
Can you remember most of the conversations you've had in your life?
Most people can't. In fact, most people can't remember their own rules and standards in the moments of life when they most need to abide by them!

That's personal development. It's managing the existence of our health, our wealth, our mind, our bodies, our spirits, our emotions, our time, our relationships, and our work. Basically, managing the existence of our life gives us a better quality of life.
You already know this, right?
At the end of most of my keynote speeches, I say:

The million dollar question is: Do we do what we know we should in the most crucial moments we need to do it?
Unfortunately, we don't remember as well as we'd like to remember. And like Plato said, “learning is remembering”.
How do you remember? (Stop, and take a moment to actually reflect on that.)

So, how do you do it – If we know, then how do we remember to do?
Practice. Patience. Faith. Becoming aware of inner mind chatter, whether through forms of meditation, cognitive behavior therapies, or our own guiding intuition, is what may trigger us to remember.

Interrupt patterns of undesired thought simply by altering the visual and audio elements of your memories. Condition yourself to speak the voice of your favorite childhood cartoon character every time you say something to yourself you wish you hadn't said. It's comical, and it works. (I chose Fred Flintstone.)
Reading a newsletter like this can be a very powerful trigger to remind you. (Which is why it's a great reason to share it with the world.) Create transformative triggers that bring you back home.

Remember that.
Always remember never to forget.

Let's love the world together...
Love,
[)anish /|hmed, blind visionary
P.S. What will you remember from reading this article? Anchor the nuggets by creating associations that work with your personality style and life preferences (e.g, notes, conversations, posts, requests, schedules, goals, and vision boards, to name a couple of paradigms).

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