If you do good things, good things will happen to you
When I was about seven, I had the idea to clean up the trash along a beautiful country road. It was spring in the gorgeous shoreline colonial town of Madison, Connecticut, USA. After school I headed out behind my house with my best friend to a magical stretch of Opening Hill Road where I had seen a Tiger Lily as tall as I was.
I told my best friend what I wanted to do from my heart because I loved nature and the beauty of that winding country road. I even loved humanity.
I sold him on the idea by telling him “if you do good things, good things will happen to you.” Again, I was speaking from deep inside the pure heart of a child.
We each collected an armload of trash and stomped it into a depression in the ground. I pointed to a loose rock in a eighteenth-century stone wall and told my best friend “pull that rock out and hand it to me.”
As I put the rock on the buried trash and turned to look at my friend, he was busy spreading coins out on the wall. There had been an old shoe box behind the exact rock I told him to pull out of the wall. It was full of large old Canadian coins.
A few years later
How I manifest my early life achievements.
You manifest your own energy
You project your own psychological energy out to form the physical world. If you want to change your world, you must change what you project.
Ideas and emotions are energy that coalesce as events and objects. When you look at the events and objects in your life you are looking at your own inner subjective reality as it appears in matter.
When you react to facts, you are reacting to facts you are creating and projecting.
Your life is a learning experience you chose in order to learn how to project energy. When you see your thoughts materialized, and have to live within the manifestations of those thoughts, you are getting feedback. This is your fleshed out “report card.”
Your life situation gives you clarity as to what you are projecting psychologically. The world around you is meant to bring your attention back to what you are thinking. If you do not like what you see you must change what you project.
Six years later
EASTWOOD: ” At age 12 I began my ongoing study. To test the science, I applied the principle that thoughts create matter using visualization. I imagined myself a great architect and solar inventor reducing America’s fossil fuel dependence and in the limelight.
“Within months my solar homes were being built in my home town. At 13 years old a Yale Professor called my mother to ask me to work on his solar invention.
“Within three years I was on the entire front page of our local newspaper as ‘The Kid with the Sun in His Eyes.’
By age 18 I had a contract with the American Supply Company. At the Capitol of the constitution state the eyes of the world were on me as I unveiled a full-scale model of my modular solar system at the annual energy exposition in Hartford Connecticut.
“I was so successful applying the principle “that thoughts create” that I set my goals higher. I had something more important to do.
Article resumes.
I believe my inner self knew the coins were there and directed me to them to make a point. My spirit knew I was going to do a good deed and it used the opportunity. It was able to reward me and send me a positive message that would help me to achieve my mission later in life.
The idea was to prove “that if you do good things with your life good things will happen to you.”
Because I was aligned with the principles of the universe, my soul, inner self, or future self was able to send me a treasure with a message behind it.
From this point on I knew I had a mission in life to help people and if I followed that path I would be protected, and that no matter what happened or how bad things got, in the end good things would happen. I did not know at the time that I would need that message to make it to where I am now.
At age seven I knew that my thoughts created my reality. My family taught me the principles at an early age, and I was amazed at the potential this knowledge had for the human race. I knew right away that this was my path, and I would not diverge.
At age twelve I committed to teaching the principles even though I had no idea how I would do it. I began to study and apply what I was learning, testing it all to see if it would work in my own life.
I was just an ordinary middle-class kid, and I never knew anyone of social standing. In that respect, my family never gave me anything other than love and support and helped me when I needed help.
I didn’t have special advantages but the opposite. I had many challenges in my childhood and later on in my adult life.
Click below to continue reading the story. It gets better.
Click above or you will miss the true story. Or read “The Glass Slipper,” a boy’s “Cinderella-like story” and the Eastwood family tree.
The glass slipper in the Cinderella fairy tale is a surviving element from a manifestation of the authentic self.
My life was mostly miracles until there was someone like the evil Stepmother in my own life. Then there was my own “glass slipper.” To learn more, click on the image below.
Albert Einstein
“We cannot solve our problems with the same thinking we used when we created them.
“A new type of thinking is essential if mankind is to survive and move toward higher levels.
“Reality is merely an illusion, albeit a very persistent one.”
— Albert Einstein.
EASTWOOD
The new constitution
This is a book that moves us in the direction of a single international community in which all the people of the earth are afforded democratic protections. It also serves as a means to transition individuals, groups and nations to a higher level of existence.
This new release explains how the individual can protect themselves from harm through their own thinking. You can be safe, no matter what is happening in the world around you.
An ongoing true saga and battle for earth (soon to be in a revolutionary film)
An iconoclast who helps people achieve their dreams
"The person who follows the crowd will usually go no further than the crowd. The person who walks alone is likely to find himself in places no one has ever seen before.”
— Albert Einstein.
25 Books by William Eastwood