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Nikola Tesla, a mastermind ahead of his time, believed every invention first forms in the subconscious mind. Before creating, he visualized ideas mentally and used the subconscious power to make the impossible possible. Tesla’s ability came from harnessing his subconscious mind, achieving feats others couldn’t even imagine.
Research shows 95% of our decisions come from the subconscious mind—the part that actually controls us, not the conscious mind we think is in charge. When the subconscious works for us, fear and hesitation vanish, and we gain energy and enthusiasm to fulfill dreams.
Unique Approach to Mind Reprogramming
Many videos provide generic steps, but every person is different. Based on years of training experience, this approach helps find steps best suited to your personality and nature. You’ll also learn how to test and track your progress while reprogramming your mind.
Like an iceberg mostly underwater, the subconscious mind is far greater and more powerful than the conscious mind. The human brain processes 11 million bits of information per second subconsciously, while conscious can handle only 40 bits. According to Stanford's Dr. Bruce Lipton, the subconscious is one million times more powerful than the conscious mind.
Examples include storing massive knowledge by age 21, placebo effects, and hypnosis showing subconscious control over body and memory. It’s clear—the subconscious mind is a superpower to harness.
Your first reaction to a word or image depends on your subconscious patterns shaped by upbringing and experiences. For example, two boys, Titu and Sonu, grew up differently. Titu’s family believed money doesn’t grow on trees and earning is hard, so he developed fear and stress around money, holding him back. Sonu’s father encouraged hard work and assured income would come, so Sonu stayed confident and took calculated risks, growing his mindset and success.
Beliefs from childhood shape confidence, fears, and behaviors today. If you cannot control your brain, it controls you.
Just like updating an outdated phone, beliefs and patterns need changing if they hinder your success. The first step is recognizing limiting beliefs by journaling thoughts, especially negative ones. Writing down why you can’t do something helps reveal and tackle these beliefs.
Our brains crave easy pleasures like social media and binge-watching, which give quick dopamine hits. More meaningful activities yield slower dopamine and are less tempting. Reducing short-term pleasure sources expands mental space to focus on long-term goals and better decisions.
Mindfulness teaches recognizing and changing automatic reactions to situations. For example, reacting calmly instead of with anger when cut off in traffic. Focused meditation, even for a few minutes a day, helps identify thought patterns and rebuild beliefs. Studies show regular mindfulness changes brain areas controlling emotions.
Talking kindly to yourself, practicing gratitude, and visualizing goals strengthens subconscious programming. Mirror work, where you speak positive affirmations facing yourself, boosts confidence and motivation. Repeat phrases like “I am the best” to instill positive energy.
There’s no one-size-fits-all formula for mind reprogramming. Your nature, mindset, environment, and past shape the approach needed. Experiment with strategies like journaling, meditation, visualization, and gratitude to find what works best.
You’ll know progress is happening if:
Your self-awareness increases and you recognize negative thoughts.
You take small but new risks to break comfort zones.
Your positivity and happiness rise gradually.
The challenge lasts at least 21 days, based on research that it takes this long to form new habits. Daily practice of your chosen techniques rewires your subconscious mind. Avoid highly stimulating, dopamine-driven distractions to maintain focus on long-term growth.
A community named "I Am Success" supports those aiming for growth and dream fulfillment. They offer life-changing workshops transforming fear into confidence, confusion into clarity, and procrastination into action.
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