bluegreen17 (
bluegreen17) wrote2005-06-20 11:58 pm
(no subject)
Infinite patience produces immediate results.*
yes,i'll have some of that,please.
~~~~~
*quoted by wayne dyer,from 'a course in miracles'. i'm not that crazy about the course,but i do like wayne dyer!
yes,i'll have some of that,please.
~~~~~
*quoted by wayne dyer,from 'a course in miracles'. i'm not that crazy about the course,but i do like wayne dyer!

no subject
Just curious... ;-)
no subject
Yeah....pass some of that around here too!
In my opinion Wayne Dyer is not quite the same when watching him on tv or video. I can't put my finger on it. but I would rather read his work or listen to him on audio.
no subject
no subject
Tolle screws with my head ALOT more than Dyer, though.
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
Happy Pocket full of Money by David Cameron- This book shocked me in how deep it goes. I was expecting one of those Money motivation books, but what I found was a very well-written guide on the law of attraction.
Excuse Me, Your Life is Waiting by Lynn Grabhorn- This was my introduction into the Law of Attraction and Deliberate Creation. It was good...but she gets a little"out there" for me.
The Master Key System by Charles Haanel - Just a good, tough read. :) Actually its very good, and challenges the reader.
I want to check out some David Hawkins stuff- as well as Carlos Castaneda.
no subject
no subject
anyway,i actually like wayne dyer's videos and audio stuff,but i'm not that crazy for his books. i think i like the ideas more than the presentation,and it was some of his stuff that led me to the stuff i really think makes a difference for me,which is the abraham-hicks stuff.
i don't think dyer claims the ideas as his own. he acknowledges a lot of folks he's learned from. i've been reading his stuff since he just did the psych stuff like 'pulling your own strings' and 'your erroneous zones' and he has really been on a journey for years. i don't agree with all of his interpretations of things,but sometimes his tapes and videos do inspire me,and i like his stories.
i'm not really much into exercises,so i think it's just a different preference as another comment you left me recently was about 'brain lock' which i have out from the library right now,synchronistically enough (hello jung!). i read the chapters of different case histories and that made me feel better because i'm not as 'bad' as those folks. sort of like how i enjoy watching war movies because then i can appreciate my life more. but i don't like doing exercises. or i have to find some that are fun,or i won't do them.
which is why david burns much-recommended book 'feeling good' never helped me when i was depressed...i found them boring and when depressed,how do you motivate yourself to do something boring? this is where the abe-hicks stuff came in. a lot of it is fun,though even then sometimes i don't feel like doing their processes. nevertheless,i'm far more likely to do theirs than burns',so of course their stuff has been more beneficial to me. glad the brain-lock stuff has helped you a bit. ocd is no picnic.
p.s.
if you care to read some of the below comments from this post,you'll see that some folks like his books better than the video or audio,but i'm the opposite! i USUALLY prefer reading to listening though,but not in wayne's case.