Global Holistic Motivators

Saturday, 20 April 2013

Exercise on Creative Visualization

What is Creative Visualization?

The subtitle says it all - "Use the power of your imagination to create what you want in your life." 

A close relative to affirmations, creative visualization is a method of improving your life by imagining that it is already improved. Beyond just having a positive outlook and a hopeful frame of mind, visualization is a deep mental exercise in a creative and productive kind of 'daydreaming'. In short, you open yourself to positive changes in your life by imagining what your life would be like in your desired goal state. 

How Does it Work? 

Well, no one knows, really. But it all comes down to mental programming. If you feel that you're trapped in a deadend job, then you are. If you feel like you can't get an A on a test, chances are you won't. When you visualize a better outcome for yourself, you are changing, however subtly, your own relationship with the universe. That change can be manifest as actual change in your circumstances. People who feel they are beautiful can actually appear more beautiful to other people than perhaps they objectively are. 

Exercise in the Basic Technique of Creative Visualization:


  • First, think of something you would like. For this exercise choose something simple, that you can easily imagine attaining. It might be an object you would like to have, an event you would like to have happen, a situation in which you'd like to find yourself, or some circumstance in your life you'd like to improve.
  • Get in a comfortable position, either sitting or lying down, in a quiet place where you won't be disturbed. 
  • Relax your body completely. Starting from your toes and moving up to your scalp, think of relaxing each muscle in your body in turn, letting all tension flow out of your body. 
  • Breathe deeply and slowly, from your belly. Count down slowly from ten to one, feeling yourself getting more deeply relaxed with each count.
  • When you feel deeply relaxed, start to imagine the thing you want exactly as you would like it. If it is an object, imagine yourself with the object, using it, admiring it, enjoying it, showing it to friends. If it is a situation or event, imagine yourself there and everything happening just as you want it to. You may imagine what people are saying, or any details that make it more real to you.
  • You may take a relatively short time or quite a few minutes to imagine this-whatever feels best to you. Have fun with it. It should be a thoroughly enjoyable experience, like a child daydreaming about what he wants for his birthday.
  • Now, keeping the idea or image still in your mind, mentally make some very positive, affirmative statements to yourself (aloud or silently, as you prefer) about it, such as:

Here I am spending a wonderful weekend in the mountains. What a beautiful vacation.
Or
I love the view from my spacious, new apartment.
Or
I'm learning to love and accept myself as I am.

These positive statements, called affirmations, are a very important part of creative visualization, which I discuss in more detail later.

If you like, you can end your visualization with the firm statement to yourself:


This, or something better, 
now manifests for me 
in totally satisfying and harmonious ways, 
for the highest good of all concerned.

This statement leaves room for something different and even better than you had originally envisioned happening, and serves as a reminder to you that this process only functions for the mutual benefit of all.


  • If doubts or contradictory thoughts arise, don't resist them or try to prevent them. This will tend to give them a power they don't otherwise have. Just let them flow through your consciousness, acknowledge them, and return to your positive statements and images.
  • Do this process only as long as you find it enjoyable and interesting. It could be five minutes or half an hour. 
  • Repeat every day, or as often as you can.


As you see, the basic process is relatively simple. Using it really effectively, however, usually requires some understanding and refinement.

-Shakti Gawain, Creative Visualization

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