By Dr. Joe Vitale
I had lunch with a dear friend the other
day. While I enjoyed the company and the food, I left feeling
a little depressed.
When I thought about it, I realized my
friend was brilliant at dismissing every book, concept, guru,
self-help method, or healing approach he had read or heard
about.
He was not directly negative or purposely
critical. He sincerely wanted something that would work in his
life. But he was unconsciously dismissing everything that came
his way.
At one point I told him about a guru I had
studied over two decades ago. I told him that people said,
"My guru was obviously enlightened. He radiated it."
My friend cut in saying, "I'm sure
there are people who saw that guru and didn't think he was any
smarter than a paper bag."
Well, my friend is right.
But my friend is also unhappy.
I think there's a lesson here. When we
dismiss people and ideas because the entire world doesn't
agree with them, we get to be right. But we also get to stay
empty inside. By dismissing what could work, we dismiss our
own growth. We dismiss what's possible.
It doesn't matter if the book you read and
love is loved by anyone else. It doesn't matter if the teacher
you admire is admired by anyone else. It doesn't matter if the
healing method that worked for you doesn't work for everyone.
What matters is you. Your happiness. Your
health. Your healing. Your well-being.
Truth is, no method works for everyone. No
teacher is right for everyone. No book is going to inspire
everyone.
It all comes from within. You are the first
and final authority on your life.
Rather than dismissing what is possible so
you can be right, what can you accept so you can grow?
Dismissing is often a way to deflect the
messages. It's a self-defense mechanism. If you dismiss the
book, idea, or method offered to you, you get to be right ---
and stay right where you're at.
Every successful person I know has accepted
new tools into their lives over the years, spent thousands of
dollars on personal growth and self-study, and never regretted
any of it.
The key is not dismissing, but digesting.
For example, Nerissa and I had dinner with
friends recently. One friend was complaining about her job.
>From her perspective, there was no way out of the misery
she felt at her place of work. Bad boss. Bad hours. Bad pay.
You name it, it was bad.
Later we were joined by other friends. As
"chance" would have it, one of the new friends had
connections with where our complaining friend worked. He gave
our unhappy friend a name, and said he could help her resolve
her issues. He went on to say that this connection was a
supervisor, head of many departments, and could probably
resolve whatever was wrong.
I was stunned. So was Nerissa. We were
seeing magic happen right before our eyes.
But what did our unhappy friend do with her
new lead and new hope?
She dismissed it.
She didn't write down the name or the
numbr, or show any signs that something wonderful had just
occured.
Do you see how this works?
Sometimes we can self-sabotage the things
we say we want. We simply dismiss the good.
Let me end this with another example:
Yesterday I received a letter in the mail
about a new audioprogram about dissolving illusions. I read
the piece but dismissed it. I figured it was simply stuff I
had already heard before and probably even recorded elsewhere
myself.
Then today I got another mailing, this time
from a different source, but selling the exact same
audiopogram. I read it over closely. I thought, "This is
interesting, but I bet there's little new in it." I then
placed the mailing aside.
An hour or so later, as I was reviewing
this very article you're reading right now, I suddenly
realized that I was doing the very thing I am warning you not
to do: I was dismissing an opportunity to learn.
I dug out the mailing, filled out the order
form, and dropped it in the mail. The audios are on the way.
The point is not that you buy everything
that comes your way, but that you don't dismiss everything
that comes your way. Sometimes a dismissal is a mask. It's
your self-sabotage at work, keeping you where you're at. To
grow, you must allow.
Again, you are the final authority on your
life. Tune in to yourself and do what's right for you. And as
you do this, be alert to those times when you may be
dismissing the next gift to come your way.
Let your guard down, and let life in.
Dr. Joe Vitale is author of way too many
books to list here, including the #1 best-selling books
"Attractor Factor" and "Spiritual
Marketing," the best-selling e-book "Hypnotic
Writing," and the best-selling Nightingale-Conant
audioprogram, "The Power of Outrageous Marketing."
His latest books are the best-selling "The Greatest
Money-Making Secret in History" and "Adventures
Within." He's being called "The Buddha of the
Internet." Sign up for his monthly ezine and see many
articles by him at http://www.MrFire.com
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