Tuesday, November 19, 2019
This brain hack will help you attract good luck
This brain hack will help you attract good luck This brain hack will help you attract good luck Things like good and bad luck are actually just in our minds. We have a tremendous amount of control over our own realities. Itâs all a matter of the lens that our brains filter experiences through, and how we use those interpretations to confirm our core beliefs. There is a new method to help reverse harmful or negative belief systems. Itâs called Flow Consciousness, and its primary goal is to replace âlimiting core beliefsâ with those that are, in essence, limitless. âItâs a new operating system for our consciousness,â says Justin Faerman, cofounder of the Flow Consciousness Institute, a Santa Barbara-based coaching and research organization. âFlow Consciousness is really a set of internal and external shifts that people need to make in order to shift their trajectory in life from one of struggle and suffering and hardship toward more of an effortless, nonlinear, intuition-based way of operating.â Since merging practices to found the Flow Consciousness Institute in 2015, Faerman and his cofounder Jackie Knechtel have refined various strategies for rebooting that internal operating system. The pair has since coached CEOs, professional athletes, Ivy League professors, venture capitalists, acclaimed musicians, and screenwriters in 10 countries on how to reframe their interpretation of reality to achieve consciousness flow. How limiting core beliefs get reinforced Whether weâre aware of it or not, Faerman says that everyone sees the world through their own filter; a lens that reframes our experiences to align with our core beliefs. As a result, those core beliefs can have a significant impact on our emotional state, which ultimately influence our decisions and actions. For example, if one believes that the world is inherently a scary place, their emotional state will remain defensive and on edge as they walk down the street. In that state, should a passing stranger give them an innocent look, one is more likely to interpret that look to be threatening. That interpretation in turn confirms and reinforces their core belief about the world, perhaps inspiring them not to travel down that road again. âIf you believe the world is a dangerous place, you wonât go to certain places, and that will limit whatâs available to you and whatâs possible for you,â says Knechtel, demonstrating how core beliefs can serve to limit our real-world actions and opportunities. Unlocking your potential by changing your core beliefs Identifying these core beliefs and working to replace them with non-limiting ones, says Knechtel, is key to opening new possibilities. For example, a limiting core belief the founder pair often encounter when working with entrepreneurs and executives is that theyâre somehow not worthy or deserving. âIf you think youâre not good enough, youâll have a stream of constant negative self-thought and a lower emotional state, which will absolutely affect your performance,â says Faerman. âThere will be more fear of failure, fear of being seen or putting yourself out there or doing things that can help grow your business because you have that deep fear of failure or need for approval,â adds Knechtel.In other words, core beliefs become self-fulfilling prophecies, as those that believe theyâre not worthy will inevitably act accordingly. Through studying fields ranging from neuroscience to psychology to quantum physics to Zen philosophy, Faerman and Knechtel have developed a variety of methodologies designed to help clients evolve their thinking away from those self-limiting belief systems. Using instinct as a data point The key to unlocking that potential is an understanding of where those core beliefs originate. Some of the typical sources are society, religion, family, the media, culture, and even DNA, each forcing their own filter on how we see the world and by extension how we behave. As a result, Faerman explains that we often experience discrepancies between our thoughts and our instincts, because instinct isnât subject to the same filters. âYou can actually gain a lot of really useful data about what to do in a given situation from how you feel about it,â says Faerman. âIf a deal looks good on paper but your stomach is in a knot over it, thatâs valuable data that can help you make better decisions.â Reorienting the linear perception of time Another guiding principal of Flow Consciousness is a reorientation of time itself. Faerman explains that while we naturally perceive time in a linear progression, Flow Consciousness teaches how to look backwards from an imagined, desirable future. âPlay more in the state of what would reality look like if the thing Iâm working toward has already happened, occupying and speaking from that place, and reverse engineering your life from there,â he suggests. Faerman points to the most decorated coach in NBA history as an example. Those who have played for Phil Jackson have saidthat the hall of fame coach, who led 11 teams to victory, encouraged his players to first believe they had already won the title, and then play the season accordingly.âWe know the brain canât tell the difference between what weâre imagining and whatâs actually happening,â adds Faerman. âIt actually lights up the same neural pathways in our brain, it activates a lot of the same systems in our body, and so by staying in this place of acting and thinking and envisioning that itâs already happened, you start to build capacity to think and live in that way.â Toward a more effortless life Those who shift their core beliefs and thinking in line with the flow methodology are able to experience more emotional freedom and inner peace, according to Faerman and Knechtel. That is because core beliefs that had long served to create roadblocks in their thoughts and actions are replaced by instinct and a more optimistic, limitless view of whatâs possible. âYou no longer have to battle your willpower, everything just kind of falls into alignment in this place of peace and calm,â says Knechtel. âEverything is inherently neutral until we assign it a meaning, so we get to choose what perceptional frame weâre operating from; the one that causes struggle and burnout and stress, or the one that results in a state of peace and calm and joy and flow. You get to choose.â This article originally appeared on Fast Company. More from Fast Company: This Is The Mind-Set Youâll Need In Order To Thrive In The Future Of Work 5 Habits To Get Over Self-Limiting Beliefs How The Most Successful People Constantly Question Their Strongest Beliefs
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