|
Success Through The
Eyes Of A Child
Adults, with eyes to
see, can learn so much about success in life from children.
When a baby is born,
it has instinctively in it everything needed to succeed in life. A child is
like a fresh piece of canvas, ready to become a unique contribution to the
world. A child has had less exposure to adult conditioning with regards to
behaviour and expectations. Every child has the seeds of success for life
within them. By observing children being children, adults can re-learn
principles of success that have been buried by their adult world.
As I was driving
home last week, I noticed a little boy and his mother by the side of the
road. They had stopped walking and the mother was adjusting a toy crossbow
to fit more comfortably over the boy’s shoulder. I realized that at that
moment in the heart and mind of that small boy, he was not on a sidewalk by
a busy road. Perhaps he was hunting in a forest, or was an intrepid explorer
of the unknown, ready to pull out his bow and arrows at the slightest hint
of danger. In his imagination he was a hero, confident, skilled, and brave.
He was alert, prepared, with the expectation of overcoming danger or threat
with his skill and swift reflexes.
For a child involved
in imaginative play, there is very little distinction between fantasy and
reality. Children live and play out their dreams totally in the moment.
There are many
principles of success that can be learned by looking through the eyes of a
child. Children’s eyes see with clarity and perception and reflect the
reality of who they are. Children are uncluttered by training, brainwashing,
and by living according to the unwritten rules and etiquette that have
assailed the adult mind. For a child life has limitless possibilities that
have not been squashed by logic, common sense, or limiting expectations that
become part of the adult mind.
What principle of
success can be drawn from the little boy with his bow and arrow?
One of the most
powerful and yet unused principles of success is the process of
visualization. Visualization is the act of creating compelling and vivid
pictures in your mind. This is just what the little boy was doing. He was
“that hero”; he acted like him, dressed like him, and could picture himself
in another time and another place. For him, it seemed like reality. This is
a spontaneous, natural process for a child.
Researchers have
found that visualization accelerates achievement in powerful ways. It has
been proved by research that when performing any task in life the brain uses
the same identical processes that it would if you were only vividly
visualizing that activity. The brain sees no difference at all between
visualizing something and actually doing it.
This principle also
is applicable when a person is learning something new. Visualization makes
the brain achieve more. In a study by researchers at Harvard University, it
was found that students who visualized in advance were able to perform tasks
with nearly 100 percent accuracy. Students who performed tasks without using
visualization only achieved 55 percent accuracy.
Visualization is
frequently used by Olympic and professional athletes to improve performance.
Jack Nicklaus, a
legend in the golfing world, once described how he uses visualization. “I
never hit a shot, not even in practice, without having a very sharp in-focus
picture of it in my head. It’s like a color movie. First I “see” where I
want it to finish, nice and white and sitting high on the bright green
grass. Then the scene quickly changes, and I “see” the ball going there: its
path, trajectory, and shape, even its behaviour on landing. Then there’s a
sort of fade out, and the next scene shows me making the kind of swing that
will turn the previous images into reality.” The results of the power of
visualization for Jack Nicklaus are convincing: he has won over 100
tournaments earning over 5.7 million in the process.
For a child a high
proportion of time is spent in visualization. Adults may say, “He’s only
playing” and not see the potential power for success that the child is
practicing. Visualization is a process that is naturally strong in the
learning and formative years of the child. Research now confirms that
visualization activates the creative powers of the subconscious mind. It
focuses the brain by programming its reticular activating system (RAS) to
notice available resources that were always there but previously unnoticed.
Visualization, incredibly, also magnetizes and attracts you to the people,
resources, and opportunities you need to achieve your goal.
Next time you see
children playing, pause to watch visualization in its purest form. What can
you learn and apply to your own life to accelerate and achieve greater
success using the principle of visualization?
|