If we don’t own our minds, we’re like pawns in a game where we’re
not the player. We’re being played. Corporations, governments,
advertisers and even religions (oops, I said it) have gone to great lengths to
control your mind. Sometimes their tactics are obvious, but most of the time
they are downright sneaky.
If we want to ensure that we’re living for ourselves and not
serving some corporation’s agenda, we have to put on our mental armor. We have
to arm our minds so we can first know when there is an assault on our
sovereignty.
Here are 10 tools you can use to avoid brainwashing and retain the ownership of your mind:
The
media uses many different tools and angles to sensationalize things that aren’t
inherently sensational. “Experts generally agree” can mean a community college
professor and “recent surveys find” can mean the polling of 10 people.
Be
wary of any claims where the sources aren’t explicitly stated. (See this
article for understanding media spin.)
Have
you ever noticed that the most genuinely talented people don’t feel the need to
convince you of their ability? If something is authentically awesome, it
advertises itself.
All hype isn’t necessarily bad, but having some man scream at you
about the amazing cleaning power of OxyClean is most likely an attempt to scare
you into believing something.
This
approach is most popular among the military. This is for an obvious reason: to
make you conform and adhere to the purpose of the larger whole. On one hand, I
understand why they have to do what they do. But on the other, I am wary of any
group the discourages questioning the command. If you don’t think the purpose
of your troop’s mission ethical, sorry, you don’t get an opinion. If you don’t
agree with the chain of command, too bad.
Sometimes we think there is no other choice but to follow the
leader with our heads down. But if we just look a little further, there’s
usually another way we didn’t see before.
Surveys and statistics are often skewed to support the agenda of
the presenter. Just because a survey says something, doesn’t mean you have to
believe it. Even if it’s from a reputable source, keep in mind that everyone
has an agenda. Even Green Peace. Even Obama. Even your mom.
Advertisers have cleverly discovered that they can sell you
something much easier if it’s associated with a certain lifestyle. A Mercedes
equals luxury and high class; a Jeep means you’re rugged and adventurous. Cut
through the BS. You define the way you live; your lifestyle doesn’t define you.
The word “authority” derives from the word author, which simply
means the one who originated the idea. It doesn’t mean they are right, or that
they are the end of the line. Get as many different opinions as possible before
making a decision and trust your common sense.
Have
you ever noticed that extremely enthusiastic people have an uncanny ability to
sway others? Their unshakeable certainty lures others into follow them, simply
because they don’t have a strong opinion one way or the other. If you don’t
know, don’t let someone else’s certainty force you to make a choice. Do your
own research and come to your own conclusion.
Follow your gut/intuition. If you think something’s shady, chances
are it is. Your mind will usually want to prolong making a decision until it
gets all the facts straight. You’ll usually find that after you’ve sorted
everything out your gut was right all along. Save yourself some time and trust
yourself.
Following the crowd is fine if you’re making that choice
consciously. We’ve all heard the saying “if so and so told you to jump off a
cliff, would you do it?” I always thought that that was the most idiotic
question. That doesn’t prove anything. That’s just stupid. And it’s not what
I’m talking about here.
What I mean is following the group because you’re afraid of standingout. You’re afraid of being seen, being heard. Because, geez, if
you do that you might actually have to defend your opinion.
Don’t
be afraid to be different. Ghandi was different. Einstein was different. People
used to think they were crazy, radical and had possible birth defects (just
kidding). Now they are considered geniuses.
“Newly
reformulated” shaving cream is often just a newly reformulated packaging design.
If you have to buy a new version of your camera, phone, or iPod every 6 months,
are you buying it, or is it buying you? Do you really own your things, or do
they own you?
So true, my naked brother!
ReplyDeleteHAD to share this when it came my way
Deleteso true! thanks for your advices!
ReplyDeleteXersex
http://menforxersex.blogspot.com & http://menforxersex.tumblr.com
you are welcome
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