential force of
character and
energy, contain some truth.
On the other hand, force, wisdom and energy will bring results without the power of imagination, which can best be employed
in building those qualities into the intellect.
The following article was clipped from a Chicago, IL., newspaper and speaks for itself: -
VIVID IMAGINATION KILLS A WOMAN
SHE THOUGHT SHE HAD BEEN POISONED, AND THIS S0 AFFECTED THE ACTION OF HER HEART THAT SHE DIED.
“CHICAGO, Tuesday. - "Not
poisoned, but dead because she thought she had been poisoned," was the
singular verdict pronounced
by Coroner's Physician Springer today, after
performing an autopsy on the body of Virginia Jackson, an aged negro
woman and
former slave. "This old lady thought she had
been poisoned," said Dr. Springer, "and it affected her heart to such an
extent
that it killed her. "
A neighbor gave Mrs. Jackson
a bottle containing a brownish liquid. Evidently, say the police, the
woman jumped to the conclusion,
on feeling ill immediately after she had
tasted of the contents of the bottle, that she had been poisoned.”
It was not the effect of the imagination on the heart that killed her. It was the severing of the spiritual chord that binds
body and soul.
No, I am not a spiritualist!
The most marked effect of
these early impressions is that the child when grown will resist any
change. He believes anything
with which he has been inoculated without
regard to reason or truth. Knowing nothing of a higher mind, he rejects
every aspiration
whether advanced by his own soul or by
another's.
The less the parents know the more firm is the conviction of the child in all their characteristics.
To induct a new and better mind he must first unlearn all he has been taught excepting whatever amount of courage, decision,
etc., they might have had, and then build upon a new foundation.
By way of digression let us
observe that old superstitions, the religion of our fathers, is clung to
by some minds after their
reason and their intuitive sense of the
eternal fitness of things loudly proclaim its absurdity They cannot
wholly remove
the impressions of their strict training in
youth even when those teachings are known to be false.
Sit by the fireside alone in
the evening and imagine the word courage before you. Look at it. Spell
it. Think of it. Let it
sink deeply into your mind. Read your Bible
and you will learn more about the power of imagination. You grow into
the conditions
you image before you. Imagine yourself an
ideal man as nearly as you can conceive of perfection, not as regards
your face
or form, but as regards being a whole-souled,
honest, earnest, steadfast personality; broad enough to see good in all
religions,
all nations, all individuals; big enough to
think without excitement of owning thousands of dollars, lands,
carriages and
horses. Hold this ideal in your mind; then
think of it often, and be not impatient as to results.
This law is not only true as to man, but to all life. Spotted buildings and fences cause an increase in the number of spotted
cattle on the farm.
If this method is too intricate, let it rest for a time, but keep up your autosuggestions. Use these first, last and every
day for developing any quality or element in which you may be deficient.
The Mental Attitude
We have elsewhere spoken of planes of mind which one
may occupy. These cover a wide variation, from that of the dullard who
scarcely thinks at all, lives like the lower
animals, is guided by instinct, knows enough to eat and work, but whose
mind
never receives a new thought, is never filled
with aspiration or an inflow of wisdom, to the clearheaded, forceful,
calm,
courageous, aspiring mind, which lifts itself
above the world and reaches back drawing the world up with it. These
may vary
to any extent, governed by the degree of
courage or confidence, or justice or power in either, and by the manner
of thinking,
each variation producing a different plane.
The proper mental attitude,
then, is the plane where one can think clearly, evenly, slowly (not
densely), holding the thought
as long as desired, with no interference by
intruding thought on other subjects; living in that condition without
taking strength
by conscious effort, but rather as a natural
condition; the attitude that is always going ahead, pushing out strong,
vigorous
thoughts, never shrinking into itself fearing
failure; a developed condition of peace, wisdom, force, justice, etc.
The majority of those who
have studied mental attraction understand it to mean that one does
nothing but figuratively hold
one's breath and await results, while, on the
contrary, very vigorous pushing thoughts occupy the mind. In its
cultivated
calmness, hardheaded, practical business
plans are conceived; good judgment gives the power to avoid fatal
mistakes; the concentrative
strength prevents pernicious activity, which
defeats one's object, and confidence in self produces a feeling of
security and
peace with a happy optimism. This kind of a
mind steadily advances towards prosperity.
Every sensible person knows
that results are obtained by putting forth effort of some kind. We see a
man go into the woods
with an axe and cut down a tree; that is
physical effort, and the felling of the tree is the result of that same
effort, and
the greater value of the timber in lumber as
compared to its value as a tree marks the gain accruing from his
efforts. Again,
we see the same man employing a number of men
to fell the trees, while his time is devoted to selling the lumber with
greater
profit to himself.
The first case was an effect
of physical effort pure and simple; the second, of building up a
business through the condition
of mind produced by holding the mental
attitude of courage and confidence in self. The resulting action was the
natural and
logical outcome of that condition of mind.
Had he held a slighter degree of courage he would have feared to launch
out; feared
to incur the liability of paying the wages of
his men; feared he would find no market; feared it could not be a
success; and
would never have undertaken to have a
business of his own.
The possessor of the right
mental attitude is the kind of man of whom one instinctively says: "He
is bound to be a success."
The energy others use in worrying is used for
work which becomes as necessary as air, and one literally works out his
own
salvation.
It embraces perfect
self-possession, since self is lost in the absorption of the mind by the
subject occupying the attention.
There is, then, no fear of superiors; in
fact, no thought of other people as regards their personalities, and no
decision
as to their goodness or badness, no judgment
of any kind, nor any distraction by the thousand and one petty fears and
worries
governing ordinary souls; never a tremble or
doubt about the proper signing of business contracts or worry regarding
their
fulfillment. This condition, never excited,
never angered, does not allow the excessive use of one's powers; for be
it firmly
impressed upon you that anger or worry or
excitement of any kind produces in the mentality an exhausting rapidity
of thinking
similar to the effect of turning a full head
of steam on an unloaded stationary engine, rapidly racking it to pieces.
Anger, a species of
insanity, increases the intensity of thought and seems to drive one's
ideas promiscuously around without
their touching anything, producing the same
result as would be obtained by striking repeated blows at the air with
one's clinched
fist; the harder the blow, the more damaging
the result; the more intense the anger, the more mental power lost. This
angry
condition of mind produces sickness of the
body, taking form as sick headache, indigestion, etc. Some think it a
sign of strength,
but strength of mind lies in the power to
hold an even temper at all times.
The proper mental attitude
not only allows the free and best use of one's abilities, but also
increases material fortune by
attracting the ideas which will push the
business or furnish new plans for more acceptable lines, and by bringing
one in touch
with a more wholesome class of people; first,
by one's strong thought going out meeting and mingling with similar
thought;
next, by bringing those on that plane into
personal contact, when they invariably become respectful of the other
and usually
fast friends. This attitude is not some
impossible visionary thing, but is held in some degree by every
successful man. If
this mental condition be cultivated, the
attention being given to its development instead of to some business,
the mind lives
in a new world, sees everything in a
different light.
Opportunities for
accumulating money which before escaped notice are evident on every
hand, and it is realized that what one
does is more important than how much one
does. A single stroke of business often makes a fortune, and it is as
easy for a
strong man to make one hundred dollars as for
a weak man to make one dollar, the only difference being that a
broad-minded,
forceful man goes out with that intention,
while the little fellow as earnestly endeavors to make the one dollar by
part of
a day's labor; simply the difference in the
way these men look at money.
When one occupies a high
attitude of mind in the seclusion of his home, he is attracting to
himself the people who are high
minded; but when he goes out into the world,
the lower thought of other people meets and mingles with his and he
loses his
clearness of mind, brings himself down to
their level. One should not open his soul to anyone, should not allow
other people
to dominate him or arrogantly assume the
ascendancy. He must, to preserve his health and fortune, wrap the mantle
of reserve
around him, not by being haughty (an
acknowledgment of one's own weakness), but by building up through
thinking of himself
as a being separate and distinct from all
others, as occupying a life of his own, a distinct individuality. Then
his friends
will have more respect for his opinions and
personality.
Sympathy bestowed on others
is only wasted strength. They hold all that is given like a leech and
crave the more, since it
sustains them while it is being given, but
destroys their self-reliance and weakens the giver until, if persisted
in, it would
reduce the one to mental poverty and leave
the other high and dry on the shoals of dependence with no one strong
enough to
lean on for support. It literally amounts to
giving one's self, one's force, away and getting no return, and since
justice
to all includes justice to self, it is a
violation of Infinite Law, the punishment being loss of force and the
resulting lessening
of the ability to care for one's self.
There are, then, two people
incapable of caring for themselves, two burdens on society, where there
was but one before. This
does not imply that one cannot do a kindness
or think good will to all; only do not allow anyone to twine himself
around you
and suck your life blood away by constantly
drawing sympathy from you. There is a sort of mental sympathy one can
feel that
prompts the giving to destitute families,
caring for the sick, and generally helping one's less fortunate
neighbors, without
giving away one's life through extending
sympathy to every one that asks.
Helping others destroys
their self-reliance and self-respect, and should not be done by outright
gifts at any time, since
some will ravenously accept anything and
everything and dislike the giver for all time. They instinctively feel
that he was
instrumental in causing them to become less
able to take care of themselves, and they feel under obligations to him
also,
which produces a feeling of inferiority, and
the dislike is the natural effect.
But if one does give at all
it should be money or property of some kind, and not sympathy. Sympathy
is too valuable to give
away; is so necessary to enable one to
provide for self and family. Constantly giving it away destroys one's
chief asset.
It is as though one cut off an arm and gave
it to some one else, destroying his own ability to earn and doing them
no good.
There are some who are so sympathetic that
their heart goes out to every man, woman and child, dumb beasts as well,
that have
sorrow or suffering. It is impossible for
them to stop at once, but the ability can be cultivated without
lessening the amount
of good done others. One can protect a horse
from brutality without weeping over it or feeling like it.
It is not to be implied that
the frame of mind that sends out a constant stream of love and good
will should be repressed.
On the contrary, that is the particular
needful thing to promote health and vigor in one; but the element so
created does
not reach the class of people who crave
sympathy, they are incapable of feeling love (emotion is usually
supposed to be love;
there is a wide difference), and your
thoughts only reach people whose condition of mind is similar to your
own, are assimilated,
absorbed by them and returned with their
added strength to invigorate you. There is a cold, crafty, selfish,
soulless frame
of mind held by some which results in their
being miserly, mean and shriveled; this condition is the result of
withholding
the outflow of love and good will to all.
They are so afraid of poverty that whatever wealth they get is held in a
vise-like
grip.
If you really desire to help
dependent people (unmixed with any love for catering to your own
emotion and no desire to secure
the approbation of others for your good
deeds), instill into those poor weak minds more respect for themselves,
inspire them
with a desire to be self-supporting;
encourage them to make a start in some line of effort, teach them to
stand on their own
feet, and you have made a man instead of
destroying yourself by giving yourself away and leaving the recipient
less able than
before to be independent.
It is largely a love of
self-approbation, a sort of "you are a good man for helping that woman"
idea, a standing off and patting
one's self on the back for one's goodness, a
feeling that sometime we may need sympathy and if we give it we will get
it,
a thorough lack of faith in the Supreme or of
confidence in self that excites one to extend sympathy, rather than a
desire
to put another on a self-supporting basis.
Inspire people to be
self-reliant instead of making paupers, both for your own good and for
theirs. A species of weakness
and lack of self-reliance produces the idea
held by some mothers, and fathers as well, that their children will take
care
of them in their old age, and it usually
results in their being tolerated for past favors rather than loved for
what they
are; or being unceremoniously turned adrift.
Had they lived their own
life and taught their children to do likewise, their attractive power in
their old age would have
been stronger than ever before; money would
have come easier; their children and friends would have loved them for
their inherent
strength. This life of ours is the only one
we know we have, and should be lived in its fullness, not absorbed by
children,
friends or paupers; putting us upon the shelf
as it were in our latter days. The only "trusts" you need bother about
is trust
in yourself and in your ability to get along
smoothly through your own efforts.
There is a state or
condition of mind which realizes that success and the acquisition of
wealth are possible to the thinker,
another that realization is probable, and
another that feels success is assured. This latter goes after it and
gets it. Opposed
to this is the condition which makes a person
say, "It is too good to be true," or, "It is not for me," which is an
effectual
bar to material progress. It is simply
building a stone wall before you - an impassable obstacle. Why prevent
yourself from
prosperity? Why not rather feel and know the
irresistible power of the human will, exercise the power within you,
develop
your latent capabilities, and enjoy life as
is your right, which nothing but your own thoughts can prevent?
A great amount of
advertising has been done along the line of hypnotic control. It has
been advanced that no one could resist
the influence of one acquainted with its
wonderful mysteries; that if the operator made certain cabalistic passes
with the
hand, looked the subject in the eye or
between the eyes; the victim must give up everything desired. Such
teachings are false,
idiotic and vicious. Try it sometime, and you
will more than likely find yourself shutting the door on the outside,
and that
quickly, while your intended victim will
consider you an unmitigated ass and forget you.
Now, on the other hand,
suppose you bring your mind to a state of peace and strength and then go
quietly into an office and
ask for what you want, expecting to get it.
The other fellow feels your thought and is favorably affected by it.
Have you
ever met a man for whom you were willing to
do any reasonable thing he desired? One you liked the first time you met
him,
who impressed you as being a good fellow? Why
do you have such thoughts? Simply because that man feels good will
towards you
and is strong in his own mentality. He never
fears nor hates anyone. He has aspiration and uses others to further his
ends,
but usually does more for them than they for
him. In fact, he seeks their welfare as well as his own. You feel his
desire
to be of service to you, and that state of
mind strikes a responsive chord in your soul and you are possessed with
the desire
to help him. That is personal magnetism. You
like him because he likes you. Such a man never wants for anything.
Money, friends,
success, happiness are his. In helping others
he helped himself.
Any foolish idea of forcing
others to do your will by concentrating your mind on them, and by so
doing to make them do something
against their own interests and to your
financial gain, will result in failure as deserved. Every such thought
sent from your
mind reacts and lowers your mental powers,
increases the element of ill will, brings you into contact with
scheming, designing
people who injure you. For let it be clearly
understood that scheming personalities herd together and you will herd
with them.
Schemes and efforts to defraud another are
entirely unnecessary and sure to eventually promote failure.
The writer has watched
strong men of shady financial reputations, has made it a point to become
well enough acquainted with
them to study their inner self. Not one of
them enjoyed his life. Some of them thought yachting, golfing, owning
thoroughbreds
and racing them was the acme of enjoyment;
but the inner soul-satisfying joy of life, the bliss of breathing the
pure air
in mental harmony, the joy of being big
enough to love peace and concord with plenty, the joy of working and
seeing the results
of one's own creation, the very essence of
life itself was lost to them, and constant moving, constant change and
excitement
were necessary to prevent soul sickness and
melancholy. They were whited sepulchers.
The fires of the Christian's
hell could never burn brighter than the fires within their own souls.
This was the condition
at the height of their prosperity. Ninety
percent of them die in poverty. Why should any man even entertain such
an idea?
One's own resistless force, relieved of the
overpowering load of fear, hate, jealousy, lust and suspicion, directed
towards
things joyful and successful, will carry him
forward to health, wealth and happiness without walking over the
prostrate bodies
of his fellow men.
Better Sometimes To Forget
When you do not have immediate success and
everything - looks discouraging, just remember that it is a stage of
progress which
all encounter, and forget it for a time. Rest
yourself and gather strength for renewed effort. This power of
forgetting is
the best test of mental strength. When
everything looks gloomy, the sunshine is hidden by the clouds of
distrust, life a failure,
and the world a mistake; then to be able to
get it all off your mind, to interest yourself in something light and
happy, thereby
taking on strength, is one necessary
attribute to success in any line of effort.
For when the mind is engaged
in any work or worry it gives off its strength, and when happily
employed it takes on strength
and power. If you are incessantly struggling,
striving and pushing in spasmodic and fruitless attempts to acquire
material
wealth, it grows weaker every instant and
less able to win the desired end; but, on the contrary, if you can dig
up enough
self-control to turn your mind into lighter
channels, take a walk or drive over beautiful country roads, go to a
ball game
or play a game of billiards, in fact, any
amusement you thoroughly enjoy, it rests the mentality, which gathers
strength while
resting, and your fears seem foolish as
viewed by your new mind, and you go bravely to work without any forced
effort or any
weak sinking of the spirit, doing the thing
at hand as well as you can and building up a strong individuality for
the future.
So you see how necessary to
your welfare and happiness is the power of forgetting. If you cannot
forget your troubles, say
to yourself and think of it as you say it, "I
must forget my troubles." Insist forcefully upon having the power to
forget;
not impatiently, fretfully, complainingly,
but using whatever confidence or faith you can summon. Your burden will
grow lighter,
gradually your mind will become healthy, and
all fear, which is the cause of your worry, will disappear. Be not
afraid to
demand earnestly from the Supreme, with all
your power, any quality in which you may be lacking.
The supply is unlimited. All
you can assimilate is yours for the asking, if you ask in the right
way. To be humble does not
mean to be a craven. It only means to realize
the wonderful love, power and justice of the Infinite One; to realize
that this
power is in you and forms your life, and that
if you did not interfere by filling your mind so full of doubt,
distrust and
the consequent worry that it could not act,
it would gently, lovingly lead you to material prosperity and happiness.
One of the great hindrances
to business success is taking the business home with you. Your mind runs
in a groove all day and
at night as well, for the predominant thought
of our sleeping hours is the same as of our conscious life. This
continued current
of similar thought nauseates, disgusts,
wearies and sickens the intellect. There is no refreshing reception of
new thought,
no progress, and failure results. A similar
state would be produced in the body by eating potatoes and nothing else
day after
day. The mind requires food, mental or
spiritual food, if you please, just as much as the body requires
material food, and
unless it receives it there can be no
invigorating life.
Determine to leave your
business at the office. Study your home life. Attend wholesome places of
amusement. Forget your troubles
if your mind is strong enough; if not, demand
forgetfulness. Think of thoughts that will make you happy, any little
incidents
of the day or of your past life. This faculty
of turning the mind upon whatever one chooses to think is not common.
It requires
a strong, forceful mind, and such we are
trying to inculcate in you.
Worrying thoughts go out,
meet other similar thoughts, are reinforced by them, and return with
greater volume 'to renew the
agitation of the suffering mind. So
overpowering does this disease become that the thought of poverty will
set - some people
in a frenzy of worry.
Would it not be a blessing
to you if nothing ever bothered you, nothing could worry you, leaving a
happy, elastic aspiring
mind instead? If you accomplished nothing
else, would it not repay you for your trouble? Are you willing to weakly
say you
cannot, and drudge on, or will you say,
"Well, it cannot harm me to try. No one will know it; no one will laugh
at me if I
fail. I will try." It cannot be done
instantly. It must be a growth.
There can be no elasticity of conception, no wandering into new fields seeking broader avenues of business and pleasure while
the mind is enslaved by worry, held down in the mire, the victim of disease.
Worry is a symptom of the mental disease, fear.
Banish all fear from your mind; say, "Things are coming my way; I am growing into a successful man; I am full of courage;"
and gradually you will build up courage and optimism and all worry will disappear.
I once knew a woman who was
so controlled by fear that she would not allow her little boy out of her
sight, dreading some
misfortune to him. Should he go out of doors,
she rushed after him and brought him in, usually with some exclamation
of dread
that he would fall into the well or be kicked
by the horses. That poor little life was cramped. His healthy, vigorous
action
restricted. The beautiful bud of a strong man
was dwarfed into a driveling, cowardly simpleton. This is a literal
truth. That
woman would have done better had she taken
the boy's life outright and given the spirit freedom, rather than sink
it so deep
in the mire of fear that it may never return -
absolutely uncontrollable fear, destroying all chance for success; for
wisdom,
calm judgment, and that elastic, pushing
spirit so necessary, cannot live in such a mind.
Fear is the Foundation of Fools
Physical Effort vs Mental Attraction
All people must classify themselves either as
masters or servants. They must have sufficient courage and self-reliance
to
start a business of their own, employing
others to carry out their ideas, or else they must work for someone who
has.
It is, therefore, largely a
matter of individual decision whether one will serve or be served; since
if a certain amount of
force be wisely guided results must be
produced in conformity to the volumes of power employed, lessened only
by the mistakes
made through lack of wisdom. As both
qualities can be added to one, it rests entirely with you what position
in life you will
occupy.
It is self-evident that no
man by bodily effort alone can accomplish great results. The volume of
returns must be of necessity
limited. If the effort be turned in the
direction of laboring entirely for others with no mental assistance, the
wage averages
one dollar and seventy-five cents per day.
If, however, the mind co-operates with the body and the laborer is a
skilled carpenter,
the wage rate is materially advanced; but if
the carpenter contracts to erect buildings and employ men to assist him,
the
mind becomes the predominant factor and the
bodily effort though still employed becomes of secondary importance,
since he
must furnish materials and give instructions
to the other workmen before he can do any manual labor himself; and, as
his business
grows, he becomes so busy with the business
details that the body is only used to carry the mind around to inspect
the different
buildings. Then the mind is dominant and the
wage whatever he chooses to count his services worth, limited only by
competition.
We do not, however, reach
the pure attitude of mental attraction until we think of the wealthy
banker who comes to the office
in a carriage at eleven o'clock, sits in an
easy chair until two, spending the balance of the day as his inclination
directs;
yet he gathers thousands of dollars while the
others gather hundreds. Therefore one must have courage to contemplate
the assumption
of responsibilities if he would have wealth,
must think of himself as relying entirely on his own ideas and his
ability to
push them to a successful conclusion. Snugly
ensconcing one's self under the protecting wing of some corporation or
stronger
individual brings retrogression, and with
very few exceptions the trials of life increase and the salary decreases
with age.
We know it may send an electric thrill of
terror to your soul to contemplate yourself as being without a position
and salary,
but it is the making of you. We do not advise
haste or immediately severing your present relations.
Commence by thinking of
yourself as standing on your own feet, relying on yourself alone; this
brings strength and allows
the natural law of gravitation to operate and
you will drift into the desired independence. If you do not want to put
forth
the necessary effort to undertake something
alone, at least develop a frame of mind that will hold up and carry some
one's
business for which he will pay well. The
principal reason why applicants for positions receive scant courtesy is
because they
bring a dependent frame of mind into the
office. Let the manager feel, by feeling so yourself, that you can be
leaned on instead
of leaning on him, and see how quickly he
will attach you to his business. The world is overrun with dependents,
human hop
toads and leeches, all intent on finding some
one on whom to cling for support.
These things are but common sense, nothing startling or visionary about them.
Mental effort brings large
returns. The development of mind gives a broader view to everything.
Business is done on a large
scale. The man who works at day labor ten
hours daily, earning two dollars per day, is using physical effort. The
broker or
financier who stays in his place of business
for four hours daily and puts forth no physical effort attains much
greater results
and uses mental effort. Let the laborer
suppose himself to be occupying the position of the financier and there
arises at
once a desire in his mind to fill that place.
That is aspiration, usually
followed by the thought, "Oh, I cannot do it," showing a want of
self-confidence and courage.
There is where the mental attitude comes in.
You must build yourself into a condition where you can feel "I can and
will do
it," and then have no exhilaration, no
excitement, the precise condition that you would have if you said, "I
can earn $2.00
per day laboring."
Now the projection of
thought brings returns consistent with its character. The strong,
courageous, active thought brings
health and wealth, but that thought cannot be
allowed to "die a-borning" or there will be no returns. The laborer
would earn
nothing unless he put forth effort. Neither
will the mentalist, unless the thought is vigorously projected into the
world,
and that constant unwavering condition of
hopeful, determined expectation, a natural condition brought about by
autosuggestion,
will carry one into larger lines of effort.
Now every time you think "I
am tired of this condition and do not purpose living in it; I shall
better it," you are making
a suggestion to yourself. Constantly
repeating this class of thought will make you over until you will
eventually send forth
a constant stream of forceful enthusiasm.
Your face will brighten; your step become elastic, vigorous and hopeful;
the entire
character become changed into a man of
action, mental not physical. Plans for pushing your business will
suggest themselves
and life will take on a new aspect. Repeating
the words courage and confidence will make you able and willing to
undertake
things which before appalled you.
Again referring to the
different results obtained by bodily efforts and mind's attractive
powers, there was a splendid illustration
in the cases of two Iowa farmers who came
under my observation. The one started in life with seventy dollars, the
gift of
his father. What can one do with seventy
dollars? Why, bank it and go to work for some one. That was the decision
his mind
brought him. Its condition produced that
thought, chemicalization. So he found employment, and, being vigorous,
active and
ambitious, received his board and twenty-two
dollars per month, which he carefully hoarded. After some eight years of
worse
than slavery he saved enough to start himself
as an independent farmer on a rented farm, and at last owned the farm.
His was entirely a case of
striving after results through bodily efforts and he was successful, but
others got the best years
of his life at a nominal wage. He failed in
his duty to himself, was unjust to himself, gave his force away, made
money for
others. He had no right to so misuse his
energy; it was a God-given force to provide for his dependent ones. We
are very apt
to howl down the wealthy man as an autocrat
and censure him for his success, but if we must blame anyone we should
rather
condemn the men who work for him, giving him
part of their earnings when they should have all.
But, you say, some can do better by working for others than they can for themselves. I doubt it, or, if they can, the fault
lies in their lack of wisdom to plan, courage and self-reliance to carry out. John G. Saxe wrote: -
Fools will be fools as certain as fate,
Men of wisdom, make them your tools;
That, only that, is the use of fools."
It contains a large element
of truth, yet their foolishness scarcely exceeds our own, since we give
our assistance and sympathy
to their cowardly whines of poverty, hard
luck, etc. Let them devote as much strength to some work, any work, as
they do to
getting sympathy and help and they would be
able to care for themselves.
My hand is always in my
pocket dragging out the dollars for some imbecile who is too cowardly
craven to face the world standing
on his own feet; and, if one spends time
explaining these things to him, he whines, "I can't." Oh, yes, I'm a
good fellow
all right, and, as a result, am the vat into
which hundreds dump their woes. I return thanks daily. That, when in the
past
I have tried the dumping process, some
stony-hearted old businessman has figuratively kicked me out and on to
my feet. It
is making a man of me. Going up against the
real thing is a developer all right (slang is so expressive). Oh, if you
must
come, tell your woes, get advice and go away
with the expression, "I feel so much better after talking to you; my
burdens
are lighter," why come along, we will brace
you up.
But let us go back and finish the history of our farmers.
The second man in mind had
thirty dollars as his portion. He bought a team of poor old horses,
paying a part thereon, and
pre-empted some land. He raised his own crop,
and in ten years was worth fifty thousand dollars - more than enough.
It never
occurred to him to go to work for another.
His mind was incapable of receiving that class of thought. He relied on
himself
and asked no favors. Both were equally
successful, having accomplished their object, yet what a trifle the one
had as compared
to the other.
Now this talk about it being
the fate of the one to have to struggle, etc., is all rot. The fate
lies in one's own mind. We
personally know that the mental faculties can
be developed until one sees everything from a different viewpoint.
Things look
different. Success looks easy instead of that
impossible thing we have heretofore longed for. Start the suggestions.
Things on which we depend seldom meet out expectations. Success comes quietly, gently.
Fear Of Failure Brings It To You
An active factor in all misery is fear, the product
of deficiency in self-assertiveness, the action of the faculties when
not supported by the element courage. When an
attempt to do some particular thing promising more returns than have
aver heretofore
been earned is undertaken, the first effect
in some people is a fear that they cannot accomplish the undertaking,
and this
sets in motion the very thought element that
will seek other failures, bring one into touch with them, add the burden
of their
indecision and general weakness to one's own,
make that class of people our friends and drive the courageous people
away.
Shrinking from the world,
the fear of interviewing those who might be induced to do business,
withdrawing into one's self,
bashfulness, flushed face and halting speech
are all from this element fear. We see its manifestation on every hand.
Here
one is eating his breakfast at breakneck
speed, for fear of being late to the office. Another trembles at the
footsteps of
his employer, and, if spoken to, can scarcely
make an intelligent reply. A third sits alone at home nights and
mentally, if
not actually, shrieks at every noise,
imagines burglars are in the house even when common sense would tell him
that no self-respecting
burglar would spend time robbing such a
modest home.
The businessman worries
himself into an early grave for fear his ventures will not be
successful. The preacher does not allow
his thoughts free action for fear he will be
dismissed for heresy. The dog crouches at his master's feet fearing
bodily harm.
All insurance is founded on fear. The walking
delegate fears he will lose his position unless he creates trouble and
strife
to prove his usefulness.
The merchant fears trade
will fall off. Every class of man and kind of animal knows this
self-abusing, soul-destroying element,
fear. It has been generated since the world
began and is so ponderous in volume that everybody and everything are
affected
by it. The miser is its product; the grasping
for wealth by all is its manifestation, caused by a fear of poverty in
old age
and growing into the desire for power and
love of show; and so fixed becomes the wealth acquiring habit that there
is no limit
to its desires and no amount can satisfy its
appetite.
People are on a nervous
tension, strung up to the breaking point, strained, rigid, unyielding,
until the face is lined and
seamed, the eyes restless, the fingers
twitching, arms swinging. Sitting quietly in a chair, relaxing the
muscles and resting
is foreign to their nature and would be, to
these people, actual torture. Such people have little common sense and
no one
respects them. I remember a gruff old manager
of a railroad when a new clerk fluttered and flushed and stammered over
a question
he had been asked, turning to his chief clerk
and asking, while his face was a study, "John, what's the matter with
the damn
fool?" There was no emotion or feeling in the
question, just a plain interrogation. They must be moving, active,
cannot and
do not rest until the nervous system breaks
down; then off they go at breakneck speed to some health resort to rest
and recuperate,
if financially able, when they find that rest
is not to be commanded at pleasure after years of ceaseless activity.
It is, therefore, essential
that courage be developed to insure health and success; courage to look
at difficulties or new
and better projects squarely, without
flinching, dissect them, render your opinion and dismiss them from your
mind; courage
enough to forget business when at home with
family and friends, enough to relax the muscles, open the soul to an
inflow of
new strength, to smile easily, naturally, to
live one day at a time letting the morrow take care of itself, to face
the world
and demand your share of the good things,
enough to use, but none to hoard.
Financial success may be
brought about by keeping the mind fixed in a determined, resolute way on
a larger income; learning
to expect it, even if fear largely
predominates in the makeup, only every thought of fear puts an obstacle
in the way of its
accomplishment and an overwhelming degree of
fear will prevent the mind from knowing and realizing that success is
for you;
but good health, that is, freedom from the
ordinary aches and pains of our fellows, cannot be realized until the
mind is at
rest, when the body will likewise rest, and
resting gather health and strength.Some Other Things
It has been said before that desire is the
controlling force of your destiny. By this it is not to be inferred that
simply
because one desires wealth it will come, but
rather if one relieves the mind of all passion, untruth and fear,
leaving freedom
of mental action, that desire controlled by
will, which is in turn guided by wisdom, will attract to you, through
the strengthened
personality, all needful things.
If, in this condition,
thoughts of trouble and poverty come (and they attract to you those most
undesirable things; try to
avoid such thoughts), you could easily turn
your mind into thoughts of success which would then be attracted
instead. There
is but little value in constant admonitions,
such as to choose good company, to avoid people who are failures and not
to worry,
to expect success, etc. If the desire for
good company and prosperity honestly deserved can be instilled into a
mind, the
resulting self-purging and purifying will
build up that mind into a pure man who unconsciously gravitates toward
similar people.
All arguing is valueless,
since, for example, a child's mind not being on the same mental plane as
the parent's cannot see
things from the same viewpoint. Tell the boy
not to smoke; he sees others apparently enjoying a good smoke and
desires to
try it himself. After he has grown up and
finds what a nuisance it is, he tells his son not to smoke and carefully
explains
how he did not obey his father and is now
sorry for it, and his son immediately gets a cigar and tries it. The
source of all
wisdom cannot make a mistake.
The human being having the
quality of wisdom adulterated by his imperfections, for the stagnant
pool will taint the purest
rivulet, does not see things as clearly and
accordingly makes many mistakes for which he suffers. Again, the quality
of truth
enables one to detect error, inasmuch as in
any idea advanced, containing part truth and part error, the truthful
portion
would appeal to the mind having the quality
of truth developed as being true, while the error would not occupy a
prominent
position and would fall away and fade from
sight from lack of attention.
If, however, that mind has
but little truth in it, then the error in any proposition seems to be
the truth, and an unsuccessful
mind is likewise attracted to a plan
promising more probability of failure than of success, and, if its
possessor was going
into business, would adopt such a plan; while
the successful mind would feel and know the probabilities of success
were small
and reject the proposition, but immediately
embrace the plan rejected by the unsuccessful mind. Cultivate,
therefore, truth
for self-protection.
If one sees all the faults
in another, it is because those same faults are in one's self. If not,
the qualities of mind would
attract the attention to the better side of
the criticized nature. There is no one so low but there remains some
good qualities,
and if the critic were absolutely pure, those
good qualities would occupy such a prominent position that the
imperfections
would escape his notice. If, therefore, you
gossip, putting in circulation the element of ill will and literally
destroying
the mentality of your neighbor as well as
building up through the reaction of your own thought those very defects
in your
character, would it not be well for you to
cultivate good will to all, when all desire to find defects in others
would disappear?
Then build up peace, justice
and love in yourself in order to be able to see them in others. The
simple desire in your soul
will start you on the road, for know you that
desire is prayer. Long set forms of words, repeated hurriedly, on your
knees,
in a cold room, in conformity to duty as laid
down by some sect, as outlined in their creed, is not prayer, and will
bring
no response. But the warm soul pulse of
earnest desire starts in vibration all those qualities desired, and
builds up the
individual through their inflow. We hold that
all nature prays. Trees, flowers, birds, all animals, inclusive of man,
send
out their desires for life, love and
happiness, and such prayer is answered.
Learn to control yourself
that your desires may be entirely for love, peace, purity, strength,
justice, decision, force, and
these things will be added to you and money
will follow as fast as you allow your personality to develop. In your
weak state
you find money hard to get. You strive and
struggle for it. It seems almost impossible for you to accumulate
anything, and
it is hard for you to acquire if your parents
were poor and you have always been in poverty, because in your mind
this educated
you to set material value on a pedestal and
mentally worship it as being above you.
If the greatest
self-control has been reached, the amount of revenue derived from your
efforts depends on the amount of force
in you and on how you look upon monetary
values. Force is obtained by conserving your energy; by never being
anxious or worrying;
by not throwing your whole power into
whatever you do, but using only as much as is required to do it well; by
not flinging
your thoughts around at random; by
alternating leisure and labor, for, be it known, the person who devotes
his whole time
to pleasure is farther from happiness than he
who is ground down by cares.
As before stated, you can no
more regulate these things in yourself without great labor and
protracted effort than you can
stop the progress of the midday sun. But
constant endeavors and forceful demands for the deficient qualities will
attract
them to you, until at last absolute
self-control will result and you will be able to use just the required
amount of mental
effort to accomplish results, and even then a
man of small caliber will only do little things. Some never rise above a
peanut
stand, others sigh for more worlds to
conquer; there is the difference. Any particular individual will,
therefore, attract
to himself results in accordance with the
caliber. If a peanut man, he will get peanut results, i.e., if he thinks
in pennies,
the result is pennies; if in millions, the
result is millions. The law is as clearly demonstrated in the one case
as the other.
Both drew to themselves in accordance with
their force. If the little mind receives force and power, pennies become
too small
to seek, and broader fields of effort follow
bringing greater returns.
But, you say, "Why does not
the little mind think in millions at once?" Simply because he cannot
think beyond his caliber.
When his force is built up he finds his ideas
have in some way undergone a change and things come in greater volume.
This
acquisition of force is assisted by
aspiration, inasmuch as the idea of greater things is constantly held
before the mind's
eye, and growth results. Without this desire
for constant improvement, retrogression sets in and the progress is
backward.
No one can stand still in mentality. It is
push forward or slip backward.
Aspiration attracts both
ways - to you, bringing power and force, and from you, lifting you
upwards, just as the earth and
a falling stone are mutually attracted
towards each other in proportion to their volumes. The larger the stone,
the greater
is the effect on the earth; so the greater
your force, the greater your attraction towards better things. It is
just as easy
for the forceful man to attract millions as
for the peanut man to attract nickels, and both are governed by the same
law.
Build up, therefore, your ability to expect
thousands instead of dollars, and thousands you will get.
This fact is further
exemplified when it is remembered that an honest man is seldom cheated.
We mean a man who would not take
advantage in a business transaction when he
could. His pure mind brings him in contact with honest people, and, if
another
tries to take advantage of him, some
instinctive voice holds him from accepting the transaction. The old
adage that honesty
is the best policy is based on a scientific
fact. Cultivate it. This quality, force, is the sustaining power that
enables
one to laugh at trouble, the mental attribute
that causes others to recognize its possessor as a strong man.
If any character be
strongly endowed with it, some degree of success would be obtained, even
if the great part of it was
wasted in violence, and self-control is only
valuable in a business sense as it enables the mind to use all its
powers to
the very best advantage; to stop the worrying
thought and substitute instead the strong, vigorous ideas of pushing on
to the
desired end. A weak man (one lacking in force
and power) having perfect self-control will accomplish more by properly
directing
his force and retaining his energy than the
strong man who wastes his energy in driving numberless projects towards,
but never
to, completion, in worrying over his
failures, in anger and other modes of mental dissipation, for it uses
the same energy
to worry that would be used for pushing
forward a successful business.
One idea carried to a
successful conclusion will produce larger returns, even if it be but a
poor idea, than a half dozen
imperfectly carried out. The less irons a
weak character has in the fire the better for him, since he requires the
concentrative
energy of all his power to carry one plan
forward. On the other hand, a strong, vigorous man can carry several
plans to as
great a success as the other fellow can his
simple purpose, but not to as great success as he could if his whole
power was
given to one large project.
The little fellow attempts
sometimes to carry out great things on the principle that the higher the
aim the greater the results,
which is true in so far that great
aspirations bring force of character which enables one to increase his
power, but until
that increased power is obtained there is
danger of his being, assailed in mind by his own doubts and lack of
confidence in
his ability to carry it out, which invariably
leads to failure. This lack of confidence is shown by the expression,
"I know
I can do it," while, if confidence prevailed,
the question as to whether or not he could, would not occur to him,
and, if
the question were asked, he would probably
answer abruptly, "Why not?"
Now do not understand that a
perfect state of confidence must be developed before any degree of
success can be obtained, for,
if that were true, the most of us would never
be successful; only, one should do those things which he can do without
being
assailed by doubts and fear of failure, and,
in the meantime, build up the qualities of force, courage, confidence
and determination;
and as they are acquired he will find himself
doing work of such caliber that the idea of it would alone have
frightened him
off some time before, while carrying with him
the intention of doing some larger line of business will accustom his
mind to
the idea and he will not "scare at the cars"
so easily. In time he will grow into such confidence in himself that it
will
be no longer a great idea, but just a
commonplace affair when he is ready for its projection.
The lack of education will
not be a bar to success. Wisdom and knowledge are not synonymous;
neither are refinement and polish.
Some of the most refined, gentle and
estimable people are wholly without polish; while some of the smart set
are puppets and
snobs. If, however, the mind puts a limit on
itself because of a lack of education and says, "Oh, he has a good
education;
of course he can do it; but I did not have
that advantage and there is no use of my trying," that thought will put a
bar to
all great progress. In general terms, we are
just what we assume ourselves to be, but may be whatever we determine to
be.
If you have a child of whom
you desire to make a failure, just teach him that education, alone will
make him a success, and
nothing else will be required. You establish a
limitation for him, and he will never, can never make the necessary
effort
to be a man unless his own power of
observation shows him the David Harums of life and proves your teachings
erroneous. By
great men we do not refer to statesmen or
noted people in any sense, but to the quiet, strong, forceful, and
self-controlled
man who always has enough and to spare of
this world's goods and who has conquered his spirit.
Neither does age prove any
bar. Lack of youthful elasticity may make progress slow until confidence
is acquired; but the sober
judgment of mature years will counterbalance
it. Spirit, your spirit, has always existed, will always exist in some
form,
and the time limit called age is only a
measure of the length of existence in this body.
People whose minds never
rise above the round of petty trifles, who constantly think of
themselves instead of losing the consciousness
of their own identity by thinking of their
work entirely - concentrating on it - are apt to talk of themselves or
of some
one else instead of discussing matters of
greater import. They are also apt to talk incessantly with but little to
say and
nothing worth hearing. If you are loquacious,
find the cause; it will be in your mental condition.
If you receive a thought,
you send it out again, reinforced, to be absorbed by another mind. If
you think hate towards some
fellow man, you add to your stock of hate and
increase your thought current of hate, and that is sin. Attending
theaters,
ball games and similar places of amusement is
not a sin, but rather a rest and recreation which add to your strength
and should
be cultivated. Low resorts, such as cheap
variety theaters, with barroom attachment and female attendants, or the
pistol-firing,
blood-curdling drama of the hero rescuing the
maiden and similar rot, contain a vulgar thought atmosphere and you, by
absorbing
it, weaken and degrade yourself. But a
high-grade actor, from thinking strong thoughts (and he cannot be such
an actor without
vigorous thought) becomes strong, and his
influence adds to your strength and improves your mind aside from the
relaxation,
which also benefits you.
Goodness, godliness,
holiness, consist in building up the qualities of good will, strength,
judgment, determination, confidence,
courage, power, justice, gentleness, order,
precision, force, calmness, and the resulting self-control; in short, of
being
a gentleman in the best sense of the word.
Fathers, mothers, what kind
of justice would you show if you deliberately chose one child and said,
"He shall have money,
health, happiness," and of the other, "He
shall have cares, worry, poverty, misery"? Yet that is just what the
Supreme Life
says to us if the doctrine of predestination
is true. Can you believe such a fearful thing could come from a mind in
which
lies exact, unfaltering justice? Would you do
it? And yet some believe that the Universal Life is less just than the
human
being. The law is there, and that law says,
in unmistakable terms: you make your own life by the thoughts you think.
Every thought received in
your mind is in accordance with the attitude of that mind and that
attitude is governed entirely
by your desire, - as a man thinketh, etc.
Though that desire may be beyond control, through years of heredity and
your own
uncontrolled thought, that does not change
it, and you must suffer the same. If you desire to hate anyone, your
mind is immediately
filled with thoughts of hate, which you send
out again reinforced by the strength of your own personality. This
hateful thought
meets and mingles with the great body of
hateful thoughts which has been generated through countless years, and,
reacting,
comes back to your own mind, establishing a
connection between the great body of hate and yourself from which a
current constantly
comes to you, degrading, weakening,
eventually destroying you.
On the other hand it works
precisely the same way if your mind desires love. Love others and others
will love you, and your
ability to love will grow, constantly adding
strength to your mind. Anyone can bring the hate or love of the entire
world
on himself, as he chooses, by building up the
quality in his own mind. As now constituted, the minds of most people
desire
to love their friends and hate their enemies.
Now don't you know you have no enemies excepting as you make them by
considering
them as such? You send them hating thought,
they return it; this establishes a connection between you, constantly
taking your
strength to keep up the war. You cannot
afford to do this; it is destroying your money making power.
Just reverse your plan and
imagine him in mind as a friend; think of him as such; feel friendly
towards him. That is strength.
Then the current he generates will rebound
from you like the sunrays from a plate of polished steel and do no harm,
while
he will feel your friendship and accept it
heartily. Such a course requires mental strength, and by saying and
thinking good
will to all you can reach it.
That is controlling people.
Acting ugly when they are ugly, fighting people, compelling them to do
your bidding, is but a
crude physical control at best; but when some
violent tempered, infuriated man stands before you and you look into
his eyes
kindly, unflinchingly, absolutely fearless,
the anger will fade away, the hostile attitude dissolve, your own look
of good
will and courage supplanting it, and you feel
his hearty grasp of your extended hand. That is the mastery. That is
self-control.
But if you become affected
by his anger, lose your temper, act as ugly as he, then self-control is
lost and he is your master
and troubles are accumulating for you. The
Indians with whom William Penn traded were affected by his mental
condition. He
meant to be just and they felt his honesty,
and as a reward for holding the right mental attitude the Quaker garb
was the
best life insurance a person could have in
Indian war times. If you master yourself first, hold yourself absolutely
obedient
to your desire for peace; you can control
anyone, savage or civilized.
The passengers on a through
train from Chicago to New York were disturbed by the constant crying of a
little babe in its mother's
arms. She walked along the aisle of the car,
tossed the babe up and down, laid it face downward on her lap, and her
nerves
were evidently at a tension. At last a
gentleman asked her to permit him to try to quiet the child, and, in a
few minutes,
it was peacefully sleeping, and he did
nothing but hold it in his arms. Evidently knowing the effects of the
mental condition
of the mother upon the baby, he would not
allow her to take the child until both obtained a restful sleep. Poor
baby! Poor
mother! What a difference inherited or
cultivated calmness in the mother would have made in the lives of both.
Had she been quiet in mind,
which means that thoughts pass through one at a time, deliberately and
not in droves (each crowding
and jostling the other and more pushing from
behind), the child would have been stronger, more courageous and
healthful, and
bright smiles of happy contentment would have
shown in the baby face instead of the constant nervous crying.
Now, briefly, to summarize:
Build yourself into a calm, determined, courageous, forceful man by the
aid of autosuggestion,
and the attractive force of your mentality
will bring success to you. You need not seek it. It will seek you. Use
the methods
given for any quality desired, eloquence,
wisdom, health, anything - you will get results.
Faith is a dead letter unless accompanied with active, progressive thoughts and actions.
Cowards cannot concentrate
Nearing The End
After all that has been said, suppose it be stated in plain terms just what is considered necessary to have, or acquire, in
some measure, before any degree of success can be had in any line of effort.
Let aspiration take
precedence, inasmuch as there is included therein hope of future
betterment, without which there can be
no progress. In this condition one is never
satisfied, which does not mean never contented. The feeling that there
is more
beyond remains, which is no impediment to
perfect contentment, but rather does it augment that condition,
producing the feeling
that we are all right at this particular
moment, and, when the future becomes the present, we will have become
stronger and
wiser and therefore better able to sustain
ourselves.
Aspiration is not ambition.
The one is hope, desire and expectation of your own and world
betterment. The other a desire to
outstrip your fellow men in the race for
temporal glory and power. The first adds to your strength, builds up
your conception,
accustoms you to the idea of better things,
brings peace to your mind. The second makes you jealous of others'
success, hostile
to the world, thereby bringing antagonism of
others upon you, using your strength in useless resistance to that
hostile thought,
and this weakens you and prevents success.
Aspiration can be grown by
suggestion. The attitude of peace, assisted by aspiration and developed
by suggestion, prepares
the mind for the induction of thought, of new
ideas. As this is developed you see opportunities to make money that
were hidden
though in plain view. Hurried, impatient,
angry thoughts become a thing of the past. Strong, forceful, quiet,
concentrative
ideas, one at a time, take their place, and
from these you choose the one adapted to your own peculiar mental
composition.
The right one in its entirety will be chosen
if the quality of truth in you is fully developed. If not perfectly
developed,
but only the foundation is there, such part
as you are able to recognize will be accepted and your success will be
limited
to the degree in which the whole idea, free
from intruding error; is worked out.
Then having chosen your work
without any idea of shining as a great leader, free from every thought
of the morrow, devote
your energy to its being pushed on and on.
There is a constant inflow of new ideas for its promotion, and as they
are worked
out life becomes one constant joy, each day
bringing its new pleasure and its new work and the quality of
determination holds
you from deviating from that work, from
chasing one idea, one occupation today, another tomorrow, and wasting
your life in
fruitless effort.
Good will to all is a wonderful lightener of mental burdens. Jealous, hating thought brings its burden of antagonism from
the world and wastes strength in resisting it which could be used in pushing your ideas forward.
Then develop calmness,
courage, push, confidence, determination, concentration, justice, truth,
with any other qualities in
which you are deficient. This produces the
same effect in your personality that tempering does in steel. You are
the man.
Instinctively people feel your success is
assured. They speak of you as a coming man. Ideas for making money will
come to
you unsought. The natural thing for you to do
is always the right thing. You push those ideas forward and success
comes as
a natural result. Every effort brings some
effect, every thought is an effort. Determined thought bent in the
direction of
success brings it to you. It becomes a
natural evolution. As your personality grows the little business grows
with it. Holding
the mental habit is your natural condition
and requires no effort to maintain it. You therefore only need study
yourself,
practice autosuggestion, use the Law of
Vibration, employ the power of imagination, and the future is assured.
There, we are done. These
ideas have lightened my burden. May they do as well for you. There is a
great truth therein. What
part of it we are able to see can only be
determined by its effects. It must be measured by the amount of truth we
have developed
in ourselves.
This much I know and have proven autosuggestion or suggestion to self, the power of imagination, the Law of Demand, will build
up your personality and increase your fortune; will make you contented and happy.
The best wish I can give you is that these old ideas as I have clothed them will do as much for you as they have done for
me, and give you as much pleasure in the reading as has the writing given me.
According to your faith and works be it unto you.
