前言.让信念力来改变你的贫困、疾病或不幸
Part 1 ·信念力驱动着我们的肉身
亨利·欧文之死
意志力是生命最好的补药
让藏在内心深处的潜能拯救自己
Part 2 ·贫困是信念力走偏造成的
坚信自己是穷人,注定一辈子受穷
整天想着“贫困”,会真的把“贫困”招来
起点在哪里不重要,朝哪个方向走才重要
钱是挣出来的,不是省出来的
要想当富人,先像富人那样思考
Part 3 ·信念力带来真正富足的人生
决心为富足而战,是获得富足的前提
财富本无穷尽,只观望不奋斗,注定受穷
你想要的东西不是太多,而是太少
坚信自己是为富足、庄严和神圣而生
Part 4 ·信念力塑造好品格与好身体
别用愚蠢或恶毒的方式对待自己
把所有工作留在办公室里
睡眠有令人惊讶的神奇力量
睡觉可以治好你的“贫困病”
Part 5 ·信念力带来健康思想和正确思维
你的情绪最容易引起哪种病?
健康的思想能预防多种身心疾病
病痛是担忧、焦虑、嫉妒和懊悔的产物
健康在很大程度上是一个道德问题
任何呻吟和抱怨都是可耻的
Part 6 ·信念力催生全新的精神世界
坏情绪,给你招惹过多少麻烦?
你为坏情绪付出的代价还不够吗?
改变坏情绪,不能“战”,只能“爱”
信念力不仅影响大脑,还影响全身
用信念与意志力再造自我
Part 7 ·信念力通过想象决定身心健康
用面粉或纽扣救活垂危的病人
一个印度年轻官员亲历的荒唐事
他死于自己“想”出来的病
暗示的力量令人震惊
一对老夫妇怎样让孩子生出病
病不是治好的,而是被医生“暗示”好的
宗教故事对信念力的记载
Part 8 ·信念力不足让人未老先衰
70岁的大法官在生日那天自杀
信念力不但影响你的财运,还影响寿命
相信自己年轻,是“抗衰老”战役的首场胜利
学会忘记那些不愉快的事 75看看吧,你就是这样变老的
你在时光中变得越来越孤独了吗?
自私让你变老,公义让你年轻
让年轻的心态成为一种生活习惯
爱是让人保持生命活力、创造力的最大能量
Part 9 ·你的信念力决定着你的成就
不要介意别人对你的期望、计划和目标嗤之以鼻
应该相信自己将是下一个“幸运儿”
不要选择成为任人踩踏的土块
自我定位决定成就大小
要把成功的渴望化为实际的行动
想要成功就不要惧怕被别人嘲笑
最大程度地相信自己
Part 10 ·把你的意志和信念大声讲出来
“我已经向上帝保证,我会做到的! ”
“我精力充沛如同朝阳冉冉,我信心十足如同宗教信徒! ”
信念力
必须敢于大声喊出信念
和自己说话——克服弱点、找回自信
你必须反抗恶习的控制!
人生在世就应该挺着胸膛做人
Part 11 ·信念力造成的两种心理暗示
“天然兴趣”使他锒铛入狱
心理暗示在潜移默化中决定命运
学会用暗示来拯救失败的自己
钞票虽然染尘却改变不了它的价值
Part 12 ·极力摆脱焦虑的困扰
“焦虑”是你的孪生兄弟
很多人貌似强大,在焦虑面前却不堪一击
请你检验自己是否处于过度焦虑
焦虑能让人未老先衰
告诉你清除焦虑的简单方法
Part 13 ·学会用信念力战胜恐惧
恐惧让你与美好人生失之交臂
你最担忧的那些事其实从未发生
敏感、焦虑和身体虚弱的人最容易恐惧
几个启发性的事例 132开
你必须立刻用信念驱赶恐惧!
恐惧本质上源自迷信和死后的惩罚
不要相信江湖骗子的所谓预测
真正健康的心灵不知恐惧为何物
Part 14 ·用信念力提高自制力
不幸往往喜欢纠缠那些不会自控的人
坏脾气到底给你带来什么?
坏脾气招来的麻烦还少吗?
一时的冲动会把永久的朋友变成敌人
狂妄、自私和虚荣导致易怒的脾气
Part 15 ·快乐是上帝恩赐的灵丹妙药
笑声如气垫般缓冲人生旅途的颠簸
多微笑可以使身体更健康
当今社会中的快乐重于一切财富
应该培养获取快乐的能力
快乐影响着我们的人生观和价值观
Part 16 ·我只记录阳光的时刻
应该不断地清理精神垃圾
为自己的大脑装进阳光
遗忘那些不友好的人和事
Part 17 ·有因必有果是万物之规律
你的收获取决于你播下的种子
恨由恨生,爱由爱生
报复心态会让你付出惨痛代价
Contents
PREFACE
I. THE POWER OF THE MIND TO COMPEL THE BODY
II. POVERTY A MENTAL DISABILITY
III. THE LAW OF OPULENCE
IV. CHARACTER BUILDING AND HEALTH BUILDING DURING SLEEP
V. HEALTH THROUGH RIGHT THINKING
VI. MENTAL CHEMISTRY
VII. IMAGINATION AND HEALTH
VIII. HOW SUGGESTION INFLUENCES HEALTH
IX. WHY GROW OLD·
X. THE MIRACLE OF SELF-CONFIDENCE
XI. AFFIRMATION AND AUDIBLE SUGGESTION
XII. DESTRUCTIVE AND CONSTRUCTIVE SUGGESTION
XIII. WORRY, THE DISEASE OF THE AGE
XIV. FEAR, THE CURSE OF THE RACE
XV. SELF-CONTROL VS. THE EXPLOSIVE PASSIONS
XVI. GOOD CHEER—GOD’S MEDICINE
XVII. THE SUN-DIAL’S MOTTO
XVIII. “AS YE SOW”
而在未开化的旧时代,一些村镇几乎就没有医生,但那里的居民自力更生,反而身强体健,对疾病表现出极强的抵抗力。
现在许多家庭使小孩子养成了依赖医生的习惯,这并不利于他们的生理健康。一些妈妈不论孩子得了啥大病小病,都要请医生诊断。结果,这样一来,孩子从小就满脑子疾病、医生和药物的图像,这会一直影响他的一生。
I. THE POWER OF THE MIND TO COMPEL THE BODY
Our destiny changes with our thought; we shall
become what we wish to become, do what we wish to do, when our
habitual thought corresponds with our desire.
“The ‘divinity that shapes our ends’ is in ourselves;
it is our very self.”
LONG before Henry Irving’s death, his physician
cautioned him against playing his famous part in “The Bells,” on
account of the tremendous strain upon his heart. Ellen Terry, his
leading woman for many years, says in her biography of him:
Every time he heard the sound of bells, the throbbing of his heart
must have nearly killed him. He used always to turn quite
white—there was no trick about it. It was imagination acting
physically on the body.
His death as Matthias—the death of a
strong, robust man—was different from all his other stage deaths.
He did really almost die—he imagined death with such horrible
intensity. His eyes would disappear upward, his face grow gray, his
limbs cold.
No wonder, then, that the first time that the Wolverhampton
doctor’s warning was disregarded, and Henry played “The Bells” at
Bradford, his heart could not stand the strain. Within twenty-four
hours of his last death as “Matthias” he was dead.
As Becket on the following night—the night of his death—his
physicians said that he was undoubtedly dying throughout the entire
performance. So buoyed up and stimulated was he by his great zeal
for his work and the bracing influence of his audience that he
actually held death at bay.
It is a common experience for actors
who are ill to be cured for a time and to be entirely forgetful of
their aches and pains under the stimulus of ambition and the
brain-quickening influence of their audiences.
Edward H. Sothern says that he feels a great increase of brain
activity when he is on the stage, and this is accompanied by a
corresponding physical exhilaration. “The very air I breathe,” says
Mr. Sothern, “seems more stimulating. Fatigue leaves me at the
stage door; and I have often given performances without any
suffering when I should otherwise have been under a doctor’s care.”
Noted orators, great preachers, and famous singers have had similar
experiences.
That “imperious must” which
compels the actor to do his level best, whether he feels like it or
not, is a force which no ordinary pain or physical disability can
silence or overcome. Somehow, even when we feel that it is
impossible for us to make the necessary effort, when the crisis
comes, when the emergency is upon us, when we feel the prodding of
this imperative, imperious necessity, there is a latent power
within us which comes to our rescue, which answers the call, and we
do the impossible.
It is an unusual thing for singers or actors and actresses to be
obliged to give up their parts even for a night, but when they are
off duty, or on their vacations, they are much more likely to be
ill or indisposed. There is a common saying among actors and
singers that they cannot afford to be sick.
“We don’t get sick,” said an
actor, “because we can’t afford that luxury. It is a case of ‘must’
with us; and although there have been times when, had I been at
home, or a private man, I could have taken to my bed with as good a
right to be sick as anyone ever had, I have not done so, and have
worn off the attack through sheer necessity. It is no fiction that
will-power is the best of tonics, and theatrical people understand
that they must keep a good stock of it always on hand.”
I know of an actor who
suffered such tortures with inflammatory rheumatism that even with
the aid of a cane he could not walk two blocks, from his hotel to
the theatre; yet when his cue was called, he not only walked upon
the stage with the utmost ease and grace, but was also entirely
oblivious of the pain which a few moments before had made him
wretched. A stronger motive drove out the lesser, made him utterly
unconscious of his trouble, and the pain for the time was gone. It
was not merely covered up by some other thought, passion, or
emotion, but it was temporarily annihilated; and as soon as the
play was over, and his part finished, he was crippled again.
General Grant was suffering greatly from rheumatism at Appomattox,
but when a flag of truce informed him that Lee was ready to
surrender, his great joy not only made him forget his rheumatism
but also drove it completely away—at least for some time.
The shock occasioned by the great San Francisco earthquake cured a
paralytic who had been crippled for fifteen years. There were a
great many other wonderful cures reported which were almost
instantaneous. Men and women who had been practically invalids for
a long time, and who were scarcely able to wait upon themselves,
when the crisis came and they were confronted by this terrible
situation, worked like Trojans, carrying their children and
household goods long distances to places of safety.
We do not know what we
can bear until we are put to the test. Many a delicate mother, who
thought that she could not survive the death of her children, has
lived to bury her husband and the last one of a large family, and
in addition to all this has seen her home and last dollar swept
away; yet she has had the courage to bear it all and to go on as
before. When the need comes, there is a power deep within us that
answers the call.
Timid girls who have always
shuddered at the mere thought of death have in some fatal accident
entered into the shadow of the valley without a tremor or murmur.
We can face any kind of inevitable danger with wonderful fortitude.
Frail, delicate women will go on an operating-table with marvellous
courage, even when they know that the operation is likely to be
fatal. But the same women might go all to pieces over the terror of
some impending danger, because of the very uncertainty of what
might be in store for them. Uncertainty gives fear a chance to get
in its deadly work on the imagination and make cowards of us.
A person who shrinks from the
prick of a pin, and who, under ordinary circumstances, can not
endure without an anesthetic the extraction of a tooth or the
cutting of flesh, even in a trivial operation, can, when mangled in
an accident, far from civilization, stand the amputation of a limb
without as much fear and terror as he might suffer at home from the
lancing of a felon.