To have as many thoughts as possible…
April 28, 2007 By: almostgotit Category: books, business, writing, humor, thought, encouragement, employment, writersMaybe Jim Fannin is just being hyperbolic when he suggests that switching our brains to “off” is the only way we can succeed (”wildly”) at business.
If so, then I suppose the next thing to do is to decide how damaging “thought” really is, not just to those trying to start their own businesses, but to the rest of us (almost) working stiffs, as well.
Of course it is bad to obsess over non-essentials; cogitate over unchangable things in our past; or worry about things over which we have no control.
But is “thought” itself really such a barrier to action, 99.99% of the time, as Fannin suggests? After all, in the previous century, Sigmund Freud wrote that “thought is action in rehearsal.” And a few hundred years before Freud was born, Philippus Aureolus Paracelsus opined that “thoughts create a new heaven, a new firmament, a new source of energy, from which new arts flow.” Mr. Paracelsus was considered inflammatory in his own time, too. He tended to reject the traditional theories of his learned colleagues, and preferred to write in everyday German instead of in snooty Latin like the rest of them.
I like this guy.
Annie Besant, the 19th century women’s rights activist, writer and orator believed “thought creates character.” Her priest told her that she had read too many books. And suggested she shut up.
Fortunately, she ignored him.
A few years later, James Allen wrote the classic self-help book, As a Man Thinketh, which you can download here for free. Allen believed that “right thoughts and right efforts will inevitably bring about right results,” and “you are today where your thoughts have brought you; you will be tomorrow where your thoughts take you.”
Some credit James Allen’s book with making many other men into millionaires.
Henry Ford said that “thinking is the hardest work there is, which is the probable reason so few engage in it,” and Henry Ford didn’t do half badly at either starting a business or making a living, did he?
Therefore, I submit that going on a “thought diet” is not the best way to assure a succesful career. But even if it is the best way, I’m not going to do it.
It was another old dead guy, Montaigne, who wrote: “The pleasantest things in the world are pleasant thoughts: and the great art of life is to have as many of them as possible.”
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Related Posts:
In defense of thoughts (part 1)
To have as many thoughts as possible (part 2)
The size of thoughts (part 3)



