4.19.2008

Do you really want me...

We've got a guaranteed way to ensure you achieve your goal(s). Stop wanting to achieve them. That's right, eliminate the want.

Eliminating the want. Very easy procedure. No, really. Take it from us, who wanted BIG things, many things, and who seemed never quite to achieve them... But along the way, this idea fell upon us and we're sharing it. Here’s how to eliminate the want. Just stop saying the word. Stop saying you "want to" do something. When you stop saying you "want to", you will actually DO that which you "want" to do.

Here, let us give you a visual:
I want to go to the store. Eliminate the want, it becomes I want to go to the store.
'I want to earn a million dollars' becomes I want to earn a million dollars.
'I want to be a millionaire' becomes I want to be a millionaire. (Maybe the grammar’s not so perfect, but when you be something, you are something.) You get the drift, right?

So now you’re probably doing that dangerous thing – thinking (see the previous post by Guest Writer) and in your thoughts, you’ve included that life-threatening word (see the previous post by Guest Writer) and you’ve possibly said something to yourself like, "Well, it’s easy to say I earn a million dollars, but I’m still not earning it!" And if that’s what your reaction is to eliminating the want, then we strongly suggest that you RE-READ the previous entry and eliminate the BUT from your thinking. WithOUT the BUT and withOUT the WANT, you HAVE. Period.

When you eliminate the "want" and the "but", mysteriously and amazingly, you become filled with an energy that propels you toward finding ways to manifest that action-oriented description of what you do and what you be.

We're done. You're welcome.


Footnote: Thinking is not DIScouraged. L. Thierry Geaux and I (Maya T. Wynn) are simply suggesting that you not overdo it to the point where you think away BRILLIANCE!

4.17.2008

I was thinking of one thing, but then... by Guest Writer

Thinking is probably the most dangerous activity in which I engage. And "but..." is perhaps the most life-threatening word in my vocabulary. The word "but..." is like a verbal eraser.