Fri, May 16, 2008

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FAITHHACKER
I’ve Got The Secret

He's also got The Secret: Bob Proctor is one of many "philosophers" to appear on The Secret DVD.He's also got The Secret: Bob Proctor is one of many "philosophers" to appear on The Secret DVD.By now you’ve read about the self-help phenomenon that is The Secret. You’ve probably heard that the book is #1 in its category on the New York Times bestseller list, and that the DVD is #1 on Amazon (with the book second only to the new Harry Potter). The Secret's cadre of experts has been featured on every major talk show, from Oprah, to Larry King, to NPR’s Talk of the Nation. Unsurprisingly, the media is fascinated by our country’s infatuation with a philosophy that insists you can get everything you’ve always wanted… simply by pretending you already have it.

That’s right, The Secret is, above all, about the power of positive thinking. Its central tenet is the law of attraction; according to Bob Proctor, one of the gurus on the DVD and in the book, “Everything that’s coming into your life you are attracting into your life…Whatever is going on in your mind you are attracting to you.” OK, so this is nothing new. This is what self-helpers through the ages have always believed, it’s why they go around smiling their gooey smiles and inviting random strangers to meditation meet-ups and community kitchens—in order to attract other self-helpers to meditate and cook and self-congratulate with. You are what you seek: This is what Scientologists believe; what people take home from the Landmark Forum, what they learned from EST back in the day.

So what makes The Secret so different from all these “self-actualization” groups many of us think of as cults? It requires nothing of you. You need not spend anything beyond the cost of materials to reach your full potential--$34.95 for the DVD, $23.95 for the book—even less on Amazon. You don’t have to go to classes with people who annoy you, or fear being seduced into a pyramid scheme, or believe in Xenu, or force your bladder into submission during an overlong revival at some airport Hilton. The Secret fits perfectly into the lazy, thrifty hole in the soul of America.

It also plays into Americans’ beliefs in omnipotence and magical thinking. Who among us hasn’t believed they might be discovered while walking down Hollywood Boulevard, or made a billionaire by purchasing a Powerball ticket? Who doesn’t fantasize about instant success without effort? Transformation without perspiration—a total life makeover in one thirty-minute segment—that is the real American dream.


I am no different from most Americans in my desire for change and my lack of motivation to affect it. But I am not the sort of person who usually consults self-help books. As a rule I find them obvious, poorly-written, cheesy, and, most important, uncool. The lameness factor doesn’t necessarily come from the way these books are executed, but from the general sentiment behind them: I don’t want to admit that I want to be the best I can be.

I don’t think I am alone in this. We in our twenties and thirties, who grew up listening to Nirvana and encouraging our hair to cover our faces, are used to playing down our accomplishments. We want to be gifted, not driven. We want our successes to happen to us—so we don’t feel guilty, so we don’t have to try too hard, so we feel special.

Recently I thought, though: What if my desire to be cool is impeding my capacity to be happy? What if my snobbishness is robbing me of the wisdom I need to self-actualize? Maybe people with correspondence degrees and life-coaching businesses really do have a lot to teach! Maybe I am surrounded by mopey complainers because I am a mopey complainer!

So, I have decided to try The Secret. I will watch the DVD and read the book and for three weeks I will do what they tell me to. I will practice the law of attraction. I will think happy thoughts. I will close my eyes and pretend to drive an imaginary Ferrari.

While 99 percent of me thinks this is a silly idea, 1 percent of me really hopes—OK, believes—that it will work. That at the end of three weeks I will have a book contract, a perfect husband, and a 26-inch waist. So stay tuned and I’ll let you know what happens. At this point, I’ll settle for one out of three.


Rebecca DiLiberto lives in Los Angeles, where she performs many odd jobs. She has an MFA in writing from Columbia University and is working on a number of books: all of them brilliant, none of them finished.


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Anonymous


The Secret

This is great! Now I won't have to buy the book, but I'll get to hear all about it! I was wondering what all the buzz was about. I like the blogger's style.





Tamar Fox


there's more to cool than effortlessness

See, it's definitely cool to be gifted, but I think it's also cool to be passionate about your cause, whatever it may be. I mean, a lot of my young cool friends are vegans, or hard core war protestors, or random entrepeneurs. I don't think it's uncool to work for something and want something, I think it's uncool to cross that invisible line into "trying too hard." And I hate myself for it, but I do ridicule people who try too hard. Probably because they're less self-conscious than I am, and I'm impressed by that.

Anyway. Good luck!





RebeccaD


Fighting for "causes" is rad, and socially acceptable

Grassroots fighter types are totally cool, for sure. Because they're fighting for something bigger than themselves, something pre-sanctioned by other cool people. But if one of those same people started an "I am going to be the king of the world" campaign--a selfish one, not one founded to perpetuate some good-for-humanity agenda--I think they'd lose some cool points. I think you're right-on about the "trying-too-hard" line. This Secret business may put me way too far on the wrong side of it!





Anonymous


Thank you ...

We were having coffee with our neighbors the other day when they insisted we hadn't been that successful in life (never mind the insult) because we simply hadn't wanted it bad enough. We hadn't complained to them that we weren't successful and are actually quite happy. They informed us they would have a $10 million house in five years and we wouldn't because, they shrieked, we didn't want it. Of course I want $10 million, but I wouldn't be stupid enough to spend it on a house. They then began to insist that we watch The Secret because we emitted negative energy (or is that above a 50 IQ?).
We watched it. It is achingly obvious - think positive and be grateful. The trouble is, we already knew this and practice it regularly. Didn't most people figure this out by University? The part we didn't know was that it would make us rich. The trouble is, where's all the money then? Are we just too happy with our lives to deserve it? I've realised my neighbors are even more stupid than I thought they were (actors).
Anyways, this Secret business reveals a lot about the US to me. We found out our other neighbors are also into it. None of our previous neighbors in London would have been nearly stupid enough to have watched this for more than five minutes. We live in Bel Air/ Brentwood and people here are dumb. I'm trying to leave academia and am afraid - is everyone outside of the University in this country completely stupid?





Anonymous


I'm sorry but that London

I'm sorry but that London bit reveals that you aren't too bright yourself. Just reach into your cliche bag again, won't you? Or are you creating a scene for the BBC?
The rest of America is not dumb, but they aren't 'ever so clever' in the pretentious way so many people want us to be. I know living down there in the southland can be painful, but just go volunteer at your local hospital and you will see what I mean. Lots of practical IQ in the US but you have to get out of your shallow shell to find it.





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