Title: IMAGINE THAT: PLAYING WITH THE POWER OF IMAGINATION
Author: Tamara Dorris
Publisher: Createspace
Pages: 190
Genre: Self-Help/Spiritual
Author: Tamara Dorris
Publisher: Createspace
Pages: 190
Genre: Self-Help/Spiritual
From rock-solid science to centuries-old scripture, we’ve been told
our thoughts and emotions matter, and may even be indicators of our
future. In this book, Tamara Dorris shows you that the real key to
navigating your way to a new reality rests in your almost-dormant
imagination. She points out that we’re all using our imaginations
anyway, but most of us are using them to conjure up the worst instead of
designing the best.
With wit, humor, and sass Tamara shares how anyone can learn to use their imagination in a more productive, profitable, and effective way.
The second half of the book is a 33-Day Challenge, including daily lessons and journaling exercises to help solidify and apply the age-old, as well as scientifically new ideas presented in the first section of the book. Be prepared to have your mind a little bit blown, your “mean monkey” a little bit riled up, and start intentionally creating your life with excitement and intention!
With wit, humor, and sass Tamara shares how anyone can learn to use their imagination in a more productive, profitable, and effective way.
The second half of the book is a 33-Day Challenge, including daily lessons and journaling exercises to help solidify and apply the age-old, as well as scientifically new ideas presented in the first section of the book. Be prepared to have your mind a little bit blown, your “mean monkey” a little bit riled up, and start intentionally creating your life with excitement and intention!
Introduction
“Imagination will often carry us to worlds that never
were. But without it we go nowhere.”
Carl Sagan
Let’s
imagine a house. There it is, sitting on the street just being a house. Got it?
Okay, now imagine you took the roof off. Is it still a house? What about if you
took the walls down? I’m not asking you if it has “house potential,” I’m asking
you if it’s still a house. Now what about if you took all the sticks and stucco
down, and bulldozed the whole mess away. No house, right?
Then
let’s go back to square one since that’s the whole idea here. A person had an
idea of a house. Next, he hired an architect to draw out the house (with me so
far?), and then after all the permits and politics, the ground is finally
broken. Then with time and red tape, the foundation is poured, then the sticks
and stucco and eventually, the “For Sale” sign goes in the yard (my favorite
part). The question really is this: when did it become a house? Wasn’t the
idea/image in the builder’s mind already a house? Didn’t he simply convey that
image to the guy who drew it? And weren’t the tractor operators and
construction workers just carrying out that original image?
You
see, in “reality” our reality is but a reflection of what has already been
“real” in another realm; or our imagination. Now if that’s too farfetched for
you, don’t worry; I do not and will not rattle on about bending reality in
weird ways, but it may interest you to know that quantum physics is the basis
for that statement. And not coincidentally, even spiritual teachings like the
Bible have my back. But let’s be clear. I can’t just imagine a house in my head
and then have it pop up out of nowhere and appear on my street tomorrow (but
what a fun way to freak out the neighbors, right?). We have to do things to
make things happen. My point is merely to make you aware that anything and
everything you are seeing in the material world right now first started as a
thought. The thought alone starts the wheels of creation even though we may see
no sign of it in the “real” world.
It’s
no secret or surprise that most (winning) athletes and Olympians mentally
rehearse their victory before it really happens. They imagine the jump, the
bell, the whatever-their-sport is until it’s so real they can actually hear the
roar of the crowd and the sound of the popping champagne bottle (I’m not
positive about that last part, but if I ever get a gold medal you can bet
there’ll be some bubbly).
Likewise
surgeons, musicians, and other performers mentally rehearse their successes.
Many military programs now use virtual reality to help soldiers imagine with
their five senses what a specific experience would be like. Same with
astronauts and pilots that use simulation experiences. The people in the make-shift
shuttle are actually being spun around ridiculously fast. The Navy divers are
really being dropped into below freezing-your-ass-off water and deprived of
oxygen. While none of the latter sounds like a day in the park to me, the point
to glean from these painful parties is that some situations require such
attentive imagination, that we’ve got to throw in some physical components to
make it even more real so when it is
real, fewer people will freak out and not know what to do when shit hits the
fan.
Fortunately,
most of us aren’t heading off to Mars or deep sea diving for missiles anytime
soon. We are going to use our beautiful brains in ways that bring us what we
want—but honestly, if you have to use your imagination to solve a not-so-fun
circumstance, the practice I teach you in this book will come in handy too. So
let’s first ask ourselves what imagination is.
The
occipital lobe is located in the back of your brain (visual cortex) and your
parietal lobe lies above that. Obviously the visual cortex is what allows you
to “see” inside your mind (as well as outside in your world) and the parietal
lobe is responsible for the sensory parts of your experiences. In a recent
study it was suggested that when you are looking at something, the image of it
goes to your occipital lobe, up to your parietal lobe. But the study indicated
that when people visualize, the image starts in the partial lobe and flows down
to the occipital. While the researchers aren’t certain what that means, I
suspect it’s the brain’s simple way of telling itself whether something has hit
our physical reality yet, or if it’s still in the planning stages of our mental
rehearsal, but interestingly, it’s all happening in the same region of the
brain.
In
other words, your memory recall and future imaginings use the exact same parts
of the brain. Think about that for a minute. When you’re remembering the
birthday cake your Aunt Betsy made you when you were five, you’re activating
the same mechanism in your head as when you are imagining yourself getting new
hardwood floors. This has powerful implications that we’ll continue to touch
on, but for now just recognize that your brain treats an imagined event very
much as if it were a real memory.
An
important point to remember is the difference between visualization and
imagination. Note that we all possess a tiny gland in our brain called the
pineal. Ancient teachings have always called it the third eye. When you simply
visualize an image in your brain, you’re likely just seeing a quick picture without
emotion. However, when you close your eyes and really feel a moving picture, in
your imagination, you may be activating this little guy in ways that science
still doesn’t fully understand…but when used properly, it’s in a good way.
The
pineal gland is shaped like a baby pinecone and lets us know when it’s time to
wake up or go night-night. It does this by releasing serotonin (the daytime
neurotransmitter) when it detects daylight, and by releasing melatonin (the
nighttime chemical) when it’s dark. Some scientists—and virtually all spiritual
teachers and sages—say that this little pinecone in our heads is our “God
gland.” In other words, it’s how we connect to infinite intelligence. The
trouble is that most of us have our third-eye closed (wake-up, little guy!).
The more relaxed we can become when we’re envisioning our future self, the more
our imaginations kicks quantum ass.
So
just how powerful is your imagination? Ever hear of the Placebo effect? While
we can attribute a safe moon landing or an Olympic gold medal to persistence,
practice, and training, when it comes to indisputable placebo studies, we got
no excuses. What I mean by that is you can’t have cancer one day that every
single “fact” proves is incurable and then heal it with a sugar pill, right? If this was a now and then kind of thing, I
may be skeptical too, but the number of documented cases, in spite of modern
medicine not being a big fan of it, far outweigh any hocus pocus or wishful
thinking. So let’s look at how this works. A patient with a problem—and it
could be anything—is given a pill that contains no healing properties
whatsoever. The good doctor in the study who usually doesn’t know which pill is
the real deal and which is nothing—so he can’t taint the results (more on that
later)—tells the patient this new miracle cure (or whatever) has been having
phenomenal success. The patient takes the pill and quite often heals (to at
least some extent).
Those
who heal didn’t do anything differently than the one who didn’t heal, with one
small exception: the self-healers believed
the doctor was telling the truth so their subconscious minds “imagined” they
would be well, and they were. So what happened to the others? Let’s face it,
sometimes people feel like they have nothing to live for or maybe they didn’t
like or trust the doctor, or importantly, they genuinely didn’t believe healing
was possible. I will add that when people are in immense pain, it can be
exceedingly difficult to even begin
to imagine themselves well, and in some sad cases, I’m sure the poor patients
have already been using their imagination in the reverse way—mentally planning
their failure to heal, often with the powerful emotion of fear. Emotions are
the octane that fuels our imaginations.
In
other placebo studies, patients who “needed” knee replacement surgery were
taken to the operating room, sedated, and sliced and stitched at the knee cap.
Clearly in these cases the doctors knew who was who. I don’t know about you,
but I’d be pissed if someone performed pretend surgery on me. Anyway, in most
of those cases, the non-knee replacement folks were up playing shuffle board
with all the real knee replacement people in no time. Okay, I really don’t know
if there was any shuffle board involved in these studies, but you get the
point: the placebo effect works because our brains are (usually always)
perfectly capable of curing our bodies when given the proper direction and
permission, backed by belief.
So if
most people can cure or heal themselves, why don’t they? Well, remember that
the placebo effect includes a doctor (authority) telling you that you will
heal. So like a good trooper, you follow orders—or I should say, your
subconscious mind does—and you get busy getting better. This is not to say a
person cannot do this without a doctor, as I know firsthand.
When
I was very ill with a debilitating disease, it was hard to imagine being
healthy. In and out of ICU a few times over the years, and once in a hospital
bed for six weeks, the doctors had no faith in my recovery. They told me I
couldn’t heal unless I left some pretty important body parts behind; parts that
people can’t really do without. Clearly it was not within my capacity to focus
on anything but pain, weakness, and fear. But I knew that’s exactly what I had
to do. Against medical warning (and some family member’s wishes) I left the
hospital to heal at home. Now I’m not going to lie. It was very tough to fully
embrace my imagination when my emaciated body was practically down to skin and
bones and I could barely get out of bed without help. Yet every day I would lay
there and see myself being healthy and happy...running around with the kids,
laughing, and having fun. When you are that sick, even something as simple as
driving a car seems impossible, but I would see myself driving the kids through
Taco Bell (I know, but I was
literally starving so work with me here).
It
was a long healing process, but my body didn’t get in that condition overnight,
so it took a little while to fix it. Of course I supplemented my imagining
health with other holistic measures, but only through my mental fortitude did I
even discover those. The point is, there was no sugar pill outside of my own
determined, persistent imagination. I convinced my brain that I was happy and
healthy until it believed me and started whatever miraculous process it did to
have me sitting here today, telling you how freaking amazing your own
imagination is.
The
issue for many of us is that we often feel like we’re at the mercy of the
medical industry and we’ve long but given up self-healing efforts. Plus, people
get scared when they are very ill, not to mention how hard it is to imagine
yourself happy and healthy with tubes sticking out of your arms and pain
wracking your body. And while the premise of this book is not focused on
healing anything beyond hangovers(drink water), I will enthusiastically point you to the book
by Dr. Joe Dispenza called, You Are the
Placebo. This will help your skeptical brain understand way more of the
science behind all this so you can start to heal yourself...and then apply all
of the information in this book to
get busy getting better too. But let’s get back to the positive aspects of your
brain and how you can use it to imagine whatever your heart desires.
Neuroscience
tells us (and this has to do with our occipital lobe and visual cortex) that
what we see in our external world is but an interpretation (reflection) based
on our very own belief patterns that are firmly fixed in our cute little
cortex. In other words, your outer world is mirroring your internal one. This
is why the once kind of hokey statement “You create your own reality,” is not a
hippie dippy new age adage, but rather, a pretty valid fact. Just sit with this
a minute: your imagination is the cause and your condition, the effect. The
reticular activator system of the brain “shows us” evidence of our most
frequent thoughts—even the unconscious ones that we don’t know we’re thinking
because its main job in life is to filter our external environment so that it
matches our expectation of it. Pretty scary, right?
What’s
ironically sad is that we all spend so much time and sweat equity trying to
change things in our external world, feeling like we’re banging our head
against a brick wall...and guess what? We are! Now I’m certainly not saying you
don’t have to take actions and precautions in life, so don’t go down that
rabbit hole. What I am saying though,
is that it’s like looking at your reflection in the mirror, not liking how long
your bangs are and trying to trim the mirror (careful, you’ll cut yourself!).
Let
me give you another analogy. Consider you’re at the theater to see a good love
story, but when the lights go down and those dreaded phone carrier commercials
are over, the film is actually a scary clown one (because all the clown ones are scary). Do you shoot the screen? No? Why not? Could it be because the
scary clown is not coming from the screen but merely being projected from the
little tiny window in the back of the theater you always wonder about? You’d either
change out the reel or go to another theater, but you wouldn’t blame it on the
screen. It isn’t the screen’s fault. That screen is your life and your own
imagination is the film.
Our
eyes are projectors showing us what our brains have been programmed to focus
on, and yet, we fail to recognize that we’ve got to change the movie (your
brain’s projections), not shoot holes in the screen (your external
experiences). The proverbial plot thickens when we realize that the majority of
our thoughts aren’t even in our conscious control, until we intentionally
utilize our imaginations to take the reins.
The
goal of this book is to help you put on a different reel—one that you fall in
love with over and over again. And the really great part is that YOU get to write
it, produce it, and play in it. Move over Quentin, there’s a new kid in town.
Are you ready?
Are you ready?
Book Trailer:
Tamara Lee Dorris, MA, is the author of 19 books, a long-time coach,
consultant, and adjunct college professor. She’s spent the past few
decades studying and sharing ways that people can live more fulfilling,
fun, and effective lives. She’s also an avid yogi, podcaster, and
wine-lover, committed to inspiring as many people as she can. Tamara
holds degrees in psychology and communications, is a certified
hypnotherapist and EFT practitioner, too.
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