Many scientists realize the true importance of the sub mind. Edison, Marconi, Kettering, Poincare, Einstein and many others have used the subconscious mind. It has given them the insight and the “know-how” for all
their great achievements in modern science and industry. Research has
shown that the ability to bring into action the subconscious power has determined the success of all the great scientific and research workers.
An instance of how a famous chemist, Fredrich von Stradonitz, used his
subconscious mind to solve his problem is as follows: He had been working laboriously for a long time trying to rearrange the six carbon and the
six hydrogen atoms on the benzine formula, and he was constantly perplexed and unable to solve the matter. Tired and exhausted, he turned
the request over completely to his subconscious mind. Shortly afterward,
as he was about to board a London bus, his subconscious presented his
conscious mind with a sudden flash of a snake biting its own tail and turning around like a pinwheel. This answer, from his subconscious mind, gave
him the long sought answer of the circular rearrangement of the atoms
that is known as the benzine ring.
Nikola Tesla was a brilliant electrical scientist who brought forth the most
amazing innovations. When an idea for a new invention came into his
mind, he would build it up in his imagination, knowing that his subconscious mind would reconstruct and reveal to his conscious mind all the
parts needed for its manufacture in concrete form. Through quietly contemplating every possible improvement, he spent no time in correcting
defects and was able to give the technicians the perfect product of his
mind.
He said, “Invariably, my device works as I imagined it should. In twenty
years there has not been a single exception.
Professor Agassiz, a distinguished American naturalist, discovered the indefatigable activities of his subconscious mind while he slept. The following has been reported by his widow in her biography of her famous husband.
“He had been for two weeks striving to decipher the somewhat obscure
impression of a fossil fish on the stone slab in which it was preserved.
Weary and perplexed, he put his work aside at last, and tried to dismiss it
from his mind. Shortly after, he waked one night persuaded that while
asleep he had seen his fish with all the missing features perfectly re stored. But when he tried to hold and make fast the image it escaped
him. Nevertheless, he went early to the Jardin des Plantes, thinking that
on looking anew at the impression he should see something which would
put him on the track of his vision. In vain the blurred record was as black
as ever. The next night he saw the fish again, but with no more satisfactory result when he awoke it disappeared from his memory as before. Hoping that the same experience might be repeated, on the third night he
placed a pencil and paper beside the bed before going to sleep.
“Accordingly, toward morning the fish reappeared in his dream, confusedly at first, but at last with such distinctness that he had no longer any
doubt as to its zoological characters. Still half dreaming, in perfect darkness, he traced these characters on the sheet of paper at the bedside. In
the morning he was surprised to see in his nocturnal sketch features
which he thought it impossible the fossil itself should reveal. He hastened
to the Jardin des Plantes, and, with his drawing as a guide, succeeded in
chiseling away the surface of the stone under which portions of the fish
proved to be hidden. When wholly exposed it corresponded with his
dream and his drawing, and he succeeded in classifying it with ease.”
Some years ago I received clipping from a magazine describing the origin
of the discovery of insulin. This is the essence of the article as I recall it.
About forty years ago or more, Dr Frederick Banting, a brilliant Canadian
physician and surgeon, was concentrating his attention on the ravages of
diabetes. At that time medical science offered not effective method of arresting the disease. Dr Banting spent considerable time experimenting
and studying the international literature on the subject. One night he was
exhausted and fell asleep. While asleep, his subconscious mind instructed
him to extract eh residue from the degenerated pancreatic duct of dogs.
This was the origin of insulin which has helped millions of people.
You will note that Dr Banting had been consciously dwelling on the problem for some time seeking a solution, a way out, and his subconscious responded accordingly.
It does not follow that you will always get an answer overnight. The answer may not come for some time. Do not be discouraged. Keep on turning the problem over every night to the subconscious mind prior to sleep,
as if you had never done it before.
One of the reasons for the delay may be that you look upon it as a major
problem. You may believe it will take a long time to solve it.
Your subconscious mind is timeless and spaceless. Go to sleep believing
you have the answer no. do not postulate the answer in the future. Have an abiding faith in the outcome. Become convinced now as you read this
book that there is an answer and a perfect solution for you.
Dr Lothax von Blenk-Schmidt, a member of the Rocket Society and an
outstanding research electronic engineer, gives the following condensed
summary of how he used his subconscious mind to free himself from certain death at the hands of brutal guards in a Russian prison camp coal
mine. He states as follows:
“I was a prisoner of war in a coal mine in Russia, and I saw men dying all
around me in that prison compound. We were watched over by brutal
guards, arrogant officers and sharp, fast thinking commissars. After a
short medical checkup, a quota of coal was assigned to each person. My
quota was three hundred pounds per day. In case any man did not fill his
quota, his small food ration was cut down, and in a short time he was
resting in the cemetery.
“I started concentrating on my escape. I knew that my subconscious mind
would somehow find a way. My home in Germany was destroyed, my family wiped out, all my friends and former associates were either killed in
the war or were in concentration camps.
“I said to my subconscious mind, I want to go to Los Angeles, and you will
find the way.” I had seen pictures of Los Angeles and I remembered some
of the boulevards very well as well as some of the buildings.
“Every day and night I would imagine I was walking down Wilshire Boulevard with an American girl whom I met in Berlin prior to the war (she is
now my wife). In my imagination we would visit the stores, ride buses
and eat in restaurants. Every night I made it a special point to drive my
imaginary American automobile up and down the boulevards of Los Angeles. I made all this vivid and real. These pictures in my mind were as real
and as natural to me as one of the trees outside the prison camp.
“Every morning the chief guard would count the prisoners as they were
lined up. He would call out ‘one, two, three,’ etc., and when seventeen
was called out which was my number in sequence, I stepped aside. In the
meantime, the guard was called away for a minute or so, and on his return he started by mistake on the next man as number seventeen. When
the crew returned in the evening, the number of men was the same, and
I was not missed, and the discovery would take a long time.
“I walked out of the camp undetected and kept walking for twenty-four
hours, resting in a deserted town the next day. I was able to live by fishing and killing some wild life. I found coal trains going to Poland and trav eled on them by night, until finally I reached Poland. With the help of
friends, I made my way to Lucerne, Switzerland.
“One evening at the Palace Hotel, Lucerne, I had a talk with a man and
his wife from the United States of America. This man asked me if I would
care to be a guest at his home in Santa Monica, California. I accepted,
and when I arrived in Los Angeles, I found that their chauffeur drove me
along Wilshire Boulevard and many other boulevards which I had imagined so vividly in the long months in the Russian coal mines. I recognized
the buildings which I had seen in my mind so often. It actually seemed as
if I had been in Los Angeles before. I had reached my goal.
“I will never cease to marvel at the wonders of the subconscious mind.
Truly, it has ways we know not of.”