Affirmations are one of the easiest ways of reprogramming negative beliefs or ingrained thoughts that no longer serve you.
Repetition is a simple way to overwrite your internal software code, line by line, and rebuild your beliefs and perspective one step at a time.
Why is then that we see so few people carrying their affirmations around, or displaying their latest ones in obvious places that they will be reminded of them frequently?
Maybe theres a social stigma attached to not believing that others use them as frequently as yourself or not wanting to air something that can be intensely personal.
What other ways are there then, to be reminded of affirmations, to feed yourself as regularly as you feel is useful to you, without exposing your innermost positive thoughts to scrutiny?
One is passwords. Most of us work with computers in some way these days, or have a personal computer, or use passwords that only we could know to access online services like banking, auctions, dating sites, email and on and on.
You could substitute you regular banking password with something exclaiming your love for money or mankind. The best way to do that is to drop the spaces between the words which will make the password, and thereby your subtle affirmation, legal according to the computers sitting behind that application. So "I love money" becomes "Ilovemoney", or "I am grateful" becomes "Iamgrateful".
The benefits are myriad, you are typing the affirmation, and saying it to yourself at the same time, its not exposed so no one knows and you get the benefit of the positive energy and from repeating it as many times as you access a system.
Often these systems require us to create complex passwords with uppercase and lowercase characters and number and... No worries, just swap letters for similar characters... It will still interpret the same in your mind. So I = 1 or 0 = o and so on.
This is a great way to get your choice affirmations repeated throughout your day with very little effort and a lot of upside.
2 inspired comments:
An excellent idea, Mikel.
Thank you :-)
thanks for not mentioning the typos
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