Principle 6: Become an Inverse Paranoid
'I’ve always been the opposite of a paranoid.I operate as if everyone is part of a plot to enhance my well-being. - STAN DALE, Founder of the Human Awareness Institute and author of Fantasies Can Set You Free
W. Clement Stone, was once described as an inverse paranoid. Instead of believing the world was plotting to do him harm, he chose to believe the world was plotting to do him good. Instead of seeing every difficult or challenging event as a negative, he saw it for what it could be—something that was meant to enrich him, empower him, or advance his causes.
What an incredibly positive belief!
Imagine how much easier it would be to succeed in life if you were constantly expecting the world to support you and bring you opportunity.
In fact, there is growing research that the vibrations of positive expectation that successful people give off actually attract to them the very experiences they believe they are going to get. Suddenly, obstacles and negatives are seen not as just another example of “Gee, the world hates me,” but as opportunities to grow and change and succeed. If your car suddenly breaks down on the side of the road, instead of imagining a serial rapist pulling over to take advantage of you, think of the possibility that the guy who stops to help you will be the man you fall in love with and marry. If your company downsizes you out of a job, suddenly the chances are good that you’ll find your dream job with more opportunity at much better pay. If you develop cancer, the possibility exists that in the process of reorganizing your life to effect a cure, you’ll create a more healthy balance in your life and rediscover what’s important to you.
Think about it.
Was there a time in your life when something terrible happened that later became a blessing in disguise?
Every negative event contains within it the seed of an equal or greater benefit.- NAPOLEON HILL, Author of the success classic Think and Grow Rich
I’m sure that you, too, can think back to several times in your life when you thought what had happened was the end of the world—you flunked a class, lost your job, got divorced, experienced the death of a friend or a business failure, had a catastrophic injury or illness, your house burned down—and later you realized it was a blessing in disguise. The trick is to realize that whatever you are goingthrough now is going to turn out better in the future as well. So look for the lemonade in the lemons.
The more you begin to look for the good, the sooner and more often you will find it. And if you take the attitude that it is coming, the less upset and discouraged you’ll get while you’re waiting for it.
How Do I Use This Experience to My Advantage?
When life hands you a lemon, squeeze it and make lemonade.
W. CLEMENT STONE : Self-made multimillionaire and former publisher of Success Magazine
Look for the Opportunity in Everything
What if you, too, were to greet every interaction in your life with the question “What’s the potential opportunity that this is?” The supersuccessful approach every experience as an opportunity. They enter every conversation with the idea that something good will come from it. And they know that what they seek and expect, they will find.
If you take the approach that “good” is not an accident—that everyone and everything that shows up in your life is there for a reason—and that the universe is moving you toward your ultimate destiny for learning, growth, and achievement, you’ll begin to see every event—no matter how difficult or challenging—as a chance for enrichment and advancement in your life.
Make a small sign or poster with the words What’s the opportunity that this is? and put it on your desk or above your computer, so you will be constantly reminded to look for the good in every event.
You might also want to start each day by repeating the phrase, “I believe the world is plotting to do me good today. I can’t wait to see what it is.” And then look for the opportunities and the miracles. He Saw the Opportunity.
God Must Have Something Better in Store for Me.
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