CHAPTER 3
THOUGHTS, EMOTIONS, AND ATTITUDES
Your thoughts, emotions, and attitudes are yours to command.
We often give control of these over to other people. It can be quite interesting and is a part of living life. But it is always within your power to take back control of these and think and feel what you wish regardless of the dictates of life, society, or physics.
Mastery over your own mind is a necessary step in your spiritual advancement. In this chapter we will take some beginning steps in this direction.
This is also a good time to begin keeping a notebook recording the processes that you are running. You will want to note down each process and anything interesting that happened and anything that you wish to note for future reference.
Keeping a record has many uses. If, for example, you get tangled up and aren’t doing so well, you can look back and review what happened. Sometimes when you get in trouble, it was actually the last step that you thought was OK where the mistake occurred.
Or you might eventually decide to get some help or advise from a professional processor, and in that case a record is of tremendous value in letting the professional know what you have been running and how it went.
In some cases it also helps to get things outside of your mind and down on paper. This can help you extrovert from things. That will be more important as we get into subjective processes.
And as you become more advanced, you will sometimes want to look back at something that you ran earlier.
So get into the habit now of recording your progress in a notebook. You will fill up quite a few of them as you proceed with this.
And let me again remind you that running a process can turn on a reaction and the solution to that is to continue running the process until the reaction that it stirred up has disappeared. When running a drill on fear for example, you might actually become afraid for a few minutes. If this happens, you keep doing the process with dogged determination until the fear goes away. The process is bringing something to the surface and you must let it come all the way out rather than stopping when it is half way.
