Lifestyle and Employment: Thought Produced Outcomes
Studies have shown that redirected thinking can produce desired lifestyle and employment outcomes.
Kalamazoo, October 15, 2005: Some of the most widely read books share the same topic, thinking. More specifically, the affect thinking has on a person’s lifestyle and employment outcomes. These researchers and authors have recounted study results that indicate that a person’s belief system is highly influenced by what the individual continually ingests into his psyche by reading, watching television, and spending time with other people. In fact, Dr. John C. Maxwell, author of Thinking for a Change, indicates that a person’s beliefs are partly derived from the people with whom she spends the most time.
“How big do we think determines the size of our accomplishments,” says noted author of The Magic of Thinking Big, Dr. David J. Schwartz. He insists that you are what you think you are. In agreement is Dr. Dennis Kimbro, bestselling co-author with Napoleon Hill of Think and Grow Rich: A Black Choice. He states, “There is nothing more important than learning the art of keeping your mind focused upon the things, conditions, and circumstances of life that you really want.” They suggest that a person can condition herself to create positive outcomes by focusing her thoughts on those outcomes. On the contrary, a lack of positive mental stimulus also produces results, and the outcomes are usually negative. Dr. Kimbro says that you can tell a person’s outcomes by the types of books housed on their bookshelves. The greater the outcomes, the larger the library. The lesser the outcomes, the larger the television set.
According to Napoleon Hill, repetition is the key to focused thought. He recommends repeatedly exposing your psyche to words, pictures, and contacts that represent your desired outcomes. New author, Linda C. Newberry, concurs in her book Riches and Honor: Transform Your Life with God’s Powerful Word. In it, she provides a tool readers can use to cast a new vision inside their own minds. Her objective was to use the power of repetition to create new beliefs that, in turn, attract desired results. As researchers have discovered from various studies, and as the noted authors have confirmed, repetition is the basis for what people believe.
Using the daily affirmation provided in Riches and Honor, a person can affect her beliefs and, thus, change her lifestyle and employment outcomes. By making positive declarations about herself, the reader can attract people and circumstances that she desires.
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