THE STARTING POINT OF ALL ACHIEVEMENT
The First Step toward Riches
WHEN Edwin C. Barnes climbed down from the freight train in Orange,
N. J., more than thirty years ago, he may have resembled a tramp, but
his thoughts were those of a king!
As he made his way from the railroad tracks to Thomas A. Edison’s
office, his mind was at work. He saw himself standing in Edison’s
presence. He heard himself asking Mr. Edison for an opportunity to carry
out the one CONSUMING OBSESSION OF HIS LIFE, a BURNING DESIRE to become
the business associate of the great inventor.
Barnes’ desire was not a hope! It was not a wish! It was a keen,
pulsating DESIRE, which transcended everything else. It was DEFINITE.
The desire was not new when he approached Edison. It had been
Barnes’ dominating desire for a long time. In the beginning, when the
desire first appeared in his mind, it may have been, probably was, only a
wish, but it was no mere wish when he appeared before Edison with it.
A few years later, Edwin C. Barnes again stood before Edison, in the
same office where he first met the inventor. This time his DESIRE had
been translated into reality. He was in business with Edison. The
dominating DREAM OF HIS LIFE had become a reality.
Today, people who know Barnes envy him, because of the “break” life
yielded him. They see him in the days of his triumph, without taking
the trouble to investigate the cause of his success.
Barnes succeeded because he chose a definite goal, placed all his
energy, all his will power, all his effort, everything back of that
goal. He did not become the partner of Edison the day he arrived. He was
content to start in the most menial work, as long as it provided an
opportunity to take even one step toward his cherished goal.
Five years passed before the chance he had been seeking made its
appearance. During all those years not one ray of hope, not one promise
of attainment of his DESIRE had been held out to him. To everyone,
except himself, he appeared only another cog in the Edison business
wheel, but in his own mind, HE WAS THE PARTNER OF EDISON EVERY MINUTE OF
THE TIME, from the very day that he first went to work there.
It is a remarkable illustration of the power of a DEFINITE DESIRE.
Barnes won his goal, because he wanted to be a business associate of Mr.
Edison, more than he wanted anything else. He created a plan by which
to attain that purpose. But he BURNED ALL BRIDGES BEHIND HIM. He stood
by his DESIRE until it became the dominating obsession of his
life—and—finally, a fact.
When he went to Orange, he did not say to himself, “I will try to
induce Edison to give me a job of some soft.” He said, “I will see
Edison, and put him on notice that I have come to go into business with
him.
He did not say, “I will work there for a few months, and if I get no
encouragement, I will quit and get a job somewhere else.” He did say,
“I will start anywhere. I will do anything Edison tells me to do, but
before I am through, I will be his associate.”
He did not say, “I will keep my eyes open for another opportunity,
in case I fail to get what I want in the Edison organization.” He said,
“There is but ONE thing in this world that I am determined to have,
and that is a business association with Thomas A. Edison. I will burn
all bridges behind me, and stake my ENTIRE FUTURE on my ability to get
what I want.”
He left himself no possible way of retreat. He had to win or perish!
That is all there is to the Barnes story of success! A long while
ago, a great warrior faced a situation which made it necessary for him
to make a decision which insured his success on the battlefield. He was
about to send his armies against a powerful foe, whose men outnumbered
his own. He loaded his soldiers into boats, sailed to the enemy’s
country, unloaded soldiers and equipment, then gave the order to burn
the ships that had carried them. Addressing his men before the first
battle, he said, “You see the boats going up in smoke. That means that
we cannot leave these shores alive unless we win! We now have no
choice-we win—or we perish! They won.
Every person who wins in any undertaking must be willing to burn his
ships and cut all sources of retreat. Only by so doing can one be sure
of maintaining that state of mind known as a BURNING DESIRE TO WIN,
essential to success.
The morning after the great Chicago fire, a group of merchants stood
on State Street, looking at the smoking remains of what had been their
stores. They went into a conference to decide if they would try to
rebuild, or leave Chicago and start over in a more promising section of
the country. They reached a decision—all except one-to leave Chicago.
The merchant who decided to stay and rebuild pointed a finger at the
remains of his store, and said, “Gentlemen, on that very spot I will
build the world’s greatest store, no matter how many times it may burn
down.”
That was more than fifty years ago. The store was built. It stands
there today, a towering monument to the power of that state of mind
known as a BURNING DESIRE. The easy thing for Marshal Field to have
done, would have been exactly what his fellow merchants did. When the
going was hard, and the future looked dismal, they pulled up and went
where the going seemed easier.
Mark well this difference between Marshal Field and the other
merchants, because it is the same difference which distinguishes Edwin
C. Barnes from thousands of other young men who have worked in the
Edison organization. It is the same difference which distinguishes
practically all who succeed from those who fail.
Every human being who reaches the age of understanding of the
purpose of money, wishes for it. Wishing will not bring riches. But
desiring riches with a state of mind that becomes an obsession, then
planning definite ways and means to acquire riches, and backing those
plans with persistence which does not recognize failure, will bring
riches.
The method by which DESIRE for riches can be transmuted into its
financial equivalent, consists of six definite, practical steps, viz:
First. Fix in your mind the exact amount of money you desire. It is
not sufficient merely to say “I want plenty of money.” Be definite as
to the amount. (There is a psychological reason for definiteness which
will be described in a subsequent chapter).
Second. Determine exactly what you intend to give in return for the
money you desire. (There is no such reality as “something for nothing.)
Third. Establish a definite date when you intend to possess the money you desire.
Fourth. Create a definite plan for carrying out your desire, and
begin at once, whether you are ready or not, to put this plan into
action.
Fifth. Write out a clear, concise statement of the amount of money
you intend to acquire, name the time limit for its acquisition, state
what you intend to give in return for the money, and describe clearly
the plan through which you intend to accumulate it.
Sixth. Read your written statement aloud, twice daily, once just
before retiring at night, and once after arising in the morning. AS YOU
READ—SEE AND FEEL AND BELIEVE YOURSELF ALREADY IN POSSESSION OF THE
MONEY.
It is important that you follow the instructions described in these
six steps. It is especially important that you observe, and follow the
instructions in the sixth paragraph. You may complain that it is
impossible for you to “see yourself in possession of money” before you
actually have it. Here is where a BURNING DESIRE will come to your aid.
If you truly DESIRE money so keenly that your desire is an obsession,
you will have no difficulty in convincing yourself that you will
acquire it. The object is to want money, and to become so determined to
have it that you CONVINCE yourself you will have it.
Only those who become “money conscious” ever accumulate great
riches. “Money consciousness” means that the mind has become so
thoroughly saturated with the DESIRE for money, that one can see one’s
self already in possession of it.
To the uninitiated, who has not been schooled in the working
principles of the human mind, these instructions may appear
impractical. It may be helpful, to all who fail to recognize the
soundness of the six steps, to know that the information they convey,
was received from Andrew Carnegie, who began as an ordinary laborer in
the steel mills, but managed, despite his humble beginning, to make
these principles yield him a fortune of considerably more than one
hundred million dollars.
It may be of further help to know that the six steps here
recommended were carefully scrutinized by the late Thomas A. Edison, who
placed his stamp of approval upon them as being, not only the steps
essential for the accumulation of money, but necessary for the
attainment of any definite goal.
The steps call for no “hard labor.” They call for no sacrifice. They
do not require one to become ridiculous, or credulous. To apply them
calls for no great amount of education. But the successful application
of these six steps does call for sufficient imagination to enable one to
see, and to understand, that accumulation of money cannot be left to
chance, good fortune, and luck. One must realize that all who have
accumulated great fortunes, first did a certain amount of dreaming,
hoping, wishing, DESIRING, and PLANNING before they acquired money.
You may as well know, right here, that you can never have riches in
great quantities, UNLESS you can work yourself into a white heat of
DESIRE for money, and actually BELIEVE you will possess it.
You may as well know, also that every great leader, from the dawn of civilization down to the present, was a dreamer.
Christianity is the greatest potential power in the world today,
because its founder was an intense dreamer who had the vision and the
imagination to see realities in their mental and spiritual form before
they had been transmuted into physical form.
If you do not see great riches in your imagination, you will never
see them in your bank balance. Never, in the history of America has
there been so great an opportunity for practical dreamers as now
exists. The six year economic collapse has reduced all men,
substantially, to the same level. A ne w race is about to be run. The
stakes represent huge fortunes which will be accumulated within the
next ten years. The rules of the race have changed, because we now live
in a CHANGED WORLD that definitely favors the masses, those who had
but little or no opportunity to win under the conditions existing during
the depression, when fear paralyzed growth and development.
We who are in this race for riches, should be encouraged to know
that this changed world in which we live is demanding new ideas, new
ways of doing things, new leaders, new inventions, new methods of
teaching, new methods of marketing, new books, new literature, new
features for the radio, new ideas for moving pictures.
Back of all this demand for new and better things, there is one
quality which one must possess to win, and that is DEFINITENESS OF
PURPOSE, the knowledge of what one wants, and a burning DESIRE to
possess it.
The business depression marked the death of one age, and the birth
of another. This changed world requires practical dreamers who can, and
will put their dreams into action. The practical dreamers have always
been, and always will be the pattern-makers of civilization.
We who desire to accumulate riches, should remember the real leaders
of the world always have been men who harnessed, and put into practical
use, the intangible, unseen forces of unborn opportunity, and have
converted those forces, [or impulses of thought], into sky-scrapers,
cities, factories, airplanes, automobiles, and every form of convenience
that makes life more pleasant.
Tolerance, and an open mind are practical necessities of the dreamer
of today. Those who are afraid of new ideas are doomed before they
start. Never has there been a time more favorable to pioneers than the
present. True, there is no wild and woolly west to be conquered, as in
the days of the Covered Wagon; but there is a vast business, financial,
and industrial world to be remoulded and redirected along new and better
lines.
In planning to acquire your share of the riches, let no one
influence you to scorn the dreamer. To win the big stakes in this
changed world, you must catch the spirit of the great pioneers of the
past, whose dreams have given to civilization all that it has of value,
the spirit which serves as the life-blood of our own country—your
opportunity and mine, to develop and market our talents.
Let us not forget, Columbus dreamed of an Unknown world, staked his life on the existence of such a world, and discovered it!
Copernicus, the great astronomer, dreamed of a multiplicity of
worlds, and revealed them! No one denounced him as “impractical” after
he had triumphed. Instead, the world worshipped at his shrine, thus
proving once more that “SUCCESS REQUIRES NO APOLOGIES, FAILURE PERMITS
NO ALIBIS.”
If the thing you wish to do is right, and you believe in it, go
ahead and do it! Put your dream across, and never mind what “they” say
if you meet with temporary defeat, for “they,” perhaps, do not know that
EVERY FAILURE BRINGS WITH IT THE SEED OF AN EQUIVALENT SUCCESS.
Henry Ford, poor and uneducated, dreamed of a horseless carriage,
went to work with what tools he possessed, without waiting for
opportunity to favor him, and now evidence of his dream belts the entire
earth. He has put more wheels into operation than any man who ever
lived, because he was not afraid to back his dreams.
Thomas Edison dreamed of a lamp that could be operated by
electricity, began where he stood to put his dream into action, and
despite more than ten thousand failures, he stood by that dream until he
made it a physical reality. Practical dreamers DO NOT QUIT!
Whelan dreamed of a chain of cigar stores, transformed his dream
into action, and now the United Cigar Stores occupy the best corners in
America.
Lincoln dreamed of freedom for the black slaves, put his dream into
action, and barely missed living to see a united North and South
translate his dream into reality.
The Wright brothers dreamed of a machine that would fly through the
air. Now one may see evidence all over the world, that they dreamed
soundly.
Marconi dreamed of a system for harnessing the intangible forces of
the ether. Evidence that he did not dream in vain, may be found in
every wireless and radio in the world. Moreover, Marconi’s dream
brought the humblest cabin, and the most stately ma nor house side by
side. It made the people of every nation on earth back-door neighbors.
It gave the President of the United States a medium by which he may
talk to all the people of America at one time, and on short notice. It
may interest you to know tha t Marconi’s “friends” had him taken into
custody, and examined in a psychopathic hospital, when he announced he
had discovered a principle through which he could send messages through
the air, without the aid of wires, or other direct physical means of
communication. The dreamers of today fare better.
The world has become accustomed to new discoveries. Nay, it has
shown a willingness to reward the dreamer who gives the world a new
idea.
“The greatest achievement was, at first, and for a time, but a dream.”
“The oak sleeps in the acorn. The bird waits in the egg, and in the
highest vision of the soul, a waking angel stirs. DREAMS ARE THE
SEEDLINGS OF REALITY.”
Awake, arise, and assert yourself, you dreamers of the world. Your
star is now in the ascendency. The world depression brought the
opportunity you have been waiting for. It taught people humility,
tolerance, and open- mindedness.
The world is filled with an abundance of OPPORTUNITY which the dreamers of the past never knew.
A BURNING DESIRE TO BE, AND TO DO is the starting point from which
the dreamer must take off. Dreams are not born of indifference,
laziness, or lack of ambition.
The world no longer scoffs at the dreamer, nor calls him
impractical. If you think it does, take a trip to Tennessee, and witness
what a dreamer President has done in the way of harnessing, and using
the great water power of America. A score of years ago, such a dream
would have seemed like madness.
You have been disappointed, you have undergone defeat during the
depression, you have felt the great heart within you crushed until it
bled. Take courage, for these experiences have tempered the spiritual
metal of which you are made-they are assets of incomparable value.
Remember, too, that all who succeed in life get off to a bad start,
and pass through many heartbreaking struggles before they “arrive.” The
turning point in the lives of those who succeed, usually comes at the
moment of some crisis, through which they are introduced to their “other
selves.”
John Bunyan wrote the Pilgrim’s Progress, which is among the finest
of all English literature, after he had been confined in prison and
sorely punished, because of his views on the subject of religion.
0. Henry discovered the genius which slept within his brain, after
he had met with great misfortune, and was confined in a prison cell, in
Columbus, Ohio. Being FORCED, through misfortune, to become acquainted
with his “other self,” and to use his IMAGINATION, he discovered
himself to be a great author instead of a miserable criminal and
outcast. Strange and varied are the ways of life, and stranger still
are the ways of Infinite Intelligence, through which men are sometimes
forced to undergo all sorts of punishment before discovering their own
brains, and their own capacity to create useful ideas through
imagination.
Edison, the world’s greatest inventor and scientist, was a “tramp”
telegraph operator, he failed innumerable times before he was driven,
finally, to the discovery of the genius which slept within his brain.
Charles Dickens began by pasting labels on blacking pots. The
tragedy of his first love penetrated the depths of his soul, and
converted him into one of the world’s truly great authors. That tragedy
produced, first, David Copperfield, then a succession of other works
that made this a richer and better world for all who read his books.
Disappointment over love affairs, generally has the effect of driving
men to drink, and women to ruin; and this, because most people never
learn the art of transmuting their strongest emotions into dreams of a
constructive nature.
Helen Keller became deaf, dumb, and blind shortly after birth.
Despite her greatest misfortune, she has written her name indelibly in
the pages of the history of the great. Her entire life has served as
evidence that no one ever is defeated until defeat has been accepted as
a reality.
Robert Burns was an illiterate country lad, he was cursed by
poverty, and grew up to be a drunkard in the bargain. The world was made
better for his having lived, because he clothed beautiful thoughts in
poetry, and thereby plucked a thorn and planted a rose in its place.
Booker T. Washington was born in slavery, handicapped by race and
color. Because he was tolerant, had an open mind at all times, on all
subjects, and was a DREAMER, he left his impress for good on an entire
race.
Beethoven was deaf, Milton was blind, but their names will last as
long as time endures, because they dreamed and translated their dreams
into organized thought.
Before passing to the next chapter, kindle anew in your mind the
fire of hope, faith, courage, and tolerance. If you have these states of
mind, and a working knowledge of the principles described, all else
that you need will come to you, when you are READY for it. Let Emerson
state the thought in these words, “Every proverb, every book, every
byword that belongs to thee for aid and comfort shall surely come home
through open or winding passages.
Every friend whom not thy fantastic will, but the great and tender soul in thee craveth, shall lock thee in his embrace.”
There is a difference between WISHING for a thing and being READY to
receive it. No one is ready for a thing, until he believes he can
acquire it. The state of mind must be BELIEF, not mere hope or wish.
Open- mindedness is essential for belief. Closed minds do not inspire
faith, courage, and belief.
Remember, no more effort is required to aim high in life, to demand
abundance and prosperity, than is required to accept misery and
poverty. A great poet has correctly stated this universal truth through
these lines:
“I bargained with Life for a penny, And Life would pay no more, However I begged at evening When I counted my scanty store.
“For Life is a just employer, He gives you what you ask, But once you have set the wages, Why, you must bear the task.
“I worked for a menial’s hire, Only to learn, dismayed, That any wage I had asked of Life, Life would have willingly paid.”
DESIRE OUTWITS MOTHER NATURE
As a fitting climax to this chapter, I wish to introduce one of the
most unusual persons I have ever known. I first saw him twenty- four
years ago, a few minutes after he was born. He came into the world
without any physical sign of ears, and the doctor admitted, when pressed
for an opinion, that the child might be deaf, and mute for life.
I challenged the doctor’s opinion. I had the right to do so, I was
the child’s father. I, too, reached a decision, and rendered an opinion,
but I expressed the opinion silently, in the secrecy of my own heart. I
decided that my son would hear and speak. Nature could send me a child
without ears, but Nature could not induce me to accept the reality of
the affliction.
In my own mind I knew that my son would hear and speak. How? I was
sure there must be a way, and I knew I would find it. I thought of the
words of the immortal Emerson,
“The whole course of things goes to teach us faith. We need only
obey. There is guidance for each of us, and by lowly listening, we
shall hear the right word.”
The right word? DESIRE! More than anything else, I DESIRED that my
son should not be a deaf mute. From that desire I never receded, not for
a second.
Many years previously, I had written, “Our only limitations are
those we set up in our own minds.” For the first time, I wondered if
that statement were true. Lying on the bed in front of me was a newly
born child, without the natural equipment of hearing. Even though he
might hear and speak, he was obviously disfigured for life. Surely, this
was a limitation which that child had not set up in his own mind.
What could I do about it? Somehow I would find a way to transplant
into that child’s mind my own BURNING DESIRE for ways and means of
conveying sound to his brain without the aid of ears. As soon as the
child was old enough to cooperate, I would fill his mind so completely
with a BURNING DESIRE to hear, that Nature would, by methods of her
own, translate it into physical reality.
All this thinking took place in my own mind, but I spoke of it to no
one. Every day I renewed the pledge I bad made to myself, not to accept
a deaf mute for a son.
As he grew older, and began to take notice of things around him, we
observed that he had a slight degree of hearing. When he reached the age
when children usually begin talking, he made no attempt to speak, but
we could tell by his actions that he could hear certain sounds slightly.
That was all I wanted to know! I was convinced that if he could hear,
even slightly, he might develop still greater hearing capacity. Then
something happened which gave me hope. It came from an entirely
unexpected source.
We bought a victrola. When the child heard the music for the first
time, he went into ecstasies, and promptly appropriated the machine. He
soon showed a preference for certain records, among them, “It’s a Long
Way to Tipperary.” On one occasion, he played that piece over and
over, for almost two hours, standing in front of the victrola, with his
teeth clamped on the edge of the case. The significance of this self-
formed habit of his did not become clear to us until years afterward,
for we had never heard of the principle of “bone conduction” of sound
at that time.
Shortly after he appropriated the victrola, I discovered that he
could hear me quite clearly when I spoke with my lips touching his
mastoid bone, or at the base of the brain. These discoveries placed in
my possession the necessary media by which I began to translate into
reality my Burning Desire to help my son develop hearing and speech. By
that time he was making stabs at speaking certain words. The outlook was
far from encouraging, but DESIRE BACKED BY FAITH knows no such word as
impossible.
Having determined that he could hear the sound of my voice plainly, I
began, immediately, to transfer to his mind the desire to hear and
speak. I soon discovered that the child enjoyed bedtime stories, so I
went to work, creating stories designed to develop in him
self-reliance, imagination, and a keen desire to hear and to be normal.
There was one story in particular, which I emphasized by giving it
some new and dramatic coloring each time it was told. It was designed to
plant in his mind the thought that his affliction was not a liability,
but an asset of great value. Despite the fact that all the philosophy I
had examined clearly indicated that EVERY ADVERSITY BRINGS WITH IT THE
SEED OF AN EQUIVALENT ADVANTAGE, I must confess that I had not the
slightest idea how this affliction could ever become an asset. However,
I continued my practice of wrapping that philosophy in bedtime
stories, hoping the time would come when he would find some plan by
which his handicap could be made to serve some useful purpose.
Reason told me plainly, that there was no adequate compensation for the lack of ears and natural hearing equipment.
DESIRE backed by FAITH, pushed reason aside, and inspired me to carry on.
As I analyze the experience in retrospect, I can see now, that my son’s faith in me had much to do with the astounding results.
He did not question anything I told him. I sold him the idea that he
had a distinct advantage over his older brother, and that this
advantage would reflect itself in many ways. For example, the teachers
in school would observe that he had no ears, and, because of this, they
would show him special attention and treat him with extraordinary
kindness. They always did. His mother saw to that, by visiting the
teachers and arranging with them to give the child the extra attention
necessary. I sold him the idea, too, that when he became old enough to
sell newspapers, (his older brother had already become a newspaper
merchant), he would have a big advantage over his brother, for the
reason that people would pay him extra money for his wares, because they
could see that he was a bright, industrious boy, despite the fact he
had no ears.
We could notice that, gradually, the child’s hearing was improving.
Moreover, he had not the slightest tendency to be selfconscious,
because of his affliction. When he was about seven, he showed the first
evidence that our method of servicing his mind was bearing fruit. For
several months he begged for the privilege of selling newspapers, but
his mother would not give her consent. She was afraid that his deafness
made it unsafe for him to go on the street alone.
Finally, he took matters in his own hands. One afternoon, when he
was left at home with the servants, he climbed through the kitchen
window, shinnied to the ground, and set out on his own. He borrowed six
cents in capital from the neighborhood shoemaker, invested it in papers,
sold out, reinvested, and kept repeating until late in the evening.
After balancing his accounts, and paying back the six cents he had
borrowed from his banker, he had a net profit of forty-two cents. When
we got home that night, we found him in bed asleep, with the money
tightly clenched in his hand.
His mother opened his hand, removed the coins, and cried. Of all
things! Crying over her son’s first victory seemed so inappropriate. My
reaction was the reverse. I laughed heartily, for I knew that my
endeavor to plant in the child’s mind an attitude of faith in himself
had been successful.
His mother saw, in his first business venture, a little deaf boy who
had gone out in the streets and risked his life to earn money. I saw a
brave, ambitious, self-reliant little business man whose stock in
himself had been increased a hundred percent, because he had go ne into
business on his own initiative, and had won. The transaction pleased
me, because I knew that he had given evidence of a trait of
resourcefulness that would go with him all through life.
Later events proved this to be true. When his older brother wanted
something, he would lie down on the floor, kick his feet in the air,
cry for it—and get it. When the “little deaf boy” wanted something, he
would plan a way to earn the money, then buy it for himself. He still
follows that plan!
Truly, my own son has taught me that handicaps can be converted into
stepping stones on which one may climb toward some worthy goal, unless
they are accepted as obstacles, and used as alibis.
The little deaf boy went through the grades, high school, and
college without being able to hear his teachers, excepting when they
shouted loudly, at close range. He did not go to a school for the deaf.
WE WOULD NOT PERMIT HIM TO LEARN THE SIGN LANGUAGE. We were determined
that he should live a normal life, and associate with normal children,
and we stood by that decision, although it cost us many heated debates
with school officials.
While he was in high school, he tried an electrical hearing aid, but
it was of no value to him; due, we believed, to a condition that was
disclosed when the child was six, by Dr. J. Gordon Wilson, of Chicago,
when he operated on one side of the boy’s head, and discovered that
there was no sign of natural hearing equipment. During his last week in
college, (eighteen years after the operation), something happened
which marked the most important turning-point of his life.
Through what seemed to be mere chance, he came into possession of
another electrical hearing device, which was sent to him on trial. He
was slow about testing it, due to his disappointment with a similar
device. Finally he picked the instrument up, and more or less
carelessly, placed it on his head, hooked up the battery, and lo! as if
by a stroke of magic, his lifelong DESIRE FOR NORMAL HEARING BECAME A
REALITY! For the first time in his life he heard practically as well as
any person with normal hearing. “God moves in mysterious ways, His
wonders to perform.”
Overjoyed because of the Changed World which had been brought to him
through his hearing device, he rushed to the telephone, called his
mother, and heard her voice perfectly. The next day he plainly heard
the voices of his professors in class, for the first time in his life!
Previously he could hear them only when they shouted, at short range.
He heard the radio. He heard the talking pictures. For the first time in
his life, he could converse freely with other people, without the
necessity of their having to speak loudly. Truly, he had come into
possession of a Changed World. We had refused to accept Nature’s error,
and, by PERSISTENT DESIRE, we had induced Nature to correct that
error, through the only practical means available.
DESIRE had commenced to pay dividends, but the victory was not yet
complete. The boy still had to find a definite and practical way to
convert his handicap into an equivalent asset.
Hardly realizing the significance of what had already been
accomplished, but intoxicated with the joy of his newly discovered
world of sound, he wrote a letter to the manufacturer of the
hearing-aid, enthusiastically describing his experience. Something in
his letter; something, perhaps which was not written on the lines, but
back of them; caused the company to invite him to New York. When be
arrived, he was escorted through the factory, and while talking with
the Chief Engineer, telling him about his changed world, a hunch, an
idea, or an inspiration—call it what you wish—flashed into his mind. It
was this impulse of thought which converted his affliction into an
asset, destined to pay dividends in both money and happiness to
thousands for all time to come.
The sum and substance of that impulse of thought was this: It
occurred to him that he might be of help to the millions of deafened
people who go through life without the benefit of hearing devices, if
he could find a way to tell them the story of his Changed World.
Then and there, he reached a decision to devote the remainder of his life to rendering useful service to the hard of hearing.
For an entire month, he carried on an intensive research, during
which he analyzed the entire marketing system of the manufacturer of
the hearing device, and created ways and means of communicating with
the hard of hearing all over the world for the purpose of sharing with
them his newly discovered “Changed World.” When this was done, he put
in writing a two- year plan, based upon his findings. When he presented
the plan to the company, he was instantly given a position, for the
purpose of carrying out his ambition.
Little did he dream, when he went to work, that he was destined to
bring hope and practical relief to thousands of deafened people who,
without his help, would have been doomed forever to deaf mutism.
Shortly after he became associated with the manufacturer of his
hearing aid, he invited me to attend a class conducted by his company,
for the purpose of teaching deaf mutes to hear, and to speak. I had
never heard of such a form of education, therefore I visited the class,
skeptical but hopeful that my time would not be entirely wasted. Here I
saw a demonstration which gave me a greatly enlarged vision of what I
had done to arouse and keep alive in my son’s mind the DESIRE for
normal hearing. I saw deaf mutes actually being taught to hear and to
speak, through application of the self-same principle I had used, more
than twenty years previously, in saving my son from deaf mutism.
Thus, through some strange turn of the Wheel of Fate, my son, Blair,
and I have been destined to aid in correcting deaf mutism for those as
yet unborn, because we are the only living human beings, as far as I
know, who have established definitely the fact that deaf mutism can be
corrected to the extent of restoring to normal life those who suffer
with this affliction. It has been done for one; it will be done for
others.
There is no doubt in my mind that Blair would have been a deaf mute
all his life, if his mother and I had not managed to shape his mind as
we did. The doctor who attended at his birth told us, confidentially,
the child might never hear or speak. A few weeks ago, Dr. Irving
Voorhees, a noted specialist on such cases, examined Blair very
thoroughly. He was astounded when he learned how well my son now hears,
and speaks, and said his examination indicated that “theoretically,
the boy should not be able to hear at all.” But the lad does hear,
despite the fact that X-ray pictures show there is no opening in the
skull, whatsoever, from where his ears should be to the brain.
When I planted in his mind the DESIRE to hear and talk, and live as a
normal person, there went with that impulse some strange influence
which caused Nature to become bridge-builder, and span the gulf of
silence between his brain and the outer world, by some means which the
keenest medical specialists have not been able to interpret. It would
be sacrilege for me to even conjecture as to how Nature performed this
miracle. It would be unforgivable if I neglected to tell the world as
much as I know of the humble part I assumed in the strange experience.
It is my duty, and a privilege to say I believe, and not without reason,
that nothing is impossible to the person who backs DESIRE with
enduring FAITH.
Verily, a BURNING DESIRE has devious ways of transmuting itself into
its physical equivalent. Blair DESIRED normal hearing; now he has it!
He was born with a handicap which might easily have sent one with a
less defined DESIRE to the street with a bundle of pencils and a tin
cup. That handicap now promises to serve as the medium by which he will
render useful service to many millions of hard of hearing, also, to
give him useful employment at adequate financial compensation the
remainder of his life.
The little “white lies” I planted in his mind when he was a child,
by leading him to BELIEVE his affliction would become a great asset,
which he could capitalize, has justified itself. Verily, there is
nothing, right or wrong, which BELIEF, plus BURNING DESIRE, cannot make
real. These qualities are free to everyone. In all my experience in
dealing with men and women who had personal problems, I never handled a
single case which more definitely demonstrates the power of DESIRE.
Authors sometimes make the mistake of writing of subjects of which they
have but superficial, or very elementary knowledge. It has been my good
fortune to have had the privilege of testing the soundness of the POWER
OF DESIRE, through the affliction of my own son. Perhaps it was
providential that the experience came as it did, for surely no one is
better prepared than he, to serve as an example of what happens when
DESIRE is put to the test. If Mother Nature bends to the will of
desire, is it logical that mere men can defeat a burning desire?
Strange and imponderable is the power of the human mind! We do not
understand the method by which it uses every circumstance, every
individual, every physical thing within its reach, as a means of
transmuting DESIRE into its physical counterpart. Perhaps science will
uncover this secret. I planted in my son’s mind the DESIRE to hear and
to speak as any normal person hears and speaks. That DESIRE has now
become a reality. I planted in his mind the DESIRE to convert his
greatest handicap into his greatest asset. That DESIRE has been
realized. The modus operandi by which this astounding result was
achieved is not hard to describe. It consisted of three very definite
facts; first, I MIXED FAITH with the DESIRE for normal hearing, which I
passed on to my son. Second, I communicated my desire to him in every
conceivable way available, through persistent, continuous effort, over a
period of years. Third, HE BELIEVED ME!
As this chapter was being completed, news came of the death of Mme.
Schuman-Heink. One short paragraph in the news dispatch gives the clue
to this unusual woman’s stupendous success as a singer. I quote the
paragraph, because the clue it contains is none other than DESIRE.
Early in her career, Mme. Schuman-Heink visited the director of the
Vienna Court Opera, to have him test her voice. But, he did not test it.
After taking one look at the awkward and poorly dressed girl, he
exclaimed, none too gently, “With such a face, and with no personality
at all, how can you ever expect to succeed in opera? My good child, give
up the idea. Buy a sewing machine, and go to work. YOU CAN NEVER BE A
SINGER.”
Never is a long time! The director of the Vienna Court Opera knew
much about the technique of singing. He knew little about the power of
desire, when it assumes the proportion of an obsession. If he had known
more of that power, he would not have made the mistake of condemning
genius without giving it an opportunity. Several years ago, one of my
business associates became ill. He became worse as time went on, and
finally was taken to the hospital for an operation. Just before he was
wheeled into the operating room, I took a look at him, and wondered how
anyone as thin and emaciated as he, could possibly go through a major
operation successfully. The doctor warned me that there was little if
any chance of my ever seeing him alive again. But that was the DOCTOR’S
OPINION. It was not the opinion of the patient. Just before he was
wheeled away, he whispered feebly, “Do not be disturbed, Chief, I will
be out of here in a few days.” The attending nurse looked at me with
pity. But the patient did come through safely. After it was all over,
his physician said, “Nothing but his own desire to live saved him. He
never would have pulled through if he had not refused to accept the
possibility of death.”
I believe in the power of DESIRE backed by FAITH, because I have
seen this power lift men from lowly beginnings to places of power and
wealth; I have seen it rob the grave of its victims; I have seen it
serve as the medium by which men staged a comeback after having been
defeated in a hundred different ways; I have seen it provide my own son
with a normal, happy, successful life, despite Nature’s having sent him
into the world without ears.
How can one harness and use the power of DESIRE? This has been
answered through this, and the subsequent chapters of this book. This
message is going out to the world at the end of the longest, and
perhaps, the most devastating depression America has ever known. It is
reasonable to presume that the message may come to the attention of
many who have been wounded by the depression, those who have lost their
fortunes, others who have lost their positions, and great numbers who
must reorganize the ir plans and stage a comeback. To all these I wish
to convey the thought that all achievement, no matter what may be its
nature, or its purpose, must begin with an intense, BURNING DESIRE for
something definite.
Through some strange and powerful principle of “mental chemistry”
which she has never divulged, Nature wraps up in the impulse of STRONG
DESIRE “that something” which recognizes no such word as impossible,
and accepts no such reality as failure.
Naopleon Hill
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