ATTRACT PROSPERITY - 11. MAKE YOUR SUBCONSCIOUS MIND WORK FOR YOU - Orison Swett Marden cover art

ATTRACT PROSPERITY - 11. MAKE YOUR SUBCONSCIOUS MIND WORK FOR YOU - Orison Swett Marden

ATTRACT PROSPERITY - 11. MAKE YOUR SUBCONSCIOUS MIND WORK FOR YOU - Orison Swett Marden

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PROSPERITY – How to Attract It - Chapter 11. MAKE YOUR SUBCONSCIOUS MIND WORK FOR YOU - Orison Swett Marden - HQ Full Book.In Chapter 11 of Prosperity – How to Attract It, titled Make Your Subconscious Mind Work for You, Orison Swett Marden unveils one of the most powerful and transformative concepts in self-development: the role of the subconscious mind in shaping our destiny. This chapter is a deep and practical exploration of how the subconscious—an inner force that is constantly working beneath our awareness—holds the key to both our struggles and our success. Marden begins with a bold and optimistic vision of the future. He claims that when humanity fully understands and utilizes the subconscious mind, poverty, suffering, and unfulfilled dreams will vanish. Everyone will live in health, happiness, and abundance. According to him, our subconscious minds are like fertile soil, always ready to return a harvest based on the seeds—thoughts, feelings, beliefs—we plant in them. Whether you sow seeds of failure or triumph, despair or hope, your subconscious will reflect those choices in your life experience. The essence of this chapter revolves around a powerful metaphor: your subconscious mind is your personal, invisible servant—always awake, always listening, and always ready to execute the commands it receives from your conscious mind. This “inner secretary” doesn’t argue or judge; it simply acts. If you feed it with fear, doubt, and negative expectations, it will lead you to failure. If you fill it with faith, confidence, and visions of prosperity, it will work tirelessly to help bring those outcomes into your life. Marden uses vivid examples to drive this truth home. Consider the simple yet astonishing act of waking up without an alarm at a predetermined time. You make a mental note before sleep, and—without fail—you awaken at the right moment. That, he says, is your subconscious at work. Similarly, when you suddenly recall an appointment or a promise made days earlier, despite not writing it down, it is your subconscious retrieving that information for you. These everyday occurrences point to the subconscious’s remarkable reliability—if only we learn how to direct it with purpose. One of the core principles Marden emphasizes is the idea that your subconscious does its best work when your conscious mind is at rest—especially during sleep. While your body sleeps, your deeper mind continues to process thoughts, dreams, and desires. This is why many great thinkers, inventors, and artists—such as Thomas Edison—credit sleep and subconscious incubation for their breakthroughs. Edison, for example, often claimed that solutions to complex problems came to him effortlessly after a night of sleep, suggesting that the subconscious had worked on the issue in the background. Marden urges readers to develop the habit of deliberately feeding their subconscious mind with positive and success-oriented thoughts, especially before going to sleep. He stresses the importance of ending the day not with worry or defeat but with strong mental pictures of desired outcomes. These thoughts, embedded deeply in the subconscious during restful hours, guide the inner creative forces toward achievement. Throughout the chapter, Marden reminds readers that the subconscious is not a discriminating power—it does not filter or analyze what it receives. Like the soil in a garden, it does not care whether you plant wheat or weeds; it simply returns a harvest in kind. This metaphor reinforces the importance of vigilant mental discipline. Whatever you focus on habitually—whether good or bad—will be realized in your external circumstances. He also warns against the common error of allowing negative emotions, fears, and self-doubt to pollute the subconscious. These mental states act like poison to your creative faculties. Doubt, especially, is described as a deadly force that can cancel the efforts of even the most talented or hardworking individuals. To succeed, Marden teaches that one must maintain unwavering faith and a mental picture of success, regardless of present difficulties or apparent failure. The chapter explores how great figures like Luther Burbank and Madame Curie harnessed the power of their subconscious by making strong, persistent demands upon it. Marden asserts that any person—regardless of education, background, or resources—can tap into this same inner force and achieve remarkable results. The difference between success and failure, he says, lies in whether or not we are working with the law that governs the subconscious mind. Importantly, Marden shifts the conversation from mere theory to action. He explains that it’s not enough to just think good thoughts occasionally. To truly harness the subconscious, one must saturate the mind consistently with images and feelings aligned with the goal. This process sets into motion invisible creative energies that...
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