Before leaving this site, please have a
Before leaving this site, please have a quick look at the highlights below to appreciate the scope and value of our information and activities: This report contains copyrighted material. This information is free for personal use only. No part of these materials may be reproduced in any form - except for personal use - without permission from the copyright holder.. Most people don't know what sabotages their success. Switch all 11 of your Hidden Core Thought Patterns to win and succeed big time. > >Consider the possibility that the toughest part >of this program may require a radical change in >your thinking. It may require you to make the >shift from limited to unlimited thinking. It may >require you to accept that there is no lack of >cash circling around you but that the requirement >for stepping into that circle and allowing it >to flow to you (and through you) requires your >giving up thoughts of lack and accept abundance. > >Perhaps there lies your challenge and there lies >your freedom! their thoughts, emotions, and actions. If you wear blue glasses, everything you see looks bluish. If you wear scarce/poor/limited glasses, not only does the world seem scarce/poor/limited to you, but you also In order to make progress in life, to advance to where you want to be, you may first have to overcome your scarce/poor/limited program (SPLP) and replace it with an abundance/prosperity/unlimited program (APUP).
- You need to move from SPLP to APUP.
- It's quite possible that if you're afflicted with a strong SPLP (scarce/poor/limited program), much, or even all, of your attempts to improve yourself and advance your life will be to no avail.
Your SPLP will always drag you back... until you replace it with your APUP (abundance/prosperity/unlimited program). Among animals and insects, scarcity is the rule. In general, for most animals and insects, there isn't enough food to go around. Many animals and insects starve to death for a lack of food. For most of human history, pervasive scarcity was suffered by most. Today, in some parts of the world, many humans still live in conditions of abject poverty and starvation. For them, scarcity is still the order of the day. Some of them still starve to death for lack of food. Scarcity is a pervasive belief that colors their entire consciousness.
A world of plenty probably seems an impossible dream to many of them. So it's no wonder that many humans still live their lives out of a deep-seated, pervasive scarcity orientation that colors how they see the world. It's as if they wear scarcity spectacles that distort their vision. They see resources as limited and scarce. In a primitive scarcity community, if one person were to take more food than his fair share in order to completely fill his belly -- or, even worse, hoard some for the future -- he would be seen as evil. If he produced more than he consumed and tried to hoard the surplus, he would be seen as evil. Keeping his surplus -- or profits -- would be seen as an evil act. If you think in terms of a fixed pie economy -- limited by scarce resources -- then anyone perceived as consuming more than his or her fair share of the fixed pie, tends to be seen as evil -- no matter how much he or she actually produced. Furthermore, anyone hoarding his surplus or profits -- thereby accumulating wealth -- tends to be seen as some kind of thief, because he or she stole from the fair share of others. But what if we really have an expanding pie economy? What if Buckminster Fuller was right in saying that we have such abundant resources that every man, woman, and child on earth should be a millionaire many times over? Fixed pie economy thinking may be a mistaken fixed idea you need to overcome.
Reprogramming your brain to think in terms of an expanding pie economy is an important wealth principle. Think about it: when you create something, does your creation process take away from someone else's fair share? Of course not! What you produce is in addition to what everyone else produces. There is no limited amount of wealth from which anyone has to get a fair share. Everyone has the potential freedom to create as much wealth as he or she chooses. Your parents may have used phrases such as money doesn't grow on trees and Don't put that filthy money in your mouth! Chances are that they suffered from SPLP (scarce/poor/limited program) and that you inherited much of your own SPLP from them. They may have acted out their SPLPs in many subtle and not so subtle ways, and you learned much of your own SPLP from them. It's very important that you dig out your earliest memories about money, particularly when you put a coin in your mouth and someone shouted at you, Don't ever do that; it's dirty! Such memories constitute early unconscious imprinting that may shape your life-long attitude toward money. Look for memories of what your parents told you about money. Do a Google. com search for earliest memory of money -- check out the stories to see if anythi.

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