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The Reader’s Digest Version of How Your Mind Functions ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

As you are probably aware, your brain functions a lot like a computer. Well...that’s kind of an understatement. Actually, your brain is a lot more sophisticated than any computer ever slapped together. Do you know how many storage units are contained in that six-inch square on top of your shoulders? Ten billion! That’s billion with a B. In order to construct a computer as comprehensive and sophisticated as your brain, it has been estimated by cybernetic experts that a company like IBM would need a storage compartment as big as the Empire State Building to house it and enough electricity to light up New York City for a week to run it for an hour. It’s mind-boggling (pun intended) when you think about it. Here is something else you may find interesting. Brain researchers estimated that even the most accomplished men of our time, guys like Einstein, Michelangelo, Bill Gates and Stephen Hawking don’t use a fraction of their brain’s potential. “If man used the full potential of his brain,” says Dr. Steven Burnhart, a leading neuro-physiologist, “he would most likely cross the parameters of mortality. He would become godlike.” Now that’s certainly a provocative thought. Anyway, if we accept the mind-computer analogy (and there is a prolific amount of neuro-physiological research that indicates that we should accept it), then we must also accept the major premise governing the science of cybernetics. Briefly and simply, that premise states that computer performance is directly related to computer input. In other words, our brain and/or computer will respond directly to the way it has been programmed. If we fill our brain with positive, happy thoughts, we will respond in direct proportion to that programming. In essence, we will tend to be positive and happy. Conversely, if we bombard our brains with negative thoughts, we will respond negatively. It’s the old garbage-in garbage-out principal. Of course, if we respond directly to the way our brain has been programmed, it would only make sense that we would want to program our brains in a positive manner. The obvious question then is, “How do you program a human computer?” That’s easy. It works the same way IBM’s computers work. In case you didn’t know, computer language is actually a complex series of electrical circuits. At the input terminal of a computer (the keyboard), words are typed into the machine. The computer then converts the input into an electrical current and circulates it through its memory banks. The typed “input,” now an electrical current, is then modified by the attitudes and responses that have been previously programmed into the computer. After the incoming information is processed, it is sent to the output terminal (screen) where it is once again converted into words and numbers. Guess what! That’s exactly how your brain and nervous system work. In fact, IBM stole the whole idea from God. That’s right! They used the brain that God gave us as their prototype. Talk about copyright infringements. Here’s how it all went down. A couple of those brainy people at IBM noticed that human beings receive incoming information from their various senses…human input terminals such as eyes, ears, nose, hands, feet, etc and etc. They then discovered that all of this incoming information…feelings, words, sensations…are converted into electrical current and circulated through the nervous system and/or the brain. The attitudes and responses that have been previously programmed into the brain then modify the electrical current and/or incoming information. It is then sent to the output terminals (lips, tongue, vocal chords, hands and feet) where it is converted into actions. Sound familiar? Remember we told you that IBM stole the idea. Those brainy people looked at the human brain and said, “We can do that!” And they did, but only not as well. Of course, the important point of all this is that the brain is a highly complex computer that is programmed by words, thoughts and actions.


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