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  • Writer's pictureThe PB Scoop

Excuses be Gone!


I know of no more encouraging fact than the unquestionable ability of man to elevate his life by a conscious endeavor. From Walden, by Henry David Thoreau.


There are four words in Thoreau's quote that I want to highlight ”encouraging, unquestionable, elevate, and conscious.

  1. Excuses Begone! is encouraging you to challenge patterns and feel inspired by a newfound awareness of the life hidden beneath your excuses. Invite yourself to move out of established thought patterns, and realize that there is nothing standing in your way of living at your highest levels.

  2. You have an unquestionable ability to eliminate excuses ”they'll get up and go when they're revealed as the false beliefs that they are. There's simply no question about this!

  3. You elevate your life by taking responsibility for who you are and what you're choosing to become. You can transcend the ordinary, mundane, and average with thoughts of greater joy and meaning; you can decide to elevate your life, rather than have it stagnate or deteriorate with excuses. Go beyond where you presently are.

  4. You can bring your desires to consciousness by disconnecting the power from your subconscious so that it can't continue to run your life. Your subconscious (habitual) mind is accessible, so unearth the excuses buried deep within you. Become conscious!

In my role as a counselor, teacher, and parent, I've heard many reasons that people use to explain an unhappy existence . . . and almost all of them inevitably fall into one huge category, which I call excuses.


For example: Excuse, I Can't Afford It


It's a rare day when I don't hear some variation of this excuse, including: "I didn't go to college because it was too expensive", "I haven't been able to travel because I never had the funds", and "I couldn't go into the business I wanted because I had to stay where I was and earn money to pay the bills." I call this belief lame and a cop-out, yet there seems to be almost universal agreement for its existence.


You originated in a world of abundance, which you unquestionably have the ability to access. Whenever you discourage yourself with thoughts that your financial situation is preventing anything from appearing, that's an excuse. If you instead decide to bring abundance awareness into your consciousness, you'll shift your thoughts from I can't afford it to Whatever I need in the form of assistance to guide me in the direction of my life is not only available, but is on its way. You'll then consciously watch for the necessary funding to show up, but you'll also be reminding yourself to believe that you have the ability to use abundance to elevate your life.


Encourage yourself by realizing that you have the capacity to create a space within you that's filled with peace and joy, an inner island of contentment that has nothing to do with money. Practice gratitude for the essentials of life, which are yours to enjoy virtually free of charge. These include air, water, fire, the sun, and the moon; the very ground you walk on; the continuous beating of your heart; the inhaling and exhaling of your lungs; your food digesting; your eyes and ears; and so on.


Be utterly grateful for all that you have naturally, which is beyond the scope of what's affordable. As that endeavor strengthens, assess what you'd truly like to do, where you'd like to live, and what creature comforts you desire.


When I made the decision to attend college after spending four years in the military, for instance, I knew in my heart that money wasn't going to be the thing that prevented me from reaching my goals. I understood the costs involved, and I didn't act on my fear of shortage or what I couldn't afford. I acted on my internal knowing that I indeed was going to attend the university.


This knowing prompted me to investigate financial assistance from the government as a veteran, open a savings account designated for tuition and books, talk with the financial-aid people at the university, and make alternative plans to attend community college, if plan A were not to materialize. I had a certainty inside of me that the "I can't afford it" reasoning is an excuse that many people who aren't considered wealthy employ as a means for exonerating themselves when they need a rationalization for why they're stuck where they are in life.


Oscar Wilde made this wry observation in 1891: "There is only one class in the community that thinks more about money than the rich, and that is the poor. The poor can think of nothing else."


I'd add that such thinking includes lamenting the fact that they'll never have money. I advise tossing out this meme, and instead rewiring thoughts to connect with what's intended to manifest, regardless of your current financial status.


Whatever you feel is your dharma, and no matter how hard that calling seems to be pulling you, if you maintain the belief that you can't manage to pull it off, I can assure you that you're right. To paraphrase Henry Ford, whether you believe you can afford to do a thing or not, you're right.

 

The preceeding excerpt is shared with permission from the book Excuses be Gone! by Dr. Wayne W Dyer. It is published by Hay House (May 1, 2009) and available at all bookstores or online at: www.hayhouse.com and Amazon. For more information on Dr. Wayne Dyer visit his website at www.drwaynedyer.com

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