Something Wonderful is Going to Happen

December 27, 2007 by Dr. Tom
Filed under: Uncategorized 

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No charge teleseminar next Wednesday, Click on link below to check it out;

Something wonderful is going to happen…

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Christmas morning.

No other day and time can quite equal it.

Manic Monday — no

Tuesday Afternoon — makes me Moody, Blue;

Hump Day — come on, surely people aren’t so unhappy with their choice of how they spend their week that this day is a big deal;

Thursday — doesn’t even have a song or famous reference (unless you count Monday Thursday, a Christian day, but even at that Thursday needs another day in it to make it special);

While I’ve been around enough to know that not everyone has a positive association with Christmas morning, I’m going to run with it anyway.

Christmas morning, whether you’re focused on Jesus or Santa, is exciting.

It’s about anticipation — something wonderful is going to happen.

Just what is a matter of “who”s perspective you take…

“All the Who girls and boys wake bright and early, they’ll rush for their toys and then all the noise! Oh, the Noise!
Oh, the Noise! Noise! Noise!”

(although my four year old was more excited about his favorite girl friend coming later in the day than Santa, the main point I’m spinning here is anticipation,
excitement.)

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Imagination is the key.

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Kids and others are imagining what Christmas morn will be like, what will happen, what they’ll get. They don’t know for sure how it will go (and it may not actually go so well), but they are imagining great things.

And as a result of this imagining they are excited. Lots of positive energy flowing.

But what about the other 364 days? No doubt there will be some good ones — the calendar makers schedule in some look-forward-to-able days each year, so we get those automatically.

Why limit the positive use of imagination to Christmas and a few other days?

We all use our imagination each day — just not deliberately. Too often we imagine how bad things will be.

When you imagine how bad things will be, you feel bad and maximize the chances of things going badly.

When you imagine how good things could be, you feel excited, get in a good mood, and are tougher to upset.

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I don’t think it’s possible to not imagine what’s coming in the future.

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Since for the most part we can choose what we imagine, it comes to a matter of choice.

When I create my day deliberately by imagining my getting what I want, I feel good, perform well, and stay focused.

When I surrender my consciousness, go on auto-pilot and get caught up in whatever the day sends me, I ride the Results Roller Coaster up and down.

Homework: Deliberately do something that makes you feel good each morning. Start your day with a healthly “emotional breakfast” and see how the rest of the day unfolds.

Tom
Dr. Tom Hanson

p.s. There’s so much going on here (I’m very excited) that I’m going to host a no charge teleseminar next week Wednesday to explain it all.

I will teach you the best tool I’ve ever found for enhancing performance.

We will do it live on the phone.

I’m imagining it helping you 1/10 as much as it has helped me and that’s exciting.

There’s a good chance you’ll be playing against this tool this year, I doubt you want to play your season at an unnecessary disadvantage.

Click here to get the details and start looking forward to it…
http://www.BaseballConfidence.com/Jan2.html

p.p.s. It’s nearing last call for my one day intensive Mental Training Camp. January 5 in Clearwater, FL. We’ll be going outside most of the day on the Phillies old spring training site. Click here for details:
http://www.BaseballConfidence.com/bootcamp.html
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