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This Mystical Life Of Ours
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Thoughts Are Forces
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Thought is at the bottom of all progress or retrogression, of all success or failure, of all that is desirable or undesirable
in human life. The type of thought we entertain both creates and draws conditions that crystallize about it, conditions exactly
the same in nature as is the thought that gives them form. Thoughts are forces, and each creates of its kind, whether we realize
it or not. The great law of the drawing power of the mind, which says that like creates like, and that like attracts like,
is continually working in every human life, for it is one of the great immutable laws of the universe. For one to take time
to see clearly the things he would attain to, and then to hold that ideal steadily and continually before his mind, never
allowing faith -- his positive thought-forces -- to give way to or to be neutralized by doubts and fears, and then to set
about doing each day what his hands find to do, never complaining, but spending the time that he would otherwise spend in
complaint in focusing his thought-forces upon the ideal that his mind has built, will sooner or later bring about the full
materialization of that for which he sets out.
There are those who, when they begin to grasp the fact that there is what we may term a “science of thought,” who, when they
begin to realize that through the instrumentality of our interior, spiritual thought-forces we have the power of gradually
moulding the everyday conditions of life as we would have them, in their early enthusiasm are not able to see results as quickly
as they expect, and are apt to think, therefore, that after all there is not very much in that which has but newly come to
their knowledge. They must remember, however, that in endeavoring to overcome an old or to grow a new habit, everything cannot
be done all at once.
In the degree that we attempt to use the thought-forces do we continually become able to use them more effectively. Progress
is slow at first, more rapid as we proceed. Power grows by using, or, in other words, using brings a continually increasing
power. This is governed by law the same as are all things in our lives, and all things in the universe about us. Every act
and advancement made by the musician is in full accordance with law. No one commencing the study of music can, for example,
sit down to the piano and play the piece of a master at the first effort. He must not conclude, however, nor does he conclude,
that the piece of the master cannot be played by him, or, for that matter, by anyone.
He begins to practice the piece. The law of the mind that we have already noticed comes to his aid, whereby his mind follows
the music more readily, more rapidly, and more surely each succeeding time, and there also comes into operation and to his
aid the law underlying the action of the reflex nerve system of the body, which we have also noticed, whereby his fingers
coordinate their movements with the movements of his mind, more readily, more rapidly, and more accurately each succeeding
time; until by and by the time comes when that which he stumbles through at first, that in which there is no harmony, nothing
but discord, finally reveals itself as the music of the master, the music that thrills and moves masses of men and women.
So it is in the use of the thought-forces. It is the reiteration, the constant reiteration of the thought that grows the power
of continually stronger thought-focusing, and that finally brings manifestation.
(from: Character-Building Thought Power)
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