Self-programming
Jan. 15th, 2012 02:53 pmhttp://www.stevepavlina.com/blog/2009/05/creating-a-belief-board/
The thing I like most about this guy is that he is deeply committed to programming himself.
I don't like to let other people program me. Like many humans, I'm pretty easy to condition, and in the absence of a strong commitment to self-programming, this can be a problem. Inevitably, when I give away more than a little of my power, I come to regret it.
The older I get, the more I believe that the source of wisdom isn't "out there"---it's in here, and when I take the time and effort to align myself, open up, and connect to the [tao, universe, god/s, insert your choice of noun here] myself, I can get a pretty good fix on what my next set of actions should be. Sometimes the voice says "let yourself drift," and sometimes it says, "move over here". Either way, the advice is usually good.
I do need to practice listening to it.
I don't care *how* we as individuals choose to program ourselves: I just think we should do more of it.
The thing I like most about this guy is that he is deeply committed to programming himself.
I don't like to let other people program me. Like many humans, I'm pretty easy to condition, and in the absence of a strong commitment to self-programming, this can be a problem. Inevitably, when I give away more than a little of my power, I come to regret it.
The older I get, the more I believe that the source of wisdom isn't "out there"---it's in here, and when I take the time and effort to align myself, open up, and connect to the [tao, universe, god/s, insert your choice of noun here] myself, I can get a pretty good fix on what my next set of actions should be. Sometimes the voice says "let yourself drift," and sometimes it says, "move over here". Either way, the advice is usually good.
I do need to practice listening to it.
I don't care *how* we as individuals choose to program ourselves: I just think we should do more of it.