The Power of Intention, Part Two
June 19, 2006 | 2:52 pm
The rest of the book is every bit as good as — or even better than! — the first part. What’s perhaps especially interesting is how Wayne Dyer incorporates the principles in Esther and Jerry Hicks’ “Ask and It is Given” into his book. By using the “Ask” principles in explaining how to connect to “intention,” Dyer gives readers another way to look at these concepts. If you aren’t feeling it, or if you’re focusing on what you don’t have instead of what you have, you won’t be able to get what you want.
Another gem in the book is when Dr. Dyer quotes Dr. David Hawkins when he reminds us “One individual who lives and vibrates to the energy of optimism and a willingness to be nonjudgmental of others will counterbalance the negativity of 90,000 individuals who calibrate at the lower weakening levels.” Anyone reading this can make the changes to get to this spot…imagine how much better our world would be if more people vibrated at a high enough energy to counterbalance 90,000 others?
Posted by: Dyer, Wayne — Meg
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The Power of Intention: Powerful Concepts to Change Your Life
June 8, 2006 | 6:33 am
I’m only part way through it, but what I’ve read so far of Wayne Dyer’s “The Power of Intention: Learning to Co-create Your World Your Way” is pretty terrific. His basic premise is that we all come from God, so we need to be as much like God as we can to have our lives be the way we want them to be.
Dyer outlines the “Seven Faces of Intention”: Be Creative (give form to your personal intentions), Be Kind (to yourself, others, all of life), Be Love (love is cooperation, not competition, and love is the force behind the will of God), Be Beauty (look for and experience beauty in all your undertakings), Be Ever-expansive (life is growth), Be Abundant (there is no scarcity), and Be Receptive (accept the guidance of God).
The next chapters go on to discuss the obstacles we put in our own way, and presumably how to get rid of those obstacles (I haven’t read that far yet….).
Would love to hear from anyone else who’s read it!
Posted by: Dyer, Wayne — Meg
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