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Who's That Knockin' On Your Door? October 16, 2002, 11:37 AM

by Charles Burke



Imagine this: You're at a friend's house, cheerfully
chatting, and there's a knock at the front door.

But your friend makes no move to go see who it is.

The knocking continues, gradually becoming more insistent,
but still your friend ignores it.

Finally, you offer, "Don't you think you should go see about
that?"

"Oh no," your friend says, "It's just the door again. It
happens sometimes. But if I ignore the noise, it'll
eventually stop."

You think that's strange, but you let it pass. And sure
enough, after a few minutes the knocking does cease.

Later, your friend says, "Man, I wish the pizza would hurry
up and get here. I'm starving."

What just happened here? Pretty obvious, isn't it.

Your friend ordered pizza, then when it came he ignored the
delivery man's knocking.

But don't laugh at your friend. You may be doing the same
thing every single day of your life.

How often do you do affirmations, make requests or pray for
a particular result, then ignore the input of your inner
mind?

Not very often, you say... are you sure about that?

To make this a bit clearer, let's back up a few years. Back
to our childhood days. Back when the world was bright and
new to us, and we suspected that everything might be
possible.

Scattered in amongst the insecurities and uncertainties of
childhood sparkled your fantasies, your hopes, your wishes.

And your daydreams.

One day it was: "Someday I'm going to grow up and be a
doctor."

The next day it was: "I think I'd like to be a famous
scientist."

And on another day you may have sighed: "That movie star is
so terrific. Someday I want to be a movie star just like
that."

We know that your inner mind is set up to monitor your
wishes, wants and desires, and to find ways to give them to
you.

When you wish for something, your inner mind takes that wish
as a serious request. The only trouble is, you keep changing
what you're requesting.

Yesterday you were thinking, "Tomorrow, I'm going to get to
work early and tackle some of these projects that have been
hanging fire." A little later you might have thought, "I
ought to take a day off and relax - all day to myself." Then
you watched a movie on TV, stayed up later than usual, and
went to bed thinking, "Maybe I'll sleep late in the
morning."

Those were all instructions to your inner mind, but they all
pointed in different directions. So your inner mind probably
ignored them. We all do this - and we do it constantly.

So when you sit down to do an affirmation and make a request
to your inner mind, is it any wonder your request is often
ignored? You've spent years training your inner mind to
ignore what you say you want. It knows you'll probably just
change your request again within minutes. It assumes you're
not being serious because most of the time you're not.

"Yeah, but this time is different. I really, really want the
money (house, husband, vacation, job, etc.) that I just
requested. This time is different."

Remember the story of the boy who cried 'wolf'?

The kid was a teaser. He cried 'wolf' so often for his own
trivial entertainment that the townspeople finally just
started ignoring him.

Just like our friend ignored the pizza man's knocking at his
door.

And just like our inner minds ignore our serious requests.

So how do you change that?

How do you break through your inner mind's pattern of
ignoring your requests?

Well, it's not complicated. But it's not entirely easy,
either.

You're going to have to do three things differently.


First - stop trivial requests


Don't ask your inner mind for anything until you've
carefully thought it through and have decided that you
really want what you're requesting.

For example, how many times have you sat down to make a
request and you changed it even as you were asking?

Or maybe you make one request today, and you make a
different, conflicting one tomorrow:

Monday:
Bring me the love of my life; someone to love and cherish
forever, and who will love me with all their heart.

Tuesday:
Bring me a constant stream of new romantic partners who
are exciting, loving and don't expect long-term
commitment.

Wednesday:
Bring me serenity and the contentment to live alone
without the need for lovers or partners.

See what I mean? How on earth could your inner mind take
seriously such a series of requests?

How can your inner mind know what you want if YOU don't?

It's the job of your inner mind to supply the things you
want and need.

It's your job to decide.

And when you make a whole career out of not-quite-deciding
anything... well, that's what your inner mind will deliver.


Second - learn how to get your inner mind's attention


Most of our thoughts are trivial - sad but true.

And after years and years of having to ignore most of those
trivial thoughts, your inner mind has become very good at
filtering out the unimportant, passing stuff.

Now it only pays attention to the most insistent thoughts.

So you're going to need some persistence to break through
your inner mind's "triviality filter". Only real persistence
will get it to take your requests seriously.

That's why teachers suggest that you repeat affirmations so
many times.

But even that isn't a sure thing. I'm certain you've had
affirmations that didn't bring the desired results. Remember
the affirmations above - three different wishes on three
subsequent days - by the person seeking love in three
different ways.

We learn a technique for getting through to the inner mind,
like affirmations, and what do we do?

We abuse it.

We use it to 'cry wolf' by changing our requests almost as
often as we change our passing wishes.

Indeed, we train our inner minds to ignore us even more
resolutely.

All because we have never learned how to make up our minds
about what we really want.

Sometimes it seems that the only thing we ARE sure about are
the things we DON'T want. We think about them a lot - so
what happens? Sure enough, our inner mind takes those
thoughts (because they're the strongest, most persistent),
and assumes they're instructions. Soon our life is filled
with what we don't want.

That's exactly how most of us take this great mental system
of ours and pervert it.

But it is possible to change this pattern.


Third - listen for your inner mind's feedback


This part may be the hardest for some people. It's the one
that - when omitted - causes us to miss most of the
opportunities in life.

This is the skill we are least likely to have developed, and
it's the one that would enable us to accept all the things
our inner mind is trying to bring us.

Let me put it like this: have you ever gotten spam e-mail?
You know the kind. It's the stuff offering to make you rich
by next Thursday, but you don't have to do any work for
those riches - they'll do it all for you, and just give you
the money.

Or it will show you how to "be a bigger man" or "more of a
woman" if you'll just send them money.

If you're a newcomer to the Internet, you may not be
familiar with 'spam' yet. But you will be. Just as soon as
the bulk mailers get hold of your e-mail address, they'll
sell it all over the world, and soon you'll be receiving
every goofy offer imaginable.

Everybody who receives spam e-mail soon adopts the same
strategy - they ignore it. They'll start deleting the stuff
as it shows up in the in-box.

Well, that's what your inner mind does with most of your
wishes and requests - ignores it - because you've been
spamming your inner mind for years.

What's the main characteristic of spam? Sure, it comes in
bulk, and it's usually not very realistic. But even more
typical, the sender is never interested in knowing you,
learning what you need, or listening for your input.

He blasts out millions of messages, but he never asks for
your comments or suggestions, doesn't want to know what you
want. He only wants you to purchase. He wants your blind
obedience.

And that's how most people treat their own inner mind.

They blast in a request because they've heard that the inner
mind will obey.

Then, when their inner mind offers feedback or suggestions,
they ignore the messages.

Our friend ignored the knocking at his door, even though he
had ordered pizza. And we often do exactly the same thing to
our own inner self.

The inner mind usually doesn't speak in words. That's the
realm of your conscious mind. Instead, it speaks to you
through impressions, moods, hunches. Subtle stuff.

And if you do your best to 'master your moods' and 'ignore
distracting feelings', then you may be refusing to open your
door to the delivery man you called for.

Let's say you're doing an affirmation requesting a certain
amount of money. All the while, you have this sinking
feeling in the pit of your stomach that something is wrong.
Maybe it's a feeling that you 'don't deserve' riches.

So you ignore the feeling, flooding it with more repetitions
of your affirmation. Just keep going - you'll overcome those
feelings and win.

But often you don't win, no matter how many repetitions you
do. I had exactly that experience for years.

Now, please don't misunderstand. This nagging feeling is not
the message. It's only your inner mind knocking on the door,
trying to get your attention.

The error is in ignoring the knocking - you've been missing
the input from your inner mind for years, as it tried to
call your attention to important information.

For example, you're affirming 'riches by next August'. But
deep down in your inner mind is a previous instruction
(maybe put there years ago by a friend or family member)
that you'll never be rich - or that you're not a good enough
person and you don't deserve fine things.

Your inner mind is knocking on your door, hoping you'll sit
down and tell it how to reconcile those two contradictory
instructions. It's saying, "Hey, I want to do what you're
requesting, but I've got conflicting instructions here, and
I need some help sorting it out."

But you don't listen. You just keep on giving commands.

Ever work for a boss like that? The kind who never listens;
he just issues orders left and right, but doesn't want to be
bothered with helping you figure anything out?

Well, the good news is, you don't have to keep doing that to
yourself.

Why does that 'bossy' supervisor act that way? It may be
because he really doesn't know how to communicate the
details of what he wants. So he just issues orders and hopes
you'll magically get it right somehow.

But that's not comfortable for you... it's not really your
role, is it?

Same with your inner mind. It has its own role to fulfill in
your life, but you're asking it to do both its own job and
yours too. However, the inner mind is not wired to make
decisions.

It brings you information, it draws your attention to
things, and it carries out your instructions brilliantly,
provided your instructions are clear enough.

So how do you communicate with your inner mind?

Here are five simple steps you can take to get real inner
communication going within yourself.


Step 1: Look for subtle 'door knocking'

Remember, I said that those uneasy feelings are not the
message - they're just your inner mind trying to get your
attention.

Anytime you're working on affirmations, or praying, or doing
any kind of inner work, be on the lookout for quiet little
signs that something just doesn't feel quite right.

That's always a signal from your inner mind.

Instead of ignoring or suppressing those feelings, look for
them - become more aware of them - because they are
priceless.

As soon as you feel some kind of consistent distraction,
stop and pay close attention to it. Maybe you suddenly feel
drowsy, or bored, or you can't stop fidgeting. Maybe you
feel like 'this won't work'. Whatever it is, that's your
inner mind trying to break in, using the only language it
speaks.

It knows something you don't, and it wants to help you keep
things going right, but it can't help if you don't listen.

When you get that kind of feeling or distraction, stop and
acknowledge the signal. Then ask what the message is. Just
ask.

When's the last time you engaged your inner mind in real two-
way dialog? Have you EVER talked with your inner mind as an
equal?


Step 2: Ask for suggestions

Once your inner mind has your attention, simply ask for
suggestions. State what you want, explain how you THINK you
want it to be delivered, and ask for ways to change what
you're requesting so that it satisfies both you and your
inner mind.

Then just wait and 'listen' for answers. Now, unless you're
schizophrenic you're almost certainly not going to hear
thundering voices pronouncing answers. What you'll get are
subtle nudges and quiet little ideas crossing your mind.

You may suddenly remember an old friend or recall the name
of a certain company, and get the feeling that you should
call them.

You may have an urge to drive a different path to work on a
given day, or have a sudden impulse to speak to a stranger
when you never do such things.

Your inner mind speaks a very subtle language, and as you
learn to heed that language, you'll be developing what
others call 'intuition'. That's the language you'll be
learning.


Step 3: Always use insurance

Here's a wonderful add-on phrase that should go onto the end
of every request, every affirmation, every prayer you ever
utter.

"Please do this or something better in ways that are
for the highest good of me and everyone involved."

According to Stuart Lichtman, coauthor of "How to Get Lots
of Money for Anything -- Fast", this phrase was first
recorded by Socrates many centuries ago.

Here's why you should always use this phrase: your inner
mind is a very literal mind. There's the story of a gambler
who kept wishing he could break the bank. He got his wish.
One day, in a traffic accident, he lost control of his car
and ran through the front window of the local Savings &
Loan.

Sue, a lady I knew, did affirmations to receive $25,000 and
then did nothing to try and open a door for the money to
come to her. Eventually she did get her $25,000 in the form
of an insurance settlement. Then she had to turn around and
pay that $25,000 right back out to her doctors for the
medical care she had received. Net gain: zero; net pain:
enormous.

If she had used this insurance phrase, her inner mind would
have known that some possibilities were not acceptable, and
would have brought her the money through some other, more
pleasant channel.


Step 4: This is a joint venture

Your inner mind is your equal partner. It can do things you
(your conscious mind) cannot do.

And vice versa.

Ever watched a bird with a broken wing trying to fly? It
doesn't work.

And trying to reach success using the strengths of only one
part of your mind is like that poor, crippled bird. It also
doesn't work.

Unless you use both wings, nothing you do will ever be very
successful. Not because life is unfair, not because 'God has
it in for you', and not because of Murphy's Law. It's simply
because that's how it is. You need both wings - both areas
of your mind - to fly in this life.

So it's important for you to start getting familiar with
that other part - your inner mind.


Step 5: Don't stop halfway

Calvin Coolidge wrote this about persistence.

"Nothing in this world can take the place of persistence.
Talent will not; nothing is more common than unsuccessful
people with talent. Genius will not; unrewarded genius is
almost a proverb. Education will not; the world is full
of educated derelicts. Persistence and determination
alone are omnipotent. The slogan 'press on' has solved
and always will solve the problems of the human race."

How often have you done an affirmation, then before you got
what you requested, you were changing it and asking for
something else entirely?

It's important to stay on track.

At the same time, it's also crucial that you be flexible
enough to adjust your target in light of feedback from your
inner mind. Adjusting your path is not forsaking your goal.

Let's say you affirm: "I am rich. I have a million dollars
in the bank, and I receive a yearly income of half a million
dollars."

Nothing wrong with any of that - except for one little,
nagging doubt.

So you go to a quiet place, still your thoughts, and ask
your inner mind why it's trying to get your attention.

In response, you realize that for years you've mistrusted
rich people. Your family always said things like, "I'd
rather be honest than rich." Or "We may be poor but we're
happy."

So you realize that forgotten suggestions hidden away in
your early memories have told you that rich people were
dishonest and unhappy.

Now, by asking your inner mind to make you rich, you are
(in effect) requesting that it make you become dishonest
and unhappy. Of course your inner mind is trying to get your
attention... Hey! Are you SURE that's what you want?

Your initial request was only half a description of what you
want. Your inner mind is trying to help you complete the
picture.

So you change your affirmation to something like: "I am
rich, happy and healthy. I have a million dollars in the
bank, and I receive a yearly income of half a million
dollars, all of which I received in totally honest and
honorable ways. My family, friends and co-workers or
employees all rejoice with me for my success."

This nullifies the effect of that old suggestion.

Now your inner mind is happier about these instructions.
Then, to be extra safe, you add on your insurance: "Please
do this or something better in ways that are for the highest
good of me and everyone involved."

Then keep listening. If your inner mind has more
reservations about your request, it'll knock on your door
again.

If it does, just ask what still needs resolving, and listen
for the conflict. Resolve that conflict the same way you
just did the 'rich people are dishonest and unhappy'
conflict.

When you've got everything ironed out, you'll have a
content, easy feeling. In fact, when you think about the
target you're requesting, you'll get a buoyant, excited
feeling of near-total certainty. That's how you'll know your
conflicts are all cleared up.

Never quit halfway to your goal, and never quit halfway to
your perfect affirmation. Be persistent.


Step 6: Always say 'thank you'

Anytime your inner mind takes the trouble to knock on your
door, always acknowledge it with something like: 'thank you
for wanting to help me; what do you suggest we change?'

And when you have attained your target or received what you
requested, it's time to say 'thank you' again.

It's especially effective if you keep notes as you go along,
and to add a special thanks note - in writing - in
recognition of the help you've received, once your target is
achieved.

This thanks is as important to your inner mind as it is to
you, so don't forget it.

And always, ALWAYS pay close attention when your inner mind
seems to be knocking on your door.

Because your whole future could be about to change.


© Charles Burke

About the Author

Charles Burke is the author of Command More Luck, a book offering powerful suggestions for getting more cooperation from life, luck, and your own mind. Whether you call it synchronicity, serendipity, or just plain old luck, you CAN become more "naturally lucky." http://www.moreluck.com