“That’s how cheerful and cheerful I am!”
Everyone knows about the need for a positive attitude towards oneself and towards life in general. You can often hear that happy events promote health and set the mind on longevity. The common recommendation is quite popular: look in the mirror, smile and praise yourself for something.
The question arises: is it possible to influence the subconscious of a person with fixed positive emotions for medicinal purposes? Experimentally, I tried to find the answer. He began by looking at his own photographs, where he was captured laughing.
Having chosen the best one, I enlarged it and hung it on the wall at home so that it caught my eye more often. I looked at her with curiosity. There was a feeling that a new idea of myself was penetrating into my consciousness, or rather into the subconscious, albeit slowly, but here I am, it turns out, how cheerful and cheerful!
At first, I noticed a decrease in my own anxiety and took this state for granted. This, apparently, was facilitated by the emotions recorded in the photograph. But when a little over three months had passed, I suddenly noticed that all the symptoms of hereditary hypertension completely disappeared from me. This result has not left me indifferent. I remember how I then approached my photo portrait and, smiling at him, mentally said: “So this is how I am — cheerful, cheerful, and now also healthy!” At the same time, I thought: “If such a good result is achieved in three months, then what will happen in a year or two?”
Now we can safely say that the positive emotions recorded in your own photograph have firmly taken root in the mind, and this, in turn, has a tremendous impact on the entire body. Well, how could you not share such a discovery with others?
The course consists of 2 parts of 6 video lessons. View >>