Proverb brings proverb. It is often heard that positive thinking can make a huge difference in not only how you view your life, but also how you act and the things that happen to you. This belief states that if you think, act, and expect positively, positive things will happen in your life. For example, if you can learn to feel positive and confident in yourself, it may give you the courage to enroll in that challenging course you’ve been considering, which may lead you to a new job with better opportunities. You may even have made a new best friend during the course. Or maybe your courage inspired an old friend to make a positive change in his life.
Societies suffer from contradictory beliefs and the like, so many identify with the education received, which automatically surrenders to fate, which they consider a reality, incoming and unchanging. Despite the conflicting opinions on this matter, what is proved is that man has been given blindness, which is a miraculous creative power. He is able to understand, deduce and innovate, and above all he is able to dream, which he uses as a means or lifeboat that he takes while floating on all the worries of reality.
This confirms that dreaming and hoping, which in turn is a positive and optimistic act, frees the soul and thought from the shackles of reality, thus the mind automatically becomes in a calmer state, and when hope meets trust, the persistence and action, a person passes in his life from a state of anxiety to an optimal state.
Positive thought
The effects of positive thinking and action are endless! You could have a ripple effect that could change the course of countless people’s lives for the better. In a relaxation lesson for kids, affirmations are used to teach children about positivity and to learn to love and accept themselves. Affirmations are positive words or phrases that you repeat to yourself to improve your self-esteem or to make you feel better about something. For example: I’m calm and confident, I’m fine, or I’m beautiful inside and out. By saying positive things about themselves out loud, children will learn to believe the things they say and will be able to tolerate this trait. What is remarkable about this story is the terrible infection that is reflected, positively and negatively, on all those around the person, affecting and influencing them.
What studies and science have shown
Psychology, research and experiments over many years have shown that the human subconscious mind memorizes the words spoken by a person and memorizes them in a way that controls the person’s emotions, behavior, achievements and even feelings.
Permanent negative repetition, for example, such as a person who always repeats: “I can’t stand it, I’m about to explode, what I want will not happen, I know my luck is bad, no matter what I do, I know the result…” it leads him into a state of persistent frustration, hesitation and distrust, so he feels that every time he wants to act, a Failure awaits him, which reduces his impulsivity and limits his expectations towards absolute negativity.
Whereas positive repetition and the feeling of this repetition is deep and certain that the person is capable, and success and positive aspects are at the distance of an action or a word…so things are automatically facilitated as a result of motivation forming within oneself, as if it is certain that dawn will break after the distance of the night. This is explained by energy scientists and they also move away from the importance of affirmations in activating energy pathways and responses of the universe, how you expect it to come to you, and this intersects with religious beliefs that say, “Everything expected is coming, so expect well”…
Embrace positivity and teach them inspiring affirmations
“I am beautiful.” “I am confident, full of life, capable, and nothing is stopping me from getting what I want.” “I am inspiring, creative, beautiful except for my personality.” “I deserve goodness and truth . . .
Hundreds of affirmations that serve their different experiences can be taught to children, so that they are positive and capable and break the chain of “bad luck” with which previous generations have chained themselves, accusing them of luck, while always invoking failure in their expectations.