Believe In Yourself By Joseph Murphy Extra Quality -
Joseph Murphy’s final message is simple and thunderous:
"Infinite Intelligence flows through me. I am poised, calm, and magnetic. The right people are waiting for me. I am a blessing to everyone I meet." believe in yourself by joseph murphy
True belief manifests as a calm, quiet confidence—what Murphy calls a "sabbath of the mind." You do your conscious work (action in the world), and then you mentally let go. You release the "how" and the "when" to Infinite Intelligence. "Your worry is a prayer for the thing you don't want." This is not passivity. It is strategic surrender. You plant the seed of belief in the subconscious soil, and then you stop digging it up every five minutes to see if it has grown. What makes Believe in Yourself a long-feature-worthy masterpiece is its relentless optimism, grounded in spiritual law. Murphy does not promise that life will be easy. He promises that life will be malleable . Joseph Murphy’s final message is simple and thunderous:
Within weeks, the salesman reported not only higher sales but a profound inner shift. The fear had not vanished; it had been overwritten by a stronger belief. Believe in Yourself is not a book you read once and place on a shelf. It is a manual for a lifetime. It asks you to become a scientist of your own consciousness—testing the hypothesis that your inner world creates your outer world. I am a blessing to everyone I meet
Murphy writes, "but a victim of your own thinking."
In an era saturated with surface-level self-help slogans—"Stay positive," "Hustle harder," "Fake it till you make it"—the voice of Dr. Joseph Murphy cuts through the noise like a clear bell. Writing in the mid-20th century, this Irish-born metaphysical minister and author of The Power of Your Subconscious Mind offered something far more profound than mere optimism. In his lesser-known but equally potent work, Believe in Yourself , Murphy distills a radical thesis: confidence is not a personality trait. It is a spiritual technology.
Critics may call it naive. Skeptics may call it magical thinking. But for the millions who have applied Murphy’s principles—from recovering addicts to bankrupt entrepreneurs to artists paralyzed by self-doubt—the results are undeniable.