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Ahmad Imam Square Wide Lo Rez 400.jpgtom Corley
By Tom Corley
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There is a War for Your Mind

When you change the Lens through which you view the world, your view of the world changes, forever.

The Lens I’m referring to = your Assumptions, Beliefs, and Ideologies.

When a new, unknown Truth comes along, it forever changes how you and everyone else see things.

Lense

And once that happens, you will never see things the same way, ever again.

Example

On January 7, 1610, Galileo used his telescope to observe the four largest moons in orbit around Jupiter.

He mapped the nightly position of those moons and discovered visual evidence to support Copernicus’ heliocentric, Sun-Centered theory.

While he was persecuted by the Catholic Church and put on trial for his research, his new “telescope invention” nonetheless made it possible for other “scientists” to see what Galileo saw.

And they began to confirm Galileo’s finding, en masse.

Despite the Church’s best efforts to shut down all dissent from the scientific community, the Sun-Centered view of the solar system became the new scientific Truth and forced the people in the world to change the Lens through which they viewed the solar system.

Knowledge, from whatever source, alters the Lens in which you see the world.

Those with a Closed Mind typically seek knowledge only from sources that confirm their existing assumptions, beliefs, and ideologies.

This is commonly referred to as Confirmation Bias.

Being closed-minded does you no good.

It keeps you stuck – never able to grow, improve or evolve in your thinking.

Open Mind

Those with an Open Mind seek Knowledge from ALL Sources, particularly sources they don’t necessarily align with ideologically.

This causes them some psychological discomfort because new information/facts challenge their existing view of the world.

This psychological discomfort is known as Cognitive Dissonance.

Cognitive Dissonance is good.

It forces you to learn, grow and improve.

Be very careful what content you consume.

Audit the media content you consume.

Is that content helping you grow and improve or is it simply confirming existing beliefs, assumptions, and ideologies?

Seek discomfort. That’s where growth happens.

Ahmad Imam Square Wide Lo Rez 400.jpgtom Corley
About Tom Corley Tom is a CPA, CFP and heads one of the top financial firms in New Jersey. For 5 years, Tom observed and documented the daily activities of wealthy people and people living in poverty and his research he identified over 200 daily activities that separated the “haves” from the “have nots” which culminated in his #1 bestselling book, Rich Habits – The Daily Success Habits of Wealthy Individuals. Visit the website: www.richhabits.net
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