The Adductive Quality of Thought
Prentice Mulford's theory - Thoughts are Things -
Thought a dynamic force - Mind and matter identical - Miracles of
Nature - Professor Gray's experiments with vibrations -Wonderful
results - Professor Williams' significant statement - Food for
thought -Character of thought vibrations - Murky thought waves and
fleecy thought waves - Your thought retains a connection with you
and affects you - Thought auras - Like attracts like A wonderful
manifestation of psychic phenomena - Results of fear or worry
thought -Advantage of confident thinking - Successful men the result
of proper thought - Realized their ideal - Requisites for success -
"I can and I will" - Others attracted toward you -Anything is yours
if you only want it hard enough - Helen Wilman's theory.
That great writer on the power of the mind - Prentice Mulford,
has summed up much of his philosophy in the statement: "Thoughts are
Things." In these words he gave expression to a mighty truth, which,
if fully apprehended by mankind, would revolutionize the world.
Thought is not only a dynamic force, it is a real thing, just as is
any other material object. Thought is merely a finer form of matter,
or grosser form of spirit - you may call it either with equal
correctness. Matter is but a grosser form of mind, mind but a finer
form of matter. There is but one substance in nature, but that
substance has many forms, ranging from the most material (so-called)
forms, to the highest form -Spirit.
When we think, we send out vibrations of a fine ethereal
substance, which is as real as the finer vapors or gasses, the
liquids, the solids. We do not see thought - neither do we see the
finer vapors or gasses. We cannot smell or taste thought - neither
do we smell or taste the pure air. We can feel it however, as many
can testify - which is more than we can say of the powerful magnetic
vibrations of a mighty magnet, which, whilst exerting a force
sufficient to attract toward it a piece of steel weighing a hundred
pounds, is absolutely without effect upon us. Its vibrations may
pass through our bodies and exert its force on the steel, while we
may be unaware of its existence. Light and heat send out vibrations
of a lower intensity than those of thought, but the principle is the
same. The evidence of the five senses is not absolutely necessary to
establish the existence of a material substance or force. The
annuals of science are full of proofs of this fact, Professor Elisha
Gray, and eminent scientist, says in his little book "The Miracles
Of Nature."
"There is much food for speculation in the thought that there
exists sound waves that no human ear can hear, and color waves of
light that no eye can see. The long, dark, soundless space between
40,000 and 400,000,000,000,000 vibrations per second, and the
infinity of range beyond 700,000,000,000,000 vibrations per second,
where light ceases, in the universe of motion, makes it possible to
indulge in speculation."
M. M. Williams, in his work entitled "Short Chapters in
Sciences," says, "There is no gradation between the most rapid
undulations or tremblings that produce our sensation of sound, and
the slowest of those which give rise to our sensations of gentlest
warmth. There is a huge gap between them, wide enough to include
another world of motion, all lying between our world of sound and
our world of heat and light, and there is no good reason whatsoever
for supposing that matter is incapable of such intermediate
activity, or that such activity may not give rise to intermediate
sensations, provided there are organs for taking up and sensifying
these movements."
I cite the above authorities merely to give you food for thought,
not to attempt to demonstrate to you the fact that thought
vibrations exist. The last mentioned subject would be far beyond the
scope and purposes of this work, and can only be touched upon
herein.
The character of the thought vibrations sent out by us depends
upon the nature of the thought itself. If thought had color (and
some say that they have), we should see our fear and worry thought
as murky, heavy, clouds hanging close to the earth; our bright,
cheerful and happy, confident, "I can and I will' thought as light,
fleecy, vapory clouds hanging close to the earth; our bright,
cheerful and happy, confident, "I can and I Will" thoughts as light,
fleecy, vapory clouds, traveling swiftly and mingling with others of
their kind, forming fleecy cloud banks, high above the level of the
dense, mephitic, foul exhalations produced by fear and worry "I
can't" thoughts.
No matter how far your thought waves may travel, they retain a
certain connection with you and exert an influence over you as well
as others. You cannot easily get rid of the influence over you as
well as others. You cannot easily get rid of the influence of these
"children of your mind." If you have been sending out bad thoughts,
you are subject to their influence, and your only hope is to
neutralize and counteract them by sending out strong, new thought
waves of the proper sort, or by asserting the I AM, and thereby
creating a mental aura, or by both means.
The old saying "Like attracts like" and "Birds of a feather flock
together," are both literally exemplified by the tendencies of
thought waves. There is what is known as the "Adductive Quality of
Thought," the word "adductive" being derived from the Latin word
adductum, to bring to. The manifestation of this quality of thought
is one of the most wonderful features in the realm of psychic
phenomena.
Fear or worry thought will attract others of their own kind, and
will combine with them, the result being that you will be afflicted
not only by the product of your own mind, but also by those
emanating from the minds of others, the whole forming a heavy
burden. And the longer that you persist in that line of thought, the
heavier will be your burden. On the other hand, if you think bright,
cheerful and happy thoughts they will draw to themselves others of
the same degree, and you will feel brighter, more cheerful and
happier from their combined influence. This is absolutely true, but
you are not asked to accept it on faith alone. Try it and be
convinced. But, in the experiment, be sure to couple the thoughts
with a feeling of confidence in the outcome, and you will obtain
much better and quicker results. Half-hearted, doubting thoughts
have only a small percentage of the force of confident, expectant
ones.
If you think along the lines of discouragement, lack of
confidence, "afraid to try," "know I can't" lines, you will attract
to yourself the force of other murky thoughts of the same kind, and
you will find that you really "can't," and moreover, everyone else
will seem to entertain just the same opinion regarding your ability.
But just brace up and send out earnest, confident, fearless, "I can
and I WILL" thought waves, and you will attract to yourself the
similar thought waves of others, which will still further stimulate
and strengthen you, and help you to accomplish your aims.
If you send out jealous, envious thoughts, they will come home
bringing their mates with them, and you will be wretched until the
effect passes off. So will waves of hate return to harm you, having
gained force and power on their journey. The old proverb "Curses
like chickens come home to roost," is much nearer the real truth
than is generally supposed. Anger thought arouses anger in the other
man (unless he has rendered himself positive to them), and he sends
back his return thought waves; besides which other anger waves
mingle and help on the vicious work. You have heard people say, "A
man always finds what he looks for." Of course he does, he cannot
help it, for his thought attracts others of the same sort, and he
sees a world of the same color as his mental spectacles.
Good thought attracts good - evil thoughts, evil. If you hate a
man and send him your hate thoughts, you will get hate in return,
and will face a hating and hateful world. In the thought world, you
get back what you send out - with good interest. Send out kind
thoughts and kind thoughts will return to you, with compound
interest, and you will find yourself greeted by a kind, helping
world, and will be much the gainer. If only from a selfish point of
view, it pays to think the best thoughts. If you will practice
thinking along these lines for, say, one month, you will find the
greatest difference in things, the greatest change in yourself, and
you will find that you look with aversions and disgust upon your
old, mean, low, miserable way of thinking, and would not return to
it under any consideration - no, not for a fortune. Before the month
will have passed you will be conscious of the helpful force of the
responsive thought waves, and your life will seem entirely different
to you. Try it. Try it now. You will never regret it.
There are two particularly bad thoughts, which you should root
out, first of all, and you will find that, when you have rid
yourself of the balance will die out of their own accord. I allude
to Fear and Hate. These two following weeds are the parents of most
of the others. Worry is the oldest child of Fear, and bears a close
resemblance to its father. Envy, Malice, and Anger are some of the
numerous broods claiming Hate as their parent. Destroy the "old
ones" and you will not be troubled with their offspring. I will
speak further on this point in the lesson on Character Building.
I will now process to another phase of the Adductive Quality of
Thought. I refer to its exhibition along the lines of Success by
right Thinking.
It may seem almost incredible to you, but it is a fact, that all
successful men owe their greatness to their earnest, forceful,
concentrated thought vibrations. They fixed their mind upon a
certain line of thought; brought the aid of Will - the recognition
of the I AM - to bear on that line of thought; allowed that line of
thought to mold their characters; went straight to the mark at which
they and aimed in the beginning. Others had aimed for the same mark,
but failed because they failed to hold the thought, and had allowed
themselves to become discouraged, intimidated, tempted or coaxed
away form their ideal.
The requisites for the successful follow-up of a thought ideal to
the end, are, first, an overpowering Desire (not a mere wish);
second, a strong belief in your ability to accomplish your desire
(not a mere half-hearted faith); and, third, an invincible
Determination to win (not a mere back boneless - "I'll try to").
It is a strange thing and difficult to explain (without leading
you into metaphysical depths), but the measure of success by this
plan seems to depend materially upon your belief in the force. A
half-hearted belief will bring only half-way results, whilst an
earnest, firm, confident belief that "your win will come to you"
will accomplish results little short of marvelous. Cultivate that
sort of belief, and accompany it with a firm mental demand for what
you want, and you will succeed. "Ask and you shall receive, knock
and it shall be opened unto you," but accompany the asking and
knocking with the firm belief and expectation of Success.
Helen Wilman says: "He who dares assert the I May calmly wait
While hurry fate Meets his demand with sure supply."
But the words "calmly wait" refer only to the state of mind - and
indicates that calm, confident expectation of a "sure thing." It
does not mean that a man shall sit down and fold his hands and do
nothing more than "calmly wait" for "hurrying fat" to drop his
reward in his lap. Oh, no. Helen Wilmans never meant that - she is
not built that way. The man, who is possessed of the dominating
desire, and concentrated thought impulses, does not sit down and
merely wait - he couldn't do that without sacrificing his keen
desire and earnest pursuit. "Thought manifests itself in Action" -
the firmer the thought, the stronger the action. You may want a
thing in the worst way, and be fully confident of your ability to
secure it, but you are going after that thing the best way you know
how, and are "going to get it." You will agree with Garfield, who
said, "Do not wait for a thing to turn up - go out and turn
something up," with all your might and main, but carrying with you
the calm demand that that thing will be "turned up as the result of
your going out and turning." And you will feel all the time the
confident expectation of the "thing" obeying your command.
I wish that my space would allow me to tell you of the wonderful
results of this plan of thinking and acting, but I can merely touch
upon it and call your attention to the workings of the Law. But,
after all, one must learn a thing by experience before they will
appreciate its truth. The I AM is not satisfied in any other way. I
want everyone who reads this lesson to start in and practice the New
Thought plan. You will have to accept what I say on faith, at first,
but you will soon begin to demonstrate its correctness by personal
experience, and then you will know it to be true, and will push
forward toward Success.
Anything is yours, if you only want it hard enough. Just think of
it. ANYTHING. Try it. Try it in earnest and you will succeed. It is
the operation of a mighty Law.
Our next lesson will take up the subject of Character Building,
and will show you that "as a man thinketh in his heart, so is he."
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