What is going on
in life is the evolution of the individual to complete oneness with the Secret
Self. The universal being that lies behind creation has differentiated into finite
form, taken disguise, so to speak, in order to work out the manifold sides of
its infinite and eternal nature. Therefore the man who expands his
consciousness is fulfilling the fondest wish of life. It is not necessary that
we become saints to understand as much of the Secret Self as is necessary to
use its power in our affairs. To know this law is enough: whatever we accept as
a permanent mental image in our consciousness must manifest in our world, for
we become in life what we are in consciousness, and nothing can alter that fact.
It takes a great deal of courage to admit to yourself that if you are sick,
frightened, frustrated, or defeated you have brought these conditions on
yourself and no one but yourself can get rid of them. Occasionally someone so
afflicted will experiment with the power of his mind to cure him, but will give
it only the most cursory trial. If, for example, he is ill and in pain, he
might say, “I visualized myself well and happy, but I hurt just as much as
ever.” What he didn’t do above all things was visualize himself well and happy.
He visualized himself sick and in pain. The moment he began to visualize
himself well and happy, he would become well and happy.
This is not a
law that works once in a while or part of the time or on auspicious occasions.
It works all of the time and it works in the exact same way, and it is
returning to you right now in the material world the images you maintain in
your mind. You cannot escape them. They surround you, sustain you, or torment
you. They are good or evil or uplifting or degrading or exalting or painful
according to the vision that prompts them, and as long as you are alive, as
long as you think and imagine, you are literally surrounded day and night by
the images that predominate in your consciousness.
THOUGHT CONTROL
The startling power
of the Secret Self is that it always makes manifest the image it beholds.
Nothing illustrates this fact better than the current experiments with
hypnosis. A man may be in such excruciating pain that even narcotics will not
relieve him, but he can be put under deep hypnosis and told that there is no
pain at all, and presto, there is no pain. He may have a deep and abiding fear
of crowds, but under hypnosis it can be suggested to him that he likes crowds,
and lo and behold, he enjoys them most of all. He can become stronger, healed
of disease, smarter, more aggressive, possessed of endurance and indomitableness,
all because these things are impressed upon his psyche as facts and the image
in his mind grows from them.
“Aha!” the cry
goes up, “find me a good hypnotist. I want to be smart and strong and
successful and all those good things and to be rid of weakness and pain and
failure.” And hypnosis can do it too, if you are willing to abdicate as the
person in charge of your life. If you are willing that someone else run it
every hour of every day throughout the whole of it, then you can turn your life
over to a hypnotist and he can remake it in the image you outline. However, it
will make small difference to you. You may still be in the vehicle, but you no
longer will be driving. If effort and strife and the overcoming of obstacles
are the spurs to growth that the Secret Self intends them to be, then surely
you will have abdicated from life itself.
You need no
hypnotist to put the power of the Secret Self to constructive work in your
life. No hypnotist can overcome the negative image making of your mind unless
he is with you twenty-four hours a day. You are the only one in constant
rapport with yourself, and thus you are the only one able to police the thoughts
and images you entertain. If you let the image be prompted by something outside
you, then you exercise no control over your life. If you accept images only in
accord with your desires, then life will deliver your inner goals. In any case,
the magnificent promise of the Secret Self is this: you can change your life
by altering the images in your mind, for what comes to you in the end is
only that which you have been accepting in consciousness. Now there
are many people who agree with this premise but are quick to point out that the
images in the consciousness of most persons are projected there from the subconscious
and are not of their own choosing. Most schools of psychotherapy apparently
feel this way, for they propose a tedious and time-consuming treatment bent on
expurgating from the subconscious memories of painful and bitter occasions
which might prompt unpleasant images in the mind. Seven or eight years of this
process have not noticeably emptied painful memories from the subconscious of
most patients, and in any case, if a treatment is truly efficacious, it cannot
possibly consume so long a time. The saddest thing about the modern “put the blame
elsewhere” school of psychoanalysis is that the person undergoing it accepts it
as justification for his failure to police his consciousness and thereafter
expects such policing to be accomplished by having the neighborhood rid of
criminals. If he achieves some semblance of a changed consciousness in the
hands of the psychiatrist, he soon goes back to a world full of negative
thoughts and ideas, and just because he does not police his own mind, they readily
find acceptance there. You may not be able to alter the positions of the stars,
to stop the earth from revolving, to cause the winds to blow or the sea to
calm, but you can choose what you will think. You can think what you
want to think. You can think only in response to an inner vision and a secret
goal, and if you take your stand with a firm heart and a high resolve you will
be successful and you will not be intimidated and you will project your image clear
and true and its counterpart will return to you in the world.
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