The subject is rather a grandiose claim, I suppose; but it's the truth. And it's fitting that it's in the mental P.E. section. I'll start this off by quite simply telling you what this post is going to attempt to explain:
Everything you need to achieve whatever you want is in you.
Now some people will read that and laugh at it, prefering instead to believe that they are the victims of circumstance and fate. And that's fine, we all go through a period of feeling that way. It's easier to place your problems on the shoulders of others: You didn't get fired because you weren't good enough, but because your boss doesn't like you. If you think this way then you are the status quo: You're normal. Most people do think this way, and that's okay.
Then there are people in the world who see that their life is a fuction of their choices. That whether their boss fires them or keeps them is a function of how good of an employee they are. That being overweight is not a function of genetics, but a function of diet and exercise. Now, there are those who would say "Wait! He can't chose if he has a dysfunctional thyroid!" and to them I would say: "No, he can't chose if he had a dysfunctional thyroid, but he can choose whether or not he does anything about it."
The people that take resonsibility for themselves, both the good and the bad, are the ones that we see being successful in their lives. Bill Gates, Ophra, Donald Trump and our own DLD all saw something in their life that they didn't want, or wanted something that they didn't have, and they took steps to change, lose or gain these things.
"They were all just lucky though. I'm not lucky." Alright, so then your successes or failures are determined by something outside of you, right? Let's look at it this way then, from a logical standpoint:
If you change your mind, you change your life.
The human brain is a powerful thing, we equate it to a computer, but that hardly does it justice. It's more powerful than any muscle, more complex than any microchip and more functional than a spoon.
The brain can cause changes in eye color, hormone levels, respiration, persperation, heart rate, voice, immune system function, digestion and a million other smaller and bigger things. Every part of the body can be physiologically affected by changes in the mind. Ask a powerlifter how much more he can lift when he's throughly 'psyched' than when he's not if you don't think that your mental state can change your physical state.
"Uh-huh, nope, you got that wrong. It's not because he's thinking differently, it's because of an increase in adreneline and norephenephrine! The mind has nothing to do with it."
Bzzzt! Incorrect. There is nothing new introduced to the lifter's body before he lifts. The adrelenine and norephenephrine was already there, dormant, but his mind made his body put it to use! That is a prime example of how mental changes illicit physiological changes. You can see this yourself tonight: Go rent a good horror movie, turn out all the lights and watch it. Your heart rate will increase, your breathing will increases, your parasympathetic nervous system will rev up; but really nothing's changed.
"So, how the hell does this relate to Penis Enlargement and weight loss and confidence and life, huh?"
Simple: If you think you can, then you can.
But it's more than that. Here's a fun little bit of trivia: The same part of the human brain is used when doing a task as is used when thinking about a task. What does that mean? That means that you use the same part of your brain when you're doing Penis Enlargement as when you're remembering it, or thinking about doing it!
"But how does THAT help?"
It helps in a lot of ways. But first a precedent: Did you know that people who vividly imagined themselves doing an exercise everyday actually gained strength in the muscle group there were 'exercising'? The implications of this are huge! It means that you can create physiological changes just by imagining them occuring! The changes, however, would be small and over a long period; however, coupeling this with real exercise, and real Penis Enlargement and real dieting would have a huge effect on the gains (Or losses) you could expirence.
In practical application it means this: If you can imagine yourself with the body/penis/personality you want then you'll be one step closer to achieving it. DLD has been touting this since [words=http://www.mattersofsize.com/join-now.html]MoS[/words] began, but most people didn't pay it's due attention: Visualizing yourself as you want to be will accelerate your gains.
But let's take it one step beyond that. Let's take it somewhere that won't just help your physiological changes, but also your mental progress. Tonight, before you go to bed, imagine yourself as you want to be: Imagine yourself at your physical ideal, with no limitations. Add muscle, strip away fat, change your hair and eye color, grow sideburns, have that 17" cock you've always wanted. See everything *exactly* as you want it to be as if it were as easy to change as the channel on your TV.
Now, when this picture of you comes into focus and is as vivid as your brain can make it, I want you to take things one step further. I want you to run your hands over your body, through your hair, over your muscles, I want you to hold your larger cock in your hands and feel the extra weight and size. I want you to give a tactile sensation to every change that you made. If you're imagineing yourself with sideburns, feel the sideburns. Do your best to actually feel these changes in your mind.
Another step further: I want you to imagine that you're inside of this body. Feel yourself standing taller, stronger. Feel the wind in your hair, feel the extra weight of your penis, feel whatever changes you made as if they were actually a part of who you are right now. In 'real life'.
The final step now: I want you to take these changes and attach emotion to them. Hear that song that always makes you smile, or imagine that beautiful woman or handsome man you've always been attracted to giving you compliments on how you look, or how you feel, or how you, ehem, 'feel'. Or imagine yourself doing something you've always wanted to do. Whatever it is, make sure that it makes you smile a real smile.
Good, what you've just done is imprinted your brain with who and what you want to be, and what changes you want to make. Your brain now associates these changes with a tactile response (How your "______" felt under the tips of your fingers) an internal, phisological response (Your standing taller, your heavier hang, the wind in your hair) an aural response (That song that you were playing in your head while you saw this) a visual response (How you looked to yourself) and MOST IMPORTANTLY an emotional response (How this whole situation made you smile.)
Doing something like this will help you achieve any goal you're working towards, even if it isn't an internal or external change. Spend an hour each day thinking not about how you want that promotion, but about how you're going to get that promotion. Focus on it vividly for a few minutes everyday and see if you don't end up promoted.
So now, to go back to my above claim of changing your life:
If you can see things how you'd like them to be, you can achieve them. By seeing, feeling and expirencing the changes you want to make you set into motion an entire series of psychological and physiological occurences: Your body changes to better meet your needs, your mind changes to make your goals more accessable, your life changes around you, rather than you changing around your life. And all of this is before even taking into consideration the fact that you can physically affect matter, but that's a post for a different day.
Regards,
Harmonic
Everything you need to achieve whatever you want is in you.
Now some people will read that and laugh at it, prefering instead to believe that they are the victims of circumstance and fate. And that's fine, we all go through a period of feeling that way. It's easier to place your problems on the shoulders of others: You didn't get fired because you weren't good enough, but because your boss doesn't like you. If you think this way then you are the status quo: You're normal. Most people do think this way, and that's okay.
Then there are people in the world who see that their life is a fuction of their choices. That whether their boss fires them or keeps them is a function of how good of an employee they are. That being overweight is not a function of genetics, but a function of diet and exercise. Now, there are those who would say "Wait! He can't chose if he has a dysfunctional thyroid!" and to them I would say: "No, he can't chose if he had a dysfunctional thyroid, but he can choose whether or not he does anything about it."
The people that take resonsibility for themselves, both the good and the bad, are the ones that we see being successful in their lives. Bill Gates, Ophra, Donald Trump and our own DLD all saw something in their life that they didn't want, or wanted something that they didn't have, and they took steps to change, lose or gain these things.
"They were all just lucky though. I'm not lucky." Alright, so then your successes or failures are determined by something outside of you, right? Let's look at it this way then, from a logical standpoint:
- You lost your job.
- Your girlfriend/boyfriend broke up with you.
- You're overweight.
- You're unhappy.
- You don't talk to your parents.
If you change your mind, you change your life.
The human brain is a powerful thing, we equate it to a computer, but that hardly does it justice. It's more powerful than any muscle, more complex than any microchip and more functional than a spoon.
The brain can cause changes in eye color, hormone levels, respiration, persperation, heart rate, voice, immune system function, digestion and a million other smaller and bigger things. Every part of the body can be physiologically affected by changes in the mind. Ask a powerlifter how much more he can lift when he's throughly 'psyched' than when he's not if you don't think that your mental state can change your physical state.
"Uh-huh, nope, you got that wrong. It's not because he's thinking differently, it's because of an increase in adreneline and norephenephrine! The mind has nothing to do with it."
Bzzzt! Incorrect. There is nothing new introduced to the lifter's body before he lifts. The adrelenine and norephenephrine was already there, dormant, but his mind made his body put it to use! That is a prime example of how mental changes illicit physiological changes. You can see this yourself tonight: Go rent a good horror movie, turn out all the lights and watch it. Your heart rate will increase, your breathing will increases, your parasympathetic nervous system will rev up; but really nothing's changed.
"So, how the hell does this relate to Penis Enlargement and weight loss and confidence and life, huh?"
Simple: If you think you can, then you can.
But it's more than that. Here's a fun little bit of trivia: The same part of the human brain is used when doing a task as is used when thinking about a task. What does that mean? That means that you use the same part of your brain when you're doing Penis Enlargement as when you're remembering it, or thinking about doing it!
"But how does THAT help?"
It helps in a lot of ways. But first a precedent: Did you know that people who vividly imagined themselves doing an exercise everyday actually gained strength in the muscle group there were 'exercising'? The implications of this are huge! It means that you can create physiological changes just by imagining them occuring! The changes, however, would be small and over a long period; however, coupeling this with real exercise, and real Penis Enlargement and real dieting would have a huge effect on the gains (Or losses) you could expirence.
In practical application it means this: If you can imagine yourself with the body/penis/personality you want then you'll be one step closer to achieving it. DLD has been touting this since [words=http://www.mattersofsize.com/join-now.html]MoS[/words] began, but most people didn't pay it's due attention: Visualizing yourself as you want to be will accelerate your gains.
But let's take it one step beyond that. Let's take it somewhere that won't just help your physiological changes, but also your mental progress. Tonight, before you go to bed, imagine yourself as you want to be: Imagine yourself at your physical ideal, with no limitations. Add muscle, strip away fat, change your hair and eye color, grow sideburns, have that 17" cock you've always wanted. See everything *exactly* as you want it to be as if it were as easy to change as the channel on your TV.
Now, when this picture of you comes into focus and is as vivid as your brain can make it, I want you to take things one step further. I want you to run your hands over your body, through your hair, over your muscles, I want you to hold your larger cock in your hands and feel the extra weight and size. I want you to give a tactile sensation to every change that you made. If you're imagineing yourself with sideburns, feel the sideburns. Do your best to actually feel these changes in your mind.
Another step further: I want you to imagine that you're inside of this body. Feel yourself standing taller, stronger. Feel the wind in your hair, feel the extra weight of your penis, feel whatever changes you made as if they were actually a part of who you are right now. In 'real life'.
The final step now: I want you to take these changes and attach emotion to them. Hear that song that always makes you smile, or imagine that beautiful woman or handsome man you've always been attracted to giving you compliments on how you look, or how you feel, or how you, ehem, 'feel'. Or imagine yourself doing something you've always wanted to do. Whatever it is, make sure that it makes you smile a real smile.
Good, what you've just done is imprinted your brain with who and what you want to be, and what changes you want to make. Your brain now associates these changes with a tactile response (How your "______" felt under the tips of your fingers) an internal, phisological response (Your standing taller, your heavier hang, the wind in your hair) an aural response (That song that you were playing in your head while you saw this) a visual response (How you looked to yourself) and MOST IMPORTANTLY an emotional response (How this whole situation made you smile.)
Doing something like this will help you achieve any goal you're working towards, even if it isn't an internal or external change. Spend an hour each day thinking not about how you want that promotion, but about how you're going to get that promotion. Focus on it vividly for a few minutes everyday and see if you don't end up promoted.
So now, to go back to my above claim of changing your life:
If you can see things how you'd like them to be, you can achieve them. By seeing, feeling and expirencing the changes you want to make you set into motion an entire series of psychological and physiological occurences: Your body changes to better meet your needs, your mind changes to make your goals more accessable, your life changes around you, rather than you changing around your life. And all of this is before even taking into consideration the fact that you can physically affect matter, but that's a post for a different day.
Regards,
Harmonic