Your brain is like a computer, and you are the programmer.
Like most computers, what you program into your computer dictates it’s capabilities and performance.
Many of us do not realize this, and unfortunately, many that do realize it do not act accordingly.
Instead, we often subconsciously program ourselves to be destructive and underperform.
When we speak we are programming, when we think we are programming. If you tell yourself you’re not good at remembering names, you’ve programmed your brain to not be good at remembering names.
Of course, saying you’re good at something will not alone make you good at it. Rather, it’s the verbalization that leads to action and attracts that to you.
Likewise, saying you’re bad at something will not alone make you bad at it, rather it’s the verbalization that leads to action and attracts that to you.
This idea is known as the law of attraction: the belief that by focusing on positive or negative thoughts a person brings positive or negative experiences into their life.
How do we know what you say and think affects you and your reality?
A few scientific examples of how our words affect ourselves and others are clearly displayed in the water and rice experiments performed by Masaru Emoto, a Japanese scientist.
When speaking kindly to water crystals they flourished and were woven into intricate designs, when he spoke poorly to them, they would not develop beautiful crystals but rather ugly clusters of brown liquid.
We know that humans are 60 percent water , how you treat and speak to that water literally changes our molecule structure.
I think the Law of Attraction is a powerful progression of cause and effect.