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  • William Walker Atkinson's Thought Vibration or The Law of Attraction in the Thought World

  • (1906)

  • Chapter I - The Law of Attraction in the Thought World

  • Chapter II - Thought Waves and Their Process of Reproduction

  • Chapter III - A Talk About The Mind Chapter IV - Mind Building

  • Chapter V - The Secret of the Will Chapter VI - How to Become Immune to Injurious

  • Thought Attraction Chapter VII - The Transmutation of Negative

  • Thought Chapter VIII - The Law of Mental Control

  • Chapter IX - Asserting the Life-Force Chapter X - Training the Habit-Mind

  • Chapter XI - The Psychology of Emotion Chapter XII - Developing New Brain Cells

  • Chapter XIII - The Attractive Power - Desire Force

  • Chapter XIV - The Great Dynamic Forces Chapter XV - Claiming Your Own

  • Chapter XVI - Law, Not Chance

  • Chapter I - The Law of Attraction in the Thought World

  • THE Universe is governed by Law - one great Law. Its manifestations are multiform, but

  • viewed from the Ultimate there is but one Law. We are familiar with some of its manifestations,

  • but are almost totally ignorant of certain others. Still we are learning a little more

  • every day - the veil is being gradually lifted.

  • We speak learnedly of the Law of Gravitation, but ignore that equally wonderful manifestation,

  • THE LAW OF ATTRACTION IN THE THOUGHT WORLD. We are familiar with that wonderful manifestation

  • of Law which draws and holds together the atoms of which matter is composed - we recognize

  • the power of the law that attracts bodies to the earth, that holds the circling worlds

  • in their places, but we close our eyes to the mighty law that draws to us the things

  • we desire or fear, that makes or mars our lives.

  • When we come to see that Thought is a force - a manifestation of energy - having a magnet-like

  • power of attraction, we will begin to understand the why and wherefore of many things that

  • have heretofore seemed dark to us. There is no study that will so well repay the student

  • for his time and trouble as the study of the workings of this mighty law of the world of

  • Thought - the Law of Attraction.

  • When we think we send out vibrations of a fine ethereal substance, which are as real

  • as the vibrations manifesting light, heat, electricity,

  • magnetism. That these vibrations are not evident to our five senses is no proof that they do

  • not exist. A powerful magnet will send out vibrations and exert a force sufficient to

  • attract to itself a piece of steel weighing a hundred pounds, but we can neither see,

  • taste, smell, hear nor feel the mighty force. These thought vibrations, likewise, cannot

  • be seen, tasted, smelled, heard nor felt in the ordinary way; although it is true there

  • are on record cases of persons peculiarly sensitive to psychic impressions who have

  • perceived powerful thought-waves, and very many of us can testify that we have distinctly

  • felt the thought vibrations of others, both whilst in the presence of the sender and at

  • a distance. Telepathy and its kindred phenomena are not idle dreams.

  • Light and heat are manifested by vibrations of a far lower intensity than those of Thought,

  • but the difference is solely in the rate of vibration. The annals of science throw an

  • interesting light upon this question. Prof. Elisha Gray, an eminent scientist, says in

  • his little book, "The Miracles of Nature":

  • "There is much food for speculation in the thought that there exist sound-waves that

  • no human ear can hear, and color-waves of light that

  • no eye can see. The long, dark, soundless space between 40,000 and 400,000,000,000,000

  • vibrations per second, and the infinity of range beyond 700,000,000,000,000 vibrations

  • per second, where light ceases, in the universe of motion, makes it possible to indulge in

  • speculation."

  • M. M. Williams, in his work entitled "Short Chapters in Science," says:

  • "There is no gradation between the most rapid undulations or tremblings that produce our

  • sensation of sound, and the slowest of those which give rise to our sensations of gentlest

  • warmth. There is a huge gap between them, wide enough to include another world of motion,

  • all lying between our world of sound and our world of heat and light; and there is no good

  • reason whatever for supposing that matter is incapable of such intermediate activity,

  • or that such activity may not give rise to intermediate sensations, provided there are

  • organs for taking up and sensifying their movements."

  • I cite the above authorities merely to give you food for thought, not to attempt to demonstrate

  • to you the fact that thought vibrations exist. The last-named fact has been fully established

  • to the satisfaction of numerous investigators of the subject, and a little reflection will

  • show you that it coincides with your own experiences.

  • We often hear repeated the well-known Mental Science statement, "Thoughts are Things,"

  • and we say these words over without consciously realizing just what is the meaning of the

  • statement. If we fully comprehended the truth of the statement and the natural consequences

  • of the truth back of it, we should understand many things which have appeared dark to us,

  • and would be able to use the wonderful power,

  • Thought Force, just as we use any other manifestation of Energy.

  • As I have said, when we think we set into motion vibrations of a very high degree, but

  • just as real as the vibrations of light, heat, sound, electricity. And when we understand

  • the laws governing the production and transmission

  • of these vibrations we will be able to use them in our daily life, just as we do the

  • better known forms of energy. That we cannot see, hear, weigh or measure these vibrations

  • is no proof that they do not exist. There exist waves of sound which no human ear can

  • hear, although some of these are undoubtedly registered by the ear of some of the insects,

  • and others are caught by delicate scientific instruments invented by man; yet there is

  • a great gap between the sounds registered by the most delicate instrument and the limit

  • which man's mind, reasoning by analogy, knows to be the boundary line between soundwaves

  • and some other forms of vibration. And there are light waves which the eye of man does

  • not register, some of which may be detected by more delicate instruments, and many more

  • so fine that the instrument has not yet been invented which will detect them, although

  • improvements are being made every year and the unexplored field gradually lessened.

  • As new instruments are invented, new vibrations are registered by them - and yet the vibrations

  • were just as real before the invention of the instrument as afterward. Supposing that

  • we had no instruments to register magnetism - one might be justified in denying the existence

  • of that mighty force, because it could not be tasted, felt, smelt, heard, seen, weighted

  • or measured. And yet the mighty magnet would still send out waves of force sufficient to

  • draw to it pieces of steel weighing hundreds of pounds.

  • Each form of vibration requires its own form of instrument for registration. At present

  • the human brain seems to be the only instrument capable of registering thought waves, although

  • occultists say that in this century scientists will invent apparatus sufficiently delicate

  • to catch and register such impressions. And from present indications it looks as if the

  • invention named might be expected at any time. The demand exists and undoubtedly will be

  • soon supplied. But to those who have experimented along the lines of practical telepathy no

  • further proof is required than the results of their own experiments.

  • We are sending out thoughts of greater or less intensity all the time, and we are reaping

  • the results of such thoughts. Not only do our thought waves influence ourselves and

  • others, but they have a drawing power - they attract to us the thoughts of others, things,

  • circumstances, people, "luck," in accord with the character of the thought uppermost in

  • our minds. Thoughts of Love will attract to us the Love of others; circumstances and surroundings

  • in accord with the thought; people who are of like thought. Thoughts of Anger, Hate,

  • Envy, Malice and Jealousy will draw to us the foul brood of kindred thoughts emanating

  • from the minds of others; circumstances in which we will be called upon to manifest these

  • vile thoughts and will receive them in turn from others; people who will manifest inharmony;

  • and so on. A strong thought or a thought long continued, will make us the center of attraction

  • for the corresponding thought waves of others. Like attracts like in the Thought World - as

  • ye sow so shall ye reap. Birds of a feather flock together in the Thought World - curses

  • like chickens come home to roost, and bringing their friends with them.

  • The man or woman who is filled with Love sees Love on all sides and attracts the Love of

  • others. The man with hate in his heart gets all the Hate he can stand. The man who thinks

  • Fight generally runs up against all the Fight he wants before he gets through. And so it

  • goes, each gets what he calls for over the wireless telegraphy of the Mind. The man who

  • rises in the morning feeling "grumpy" usually manages to

  • have the whole family in the same mood before the breakfast is over. The "nagging" woman

  • generally finds enough to gratify her "nagging" propensity during the day.

  • This matter of Thought Attraction is a serious one. When you stop to think of it you will

  • see that a man really makes his own surroundings, although he blames others for it. I have known

  • people who understood this law to hold a positive, calm thought and be absolutely unaffected

  • by the inharmony surrounding them. They were like the vessel from which the oil had been

  • poured on the troubled waters - they rested safely and calmly whilst the tempest raged

  • around them. One is not at the mercy of the fitful storms of Thought after he has learned

  • the workings of the Law.

  • We have passed through the age of physical force on to the age of intellectual supremacy,

  • and are now entering a new and almost unknown field, that of psychic power. This field of

  • energy has its established laws, as well as have the others, and we should acquaint ourselves

  • with them or we will be crowded to the wall as are the ignorant on the planes of effort.

  • I will endeavor to make plain to you the great underlying principles of this new field of

  • energy which is opening up before us, that you may be able to make use of this great

  • power and apply it for legitimate and worthy purposes, just as men are using steam, electricity

  • and other forms of energy today.

  • Chapter II - Thought Waves and Their Process of Reproduction

  • LIKE a stone thrown into the water, thought produces ripples and waves which spread out

  • over the great ocean of thought. There is this difference, however: the waves on the

  • water move only on a level plane in all directions, whereas thought waves move in all directions

  • from a common center, just as do the rays from the sun.

  • Just as we here on earth are surrounded by a great sea of air, so are we surrounded by

  • a great sea of Mind. Our thought waves move through

  • this vast mental ether, extending, however, in all directions, as I have explained, becoming

  • somewhat lessened in intensity according to the

  • distance traversed, because of the friction occasioned by the waves coming in contact

  • with the great body of Mind surrounding us on all sides.

  • These thought waves have other qualities differing from the waves on the water. They have the

  • property of reproducing themselves, in this respect they resemble sound waves rather than

  • waves upon the water. Just as a note of the violin will cause the thin glass to vibrate

  • and "sing," so will a strong thought tend to awaken similar vibrations in minds attuned

  • to receive it. Many of the "stray thoughts" which come to us are but reflections or answering

  • vibrations to some strong thought sent out by another. But unless our minds are attuned

  • to receive it, the thought will not likely affect us. If we are thinking high and great

  • thoughts, our minds acquire a certain keynote corresponding to the character of the thoughts

  • we have been thinking. And, this keynote once established, we will be apt to catch the vibrations

  • of other minds keyed to the same thought. On the other hand, let us get into the habit

  • of thinking thoughts of an opposite character, and we will soon be echoing the low order

  • of thought emanating from the minds of the thousands thinking along the same lines.

  • We are largely what we have thought ourselves into being, the balance being represented

  • by the character of the suggestions and thought of others, which have reached us either directly

  • by verbal suggestions or telepathically by means of such thought waves. Our general mental

  • attitude, however, determines the character of the thought waves received from others

  • as well as the thoughts emanating from ourselves. We receive only such thoughts as are in harmony

  • with the general mental attitude held by ourselves; the thoughts not in harmony affecting us very

  • little, as they awaken no response in us.

  • The man who believes thoroughly in himself and maintains a positive strong mental attitude

  • of Confidence and Determination is not likely to be affected by the adverse and negative

  • thoughts of Discouragement and Failure emanating from the minds of other persons in whom these

  • last qualities predominate. At the same time these negative thoughts, if they reach one

  • whose mental attitude is pitched on a low key, deepen his negative state and add fuel

  • to the fire which is consuming his strength, or, if you prefer this figure, serve to further

  • smother the fire of his energy and activity.

  • We attract to us the thoughts of others of the same order of thought. The man who thinks

  • success will be apt to get into tune with the minds of others thinking likewise, and

  • they will help him, and he them. The man who allows his mind to dwell constantly upon thoughts

  • of failure brings himself into close touch with the minds of other "failure" people,

  • and each will tend to pull the other down still more. The man who thinks that all is

  • evil is apt to see much evil, and will be brought into contact with others who will

  • seem to prove his theory. And the man who looks for

  • good in everything and everybody will be likely to attract to himself the things and people

  • corresponding to his thought. We generally see that for which we look.

  • You will be able to carry this idea more clearly if you will think of the Marconi wireless

  • instruments, which receive the vibrations only from the sending instrument which has

  • been attuned to the same key, while other telegrams are passing through the air in near

  • vicinity without affecting the instrument. The same law applies to the operations of

  • thought. We receive only that which corresponds to our mental attunement. If we have been

  • discouraged, we may rest assured that we have dropped into a negative key, and have been

  • affected not only by our own thoughts but have also received the added depressing thoughts

  • of similar character which are constantly being sent out from the minds of other unfortunates

  • who have not yet learned the law of attraction in the thought world. And if we occasionally

  • rise to heights of enthusiasm and energy, how quickly we feel the inflow of the courageous,

  • daring, energetic, positive thoughts being sent out by the live men and women of the

  • world. We recognize this without much trouble when we come in personal contact with people

  • and feel their vibrations, depressing or invigorating, as the case may be. But the same law operates

  • when we are not in their presence, although less strongly.

  • The mind has many degrees of pitch, ranging from the highest positive note to the lowest

  • negative note, with many notes in between, varying in pitch according to their respective

  • distance from the positive dr negative extreme.

  • When your mind is operating along positive lines you feel strong, buoyant, bright, cheerful,

  • happy, confident and courageous, and are enabled to do your work well, to carry out your intentions,

  • and progress on your roads to Success. You send out strong positive thought, which affects

  • others and causes them to co-operate with you or to follow your lead, according to their

  • own mental keynote.

  • When you are playing on the extreme negative end of the mental keyboard you feel depressed,

  • week, passive, dull, fearful, cowardly. And you find yourself unable to make progress

  • or to succeed. And your effect upon others is practically nil. You are led by, rather

  • than leading others, and are used as a human door-mat or football by more positive persons.

  • In some persons the positive element seems to predominate, and in others the negative

  • quality seems to be more in evidence. There are, of course, widely varying degrees of

  • positiveness and negativeness, and B may be negative to A, while positive to C. When two

  • people first meet there is generally a silent mental conflict in which their respective

  • minds test their quality of positiveness, and fix their relative position toward each

  • other. This process may be unconscious in many cases, but it occurs nevertheless. The

  • adjustment is often automatic, but occasionally the struggle is so sharp - the opponents being

  • so well matched - that the matter forces itself into the consciousness of the two people.

  • Sometimes both parties are so much alike in their degrees of positiveness that they fail

  • to come to terms, mentally; they never really are able to get along with each other, and

  • they are either mutually repelled and separate or else stay together amid constant broils

  • and wrangling.

  • We are positive or negative to everyone with whom we have relations. We may be positive

  • to our children, our employees and dependents, but we are at the same time negative to others

  • to whom we occupy inferior positions, or whom we have allowed to assert themselves over

  • us.

  • Of course, something may occur and we will suddenly become more positive than the man

  • or woman to whom we have heretofore been negative. We frequently see cases of this kind. And

  • as the knowledge of these mental laws becomes more general we will see many more instances

  • of persons asserting themselves and making use of their new-found power.

  • But remember you possess the power to raise the keynote of your mind to a positive pitch

  • by an effort of the will. And, of course, it is equally true that you may allow yourself

  • to drop into a low, negative note by carelessness or a weak will.

  • There are more people on the negative plane of thought than on the positive plane, and

  • consequently there are more negative thought vibrations in operation in our mental atmosphere.

  • But, happily for us, this is counterbalanced by the fact that a positive thought is infinitely

  • more powerful than a negative one, and if by force of will we raise ourselves to a higher

  • mental key we can shut out the depressing thoughts and may take up the vibrations corresponding

  • with our changed mental attitude. This is one of the secrets of the affirmations and

  • auto-suggestions used by the several schools of Mental Science and other New Thought cults.

  • There is no particular merit in affirmations of themselves, but they serve a twofold purpose:

  • (1) They tend to establish new mental attitudes within us and act wonderfully in the direction

  • of character- building - the science of making ourselves over. (2) They tend to raise the

  • mental keynote so that we may get the benefit of the positive thought waves of others on

  • the same plane of thought.

  • Whether or not we believe in them, we are constantly making affirmations. The man who

  • asserts that he can and will do a thing - and asserts it earnestly - develops in himself

  • the qualities conducive to the well doing of that thing, and at the same time places

  • his mind in the proper key to receive all the thought waves likely to help him in the

  • doing. If, on the other hand, one says and feels that he is going to fail, he will choke

  • and smother the thoughts coming from his own subconscious mentality which are intended

  • to help him, and at the same time will place himself in tune with the Failure-thought of

  • the world - and there is plenty of the latter kind of thought around, I can tell you.

  • Do not allow yourselves to be affected by the adverse and negative thoughts of those

  • around you. Rise to the upper chambers of your mental dwelling, and key yourself up

  • to a strong pitch, away above the vibrations on the lower planes of thought. Then you will

  • not only be immune to their negative vibrations but will be in touch with the great body of

  • strong positive thought coming from those of your own plane of development. My aim will

  • be to direct and train you in the proper use of thought and will, that you may have yourself

  • well in hand and may be able to strike the positive key at any moment you may feel it

  • necessary. It is not necessary to strike the extreme note on all occasions. The better

  • plan is to keep yourself in a comfortable key, without much strain, and to have the

  • means at command whereby you can raise the pitch at once when occasion demands. By this

  • knowledge you will not be at the mercy of the old automatic action of the mind, but

  • may have it well under your own control.

  • Development of the will is very much like the development of a muscle - a matter of

  • practice and gradual improvement. At first it is apt to be tiresome, but at each trial

  • one grows stronger until the new strength becomes real and permanent. Many of us have

  • made ourselves positive under sudden calls or emergencies. We are in the habit of "bracing

  • up" when occasion demands. But by intelligent practice you will be so much strengthened

  • that your habitual state will be equal to your "bracing up" stage now, and then when

  • you find it necessary to apply the spur you will be able to reach a stage not dreamed

  • of at present.

  • Do not understand me as advocating a high tension continuously. This is not at all desirable,

  • not only because it is apt to be too much of a strain upon you but also because you

  • will find it desirable to relieve the tension at times and become receptive that you may

  • absorb impressions. It is well to be able to relax and assume a certain degree of receptiveness,

  • knowing that you are always able to spring back to the more positive state at will. The

  • habitually strongly positive man loses much enjoyment and recreation. Positive, you give

  • out expressions; receptive, you take in impressions. Positive, you are a teacher; receptive, a

  • pupil. It is not only a good thing to be a good teacher, but it is also very important

  • to be a good listener at times.

  • Chapter III - A Talk About The Mind

  • MAN has but one mind, but he has many mental faculties, each faculty being capable of

  • functioning along two different lines of mental effort. There are no distinct dividing lines

  • separating the two several functions of a faculty, but they shade into each other as

  • do the colors of the spectrum.

  • An Active effort of any faculty of the mind is the result of a direct impulse imparted

  • at the time of the effort. A Passive effort of any faculty of the mind is the result of

  • either a preceding Active effort of the same mind; an Active effort of another along the

  • lines of suggestion; Thought Vibrations from the mind of another; Thought impulses from

  • an ancestor, transmitted by the laws of heredity (including impulses transmitted

  • from generation to generation from the time of the original vibratory impulse imparted

  • by the Primal Cause - which impulses gradually unfold, and unsheath, when the proper state

  • of evolutionary development is reached).

  • The Active effort is new-born - fresh from the mint, whilst the Passive effort is of

  • less recent creation, and, in fact, is often the result of vibratory impulses imparted

  • in ages long past. The Active effort makes its own way, brushing aside the impeding vines

  • and kicking from its path the obstructing stones. The Passive effort travels along the

  • beaten path.

  • A thought-impulse, or motion-impulse, originally caused by an Active effort of faculty, may

  • become by continued repetition, or habit, strictly automatic, the impulse given it by

  • the repeated Active effort developing a strong momentum, which carries it on, along Passive

  • lines, until stopped by another Active effort or its direction changed by the same cause.

  • On the other hand, thought-impulses, or motion-impulses, continued along Passive lines may be terminated

  • or corrected by an Active effort. The Active function creates, changes or destroys. The

  • Passive function carries on the work given it by the Active function and obeys orders

  • and suggestions.

  • The Active function produces the thought-habit, or motion-habit, and imparts to it the vibrations,

  • which carry it on along the Passive lines thereafter. The Active function also has the

  • power to send forth vibrations which neutralize the

  • momentum of the thought-habit, or motion-habit; it also is able to launch a new thought-habit,

  • or motion-habit, with stronger vibrations, which overcomes and absorbs the first thought,

  • or motion, and substitutes the new one.

  • All thought-impulses, or motion-impulses, once started on their errands, continue to

  • vibrate along passive lines until corrected or terminated by subsequent impulses imparted

  • by the Active function, or other controlling power.

  • The continuance of the original impulse adds momentum and force to it, and renders its

  • correction or termination more difficult. This explains

  • that which is called "the force of habit." I think that this will be readily understood

  • by those who have struggled to overcome a habit which had been easily acquired. The

  • Law applies to good habits as well as bad. The moral is obvious.

  • Several of the faculties of the mind often combine to produce a single manifestation.

  • A task to be performed may call for the combined exercise of several faculties, some of which

  • may manifest by Active effort and others by Passive effort.

  • The meeting of new conditions - new problems - calls for the exercise of Active effort;

  • whilst a familiar problem, or task, can be easily handled by the Passive effort without

  • the assistance of his more enterprising brother.

  • There is in Nature an instinctive tendency of living organisms to perform certain actions,

  • the tendency of an organized body to seek that which satisfies the wants of its organism.

  • This tendency is sometimes called Appetency. It

  • is really a Passive mental impulse, originating with the impetus imparted by the Primal Cause,

  • and transmitted along the lines of evolutionary development, gaining strength and power as

  • it progresses. The impulse of the Primal Cause is assisted by the powerful upward attraction

  • exerted by THE ABSOLUTE.

  • In plant life this tendency is plainly discernible, ranging form the lesser exhibitions in the

  • lower types to the greater in the higher types.

  • It is that which is generally spoken of as the "life-force" in plants. It is, however,

  • a manifestation of rudimentary mentation, functioning along the lines of Passive effort.

  • In some of the higher forms of plant life there appears a faint color of independent

  • "life action" - a faint indication of choice of volition. Writers on plant life relate

  • many remarkable instances of this phenomenon. It is, undoubtedly, an exhibition of rudimentary

  • Active mentation.

  • In the lower animal kingdom a very high degree of Passive mental effort is found. And, varying

  • in degree in the several families and species, a considerable amount of Active mentation

  • is apparent. The lower animal undoubtedly possesses Reason only in a lesser degree than

  • man, and, in fact, the display of volitional mentation exhibited by an intelligent animal

  • is often nearly as high as that shown by the lower types of man or by a young child.

  • As a child, before birth, shows in its body the stages of the physical evolution of man,

  • so does a child, before and after birth - until maturity - manifest the stages of the mental

  • evolution of man.

  • Man, the highest type of life yet produced, at least upon this planet, shows the highest

  • form of Passive mentation, and also a much higher development of Active mentation than

  • is seen in the lower animals, and yet the degrees of that power vary widely among the

  • different races of men. Even among men of our race the different degrees of Active mentation

  • are plainly noticeable; these degrees not depending by any means upon the amount of

  • "culture," social position or educational advantages possessed by the individual: Mental

  • Culture and Mental Development are two very different things.

  • You have but to look around you to see the different stages of the development of Active

  • mentation in man. The reasoning of many men is scarcely more than Passive mentation, exhibiting

  • but little of the qualities of volitional thought. They prefer to let other men think

  • for them. Active mentation tires them and they find the instinctive, automatic, Passive

  • mental process much easier. Their minds work along the lines of least resistance. They

  • are but little more than human sheep,

  • Among the lower animals and the lower types of men Active mentation is largely confined

  • to the grosser faculties - the more material plane; the higher mental faculties working

  • along the instinctive, automatic lines of the Passive function.

  • As the lower forms of life progressed in the evolutionary scale, they developed new faculties

  • which were latent within them. These faculties always manifested in the form of rudimentary

  • Passive functioning, and afterwards worked up through higher Passive forms, until the

  • Active functions were brought into play. The evolutionary process still continues, the

  • invariable tendency being toward the goal of highly developed Active mentation. This

  • evolutionary progress is caused by the vibratory impulse imparted by the Primal Cause, aided

  • by the uplifting attraction of THE ABSOLUTE.

  • This law of evolution is still in progress, and man is beginning to develop new powers

  • of mind, which, of course, are first manifesting themselves along the lines of Passive effort.

  • Some men have developed these new faculties to a considerable degree, and it is possible

  • that before long Man will be able to exercise them along the line of their Active functions.

  • In fact, this power has already been attained by a few. This is the secret of the Oriental

  • occultists, and of some of their Occidental brethren.

  • The amenability of the mind to the will can be increased by properly directed practice.

  • That which we are in the habit of referring to as the "strengthening of the Will" is in

  • reality the training of the mind to recognize and absorb the Power

  • Within. The Will is strong enough, it does not need strengthening, but the mind needs

  • to be trained to receive and act upon the suggestions

  • of the Will. The Will is the outward manifestation of the I AM. The Will current is flowing in

  • full strength along the spiritual wires; but you must learn how to raise the trolley-pole

  • to touch it before the mental car will move. This is a

  • somewhat different idea from that which you have been in the habit of receiving from writers

  • on the subject of Will Power, but it is correct, as you will demonstrate to your own satisfaction

  • if you will follow up the subject by experiments along

  • the proper lines.

  • The attraction of THE ABSOLUTE is drawing man upward, and the vibratory force of the

  • Primal Impulse has not yet exhausted itself. The time of evolutionary development has come

  • when man can help himself. The man who understands the Law can accomplish wonders by means of

  • the development of the powers of the mind; whilst the man who turns his back upon the

  • truth will suffer from his lack of knowledge of the Law.

  • He who understands the laws of his mental being, develops his latent powers and uses

  • them intelligently. He does not despise his Passive mental functions, but makes good use

  • of them also, charges them with the duties for which they are best fitted, and is able

  • to obtain wonderful results from their work, having mastered them and trained them to do

  • the bidding of the Higher Self. When they fail to do their work properly he regulates

  • them, and his knowledge prevents him from meddling with them unintelligently, and thereby

  • doing himself harm. He develops the faculties and powers latent within him and learns how

  • to manifest them along the line of Active mentation as well as Passive. He knows that

  • the real man within him is the master to whom both Active and Passive functions are but

  • tools. He has banished Fear, and enjoys Freedom. He has found himself. HE HAS LEARNED THE SECRET

  • OF THE I AM.

  • Chapter IV - Mind Building

  • MAN can build up his mind and make it what he wills. In fact, we are mind-building every

  • hour of our lives, either consciously or unconsciously. The majority of us are doing the work unconsciously,

  • but those who have seen a little below the surface of things have taken the matter in

  • hand and have become conscious creators of their own mentality. They are no longer subject

  • to the suggestions and influences of others but have become masters of themselves.

  • They assert the "I," and compel obedience from the subordinate mental faculties. The

  • "I" is the sovereign of the mind, and what we call WILL is the instrument of the "I."

  • Of course, there is something back of this, and the Universal Will is higher than the

  • Will of the Individual, but the latter is in much closer touch with the Universal Will

  • than is generally supposed, and when one conquers the lower self, and asserts the "I," he becomes

  • in close touch with the Universal Will and partakes largely of its wonderful power.

  • The moment one asserts the "I," and "finds himself," he establishes a close connection

  • between the Individual Will and the Universal Will. But before he is able to avail himself

  • of the mighty power at his command, he must first effect the Mastery of the lower self.

  • Think of the absurdity of Man claiming to manifest powers, when he is the slave of the

  • lower parts of his mental being, which should be subordinate. Think of a man being the slave

  • of his moods, passions, animal appetites and lower faculties, and at the same time trying

  • to claim the benefits of the Will. Now, I am not preaching asceticism, which seems to

  • me to be a confession of weakness. I am speaking of Self-Mastery - the assertion of the "I"

  • over the subordinate parts of oneself. In the higher view of the subject, this "I" is

  • the only real Self, and the rest is the non-self; but our space does not permit the discussion

  • of this point, and we will use the word "self' as meaning the entire man. Before a man can

  • assert the "I" in its full strength he must obtain the complete mastery of the subordinate

  • parts of the self. All things are good when we learn to master them, but no thing is good

  • when it masters us. Just so long as we allow the lower portions of the self to give us

  • orders, we are slaves. It is only when the "I" mounts his throne and lifts the scepter,

  • that order is established and things assume their proper relation to each other.

  • We are finding no fault with those who are swayed by their lower selves - they are in

  • a lower grade of evolution, and will work up in time. But we are calling the attention

  • of those who are ready, to the fact that the Sovereign must assert his will, and that the

  • subjects must obey. Orders must be given and carried out. Rebellion must be put down, and

  • the rightful authority insisted upon. And the time to do it is Now.

  • You have been allowing your rebellious subjects to keep the King from his throne. You have

  • been allowing the mental kingdom to be misgoverned by irresponsible faculties. You have been

  • the slaves of Appetite, Unworthy Thoughts, Passion and Negativeness. The Will has been

  • set aside and Low Desire has usurped the throne. It is time to re-establish order in the mental

  • kingdom. You are able to assert the mastery over any emotion, appetite, passion or class

  • of thoughts by the assertion of the Will. You can order Fear to go to the rear; Jealousy

  • to leave your presence; Hate to depart from your sight; Anger to hide itself; Worry to

  • cease troubling you; Uncontrolled Appetite and Passion to bow in submission and to become

  • humble slaves instead of masters - all by the assertion of the "I." You may surround

  • yourself with the glorious company of Courage, Love and Self-Control, by the same means.

  • You may put down the rebellion and secure peace and order in your mental kingdom if

  • you will but utter the mandate and insist upon its execution. Before you march forth

  • to empire, you must establish the proper internal condition - must show your ability to govern

  • you own kingdom. The first battle is the conquest of the lesser self by the Real Self.

  • AFFIRMATION.

  • I AM Asserting the Mastery of My Real Self.

  • Repeat these words earnestly and positively during the day at least once an hour, and

  • particularly when you are confronted with conditions which tempt you to act on the lines

  • of the lesser self instead of following the course dictated by the Real Self. In the moment

  • of doubt and hesitation say these words earnestly, and your way will be made clear to you. Repeat

  • them several times after you retire and settle yourself to sleep. But be sure to back up

  • the words with the thought Inspiring them, and do not merely repeat them parrot-like.

  • Form the mental image of the Real Self asserting its mastery over the lower planes of your

  • mind - see the King on his Throne. You will become conscious of an influx of new thought,

  • and things which have seemed hard for you will suddenly become much easier. You will

  • feel that you have yourself well in hand, and that YOU are the master and not the slave.

  • The thought you are holding will manifest itself in action, and you will steadily grow

  • to become that which you have in mind. EXERCISE

  • Fix the mind firmly on the higher Self and draw inspiration from it when you feel led

  • to yield to the promptings of the lower part of your nature. When you are tempted to burst

  • into Anger - assert the "I," and your voice will drop. Anger is unworthy of the developed

  • Self. When you feel vexed and cross, remember what you are, and rise above your feeling.

  • When you feel Fearful, remember that the Real Self fears nothing, and assert Courage. When

  • you feel Jealousy inciting, think of your higher nature, and laugh. And so on, asserting

  • the Real Self and not allowing the things on the lower plane of mentality to disturb

  • you. They are unworthy of you, and must be taught to keep their places. Do not allow

  • these things to master you - they should be your subjects, not your masters. You must

  • get away from this plane, and the only way to do so is to cut loose from these phases

  • of thought which have been "running things" to suit themselves. You may have trouble at

  • the start, but keep at it and you will have that satisfaction which comes only from conquering

  • the lower parts of our nature. You have been a slave long enough - now is the time to free

  • yourselves. If you will follow these exercises faithfully you will be a different being by

  • the end of the year, and will look back with a pitying smile to your former condition.

  • But it takes work. This is not child's play but a task for earnest men and women, Will

  • YOU make

  • the effort?

  • Chapter V - The Secret of the Will

  • WHILE psychologists may differ in their theories regarding the nature of the Will, none deny

  • its existence, nor question its power. All persons recognize the power of strong Will

  • - all see how it may be used to overcome the greatest obstacles. But few realize that the

  • Will may be developed and strengthened by intelligent

  • practice. They feel that they could accomplish wonders if they had a strong Will, but instead

  • of attempting to develop it, they content themselves with vain regrets. They sigh, but

  • do nothing.

  • Those who have investigated the subject closely know that Will Power, with all its latent

  • possibilities and mighty powers, may be developed, disciplined, controlled and directed, just

  • as may be any other of Nature's forces. It does not matter what theory you may entertain

  • about the nature of the Will, you will obtain the results if you practice intelligently.

  • Personally, I have a somewhat odd theory about the Will. I believe that every man has,

  • potentially, a strong Will, and that all he has to do is to train his mind to make use

  • of it. I think that in the higher regions of the mind of every man is a great store

  • of Will Power awaiting his use. The Will current is running along the

  • psychic wires, and all that it is necessary to do is to

  • raise the mental trolley-pole and bring down the power for your use. And the supply is

  • unlimited, for your little storage battery is connected with the great powerhouse of

  • the Universal Will Power, and the power is inexhaustible. Your Will does not need training

  • - but your Mind does. The mind is the instrument and the supply of Will Power is proportionate

  • to the fineness of the instrument through which it manifests. But you needn't accept

  • this theory if you don't like it. This lesson will fit your theory as well as mine.

  • He who has developed his mind so that it will allow the Will Power to manifest through it,

  • has opened up wonderful possibilities for himself. Not only has he found a great power

  • at his command, but he is able to bring into play, and use, faculties, talents and abilities

  • of whose existence he has not dreamed. This secret of the Will is the magic key which

  • opens all doors.

  • The late Donald G. Mitchell once wrote: "Resolve is what makes a man manifest; not puny resolve,

  • but crude determination; not errant purpose - but that strong and indefatigable will which

  • treads down difficulties and danger, as a boy treads down the heaving frost-lands of

  • winter; which kindles his eye and brain with a proud pulse-beat toward the unattainable.

  • Will makes men giants."

  • Many of us feel that if we would but exert our Will, we might accomplish wonders. But

  • somehow we do not seem to want to take the trouble - at any rate, we do not get to the

  • actual willing point. We put it off from time to time, and talk vaguely of "some day," but

  • that some day never comes.

  • We instinctively feel the power of the Will, but we haven't enough energy to exercise it,

  • and so drift along with the tide, unless perhaps some friendly difficulty arises, some helpful

  • obstacle appears in our path, or some kindly pain stirs us into action, in either of which

  • cases we are compelled to assert our Will and thus begin to accomplish something.

  • The trouble with us is that we do not want to do the thing enough to make us exert our

  • Will Power. We don't want to hard enough. We are mentally lazy and of weak Desire. If

  • you do not like the word Desire substitute for it the word "Aspiration." (Some people

  • call the lower impulses Desires, and the higher, Aspirations - it's all a matter of words,

  • take you choice.) That is the trouble. Let a man be in danger of losing his life - let

  • a woman be in danger of losing a great love - and you will witness a startling exhibition

  • of Will Power from an unexpected source. Let a woman's child be threatened with danger,

  • and she will manifest a degree of Courage and Will that sweeps all before it. And yet

  • the same woman will quail before a domineering husband, and will lack the Will to perform

  • a simple task. A boy will do all sorts of work if he but considers it play, and yet

  • he can scarcely force himself to cut a little fire-wood. Strong Will follows strong Desire.

  • If you really want to do a thing very much, you can usually develop the Will Power to

  • accomplish it.

  • The trouble is that you have not really wanted to do these things, and yet you blame your

  • Will. You say that you do want to do it, but if you stop to think you will see that you

  • really want to do something else more than the thing in question. You are not willing

  • to pay the price of attainment. Stop a moment and analyze this statement and apply it in

  • your own case,

  • You are mentally lazy - that's the trouble. Don't talk to me about not having enough Will.

  • You have a great storehouse of Will awaiting your use, but you are too lazy to use it.

  • Now, if you are really in earnest about this matter, get

  • to work and first find out what you really want to do -

  • then start to work and do it. Never mind about the Will Power - you'll find a full supply

  • of that whenever you need it. The thing to do is to get to the point where you will resolve

  • to do. That the real test - the resolving . Think of these things a little, and make

  • up your mind whether or not you really want to be a Willer sufficiently

  • hard to get to work.

  • Many excellent essays and books have been written on this subject, all of which agree

  • regarding the greatness of Will Power, the most enthusiastic terms being used; but few

  • have anything to say about how this power may be acquired by those who have it not,

  • or who possess it in but a limited degree. Some have given exercises designed to "strengthen"

  • the Will, which exercises really strengthen the Mind so that it is able to draw upon its

  • store of power. But they have generally overlooked the fact that in auto-suggestion is to be

  • found the secret of the development of the mind so that it may become the efficient instrument

  • of the Will.

  • AUTO-SUGGESTION

  • I AM Using My Will Power.

  • Say these words several times earnestly and positively, immediately after finishing this

  • article. Then repeat them frequently during the day, at least once an hour, and particularly

  • when you meet something that calls for the exercise of Will Power. Also repeat them several

  • times after you retire and settle yourself for sleep. Now, there is nothing in the words

  • unless you back them up with the thought. In fact, the thought is "the whole thing,"

  • and the words only pegs upon which to hang the thought. So think of what you are saying,

  • and mean what you say. You must use Faith at the start, and use the words with a confident

  • expectation of the result. Hold the steady thought that you are drawing on your storehouse

  • of Will Power, and before long you will find that thought is taking form in action, and

  • that your Will Power is manifesting itself. You will feel an influx of strength with each

  • repetition of the words. You will find yourself overcoming difficulties and bad habits, and

  • will be surprised at how things are being smoothed out for you.

  • EXERCISE

  • Perform at least one disagreeable task each day during the month.. If there is any specially

  • disagreeable task which you would like to shirk, that is the one for you to perform.

  • This is not given to you in order to make you self-sacrificing or meek, or anything

  • of that sort - it is given you to exercise your Will. Anyone can do a pleasant thing

  • cheerfully, but it takes Will to do the unpleasant thing cheerfully; and that is how you must

  • do the work. It will prove a most valuable discipline to you. Try it for a month and

  • you will see where "it comes in." If you shirk this exercise you had better stop right here

  • and acknowledge that you do not want Will Power, and are content to stay where you are

  • and remain a weakling.

  • Chapter VI - How to Become Immune to Injurious Thought Attraction

  • THE first thing to do is to begin to "cut out" Fear and Worry. Fear-thought is the cause

  • of much unhappiness and many failures. You have been told this thing over and over again,

  • but it will bear repeating. Fear is a habit of mind which

  • has been fastened upon us by negative race-thought, but from which we may free ourselves by individual

  • effort and perseverance.

  • Strong expectancy is a powerful magnet. He of the strong, confident desire attracts to

  • him the things best calculated to aid him - persons,

  • things circumstances, surroundings; if he desires them hopefully, trustfully, confidently,

  • calmly. And, equally true, he who Fears a thing generally

  • manages to start into operation forces which will cause the thing he feared to come upon

  • him. Don't you see, the man who Fears really expects the feared thing, and the eyes of

  • the Law is the same as if he really had wished for or desired it? The Law is operative in

  • both cases - the principle is the same.

  • The best way to overcome the habit of Fear is to assume the mental attitude of Courage,

  • just as the best way to get rid of darkness is to let in the light. It is a waste of time

  • to fight a negative thought-habit by recognizing its force and trying to deny it out of existence

  • by mighty efforts. The best, surest, easiest and quickest method is to assume the existence

  • of the positive thought desired in its place; and by constantly dwelling upon the positive

  • thought, manifest it into objective reality.

  • Therefore, instead of repeating, "I'm not afraid," say boldly, "I am full of Courage,"

  • "I am Courageous." You must assert, "There's nothing to fear," which, although in the nature

  • of a denial, simply denies the reality of the object causing fear rather than admitting

  • the fear itself and then denying it.

  • To overcome fear, one should hold firmly to the mental attitude of Courage. He should

  • think Courage, say Courage, act Courage. He should keep the mental picture of Courage

  • before him all the time, until it becomes his normal mental attitude. Hold the ideal

  • firmly before you and you will gradually grow to its attainment - the ideal will become

  • manifest.

  • Let the word "Courage" sink deeply into your mind, and then hold it firmly there until

  • the mind fastens it in place. Think of yourself as being Courageous - see yourself as acting

  • with Courage in trying situations. Realize that there is nothing to Fear - that Worry

  • and Fear never helped anyone, and never will. Realize that Fear paralyzes effort, and that

  • Courage promotes activity.

  • The confident, fearless, expectant, "I Can and I Will" man is a mighty magnet. He attracts

  • to himself just what is needed for his success. Things seem to come his way, and people say

  • he is "lucky." Nonsense! "Luck" has nothing to do with it. It's all in the Mental Attitude.

  • And the Mental Attitude of the "I Can't" or the "I'm Afraid" man also determines his measure

  • of success. There's no mystery whatsoever about it. You have but to look about you to

  • realize the truth of what I have said. Did you ever know a successful man who did not

  • have the "I Can and I will" thought strong within him? Why, he will walk all around the

  • "I Can't" man, who has perhaps even more ability. The first mental attitude brought to the surface

  • latent qualities, as well as attracted help from outside; whilst the second mental attitude

  • not only attracted "I Can't" people and things, but also kept the man's own powers from manifesting

  • themselves. I have demonstrated the correctness of these views, and so have many others, and

  • the number of people who know these things is growing every day.

  • Don't waste your Thought-Force, but use it to advantage. Stop attracting to yourself

  • failure, unhappiness, inharmony, sorrow - begin now

  • and send out a current ot bright, positive, happy thought. Let your prevailing thought

  • be "I Can and I Will;" think "I Can and I Will;" dream "I Can and I Will;" say "I Can

  • and I Will;" and act "I Can and I Will". Live on the "I Can and I and Will" plane, and before

  • you are aware of it, you will feel the new vibrations manifesting themselves in action;

  • will see them bring results; will be conscious of the new point of view; will realize that

  • your own is coming to you. You will feel better, act better, see better, BE better in every

  • way, after you join the "I Can and I Will" brigade.

  • Fear is the parent of Worry, Hate, Jealousy, Malice, Anger, Discontent, Failure and all

  • the rest. The men who rids himself of Fear will find that the rest of the brood have

  • disappeared. The only way to be Free is to get rid of Fear. Tear it out by the roots.

  • I regard the conquest of Fear as the first important step to be taken by those who wish

  • to master the application of Thought Force. So long as Fear masters you, you are in no

  • condition to make progress in the realm of Thought, and I must insist that you start

  • to work at once to get rid of this obstruction. You CAN

  • do it - if you only go about it in earnest. And when you have ridded yourself of the vile

  • thing, life will seem entirely different to you - you will feel happier, freer, stronger,

  • more positive, and will be more successful in every undertaking of Life.

  • Start it today, make up your mind that this intruder must GO - do not compromise matters

  • with him, but insist upon an absolute surrender on his part. You will find the task difficult

  • at first, but each time you oppose him he will grow weaker, and you will be stronger.

  • Shut off his nourishment - starve him to death - he cannot live in a thought atmosphere of

  • Fearlessness. So, start to fill your mind with good, strong, Fearless thoughts - keep

  • yourself busy thinking Fearlessness, and Fear will die of his own accord. Fearlessness is

  • positive - Fear is negative, and you may be sure that the positive will prevail.

  • So long as Fear is around with his "but," "if," "suppose," "I'm afraid," "I can't,"

  • "what if," and all the rest of his cowardly suggestions, you will not be able to use your

  • Thought Force to the best advantage. Once get him out of the way, you will have clear

  • sailing, and every inch of thought- sail will catch the wind. He is a Jonah. Overboard with

  • him! (The whale who swallows him will have my sympathy.)

  • I advise that you start in to do some of the things which you feel you could do if you

  • were not afraid to try. Start to work to do these things, affirming Courage all the way

  • through, and you will be surprised to see how the changed mental

  • attitude will clear away obstacles from your path, and will make things very much easier

  • than you had anticipated. Exercises of this kind will develop you wonderfully, and you

  • will be much gratified at the result of a little practice along these lines.

  • There are many things before you awaiting accomplishment, which you can master if you

  • will only throw aside the yoke of Fear - if you will only refuse to accept the race suggestion,

  • and will boldly assert the "I" and its power. And the best way to vanquish Fear is to assert

  • "Courage" and stop thinking of Fear. By this plan you will train the mind into new habits

  • of thought, thus eradicating the old negative thoughts which have been pulling you down,

  • and holding you back. Take the word "Courage" with you as your watchword and manifest it

  • in action.

  • Remember, the only thing to fear is Fear, and - well, don't even fear Fear, for he's

  • a cowardly chap at the best, who will run if you show

  • a brave front.

  • Chapter VII - The Transmutation of Negative Thought

  • WORRY is the child of Fear - if you kill out Fear, Worry will die for want of nourishment.

  • This advice is very old, and yet it is always worthy of repetition, for it is a lesson of

  • which we are greatly in need. Some people think that if we kill out Fear and Worry we

  • will never be able to accomplish anything. I have read editorials in the great journals

  • in which the writers held that without Worry one can never accomplish any of the great

  • tasks of life, because Worry is necessary to stimulate interest and work. This is nonsense,

  • no matter who utters it. Worry never helped one to accomplish anything; on the contrary,

  • it stands in the way of accomplishment and attainment.

  • The motive underlying action and "doing things" is Desire and Interest. If one earnestly desires

  • a thing, he naturally becomes very much interested in its accomplishment, and is quick to seize

  • upon anything likely to help him to gain the thing he wants. More than that, his mind starts

  • up a work on the subconscious plane that brings into the field of consciousness many ideas

  • of value and importance. Desire and Interest

  • are the causes that result in success. Worry is not Desire. It is true that if one's surroundings

  • and environments become intolerable, he is driven in desperation to some efforts that

  • will result in throwing off the undesirable conditions and in the acquiring of those more

  • in harmony with his desire. But this is only another form of Desire - the man desires something

  • different from what he has; and when his desire becomes strong enough his entire interest

  • is given to the task, he makes a mighty effort, and the change is accomplished. But it wasn't

  • Worry that caused the effort. Worry could content itself with wringing its hands and

  • moaning, "Woe is me," and wearing its nerves to a frazzle, and accomplishing nothing. Desire

  • acts differently. It grows stronger as the man's conditions become intolerable, and finally

  • when he feels the hurt so strongly that he can't stand it any longer, he says, "I won't

  • stand this any longer - l will make a change," and lo! Then Desire springs into action. The

  • man keeps on "wanting" a change the worst way (which is the best way) and his Interest

  • and Attention being given to the task of deliverance, he begins to make things move. Worry never

  • accomplished anything. Worry is negative and death producing. Desire and Ambition are positive

  • and life producing. A man may worry himself to death and yet nothing will be accomplished,

  • but let that man transmute his worry and discontent into Desire and Interest, coupled with a belief

  • that he is able to make the change - the "I Can and I Will" idea - then something happens.

  • Yes, Fear and Worry must go before we can do much. One must proceed to cast out these

  • negative intruders, and replace them with Confidence and Hope. Transmute Worry into

  • keen Desire. Then you will find that Interest is awakened, and you will begin to think things

  • of interest to you. Thoughts will come to you

  • from the great reserve stock in your mind and you will start to manifest them in action.

  • Moreover you will be placing yourself in harmony with similar thoughts of others, and will

  • draw to you aid and assistance from the great volume of thought waves with which the world

  • is filled. One draws to himself thought waves corresponding in character with the nature

  • of the prevailing thoughts in his won mind - his mental attitude. Then again he begins

  • to set into motion the great Law of Attraction, whereby he draws to him others likely to help

  • him, and is, in turn, attracted to others who can aid him. This Law of Attraction is

  • no joke, no metaphysical absurdity, but is a great live working principle of Nature,

  • as anyone may learn by experimenting and observing.

  • To succeed in anything you must want it very much - Desire must be in evidence in order

  • to attract. The man of weak desires attracts very little to himself. The stronger the Desire

  • the greater the force set into motion. You must want a thing hard enough before you can

  • get it. You must want it more than you do the things around you, and you must be prepared

  • to pay the price for it. The price is the throwing overboard of certain lesser desires

  • that stand in the way of the accomplishment of the greater one. Comfort, ease, leisure,

  • amusements, and many other things may have to go (not always, though). It all depends

  • on what you want. As a rule, the greater the thing desired, the greater the price to be

  • paid for it. Nature believes in adequate compensation. But if you really Desire a thing in earnest,

  • you will pay the price without question; for the Desire will dwarf the importance of the

  • other things.

  • You say that you want a thing very much, and are doing everything possible toward its attainment?

  • Pshaw! You are only playing Desire. Do you want the thing as much as a prisoner wants

  • freedom - as much as a dying man wants life? Look at the almost miraculous things accomplished

  • by prisoners desiring freedom. Look how they work through steel plates and stone walls

  • with a bit of stone. Is your desire as strong as that? Do you work for the desired thing

  • as if your life depended upon it? Nonsense! You don't know what Desire is. I tell you

  • if a man wants a thing as much as the prisoner wants freedom, or as much as a strongly vital

  • man wants life, then that man will be able to sweep away obstacles and impediments apparently

  • immovable. The key to attainment is Desire, Confidence, and Will. This key will open many

  • doors.

  • Fear paralyzes Desire - it scares the life out of it. You must get rid of Fear. There

  • have been times in my life when Fear would get hold of me and take a good, firm grip

  • on my vitals, and I would lose all hope; all interest; all ambition; all desire. But, thank

  • the Lord, I have always managed to throw off the grip of the monster and face my difficulty

  • like a man; and lo! Things would seem to be straightened out for me somehow. Either the

  • difficulty would melt away or I would be given means to overcome, or get around, or under

  • or over it. It is strange how this works. No matter how great is the difficulty, when

  • we finally face it with courage and confidence in ourselves, we seem to pull through somehow,

  • and then we begin to wonder what we were scared about. This is not a mere fancy, it is the

  • working of a mighty law, which we do not as yet fully understand, but which we may prove

  • at any time.

  • People often ask: "it's all very well for you New Thought people to say 'Don't worry,'

  • but what's a person to do when he thinks of all the possible things ahead of him, which

  • might upset him and his plans? Well, all that I can say is that the man is foolish to bother

  • about thinking of troubles to come at some time in the future. The majority of things

  • that we worry about don't come to pass at all; a large proportion of the others come

  • in a milder form than we had anticipated, and there are always other things which come

  • at the same time which help us to overcome the trouble. The future holds in store for

  • us not only difficulties to be overcome, but also agents to help us in overcoming the difficulties.

  • Things adjust themselves. We are prepared for any trouble which may come upon us, and

  • when the time comes we somehow find ourselves able to meet it. God not only tempers the

  • wind to the shorn lamb, but He also tempers the shorn lamb to the wind. The winds and

  • the shearing do not come together; there is usually enough time for the lamb to get seasoned,

  • and then he generally grows new wool before the cold blast comes.

  • It has been well said that nine-tenths of the worries are over things which never comes

  • to pass, and that the other tenth is over things of little or no account. So what's

  • the use in using up all your reserve force in fretting over future troubles, if this

  • be so? Better wait until your troubles really come before you worry. You will find that

  • by this storing up of energy you will be able to meet about any sort of trouble that comes

  • your way.

  • What is it that uses up all the energy in the average man or woman, anyway? Is it the

  • real overcoming of difficulties, or the worrying about impending troubles? It's always "Tomorrow,

  • tomorrow," and yet tomorrow never comes just as we feared it would. Tomorrow is all right;

  • it carries in its grip good things as well as troubles. Bless my soul, when I sit down

  • and think over the things which I once feared might possibly

  • descend upon me, I laugh! Where are those feared things now? I don't know - have almost

  • forgotten that I ever feared them.

  • You do not need fight Worry - that isn't the way to overcome the habit. Just practice concentration,

  • and then learn to concentrate upon something right before you, and you will find that the

  • worry thought has vanished. The mind can think of but one thing at a time, and if you concentrate

  • upon a bright thing, the other thing will fade away. There are better ways of overcoming

  • objectionable thoughts than by fighting them. Learn to concentrate upon thoughts of an opposite

  • character, and you will have solved the problem.

  • When the mind is full of worry thoughts, it cannot find time to work out plans to benefit

  • you. But when you have concentrated upon bright, helpful thoughts, you will discover that it

  • will start to work subconsciously; and when the time comes you will find all sorts of

  • plans and methods by which you will be able to meet the demands upon you. Keep your mental

  • attitude right, and all things will be added unto you. There's no sense in worrying; nothing

  • has ever been gained by it, and nothing ever will be. Bright, cheerful and happy thoughts

  • attract bright, cheerful and happy things to us - worry drives them away. Cultivate

  • the right mental attitude.

  • Chapter VIII - The Law of Mental Control

  • YOUR thoughts are either faithful servants or tyrannical masters - just as you allow

  • them to be. You have the say about it; take your choice. They will either go about your

  • work under direction of the firm will, doing it the best they know how, not only in your

  • waking hours, but when you are asleep - some of our best mental work being performed for

  • us when our conscious mentality is at rest, as is evidenced by the fact that when the

  • morning comes we find troublesome problems have been worked out for us during the night,

  • after we had dismissed them from our minds - apparently; or they will ride all over us

  • and make us their slaves if we are foolish enough to allow them to do so. More than half

  • the people of the world are slaves of every vagrant thought which may see fit to torment

  • them.

  • Your mind is given you for your good and for your own use - not to use you. There are very

  • few people who seem to realize this and who understand the art of managing the mind. The

  • key to the mystery is Concentration. A little practice will develop within every man the

  • power to use the mental machine properly. When you have some mental work to do concentrate

  • upon it to the exclusion of everything else, and you will find that the mind will get right

  • down to business - to the work at hand - and matters will be cleared up in no time. There

  • is an absence of friction, and all waste motion or lost power is obviated. Every pound of

  • energy is put to use, and every revolution of the mental driving-wheel counts for something.

  • It pays to be able to be a competent mental engineer.

  • And the man who understands how to run his mental engine knows that one of the important

  • things is to be able to stop it when the work has been done. He does not keep putting coal

  • in the furnace, and maintaining a high pressure

  • after the work is finished, or when the day's portion of the work has been done, and the

  • fires should be banked until the next day. Some people act as if the engine should be

  • kept running whether there was any work to be done or not, and then they complain if

  • it gets worn out and wobbles and needs repairing. These mental engines are fine machines, and

  • need intelligent care.

  • To those who are acquainted with the laws of mental control it seems absurd for one

  • to lie awake at night fretting about the problems of the day, or more often, of the morrow.

  • It is just as

  • easy to slow down the mind as it is to slow down an engine, and thousands of people are

  • learning to do this in these days of New Thought. The best way to do it is to think of something

  • else - as far different from the obtruding thought as possible. There is no use fighting

  • an objectionable thought with the purpose of

  • "downing" it - that is a great waste of energy, and the more you keep on saying, "I won't

  • think of this thing!" the more it keeps on coming into your mind, for you are holding

  • it there for the purpose of hitting it. Let it go; don't give it another thought; fix

  • the mind on something entirely different, and keep the attention there by an effort

  • of the will. A little practice will do much for

  • you in this direction. There is only room for one thing at a time in the focus of attention;

  • so put all your attention upon one thought, and the others will

  • sneak off. Try it for yourself.

  • Chapter IX - Asserting the Life-Force

  • I have spoken to you of the advantage of getting rid of Fear. Now I wish to put LIFE into you.

  • Many of you have been going along as if you were dead - no ambition - no energy - no vitality

  • - no interest - no life. This will never do. You are stagnating. Wake up and display a

  • few signs of life! This is not the place in which you can stalk around like a living corpse

  • - this is the place for wide-awake, active, live people, and a good general awakening

  • is what is needed; although it would take nothing less than a blast from Gabriel's trumpet

  • to awaken some of the people who are stalking around thinking that they are alive, but who

  • are really dead to all that makes life worthwhile.

  • We must let Life flow through us, and allow it to express itself naturally. Do not let

  • the little worries of life, or the big ones either, depress you and cause you to lose

  • your vitality. Assert the Life Force within you, and manifest it in every thought, act

  • and deed, and before long you will be exhilarated and fairly bubbling over with vitality and

  • energy.

  • Put a little life into your work - into your pleasures - into yourself. Stop doing things

  • in a half-headed way, and begin to take an interest in what you are doing, saying and

  • thinking. It is astonishing how much interest we may find in the ordinary things of life

  • if we will only wake up. There are interesting things all around us - interesting events

  • occurring every moment - but we will not be aware of them unless we assert our life force

  • and begin to actually live instead of merely existing.

  • No man or woman ever amounted to anything unless he or she put life into the tasks of

  • everyday life - the acts - the thoughts. What the world needs is live men and women. Just

  • look into the eyes of the people whom you meet, and see how few of them are really alive.

  • The most of them lack that expression of conscious life which distinguishes the man who lives

  • from the one who simply exists.

  • I want you to acquire this sense of conscious life so that you may manifest it in your life

  • and show what Mental Science has done for you. I want you to get to work today and begin

  • to make yourselves over according to the latest pattern. You can do this if you will only

  • take the proper interest in the task.

  • AFFIRMATION AND EXERCISE

  • Fix in your mind the thought that the "I" within you is very much alive and that you

  • are manifesting life fully, mentally and physically. And keep this though there, aiding yourself

  • with constant repetitions of the watchword. Don't let the thought escape you, but keep

  • pushing it back into the mind. Keep it before the mental vision as much as possible. Repeat

  • the watchword when you awaken in the morning - say it when you retire at night. And say

  • it at meal times, and whenever else you can during the day - at least once an hour. Form

  • the mental picture of yourself as filled with Life and Energy. Live up to it as far as possible.

  • When you start in to perform a task say "I AM Alive" and mix up as much life as possible

  • in the task. If you find yourself feeling depressed, say "I AM Alive," and then take

  • a few deep breaths, and with each inhalation let the mind hold the thought that you are

  • breathing in Strength and Life, and as you exhale, hold the thought that you are breathing

  • out all the old, dead, negative conditions and are glad to get rid of them. Then finish

  • up with an earnest, vigorous affirmation: "I AM Alive," and mean it when you say it

  • too.

  • And let your thoughts take form in action. Don't rest content with merely saying that

  • you are alive, but prove it with your acts. Take an interest in doing things, and don't

  • go around "mooning" or day-dreaming. Get down to business, and LIVE.

  • Chapter X - Training the Habit-Mind

  • PROFESSOR William James, the well-known teacher of, and writer upon Psychology very truly

  • says: "The great thing in all education is to make our nervous system our ally instead

  • of our enemy. For this we must make automatic and habitual, as early as possible, as many

  • useful actions as we can and as carefully guard against growing into ways that are likely

  • to be disadvantageous. In the acquisition of a new habit, or the leaving off of an old

  • one we must take care to launch ourselves with as strong and decided initiative as possible.

  • Never suffer an exception to occur until the new habit is securely rooted in your life.

  • Seize the very first possible opportunity to act on every resolution you make and on

  • ever emotional prompting you may experience, in the direction of the habits you aspire

  • to gain."

  • This advice is along the lines familiar to all students of Mental Science, but it states

  • the matter more plainly than the majority of us have done. It impresses upon us the

  • importance of passing on to the subconscious mind the proper impulses, so that they will

  • become automatic and "second nature." Our subconscious mentality is a great storehouse

  • for all sorts of suggestions from ourselves and others and, as it is the "habit-mind,"

  • we must be careful to send it the proper material from which it may make habits. If we get into

  • the habit of doing certain things, we may be sure that the subconscious mentality will

  • make it easier for us to do just the same thing over and over again, easier each time,

  • until finally we are firmly bound with the ropes and chains of the habit, and find it

  • more or less difficult, sometimes almost impossible, to free ourselves from the hateful thing.

  • We should cultivate good habits against the hour of need. The time will come when we will

  • be required to put forth our best efforts, and it rests with us today whether that hour

  • of need shall find us doing the proper thing automatically and almost without thought,

  • or struggling to do it bound down and hindered with the chains of things opposed to that

  • which we desire at that moment.

  • We must be on guard at all times to prevent the forming of undesirable habits. There may

  • be no special harm in doing a certain thing today, or perhaps again tomorrow, but there

  • may be much harm in setting up the habit of of doing that particular thing. If you are

  • confronted with the question: "Which of these two things should I do?" the best answer is:

  • "I will do that which I would like to become a habit with me.

  • In forming a new habit, or in breaking an old one, we should throw ourselves into the

  • task with as much enthusiasm as possible, in order to gain the most ground before the

  • energy expends itself when it meets with friction from the opposing habits already formed. We

  • should start in by making as strong an impression as possible upon the subconscious mentality.

  • Then we should be constantly on guard against temptations to break the new resolution "just

  • this once." This "just once" idea kills off more good resolutions than any other one cause.

  • The moment you yield "just this once, you introduce the thin edge of the wedge that

  • will, in the end, split your resolution into pieces.

  • Equally important is the fact that each time you resist temptation the stronger does your

  • resolution become. Act upon your resolution as early and as often as possible, as with

  • every manifestation of thought in action, the stronger does it become. You are adding

  • to the strength of your original resolution every time you back it up with action.

  • The mind has been likened to a piece of paper that has been folded. Ever afterwards it has

  • a tendency to fold in the same crease - unless

  • we make a new crease or fold, when it will follow the last lines. And the creases are

  • habits - every time we make one it is so much easier for the mind to fold along the same

  • crease afterward. Let us make our mental creases in the right direction.

  • Chapter XI - The Psychology of Emotion

  • ONE is apt to think of the emotions as independent from habit. We easily may think of one acquiring

  • habits of action, and even of thinking, but we are apt to regard the emotions as something

  • connected with "feeling" and quite divorced from intellectual effort. Yet, notwith- standing

  • the distinction between the two, both are dependent largely upon habit, and one may

  • repress, increase, develop, and change one's emotions, just as one may regulate habits

  • of action and lines of thought.

  • It is an axiom of psychology that "Emotions deepen by repetition." If a person allows

  • a state of feeling to thoroughly take possession of him, he will find it easier to yield to

  • the same emotion the second time, and so on, until the particular emotion or feeling becomes

  • second nature to him. If an undesirable emotion shows itself inclined to take up a permanent

  • abode with you, you had better start to work to get rid of it, or at least to master it.

  • And the best time to do this is at the start; for each repetition renders the habit more

  • firmly intrenched, and the task of dislodging it more difficult.

  • Were you ever jealous? If so, you will remember how insidious was its first approach; how

  • subtly it whispered hateful suggestions into your willing ear, and how gradually it followed

  • up such suggestions, until, finally you began to see green. (Jealousy has an effect upon

  • the bile, and causes it to poison the blood. This is why the idea of green is always associated

  • with it.) Then you will remember how the thing seemed to grow, taking possession of you until

  • you scarcely could shake it off. You found it much easier to become jealous the next

  • time. It seemed to bring before you all sorts of objects apparently justifying your suspicions

  • and feeling. Everything began to look green - the green-eyed monster waxed fat.

  • And so it is with every feeling or emotion. If you give way to a fit of rage, you will

  • find it easier to become angry the next time, on less provocation. The habit of feeling

  • and acting "mean" does not take long to firmly settle itself in its new home if encouraged.

  • Worry is a great habit for growing and waxing fat. People start by worrying about big things,

  • and then begin to worry and fret about some smaller thing. And then the merest trifle

  • worries and distresses them. They imagine that all sorts of evil things are about to

  • befall them. If they start on a journey they are certain there is going to be a wreck.

  • If a telegram comes, it is sure to contain some dreadful tidings. If a child seems a

  • little quiet, the worrying mother is positive it is going to fall ill and die. If the husband

  • seems thoughtful, as he revolves some business plan in his mind, then the good wife is convinced

  • that he is beginning to cease to love her, and indulges in a crying spell. And so it

  • goes - worry, worry, worry - each indulgence making the habit more at home. After a while

  • the continued thought shows itself in action. Not only is the mind poisoned by the blue

  • thoughts, but the forehead shows deep lines between the eyebrows, and the voice takes

  • on that whining, rasping tone so common among worry-burdened people.

  • The condition of mind known as "fault-finding" is another emotion that grows fat with exercise.

  • First, fault is found with this thing, then with that, and finally with everything. The

  • person becomes a chronic "nagger" - a burden to friends and relatives, and a thing to be

  • avoided by outsiders. Women make the greatest naggers. Not because men are any better, but

  • simply because a man nagger apt to have the habit knocked out of him by other men who

  • will not stand his nonsense - he find that he is making things too hot for himself and

  • he reforms; while a woman has more of a chance to indulge in the habit. But this nagging

  • is all a matter of habit. It grows from small beginnings, and each time it is indulged in

  • it throws out another root, branch, or tendril, and fastens itself the closer to the one who

  • has given it soil in which to grow.

  • Envy, uncharitableness, gossip scandal-mongering, are all habits of this kind. The seeds are

  • in every human breast, and only need good soil and a little watering to become lusty

  • and strong.

  • Each time you give way to one of these negative emotions, the easier do you make it for a

  • recurrence of the same thing, or similar ones. Sometimes by encouraging one unworthy emotion,

  • you find that you have given room for the growth of a whole family of these mental weeds.

  • Now, this is not a good old orthodox preachment against the sin of bad thoughts. It is merely

  • a calling of your attention to the law underlying the psychology of emotion. Nothing new about

  • it - old as the hills - so old that many of us have forgotten all about it.

  • If you wish to manifest these constantly disagreeable and unpleasant traits, and to suffer the unhappiness

  • that comes from them, by all means do so - that is your own business, and privilege. It's

  • none of mine, and I am not preaching at you - it keeps me busy minding my own business

  • and keeping an eye on my own undesirable habits and actions. I am merely telling you the law

  • regarding the matter, and you may do the rest. If you wish to choke out these habits, there

  • are two ways open to you. First, whenever you find yourself indulging in a negative

  • thought or feeling, take right hold of it and say to it firmly, and vigorously, "Get

  • out!" It won't like this at first, and will bridle up, curve its back and snarl like an

  • offended cat. But never mind - just say, "Scat" to it. The next time it will not be so confident

  • and aggressive - it will have manifested a little of the fear-habit. Each time you repress

  • and choke out a tendency of this kind, the weaker it will become, and the stronger will

  • your will be.

  • Professor James says: "Refuse to express a passion, and it dies. Count ten before venting

  • your anger, and its occasion seems ridiculous. Whistling to keep up courage is no mere figure

  • of speech. On the other hand, sit all day in a moping posture, sigh, and reply to everything

  • with a dismal voice, and your melancholy lingers. There is no more valuable precept in moral

  • education than this, as all who have experience know: if we wish to conquer emotional tendencies

  • in ourselves, we must assiduously, and in the first instance, cold-bloodedly, go through

  • the outward movements of those contrary dispositions we prefer to cultivate.

  • Smooth the brow, brighten the eye, contract the dorsal rather than the ventral aspect

  • of the frame, and speak in a major key, pass the genial compliment, and your heart must

  • be frigid indeed if it does not gradually thaw.

  • Chapter XII - Developing New Brain Cells

  • I have spoken of the plan of getting rid of undesirable states of feeling by driving them

  • out. But a far better way is to cultivate the feeling or emotion directly opposed to

  • the one you wish to eradicate.

  • We are very apt to regard ourselves as the creatures of our emotions and feelings, and

  • to fancy that these feelings and emotions are "we." But such is far from being the truth.

  • It is true that the majority of the race are slaves of their emotions and feelings, and

  • are governed by them to a great degree. They think that feelings are things that rule one

  • and from which one cannot free himself, and so they cease to rebel. They yield to the

  • feeling without question, although they may know that the emotion or mental trait is calculated

  • to injure them, and to bring unhappiness and failure instead of happiness and success.

  • They say, "We are made that way," and let it go at that.

  • The new Psychology is teaching the people better things. It tells them that they are

  • masters of their emotions and feelings, instead of being their slaves. It tells them that

  • brain-cells may be developed that will manifest along desirable lines, and that the old brain-cells

  • that have been manifesting so unpleasantly may be placed on the retired list, and allowed

  • to atrophy from want of use. People may make themselves over, and change their entire natures.

  • This is not mere idle theory, but is a working fact which has been demonstrated by thousands

  • of people, and which is coming more and more before the attention of the race.

  • No matter what theory of mind we entertain, we must admit that the brain is the organ

  • and instrument of the mind, in our present state of existence, at least, and that the

  • brain must be considered in this matter. The brain is like a wonderful musical instrument,

  • having millions of keys, upon which we may play innumerable combinations of sounds. We

  • come into the world with certain tendencies, temperaments, and pre-dispositions, We may

  • account for these tendencies by heredity, or we may account for them upon theories of

  • pre-existence, but the facts remain the same. Certain keys seem to respond to our touch

  • more easily than others. Certain notes seem to sound forth as the current of circumstances

  • sweeps over the strings. And certain other notes are less easily vibrated. But we find

  • that if we but make an effort of the will to restrain the utterance of some of these

  • easily sounded strings, they will grow more difficult to sound, and less liable to be

  • stirred by the passing breeze. And if we will pay attention to some of the other strings

  • that have not been giving forth a clear tone, we will soon get them in good working order;

  • their notes will chime forth clear and vibrant, and will drown the less pleasant sounds.

  • We have millions of unused brain-cells awaiting our cultivation. We are using but a few of

  • them, and some of these we are working to death. We are able to give some of these cells

  • a rest, by using other cells. The brain may be trained and cultivated in a manner incredible

  • to one who has not looked into the subject. Mental attitudes may be acquired and cultivated,

  • changed and discarded, at will. There is no longer any excuse for people manifesting unpleasant

  • and harmful mental states. We have the remedy in our own hands.

  • We acquire habits of thought, feeling, and action, repeated use. We may be born with

  • a tendency in a certain direction, or we may acquire tendencies by suggestions from other;

  • such as the examples of those around us, suggestions

  • from reading, listening to teachers. We are a bundle of mental habits. Each time we indulge

  • in an undesirable thought or habit, the easier does it become for us to repeat that thought

  • or action.

  • Mental scientists are in the habit of speaking of desirable thoughts or mental attitudes

  • as "positive," and of the undesirable ones as "negative." There is a good reason for

  • this. The mind instinctively recognizes certain things as good for the individual to which

  • it belongs, and it clears the path for such thoughts, and interposes the least resistance

  • to them. They have a much greater effect than an undesirable thought possesses, and one

  • positive thought will counteract a number of negative thoughts. The best way to overcome

  • undesirable or negative thoughts and feelings is to cultivate the positive ones. The positive

  • thought is the strongest plant, and will in time starve out the negative one by withdrawing

  • from it the nourishment necessary for its existence.

  • Of course the negative thought will set up a vigorous resistance at first, for it is

  • a fight for life with it. In the slang words of the time, it "sees its finish" if the positive

  • thought is allowed to grow and develop; and, consequently it makes things unpleasant for

  • the individual until he has started well into the work of starving it out. Brain cells do

  • not like to be laid on the shelf any more than does any other form of living energy,

  • and they rebel and struggle until they become too weak to do so. The best way is to pay

  • as little attention as possible to these weeds of the mind, but put in as much time as possible

  • watering, caring for and attending to the new and beautiful plants in the garden of

  • the mind.

  • For instance, if you are apt to hate people, you can best overcome the negative thought

  • by cultivating Love in its place. Think Love, and act it out, as often as possible. Cultivate

  • thoughts of kindness, and act as kindly as you can to everyone with whom you come in

  • contact. You will have trouble at the start, but gradually Love will master Hate, and the

  • latter will begin to droop and wither. If you have a tendency toward the "blues" cultivate

  • a smile, and a cheerful view of things. Insist upon your mouth wearing upturned corners,

  • and make an effort of the will to look upon the bright side of things. The "blue-devils"

  • will set up a fight, of course, but pay no attention to them - just go on cultivating

  • optimism and cheerfulness. Let "Bright, Cheerful and Happy" be your watchword, and try to live

  • it out.

  • These recipes may seem very old and timeworn, but they are psychological truths and may

  • be used by you to advantage. If you once comprehend the nature of the thing, the affirmations

  • and auto-suggestions of the several schools may be understood and taken advantage of.

  • You may make yourself energetic instead of slothful, active instead of lazy, by this

  • method. It is all a matter of practice and steady work. New Thought people often have

  • much to say about "holding the thought;" and, indeed, it is necessary to "hold the thought"

  • in order to accomplish results. But something more is needed. You must "act out" the thought

  • until it becomes a fixed habit with you. Thoughts take form in action; and in turn actions influence

  • thought. So by "acting out" certain lines of thought, the actions react upon the mind,

  • and increase the development of the part of the mind having close relation to the act.

  • Each time the mind entertains a thought, the easier becomes the resulting action - and

  • each time an act is performed, the easier becomes the corresponding thought. So you

  • see the thing works both ways - action and reaction. If you feel cheerful and happy,

  • it is very natural for you to laugh. And if you will laugh a little, you will begin to

  • feel bright and cheerful. Do you see what I am trying to get at? Here it is, in a nutshell:

  • if you wish to cultivate a certain habit of action, begin by cultivating the mental attitude

  • corresponding to it. And as a means of cultivating that mental attitude, start in to "act-out

  • " or go through, the motions of the act corresponding to the thought. Now, see if you cannot apply

  • this rule. Take up something that you really feel should be done, but which you do not

  • feel like doing. Cultivate the thought leading up to it - say to yourself: "I like to do

  • so and so," and then go through the motions (cheerfully, remember!) and act out the thought

  • that you like to do the thing. Take an interest in the doing - study out the best way to do

  • it - put brains into it - take a pride in it - and you will find yourself doing the

  • thing with a considerable amount of pleasure and interest - you will have cultivated a

  • new habit.

  • If you prefer trying it on some mental trait of which you wish to be rid, it will work

  • the same way. Start in to cultivate the opposite trait, and think it out and act it out for

  • all you are worth. Then watch the change that will come over you. Don't be discouraged at

  • the resistance you will encounter at first, but sing gaily: "i Can and I Will," and get

  • to work in earnest. The important thing in this work is to keep cheerful and interested.

  • If you manage to do this, the rest will be easy.

  • Chapter XIII - The Attractive Power - Desire Force

  • WE have discussed the necessity of getting rid of fear, that your desire may have full

  • strength with which to work. Supposing that you have mastered this part of the task, or

  • at least started on the road to mastery, I will now call your attention to another important

  • branch of the subject. I allude to the subject of mental leaks. No, I don't mean the leakage

  • arising from your failure to keep your own secrets - that is also important, but forms

  • another story. The leakage I am now referring to is that occasioned by the habit of having

  • the attention attracted to and distracted by every passing fancy.

  • In order to attain a thing it is necessary that the mind should fall in love with it,

  • and be conscious of its existence, almost to the exclusion of everything else. You must

  • get in love with the thing you wish to attain, just as much as you would if you were to meet

  • the girl or man you wished to marry. I do not mean that you should become a monomaniac

  • upon the subject, and should lose all interest in everything else in the world - that won't

  • do, for the mind must have recreation and change. But, I do mean that you must be so

  • "set" upon the desired thing that all else will seem of secondary importance. A man in

  • love may be pleasant to everyone else, and may go through the duties and pleasures of

  • life with good spirit, but underneath it all he is humming to himself "Just One Girl;"

  • and every one of his actions is bent toward getting that girl, and making a comfortable

  • home for her. Do you see what I mean? You must get in love with the thing you want,

  • and you must get in love with it in earnest - none of this latter-day flirting, "on-today

  • and off-tomorrow" sort of love, but the good old-fashioned kind, that used to make it impossible

  • for a young man to get to sleep unless he took a walk around his best girl's house,

  • just to be sure it was still there. That's the real kind!

  • And the man or woman in search of success must make of that desired thing his ruling

  • passion - he must keep his mind on the main chance. Success is jealous - that's why we

  • speak of her as feminine. She demands a man's whole affection, and if he begins flirting

  • with other fair charmers, she soon turns her back upon him. If a man allows his strong

  • interest in the main chance to be sidetracked, he will be the loser. Mental Force operates

  • best when it is concentrated. You must give to the desired thing your best and most earnest

  • thought. Just as the man who is thoroughly in love will think out plans and schemes whereby

  • he may please the fair one, so will the man who is in love with his work or business give

  • it his best thought, and the result will be that a hundred and one plans will come into

  • his field of consciousness, many of which are very important. The mind works on the

  • subconscious plane, remember, and almost always along the lines of the ruling passion or desire.

  • It will fix up things, and patch together plans and schemes, and when you need them

  • the most it will pop them into your consciousness, and you will feel like hurrahing, just as

  • if you had received some valuable aid from outside.

  • But if you scatter your thought-force, the subconscious mind will not know just how to

  • please you, and the result is that you are apt to be put off from this source of aid

  • and assistance. Beside this, you will miss the powerful result of concentrated thought

  • in the conscious working out of the details of your plans. And then again the man whose

  • mind is full of a dozen interests fails to exert the attracting power that is manifested

  • by the man of the one ruling passion, and he fails to draw to him persons, things, and

  • results that will aid in the working out of his plans, and will also fail to place himself

  • in the current of attraction whereby he is brought into contact with those who will be

  • glad to help him because of harmonious interests.

  • I have noticed, in my own affairs, that when I would allow myself to be side-tracked by

  • anything outside of my regular line of work, it would be only a short time before my receipts

  • dropped off, and my business showed signs of a lack of vitality. Now, many may say that

  • this was because I left undone some things that I would have done if my mind had been

  • centered on the business. This is true; but I have noticed like results in cases where

  • there was nothing to be done - cases in which the seed was sown, and the crop was awaited.

  • And in just such cases, as soon as I directed my thought to the matter the seed began to

  • sprout. I do not man that I had to send out great mental waves with the idea of affecting

  • people - not a bit of it. I simply began to realize what a good thing I had, and how much

  • people wanted it, and how glad they would be to know of it and all that sort of thing,

  • and lo! My thought seemed to vitalize the work, and the seed began to sprout. This is

  • no mere fancy, for I have experienced it on several occasions; I have spoken to many others

  • on the subject, and I find that our experiences tally perfectly. So don't get into the habit

  • of permitting these mental leaks. Keep your Desire fresh and active, and let it get in

  • its work without interference from conflicting desires. Keep in love with the thing you wish

  • to attain - feed your fancy with it - see it as accomplished already, but don't lose

  • your interest. Keep your eye on the main chance, and keep your one ruling passion strong and

  • vigorous. Don't be a mental polygamist - one mental love is all that a man needs - that

  • is, one at a time.

  • Some scientists have claimed that something that might as well be called "Love" is at

  • the bottom of the whole of life. They claim that the love of the plant for water causes

  • it to send forth its roots until the loved thing is found. They say that the love of

  • the flower for the sun, causes it to grow away from the dark places, so that it may

  • receive the light. The so-called "chemical affinities" are really a form of love. And

  • Desire is a manifestation of this Universal Life Love. So I am not using a mere figure

  • of speech when I tell you that you must love the thing you wish to attain. Nothing but

  • intense love will enable you to surmount the many obstacles placed in your path. Nothing

  • but that love will enable you to bear the burdens of the task. The more Desire you have

  • for a thing, the more you Love it; and the more you Love it, the greater will be the

  • attractive force exerted toward its attainment - both within yourself, and outside of you.

  • So love but one thing at a time - don't be a mental Mormon.

  • Chapter XIV - The Great Dynamic Forces

  • YOU have noticed the difference between the successful and strong men in any walk of life,

  • and the unsuccessful weak men around them. You are conscious of the widely differing

  • characteristics of the two classes, but somehow find it difficult to express just in what

  • the difference lies. Let us take a look at the matter.

  • Burton said: "The longer I live, the more certain I am that the great difference between

  • men, the feeble and the powerful, the great and the insignificant, is energy and invincible

  • determination - a purpose once fixed and then Death or Victory. That quality will do anything

  • that can be done in this world - and no talents, no circumstances, no opportunities will make

  • a two-legged creature a man without it." I do not see how the idea could be more clearly

  • expressed than Burton has spoken. He has put his finger right in the center of the subject

  • - his eye has seen into the heart of it.

  • Energy and invincible determination - these two things will sweep away mighty barriers,

  • and will surmount the greatest obstacles. And yet they must be used together. Energy

  • without determination will go to waste. Lots of men have plenty of energy - they are full

  • to overflowing with it; and yet they lack concentration - they lack the concentrated

  • force that enables them to bring their power to bear upon the right spot. Energy is not

  • nearly so rare a thing as many imagine it to be. I can look around me at any lime, and

  • pick out a number of people I know who are full of energy - many of them are energy plus

  • - and yet, somehow, they do not seem to make any headway. They are wasting their energy

  • all the time. Now they are fooling with this thing - now meddling with that. They will

  • take up some trifling thing of no real interest or importance, and waste enough energy and

  • nervous force to carry them through a hard day's work, and yet when they are through,

  • nothing has been accomplished.

  • Others who have plenty of energy, fail to direct it by the power of the Will toward

  • the desired end. "invincible determination" - those are the words. Do they not thrill

  • you with their power? If you have something to do, get to work and do it. Marshal your

  • energy, and then guide and direct it by your Will - bestow upon it that "invincible determination"

  • and you will do the thing.

  • Everyone has within him a giant will, but the majority of us are too lazy to use it.

  • We cannot get ourselves nerved up to the point at which we can say, truthfully: "I Will.

  • If we can but pluck up our courage to that point, and will then pin it in place so that

  • it will not slip back, we will be able to call into play that wonderful power - the

  • Human Will. Man, as a rule, has but the faintest conception of the power of the Will, but those

  • who have studied along the occult teachings, know that the Will is one of the great dynamic

  • forces of the universe, and if harnessed and directed properly it is capable of accomplishing

  • almost miraculous things.

  • "Energy and Invincible Determination: -- aren't they magnificent words? Commit them to memory

  • - press them like a die into the wax of your mind, and they will be a constant inspiration

  • to you in hours of need. If you can get these words to vibrating in your being, you will

  • be a giant among pygmies. Say these words over and over again, and see how you are filled

  • with new life - see how your blood will circulate - how your nerves will tingle. Make these

  • words a part of yourself, and then go forth anew to the battle of life, encouraged and

  • strengthened. Put them into practice. "Energy and Invincible Determination" - let that be

  • your motto in your work-a-day life, and you will be one of those rare men who are able

  • to "do things."

  • Many persons are deterred from doing their best by the fact that they underrate themselves

  • by comparison with the successful ones of life, or rather, overrate the successful ones

  • by comparison with themselves.

  • One ot the curious things noticed by those who are brought in contact with the people

  • who have "arrived" is the fact that these successful people are not extraordinary after

  • all. You meet with some great writer, and you are disappointed to find him very ordinary

  • indeed. He does not converse brilliantly, and, in fact, you know a score of everyday

  • people who seem far more brilliant than this man who dazzles you by his brightness in his

  • books. You meet some great statesman, and he does not seem nearly so wise as lots of

  • old fellows in your own village, who waste their wisdom upon the desert air. You meet

  • some great captain of industry, and he does not give you the impression of the shrewdness

  • so marked in some little bargain-driving trader in your own town. How is this, anyway? Are

  • the reputations of these people fictitious, or what is the trouble

  • The trouble is this: you have imagined these people to be made of superior metal, and are

  • disappointed to find them made of the same stuff as yourself and those about you. But,

  • you ask, wherein does their greatness of achievement lie? Chiefly in this: Belief in themselves

  • and in their inherent power, in their faculty to concentrate on the work in hand, when they

  • are working, and in their ability to prevent leaks of power when they are not working.

  • They believe in themselves, and make every effort count. Your village wiseman spills

  • his wisdom on every corner, and talks to a lot of fools; when if he really were wise

  • he would save up his wisdom and place it where it would do some work. The

  • brilliant writer does not waste his wit upon every

  • corner; in fact, he shuts the drawer in which he contains his wit, and opens it only when

  • he is ready to concentrate and get down to business. The captain of industry has no desire

  • to impress you with his shrewdness and "smartness.

  • He never did, even when he was young. While his companions were talking and boasting,

  • and "blowing," this future successful financier was "sawin' wood and sayin' nuthin'."

  • The great people of the world - that is, those who have "arrived" - are not very different

  • from you, or me, or the rest of us - all of us are about the same at the base. You have

  • only to meet them to see how very "ordinary" they are,

  • after all. But, don't forget the fact that they know how to use the material that is

  • in them; while the rest of the crowd does not, and, in fact, even

  • doubts whether the true stuff is there. The man or woman who "gets there", usually starts

  • out by realizing that he or she is not so very different, after all, from the successful

  • people that they hear so much about. This gives them confidence, and the result is they

  • find out that they are able to "do things." Then they learn to keep

  • their mouths closed, and to avoid wasting and dissipating their energy. They store up

  • energy, and concentrate it upon the task at hand; while their companions are scattering

  • their energies in every direction, trying to show off and let people know how smart

  • they are. The man or woman who "gets there," prefers to wait for the applause that follows

  • deed accomplished, and cares very little for the praise that attends promises of what we

  • expect to do "some day," or an exhibition of "smartness" without works.

  • One of the reasons that people who are thrown in with successful men often manifest success

  • themselves, is that they are able to watch the successful man and sort of "catch the

  • trick" of his greatness. They see that he is an everyday sort of man, but that he thoroughly

  • believes in himself, and also that he does not waste energy, but reserves all his force

  • for the actual tasks before him. And, profiting by example, they start to work and put the

  • lesson into practice in their own lives.

  • Now what is the moral of this talk? Simply this: Don't undervalue yourself, or overvalue

  • others. Realize that you are made of good stuff, and that locked within your mind are

  • many good things. Then get to work and unfold those good things, and make something out

  • of that good stuff. Do this by attention to the things before you, and by giving to each

  • the best that is in you, knowing that plenty of more good things are in you ready for the

  • fresh tasks that will come. Put the best of yourself into the undertaking on hand, and

  • do not cheat the present task in favor of some future one. Your supply is inexhaustible.

  • And don't waste your good stuff on the crowd of gapers, watchers and critics who are standing

  • around watching you work. Save your good stuff for your job, and don't be in too much of

  • a hurry for applause. Save up your good thoughts for "copy" if you are a writer; save up your

  • bright schemes for actual practice, if you are a business man; save up your wisdom for

  • occasion, if you are a statesman; and, in each case, avoid the desire to scatter your

  • pears before - well, before the gaping crowd that wants to be entertained by a "free show."

  • Nothing very "high" about this teaching, perhaps, but it is what many of you need very much.

  • Stop fooling, and get down to business. Stop wasting good raw material, and start to work

  • making something worthwhile.

  • Chapter XV - Claiming Your Own

  • IN a recent conversation, I was telling a woman to pluck up courage and to reach out

  • for a certain good thing for which she had been longing for many years, and which, at

  • last, appeared to be in sight. I told her that it looked as if her desire was about

  • to be gratified - that the Law of Attraction was bringing it to her. She lacked faith,

  • and kept on repeating, "Oh! It's too good to be true - it's too good for me! She had

  • not emerged from the worm-of-the-dust stage, and although she was in sight of the Promised

  • Land she refused to enter it because it "was too good for her." l think I succeeded in

  • putting sufficient "ginger" into her to enable her to claim her own, for the last reports

  • indicate that she is taking possession.

  • But that is not what I wish to tell you. I want to call your attention to the fact that

  • nothing is too good for YOU - no matter how great the thing may be - no matter how undeserving

  • you may seem to be. You are entitled to the best there

  • is, for it is your direct inheritance. So don't be afraid to ask - demand - and take.

  • The good things of the world are not the portion of any favored sons. They belong to all, but

  • they come only to those who are wise enough to recognize that the good things are theirs

  • by right, and who are sufficiently courageous to reach out for them. Many good things are

  • lost for want of the asking. Many splendid things are lost to you because of your feeling

  • that you are unworthy of them. Many great things are lost to you because you lack the

  • confidence and courage to demand and take possession of them.

  • "None but the brave deserves the fair," says the old adage, and the rule is true in all

  • lines of human effort. If you keep on repeating that you are unworthy of the good thing - that

  • it is too good for you - the Law will be apt to take you at your word and believe what

  • you say. That's a peculiar thing about the Law - it believes - what you say - it takes

  • you in earnest. So beware what you say to it, for it will be apt to give credence. Say

  • to it that you are worthy of the best there is, and that there is nothing too good for

  • you, and you will be likely to have the Law take you in earnest, and say, "I guess he

  • is right; I'm going to give him the whole bakeshop if he wants it - he knows his rights,

  • and what's the use of trying to deny it to him?" But if you say,

  • "Oh, it's too good for me! The Law will probably say, "Well, I wouldn't wonder but that that

  • is so. Surely he ought to know, and it isn't

  • for me to contradict him." And so it goes.

  • Why should anything be too good for you? Did you ever stop to think just what you are?

  • You are a manifestation of the Whole Thing, and have a perfect right to all there is.

  • Or, if you prefer it this way, you are a child of the Infinite, and are heir to it all. You

  • are telling the truth in either statement, or both. At any rate, no matter for what you

  • ask, you are merely demanding your own. And the more in earnest you are about

  • demanding it - the more confident you are of receiving it - the more will you use in

  • reaching out for it - the surer you will be to obtain it.

  • Strong desire - confident expectation - courage in action - these things bring to you your

  • own. But before you put these forces into effect, you must awaken to a realization that

  • you are merely asking for your own, and not for something

  • to which you have no right or claim. So long as there exists in your mind the last sneaking

  • bit of doubt as to your right to the things you want, you will be setting up a resistance

  • to the operation of the Law. You may demand as vigorously as you please, but you will

  • lack the courage to act, if you have a lingering doubt of your right to the thing you want.

  • If you persist in regarding the desired thing as if it belonged to another, instead of to

  • yourself, you will be placing yourself in the position of the covetous or envious man,

  • or even in the position of a tempted thief. In such a case your mind will revolt at proceeding

  • with the work, for it instinctively will recoil from the idea of taking what is not your own

  • - the mind is honest. But when your realize that the best the Universe holds belongs to

  • you as a Divine Heir, and that there is enough for all without your robbing anyone else;

  • then the friction is removed, and the barrier broken down, and the Law proceeds to do its

  • work.

  • I do not believe in this "humble" business. This meek and lowly attitude does not appeal

  • to me - there is no sense in it, at all. The idea of making a virtue of such things, when

  • Man is the heir of the Universe, and is entitled to whatever he needs for his growth, happiness

  • and satisfaction! I do not mean that one should assume a blustering and domineering attitude

  • of mind - that is also absurd, for true strength does not so exhibit itself. The blusterer

  • is a self-confessed weakling - he blusters to disguise his weakness. The truly strong

  • man is calm, self-contained, and carries with him a consciousness of strength which renders

  • unnecessary the bluster and fuss of assumed strength. But get away from this hypnotism

  • of "humility" - this "meek and lowly" attitude of mind. Remember the horrible example of

  • Uriah Heep, and beware of imitating him. Throw back you head, and look the world square in

  • the face. There's nothing to be afraid of - the world is apt to be as much afraid of

  • you, as yell are of it, anyway. Be a man, or woman, and not a crawling thing. And this

  • applies to your mental attitude, as well as to your outward demeanor. Stop this crawling

  • in your mind. See yourself as standing erect and facing life without fear, and you will

  • gradually grow into your ideal.

  • There is nothing that is too good for you - not a thing. The best there is, is not beginning

  • to be good enough for you; for there are still better things ahead. The best gift that the

  • world has to offer is a mere bauble compared to the great things in the Cosmos that await

  • your coming of age. So don't be afraid to reach out for these playthings of life - these

  • baubles of this plane of consciousness. Reach out for them - grab a whole fistful - play

  • with them until you are tired; that's what they are made for, anyway. They are made for

  • our express use - not to look at, but to be played with, if you desire. Help yourself

  • - there's a whole shopful of these toys awaiting your desire, demand and taking. Don't be bashful!

  • Don't let me hear any more of this silly talk about things being too good for you. Pshaw!

  • You have been like the Emperor's little son thinking that the tin soldiers and toy drum

  • were far too good for him, and refusing to reach out for them. But you don't find this

  • trouble with children as a rule. They instinctively recognize that nothing is too good for them.

  • They want all that is in sight to play with, and they seem to feel that the things are

  • theirs by right. And that is the condition of mind that we seekers after the Divine Adventure

  • must cultivate. Unless we become as little children we cannot enter the Kingdom of Heaven.

  • The things we see around us are the playthings of the Kindergarten of God, playthings which

  • we use in our game-tasks. Help yourself to them - ask for them without bashfulness demand

  • as many as you can make use of - they are yours. And if you don't see just what you

  • want, ask for it - there's a big reserve stock on the shelves, and in the closets. Play,

  • play, play, to your heart's content. Learn to weave mats - to build houses with the blocks

  • - to stitch outlines on the squares - play the game through, and play it well. And demand

  • all the proper materials for the play - don't be bashful - there's enough togo round.

  • But - remember this! While all this be true, the best things are still only game-things

  • - toys, blocks, mats, cubes, and all the rest. Useful, most useful for the learning of the

  • lessons - pleasant, most pleasant with which to play - and desirable, most desirable, for

  • these purposes. Get all the fun and profit out of the use of things that is possible.

  • Throw yourself heartily into the game, and play it out - it is Good. But, here's the

  • thing to remember - never lose sight of the fact that these good things are but playthings

  • - part of the game - and you must be perfectly willing to lay them aside when the time comes

  • to pass into the next class, and not cry and mourn because you must leave your playthings

  • behind you. Do not allow yourself to become unduly attached to them - they are for your

  • use and pleasure, but are not a part of you - not essential to your happiness in the next

  • stage. Despise them not because of their lack of Reality - they are great things relatively,

  • and you may as well have all the fun out of them that you can - don't be a spiritual prig,

  • standing aside and refusing to join in the game. But do not tie yourself to them - they

  • are good to use and play with, but not good enough to use you and to make you a plaything.

  • Don't let the toys turn the tables on you.

  • This is the difference between the master of Circumstances and the Slave of Circumstances.

  • The Slave thinks that these playthings are real, and that he is not good enough to have

  • them. He gets only a few toys, because he is afraid to ask for more, and he misses most

  • of the fun. And then, considering the toys to be real, and not realizing that there are

  • plenty more where these came from, he attaches himself to the little trinkets that have come

  • his way, and allows himself to be made a slave of them. He is afraid that they may be taken

  • away from him and he is afraid to toddle across the floor and help himself to the others.

  • The Master knows that all are his for the asking. He demands that which he needs from

  • day to day, and does not worry about over-loading himself; for he knows that there are "lots

  • more," and that he cannot be cheated out of them. He plays, and plays well, and has a

  • good time in the play - and he learns his Kindergarten lessons in the playing. But he

  • does not become too much attached to his toys. He is willing to fling away the worn-out toys,

  • and reach out for a new one. And when he is called into the next room for promotion, he

  • drops on the floor the worn-out toys of the day, and with glistening eyes and confident

  • attitude of mind, marches into the next room - into the Great Unknown - with a smile on

  • his face. He is not afraid, for he hears the voice of the Teacher, and knows that she is

  • there waiting for him - in that Great Next Room.

  • Chapter XVI - Law, Not Chance

  • SOME time ago I was talking to a man about the Attractive Power of Thought. He said that

  • he did not believe that Thought could attract anything to him, and that it was all a matter

  • of luck. He had found, he said, that ill luck relentlessly pursued him, and that everything

  • he touched went wrong. It always had, and always would, and he had grown to expect it.

  • When he undertook a new thing he knew beforehand that it would go wrong and that no good would

  • come of it. Oh, no! There wasn't anything in the theory of Attractive Thought, so far

  • as he could see; it was all a matter of luck!

  • This man failed to see that by his own confession he was giving a most convincing argument in

  • favor of the Law of Attraction. He was testifying that he was always expecting things to go

  • wrong, and that they always came about as he expected. He was a magnificent illustration

  • of the Law of Attraction - but he didn't know it, and no argument seemed to make the matter

  • clear to him. He was "up against it," and there was no way out of it - he always expected

  • the ill luck. and every occurrence proved that he was right, and that the Mental Science

  • position was all nonsense.

  • There are many people who seem to think that the only way in which the Law of Attraction

  • operates is when one wishes hard, strong and steady. They do not seem to realize that a

  • strong belief is as efficacious as a strong wish. The successful man believes in himself

  • and his ultimate success, and, paying no attention to little setbacks, stumbles, tumbles and

  • slips, presses on eagerly to the goal, believing all the time that he will get there. His views

  • and aims may alter as he progresses, and he may change his plans or have them changed

  • for him, but all the time he knows in his heart that he will eventually "get there."

  • He is not steadily wishing he may get there - he simply feels and believes it, and thereby

  • sets to operation the strongest forces known in the world of thought.

  • The man who just as steadily believes he is going to fail will invariably fail. How could

  • he help it? There is no special miracle about it. Everything he does, thinks and says is

  • tinctured with the thought of failure. Other people catch his spirit, and fail to trust

  • him or his ability, which occurrences he in turn sets down as but other exhibitions of

  • his ill luck, instead of ascribing them to his belief and expectation of failure. He

  • is suggesting failure to himself all the time, and he invariably takes on the effect of the

  • auto-suggestion. Then, again, he by his negative thoughts shuts up that portion of his mind

  • from which should come the ideas and plans conducive to success and which do come to

  • the man who is expecting success because he believes in it. A state of discouragement

  • is not the one in which bright ideas come to us. It is only when we are enthused and

  • hopeful that our minds work out the bright ideas which we may turn to account.

  • Men instinctively feel the atmosphere of failure hovering around certain of their fellows,

  • and on the other hand recognizes something about others which leads them to say, when

  • they hear of a temporary mishap befalling such a one: "Oh, he'll come out all right

  • somehow - you can't down him. It is the atmosphere caused by the prevailing Mental Attitude.

  • Clear up you Mental Atmosphere!

  • There is no such thing as chance. Law maintains everywhere, and all that happens happens because

  • of the operation of Law. You cannot name the simplest thing that ever occurred by

  • chance - try it, and then run the thing down to a final analysis, and you will see it as

  • the result of law. It is as plain as mathematics. Plan and purpose; cause and effect. From the

  • movements of worlds to the growth of the grain of mustard seed - all the result of Law. The

  • fall of the stone down the mountain-side is not chance - forces which had been in operation

  • for centuries caused it. And back of that cause were other causes, and so on until the

  • Causeless Cause is reached.

  • And Life is not the result of chance - the Law is here, too. The Law is in full operation

  • whether you know it or not - whether you believe in it or not. You may be the ignorant object

  • upon which the Law operates, and bring yourself all sorts of trouble because of your ignorance

  • of or opposition to the Law. Or you may fall in with the operations to the Law - get into

  • its current, as it were - and Life will seem a far different thing to you. You cannot get

  • outside of the Law, by refusing to have anything to do with it. You are at liberty to oppose

  • it and produce all the friction you wish to - it doesn't' hurt the Law, and you may keep

  • it up until you learn your lesson.

  • The Law of Thought Attraction is one name for the law, or rather for one manifestation

  • of it. Again I say, your thoughts are real things. They go forth from you in all directions,

  • combining with thoughts of like kind - opposing thoughts of a different character - forming

  • combinations - going where they are attracted - flying away

  • from thought centers opposing them. And your mind attracts the thought of others, which

  • have been sent out by them conscious or unconsciously. But it attracts only those thoughts which

  • are in harmony with its own. Like attracts like, and opposites repel opposites, in the

  • world of thought.

  • If you set your mind to the keynote of courage, confidence, strength and success, you attract

  • to yourself thoughts of like nature; people of like nature; things that fit in the mental

  • tune. Your prevailing thought or mood determines that which is to be drawn toward you - picks

  • out your mental bed-fellow. You are today setting into

  • motion thought currents which will in time attract toward you thoughts, people and conditions

  • in harmony with the predominant note of your thought. Your thought will mingle with that

  • of others of like nature and mind, and you will be attracted toward each other, and will

  • surely come together with a common purpose sooner or later, unless one or the other of

  • you should change the current of his thoughts.

  • Fall in with the operations of the law. Make it a part of yourself. Get into its currents.

  • Maintain your poise. Set your mind to the keynote of Courage, Confidence and Success.

  • Get in touch with all the thoughts of that kind that are emanating every hour from hundreds

  • of minds. Get the best that is to be had in the thought world. The best is there, so be

  • satisfied with nothing less. Get into partnership with good minds. Get into the right vibrations.

  • You must be tired of being tossed about by the operations of the Law - get into harmony

  • with it.

  • THE END

William Walker Atkinson's Thought Vibration or The Law of Attraction in the Thought World

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