Unlock the Powers of Your Mind in this Concise, Enjoyable Course
In ten simple and straightforward lessons, PEN Award-winning historian and explorer of alternate realms Mitch Horowitz surveys the most persuasive ideas and techniques from within the positive-mind tradition, and shows how to use them in your life.
This succinct course teaches you:
How to change your thoughts in thirty days. The seven daily practices that make a difference in your life. How to use affirmations effectively. How to turn the Golden Rule into a source of power. Why your thoughts make things happen. Paris Match says: "Mitch Horowitz, a specialist in American esotericism, traces the history of positive thinking and its influence ... takes us far from naive doctrines."
MITCH HOROWITZ is the editor-in-chief of Tarcher/Penguin and the author OCCULT AMERICA: THE SECRET HISTORY OF HOW MYSTICISM SHAPED OUR NATION (Bantam, Sept '09), which has been called "a fascinating book" by Ken Burns and "extraordinary" by Deepak Chopra. Visit him online at www.MitchHorowitz.com "
I like Horowitz-doesn’t commit time one religion or one right idea. The thing he does well, especially in this book, is assert that certain ales that govern our ability to manifest is age old and has been used and recycled in every major religion and culture. Nothing new under the sun, you just may not be doing it right! This book is great because it lays out exercises that Catherine Ponder and Neville would be proud of.
We repeatedly tell ourselves what we want but we don't know what we want.
The three step miracle: 1. List and devise what you really want in life 2.Read the list day and night 3. Tell no one what you are doing 4. Express gratitude every time a good thing arrives
We become what we don't forgive. Thoughts to others- solidify your character. So think about others like how you want others think about you.
Not a course by any means, yes there are some insights and easy to understand concepts shared here and there, but the entire audio book lacks a proper structure in the way it unfolds and relate its contents to each other. It could have been a better book, but as long one can jot down some ideas to try, I would say it's still wroth listening to.