Understanding the Positive and Negative Thinking
By James Rogers
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Understanding the Positive and Negative Thinking - James Rogers
Contents
Understanding Positive and Negative Thinking
(1) So why is the subconscious mind so hard to control?
(2) Is it possible for a human being to control his subconscious mind?
(3) Each morning when you wake up try these exercises:
(4) How to control your emotions:
(6) Never believe the emotions of your heart.
(7) The heart is like a false prophet?
(8) Listen to your first thoughts: This is the true voice from God.
(9) Scream out loud at yourself when negative images start coming from the subconscious mind. Tell it to shut up
The Subconscious Mind
(10) Why Do We Hurt and Feel Pain?
(11) Why Do We Dwell on Events That Are Years Old and Years Over?
(12) Why do we fear, Fear?
(13) Why Do We Give People the Power to Control Us?
(14) Why is Change a Scary Thing
(15) Please stop believing that your heart can think, because it can’t!
(17)-Why do the subconscious mind hold so much hate
(17) Control arguments in your relationship.
(18) What is an argument?
(19) How to handle a breakup
(20) Why is it so hard to lose weight?
(21) How to forgive a parent who has hurt you
(22) How to achieve a goal
24-Who controls the information coming from our subconscious mind?
25-Is suicide a subconscious mind information overload?
26-How Electronic Devices Influence Your Mind
Understanding Positive
and Negative Thinking
Are you looking to change how you think and handle problems? Has life confronted you with situations that keep you worried and confused? Well worry no more, because help has arrived. In this book are my secrets that have helped me change my life and the way I conduct myself in a relationship and around strangers. Learning these secrets can be your first steps into understanding how decision form and release themselves into our conscious awareness.
Understanding how we make decisions, can give us the power we need to control those awkward and embarrassing moments that sometimes produce stress and displeasure in our lives. Learning how to make a good decision isn’t hard, as long as you have courage, faith and control. Having these qualities are essential especially in those times when nobody is around to give you a helping hand to help fight off those negative images that are flooding your mind and over powering your common sense.
As a parent, I never thought that I would have to bury my youngest daughter, but life doesn’t care about what we think, nor does it care about the pain it leaves behind when it takes a love one away without our approval. Losing my 4-year-old daughter Amy to phenomena came without a warning, in fact; it came and went and never said sorry. Although her dying wasn’t something I was ready for, being able to control my emotions tested my strength and ability to work through those images that were now controlling how I was collecting information of the event. Knowing that this event wasn’t just going to touch my family, but it was also going to touching the lives of her friends and relatives that also loved her just as much as I did.
To lose a child is devastating, it made me wonder; why did God have to let this happen? What did I do as the protector of my family to allow such a terrible thing to happen under my watch? Was I responsible? Did I overlook the signs? Or did I like many of you have, forgotten that life and death is inevitable but being able to control the way you make a decision in the time of a crisis can be the difference between a positive and a negative breakdown. Thank God that I didn’t let my emotion over power my common sense. I learned something from my daughter death, that images are created to visually connect us with our conscious awareness.
I also believe that life and death works as a team; one brings in life and one takes out life but the decisions that comes after a life changing experience, falls totally on us and how we handle the visual information coming from our subconscious mind. So making a good decisions in the times of a crisis shouldn’t be taken lightly or without caution and concern.
The Night my daughter died.
On the night that my daughter died, I was working in Rahway New Jersey in a remote area where getting a train wasn’t an easy thing to accomplish. A call came through on the company phone that was told to me by my partner that my youngest daughter was in the hospital and my wife needed me at the hospital because our daughter wasn’t doing well and the doctors feared that she wasn’t going to make it through the night. So I asked my partner would he take me to the hospital and he kindly said he couldn’t because the job we were doing needed one of us to stay behind and since he was the lead man, he had to stay and the company truck had to stay with him. So I had to wait until the job was done for him to get me at a station that would take me closes to the hospital; and that wait took about 4 hours. Now you can’t imagine the things that were going on in my head