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The
Power of Intention: Learning to Co-Create Your World Your Way
Viewing Intention from a New Perspective
In
the universe there is an immeasurable, indescribable force which
shamans call intent, and absolutely everything that exists in
the entire cosmos is attached to intent by a connecting link.
Carlos Castaneda
During
the past several years, I've been so strongly attracted to
studying intention that I've read hundreds of books by psychological,
sociological, and spiritual writers; ancient and modern scholars;
and academic researchers. My research reveals a fairly common
definition of intention as a strong purpose or aim, accompanied
by a determination to produce a desired result. People driven
by intention are described as having a strong will that won't
permit anything to interfere with achieving their inner desire.
I imagine a sort of pit-bull kind of resolve or determination.
If you're one of those people with a never-give-up attitude
combined with an internal picture that propels you toward fulfilling
your dreams, you fit this description of someone with intention.
You are, most likely, a super-achiever and probably proud of your
ability to recognize and take advantage of opportunities that
arise.
For many years I've held a similar belief about intention.
In fact, I've written and spoken often about the power of
intention being just what I've described above. Over the past
quarter of a century, however, I've felt a shift in my thinking
from a purely psychological or personal-growth emphasis, toward
a spiritual orientation where healing, creating miracles, manifesting,
and making a connection to divine intelligence are genuine possibilities.
This hasn't been a deliberate attempt to disengage from my
academic and professional background, but rather a natural evolution
that's been unfolding as I began to make more conscious contact
with Spirit. My writing now emphasizes my belief that we can find
spiritual solutions to problems by living at higher levels and
calling upon faster energies. In my mind, intention is now something
much greater than a determined ego or individual will. It's
something almost totally opposite. Perhaps this comes from shedding
many levels of ego in my own life, but I also feel the strong
influence of two sentences I read in a book by Carlos Castaneda.
In my writing life, I've often come across something in a
book that starts a thought germinating in me that ultimately compels
me to write a new book. At any rate, I read these two sentences
in Castaneda's final book, The Active Side of Infinity,
while I was waiting to have a cardiac procedure to open one clogged
artery leading into my heart that had caused a mild heart attack.
Castaneda's words were: Intent is a force that exists
in the universe. When sorcerers (those who live of the Source)
beckon intent, it comes to them and sets up the path for attainment,
which means that sorcerers always accomplish what they set out
to do.
When I read those two sentences, I was stunned by the insight
and clarity it gave me about the power of intention. Imagine that
intention is not something you do, but rather a force that exists
in the universe as an invisible field of energy! I had never considered
intention in this way before reading Castaneda's words.
I wrote those two sentences down, and then I had them printed
on a card and laminated. I carried the laminated card with me
into the catheter lab for my minor surgical procedure, and as
soon as I could, I began talking about the power of intention
to everyone who would listen. I made intention a part of every
speech I gave. I immersed myself in this idea to use it, not only
for my own healing, but to help others use the power of intention
to carry them where they're fully equipped to go. I had experienced
satori, or instant awakening, and was intent on offering this
insight to others. It had become clear to me that accessing the
power of intention relieved so much of the seemingly impossible
work of striving to fulfill desires by sheer force of will.
Since that defining moment, I've thought of the power of intention
in virtually all of my waking hours. So here it is: The Power
of Intention. I hope this book will help you view intention in
a new way and make use of it in a manner that leads you to define
yourself as Patanjali suggested more than 20 centuries ago:
Patanjali's two words, dormant forces, kick-started
me in the direction of writing about intention. Patanjali was
referring to forces that appear to be either nonexistent or dead,
and he was referring to the powerful energy a person feels when
inspired. If you've ever felt inspired by a purpose or calling,
you know the feeling of Spirit working through you. Inspired is
our word for in-spirited. I've thought long and hard about
the idea of being able to access seemingly dormant forces to assist
me at key times in my life to achieve an inner burning desire.
What are these forces? Where are they located? Who gets to use
them? Who is denied access? And why? Questions like these have
propelled me to research and write this book and subsequently
arrive at a totally new perspective of intention.
At this point, I know that intention is a force that we all have
within us.
This excerpt is taken from the new book The Power of Intention,
by Wayne W. Dyer., best-selling author of Ten Secrets for Success and
Inner Peace.It is available at all bookstores or by phone 800-654-5126.
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