By
now, most of you know that I am of the opinion that it is not necessary to live
a life that contains suffering, and that there are definite ways to change your
life from one containing suffering to one where you are happy and peaceful all
the time.
Most
of you also know that, in my opinion, the way to do this is to cultivate the ability
to let whatever happens be okay and to not resist "what is."
This
doesn't mean you're okay with injustice and suffering or don't do anything about
them. It means you emotionally accept things the way they are and do not resist
what is.
Resisting
what is is not the same as deciding you want to change what is, and the difference
is one of attachment to the outcome. The person who is attached to the outcome
suffers if they do not get the outcome they want, whereas the happy, peaceful
person prefers the outcome they want but are not attached to it. If the outcome
they get is not what they wanted, they remain just as happy and peaceful as they
were to begin with. Their happiness comes from within, and is not dependent on
what goes on around them.
Many
people are not only unhappy as a result of what goes on around them, but are unhappy
because of what goes on inside. At the same time, this inside unhappiness helps
create outside conditions that give them something to resist in their outer life.
This is one way in which people "create their own universe." Unfortunately,
this universe is not a happy one. On the other hand, you can always create a new
one, at any time.
Based
on our early life interactions with our primary care-givers, we all develop generalization
about who we are and what our relationship is to the rest of the world. These
generalizations (part of our "map" of reality) divide different aspects
of ourselves, and qualities we may have, into two categories, those that we think
are "good", or acceptable, and those we think are "bad" or
unacceptable.
We
don't choose these beliefs. We soak them up from our primary care-givers, our
teachers, and from other influences (friends, relatives, the media, etc.) when
we're too small to know any better. These beliefs become core components of the
way we see ourselves, other people, and the world.
This
is critically important to your happiness, for two reasons. First, the brain is
a goal seeking mechanism, and a very powerful one. Your brain can make whatever
you put into it come true in your life. And second, because human beings have
a powerful need for consistency between what they believe to be true and what
really is true. As has been said, people would rather be right than be happy.
This
means that regardless of how much what you believe is not representative of how
things really are, or how much your beliefs result in misery for you, you will
arrange to be right about them by creating the circumstances that seem to confirm
that what you believe is true.
This
is compounded by the fact that many of these beliefs, since they involve something
about you being "bad", "defective", "not okay",
"broken", "unacceptable", and so one, are too painful to hold
in your conscious awareness and are therefore repressed into your unconscious
mind, where they affect you all the time, but are out of sight. This means they
are not available for conscious examination and change.
The
other thing we do with these parts of ourselves we think are unacceptable is to
project them onto others (this results in extreme emotional reactions to others
who exhibit the characteristics we believe are "bad" or unacceptable
about us).
In
many ways, emotional healing involves "unlearning" these old generalizations
and making new, healthier ones. In reality, there is nothing about any of us that
is innately bad. Since whatever you deeply believe comes true in reality, you
could make a conscious choice to believe whatever would create a happy and peaceful
life for yourself. Most people, however never take the reins and do this, instead
adopting the victim posture made so popular in the last few decades.
Holosync®
facilitates this healing by making you more aware, more conscious, of repressed
beliefs about yourself, and it does this in a way that, in most cases, takes all
or part of the emotional charge off the negative and painful belief. If you'll
remember, another of these principles described the fact that you cannot continue
to do something harmful to yourself and do it consciously. Only by remaining unconscious
can a person continue to do something that is harmful to themselves.
Most
people evaluate beliefs by whether or not they are "true" or "false."
If it's "true" it's worth believing, if it's "false" it isn't.
In my opinion, this true/false distinction is not useful, despite the fact that
it seems so obvious. The useful way to evaluate beliefs is by whether they are
resourceful or non-resourceful for you -- by whether they create happiness and
peace, or something else. Since whatever you deeply believe comes true, the only
resourceful beliefs are those that contain an outcome you want.
The
big secret is that you can CHOOSE what you want to believe -- you don't have to
believe what seems true based on past experience.
The
first step is to find out what these unresourceful beliefs are. One way to begin
to do this is to complete the following sentences:
I
am _______.
People are _______.
The world is _________.
What
we're looking for are the things you say to yourself when you're really down about
things, when you're feeling the worst. We are NOT looking for what you learned
in self help books -- those things you think you SHOULD believe about yourself.
We are not looking for "I am one with everything." "The world is
filled with abundance." "People are basically good." We're looking
for what you really do believe about yourself, and say to yourself, about yourself,
when things look darkest -- things like "I'm never going to be a success.
No one will ever love me. There's something wrong with me. I can't seem to do
anything right. People will take advantage of you if you don't watch them very
carefully. Men always leave me in the end. No one cares about me. The world is
dangerous and chaotic." And so on. You know, those things you say when you
are really down about everything. These statements are big clues to what these
negative core beliefs are.
The
second way to determine what these beliefs are is to look at what is happening
in your life. Since what you believe manifests in reality, you can tell what a
person's beliefs are just by looking at the results they get in their life. If
you are having trouble sustaining a close relationship with the opposite sex,
somewhere there is a core belief about yourself and about the opposite sex that
is manifesting this result in your life. If you are having trouble with prosperity,
or health, or any other issue, you must have a belief about that subject that
is manifesting in what actually happens to you.
When
you look at other people who are getting better results, you can be sure the difference
is that they have different, and more empowering, core beliefs on that subject.
Once
you know what the various core beliefs you have are (and we're concerned with
the negative beliefs here -- the positive ones, those that are giving you the
results you want, don't need attention), the next step is to decide what would
a more empowering, resourceful belief be?
Once
you know this, you can begin to install the new way of thinking about yourself.
To
do this, you have to start telling yourself this new belief over and over, and
wiping the old one out of your mind whenever it pops up. The only reason the old
one seems true is that you have focused on it so much, which makes it play out
in reality, which of course makes you focus on it more, which makes it play out...
Focus
on this new belief. Do it while meditating, do it while driving, while showering,
etc., etc. It will bring up old and uncomfortable feelings as you focus on it,
so be prepared for that -- the old belief will fight for its life. Don't let that
bother you. Just keep focusing on what you want. Create a technicolor movie of
you getting just what you want, and feeling happy and satisfied by it -- the more
vivid, the better. In addition to playing the movie during meditation, play it
right before you go to sleep and right after waking up.
Most
people who have had a significant (negative) emotional experience focus on what
they don't want (ie, a repetition of the significant emotional experience, such
as abandonment). They have a rule: "avoid "x" at all costs!"
When you notice yourself focusing on what you do not want, change the focus to
what you do want. Since your mind doesn't know when you focus on something that
you do not want it (it always takes whatever you focus on as an instruction to
go get something and bring it to you). To change your focus, which has been on
automatic for a long time, takes practice, since the old way is on automatic.
Allow yourself to go through the learning curve, which may take a while.
As
I said earlier, beliefs come true because we need consistency between what we
believe and reality, and we will do anything to create this consistency. We create
this consistency in 3 ways.
We
get attracted to people and situations that confirm that the belief is true (ie,
if you believe no one will ever really love you, you somehow feel this magical
attraction to men/women who will leave, even though consciously you have no information
about this aspect of who they are);
we
hallucinate that the belief is true even if it isn't (ie, you interpret behaviors
potential partners may have as meaning they will leave, are leaving, have left,
etc., even if that is not what it really means). In other words, we put a meaning
on whatever happens that causes it to confirm, in our mind, that the belief is
true;
we
act in such a way that people finally comply and act in the way we feared they
would act (you fear they will leave, and the ways you act because of that fear,
finally cause the person to leave).
With
all three, you get to be right about what you believe. But as they say, it's better
to be happy than right.
This
process of changing core beliefs can take several years to complete. Just identifying
your core beliefs can take some time. Let it be okay that it takes time. Take
it one step and one day at a time. Meditation with Holosync greatly speeds up
this process, because it helps you become more conscious and aware of what you
are creating, and it takes the emotional charge off things in your life and allows
you to look at things from a more dispassionate perspective (this is the watcher
I often talk about).
However
long this process takes, it is worth undertaking. What we're talking about here
is the difference between being an unconscious automatic response mechanism. living
out beliefs that create suffering, and a conscious being who chooses what to believe
based on the kind of world they want to live in and therefore creates a life that
is happy, peaceful, full of stimulating creativity, and well worth living.
You
are already REALLY GOOD at creating what you believe and focus on. You may have
not yet quite come to terms with the fact that ANYTHING you focus on and believe
can happen for you. Most of what we focus on we did not choose. It was chosen
for us when we were small and it runs on automatic. This is why I often refer
to most people as being, for the most part, automatic response mechanisms. Now
all you have to do is consciously change that focus to what you want and (since
you're already good at getting what you focus on) you'll get it.
Once
these unconscious generalizations about yourself have become conscious and have
been changed to what you choose for yourself, you are free.
Be
well,
William
Harris Director
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