"Architecture" means "the art
or science of building or construction," and
"Mental Architecture" means "the art or science of
Mind Building." By "Mind Building" I, of course,
mean "Brain Building," for as I have told you in a
previous chapter, the brain is the "machinery" of
the personal manifestation of mind, or the
"converter" or "transformer" of the Mind-Power.
But as the word "mind" is
generally used as synonymous with "brain," in the
case of individuals, I shall speak of "Mind
Building" in this lesson, although I always mean
"Brain Building" when I so speak.
The differing manifestations
of mind in the various persons with whom we come
in contact is at once recognized as depending upon
the character, quality, degree and grade of their
brain-material The brain is composed of a peculiar
substance called "plasm," or elementary
living-matter.
The word "plasm" is derived
from the Greek word meaning "a mould or matrix,"
and its use in connection with the brain-substance
is peculiarly appropriate, for it is in the cells
of the brain that "mental states" are "cast or
molded," as it were. The brain is composed of an
enormous number of tiny cells which are the actual
elements in the production and manifestation of
thought, or mentation.
These brain-cells are
estimated at from 500,000,000 to 2,000,000,000,
according to the mental activity of the person.
There is always a great number of reserve
brain-cells remaining unused in every brain, the
estimate being made that even in the case of the
wisest man, or most active thinker, there are
always several millions of unused brain cells held
as a reserve.
And the most advanced science
also informs us that the brain "grows" additional
cells to meet any demand upon it. And
brain-building is the development and growth of
brain-cells in any special region of the brain;
for, as you probably know, the brain contains many
regions, each region being the seat of some
particular function, quality, faculty or mental
activity.
By developing the brain-cells
in any special region, the quality, activity or
faculty which has that region for its seat is
necessarily greatly increased and rendered more
effective and powerful.
The investigators along the
lines of Phrenology have long since recognized the
fact that brain-centers or regions could be
developed by proper exercises, etc., and the
text-books on that science give us many
interesting facts regarding the same.
These cases show us that not
only is an individual able to develop and
cultivate certain qualities of mind on the one
hand, or restrain them on the other, but that also
the very outward shape and size of the skull
manifests a corresponding change, for the bony
structure accommodates itself very gradually to
the pressure of the increasing number of cells in
some particular center or region of the brain.
It is a fully demonstrated
scientific fact that a man may "make himself over"
mentally, if he will but devote the same degree of
attention, patience and work to the subject that
he would in the case of a desired development of
some part of the physical body--some muscle, for
instance.
And the processes are almost
identical in the case of muscle and
brain-center--use, exercise and practice along the
lines pointed out by those who have investigated
and experimented along the particular line.
Prof. Elmer Gates, of
Washington, D. C., one of the most remarkable men
of this age, has given to the world an account of
some remarkable experiments along the line of
brain-growing, the experiments having been tried
upon various animals. He tells us that his early
experiments along this line were in the direction
of training dogs to develop some one particular
sense, that of seeing or hearing particularly.
He would specially train a
certain number of the animals according to his
methods, and at the same time would keep a like
number of the same animals of the same age, etc.,
without any extraordinary use of the particular
faculty in question, and still a similar number
without the opportunity of using that faculty at
all. At the end of a certain time he would kill
some of the animals belonging to each class, and
upon examining the brains of each he made the
discovery that the number of brain cells (in the
regions of their brains in which the sense or
faculty was manifested) showed a startling
difference, depending upon the degree of use and
exercise of the particular faculty.
His specially trained animals
showed a much greater number of brain-cells than
had ever been found in animals of the same breed
and age. Prof. Gates continued these experiments
over a number of years and obtained some
remarkable results. He specially trained the
faculties of some of his dogs so that they were
able to distinguish between seven shades of red
and a like number of green shades.
I have not the time here to
speak at length of the wonderful results of Prof.
Gates' experiments, but he has firmly established
the scientific fact that brains may be "grown" at
will, if the person will apply himself to the
subject with sufficient zeal and ardor. I have
conducted a number of interesting experiments (not
with dogs, or through vivisection, however) which
have proven conclusively to my mind that the
entire natures, dispositions, characters and
faculties of people may he entirely changed by
intelligent psychological methods along the lines
of Suggestion or Auto-Suggestion, accompanied with
certain other methods to be mentioned in this
lesson.
The great school of "New
Thought" people of the various sects, cults and
associations have been doing some excellent work
along these lines during the past ten years or
more. Their systems of "affirmations" and
"denials" really developed or restrained their
brain-centers and desirable qualities were
increased and developed and undesirable ones were
restrained. But the mere use of "affirmations",
"auto-suggestions" or even strong, positive
suggestions given by another, forms only one-third
of the work necessary in order to produce the best
results.
It is all very well to assert
"I am Brave," "I am Industrious," "I am Active,"
etc., etc., but if the work stops there it remains
only one-third done. It is true that these
affirmations and auto-suggestions undoubtedly do
stimulate and develop mental faculties and
brain-centers and play an important part in
character building. But in order that they be used
to the best advantage there must be visualization,
and there should be a certain physical acting
out of the mental suggestions or affirmation. There
must be seeing and doing as well
as saying.
You will remember what I said
in my lesson on Mental Suggestion regarding the
fact that "mental states take form in physical
action," and its twin-truth that "physical action
produces mental states." It is a case of action
and reaction in both instances.
For instance, if you will
start in to feel angry, and keep it up a little
while (even though the emotion is assumed for the
experiment), you will find that your brows will
form into a frown and that your hands will clench
and your jaws will fasten into a savage "bite."
You know this to be true, of course. But then, on
the other hand, if you will assume the
above-mentioned physical characteristics
accompanying anger and will keep them up earnestly
for a short time, you will find yourself actually
feeling angry. And the same thing is true
of the feelings and actions of pleasure.
Think intently of some
pleasant thing and you will find your face
breaking into an expression of pleasure--you will
smile; your eyes will twinkle and you will
manifest all the outward characteristics of
pleasure. And, on the other hand, if you will
"throw yourself into the part," and will smile and
manifest all the outward signs of pleasure, you
will find yourself beginning to feel "bright,
cheerful and happy" in a short time.
I have seen a sign bearing the
simple word "smile!" in big letters cause
people to change their mental states in a few
moments. They would take the suggestion and being
amused at the sign they would begin to smile--then
the smile's physical actions would react upon
their minds and they would begin to "feel good"
and so on.
I defy anyone to manifest the
physical actions of any particular emotion or
feeling, earnestly and actively, for a short time,
without the corresponding mental state actually
manifesting itself. Go into a business house
manifesting the outward signs of good nature,
confidence, self-reliance, etc., and you will not
only impress others by suggestion, but you will
also impress yourself, and you will begin
to actually feel the thing that you have
been acting out.
Go into the same place
manifesting the outward appearance of failure,
lack of confidence, fear, etc., and not only will
your suggestions be taken up by the others, but
you will sink deeper and deeper into the mental
state you are acting out.
I have known people to acquire
a masterful, confident, reliant character by a
systematic and persistent "acting out" of the
part--their "second-nature," so acquired, growing
stronger than their original nature.
The exercise of the faculty,
in this way, developed the brain-cells in the
proper area and the people were indeed "made
over." I know men who, when feeling "blue" or
"discouraged" will always force a smile to their
faces and in a short time they will regain their
accustomed or desired cheerful state.
I have known at least one man
to rouse feelings of stern determination by
similar methods. This man was in a position in
which there would frequently arise the necessity
for the manifestation of the most determined
sternness and an almost angry display of will.
The man in question was by
nature a good-natured, easy-going, kindly person,
and he found it almost impossible to manifest the
desired qualities upon the occasions mentioned.
But one day he was roused to a
state of intense determined sternness by a most
annoying exhibition of careless action in the
office, which although soon settled, left him with
the physical reflex of the mental state just
experienced. Before this physical condition had
passed away there arose, unexpectedly, a case of
genuine necessity for the exhibition of the stern,
determined action mentioned in the first place.
Meeting the man to whom this attitude must be
manifested, our man found that, much to his
surprise, he displayed a wonderful degree of the
desired trait and gave the other man a talking to
that made his hair stand on end, and brought the
desired result instantly.
No one was more surprised at
this occurrence than oar man, and after it was all
over he tried to "figure it out"--and did. He came
to the conclusion that when he was manifesting the
physical conditions of the mental state, it
required but a trifling effort to induce the state
itself--in fact the state came almost
"automatically." He had discovered, by accident, a
well-established psychological law. And he made
use of it ever after.
Thereafter, whenever he had to
"work himself into a state," as he called it, he
would walk about his office a few moments before
he would see the other man, and during his walk be
would "bite" hard and protrude his jaw; he would
frown and clench his fists and make his eyes
glare, etc., etc., and before long he would feel
himself in the proper mood to see the other man
and give him the necessary "laying out" The plan
worked like a charm. I almost dislike to tell you
the sequel, however.
Our good-natured, "easy" man
so developed these opposite qualities by this
practice that in a few years he was known as a man
to be dreaded by those who had occasion to receive
treatment at his hands, and his whole nature
seemed to have changed, and even his best friends
would then hesitate to call him "easy" or "good
natured."
He had made himself over--
that's all. And from this story you may build up a
whole process of character building if you have
sufficient imagination and ingenuity--for the
principle is the same in all cases. Character is
plastic--and may be molded at will, by intelligent
methods. But it takes more than "holding the
thought" to do it-- one must learn to act out
the part desired, until it becomes
second-nature.
I wonder how many of you will
realize what a wonderful field is here opened out
for you if you will follow the idea taught by the
past few pages? How many of you will realize that
I have herein given you the "Secret of Making
Yourselves Overt?" I wish that I could fairly
"pound into you" this truth. When I think of what
many of you are; and then of what you might be, if
you would realize the inner truth and importance
of what I have just told you-- well, then, I feel
like printing the tale in big, black-faced type
and capital letters--so that I could make you read
it.
I think that the facts and
principles above stated are self-evident and need
little or no backing up by authorities. But I
think I will give you a quotation or two to help
fasten the idea in your minds. Prof. Halleck says:
"By restraining the expression of an emotion we
can frequently throttle it; by inducing an
expression we can often cause its allied
emotion." I wish that every one of you
would commit the above words to memory--they are
golden. By expression Prof. Halleck, of course,
means the physical manifestation or
expression--the physical action which springs from
the emotion.
Prof. William James has this
to say along the same line: "Refuse to express a
passion and it dies. Count ten before venting your
anger and its occasion seems ridiculous.
Whistling to keep up courage
is no mere figure of speech. On the other hand,
sit all day in a moping posture, sigh, and reply
to everything with a dismal voice, and your
melancholy lingers. There is no more valuable
precept in moral education than this, as all of us
who have experienced know: If we wish to conquer
undesirable emotional tendencies in ourselves we
must assiduously, and in the first instance
cold-bloodedly, go through the outward
movements of those contrary dispositions
which we wish to cultivate. Smooth the brow,
brighten the eye, contract the dorsal rather than
the ventral aspect of the frame, and speak in a
major key, pass the genial compliment and your
heart must indeed be frigid if it does not
gradually thaw." Aren't those words fine? Read
them over several times so as to be sure to grasp
their full meaning!
If you wish to cultivate a
quality in which you are deficient, you
must think about it, dream about it, concentrate
upon it--live it out in your thoughts as a
"day-dream" or "mental picture"--hold the
visualized mental image of it always with you--and
last and equally as important, if not more so, act
out the physical manifestations of it--play
the part out. Act your part, earnestly, ardently,
constantly, eagerly, steadily.
On the other hand, if you wish
to repress a quality, the best way to do it is to
cultivate the opposite quality, and the
undesirable quality will be "crowded out." If you
wish to get rid of darkness in a room, you don't
have to shovel it out--just open the windows and
"let a little sunshine in." Prof. James has told
you the same thing in the quotation given a few
moments ago. it is psychological law. Kill out the
negative by cultivating the positive. That's the
rule! But don't forget to act out the part!
What is called
auto-suggestion, or self-suggestion, id one of the
most active agencies employed in Mind Building.
Auto-suggestion covers all the various forms of
affirmations, denials, statements, etc., employed
by the several "New Thought" schools, and is the
underlying principle of all forms of
"self-impression." "Self-impression" would be a
better name than any of these terms, for it
described the process exactly. One "impresses" his
mind with certain ideas, suggestions, feelings and
mental states.
There is a dual aspect of mind
which enables one to play two parts at the same
time, viz.,
(1) the part of
teacher or master, and
(2) the part of scholar or
pupil.
One may charge his mind with
the task of waking him up at a certain time in the
morning--and wakes up. Or he may charge his mind
to remember a certain thing--and he remembers it.
This form of self-mastery may
be carried to great lengths, and one may bid his
mind collect data regarding certain subjects, from
amidst its heterogeneous collection of mental odds
and ends of knowledge; and then bid it combine the
information into a systematic form--and the mind
will so act and the combined information will be
at hand when needed. I find myself doing this,
almost unconsciously, when I start to write a
book--fact after fact and illustrations appearing
at their proper time and place. The field of
self-impression has just had its outer edges
explored--there is a great region of mentation
here awaiting some of you.
And so, this auto-suggestion
is a case of "says I to myself, says I." And the
queer thing is that if you will impress your mind
sufficiently, strongly, and with sufficient
repetition, you will find it taking the impression
and acting upon it.
Repetition is a great thing in
auto-suggestion. You remember the case of the man
who told a certain He so often that he got to
actually believe it himself--repeated
auto-suggestion works along the same psychological
lines. Hearing a thing impressed upon it
sufficiently often, it takes it as a fact, and
proceeds to act it out accordingly. Constant
affirmation and statement, made to one's self,
will manifest in actual conditions.
Many a person has changed his
whole physical and mental condition by a careful,
persistent course of auto-suggestion. Of course,
if one combines the mental image, or visualization
process with the autosuggestion, he will obtain a
doubly efficacious result.
And, if, in addition to these
two, he will practice acting out the part along
physical lines, he will reap a ten-fold harvest of
results. These three forms combined, employed and
persisted in, will work miracles in any one.
For instance, if one suffers
from fear in meeting other persons--an abnormal
timidity or bashfulness, commonly called "
self-consciousness"--the first thing for him to
do, is to brace himself with constant affirmations
or auto-suggestions of "fearlessness"; then he
should visualize himself as absolutely fearless;
then he should endeavor to reproduce the physical
appearance and outward demeanor (an acting out of
the part) of the fearless man.
And thus will he gradually
develop into that which he desires. His ideal
becomes real--his dream a fact--his feelings
actions--his actions feelings. And this rule and
example will hold good along the whole line of
personal qualities or characteristics. All come
under the rule--the same principle works in all
cases. Get the principle and you have the secret
of the whole thing.
But here I am going to suggest
a little variation along the lines of
autosuggestion, which I have found to act
admirably in this class of cases. The ordinary
auto-suggestion, or affirmation works along these
lines, viz., one affirms or suggests to
himself something like this: "I am fearless--I
fear nothing--I am courageous--I am filled with
confidence," etc., etc. Now this in fine--no one
who knows anything about the subject will dispute
the fact that a man "holding the thought" that "I
am fearless," will be filled with courage, and
will manifest the qualities that he is claiming
for himself.
It is the old tried and
oft-taught plan of affirmation or auto-suggestion
that has worked wonders for so many people. And I
positively advise you to follow this plan of
"holding the thought," and making the
affirmations or autosuggestions in the first
person, when you are "going into action."
As a "bracer" it is unexcelled. But there is
something else not so old--and here it is.
You will see in the previous
chapter, entitled "Healing Methods," (in that part
devoted to self-healing ) I tell you to imagine
yourself as "John Smith," or whatever your name
may be--that is, as a separate person, and then to
"treat" him as such --just as you would a patient
well, this plan also works admirably in cases of
character building by auto-suggestion.
While the "I am," etc., plan
is good as a bracer, and when going into action,
still this last mentioned plan of mine operates
far better when it conies down to steady
"treatment" of oneself for mental failings;
weaknesses and character-building. Just try both
plans yourself and see if I am not right--but
practice my plan a little until you acquire the
"knack" before finally deciding the matter. Here
is how it works in practice.
Suppose you wish to cultivate
fearlessness in place of the fear-thought that has
bothered you so much. Well, in addition to the
mental image of visualization and the
never-to-be-forgotten acting out the part, you
wish to try auto-suggestion. The old way, you
remember, was to claim to yourself, "I am
fearless," etc. Now my new way of "treating"
yourself is to imagine that you are "treating"
some other person for the same trouble. Sit down
and give a regular treatment. Imagine yourself as
sitting before your personality--the central mind
giving a treatment to the "John Smith" part of
you--the individual "treating" the personality.
The individual (that's you) says to the
personality of "John Smith": "Here, John Smith,
you must brace up and do better. You are fearless,
fearless, FEARLESS! I tell you, you are
fearless! You are courageous, and brave, and bold!
You are confident and self-reliant! You fear
nothing! You are filled with strong, positive
Mind-Power, and you are going to manifest it--you
are going to grow more and more positive every
day! You are positive this minute-- do
you hear met Positive this very minute! You
are positive, fearless, confident and self-reliant
right now, and you will grow more and more
so every day. Remember now, you are positive,
positive, positive--fearless, fearless,
fearless!" etc., etc., etc.
You will find that by this
plan you will be able to fairly pour in the
positive suggestions to "the John Smith part of
you," and the latter will take them with the same
effect as if there were two persons instead of
one. And there are two persons, according
to the occult teachings--the individual and the
personality.
This plan will afford a
welcome variation to the monotonous "I am this and
I am that" methods which have caused so many
once-ardent followers of the "New Thought" to
throw up the whole matter in disgust. This
wholesale "I am this and that" business has tired
many a good soul who thereby let go just when in
sight of attainment. To such and to all others I
would say: "Try this new plan!" Learn to actually
"treat yourself" by this method and you will be
surprised at the rapid progress you will make as
compared with the old plan.
But don't forget to impress
upon the "John Smith" part of you that he must
hold the mental image or visualization; and that
he must start right in to act out the part! Don't
let him get away from this--insist upon
it--cross-examine him about it before each
treatment and hammer it into him hard. For as our
colored brother would say. "He sure needs 'em all"
to carry him through.
Now, please experiment with
this method on yourself and find out its wonderful
possibilities by your own experience. Don't rest
with my say-so, but prove it for yourself.
When once you have found out
just what this method will do for you you will
wonder that you had never thought of it before.
You will cultivate a sense of individuality which
will recognize the personality is a plastic
something that can be molded and shaped at your
will by this "treatment." And, best of all, you
will learn to know that the individual is you, and
you are the individual and that the personality is
merely something that "belongs to you." "When you
have reached this stage you will have called to
your hand the forces of the great Mind-Power and
will indeed have a right to call yourself
"positive" and an "active center of power" in the
great Ocean of Mind-Power.
And all this will have been
brought about by this new plan of '' Says I to
myself, says I. Is it not worthwhile?" Then start
in to "make yourself over as you will!"