It’s not easy, but everyone can control their mind more than they think they can.
For example, I have had amazing success in controlling physical pain with my mind. About five years ago the muscles in both of my legs starting hurting me so bad that I went to the emergency room of a hospital on three different occasions, complaining about the pain in different muscles of each leg. Thank God, the third time I went to the hospital the doctor told me that he did not think that I had any problems with any muscles in my legs. He told me that he thought I had back problems. I found that hard to believe since my back never hurt me, but I agreed to have some back x-rays. He was right. The x-rays showed that the two lower vertebrae in my back were completely crushed, as was the sciatic nerve between those two vertebrae. The sciatic nerve controls the nerves in your legs.
Soon the pain moved to my lower back and became increasingly severe. After about one month I used crutches to walk and on two occasions I was in a wheel chair. My new back surgeon told me that I had no choice but to have back surgery. I have heard horror stories about people that have had back surgery… many times back surgery can make your back worse. However, I agreed to have back surgery within the next two months. I went back for another MRI about one month later. I walked out of that hospital that day, using my crutches, and started up this ramp to go to my car that was on the second floor.
I stopped about halfway up that ramp and told myself that I was going to “refuse” to accept this pain. I threw away my crutches and forced myself to walk up that ramp to my car. I kept telling myself over and over again “I feel no pain.” When I felt pain I would force my mind to think of something else that was positive. I refused to think about the pain. I kept going through this mental process many, many times every day. My overall pain kept decreasing everyday.
About three weeks after throwing aside my crutches I visited my back surgeon again. The nurse put me in a small waiting room and told me that the doctor would be in soon. I kept walking around that room with very little pain and obviously without my “lost” crutches. Finally the doctor came in the room and saw me walking around with little or no pain. He was shocked and asked me how I could walk that well without my crutches. I told him my story. He then told me a story: he said he had been studying research on people that could control pain with their minds. He also told me that Harvard Medical School in Boston had spent the past two years studying people that could control pain with their mind. He knew it was possible although I was his first patient who could do it. He then told me to continue my mental exercises and to call him periodically to let him know how I was doing. We both agreed to cancel my back operation.
I continued my own “mental therapy.” I forced my mind to think about something else every time I felt pain. I did this 50 to 100 times every day, and about three months later I felt no pain what so ever. I have not felt any pain in my back since then.
I use an analogy in describing what happened. For example, let’s say that you were driving on a freeway and had a horrific car accident and you broke your back. You would be in excruciating pain. Then let’s say that an ambulance picked you up and rushed you to the hospital along that same freeway. Let’s say that about two miles up that freeway there was another horrific accident with about fifteen cars involved. Some cars were on fire and you could hear children screaming in agony all around you. Your ambulance barely missed being involved in the accident, but ended up in the middle of the wreck. You are lying on a stretcher in the back of this ambulance and you hear these poor children screaming. Guess what? For the next thirty minutes or so your mind would be on those children. You had inadvertently gotten your mind to move from your pain to their pain. “You had personally felt no back pain at all during that period of time.” So if your mind is thinking about something else, you will feel “no pain.”
My concept about forcing your mind to think of something else when pain arises really works!
I have lectured at the Houston, Texas chapter of the “American Chronic Pain Association.” About 50% of the members that have heard me lecture about “mind control over pain” have sent me emails or called me thanking me for my concept and lecture; they told me that each one of them had some degree of success in eliminating up to 100% of their chronic pain.
One of my quotes is “you can do almost anything in the world that you want to do — if — you want to do it bad enough.” Another one is “it’s better to have swung the bat and missed than sit in the stands and watch the game.”
It also works when you have mental pain. Let’s assume a very good friend or your mate or anyone close to you does something that really hurts you mentally and emotionally. Force your mind to think of something else, and in time that pain will also leave you.
I am not saying that my concept of mind control is easy because it is not, but you can do it my friends, I know you can!!!
Good luck, my friends, good luck.
Bill J. Rogers
www.yesyoucandoitclub.com
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