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       Prentice Mulford

      Your Forces and How to Use Them (Complete Six Volume Edition)

      Published by

      Books

      - Advanced Digital Solutions & High-Quality eBook Formatting -

       [email protected]

      2017 OK Publishing

      ISBN 978-80-7583-802-5

       VOLUME I. MAY 1886–MAY 1887

       VOLUME II. MAY 1887–MAY 1888

       VOLUME III. MAY 1888–MAY 1889

       VOLUME IV. MAY 1889–MAY 1890

       VOLUME V. MAY 1890–MAY 1891

       VOLUME VI. MAY 1891–MAY 1892

      MAY 1886–MAY 1887

       Table of Contents

       I. YOU TRAVEL WHEN YOU SLEEP.

       II. WHERE YOU TRAVEL WHEN YOU SLEEP.

       III. THE ART OF FORGETTING.

       IV. HOW THOUGHTS ARE BORN.

       V. THE LAW OF SUCCESS.

       VI. HOW TO KEEP YOUR STRENGTH.

       VII. CONSIDER THE LILIES.

       VIII. THE ART OF STUDY.

       IX. PROFIT AND LOSS IN ASSOCIATES.

       X. THE SLAVERY OF FEAR.

       XI. WHAT ARE SPIRITUAL GIFTS?

       XII. THE PROCESS OF RE EMBODIMENT.

       XIII. RE-EMBODIMENT UNIVERSAL IN NATURE.

      YOU TRAVEL WHEN YOU SLEEP.

       Thoughts are Things.

       Table of Contents

       You travel when your body is in the state called sleep. The real “you” is not your body; it is an unseen organization, your spirit. It has senses like those of the body, but far superior. It can see forms and hear voices miles away from the body. Your spirit is not in your body. It never was wholly in it; it acts on it and uses it as an instrument. It is a power which can make itself felt miles from your body.

      One-half of our life is a blank to us; that is, the life of our spirit when it leaves the body at night. It goes then to countries far distant, and sees people we never know in the flesh.

      Sleep is a process, unconsciously performed, of self-mesmerism. As the mesmeric operator wills another into unconsciousness, so do you nightly will yourself, or rather your body, into a state of insensibility.

      What the mesmeric operator really does is to draw the spirit out of the body of the person he mesmerizes. He brings the thought of his subject to some focus or centre, as a coin held in the hand. While thus centred, the thought (or spirit) of the subject is put in such a condition that he can most easily affect it by his will. He wills then the person’s spirit out of his body. This done, he throws his own thought in that body. It is then as a house left open by its owner. The mesmerizer then takes possession of that body by the power of his own thought. It is not the subject at all who sees, feels, and tastes as the operator wills: it is the spirit or thought of the mesmerizer himself, exercised in another body, temporarily left vacant by its own spirit.

      Thought is a substance as much as air or any other unseen element of which chemistry makes us aware. It is of many and varying degrees in strength.

      Strong thought or mind is the same as strong will. Some persons are so weak in thought, as compared with the practised mesmerizer, that they cannot resist him. Others of even stronger thought can give themselves up voluntarily to his control. You need not be overpowered by anyone in this way, providing you resist them in mind, and call upon the higher power to assist you, if you feel their thought overcoming you.

      When we “go to sleep,” the spirit has been by its day’s workings sent widely scattered away from the body; with so little of its force left by it, the body falls into the trance state of slumber. As the mesmerizer draws the spirit away from the body of his subject, so has our spirit drawn itself away from our bodies by its many efforts during the day.

      Your body is not your real self. The power that moves it as you will is your spirit. That is an invisible organization, quite distinct and apart from your body. Your spirit (your real self) uses your body as the carpenter does his hammer or any tool to work with.

      It is the spirit that is tired at night. It is exhausted of its force, and therefore not able to use the body vigorously. The body is really then as strong as ever, as the carpenter’s hammer has the same strength when his arm is too weak to use it.

      The spirit is weak at night, because its forces have in thought been sent in so many different directions during the day that it cannot call them together. Every thought is one of these forces, and a part of your spirit. Every thought, spoken or unspoken, is a thing, a substance, as real, though invisible, as water or metal. Every thought, though unspoken, is something which goes to that person, thing, or locality on which it is placed. Your spirit, then, has during the day been so sent in a thousand, perhaps ten thousand, different directions. When you think, you work. Every thought represents an outlay of force. So sending out force for sixteen or eighteen hours, there is not at night sufficient left in or near the body to use it. The body therefore falls into the condition of insensibility we call sleep. During this condition the spirit collects its scattered forces, its thoughts which have been sent far and wide; it returns with its powers so concentrated to the body, and again possesses it with its full strength. It is when scattered as so many scattered

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