1. The "self image" sets the boundaries of individual accomplishment. It defineswhat you can and cannot do. Expand the self image and you expand the "area" ofthe "possible." Dr. Maxwell MaltzAuthor of Psycho-Cybernetics,The 30 Million copy best-seller
2. The "self image" is the key to human personality and human behavior. Change theself image and you change the personality and the behavior.
3. Visualizing, creative mental picturing, is no more difficult than what you dowhen you remember some scene out of the past, or worry about the future. Actingout new action patterns is no more difficult than "deciding," then followingthrough on tying your shoes in a new and different manner each morning, insteadof continuing to tie them in your old "habitual way," without thought or decision.
4. This Creative Mechanism within you is impersonal. It will work automatically andimpersonally to achieve goals of success and happiness, or unhappiness andfailure, depending upon the goals which you yourself set for it. Present it with"success goals" and it functions as a "Success Mechanism." Present it withnegative goals, and it operates just as impersonally, and just as faithfully as a"Failure Mechanism."Dr. Maxwell Maltz
5. "If You can remember, worry, or tie your shoe, you can succeed. "
6. "Animals cannot select their goals. Their goals (self-preservation andprocreation) are pre-set, so to speak. And their success mechanism is limited tothese built-in goal images, which we call "instincts."Man, on the other hand, has something animals haven't - Creative Imagination.Thus man of all creatures is more than a creature, he is also a creator. "
7. "Science has now confirmed what philosophers, mystics, and other intuitive peoplehave long declared: every human being has been literally "engineered for success"by his Creator. Every human being has access to a power greater than himself."
8. Time and again, I have seen confused and unhappy people "straighten themselvesout," when they were given a goal to shoot for and a straight course to follow.
Friday, November 17, 2006
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