ATTRACT PROSPERITY - 3. DRIVING AWAY PROSPERITY - Orison Swett Marden Podcast Por  arte de portada

ATTRACT PROSPERITY - 3. DRIVING AWAY PROSPERITY - Orison Swett Marden

ATTRACT PROSPERITY - 3. DRIVING AWAY PROSPERITY - Orison Swett Marden

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PROSPERITY – How to Attract It - Chapter 3. DRIVING AWAY PROSPERITY - Orison Swett Marden - HQ Full Book. In Chapter 3: Driving Away Prosperity, Orison Swett Marden delivers a powerful and sobering exploration of how mental attitudes, particularly those centered around poverty and limitation, actively repel the very prosperity that so many strive to achieve. This chapter is a call to conscious mental reform. It challenges readers to recognize the destructive power of negative thinking, especially thoughts steeped in fear, lack, doubt, and limitation. Marden opens with a sharp reminder: “As long as you hold the poorhouse thought you are heading toward the poorhouse.” This phrase encapsulates the central theme of the chapter—that one’s habitual thought patterns shape one’s material reality. He insists that no matter how hard a person works, if their mind is saturated with poverty thoughts and imagery, they are driving away the very prosperity they seek. This is not merely metaphorical. To Marden, thoughts are magnetic forces—mental seeds—which, when planted consistently, yield harvests in kind. A mind sowing thistles of fear and lack cannot reap the golden wheat of abundance. He illustrates this truth through a poignant anecdote of a man who believed he was destined to remain poor simply because his ancestors were. Despite his hard work, he could not rise above bare subsistence. His expectations had become convictions, and those convictions shaped his reality. Marden argues that this man’s plight was not the result of fate or external injustice, but of the mental walls he had built around himself—walls reinforced daily by fear, hopelessness, and resignation. A significant portion of the chapter is devoted to exposing the paralyzing effect of the “poverty thought.” Marden observes that masses of people remain in financial distress not because of inherent inability or systemic oppression, but because they carry mental habits of defeat and expectation of lack. He references the biblical line, “the destruction of the poor is their poverty,” interpreting it as a reflection of mental and spiritual poverty, not just material want. He emphasizes that poverty is not simply a condition—it is a belief system, a habitual mental outlook that closes the doors to prosperity. In vivid detail, he describes how people living in poverty often fixate on their misfortunes, talking endlessly about their “bad luck,” their “hard lives,” and how society is against them. These individuals, Marden says, think of themselves as victims rather than victors. Their lives reflect what they consistently dwell upon in thought and speech. They unknowingly repel prosperity by declaring themselves unworthy or incapable of it, often through their appearance, attitudes, and surroundings. Just as an untidy, neglected environment signals mental disarray, a slovenly exterior often mirrors a consciousness filled with poverty. Marden further explains that the creative power of thought is relentless and impartial. Whether you consistently think prosperity or poverty, the universe will bring forth experiences aligned with your dominant mental state. He compares this to the laws of agriculture: one cannot sow wild oats and expect to harvest wheat. Similarly, you cannot expect abundance while thinking in terms of scarcity. This is a stern warning that positive effort alone cannot override a persistently negative mindset. Action, to be fruitful, must be aligned with belief and expectation. The chapter also addresses the common inconsistency many face: treating or praying for prosperity while simultaneously thinking thoughts of lack and doubt. Marden argues that faith—not willpower—is the true engine behind success. Willpower is rendered ineffective when conviction runs counter to it. If someone believes deep down that they are destined for failure or poverty, their belief will win out regardless of effort. The subconscious mind—powered by belief and conviction—will always guide behavior and outcomes in accordance with its dominant impressions. What makes Marden’s argument particularly compelling is its urgency and its insistence on radical responsibility. He does not deny the existence of hardship, but he insists that the pathway out of it is internal. He advocates for a total shift in self-perception: to dress, act, think, and speak as if one is already in the flow of abundance. He encourages readers to look up and think up, to keep their thoughts attuned to abundance, prosperity, health, and success. This alignment, he claims, opens the mind to the cosmic ocean of supply that surrounds every individual. Marden employs metaphors to drive home his points. For instance, he likens humans to fish swimming in an ocean of supply. Just as there is no shortage of water for the fish, there is no shortage of prosperity for the human being—only a closed or fearful mind keeps one from receiving it....
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