Estimated Read Time: 4 Minutes
Negative Thinking Is the Key to Happiness
By Bill Harris
I know, I know. You think I've lost my marbles. Everyone knows that POSITIVE thinking is the key to happiness.
But as Dr. Phil says, "How's that working for ya?" In my thirty years as a personal growth teacher, I've taught hundreds of thousands of students to focus on what they want.
Some of them report positive benefits.
Many, however, don't. And few report fundamental, life-changing shifts. So let me ask you:
Since you learned that the solution to life's problems is to "think positive," are you happy? Is your life just the way you want it to be?
C'mon. Tell the truth. Like everyone else, sometimes you get what you want and sometimes you don't.
What's going on here? Is the popular positive thinking, put-it-out-to-the-universe school of thought wrong?
Is "Positive Thinking" Wrong?
Yes. And, no.
Yes, what you focus on hugely affects your life. It generates how you feel in each moment, how you behave, which people and situations you attract or are attracted to, and the meaning you assign to what happens.
Doesn't this include pretty much everything in your life?
Here's the problem, though.
Nearly all your focusing happens unconsciously, outside your awareness. Your mind automatically focuses in a way you learned when you were a child. The major internal activity that shapes your life, because it happens unconsciously, isn't a choice!
Okay, Bill, but how does that make negative thinking the key to happiness?
Patience, Grasshopper.
Focusing on the Right Things
Focusing means making internal representations—mostly internal pictures and internal dialog—and those representations generate how you feel and how you behave.
When you focus on something you want, you feel good. When you focus on something you don't want, you feel bad.
When you keep encountering the same bad feelings, the same problem people, the same negative outcomes over and over, your unconscious focus is generating it. Not on purpose. But it's coming from something in you.
So why do people focus on what they don't want? Traumatic childhood experiences create a belief that the world is a dangerous place. To avoid that danger, we think we have to watch out for it—in other words, focus on what we don't want.
And focusing on what you don't want doesn't just make you feel bad. Your mind sees it as an instruction to attract or create more of it.
Creating Shadows
Before I tell you why negative thinking is still the key to happiness, let's look at another type of negative thinking.
You learned good and bad, positive and negative, from your parents. In one way or another they said, "To be okay in our eyes, don't do this. This is bad. Instead, do this. This is good."
The more they used negative reinforcement, the more strongly you felt the need to avoid what they didn't approve of:
Don't be noisy. Don't show your feelings. Don't make a mistake. Don't trust anyone. Don't show any weakness...
...and so on.
These negative injunctions become shadows—parts of being human we've disowned or repressed. When we see these qualities in others, we're triggered emotionally. Ironically, the more we repress these qualities, the more we attract people who have them.
Though we try to repress them, we express these shadows anyway, but in covert and dysfunctional ways. If you've disowned anger, you'll express it anyway—in an unhealthy, immature way. Others will see your anger, but you won't.
The negative feelings, people, and situations that keep happening to you are directly related to your unconscious shadows. Shadows are just another way we focus on what we don't want.
The Real Power of Negative Thinking
So why is negative thinking, as unlikely as it sounds, the key to happiness?
First, a fundamental principle about life:
You can only do what doesn't serve you if you do it unconsciously.
Focusing on what you don't want creates bad feelings and attracts more of it. Repressing qualities you think are bad or wrong causes you to express them anyway—covertly—and to attract people who trigger you emotionally.
Obviously this doesn't serve you. Yet most people will keep doing it their entire life—as long as they do it outside their awareness.
Do it with awareness, though, and you can't keep doing it.
These habits create harmful results only when done unconsciously. Do the same thing with awareness and you'll clearly see how you create the bad feelings, the less-than-resourceful behaviors, and your attraction to people and situations you don't want.
And you'll stop doing it, unless for some reason it serves you. If it doesn't, you'll drop it like a hot rock.
As counter-intuitive as it might seem, negative thinking, when done with awareness, eliminates itself—and the negative outcomes! Watching your mind create your life is one of the most fascinating things you'll ever do.
Awareness Is the Secret Ingredient
How do you become aware enough to observe yourself in this way?
The most effective way is meditation—especially with Holosync. Meditation creates awareness, and awareness creates choice. Once you have choice, you won't choose what creates suffering for you.
So go ahead. Think negatively. Just make sure you do it with awareness.
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