Napoleon Hill - THE LAW OF SUCCESS Lesson Three - SELF-CONFIDENCE
THE LAW OF SUCCESS Lesson Three - SELF-CONFIDENCE
Napoleon Hill
Description
In this chapter of The Law of Success, Napoleon Hill argues that the real enemy of success is fear, and that self-confidence only arises when we learn to neutralize six fundamental fears: fear of poverty fear of old age fear of criticism fear of losing someone's love fear of illness fear of deathAccording to Hill, these fears are not innate but are mainly transmitted through “social inheritance”: education, religion, environment, habits, stories, and beliefs instilled by parents, school, church, and society. From childhood, we assimilate ideas and superstitions that condition us so deeply that they guide our lives without us even realizing it.The key to breaking this conditioning is autosuggestion: voluntarily filling the mind with positive thoughts, self-confidence, and a defined goal until they take root in the subconscious and become habit. Hill proposes a written formula for self-confidence to be read every day, in which we commit ourselves to believing in our abilities, defining a specific purpose, serving others with honesty, and eliminating hatred, envy, and cynicism. Through constant repetition (the power of habit), the mind “recharges” and shifts from negative to positive.
