For well over a decade my passion has been a grand spiritual journey into what I call “the physics of thought,” toward the end that a deeper knowledge of this somewhat outrageous topic might provide ways for all of us—myself in particular—to get more out of life.
My studies have taken me everywhere from learned professors of physics to deep within the esoteric sciences, from plain old medicine and just about everything in between to the point where I decided I could call myself somewhat of a lay expert on the subject. The only problem was that, knowledge or no, “getting more out of life” wasn't happening and it was beginning to tick me off. Something was missing, and I flat-out couldn't put my finger on it.
Naturally, with my vast knowledge on the subject, when I came across some new but provincial teachings from this unlettered, unscientific family of teachers, my first impulse was to pooh-pooh the information because of their enormous over-simplification of what I considered to be a rather formidable topic. So it was more than a tad begrudgingly that I agreed to investigate this taped malarkey that a well-meaning friend had ungraciously shoved in my face.
I flipped! Here I am, this learned student of thought—its magnetics, its propellant, its frequencies, its relation to emotion, its effect on our experience, etc.—and these guys come along to nonchalantly provide, in the simplest of form, the missing pieces to life's obstacles that I was beginning to think didn't exist. Sort of like, “Aaa, pardon me, Ma'am, might this be what you were looking for?”
So I dive into this information (ultimately hundreds of hours worth) and in two weeks I'm stunned, in one month I'm flabbergasted, and in ninety days there's such a turnaround in my life, I say, “That's it! I gotta write about it so the rest of the world can flip along with me.”
Now I grant you, there are probably eight and a half million books on the overworked subject of getting more out of life, but the utterly bizarre things about these little-known principles are (a) they are uncomplicated, (b) they work fast, and (c) they are guaranteed.
And so, in my own prosaic words and style I've reissued here the profoundly simple teachings from the Hicks family in Texas,* spiced with my own angles and buzzwords, my own observations and experiences over the past years, and blended it together with my years of study. I unashamedly offer the finished product as the greatest missing link to life and living ever known to mankind, which means I've done this stuff … am still doing it … and will never stop doing it … because, by damn, it works!
lynn grabhorn
*P.O. Box 690070, San Antonio, TX 78269