carries out instructions to the letter. I cannot
emphasize strongly enough that your biocomputer is
very much like a conventional computer and will
respond to specific instructions. It really does operate
I like a computer. You have to think about that.
To all intents and purposes conventional com-
puters are all basically alike. It is the programs that
determine .the value of the computer and so it is with
the human biocomputer: I recall a guy I used to know,
who would say, "I see for myself a pink Cadillac." Do
you know what? That guy used to see pink Cadillacs
everywhere he went. The biocomputer is teleological,
his biocomputer pointed out all the pink Cadillacs to
him, I doubt he ever missed one! He never owned a
pink Caddy, but he certainly saw lots of them!
Many people make the mistake of programming
I their biocomputers with, "The money they make," or
"I make $10,000 a week." In actual fact we don't make
money at all. Only governments and counterfeiters
make money. The rest of us have to earn money. I
suggest you program your biocomputer with "I earn
$10,000 a week." Or "I earn $1,000 a week." That is
how to reprogram the human biocomputer with
information that is semantically correct.
I have a lot to say on biocomputer language because
I think in the past too many books about success and
goal accomplishment have been written by people who
haven't actually done it. They've dabbled in the theory
of it, and in doing so, have lead many people astray.
It will pay you dividends to carefully study and
observe your biocomputer language. The biocomputer
understands only and exactly what you have
programmed into it. For example, say if your
biocomputer language is, 'Open up a corner grocery
store.' Your biocomputer will give you the output that
you have programmed into it. (I'm assuming now, in