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How to Turn Your Desires and Ideals Into Reality
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Giving Your Ideal The Impulse Of Action To Make It Real
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CHAPTER 11
There is one more step in the process of making your ideal complete. It possesses infinite energy, but you must give it the
impulse of action. How can you do this? In this I differ from many others. I hold that visualization is not sufficient. Visualization,
although it often accomplishes wonders, is after all but a picturing of an idea. It does make the idea vivid but it adds to
it only one of several elements -only the images of the sight sense.
Instead of visualization I use idealization -the perfect image. This includes the factor of visualization and that of the
eleven other factors. Using the other factors -especially those of motion and direction of motion -we give the ideal an impulse
to move and this in turn gives it the action power that makes the ideal manifest as a reality.
Visualizing is the act of holding a mental picture; idealizing is the act of perfecting the mental image of all factors, -the
picture, the process of securing it and the act of making it real.
You often ignite the heart of your ideal by vivid mental pictures and strong feelings of desire to possess the reality; but
unless connected up with your motor power of action, it remains merely an urgent unfulfilled picture of desire within you
-an ideal that does not become a reality. Clutching your ideal to action cannot be effectively accomplished by a picture.
Let me illustrate this clearly.
Go to an art museum; look at any painting representing a number of people. If, after going away, you close your eyes and visualize
the painting, you hold in your mind a mental picture of the painting. With care and practice you can make this mental picture
very vivid and increase your ability to re-see in the mind every detail of such a painting -lines, forms and colors of things
and people. Yet, it is still a mere picture; it is flat, lacking action, and it does not impel to action. That which I have
just described is the visualizing process. Visualizing has produced marvelous results when the person visualizing has turned
such mental picture-making into the idealized process, even if they have not recognized that they have done so.
Idealizing, however, is more remarkable because it includes visualizing and adds all other elements to it. Visualization comes
from using the stored-up images of but one of our senses, the sense of sight. Idealization comes from using the stored-up
images not only of the sense of sight but of all other senses. To attain that which we desire it is necessary, not only to
see the visual image, but to act.
Try now another process: Idealize the painting you saw in the art museum; bring it visually to your mind; re-see it just as
you did by the process previously described. Then image action, -every person in it in action; feel them doing the thing they
are pictured as doing; feel the movement; feel the activities. If it portrays them as speaking, hear the tones, -hear what
they say. I might continue with all other elements of the picture, but I think this is sufficient to show you the difference
between visualization and idealization. Visualization produces a non-moving, non-active picture in the mind, even though it
be vivid and clear. Being non-active, it does not impel to action and hence many of our pictured ideals do not become realities.
But if we idealize action, if we use the mental clutch of connecting up the ideal of the thing desired with the process of
obtaining that which we desire, action must result; and action is one of the essential factors in making any ideal come true.
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