Hello to everyone who follow us.
Today as we continue our lesson on courage. We'd like to take a look at how past experiences influence our courage and how we can work to use past experience in conjunction with our entrainment therapy to maximize our courageous new lives. As we said in our previous lesson, no one is born brave just as no one is born cowardly.
But let's touch briefly on a character who is commonly associated both with the word courage as well as the act itself. The Cowardly Lion from The Wizard of Oz considered himself by default very cowardly, but soon realized after confronting the wicked witch of the west that he was indeed quite courageous. Why? Prior to his altercation with the witch he had never had any major conflict that helped him establish himself as a courageous figure. But after testing his own abilities in a heroic trial, he found himself not only full of courage, but perhaps the most courageous of all of Dorothy's companions. Of course this is just a silly little children's story, but the allegory translates quite well to modern life in many ways. Of course with any luck we won't be running into very many wicked witches of the west in our lives, so we will have to find different trials to overcome in order to establish our own courage as we bravely walk out on our quest of self improvement.
But trials can come in many forms, and interpersonal conflict is not always part of them. You may find that in some cases making a stranger your friend requires just as much courage as besting any opponent. Once you've acquired your first courageous interaction and established your new identity, future courageous actions will soon follow.
But past experiences can damage our courage as well. In fact, many of our deepest fears are actually rooted firmly in past experience. What is it you fear? Someone who had been injured in a bicycling accident may grow up and eventually fear automobiles, avoiding them at all costs. If you had at some point in your life almost drowned, your fear may instead be of water. Both cases started as perfectly reasonable reactions to dangerous stimuli, but eventually grew into titanic boogeymen. There's a therapy especially designed to help you remove these limiting elements from your life as well.
As you sit down, simply focus your mind on the experience. As your mind takes away from fear, you can soon experience life no longer tethered by these forces conflicting with how you want to live your life. If you don't have it already, you truly can change your life and remove the fears from past experiences.
As you bolster your courage and remove the fear you experience from past life experiences, you can find out just how powerful you truly are. Fear is the mind killer, but it is also perpetually imprisoned within the mind. You never need to look far to conquer your fear.
We hope you found this lesson on courage and past experiences helpful. By analyzing our own fears and overcoming them we open up a whole new world to ourselves. And when courage is present, we give ourselves more freedom to explore opportunities. Next time we'd like to finish up our courage entrainment by examining the all important difference between courage and a simple lack of fear.
If you like us, please, visit our site at www.traduzioni.soluzionidiarredo.com. We can offer you the most help you may need: even acquiring self-confidence with a foreign language is an outstanding means to overcome fears. Thanks to the best using of language – and the ways you express yourself, your soul – you may achieve better relationship with yourself and your loved ones.
Have a safe and enlightened journey!