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Isn't all of this exciting? Can you wait until you begin taking the steps which you now instinctively know will liberate you from "pay-day blues"?
No, I am not digressing from the remarks I made earlier about "growing rich while you sleep." I am including the previous points to help make it apparent to you that to grow rich while you sleep is not fantastic, but a natural phenomenon of the subconscious mind.
As I have pointed out in many of my previous books, we have two minds: the conscious and the subconscious minds. The conscious mind takes care of all of our thinking, scheming, and planning, while the subconscious mind looks after all of the involuntary operations in the body: breathing, circulation of blood, restoration of worn tissue, etc. In addition to this, it has reasoning powers independent of the conscious mind. While the conscious mind is working on one thought, the subconscious mind can be devoting itself to something else.
Haven't you often said: "I have a feeling I should do this" or "I have a feeling I should not do that"? I know you have. Where did that "feeling" come from? It did not float from free air and bump into your mental antennae. It came from your subconscious mind.
If the "feeling" was negative in its nature, it was because you habitually feed your subconscious mind with negative thoughts. And the reverse is fortunately true. Positive thinking will create positive reactions in your inner mind.
When you arise in the morning, what is your normal tendency? Do you slip into consciousness with the thought: "Well,
another day at the grind. Gosh, I wish I could sleep another hour or two!"
Or, do you start your day with vibrancy and the thought: "Boy, I feel good! I'm going out and shatter all records today."
Why the great variation in day-openers?
Is there something physically wrong with the one who sluggishly starts his day? Perhaps yes in a few rare cases. In the great majority of instances, however, the condition at waking is a reflection of the thought pattern established in the subconscious mind the night before.
If you go to bed with thoughts such as: "Boy! Today was a tough one. I have some
hard nuts to crack tomorrow which I am not looking forward to," etc., etc.,
etc., you are apt to be restless all night long, while your subconscious mind
mulls over the "tough day" thoughts you gave it earlier. Is it any wonder you
awaken dreading the new day?
Related terms include online income and earning money.
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