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SNIPPETS
. . .
If you can’t answer
a question, you should at least try to figure out why you
can’t do it. Questions like What is the weight
of this fire?, What is the shape of your feeling?,
or What color is my courage? are not difficult
to answer; they are simply wrong and stupid because weight
has nothing to do with fire, a feeling cannot have a shape,
and courage is not related to a specific color! Unfortunately,
most of our so-called difficult questions are as
stupid as those I just mentioned. We ask the wrong questions
but, most of the time, we don’t even realize it. Why?
Because we lack the adequate system of knowledge to perceive
the problem with the questions we ask, the wishes we make,
and the solutions we find. When I was young, I started questioning
life and exploring all available systems of knowledge. No
system as such could answer all my questions. Nevertheless,
I knew, intuitively, that my quest was about assembling
a great jigsaw puzzle. Year after year, I became more convinced
that the pieces of that puzzle were scattered and echoed
inside many systems of knowledge. Each piece had to be hidden
somewhere behind a layer of abstraction, symbolism, or analogy.
It is harder to assemble a picture puzzle when you don’t
have a clear idea about what the final picture is going
to look like! Despite all this, I made myself believe that
all sacred books, psychology books, philosophy books, and
purely scientific books were actually talking about the
same hidden truth, using different languages, symbolisms,
definitions, and descriptions. As I continued my studies
and experiments, significant areas of the puzzle started
to appear, confirming my initial intuitions and expectations.
At a certain stage, knowledge becomes like fire; if you
are afraid to burn, you cannot move forward. The fire of
knowledge requires more than words, understanding, or speculation.
In order to climb the final steps, you are required to change
yourself by taking action.
. . .
Our conscious mind, which
survived for such a long time now, can hardly understand
the meaning of a great and infinite power capable of anything!
Over the centuries, the conscious mind became more and more
persuaded of its own limitations. This conscious perception
of being subject to the limitation law was translated into
a powerful suggestion to the subconscious mind, which accepted
it. Limitation became an external shell to the infinite
power of the subconscious.
. . .
If you spend your whole
life inside a house with a red window glass, you may only
see red light, although white light beams travel millions
of miles through space to reach your house. The red glass
will block all colors except red, so all you can see, know,
or think of is red. If you hear someone talking about a
yellow or a green color, for example, you simply cannot
believe it. Likewise, the confinement of the subconscious
mind within its boundaries is comparable to you staying
in a house with a red window glass. Again, the boundaries
surrounding the subconscious mind are the result of thousands
of years of suggestion caused by the conscious mind.
The red glass, in the previous
example, represents our deeply rooted submission to the
idea that our conscious mind is definitively limited. If
ever we are capable of perceiving, realizing, and believing
in the infinite power of the subconscious mind, the boundaries
that surround it will fall and the conscious mind will finally
be free from the law of limitation. In fact, the boundaries
may not vanish completely. It would require thousands of
years! However, a partial demolition of these mental boundaries
is enough to perform miracles! The first step is to make
the conscious mind admit and believe in the infinite power
of the subconscious mind. I have just revealed to you a
great secret. It is a major requirement to perform magic,
remote influence, miracles, and supernatural healing.
. . .
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