Belief is a funny thing. I used to think that it was entirely
objective. The mind receives information, processes it, and creates the
appropriate belief. There is no room for choice — your beliefs depend
entirely on the information you’ve absorbed. If this were true, it would
be ridiculous to judge someone for their beliefs. After all, they have
no choice in the matter!
While I still believe that people shouldn’t be judged for beliefs,
time and reflection have reversed my opinion on the matter of choice —
all belief is rooted in choice. But why? How can something as important
as belief be subject entirely to whim?
The reason is uncertainty. Every piece of knowledge has inherent
uncertainty. Our tools for measuring and interpreting information are
inaccurate. Although some areas (like science) provide a high degree of
certainty, others (such as morals) provide virtually none. Even the most
established facts could be (and often are) proved false by new
discoveries.
Unlike knowledge, beliefs don’t have the luxury of uncertainty. You
either believe something or you don’t. In order to go from uncertain
knowledge to certain belief, the mind has to fill in the gaps. It has to
look for additional information and draw conclusions. This is where
choice is used to develop and reinforce belief. As soon as you choose to
believe something, your mind goes to work gathering information that
supports your rationale.
This is why positive beliefs are so important. It’s impossible to
know for certain if your efforts will be met with failure or success. No
matter how confident you are, it’s possible that outside forces will
ruin your plans. You make a conscious decision to believe you will
succeed or that you will fail. You can always rationalize either belief.
Consider the example of this site. If I choose to believe that SyedKhurramAali.blogspot.com will fail, I can instantly drum up a list of facts to
support that belief:
- Other sites have grown more quickly
- I started blogging 2 years too late
- I lack formal training and experience as a writer
- Many people aren’t interested in intellectual topics
- Blog traffic doesn’t monetize well
On the other hand, if I choose to believe that SyedKhurramAali.blogspot.com will succeed, I can create an equally compelling list.
- The site has several thousand subscribers
- Visitors have responded positively to the content
- Numerous articles have become popular with social media
- Traffic has grown continuously
- Blogging is gradually becoming mainstream
Every item on both lists is true, but my belief determines which set
of facts I focus on. When I lose confidence and dwell on failure, I come
up with even more facts to add to the failure list, strengthening the
failure belief. When I choose to believe in success, positive facts
emerge. The belief you choose to accept will become stronger over time
through this pattern of self reinforcement.
Believe You Will Succeed
Although positive belief doesn’t guarantee success, I doubt that success is possible without it. Not because of the belief itself, but because of the chain of thoughts and actions triggered by a positive belief. When you believe you can succeed, your mind overcomes obstacles. You solve problems creatively and are eager to take action.
Believe You Will Succeed
Although positive belief doesn’t guarantee success, I doubt that success is possible without it. Not because of the belief itself, but because of the chain of thoughts and actions triggered by a positive belief. When you believe you can succeed, your mind overcomes obstacles. You solve problems creatively and are eager to take action.
How do you control your beliefs? The key is realizing that it’s
possible. You don’t have to a slave to every thought that pops into your
head. If you want to believe you can succeed, just start doing it. When
negative thoughts enter your mind, recognize them for what they are and
discard them. Don’t be oblivious to negative feedback. Rather, use it
constructively and refuse to let it dominate you. Consciously remind
yourself of the positive and allow the negative to roll off your back.
There really isn’t a downside to believing in yourself and believing
the best about others. You may not achieve your original goal and might
get burned, but you’ll be better off than if you’d assumed the worst
from the start. Believing you will succeed will also make you happier.
Although it may be partly delusion, the same is true of the failure
belief. You have to believe in something, why not believe that your hard
work is contributing to something positive? Why not believe that your
biggest dreams are possible?
It may be idealistic but it’s preferable to cynicism.
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