What false motives lead to

Tomcat

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Why are so few people 100% satisfied with their lives? Over the course of my many years of experience, I have come to the conclusion that the reason for most of the visits to psychologists is a life built from false motives.

Motive is at the heart of any of your actions. In Psychomagic, the true motive and the false one stand out.

False motives are imposed programs that are introduced into your consciousness from the outside and dictate what you need to do. For a conscious, happy life, it is important to learn how to filter them.

False motives do not have any value for your soul: they do not give development, do not allow you to better serve the world and do not give pleasure, or they can give something of this, but in a surrogate version.

They lead to actions that you are doing in vain and which will not lead to anything good. As a result, your life and actions cease to be something pleasant, exciting and filled with a state of inspiration.

Often, false motives arise when you are too busy, in a hurry, anxious and doing a lot of things at the same time, which leads to a dispersion of attention.

The false motive is filtered out when you are not aware of what you really need it for. For example, you can build relationships not on the basis of love, but with the goal of getting something in return or increasing your self-esteem.

You may be working for a false motive, wanting to make more money above all else, not to benefit the world.

On the basis of a false motive, many decide to undergo plastic surgery not because of an objective problem due to an anomaly or injury, but because someone has hurt their self-esteem.

Perhaps you ate a harmful product on the machine, watched a degrading program, or kept up conversations about anything.

When you discover your false motives, they begin to weaken, and you are freed from thoughts of doing something that does not carry any meaning to your soul.
 
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