Lesson Seven: Putting It All Together

Lesson One through Six have showed you how to create a Target, Prioritize It, Resolve Signs of Conflict and Monitor what you have set up.

In this lesson, I'll put all of these pieces together for you.

The Three-Step Process

Remember the basic framework, the Three-Step Process that we discussed in Lesson One:

1. Create a Target that defines what you want,
one that is clearly understood by all aspects of your un-conscious mind.

2. Prioritize your Target,
Flag it so that you will remain unconsciously focused on it while you get on with your normal activities.

3. Resolve any self-defeating un-conscious habit patterns that can prevent you from achieving your target.

In Lesson Three, we discussed how to create a preliminary Target:

1. Focus on what you consciously want by writing a description.
This explicitly frames your conscious intent.

2. While you are thinking about whether you can and will achieve what you want, be alert for any uncomfortable feelings. If and when you experience any, describe them in writing.
This explicitly frames any signs of unconscious conflict.

3. Read over your written description of what you want, to identify the specific words or phrases that trigger these signs of unconscious conflict.

4. Underline or circle the words or phrases that cause those feelings. This explicitly frames what triggers the unconscious conflict.

5. Rewrite the words or phrases that you have marked. In this very familiar editing process, you are instructing your unconscious to do what it has often done before: to invent alternatives to what you first recorded.
As you continue to edit, you are instructing your unconscious to keep coming up with more acceptable alternatives, bridging the gap between what you consciously want and your unconscious habit patterns.

When you reach a point where both your conscious and unconscious needs are met, the signs of conflict disappear.

At that point, you have achieved a basic level of whole-brain harmony - that is, harmony among your four brain parts (both conscious and unconscious).

This is a preliminary step.
If you also do the other two steps of the Basic Achievement Three-Step: "prioritizing your Target" and, on an ongoing basis, "resolving any unconscious conflicts" that your prioritized Target triggers, you'll get what you have asked for.

In Lesson Four, we discussed how to prioritize your Target.

1. Sit down with your Target statement. Put the piece of paper on which you have written your Basic Target in front of you.
Choose a time when you won't be disturbed.

2. Imagine and experience what your Target describes, reading it silently. Create a movie in your head.

3. Write your Target statement 100 times. You are going to write your Target statement 100 times by hand instead of reading it.
Just like you did in school. (It worked then. It still works
now!)

Of course, what I just showed you taps into only a small portion of the impressive potential strength and power of your mind, when it's focused.

What you just learned, as powerful as it is, is only really a baby step. Nevertheless, it is an effective one.

In Lesson Five, I pointed out that once you have made clear to your unconscious what you want by doing the Three-Step process covered in the preceding lessons, your unconscious will attempt to give you what it thinks you want.

Your conscious job is to clearly tell it how it is doing. I call this process Monitoring.

Monitoring consists of five steps:

1. On a daily basis, read through your Target, imagining and experiencing what it describes.

2. On a separate piece of paper, write down the things that you have done that day to bring you closer to the accomplishment of your Target.

3. Record a "1" to "10" rating that indicates how close you are to achieving your Target. A "1" means no progress at all and a "10" means full achievement.

4. If signs of conflict arise, either while you are reviewing your Target or while you are recording your progress in achieving it, note them and handle them as described in Lessons 3.

5. Check for the feedback signals that tell you you're on track to manifesting your target - joy and happiness, enthusiasm and eagerness, and certainty of achievement.
If any of those are missing, repeat the previous steps - especially step 4.

In Lesson Six, I elaborated on step 4 of the Monitoring process, above.

1. Each day, read over your written Target to see whether you experience signs of unconscious conflict such as the feeling, "that's not quite right" or "I thought I really wanted that aspect of my target but not I realize I don't" or "this is beginning to bore me" or anything but joy and enthusiasm.

2. Record, in writing, those signs of unconscious conflict on a clean piece of paper. In this step, you are "answering the phone," telling your unconscious that you recognize it is sending you a message.

3. Read over your written Target to identify the specific words or phrases that trigger these signs of unconscious conflict.

4. Underline or circle the words or phrases that cause those feelings. This explicitly frames what triggers the unconscious conflict.

5. Rewrite the words or phrases that you have marked. In this very familiar editing process, you are instructing your unconscious to do what it has often done before: to invent alternatives to what you first recorded.

6. Continue steps 4 and 5 until all signs of unconscious conflict disappear and you're left with only joy and enthusiasm when you contemplate your Target.

In Lesson Two, we discussed one additional way of giving your unconscious feedback, the Success and Failure Process:

1. Each day, take a clean piece of paper, divide it into two columns, write "successes" at the top of the left hand column and "failures" at the top of the right hand one. Then date the page.
Under "successes," briefly note each of your successes that day, one per line. Include both the little and big ones.

2. Similarly, under "failures," list each of what you perceive to be the day's failures.

3. Then read through your success list.
After reading each "success," remember the experience it refers to and say to yourself, "That's a success. I'd like more like of those!"

4. Next read through your "failure" list.
After each "failure," remember the experience and say to yourself, "That's a failure. I don't want any more of those!"

If you do this every day,
you will soon see that the daily list of successes increases and the list of failures decreases,
simply because you consciously framed the experiences that you consider successes and the ones that you consider failures and told your unconscious to focus on generating the former and reducing the latter.

And if you do the entire Monitoring process every day - and if your Target is only moderately difficult, your unconscious will soon lead you to its realization, to successfully achieving your Target.

If, however, you've followed this basic process and you don't achieve your Target, that's a sign that what you were attempting to achieve is too difficult for these very simple techniques - and
that you need the much more powerful ones called the Cybernetic Transposition Super Achievement Processes that are taught in Stuart's book.

Best Regards and Joy

Ziqry

PS:
This lesson was taken from
"How to Get Lots of Money for Anything - Fast!"
by Stuart A. Lichtman and Joe Vitale.
For more information about this e-book
or if you want to learn more of
"the Cybernetic Transposition Super Achievement Processes",
please visit

http://123toattractwealth.com/FastMoney4u.html