Page:The Ancient Science of Numbers by Luo Clement (1908).pdf/13

 and practical application of the Science of Numbers. Important as the part of the subconscious mind may be, it is not capable, unaided, of maintaining the highest mental equilibrium. Thus, if the objective mind is given too free a rein, and is permitted to deluge the subjective mind with unhealthful, unhappy, and unsuccessful thoughts, it is inevitable that the latter will at last succumb to the attacks upon it, and disasters of some sort follow.

It is true that a man’s life and character are largely Influenced by his thoughts—as he thinks, so he is—and yet it is just as true that a man’s thoughts are materially influenced by the conditions of his life. If he is happy, and healthful, and successful in all that he undertakes; or, in other words, if his life runs smoothly along absolutely harmonious lines, it requires no effort upon his part to mould his thoughts correspondingly.