Thinking To Things
I used to play a lot of racquetball.
When I was in college, I lived in some dorms that were next to the sports center, which had the racquetball courts.
Me and my buddy would always play, and he would almost always beat me. It was fun, but frustrating.
The only few times I beat him I was completely “out of my head.” I didn’t really think about each individual shot. I didn’t consciously hold the score in mind and “count” how many more points I needed.
I was absolutely UNCONSCIOUS. Meaning I had vague thoughts, and my body obeyed. The ball went exactly where I wanted it to go, completely confounding my friend. He would always look at me funny after games like this, as if I were possessed or something.
No Barriers
Musicians frequently have experiences like this. They don’t consciously think of each note, or where they are in the particular piece they are playing. They just have vague thoughts or feelings, and express it as beautiful music.
There’s a famous line from the movie, “The Color of Money,” with Paul Newman, about a pool hustler. He never made the big time, but when he played pool, he was always in that magical “zone.”
All through the movie he questioned himself. He never really knew if he was a “winner” or a “loser.”
Genius Explained
But one day he was having a picnic with his girl, and he explained the feeling. “It’s like my arm the pool cue are one. I just imagine the shot and it happens, and when it does, it’s beautiful. Like something nobody’s ever seen before.”
Those moments of “flow,” of being in the “zone” are what life is all about.
When there is no second guessing, no worries about the outcome, no inner arguments or silly voices in your head telling you what you can’t do.
Just a pure connection between thought, and outcome.
What if your entire life was like that?
What if you could create relationships, build income, manifest your dreams, through this same process?
Well, you can.