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This Mystical Life Of Ours
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Thought And Its Intelligent Direction
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Of all known forms of energy, thought is the most subtle, the most irresistible force. It has always been operating; but,
so far as the great masses of the people are concerned, it has been operating blindly, or, rather, they have been blind to
its mighty power, except in the cases of a few here and there. And these, as a consequence, have been our prophets, our seers,
our sages, our saviours, our men of great and mighty power. We are just beginning to grasp the tremendous truth that there
is a science of thought, and that the laws governing it can be known and scientifically applied.
Thought needs direction to be effective, and upon this effective results depend as much as upon the force itself. This brings
us to the will. Will is not, as is so often thought, a force in itself; will is the directing power. Thought is the force.
Will gives direction. Thought scattered gives the weak, the uncertain, the vacillating, the aspiring, but the never-doing,
the I-would-like-to, but the get-no-where, the attain-to-nothing man or woman.
Thought steadily directed by the will gives the strong, the firm, the never-yielding; the never-know-defeat man or woman,
the man or woman who uses the very difficulties and hindrances that would dishearten the ordinary person, as stones with which
he paves a way over which he triumphantly walks, who, by the very force he carries with him, so neutralizes and transmutes
the very obstacles that would bar his way that they fall before him, and in turn aid him on his way; the man or, woman who,
like the eagle, uses the very contrary wind that would thwart his flight, that would turn him and carry him in the opposite
direction, as the very agency upon which he mounts and mounts and mounts, until actually lost to the human eye, and which,
in addition to thus aiding him, brings to him an ever fuller realization of his own powers, or in other words, an ever greater
power.
It is this that gives the man or the woman who in storm or in sunny weather, rides over every obstacle, throws before him
every barrier, and, as Browning has said, finally “arrives.” Take, for example, the successful business man, --for it is all
one, the law is the same in all cases -- the man who started with nothing except his own interior equipments. He has made
up his mind to one thing, -- success. This is his ideal. He thinks success, he sees success. He refuses to see anything else.
He expects success: he thus attracts it to him, his thought-forces continually attract to him every agency that makes for
success. He has set up the current, so that every wind that blows brings him success. He doesn’t expect failure, and so he
doesn’t invite it. He has no time, no energies, to waste in fears or forebodings. He is dauntless, untiring, in his efforts.
Let disaster come today, and tomorrow -- ay, even yet today -- he is getting his bearings, he is setting forces anew into
operation; and these very forces are of more value to him than the half million dollars of his neighbor who has suffered from
the same disaster.
We speak of a man’s failing in business, little thinking that the real failure came long before, and that the final crash
is but the culmination, the outward visible manifestation, of the real failure that occurred within possibly long ago. A man carries his success or his failure with him: it is not dependent upon outside conditions.
(from: What All the World’s A-Seeking)
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