In this book, beloved spiritual teacher Louise Hay reveals how you affirm and create your life experiences with every word and thought. Your beliefs are merely habitual thinking patterns, and while many of them work very well for you, others may be limiting your ability to create the very things you say you want. You need to pay attention to your thoughts so that you can begin to eliminate the ones creating experiences that you don't want.
Relax and allow Louise Hay to guide you with her most loved positive affirmations. These audible and subliminal affirmations allow you to build confidence, recognize your self-worth, and relieve anxiety and stress.
Louise Hay's morning and evening affirmations have touched millions worldwide, fostering self-healing journeys. In this remastered edition, the affirmations that usher in hope at the dawn and conclude the day with joy and contentment are enhanced with entirely new music. Louise motivates you to kickstart your day with positive affirmations, unlocking new possibilities. Later, she guides you in closing the day with gratitude, setting the stage for a deep and restful sleep. Explore all this and more in this refined Remastered edition.
Heal Your Body is a fresh and easy step-by-step guide. Just look up your specific health challenge and you will find the probable cause for this health issue and the information you need to overcome it by creating a new thought pattern.
Beloved teachers Louise Hay and Dr. Wayne W. Dyer offer guided meditations for the morning and evening. Use these meditations to generate gratitude, appreciation, and the inner power that will manifest your greatest potential.
In this inspirational audiobook, Louise L. Hay brings you 101 power thoughts and explains how each can make your life more productive and positive. You might wish to replay the thoughts that are especially meaningful to you so they can really make a lasting impression.
Another great post Louise. I am really loving this energy series. I firmly believe in your ability to change the energy in and around you by changing the thoughts you have. Positive affirmations are a big part of my life because of this and the energy around me has definitely changed since I started doing them. Thanks for the reminder about how you start your day and the intentions you put out there.
Lee:)
This is a great post, Louise! And one that I truly needed today. Lots of changes in my life right now, and sometimes those changes seem to get the best of me. But I know my thoughts are what I CAN control and that power always gets me back on track!
On Wednesday 30 August 2017, at the age of 90, Louise Hay - the powerhouse behind Hay House publishing, Hay House Radio and author of many books including the seminal "You Can Heal Your Life" passed on. Known for her positive affirmations and "power thoughts", Louise is an inspiration for many of us in the personal development world. In this article I share 23 of my favourite Louise Hay quotes.
As with so many people who go on to make a big impression in the world, Louise had a challenging childhood. Born Helen Vera Lunney in 1926 in Los Angeles, Louise was raised by her mom and violent and abusive step-father in poverty in Los Angeles. Needless to say she learned how NOT to love herself early on.
Louise experienced many traumatic events including being raped as a child, dropping out of high school, having a child just before 16 and giving her up newborn baby for adoption. Moving first to Chicago and working low-paying jobs, she eventually moved to New York and became a successful fashion model working for big names.
Then she married an English businessman who left her after 14 years of marriage for another woman, which Louise said was devastating. Shortly after her marriage fell apart, she discovered the power of positive thinking through a local church, and everything changed from there.
Louise worked with people with an HIV/Aids diagnosis during the aids crisis in the 1980s to help them look in the mirror and love themselves - no matter what. She began using positive affirmations and led workshops, learned transcendental meditation, survived "incurable" cervical cancer through a regimen of extreme self-care.
Beautiful book. You can heal your life. Excellent narration. Every one of us should read and get the benefits of her teaching. You are part of this universe. All are perfect, whole and complete.
The will power to stay alive even with problems.
Really Great lady.
"You can heal your life" was the first Louise Hay book I read, immediately upon diagnosis of an autoimmune condition I've struggled with for 34 years. After reading this, I realized that I needed to apply Louise Hay's wisdom and be brave enough to live my life. As she says, fix your thinking. Love yourself. I'm still standing!
I love the title. Many people nowadays find it hard to find inspiration due to problems they burden in life. All people should read this content to boost inspiration and motivation in life. Thank you for posting!
As Louise wrote, language is the first weapon drawn in a conflict. The film told us in the opening minutes what the Heptapods were offering. The weapon is literally drawn by the Heptapods.
Rewatching movies is a lot like understanding the Heptapods\u2019 written language. Once you understand it, you know how everything ends even before the ending arrives. You\u2019re watching the beginning again, but you\u2019re not watching it the way beginnings are intended to be watched. You\u2019re watching it unfold, but with the ending burrowed in your mind, so that you can see how the pieces fall into place instead of only looking at the puzzle upon completion. When the ending comes, it doesn\u2019t arrive as a surprise, but as an ending you\u2019ve seen coming for two hours. But you watch it again anyway. You embrace the journey. You welcome every moment of it.
I rewatch movies a lot. Arrival especially so. I saw it twice in theaters, bought it on blu-ray when it was released, and have rewatched it countless times since \u2014 once in August with my dad and again last week when I decided I wanted to write on it. After my dad and I finished, he asked me why I kept revisiting the movie.
I didn\u2019t have a good answer for him \u2014 at least I wasn\u2019t able to convey it effectively. It almost felt like I was Abbott and Costello \u2014 the two alien Heptapods sent to Montana to deal with the Americans \u2014 trying to communicate with Dr. Louise Banks, an American linguist, and Ian Donnelly, an American physicist. It\u2019s probably my favorite movie (not named Rogue One) ever, but it\u2019s not easy to explain why.
At one point in the film, Ian remarks that the Heptapods write the beginning and ending of their thoughts all at once. They don\u2019t start at the beginning and end at the end. All of it comes out in a single moment.
\\\"Imagine you wanted to write a sentence using two hands starting from either side,\u201D Ian says. \u201CYou would have to know each word you wanted to use, as well as much space they would occupy. A Heptapod can write a complex sentence in two seconds, effortlessly.\u201D
I\u2019ll be honest. This story won\u2019t be like that. Seven months after my dad asked me what it was about Arrival that kept me coming back, I still don\u2019t have a clear and concise answer to a simple question.
Arrival, directed by the great Denis Villeneuve and based on Ted Chiang\u2019s Story of Your Life, is a big movie. It\u2019s about aliens coming to Earth to save humanity and themselves. Twelve vessels arrive around the world. One hovers above Montana. Louise and Ian are tasked with figuring out why the Heptapods have come to our planet before they annihilate us or the natural instincts of the militaristic governments around the globe kick in and attempt to blast the aliens to smithereens.
In that sense, it\u2019s not a wholly original movie. Aliens coming to Earth will never be a unique movie concept. But the way Arrival approaches their arrival is unique to most movies. Most alien movies aren\u2019t this quiet.
The moments that change our lives can land with a hush. We panic and fret and cry about what might be, and then when the unthinkable finally happens, the air goes still, like you missed your own death and woke up in the tomb. Movies \u2014 especially sci-fi movies like Denis Villeneuve\u2019s Arrival \u2014 tend to get this wrong. They think every big moment is big, that when the aliens land, our heads will pound with lasers and explosions and a crashing orchestra. But Villeneuve (Prisoners, Enemy, Sicario) taps into that uncanny quiet. Here, the aliens are announced the same way many of my college classmates found out about 9/11. Linguistics professor Dr. Louise Banks (Amy Adams) walks into her lecture hall and most of her students are gone. A text message chirps, and then another, tiny squawks alerting us that the climate has changed.
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