I've been
doing lots
of thinking
lately. I
mean a
LOT
of thinking.
I've been
engaging in
a lot of
thinking
lately
because I
haven't
spent my
time
watching ANY
of the
presidential
debates.
None. I
consider the
debates to
be nothing
but a circus
sideshow
designed to
lure me away
from working
on something
productive
for me and
my life, and
so far, I
don't
believe I'm
missing
anything of
any
substance.
What have I
been doing
instead?
Listening
to
books-on-CDs.
Not
fictional
crap. Not
political
history
crap. Not
biographies
of
presidential
candidates
crap.
No, I've
been
listening to
books that
feed my mind
business and
life
philosophies.
You'd be
amazed at
what you can
learn when
you step-out
of the
political
mishmash
(of, again,
crap)
and take-on
the
challenges
of listening
to the ideas
and
philosophies
of
non-political
people.
One such
book I just
finished
listening to
for the
first time
was the
1938 book by
Napolean
Hill
called "Think
And Grow
Rich."
It is
not
a book that
will show
you how to
"get rich
quick." It
is a book
chock-full
of lessons
in morality,
lessons in
business,
and,
especially, lessons
in how to
control your
own mind.
The book
should have
been more
aptly titled
"How to
Control Your
Mind So That
It Helps You
Get Rich",
whether that
"richness"
is richness
in life,
richness in
monetary
wealth, or
richness in
whatever
goal you
would like
to achieve.
It's a
challenging
book to
read, and a
pretty
challenging
book to even
listen to,
not because
it's boring,
but because
as each new
idea and
viewpoint is
revealed, I
found my
mind
spinning-off
into a
thought
process
relating to
what I just
heard and
then I had
to reel my
mind back-in
to focus on
the next
nugget. (If
you buy it
on CD, I
advise using
a
remote-controlled
CD player to
work through
it because
some parts
you want to
stop-rewind-play
to listen to
over and
over again
due to how
poignant the
subject
matter is.)
(By the way,
lest I leave
you bereft
with the
benefit of
being able
to acquire
the "book"
version, the
copyright
protection
for
Think And
Grow Rich
expired
sometime in
the past few
years, and I
found a PDF
version on
the Web
which
you
can have
access to by
clicking and
saving it on
your
computer
here.)
There were
several
amazing
things I
derived from
my first
"listen" to
the audio
version.
Several
things that
apply to our
current
economic and
political
times.
The book was
published
just after
the Great
Depression
ended. Lots
of the
conversation
is all about
what led up
to it, what
happened
during it,
and what
people were
faced with
during the
time of the
Great
Depression.
The
parallel
in the times
it covered
compared to
today's
times is
uncanny with
what people
were
screaming
about back
then, and
what they're
screaming
about today.
Here's one
excerpt that
I laughed my
butt off at
because it's
so
fitting
to today's
political
environment:
(Page 121):
"Just
to keep the
record
simple and
understandable,
I will add
that these
capitalists
are the
self-same
men of whom
most of us
have heard
soap-box
orators speak.
They are
the same men
to whom
radicals,
racketeers,
dishonest
politicians
and grafting
labor
leaders
refer as
“the
predatory
interests,”
or “Wall
Street.”
See anything
familiar in
that
excerpt?
"Grafting
labor
leaders" of
the 1920s
are today's
union
bosses.
"Dishonest
politicians"
of the 1920s
are, well,
like they've
always been
in EVERY
country on
the planet:
Dishonest
low-lifes.
"Predatory
interests"
and "Wall
Street" of
the 1920s
are what the
ignorant
"Occupiers/Newt
Gingrich
Supporters"
of today
scream and
whine about
with regards
to "Wall
Street" and
"venture
capitalists."
If you can
pull
yourself
away from
the
political
debate
circus for
long enough
to immerse
yourself in
"Think
And Grow
Rich,"
your mind
will be a
lot better
for it and
you will
find
yourself
thinking a
whole lot
better about
yourself and
the world
around you.
(Of
course...you
actually
have to have
a mind
in order to
do this.
Some of you
folks have
allowed your
brain to
become
nothing but
a reflection
of what
happens in
the
political
world and
your cortex
has melted
away.)
And,
now...the
feature
presentation...

