The mind is a breathtakingly powerful instrument—more like an orchestra than a machine. Each thought is a note, each emotion a melody, and together they form the complex music of your life. The energy that flows through you—light, sound, chemical, and emotional—shapes who you are, moment by moment.
Imagine your body as an intricate network of glowing pathways. Along these meridians, thoughts travel like beams of electricity. When energy is healthy and clear, these beams harmonize, creating emotional clarity and vitality. But when pain or trauma gets stuck—it is like a river frozen mid-flow. The energy wants to move, to release — but it’s suspended in time, waiting for the warmth of safety.—the energy short-circuits, creating emotional dissonance or even physical weakness.
Dr. George Goodheart, founder of Applied Kinesiology, likened the pineal gland to the composer of this system, and the pituitary gland as its conductor. Light absorbed by these glands becomes the starting signal for your body’s internal symphony, encoding not just biological function, but emotional and spiritual patterns as well.
Each moment, your brain translates these frequencies into holographic impressions—full-sensory blueprints of who you are. These impressions live on, flowing through the circuits of your nervous system. Acupuncture and kinesiology charts around the world map these pathways.
When we say we feel "stuck," we’re often referring to a memory—emotional, chemical, energetic—that continues to replay. As Dr. Candace Pert demonstrated in Molecules of Emotion, these emotional memories are not abstract; “our emotional experiences are stored in the body at feeling-specific neurotransmitter sites and can be re-keyed to create different emotions than those feelings to which we have previously been addicted.” (From Dr. Deb Sandella, RIM Institute).
Years ago, at a UN event, I mused aloud about a network where computers could speak globally, sharing life-saving information even in the remotest parts of the world. A friend passed me a phone number, and soon I was speaking with innovators who hadn’t yet built the idea—but knew it was possible. Because they understood: computers simply imitate us.
Like your brain, a computer processes incoming signals, organizes them into patterns, and feeds back outcomes. Our biology is already a living algorithm—built to sense, adapt, and respond. The real breakthrough? Realizing your thoughts are the software—and you are the programmer.
Systems like NLP (Neuro-Linguistic Programming) remind us: change your words, and you change your chemistry. Shift your language, and you shift your life.
Simple Steps to Begin Rewriting Your Inner Code
- Create a kind inner editor. This isn't a harsh critic, but a loving overseer who gently redirects unhelpful language.
- Replace “trying” with empowered statements.
- Instead of: “I’m trying to get better.”
- Say: “It’s amazing how quickly I’m healing.”
- Catch limiting thoughts and rewrite them. Treat your thoughts like rough drafts—not final truths.
- Remember: your brain is not a judge. It doesn’t decide what’s right—it just computes based on your input. Feed it wisely.
- Recognize that the universe reflects your language. It echoes back what you believe and speak—so choose your words as if they were seeds.
Final Thought
Your thoughts are not you—they are patterns you’ve learned. But patterns can be rewritten. You’re not just living in a body—you are conducting a brilliant symphony. Each word you speak, each belief you hold, is a note in the score of your life.
So tune your thoughts with love, choose your words like music, and watch the universe dance in harmony with you.
Nancy