The Million Dollar Project
Filed under: Meditation
I came across Steve Palina’s Million Dollar Project in a post from Alvin at lifecoachesblog.com about a week back. At first I was skeptical, but then I started to wonder about the effects of multiple minds working in parallel on a single intention, and whether this leads to some kind of propagation of thought through a medium that is invisible to us, eventually creating a unified mind.
It caught my interest, however, still being skeptical; I decided to wait for a positive sign from Alvin’s own test of the Million Dollar Project before I joined the experiment. The positive sign finally came in a post he made yesterday, and as a result my test starts today, and I am going to give it a try for the next 30 days, and post my progress here.
The project requires one to take at least 60 seconds in a day to think about the following intention:
“In an easy and relaxed manner, in a healthy and positive way, in its own perfect time, for the highest good of all, I intend $1,000,000 to come into my life and into the lives of everyone who holds this intention.”
I have a feeling more than my far fetched idea of a unified mind, this has got more to do with meditating on a single intention, that the focus of ones mind becomes that intention, and as a result one would unintentionally think of making money on every action they take. Just a thought, let’s see how this turns out.
2 Comments
Alvin
Dec 6, 2005 | 12:03 pm
Hi Karmadude!
Interesting that you waited for a positive sign from me before you started. There are lots of positive signs mentioned on Steve’s blog from people who started getting results a lot sooner than I did.
In fact, I thought that it probably wasn’t going to work for me, until I got chided by my fellow life coach and co-writer, Pete, that doubting myself would weaken my intentions, and instead of doing it just to see what happens, I should do it to make it happen.
A subtle difference, but I think it made all the difference.
Best of karma to you 😉 and I’ll look forward to your own accounts of this experiment!
A dude
Dec 9, 2005 | 6:18 pm
Causation and assignment of cause are probably very different. Nevertheless we only see assignment and so it’s easy enough to assign any monetary gains to this very odd intention!