
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
I listened to the audio version of this and have to remind myself that in 1910 when this was published, it was a whole new concept. Now of course it is everywhere in the self-help, personal development world, which has been highjacked by spirituality. And this book sees the same cross over as he uses his religious beliefs and quotes the bible continually to support what he is saying.
And what is he saying? The Law of Attraction. If you hold something in your mind you draw it to you. And the concept of setting an intention: Stay focused on what you want and work towards it, but just sort of reiterated in multiple ways. And really The Law of Attraction and The Secret were born from the 'New Thought Movement' which Wallace Wattles was part of. And it was brought back a century later by the creator of The Secret talking with Oprah Winfrey. Like and Like attract. The same people, putting out the same things, with one intention, to make money. There is now an entire industry about packaging this same concept, in both books, websites, podcasts. I could list name up on name. Oprah was one of them first to bring it to a wider audience in our current time.
I don't disbelieve the concept: if you stay focused and moving forward to what you want to achieve, of course you will achieve it. You have to take action by keeping it in the front of your mind and take physical steps towards it every day. It's quite logical. It is not specifically religous, or some special ordained action that only special people do. It's like doing the laundry. If you want to see the end of that pile of laundry, you have to take action and put a load in the machine, then dry it and then iron and fold it. Then it is done. Rinse and repeat in all aspects of your life.
In also talks about not spending too much time thinking about the past or colouring the future with thoughts of the past. And the laundry analogy works again: You can stand and look at your laundry and lament past times when you should have done it earlier, and find it a harder task that you didn't do it sooner, but if you want it done you still need to take action in the now.
It was interested to hear the dated origination of a lot of today's thinking, but there are more up-to-date books out that would be more helpful.
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