Case Study
Case study
When you first learn to write, you learn with your conscious mind. Everything is awkward, you have to think about every little movement of your pencil and your hand. Each line or curve has to be carefully controlled and made in the right direction. It seems impossible to produce straight lines and smooth curves, let alone produce a letter which sits on the line.
As the lessons progress, the tiny actions start to become habit. Now you write without thinking about how the letters are formed – they just appear.
Imagine you hadn’t learned to write until you were an adult. The thought of learning to write would now have become a major obstacle. You may have tried a few times and failed, and the subconscious would make you relive the failure and keep reminding you that writing wasn’t for you. You could be influenced by outsiders or just by your own fears, but it is the subconscious that stops you.
Once we realize this, we can control the power of the mind and, therefore, it is our choice whether we use it constructively or destructively.
The subconscious part of your mind is actually the most powerful, and the average human only uses less than one percent of their mind’s capability. The subconscious only reacts to what you feed it; it doesn’t have the ability to know what is good or bad for you.
- Feed your subconscious mind with positive messages and the conscious mind will produce positive actions.
- You are who you think you are.
- Your subconscious mind is working right now, day and night, to make sure that you become precisely the person you unconsciously believe yourself to be.
