Man Is Mind
WHEN A MAN says to a young lady: “You are a very sweet
girl," what does he mean? Does he mean that her physical being is like the
childhood rhyme: "Sugar and spice, and everything nice"? Does he mean
that her features portray sweetness? Is it her smile and expression which
prompt the statement that she is sweet? The answer to all of these questions
is—No.
Not many people realize it, but it is the mind which
reflects sweetness, or its opposite.
A sweet individual is one whose mind causes him to be
generous, understanding, sympathetic, friendly, and helpful.
When we think of someone as having a magnetic personality,
it is natural to associate that personality with his visible, physical being;
but this, of course, is not correct.
There are beautiful girls with personalities so bad they are
actually repulsive. There are girls with plain features, but whose
personalities are so magnetic they appear as sweet and charming.
What is the difference between these girls? It is a matter
of mind. The latter think in terms of giving, but the former think only in
terms of receiving.
There are two men very much alike from a physical
standpoint. One man is a good businessman. He makes money and saves money. The
other one just gets by. He earns a small income and spends every cent of it.
51
52 MAN IS MIND
What is the difference between the two men? It is a matter
of mind. One man thinks in terms of good business and sound investments. The
other man thinks in terms of earning merely for the pleasure of spending.
These illustrations could be carried on for many, many
pages. The only difference between a writer and the one who does not write is a
matter of mind. One man knows he can write; the other one is sure he cannot.
There is no important physical difference between the
success and the failure. Again it is a matter of mind. One man sees himself as a
failure; the other man knows he is a success.
As we make these comparisons we must conclude that the
all-important part of a human being is his mind. His mind makes him what he
is—whether that be good or bad.
Whenever one uses the personal pronoun "I" he is
not referring to his physical being at all. He means his mental self. If he
says: "I'm happy," there is nothing about his being, as such, which
can be happy. Of course, there is a physical response to the emotional fact of
his happiness. His lips will indicate a smile; the body may even ripple with
laughter, but without happiness and joy being in the mind, none of this will
happen.
If I should say: "You are a fine person," I am not
referring to that which I see. There is nothing about your skin, flesh, and
bones which can be fine or otherwise. It is your mind I refer to.
Doesn't all of this discussion give emphatic evidence to the
statement heading this chapter: "Man is Mind"?
"You are what you think you are" is a statement
you will find in practically every book I have written, and you'll see it again
in books I will write in the future.
Do you fully comprehend the significance of this simple
expression?
It does not mean that you are you because you are tall or
short, dark or light, fat or lean. It means that the you which people like or
dislike is a reflection of your mind.
You don't have to be unhappy, you need not always be ailing
and complaining, you can be successful. In other words, within
MAN IS MIND 53
the realm of that great mind of yours is the power and
intelligence to guide your life in any direction you may choose.
For a moment, think of some of the monumental achievements
of man. A streamlined train of many cars will travel at sixty or more miles per
hour, yet it is controlled by a single man—the engineer—and we may go on to say
that all of this is controlled by the mind of this single man.
The largest ships afloat are guided by a single man. Of
course, he has his helpers, but there must be a master mind.
The giant airliners, carrying over a hundred passengers plus
baggage and mail, are flown by a single man.
In the beginning, these trains, ships and planes were first
conceived in the mind of man. They had to be created before they could be
navigated.
Now then, suppose I should tell you that you have—within
your mental self—a gigantic reservoir of power, most of which is unused. And
suppose I tell you also that just as the pilot drives his plane, the captain
steers his ship, the engineer speeds his train, you—your conscious mind—can
steer your Creative Mind so that it will guide you in any direction you select
to Health, Wealth and Happiness.
MAN IS A MIND WITH A BODY
One of my countless blessings is a curious mind. I must have
been born under the sign of a question mark. The adverbs How? Why? When? and
Where? are the most overworked words in my vocabulary.
When I first learned to drive an automobile (before the days
of the automatic gearshift), I was not content to be told how I should move the
shift lever to change gears. I insisted upon having the lid of the gearbox
removed so that I could see what happened when the lever was moved.
I have always been like that. Why does it work? How does it
work? are just a couple of the questions always on the tip of my tongue.
54 MAN IS MIND
Several years ago, while having dinner with a friend of
mine, we began discussing a provocative subject: the mysteries of man. We
talked about the power of mind and how it directed every cell in the body; that
to take away mind would leave a decaying mass of flesh and bones. It was then
that a great truth dawned upon me. Up to that time I had looked at man as a
body with a mind. But he isn't. Man is a mind with a body.
It is important to understand this truth, and as simple as
it sounds, one must think about it quite awhile before he does understand it.
In reality, that body of yours is merely a utility for your
mind —which is you.
Your legs provide you with locomotion. Your arms do the many
jobs directed by your mind. The food you eat furnishes fuel for your
"engine." Your mouth performs a dual function. It acts as a
"hopper" for your food intake, and as a mouthpiece for your vocal
communication system. Your eyes are for guidance and your ears are receivers
for your communication system.
Your physical being functions in a dual manner: 1, to keep
itself alive and functioning and 2, to carry out and execute the dictates of
the mind.
CREATURES OF HABIT
This is a guess on my part, but I would say that at least 95
per cent of everything we do is guided by habit rather than intellect.
When you awaken in the morning, do you dress consciously or
subconsciously? The latter, of course. As you shave your face, you do not think
about the manner in which you hold the razor; you do not think about it at all.
Your mind may be on your business. As you eat your breakfast, you do not think
about the way you use your knife and fork. You eat without thought of the
mechanics of eating.
If you are a typist, you do not consciously pick out the
keys.
MAN IS MIND 55
You keep your mind on the material you are putting on paper;
your Creative Mind guides your fingers.
A good automobile driver does not drive consciously. The use
of the steering wheel, brakes, accelerator and horn is all prompted by the
Creative Mind.
When learning something new, we are slow because we must
think as we act. When the Creative Mind takes over, we become faster and far
more accurate in that which we are doing. In other words, we become good after
the act becomes a habit.
Now then, is it too premature to say that if you are not
happy with your life as it is, all you have to do is to begin forming habit
patterns which conform to the life to which you aspire? No, it is not, but only
if you understand what you have already read.
We have been talking about habit. Let's continue on this
subject for a while, then you'll be given a routine to follow in developing
habits to promote Health, Wealth and Happiness.
Habits are not formed instantaneously. Do you recall the old
adage: Habit is a cable, we weave a thread each day, and at last we cannot
break it? This is true, only if we permit it to be true. Habits can be broken,
if we set out, intentionally, to do so.
If your body is below par physically, a physical culturist
can show you, in a very short time, how you should exercise in order to build
it up. But merely showing you how is not enough. You must follow his
instructions for a period of time before a noticeable change takes place.
If you are not successful, if you are not happy, if you are
always ailing and complaining, it is because you are being guided by the type
of habit which makes these conditions a reality. You think of yourself as a
failure, perhaps one not entitled to success. You believe it is your lot to be
unhappy. The natural consequences of a mind of failure and gloom is a body
reeking with aches and pains, which gives you more reason for your self-pity.
A friend of mine—a very successful man—told me a story which
has a direct bearing on what I have been telling you.
56 MAN IS MIND
"A casual remark about me, which I should not have
heard, changed my entire life," this friend remarked.
"I had always been a ne'er-do-well, just getting
by," he continued, "but I always bragged about the big things I was
going to do.
"One day I chanced to overhear a remark made by a man I
thought to be a friend. He said to another, 'Joe is a nice enough fellow, but
he is an idle dreamer, always going to do something, but never doing anything.'
"It was that thought of being an idle dreamer which
stiffened my spine. I decided then and there I'd prove I was not an idle
dreamer."
This man changed his thought pattern. The "idle
dreamer" thought kept egging him on until he created a new picture of
himself. He began to see himself as a doer instead of a mere "going
to" talker. In time—not much—his new mental picture was complete and he
became an outstanding success.
TEST YOURSELF FOR NEGATIVITY
The negative person seldom thinks of himself as being
negative. He most likely will put up an argument if you even subtly suggest he
is negative.
I will give you a very simple test which will tell you, in
no uncertain terms, whether your mind leans toward the negative or positive
side.
Below are 25 ordinary words. Read these words slowly, noting
carefully what mental association goes with each. The association will be
either negative or positive. If you find you are negative on most of them—be
happy. I say: Be Happy, because a great change is about to take place in your life
which will give you Health, Wealth and Happiness.
1. Love 5. Food
2. Crag 6. Sex
3. Money 7. Dark
4. Automobile 8. Book
MAN IS MIND 57
9. Rest 17.
Guests
10. Law 18.
Health
11. Water 19.
Animal
12. Letter 20.
Father
13. Garden 21.
Clothing
14. Maid 22.
Music
15. Boss 23.
Children
16. Home 24.
Write
25. Tests
Many of these words seem negative and others positive; but
below you will find that each can be either negative or positive.
Love. The association flashing in the mind of a negative person
might be: No one loves me. On the other hand, a mental picture of a loved one
might appear in the mind of the positive one.
Crag. The negative one could easily picture dangerous crags
on which his clothing could become torn, or he could be hurt in falling against
one of them. Crags add beauty to the hillside in the mind of the positive
thinker.
Money. Negative: debts, lack of it, etc. Positive: Comfort,
security, generosity.
Automobile. Negative: Lack of one, or condition of present
car. Positive: Enjoyable trips; fun for the family.
Food. Negative: Poor meals, indigestion. Positive: Pleasant
repast with relatives and friends.
Sex. Negative: Resentment if not happy with mate, or if
unpopular with opposite sex. Positive: Reverse of negative.
Dark. Negative: Loneliness. Positive: Rest, relaxation.
Book. Negative: Study, boredom. Positive: Enlightenment,
pleasant pastime.
Rest. Negative: Works too hard; no time for rest. Positive:
Recuperation, recreation.
Law. Negative: Traffic tickets. Positive: Order, protection.
Water. Negative: Drowning, rain. Positive: Swimming,
boating, cleanliness.
Letter. Negative: Bad news. Positive: Good news.
Garden. Negative: Work, expense. Positive: Beauty.
58 MAN IS MIND
Maid. Negative: Cannot afford one. Positive: Makes the
wife's home work more enjoyable.
Boss. Negative: Slave driver. Positive: Promotion, income.
Home. Negative: Fighting, nagging. Positive: Companionship
with family.
Guests. Negative: Extra work and expense. Positive: Good
fellowship.
Health. Negative: Awareness of aches and pains. Positive: A
condition worth striving for.
Animal. A nuisance, expense. Positive: Loyalty, devotion,
companionship.
Father. Negative: Strict, never gave one any breaks.
Positive: Devotion.
Clothing. Scanty wardrobe, cheap clothing. Positive:
Reverse.
Music. Negative: Noise, annoyance. Positive: Peace,
inspiration.
Children. Negative: Pests, expense. Positive: Fulfillment.
Write. Negative: Inability to write which causes one to
dread writing. Positive: Helps one to develop ideas.
Tests. Negative: Lack of faith in one's ability to pass
tests. Positive: Gives one an opportunity to try his skill.
Your reaction to these words may be entirely different from
the illustrations given; but from these illustrations you will be able to determine
whether or not your first impressions were negative or positive.
Psychological studies have shown that 95 per cent of all
people lean toward the negative side. This figure coincides with the study
which revealed that not more than 5 per cent of all people are successful. If
you are among the 95 per cent of negative people, undoubtedly your flash
reactions to the words were heavily on the negative side. If you find this to
be true, as I said earlier: Be Happy.
"A fault discovered is half overcome" is a truism
often heard. If you are largely negative in your thinking, it is reasonably
cer-
MAN IS MIND 59
tain that you are not enjoying as much success as you might
like; that you are not as happy as you should be.
Think then, with rejoicing, that your day of emancipation is
at hand. No longer will you be held in the bondage of lack, uncertainty and
gloom. You can literally tilt your head heavenward, throw out your arms, and
with unbounded enthusiasm proclaim: I am free!
MAKE A GAME OF POSITIVE THINKING
Copy the list of words on a piece of paper. When you have
guests you can suggest that they test themselves to see how negative they may
be. Discuss the mind and how it can lead us to success or failure. Remember!
The more conscious you become of the power of thought, the more cautious you
will be as to the type of thoughts you allow to linger in your mind.
Here is another helpful game. Take each letter of the
alphabet and see how many positive words you can think of for each letter.
Among the positive words you could select for A, are Adorable, Admire,
Agreeable, Alacrity, Alert, Ambitious, Amiable, etc. For B you might think of
such words as Beautiful, Becoming, Beloved, Benediction, Benefit, Bounty, etc.
Proceed through the alphabet, thinking of as many positive words as you can.
A good way to use this positive alphabet is to obtain a
small card file, about the size of the usual cooking recipe file. Get a set of
index cards and a quantity of blank 3" x 5" cards, obtainable from
most stationery stores. Take a card for each positive word and file it after
the correct letter. Soon you'll have well over 100 name cards in your file.
Every time you learn something, or read something, about any
one of the positive words, take that card from your file and add the information
you obtained.
It is not likely that you will refer to this file often, but
the very act of keeping it, makes you more positive-thought conscious.
60 MAN IS MIND
I CAN! I WILL! I AM!
In one of my earlier books I gave a formula which has been
used with great success by, perhaps, hundreds of thousands of success-seeking
men and women.
This formula is an extremely simple—and effective—way of
re-educating your Creative Mind, making it natural for you to think positively,
constructively.
For a full week, say to yourself as often as you think of
it: I CAN be a Success! Say it before retiring at night; when you first awaken
in the morning; several times during the day.
This fixes in your mind the fact that you CAN be a success.
You will agree that unless you know you can .succeed, there is little use in
trying. So burn this truth into your mind, even if, at first, you do not
believe it. After a short period of time you will begin rejoicing in the
thought that success can be yours.
But, knowing you CAN be a success is not enough. We all know
lots of things we can do, but unless we do something about them, the positive
knowledge is of little benefit to us. This brings us to the second phase of
this formula: For another full week (you can take longer if you wish), every
time you think of it, repeat to yourself: I WILL be a Success. Do this many
times from early morning until the time you retire at night.
A great change will begin taking place within that mental
reservoir of power of yours. You will experience a pleasant uneasiness. You'll
want to test your new powers. If, for example, you have yearned for a business
of your own, you'll begin preparing yourself for one. If you have no money at
all, it doesn't matter. Your Creative Mind will guide you to ways and means of
obtaining it.
But you're not yet through with your mental exercises. For
at least another week, begin telling yourself: I AM a Success. Do this many
times from early morning until you retire at night.
This statement may seem to be a bit premature, but it isn't.
If you have money in the bank, but none in your pocket, you
MAN IS MIND
61
know that, without effort, you can write a check and obtain
money.
If you have a success consciousness and know that you CAN be
a success, and that you WILL be a success, you have a fulfillment of your
desire.
All statements given in this chapter are facts which have
been proved, which are being proved, and which will be proved again and again.
They may seem too good to be true, but do not rest upon that
thought. These principles are lifting others out of mediocrity to leadership.
If they do not do so for you- it is because you are not giving them an
opportunity to do so.
Before proceeding to the next chapter, pause a while and
reflect over this one. If it has not excited you, if it has not caused you to
overflow with enthusiasm, you have missed a point or two and should reread
part, or all of it.
Although I have been using these principles for several
years, just telling about them gets me excited all over again. I want all of
you to get out of life what these truths are doing for me.
5
Getting Acquainted with the Real You
IN ABOUT 400 B.C., when Socrates said to his followers:
"Know Thyself," I am sure this great sage was not referring to the
physical being. His every utterance was directed to the intellect, i.e., to the
mind.
I once read a story in which the author said there were two
entities residing within every being: a plus entity and a minus entity. The
plus entity saw nothing but good—health, strength, success, happiness, etc. The
minus entity saw just the opposite— gloom, poor health, failure, etc. This
author felt that we were influenced by only one entity at a time. If we were to
allow the plus entity to take over, we would walk erectly with chests out and
chins up, a spark in our eyes and a resolute expression of determination on our
faces. If the minus entity should be in charge, the reverse would be true. There
would be a lag in our steps; with listless eyes and drooping mouths, our faces
would reflect abject despair.
I am not so sure that two entities dwell within our beings,
but I do know with certainty that our minds run either in a negative or a
positive direction.
According to early psychologists, 95 per cent of all people
lean toward the negative side in their thinking. This opinion would imply that
most people are under the control of their negative selves, and it would also
indicate why such a large percentage of people are unhappy and unsuccessful.
62
THE REAL YOU 63
The title of this chapter is: "Getting Acquainted with
the Real You." If you are one of the 95 per cent who lean toward the
negative side, you might not be particularly pleased to meet the real YOU. But,
instead of being regretful, you will have cause for rejoicing, because you will
have learned why you are as you are, and what you can do to change your
situation.
In the previous chapter you were given a simple test to
learn whether you are inclined negatively or positively. This is the first—and
perhaps the most important—step toward getting acquainted with the real you.
The illustrations which follow are intended for those who
are negatively inclined. In fact, this description may apply to most readers of
this book, because, after all, a strictly positive-minded person really does
not need it.
Let me tell you the story of a man who stayed awake all
night—and was glad of it. We will call him Joseph Benson.
Joe had run into a streak of bad luck and found himself
without money and with a mass of overdue bills on his desk. Things looked
serious for this unhappy man, who was already feeling the effects of loss of
sleep.
One night Joe went to bed and, as usual, began thinking
about his many creditors and of the threats they had been making regarding his
indebtedness.
A tide-turning thought entered Benson's mind.
In one of my earlier books, he had read the same thought
which is repeated in this book, to the effect that man is a mind with a body—not
a body with a mind.
The statement hadn't meant much to Joe when he first read
it, but now it seemed to take on a new significance.
"If I am mind," Benson thought, "I can be
anything I want to be. All I have to do is make up my mind what I would like to
be—and then be just that."
Throughout the night his mind ran in constructive circles.
He thought of himself as he was. He thought of others whom he would like to
emulate. He thought of the changes he would have
64 THE REAL YOU
to make within himself to be able to accomplish what he
would like to accomplish.
"What is the difference between me and the man I
admire— and perhaps even envy?" he asked himself.
"I do not like to refer to myself as being
spineless," he thought, "but I might as well face it and admit it to
be the truth.
"I shrink when asking others to grant me any request
which might relieve my condition, because I feel I will be refused, as,
invariably I am.
"The go-getter has forcefulness. He tells others what
kind of deal he would like to make—one which will be of benefit to both. They
listen to him and, in most cases, do as he wants them to do.
"My actions are guided by my mind. The other man's
actions are guided by his mind. Why can't I change my mind to coincide with
his?"
The early morning rays of the sun peeping through the
openings in his curtains indicated the dawn of a new day.
Joe Benson arose, and instead of having a bedraggled
appearance, he was alive and alert, with an expression quite similar to that of
the miner who has just struck pay-dirt.
Mrs. Benson, upon seeing her changed husband, was actually
timid about asking Joe what had happened. She didn't have to, though, because
at breakfast, she got the enthusiastic story of how a sleepless night would
change the future for them both.
Joe stayed home that day—and with good reason.
With pencil and paper, he charted his problem according to
the Mental Yardstick described in one of my former books. He decided what his
objective would be; in his case it was a means of liquidating his indebtedness
and establishing an income on which he could maintain a reasonably high
standard of living. He next listed every obstacle which stood between him and
his objective; then he outlined a plan of action which would enable him to
hurdle the obstacles and attain his objective.
Before retiring that evening, he meditated on his new plan
at great length, and determined to arise early in the morning
to put it into action.
Without understanding the principles revealed in this book,
Joe Benson was literally "Growing Rich While He Slept." He had
retired with his plan well in mind, and while his conscious mind was asleep,
his Creative Mind had worked diligently on Joe's constructive plan of action.
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