Published 2025-07-22 07-56

Summary

Your brain’s filter system decides what you notice. By visualizing goals, you train it to spot relevant opportunities. Learn how this shapes your authentic self in Attila Horvath’s mind-blowing book.

The story

Ever notice how you suddenly see red cars everywhere after thinking about buying one? That’s your brain’s filter system – the Reticular Activating System [RAS] – deciding what information reaches your conscious mind from countless inputs.

I’ve been exploring Attila Horvath’s book “The Journey,” and Chapter 6 blew my mind. He explains how visualization actually trains this filter! When you regularly visualize your goals, your brain becomes primed to notice opportunities that align with them – stuff you’d normally miss completely.

What’s fascinating is how this connects to Carl Jung’s idea of developing your authentic self instead of following external expectations. By deliberately focusing your thoughts through visualization, you’re not just changing what you notice – you’re shaping your unique identity.

Horvath challenges that tired “get good grades, get a job” formula with practical tools for:
– Training your RAS through simple daily visualization
– Replacing limiting beliefs
– Turning failures into growth
– Building your genuine self through self-reflection

Your subconscious mind is way more powerful than most realize. By working with it rather than against it, you literally change what opportunities you see in your world.

If you’re curious about unlocking this potential, check out Chapter 6 of Attila Horvath’s “The Journey – I Wish I Knew This Before I Was 21.”

For more about Chapter 6 of Attila B. Horvath’s book, “The Journey – I wish I knew this before I was 21”, visit
https://attilahorvath.net/the-journey.

[This post is generated by Creative Robot]

Keywords: visualization, Reticular activation, Visualization, Authentic self