You might not realize it, but something besides yourself is running the show â often without your permission. And if you donât understand it, it can mess with your success.
Your subconscious mind works behind the scenes and shapes your thoughts, habits, and reactions. Itâs powerful, and itâs sneaky.
But Iâm about to pull back the curtain to show whatâs really going on inside that head of yours.
Youâre about to learn:
- Why your subconscious mind is the real boss of your actions.
- How it can sabotage your success without you even noticing.
- Why most self-help advice and âmind hacksâ are total BS.
- What you can do to finally take control and make it work for you.
Ready to take charge? Letâs get into it.
What Is the Subconscious Mind?
Ever driven somewhere and then realized you don't remember the trip?
Thatâs your subconscious on autopilot. It takes over and lets you zone out, while it handles all the details without bothering your conscious mind.
You can imagine your subconscious mind as an iceberg.
The small part above the water is your conscious mind â the thoughts and decisions you're aware of. But below the surface lies the massive, unseen bulk â thatâs your subconscious.
But itâs more practical to think of your subconscious as your silent business partner.
Sometimes, it's super helpful and steers you in the right direction. Other times, it messes things up and leaves you to deal with the fallout.
Either way, it works behind the scenes, 24/7.
It controls your habits, fears, and reactions. It stores all your past experiences â even the ones you donât consciously remember.
Pretty wild, right?
Hereâs how it works:
You touch a hot stove as a kid. Your conscious mind thinks, âOuch, that hurt!â But your subconscious mind goes to work and files away the experience. The next time youâre near a stove, it sends a quick warning â âDonât touch that!â
This can be great for survival.
But what if your subconscious is filled with outdated, negative, or just plain wrong beliefs?
Then it can lead to subconscious behaviors like:
- You flinch when someone raises their hand quickly.
- You feel nervous speaking in public, even with no reason to be.
- You bite your nails when youâre stressed without thinking about it.
These actions are driven by your subconscious mind, not your conscious choices. Itâs acting on autopilot, trying to protect you based on past experiences.
Now, you might not think flinching or biting your nails are serious issues.
But if you want to start and run a successful businessâŚ
You Subconscious Mind Can Seriously Mess Everything Up
Your subconscious mind is powerful, but itâs not perfect. It needs guidance and occasional updates to serve you better. In short, it can work for you â or against you.
On the bright side:
- It helps you form good habits. Once you consciously decide to exercise, your subconscious starts to remind you to do it.
- It keeps you safe by reacting quickly to danger, often faster than your conscious mind can process.
Then thereâs the dark side:
- It can hold you back with limiting beliefs. If youâve failed at something before, your subconscious might tell you youâll always fail.
- It can make you react irrationally. Those quick judgments and fears arenât always accurate, but they feel very real.
Letting subconscious habits drive your life is a dangerous game. You might think youâre in control, but often, youâre not. That can sabotage your success without you even noticing.
Some examples include when you:
- Avoid taking risks because you fear failure.
- Doubt your abilities despite your past successes.
- Procrastinate on important tasks and sabotage your progress.
For example, letâs say you hesitated to launch a new product because you feared it wouldnât sell. Thatâs your subconscious playing tricks.
The market might be ready, but your outdated belief holds you back.
So, how do you make sure you donât fall into that trap?
WellâŚ
Most Advice on How to Reprogram Your Subconscious Is BS
Thereâs no shortage of gurus dishing out advice on how to hack your mind. And while some of the advice will work for some people, Iâve found much of it to be useless.
Letâs look at the most common examples.
1. Positive Affirmations and Autosuggestion
Youâve probably heard that positive affirmations are the key to success. âJust tell yourself youâre amazing, and everything will fall into place,â they say.
Sounds simple, right?
But the truth is that positive affirmations can mess you up, especially if youâre struggling with anxiety or depression.
Hereâs why:
Positive affirmations are supposed to work by getting you to focus on your strengths. Theyâre meant to shift your mindset from âI canâtâ to âI can.â
But what if you donât really believe what youâre saying?
What if, deep down, those words feel like lies?
If youâre already feeling low, repeating phrases like âI am worthy of successâ can actually backfire. Instead of lifting you up, they can make you feel even worse.
Why?
Because your brain knows when something doesnât match your reality. When you say âI am confidentâ but feel insecure, your mind starts arguing with itself.
This internal conflict creates stress and tension. And if youâre prone to anxiety or depression, it can trigger a self-defeating spiral.
2. Hypnosis and Subliminal Audio
You mightâve heard that hypnosis is a magical tool that can rewire your brain. But if youâre a natural skeptic like me, itâs not going to do a thing for you.
Thatâs because hypnosis doesnât work unless you believe in it â itâs pure placebo.
Let me give you an example:
I was at a hypnosis seminar, and the instructor was guiding everyone through the process. He told the group to relax their eyes so much that they couldnât open them, no matter how hard they tried.
Most people followed along, but one guy didnât. His eyes popped right open.
Why? Because he didnât buy into it. He wasnât convinced, so it didnât work.
Hereâs the thing:
Your mind is powerful.
If youâre not on board with the idea of hypnosis, your brain will resist. Itâs like a mental barrier that says, âYou canât make me!â
Thatâs especially true if you associate hypnosis with something negative, like weakness or loss of control.
And itâs not just hypnosis. The same goes for subliminal audio. Those recordings that claim to change your life while you sleep. They wonât work unless you already believe they will.
3. Surrounding Yourself With Positivity
Surrounding yourself with positivity sounds great, right? But youâre just creating an echo chamber. And when you only allow positive voices, you shut out critical thinking.
Think about it â critically:
If everyone around you is constantly telling you how great you are, whereâs the room for growth? You need to hear the hard truths, not just the fluffy affirmations.
This isnât just me musing.
Look at kids who are showered with participation trophies and praised for just showing up.
Do they become confident winners? No.
This âpositive environmentâ just produces losers.
George Carlin nailed it when he said, âThere are no losers anymore. Everybody wins. Everybody gets a trophy.â
But what happens when these kids grow up? They step into the real world and hear something new: âYou lost, Bobby. Youâre a loser.â
Imagine that moment.
Youâve been told youâre a winner your whole life, but suddenly, reality hits. Your boss wonât give you a trophy for just showing up. Theyâll tell you to clean out your desk if you donât perform.
This false positivity doesnât prepare you for the real challenges of life.
It sets you up for failure.
4. Positive Visualization
Positive visualization is just wishful thinking. Itâs daydreaming about your ideal life instead of actually working toward it.
Sure, it feels good to imagine yourself living that dream. You picture the perfect business, the freedom, the success.
But hereâs the problem:
Visualization without action is a trap. It tricks you into feeling like youâve accomplished something when you havenât done anything.
You might tell yourself that visualizing success will attract it to you. But the truth is that no amount of mental imagery will replace hard work.
Studies have shown that sharing your goals gives you a quick dopamine hit but also leads to complacency. You start to believe success is inevitable just because youâve imagined it.
Thatâs dangerous thinking.
You need to be grounded in reality.
Your business wonât grow just because you spend a few minutes each morning imagining that it will. It grows because you make smart decisions, and put in the work every single day.
Consider this:
While youâre sitting there daydreaming, someone else is out there grinding. Theyâre making calls, closing deals, and pushing their business forward.
5. Reframing Challenges With Euphemisms
Soft, euphemistic language is just a way to avoid the truth. It doesnât change realityâit just hides it. And hiding the truth is always a dangerous game.
Letâs pull out George Carlin again:
âPoor people used to live in slums. Now 'the economically disadvantaged' occupy 'substandard housing' in the 'inner cities.'
And theyâre broke! They don't have a ânegative cash flow position.â
They're broke because a lot of them were fired. Management wanted to âcurtail redundancies in the human resources areaâ so many people are no longer âviable members of the workforce.ââ
The point is clear:
When you dress up the truth with nice words, youâre not helping anyone.
Euphemisms spare us discomfort but at the cost of clarity. If youâre struggling with a failing product, donât call it a âmarket misalignment.â
Call it what it is â a flop.
Drop the soft language. Get real with yourself and your business. Itâs the only way youâll make real progress.
But If Thatâs All BS, What Should You Do Instead?
Good question; glad you asked. And since Iâve torn down five of the most common pieces of advice youâll find, itâs only fair I equipped you with five of my go-to methods.
Theyâre not as glamorous but also donât require you to believe in any woo-woo.
1. Outwork Your Self-Doubt
We all have moments of self-doubt. That just makes us human. And itâs in those moments you should remind yourself of your past wins.
David Goggins calls it the Cookie Jar method:
The Cookie Jar is a mental collection of your toughest wins â times when you pushed through pain and suffering and emerged victorious.
When doubt creeps in, reach into that jar, pull out a memory, and remind yourself of what youâre capable of.
But what if you donât have enough (or any) past wins?
Then you have to go out there and get them.
As James Clear puts it in his book:
âEvery action you take is a vote for the type of person you wish to become. No single instance will transform your beliefs, but as the votes build up, so does the evidence of your new identity.â
In other words, small actions, repeated consistently, build undeniable proof of who you are. This is the harsh truth about building confidence â you have to work for it.
Alex Hormozi sums it up beautifully:
âConfidence without evidence is a delusion. You donât become confident by shouting affirmations in the mirror, but by having a stack of undeniable proof that you are who you say you are. Give yourself so much goddamn proof that you are the version of yourself you want to be, and youâll become them. Outwork your self-doubt.â
Put in the work, day after day, until the evidence of your success is undeniable.
Itâs not about wishing or hoping. Itâs about proving.
You must build that stack of undeniable proof to fill up your cookie jar until your self-doubt doesnât stand a chance.
2. Be Process-Oriented Instead of Goal-Oriented
Focusing on big goals can easily make you feel inadequate.
The bigger the goal, the more overwhelming it seems. Itâs easy to get lost in the sheer size of what you want to achieve and end up feeling like youâre constantly falling short.
But hereâs the thing:
The magic doesnât happen in the goal itself â it happens in the process.
Break down your massive goals into small, manageable steps. Completing each of those small steps gives you the same dopamine boost as hitting a big milestone.
Again, James Clear explains this perfectly:
âAchieving a goal only changes your life for the moment. Thatâs the counterintuitive thing about improvement. We think we need to change our results, but the results are not the problem. What we really need to change are the systems that cause those results.â
So, letâs say your goal is to build a million-dollar business.
Thatâs huge, right?
But if you obsess over that number, youâll likely feel like youâre never making progress. Instead, focus on the systems that will get you there: the daily tasks, the habits, the consistent actions.
These are what will actually move the needle.
Think of it this way:
If you love the process, the results will follow. Youâre not chasing a finish line; youâre committing to a cycle of continuous improvement.
And thatâs where real, long-term success comes from.
3. Negative Visualization
Life isnât always rainbows and sunshine. Sometimes, things go wrong â really wrong.
But you can prepare for it.
Instead of pretending everything will be perfect, try using negative visualization to imagine the worst-case scenario.
Why? Because it helps you practice indifference to the chaos life can throw at you.
Iâm not telling you to be a pessimist â just to be a realist.
The Stoics, some of the wisest thinkers in history, mastered this technique.
They would vividly picture their worst fears coming true. Not to scare themselves, but to prepare. By imagining the worst, they made it less terrifying.
When you do this, you realize that most of your fears are just that â fears.
Think of it as mental training.
When the worst actually happens, you wonât be caught off guard. Youâll be ready, calm, and in control. Youâll find that your worst fears often arenât as bad as you imagined. And even if they are, youâve already faced them in your mind.
Negative visualization is your shield against anxiety. Itâs your tool to face whatever life throws your way without losing your cool.
4. Mindfulness
Youâve probably experienced your mind constantly racing. Youâre thinking about that missed opportunity from last week or stressing over tomorrowâs big pitch.
But hereâs the truth:
Living in the past or future robs you of the present â which is all you truly have.
So, you have to train your mind to focus on the present moment.
This simple practice can reduce regret for the past and ease worry about the future. But most people donât do it because theyâre too busy being trapped in their thoughts.
Eckhart Tolle explains it well in The Power of Now:
âAll negativity is caused by an accumulation of psychological time and denial of the present. Unease, anxiety, tension, stress, worry - all forms of fear - are caused by too much future and not enough presence. Guilt, regret, resentment, grievances, sadness, bitterness, and all forms of nonforgiveness are caused by too much past, and not enough presence.â
When youâre stuck in your head, youâre not fully alive. Youâre either reliving whatâs already gone or worrying about whatâs yet to come.
When you train your mind to stay present, you regain control. You see things clearly, make better decisions, and experience life fully.
5. Journaling
Maybe youâre already keeping a journal â if not, I suggest you start one immediately. Itâs a great way to collect your thoughts and track your progress.
But Iâve recently come up with a radical approach to journaling.
Start by keeping a rage journal.
This is where you let loose. Write down all your unfiltered negative thoughts â every frustration, every anger, every moment that makes you want to scream.
Donât hold back. This is your space to get it all out without judgment.
Why?
Bottling up those emotions doesnât make them disappear. It just lets them fester. By putting them on paper, you release that pent-up energy and understand whatâs really bothering you.
Now, add a gratitude journal.
Here, you do the opposite. Detail everything positive you enjoy in life, no matter how small. Shift your focus to whatâs going right.
Gratitude has been shown to boost your mood and increase overall happiness. Writing down what youâre thankful for helps you appreciate the good things and keeps you grounded.
Finally, compare the two journals.
Youâll often find that the negative thoughts in your rage journal are just fiction, blown out of proportion by stress or fear. The gratitude journal, on the other hand, reflects the reality of whatâs good in your life.
This comparison gives you an accurate picture of your world.
Conclusion
Your subconscious mind is either your best friend or your worst enemy. Itâs time to take control and stop letting it run the show. Itâs not easy, but itâs worth it.
Hereâs what you need to remember:
- Your subconscious can be a bull in a china shop if left unchecked.
- Most âmind hacksâ are just feel-good fluff. Donât fall for them.
- True change comes from consistent action â not wishful thinking.
- Stay grounded in reality. Face your fears, donât hide from them.
Youâve got the tools. Now, itâs up to you to use them.
Take charge of your mind. Donât let it take charge of you.
Scott
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