by Dr. Wayne W. Dyer Known as the “father of motivation,” is one of the most widely respected people in the field of self-empowerment. He became well-known with his best-selling book, Your Erroneous Zones and has gone on to write many other self-help classics.
Dr. Dyer has a doctorate in counseling psychology. www.drwaynedyer.com
This quote from Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., reminds me of a story about the Buddha. It seems that a man had heard of the reputation that Buddha had for being peaceful and nonviolent regardless of what he encountered in life. This man decided to test the divine one, and he traveled a long distance to be in his presence. For three days he was rude and obnoxious to the Buddha. He criticized and found fault with everything the Buddha said or did. He verbally abused the Buddha, attempting to get him to react angrily.
My wife, Marcelene, is a very peaceful, meditative woman, and always has been in the two — plus decades that we have been together. In our earliest years I would attempt to draw her into arguments with my rather loud logic, but she simply didn’t play the relationship game that way. Essentially she was telling me with her behavior, “I am not interested in fighting with you;” and she displayed this by showing me a peaceful countenance and not joining in my attempts to argue. Before long I realized that I was not going to bulldoze this woman into thinking my way I realized that it is very difficult to pick a fight with someone who has no interest in fighting. She wasn’t trying to change me with her behavior. She was responding peacefully from her commitment to nonviolent behavior.
As you read and reread these beautiful words of Dr. King, remind yourself that your objective in choosing to be a nonviolent person is not to change anyone or to fix the world. Your objective is to give yourself the self — respect that you deserve as a divine creation of God, and to remove the pain associated with conflict and “disease.” You will then begin to effortlessly radiate that strength of self-respect and peace, and impact those around you simply by your presence.
It was said of Buddha and Jesus Christ that just their presence in a village, and nothing more, would raise the consciousness of those around them. You have probably experienced this when you were around highly evolved peaceful people. They seem to radiate pheromones of love that make you feel peaceful and more self-assured.
It is my experience that we can literally change the energy of any environment by making the decision to implement an affirmation such as this one from A Course in Miracles. “I will be peaceful and nonviolent regardless of the offerings directed at me?’ I have practiced sending out nonviolent pheromones of energy in many situations where I used to think I had no power whatsoever. In grocery stores, when I hear or see parents who are being abusive toward a child, I literally move into the energy field and allow my peaceful loving energy to impact the field. It sounds crazy but it always seems to work, and as Dr. King puts it so eloquently; “It reaches the opponent and so stirs his (and her)
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