Master Motivater
Keep motivational MATERIAL at Reach
- I begin each day with a clear mind and a specific plan to get the most from my time and my effort.
- I follow my plan and I reach my goals. An accurate description of me would include the words professional, hard working, qualified, skillful, energetic, enthusiastic, organized, determined and highly successful.
- I am good at persuading others to my point of view. That is because I first and always recognize and understand the point of view of the individual to who I am presenting my ideas, my product, or my service.
- I know how to listen - and I do. I have learned to hear not only the words, which are being said, but also I listen to the unspoken thoughts, which lie behind them.
- I am always prepared. I take the time to do it right. In everything I do, I am prepared, confident, self-assured, and successful.
- I always take care of the details in my work. I enjoy the details of selling and I always tend to them on time and with full attention.
- I keep myself "up". I know that making good sales presentations means keeping myself up, energetic, and in control. That is exactly the way I am, and my sales presentations are always professional and effective.
- I never avoid confronting a problem or making a sales call of any kind. I keep myself working and that keeps me winning.
- I deserve to make the sales I create. I know that success in selling starts with seeing myself as the capable, productive individual that I am.
Being told "no" never bothers me. Instead, hearing the word "no" doubles my determination and adds to my positive enthusiasm.
- Do not wait; the time will never be "just right". Start where you stand, and work with whatever tools you may have at your command, and better tools will be found as you go along.
- Every adversity, every failure and every heartache carries with it the seed of an equivalent or greater benefit.
- It has always been my belief that a person should do his/her best, regardless of how much he/she receives for his/her services, or the number of people he/she may be serving or the class of the people served.
- It is always your next move.
- It is literally true that you can succeed best and quickest by helping others to succeed.
- No one can make you jealous, angry, vengeful, or greedy unless you let him.
- One good idea is all one needs to achieve great success.
- Persistence is to the character of man as carbon to steel.
The best job goes to the person who can get it done without passing the buck or coming back with excuses.
The majority of people meet with failure because of their lack of persistence in creating new plans to take the place of those which fail.
- Success happens to a man who got up onemore time.
- INGO - Halden Clark, Master Motivator
Dreams
Every night before retiring blow out all the air in your body with the sound "O' for about 10 minutes. This sound will turn itself into OM, yet you do not do OM, just do O.....
Thinking that every useless thought is leaving your consciousness, thinking that you are renewing your cells by uncluttered emotional baggage relating to all the thinking.
Sleep with head slightly elevated so as not to have blood-cells filled with protein from food go that high, the weight of these cells will stay behind and cells high in oxygens will rise passed heavier cells.
It is best to eat early and if need more intake tea a little hone or cooked apple is sufficient to keep digestion inactive at night. majority of baldness is from having to eat late do to too much acid reaching the hair root, so your dreams can be frustrating current events....
It is better to have no dream then have dreams of frustrations...
"Pleasent Dreams" - how many of you know where this term came from?
Please write in your thoughts. and dreams...
Coinsidences
Now even if I know who I was last life and retained my knowledge, there will be no one to go out searching for a little girl, However the beauty of this is that we find each other by these coinsidences.
"To remain annonomus God created Coinsidence."
HO'OPONOPONO
Two years ago, I heard about a therapist in Hawaii who cured a complete ward of criminally insane patients--without ever seeing any of them. The psychologist would study an inmate's chart and then look within himself to see how he created that person's illness. As he improved himself, the patient improved.
"When I first heard this story, I thought it was an urban legend. How could anyone heal anyone else by healing himself? How could even the best self-improvement master cure the criminally insane? It didn't make any sense. It wasn't logical, so I dismissed the story.
"However, I heard it again a year later. I heard that the therapist had used a Hawaiian healing process called ho 'oponopono. I had never heard of it, yet I couldn't let it leave my mind. If the story was at all true, I had to know more. I had always understood "total
responsibility" to mean that I am responsible for what I think and do.
Beyond that, it's out of my hands. I think that most people think of total responsibility that way. We're responsible for what we do, not what anyone else does--but that's wrong.
"The Hawaiian therapist who healed those mentally ill people would teach me an advanced new perspective about total responsibility. His name is Dr. Ihaleakala Hew Len. We probably spent an hour talking on our first phone call. I asked him to tell me the complete story of his work as a therapist.
He explained that he worked at Hawaii State Hospital for four years.
That ward where they kept the criminally insane was dangerous.
Psychologists quit on a monthly basis. The staff called in sick a lot or simply quit. People would walk through that ward with their backs against the wall, afraid of being attacked bypatients. It was not a pleasant place to live, work, or visit.
"Dr. Len told me that he never saw patients. He agreed to have an office and to review their files. While he looked at those files, he would work on himself. As he worked on himself, patients began to heal.
"'After a few months, patients that had to be shackled were being allowed to walk freely,' he told me. 'Others who had to be heavily medicated were getting off their medications. And those who had no chance of ever being released were being freed.' I was in awe.'Not only that,' he went on, 'but the staff began to enjoy coming to work.
Absenteeism and turnover disappeared. We ended up with more staff than we needed because patients were being released, and all the staff was showing up to work. Today, that ward is closed.'
"This is where I had to ask the million dollar question: 'What were you doing within yourself that caused those people to change?'
"'I was simply healing the part of me that created them,' he said. I didn't understand. Dr. Len explained that total responsibility for your life means that everything in your life- simply because it is in your life--is your responsibility. In a literal sense the entire world is your creation.
"Whew. This is tough to swallow. Being responsible for what I say or do is one thing. Being responsible for what everyone in my life says or does is quite another. Yet, the truth is this: if you take complete responsibility for your life, then everything you see, hear, taste, touch, or in any way experience is your responsibility because it is in your life. This means that terrorist activity, the president, the economy or anything you experience and don't
like--is up for you to heal. They don't exist, in a manner of speaking, except as projections from inside you. The problem isn't with them, it's with you, and to change them, you have to change you.
"I know this is tough to grasp, let alone accept or actually live. Blame is far easier than total responsibility, but as I spoke with Dr.
Len, I began to realize that healing for him and in ho 'oponopono means loving yourself.
"If you want to improve your life, you have to heal your life. If you want to cure anyone, even a mentally ill criminal you do it by healing you.
"I asked Dr. Len how he went about healing himself. What was he doing, exactly, when he looked at those patients' files?
"'I just kept saying, 'I'm sorry' and 'I love you' over and over again,' he
explained.
"That's it?
"That's it.
"Turns out that loving yourself is the greatest way to improve yourself, and as you improve yourself, you improve your world.
"Let me give you a quick example of how this works: one day, someone sent me an email that upset me. In the past I would have handled it by working on my emotional hot buttons or by trying to reason with the person who sent the nasty message.
"This time, I decided to try Dr. Len's method. I kept silently saying, 'I'm sorry' and 'I love you,' I didn't say it to anyone in particular. I was simply evoking the spirit of love to heal within me what was creating the outer circumstance.
"Within an hour I got an e-mail from the same person. He apologized for his previous message. Keep in mind that I didn't take any outward action to get that apology. I didn't even write him back. Yet, by saying 'I love you,' I somehow healed within me what was creating him.
"I later attended a ho 'oponopono workshop run by Dr. Len. He's now 70 years old, considered a grandfatherly shaman, and is somewhat reclusive.
He praised my book, The Attractor Factor. He told me that as I improve myself, my book's vibration will raise, and everyone will feel it when they read it. In short, as I improve, my readers will improve.
"'What about the books that are already sold and out there?' I asked.
"'They aren't out there,' he explained, once again blowing my mind with his mystic wisdom. 'They are still in you.' In short, there is no out there. It would take a whole book to explain this advanced technique with the depth it deserves.
"Suffice It to say that whenever you want to improve anything in your life, there's only one place to look: inside you. When you look, do it with love."
I've done it in coffee shops where there was some angry conversations, or crying kids and the people either left or changed topic and kids stopped crying. My favorite has been at home...when I said inward, Im sorry I love you to the messy apt, my roommate did his dishes and took out garbage....must be very powerful ;)
Mon, July 24, 2006 - 1:21 PM
Thanks for the feedback, Gary, and for trying this! I'm using it now, too. I was listening to NPR on the way to work today and heard about the civilians suffering wounds and death of family members, etc. in Lebanon. So I said, "I'm sorry, I love you." I look into myself to see where this war is coming from, but all I can figure out is that it's a fear of how bad life could get. I do know from my enlightenment intensive direct experiences that Love is all there is and that we are all safe in Spirit. So I remind my mind of that, while I'm at it.
Tue, July 25, 2006 - 10:11 AM
Im glad you're working on the "inner war" too. I also feel it comes from fear. Fear of surviving, lack of self respect, refusing to see self/others as Divine Beingins, and IMO the biggest is diconnection from Source. So that's where I've been focusing my thoughts. Many Blessings to you!
Spirit of ZAADZ enters my life
WOW, not even 24hrs of joining Zaadz, some wild energy, some coinsidence or just on the wave of Being, the Spirit of intense good mood has come over me. Went Shopping and the music in the market was "Boggie Uggie until you just can't Boogie no more" so I started singing and moving with the groving. A Happy Gent loooked over at me with great smile, Then outside in the parking lot came over and wished me a happy holyday and leaned to kiss me full mouth, I continued smilling and wished him back and kissed him back and there we were kissing in the parkinglot two complete strangers. Then we proceded to get in our cars and we both went our way. Wish this would happen more oftem.






