Thoughts carry tremendous creative power.
Consciously or not, before every spoken word,
In the same way, there is a thought proceeding every action.
Since thoughts shape our words and behaviors, they inevitably
shape our environment, relationships and destiny.
As part of our unique human power, our higher reasoning process
separates us from other species.
With our birth gifts of higher thoughts, inventions are made and
modern civilization becomes a reality.
Unfortunately, most of us do not utilize the power of thoughts effectively.
Instead of managing our thoughts positively and using them to create a
better reality, we have become powerless with our thoughts.
For example, how many of us catch ourselves daydreaming often and
allow our mind to wonder from places to places without much control?
On the other hand, how many of us try to control our lives ineffectively by
allowing repetitively negative thoughts to dominate our mind
such as worrying obsessively.
Without learning to master the power of our thoughts, no wonder
we feel anxious and depressed most of the time!
The power of our thoughts truly deserves our better attention
as the quality of our thoughts determines the quality of our life.
Negative thoughts create negative state of mind; therefore,
they produce negative actions following by negative results.
This sounds bad, doesn’t it? The good news is that in the same way,
high quality thoughts create high quality state of mind; therefore,
they produce positive actions and wonderful and positive results.
Isn’t this a great incentive for us to pay attention and learn to
monitor our thoughts carefully?
A good exercise is to start paying attention to the quality of our thoughts for a day.
Your job is to reject any negative or limited thoughts as soon as they surface.
Any “I can’t” or “too” judgments are out of the windows immediately.
You might be surprised by how many negative thoughts you think daily.
You might also discover that some of these thoughts are not even originally yours!
What a relief! When I first started this exercise, I noticed that there were
more negative thoughts than positive ones.