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English Pages 62 [68] Year 1991
AS
THINK
I
James Allen ARRANGED BY ART
W.
CHRISTENSEN
y
The Classic ASA MAN THINKETH in Personal Affirmation form.
S8.95US Price higher in
other countries
AS
THINK
I
JAMES ALLEN'S inspirational classic
As A
Man Thinketh has long been read by millions of people seeking joy, success, and health through the
power of thought and effect
on
its
life.
For the first time, this book has been written in the
form of an affirmation so that
when it is read,
the
powerful thoughts become planted in your mind. Throughout each page,
you will re-affirm that the power of thought is not people but for "me" and "my" life, for "I
just for other
am literally what I think, my character being the complete sum of all my thoughts."
IHl
i DEVCXiSS Publications
I
SV
AS
THINK
I
r
James
As
a
Allen's
Man
Thinketh
personal affirmation form
in
arranged by
Art
Mind
is
the
W.
Christensen
Master-power that molds and makes.
And I am Mind, and evermore The
tool of Thought, and, shaping
I
take
what
Bring forth a thousand joys, a thousand /
think in secret,
Environment
is
and but
it
comes
my
I will, ills
to pass:
looking-glass
DEVORSS Publications
—
As I Think Copyright© 1991 by Art W. Christensen
All rights reserved.
without permission
who may
No part of this book may in writing
be reproduced in any form
from the publisher, except by a reviewer
quote brief passages for review purposes.
ISBN: 0-87516-636-9
Second
Printing,
1993
Third Printing, 1998
DeVorss
& Company, Publisher P.O.
Box 550
Marina del Rey, Printed in the
CA
90294
Hong Kong
CONTENTS My
Thought and
My
Character ...
My Thought My Circumstances
1
Effect of
on
My Thought My Health and My
6
Effect of
on
My
Thought and
My
Thought-Factor in
My
My
Visions and
My
Serenity
My
.
.
25
Purpose .... 30
Achievement
My
Body
Ideals
35 41
48
—
FOREWORD This
volume
little
(the result of
meditation and experience)
is
not
in-
tended as an exhaustive treatise on the
much-written-upon subject of the power of thought. explanatory,
suggestive rather than
It is its
object being to stimulate
men and women
to the discovery
and
perception of the truth that
"They themselves are makers of themselves"
by virtue of the thoughts which they
choose and encourage; that mind
is
the
master weaver, both of the inner garment of character and the outer garment of cir-
cumstance, and that, as they hitherto
they
woven
in
may have
ignorance and pain
may now weave
in
enlightenment
and happiness.
James Allen
AS
I
THINK
MY THOUGHT AND MY CHARACTER The
aphorism, "As
heart so
am
I,"
I think,
my
complete sum of
my
is
so comprehen-
out to every condition
and circumstance of my
what
think in
not only embraces the
whole of my being, but sive as to reach
I
life.
I
am literally
character being the
all
my
thoughts.
As the plant springs from, and could not be without, the seed, so every act of
mine springs from the hidden seeds of my thought, and could not have appeared
without them. This applies equally to those acts called "spontaneous" and "un-
premeditated" as to those which are deliberately executed.
Act
is
the blossom of thought, and joy
and suffering are its fruits; thus I garner in the sweet and bitter fruitage of my
own
husbandry.
1
As
2
"Thought
Think
mind hath made
in the
What we
I
us.
are
By thought was wrought and
built. If
my mind Hath
evil
thoughts, pain comes on
comes The wheel the ox behind
me
as
...
.
If
.
I
.
endure
In purity of thought, joy follows
As
me
my own shadow — sure." am
growth by law, and not a creation by artifice, and cause and effect is as absolute and undeviating in the hidden realm of my thought as in the world of visible and material things. A noble and I
a
God-like character
is
or chance, but
the natural result of
is
not a thing of favor
continued effort in right thinking, the effect of long-cherished association
God-like thought. character, by the result of the
An
with
ignoble and bestial
same process,
is
the
continued harboring of
groveling thoughts.
My I
Thoughts and
My
am made or unmade
Character
3
by myself;
in the
armory of thought I can forge the weapons by which I may destroy myself; but I can also fashion the tools with which to build for myself heavenly mansions of joy and strength and peace. By the right choice and true application of thought, I
ascend to the Divine Perfection; but
by the abuse and wrong application of thought,
I
can descend below the
level of
two extremes are all the grades of character, and I am their maker and master. the beast. Between these
Of all
the beautiful truths pertaining to
the soul which have been restored
and brought to light in this age, none is more gladdening or fruitful of divine promise and confidence than this that I am the master of my thought, the molder of my character, and the maker and shaper of my condition, environment, and destiny. As a being of Power, Intelligence, and Love, and the lord of my own thoughts, I hold the key to every situation, and
—
As
4
Think
I
contain within myself that transforming
and regenerative agency by which myself what I
am
I
I
make
will.
in
my
state;
but
always the master, even
weakest and most abandoned
if
my weakness and degradation would be the foolish master who misgoverned in
I
his or her
"household." Instead,
I
begin
upon my condition, and to search diligently for the Law upon which my being is established, becoming the
to reflect
wise master, directing intelligence,
my
energies with
and fashioning
to fruitful issues. Such
master, which
I
thus
is
my thoughts
the conscious
become by
discover-
ing within myself the laws of thought;
which discovery
is
totally a matter of ap-
and experience. Only by much searching and mining are gold and diamonds obtained, and
plication, self-analysis,
I
find every truth connected with
being, as
my
soul;
I
my
dig deep into the mine of
and that
I
am
the
maker of my
My
My
Thoughts and
Character
character, the molder of the builder of
prove, as
I
my
my
destiny,
upon
watch, control, and others,
and upon
and
unerringly
I
thoughts, tracing their effects self,
life,
5
alter
my
upon my-
my
life
and
circumstances, linking cause and effect
by patient practice and investigation, and utilizing
my every experience,
even to the
most trivial, everyday occurrence, as a means of obtaining that knowledge of myself which is Understanding, Wisdom, Power. In this direction, as in no other, is the law absolute that "He that seeketh findeth; and to him that knocketh it is opened"; for only by patience, practice,
and ceaseless importunity do I enter the Door of the Temple of Knowledge.
MY THOUGHT ON MY EFFECT OF
CIRCUMSTANCES
M
y mind
may
be likened to a gar-
which may be
.den,
intelligentl y
— —— mus——
cultivated or allowed to, run * wild; but »-
^
-
*
.^
whether cultivated or neglected,
t,
it
no useful seed s are put into it, then an abundance of use less we ed-seeds will fall therein and will CtOy^GJ^ continue to produce J^heirjdnd. and
will, bring forth. If
,
Just as a gardener cultivates a plot,
from weeds, and growing the flowers and fruits required, so I tend the garden of my mind, weeding out all the wrong useless, and impure thoughts, and cultivating toward perfection th e flowers and fr uits of right, useful and pure though ts. By purs uing this ^rocess, keeping
it
free
,
,
I
discover that
I
am the master-gardener
My
Circumstances
my
of
7
my
soul, the director of
life.
I
also reveal, within myself, the laws of t
hought
,
and understand, with ever-
increasing accuracy,
how
the thought-
and mind-elements operat ein the shaping of my Character, ofcumstance s, and destin y. v'* Theouter world of circumstance shapes itself to the in ner world of t hought and b oth pleasant and unpleasant external conditions are factors which make for the ultimate good of theTncTisooner or later intp
,
act,
—
v
9
10
^V"
'
As
I
Think
As the r eaper of my own harvest learn both by suffering and bliss
vidual. I
,
.
F ollowingj he inmost desires, aspirar
mm
tjon_s,
thoughts, by which
to be
dominate d (pursuing the
I
allow myself will-o'-
the-wisps of impure imaginings or steadfastly
walking the highway of strong and
high endeavor ), fruition
at last arrive at their
I
and fulfilment
ditions of
my
life.
con -
in the outer
The laws
IH come
it is
o
of growth
and adjustment everywhere obtain. /
C~n
to the pot-house or the
-
gao l,
^
not by the tyran ny of fate or circum -
pathway of groveling t houghts and base desire s. Nor do I, stance but by the ,
ure-minded, stress of
fall
suddenly into crime b y
any mere external force
:
the
criminal thought has long to be secretly fostered in the hear t,
and the hour of
opportuni ty only reveals
its
gathered
po wer. Circumstance does not make me it
reveals
me
to myself.
No
;
such condi-
tions can exist as descending into vice
r