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This Mystical Life Of Ours
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The Influence Of Our Prevailing Mental States Upon Others
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Not only do we attract to ourselves the things we fear, but we also aid in attracting to others the conditions we in our own
minds hold them in fear of. This we do in proportion to the strength of our own thought, and in the degree that they are sensitively
organized and so influenced by our thought, and this, although it be unconscious both on their part and on ours.
Children, and especially when very young, are, generally speaking, more sensitive to their surrounding influences than grown
people are. Some are veritable little sensitive plates, registering the influences about them, and embodying them as they
grow. How careful in their prevailing mental states then should be those who have them in charge, and especially how careful
should a mother be during the time she is carrying the child, and when every thought, every mental as well as emotional state
has its direct influence upon the life of the unborn child. Let parents be careful how they hold a child, either younger or
older, in the thought of fear. This is many times done, unwittingly on their part, through anxiety, and at times through what
might well be termed over-care, which is fully as bad as under-care.
I know of a number of cases where a child has been so continually held in the thought of fear lest this or that condition
come upon him, that the very things that were feared have been drawn to him, which probably otherwise never would have come
at all. Many times there has been no adequate basis for the fear. In case there is a basis, then far wiser is it to take exactly
the opposite attitude, so as to neutralize the force at work, and then to hold the child in the thought of wisdom and strength
that it may be able to meet the condition and master it, instead of being mastered by it.
But a day or two ago a friend was telling me of an experience of his own life in this connection. At a period when he was
having a terrific struggle with a certain habit, he was so continually held in the thought of fear by his mother and the young
lady to whom he was engaged, -- the engagement to be consummated at the end of a certain period, the time depending on his
proving his mastery, -- that he, very sensitively organized, continually felt the depressing and weakening effects of their
negative thoughts. He could always tell exactly how they felt toward him; he was continually influenced and weakened by their fear, by their questionings, by their suspicions, all of which had the effect of lessening
the sense of his own power, all of which had an endeavor-paralyzing influence upon him. And so instead of their begetting
courage and strength in him, they brought him to a still greater realization of his own weakness and the almost worthless
use of struggle.
Here were two who loved him dearly, and who would have done anything and everything to help him gain the mastery, but who,
ignorant of the silent, subtle, ever-working and all-telling power of the thought forces, instead of imparting to him courage,
instead of adding to his strength, disarmed him of this, and then added an additional weakness from without. In this way the
battle for him was made harder in a three-fold degree.
Fear and worry and all kindred mental states are too espensive for any person, man, woman, or child, to entertain or indulge
in. Fear paralyzes healthy action, worry corrodes and pulls down the organism, and will finally tear it to pieces. Nothing
is to be gained by it, but everything to be lost. Long-continued grief at any loss will do the same. Each brings its own peculiar
type of ailment. An inordinate love of gain, a close-fisted, hoarding disposition will have kindred effects. Anger, jealousy,
malice, continual fault-finding, lust, has each its own peculiar corroding, weakening, tearing down effects.
We shall find that not only are happiness and prosperity concomitants of righteousness, -- living in harmony with the higher
laws, but bodily health as well. The great Hebrew seer enunciated a wonderful chemistry of life when he said, --“ As righteousness
tendeth to life, so he that pursueth evil, pursueth it to his own death.” On the other hand, “In the way of righteousness
is life; and in the pathway thereof there is no death.” The time will come when it will be seen that this means far more than
most people dare even to think as yet. “It rests with man to say whether his soul shall be housed in a stately mansion of ever-growing splendor and beauty, or
in a hovel of his own building, -- a hovel at last ruined and abandoned to decay.”
The bodies of almost untold numbers, living their one-sided, unbalanced lives, are every year, through these influences, weakening
and falling by the wayside long before their time. Poor, poor houses! Intended to be beautiful temples, brought to desolation
by their ignorant, reckless, deluded tenants. Poor houses!
(from: In Tune with the Infinite)
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