Trading Psychology Self~Assessment.
Do you complain often of
"feeling bad," and if so, what is the cause?
Do you find fault with other
people at the slightest provocation?
Do you frequently make mistakes
in your work, and if so, why?
Are you sarcastic and offensive
in your conversation?
Do you deliberately avoid the
association of anyone, and if so, why?
Do you suffer frequently with
indigestion? If so, what is the cause?
Does life seem futile and the
future hopeless to you? If so, why?
Do you like your occupation? If
not, why?
Do you often feel self-pity, and
if so why?
Are you envious of those who
excel you?
To which do you devote most time,
thinking of SUCCESS, or of FAILURE?
Are you gaining or losing
self-confidence as you grow older?
Do you learn something of value
from all mistakes?
Are you permitting some relative
or acquaintance to worry you? If so, why?
Are you sometimes "in the
clouds" and at other times in the depths of despondency?
Who has the most inspiring
influence upon you? What is the cause?
Do you tolerate negative or
discouraging influences which you can avoid?
Are you careless of your personal
appearance? If so, when and why?
Have you learned how to
"drown your troubles" by being too busy to be annoyed by them?
Would you call yourself a
"spineless weakling" if you permitted others to do your thinking for
you?
Do you neglect internal bathing
until auto-intoxication makes you ill-tempered and irritable?
How many preventable disturbances
annoy you, and why do you tolerate them?
Do you resort to liquor,
narcotics, or cigarettes to "quiet your nerves"? If so, why do you
not try will-power instead?
Does anyone "nag" you,
and if so, for what reason?
Do you have a DEFINITE MAJOR
PURPOSE, and if so, what is it, and what plan have you for achieving it?
Do you suffer from any of the Six
Basic Fears? If so, which ones?
Have you a method by which you
can shield yourself against the negative influence of others?
Do you make deliberate use of auto-suggestion
to make your mind positive?
Which do you value most, your
material possessions, or your privilege of controlling your own thoughts?
Are you easily influenced by others,
against your own judgment?
Has today added anything of value
to your stock of knowledge or state of mind?
Do you face squarely the
circumstances which make you unhappy, or sidestep the responsibility?
Do you analyze all mistakes and
failures and try to profit by them or, take the attitude that this is not your
duty?
Can you name three of your most
damaging weaknesses?
What are you doing to correct
them?
Do you encourage other
people to bring their worries to you for sympathy?
Do you choose, from your daily
experiences, lessons or influences which aid in your personal advancement?
Does your presence have a
negative influence on other people as a rule?
What habits of other people annoy
you most?
Do you form your own opinions or
permit yourself to be influenced by other people?
Have you learned how to create a
mental state of mind with which you can shield yourself against all
discouraging influences?
Does your occupation inspire you
with faith and hope?
Are you conscious of possessing
spiritual forces of sufficient power to enable you to keep your mind free from
all forms of FEAR?
Does your religion help you to
keep your own mind positive?
Do you feel it your duty to share
other people's worries? If so, why?
If you believe that "birds
of a feather flock together" what have you learned about yourself by
studying the friends whom you attract?
What connection, if any, do you
see between the people with whom you associate most closely, and any
unhappiness you may experience?
Could it be possible that some
person whom you consider to be a friend is, in reality, your worst enemy,
because of his negative influence on your mind?
By what rules do you judge
who is helpful and who is damaging to you?
Are your intimate associates
mentally superior or inferior to you?
How much time out of every 24
hours do you devote to:
a.
your occupation
b.
sleep
c.
play and relaxation
d.
acquiring useful knowledge
e.
plain waste
Who among your acquaintances,
a.
encourages you most
b.
cautions you most
c.
discourages you most
d.
helps you most in other ways
What is your greatest worry? Why
do you tolerate it?
When others offer you free,
unsolicited advice, do you accept it without question, or analyze their motive?
What, above all else, do you most
DESIRE? Do you intend to acquire it?
Are you willing to subordinate
all other desires for this one?
How much time daily do you devote
to acquiring it?
Do you change your mind often? If
so, why?
Do you usually finish everything
you begin?
Are you easily impressed by other
people's business or professional titles, college degrees, or wealth?
Are you easily influenced by what
other people think or say of you?
Do you cater to people
because of their social or financial status?
Whom do you believe to be the
greatest person living?
In what respect is this person
superior to yourself?
How much
time have you devoted to studying and answering these questions? (At least one
day is necessary for the analysis and the answering of the entire list).
If you have answered all these
questions truthfully, you know more about yourself than the majority of people.
Study the
questions carefully, come back to them once each week for several months, and be
astounded at the amount of additional knowledge of great value to yourself, you
will have gained by the simple method of answering the questions truthfully. If
you are not certain concerning the answers to some of the questions, seek the
counsel of those who know you well, especially those who have no motive in
flattering you, and see yourself through their eyes. The experience will be
astonishing.
You have ABSOLUTE CONTROL over
but one thing, and that is your thoughts. This is the most significant and
inspiring of all facts known to man! It reflects man's Divine nature. This
Divine prerogative is the sole means by which you may control your own destiny.
If you fail to control your own mind, you may be sure you will control nothing
else.
If you must be careless with your
possessions, let it be in connection with material things. Your mind is your
spiritual estate! Protect and use it with the care to which Divine Royalty is
entitled.
You were given a WILL-POWER for
this purpose.
Unfortunately, there is no legal
protection against those who, either by design or ignorance, poison the minds
of others by negative suggestion. This form of destruction should be punishable
by heavy legal penalties, because it may and often does destroy one's chances
of acquiring material things which are protected by law. Men with negative
minds tried to convince Thomas A. Edison that he could not build a machine that
would record and reproduce the human voice, "because" they said,
"no one else had ever produced such a machine." Edison did not
believe them. He knew that the mind could produce ANYTHING THE MIND COULD
CONCEIVE AND BELIEVE, and that knowledge was the thing that lifted the great
Edison above the common herd.
Men with negative minds told F.
W. Woolworth, he would go "broke" trying to run a store on five and
ten cent sales. He did not believe them. He knew that he could do anything,
within reason, if he backed his plans with faith. Exercising his right to keep
other men's negative suggestions out of his mind, he piled up a fortune of more
than a hundred million dollars.
Men with negative minds told
George Washington he could not hope to win against the vastly superior forces
of the British, but he exercised his Divine right to BELIEVE, therefore this
book was published under the protection of the Stars and Stripes, while the
name of Lord Cornwallis has been all but forgotten.
Doubting Thomases scoffed
scornfully when Henry Ford tried out his first crudely built automobile on the
streets of Detroit. Some said the thing never would become practical. Others
said no one would pay money for such a contraption.
FORD SAID, "I'LL BELT THE
EARTH WITH DEPENDABLE MOTOR CARS," AND HE DID!
His decision to trust his own
judgement has already piled up a fortune far greater than the next five
generations of his descendents can squander. For the benefit of those seeking
vast riches, let it be remembered that practically the sole difference between
Henry Ford and a majority of the more than one hundred thousand men who work
for him, is this - FORD HAS A MIND AND CONTROLS IT, THE OTHERS HAVE MINDS WHICH
THEY DO NOT TRY TO CONTROL.
Henry Ford has been repeatedly
mentioned, because he is an astounding example of what a man with a mind of his
own, and a will to control it, can accomplish. His record knocks the foundation
from under that time-worn alibi, "I never had a chance." Ford never
had a chance, either, but he CREATED AN OPPORTUNITY AND BACKED IT WITH
PERSISTENCE UNTIL IT MADE HIM RICHER THAN CROESUS.
Mind control is the result of
self-discipline and habit. You either control your mind or it controls you.
There is no half-way compromise. The most practical of all methods for
controlling the mind is the habit of keeping it busy with a definite purpose,
backed by a definite plan. Study the record of any man who achieves noteworthy
success, and you will observe that he has control over his own mind, moreover,
that he exercises that control and directs it toward the attainment of definite
objectives. Without this control, success is not possible.
From Napoleon Hill's book; Think and Grow Rich
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