The exercise of the visualizing faculty keeps your mind in order and attracts to you the things you need to make life more enjoyable in an orderly way. If you train yourself in practice of deliberately picturing your desire and carefully examining it, you will soon and your thoughts and desires come and proceed in more orderly procession than ever before. In visualizing, or making a mental picture, you are not endeavouring to change the laws of Nature. You are fulfilling them. Your object in visualizing is to bring things into regular order both mentally and physically. When you realize that…mehr
The exercise of the visualizing faculty keeps your mind in order and attracts to you the things you need to make life more enjoyable in an orderly way. If you train yourself in practice of deliberately picturing your desire and carefully examining it, you will soon and your thoughts and desires come and proceed in more orderly procession than ever before. In visualizing, or making a mental picture, you are not endeavouring to change the laws of Nature. You are fulfilling them. Your object in visualizing is to bring things into regular order both mentally and physically. When you realize that this method of employing the creative power brings your desires, one after another, into practical material accomplishment, your confidence in the mysterious but unfailing law of attraction, which has its central power station in the very heart of your word/picture, becomes supreme.
Geneviève Behrend was born in Paris in 1881 and died in the United States in 1960. She wrote books and taught Mental Science, a branch of New Thought taught by Thomas Troward. We don't know much about her childhood, except that one of her parents was from Scotland. After her husband died, she went on many trips. She studied Christian Science and met the religion's founder, Mary Baker Eddy, but she eventually stopped believing in it. She met Abdul Baha, whose father had started the Bahá Faith. He told her, "You will travel the world looking for the truth, and when you find it, you will tell everyone about it." She later wrote about finding a book of Thomas Troward's talks in her book Your Invisible Power. After studying with Troward, she started a New Thought school in New York City called The School of the Builders around 1915. She ran it herself until 1925. She then started a second New Thought school in Los Angeles. For the next 35 years, she lectured on mental science and New Thought all over North America and did radio shows.
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