Tuesday, March 18, 2014

The Magic Power of Self Image Psychology





In the marvelous book ‘The Magic Power of Self Image Psychology’ the author Dr. Maxwell Maltz elucidates how self-image plays a significant role in determining success or failure in life. He reiterates that the self-image can be modified or reformed to bring about enduring happiness and achieving greater success in life. It is an inspiring, enlightening and interesting reading.

Some excerpts…

How to Live Joyfully

How, then, does one live the happy life? How does one find joy living in this busy, complicated world of ours? What is the secret?

It is really so simple. To really "live," to find life enjoyable, you must have a realistic, adequate self-image, one that you can live with. You must like and trust yourself. You must feel that you can express yourself without fear of exposure; you must feel no need to hide your true self You must know yourself well. Your self-image must be realistic, what you really are. You feel good when your self-image is intact and adequate.


Aldous Huxley, the great English writer, once wrote, "There's only one corner of the universe you. can be certain of improving; and that's your own self."


Inferiority and superiority are merely opposite sides of the same coin — and the cure lies in simply understanding that the coin itself is counterfeit. For the simple truth is that you are neither "inferior" nor "superior" to your fellow human beings.

"You" are "you" and that's the whole story!

The truth is that, as a personality, you are not in competition with anyone else. God made you a unique individual. You will never be the same as another person and you were never meant to be.


You can change your personality, become more whole than you've ever been, if you build a stronger self-image.

Let's get one thing straight, though.. The aim of self-image psychology is not to create a fictitious self which is omnipotent. Such an image is as untrue as the inferior image of oneself. Our aim is to find the best we have in us, realistically, and to bring it out into the open. Why should you continue to short-change yourself?


The science of cybernetics has led us to the understanding that your so-called "subconscious mind" is not a "mind" but a goal-striving servo-mechanism consisting of the brain and nervous system which the mind directs. We do not have two "minds," but a mind or consciousness which operates an automatic, goal-oriented machine.


This inner mechanism is impersonal. It will work automatically to achieve the goals which you yourself set for it. Feed it "success goals" and if functions as a "success mechanism." Feed it negative aims and it operates as a "failure mechanism."


Forgiveness
If your job was to unload heavy crates of oranges from a truck and carry them into a supermarket, wouldn't you feel overburdened if you had to lift up a crate on your shoulders instead and carry it around with you all day? Could you relax? Of course not. Well, you cannot relax and carry grudges around with you all day long either. The two just don't go together.

There are many fallacies about forgiveness, and one reason that its therapeutic value has not received full recognition is that real forgiveness has been so rare. We have been told that we are "good" if we forgive, but have seldom been advised that the act of forgiveness can relax us, can reduce our load of hostility.

Real forgiveness is not difficult — it's much easier than holding a grudge. There is only one essential condition. You must be willing to give up your sense of condemnation; you must cancel out the debt, with no mental reservations.

When we find it hard to forgive, it is because we enjoy our sense of condemnation. We get a morbid satisfaction from it. As long as we can condemn another, we can feel superior to him.

In nursing a grudge, many people also derive a perverse sense of satisfaction in feeling sorry for themselves. When we really forgive, we are not doing someone a favor or showing off our righteousness. We cancel out the debt not because we have made the other person pay long enough for the harm he has done us, but because we have come to see that the debt itself is not valid. True forgiveness comes only when we are able to see that there is and was nothing for us to forgive. We should not have condemned the other person in the first place.

But the main point is that if you want to relax, to enjoy peace of mind, you must learn to bury grudges. You must become a forgiving person. Be a lover, not a hater. In the words of the great French writer, La Rochefoucauld, "One pardons in the degree that one loves."



In his essay "Self-Reliance," Ralph Waldo Emerson wrote: "There is a time in every man's education when he arrives at the conviction that envy is ignorance, that imitation is suicide, that he must take himself for better or worse as his portion; that though the wide universe is full of good, no kernel of nourishing corn can come to him but through the toil bestowed on that plot of ground which is given to him to till. The power which resides in him is new in nature, and none but he knows what that is which he can do, nor does he know until he has tried. . . . Trust thyself: every heart vibrates to that iron string."



… too many of us don't believe in ourselves. We watch baseball games on television when we might be better off playing baseball. We watch soap operas on television instead of living full lives ourselves. We have come to be "watchers" instead of "doers" and have thus lost faith in our creative powers. We are becoming passive people who observe life while it passes us by.

To be one of life's winners, you must recapture your belief in yourself. You must set worthwhile goals for yourself and believe in their worth — no matter how insignificant these goals might seem to someone else.


As the great English poet John Dryden once wrote:
“Presence of mind and courage in distress
Are more than armies to procure success.”


If you eat too much, and are overweight, your overeating habit is a result of an emotional grievance, conscious or buried. You overeat to make up for what you feel you are missing or have missed at some time in your life. You are trying to soothe all your frustrations with food and it can't be done.


Your self-image must be made of stone and mortar, not of smoke floating away into the air.


"one of the surest ways to find happiness for yourself is to devote your energies toward making someone else happy. Happiness is an elusive, transitory thing. And if you set out to search for it, you will find it evasive. But if you try to bring happiness to someone else, then it comes to you."


To be happy, you must learn the art of give-and-take, which is the lifeblood of civilized living. The person who is just a "taker" can never be happy. A man whose whole life is grabbing money like a shark killer or a woman who accepts others' gifts like a pampered pet — neither can be happy in this kind of role. One must know the joy of giving, the spine-tingling thrill of making somebody else happy, to know the real meaning of contentment.


Seven Rules for Happy Living

1. Get the happiness habit. Smile inside, and make this feeling a part of you. Create a happy world for yourself; look forward to each day. Even if some shadows blot out the sunshine, there is always something to feel good about.

2. Declare war on negative feelings. Don't let unrealistic worries eat away at you! When negative thoughts invade your mind, fight them. Ask yourself why you, who have every natural right to be happy, must spend your waking hours wrestling with fear, worry, and hate. Win the war against these insidious twentieth century scourges.

3. Strengthen your self image. See yourself as you've been in your best moments, and give yourself a little appreciation. Visualize your happy times and the pride you've felt in yourself. Imagine future experiences that will be joyful; give yourself credit for what you are. Stop beating your own brains in!

4. Learn how to laugh. Adults sometimes grin or chuckle, but not many can really laugh, I mean a real belly laugh that gives one a sense of release and freedom. Laughing, when it's genuine, is purifying. It is part of your success mechanism, jet-propelling you to victories in life. If you haven't laughed since the age of 10 or 14, go back into the school of your mind and re-learn something you never should have forgotten.

5. Dig out your buried treasures. Don't let your talents and resources just die inside you; give them a chance to meet the test of life!

6. Help others. Giving to your fellows can be the most rewarding experience of your life. Don't be cynical; understand that many people who seem unpleasant or hostile are waring a facade that they think will protect them from others. If you give to others, you might be amazed at their grateful, appreciative response. Some people who seem the hardest are really soft and vulnerable. You'll feel great when you can give, without thought of profit.

7. Seek activities that will make you happy. Golf, tennis, water skiing? Painting, singing, sewing? I can't tell you — you'll have to tell yourself. But an active life is a happy life, if you're doing what's good for you.


Henry Ford's. "If there is any one secret of success, it lies in the ability to get the other person's point of view and see things from his angle as well as your own."

Carnegie himself states : "You can make more friends in two months by becoming interested in other people than you can in two years by trying to get other people interested in you."

In Personality and Successful Living, (Bruce Publishing Co. 1945) James A. Magner's approach is similar. "We come to tolerate, to understand and to love people not by waiting for them to serve us, much less by giving them an opportunity to display their defects, but by assuming the active role ourselves and giving others positive reasons for tolerating and loving us. Nothing wins friends so much as an unselfish concern on our part. Nothing makes us so worthy of friendship as developing ourselves, our resources, our personality by a program of friendliness and usefulness to others."


In How to Relax in a Busy World (Prentice-Hall, 1962), Floyd and Eve Corbin write:

"If you have been in the habit of inviting negative thoughts —jealousy, envy, resentment, and self-pity, think of these as intruders in your mind. The old Chines saying fits here: You cannot stop the birds of the air from flying over your head, but you need not let them nest in your hair.'

"Face and define your troubles. Gather knowledge about them from every good source. Confide your worries to God. Do all you can about the situation that is causing them. Don't contaminate your friends and loved ones with them."

This is good advice. Worry is one of the most destructive scourges of mankind; if it takes over your mind, your days will be miserable and your nights will be intolerable. Even if the worst misfortune should befall you, it is no worse than a worried mind.

The famed philosopher Soren Kierkergaard once wrote, "No grand inquisitor has in readiness such terrible tortures as has anxiety and no spy knows how to attack more artfully the man he suspects, choosing the instant when he is weakest; nor knows how to lay traps where he will be caught and ensnared as anxiety knows how, and no sharp-witted judge knows how to interrogate, to examine the accused, as anxiety does, which never lets him escape..."

These ideas will help you master your worry:

1. Bring your fears into the open. Talk about them to friends without hiding details which may be ridiculed. The more you express your fears the less serious they will seem to you and the sooner you will forget them.

2. Seek solutions to your problems. When you feel you've done your best to solve a problem, even if you haven't found a clearcut answer, you'll feel better about yourself and will be more inclined to allow yourself the privilege of relaxation.

3. Guide your thinking into constructive channels. Once you've done your best to alleviate some trouble, thinking about it will only make it worse. Use your imagination more positively, picturing happier situations, or undertake activities that will give you pleasure.



The Magic Power of Self Image Psychology
Dr. Maxwell Maltz
 


If you wish to purchase this e-book click the following link:

The Magic Power of Self Image Psychology

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