Your life, your way of thinking: Serious brain hacking on yourself

Thinking deeply about life when making affirmations helps them go deeper into you. Simply making affirmations without emotion, visualization, or deep thought leads nowhere or produces very little beneficial effect. Without exaggerating this article, I’m going to give you the reality of effective affirmations to the best of my ability.

Albert Einstein said that imagination is more important than knowledge. Considering imagination and the law of reverse effect, and understanding reality as a fluid game instead of a rigid plan, all of this is real: imagination when programmed to act in a certain way in reality is very important. The “knowledge” about how it all works is really not important or relevant. Let me give an example: walk on a balance beam ten inches off the ground to get ten dollars back. It would be easy to be less than a foot off the ground, wouldn’t it? Now put that same ten bucks about fifteen feet off the ground and under a rock in case there’s a breeze. Okay, apparently it’s a bit more difficult, although ultimately it’s exactly the same task in reality.

The point of that anecdote is to show the power of imagination to make anything easy or difficult in life. After all, wasn’t John Milton the poet who said something like “the mind can turn anything into heaven or hell”? I understand that the point of that quote was to show the genuine power of the imagination to make anything really difficult or easy, not to say that heaven or hell is everybody in the mind with no basis in reality. So, reality is to some extent what we perceive it to be, not something rigid or immutable.

So start thinking here, what does this actually mean to us when it comes to ultimately changing it for the better? It means that affirmations work if we work them, that’s what it means, and I’m being somewhat cryptic to give you space to “think about” some of your own answers and understanding so I don’t have to take all the credit for helping you. by the boredom of not being able to change yourself.

I remember the year 1979, when my dad lost his foot to diabetes and had to be hypnotized by my mother to alleviate the fear and suffering he was going through. Instead of seeing it as a bad thing, that was my first inkling of how reality and imagination really work.

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