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Hidden Language Codes: Reprogram Your Life by Reengineering Your Vocabulary - Softcover

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9781578633623: Hidden Language Codes: Reprogram Your Life by Reengineering Your Vocabulary

Synopsis

When R. Neville Johnston was shot three times in 1977, he died. But he came back knowing some things he hadn't known before. That the universe is made of up of vibrations for one. And that some of the most meaningful vibrations are the words we use in everyday thought and speech. Obviously it behooves us to choose our words with care so we can create the life we want.

Hidden Language Codes is a book about thought. Where we go in life is directly related to our mastery and command of our thoughts and our language. In evolving, we naturally change the way we think. A method of accelerating this process is to change the very words we think with. This book is the key to learning words that will improve our lives and giving up the ones that hold us back. Learn to use power words, words that serve us well such as "acceptance," "faith," even "MacGyver," and the key power word, "love." Those words that do not serve us well include "greed," "blame," "hard," and the poster child for disempowerment/slave thinking "can't."

Our language is full of unconscious triggers the words we speak are making decisions for us, running us. As long as we continue to try, need, guess, want, whine, and victim our way through life, we sabotage our own goals and happiness. Never use these words again. Take charge of your thoughts and speech, and your life will follow suit.

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About the Author


R. Neville Johnston was shot to death in 1977. He woke up in a hospital able to see people in their past lives. This NDE or "shaman's death" was just the beginning. He believes that he was sent back to assist in raising human consciousness to a higher echelon by helping us learn to speak an ascended language. He is the author of many books including The Language Codes and Telepathic Etiquette. Johnston lives in Reston, Virginia.


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HIDDEN LANGUAGE CODES

discard a weak language of doubt and excuse and acquire a vocabulary of power and sovereignty

By R. Neville Johnston

Red Wheel/Weiser, LLC

Copyright © 2005 R. Neville Johnston
All rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-1-57863-362-3

Contents

Acknowledgments
Preface
The All-Important Introduction
QUADRANT 1 OBSOLETE LANGUAGE
Words That Disempower
A List of Words That Do Not Serve Us Well
Cliché Removal
Changing Our Speech
QUADRANT 2 WORDS AS POWER
Vocabulary Equals Power
A List of Words That Serve Us Well
The Dialect of Angelese
QUADRANT 3 LANGUAGE ANOMALIES
The Mechanics of Language
The Pitfalls of Superlatives
The Disconnects
Dialects of the Obsolete Paradigm
The Dialect of Belief Conflicts
The War of Ors
The Language of Manipulation
The Four Dialects of Guilt
The Dialect of Victimese
The Dialect of Inquisition
The Dialect of Elitism
The Dialect of the Bully
The Charmed Life
The Path of Regret
QUADRANT 4 ARCHETYPE UPGRADE
Modalities of Thought
Human Consciousness as the Limitless Creator
Thought Management
Tense: The Hidden Language
Brain Language Upgrade
The Power of Our Language Creates
Certificate of Self-Sovereignty
Bibliography


CHAPTER 1

QUADRANT 1


OBSOLETE LANGUAGE

ANY LANGUAGE, by its nature, reflects the group of beings that speak it. In away it appears statistical. Where is the language focused? For example, thereare many more words in Eskimo to describe snow than there are in English.

Language reflects the lives of the natives. We are our language—fact. Now, howdoes our language describe us? What is the single biggest entry in our language?How many vocabulary words are there to describe love? Not so many. For moneythere are a lot more. The biggest vocabulary entry may take a moment torecognize.

What is built into the fabric of our language, the easiest thing to do in it,the hallmark? Doubt. There are more ways to doubt in our language than anythingelse—I think, I guess, perhaps, theoretically, usually, well, sometimes, maybe,normally, often, I mean not often, don't quote me, it isn't official yet, I maybe wrong but, I'll take it under advisement, I'm not sure, we'll see, maybelater, if God smiles, somehow, almost, hopefully, in the worst case, just incase, unless, what if.... We appear to speak a doubting language.

After a while language tends to do more than just reflect life. It perpetuatesand actually creates the life of the speaker. The words we speak habitually willeventually habituate our life to their meaning. We all too easily fall into thehabit of the language. A word is a decision made. In fact, all words aredecisions that have already been made.

Our language cleaves in half between words of control and words of create. Theone and only thing that we actually control is ourselves. The idea that wecontrol others is an illusion. The control of someone else is done only with thecomplete cooperation of the other. To say we "control a situation" is to saythat the situation is larger than us. When we are creating, we have accepted thesituation, incorporated it inside of us, and are therefore larger than it. Wecan then digest it, or recreate it to our specifications.

Should vs. Could is a perfect example. Should is guilt manipulation. Couldimplies option. Could is open-ended potential. Words that affix us to a singleoutcome (control) vs. words that are holographic (create) will be revealed tous. Our choice will influence the expansion of not only our minds, but ourcivilization.

In the last few years a surprisingly large number of us began to edit the wordshould from speech. Should is, without doubt, a word that is a decision made.The decision looks like: If you do not do what you should, you are guilty.Should is a major guilt-manipulation word. The fact that so many of us are nolonger using it indicates a major step forward.

We can do more than just stop the use of such words. We can stop "thinking in"these obsolete words. As long as we use fear-encrypted words to cause pain, weall remain less than what we could be. A way for us as humanity to stop it isfor us as individuals to stop it.

As surprising as this approach may sound, it will play. The only one you havecontrol of is yourself. The day enough of us decide to stop chattering thesedebilitating words, both in our heads and in our mouths, calm will just radiateto the rest of us. It is called the "hundredth monkey" effect.


Words That Disempower

All disempowering words have certain recognizable traits. They state that powerand authority are outside of the individual. These words are guilt encrypted,inspiring fear; they always make us feel "less." They are designed to keep us inplace, to enslave us.

There are a surprisingly large number of such words. Originally I thought ofthese words as short circuits in the field or dysfunctional. They function allright. They do more than just cross signals; they deaden the field at the momentthey are uttered. Other words bring it to life.

Let's examine a word that is really asleep: What happens when we say "need"?Close your eyes and observe the field around you when you say this word. Justfor starters, everything takes on the signature of desperation. There is analert. Suddenly we are climbing uphill. A subconscious program switches on,creating suffering in order to achieve getting what is needed. We are driven bylack.

But all information encoded in the word need is false information. There is nosuch thing as "need." It is a nonword. The packets of instruction containedtherein are negative, sucking, antivitality. It is the nature of the word. It isa fear word. It is a slave word. Anyone who has just used the word need has toldthe entire room what they are scared to death of. They have also told everyonethat they will go to any extreme to accomplish this. This is not informationthat is really useful to others, nor is it their business. Need is an illusionthat we are outgrowing.

As we as a species evolve, we will outgrow all disempowering words and thoughts.This volume is a forerunner of the more advanced line of thought. As these ideassprout in the fertile ground of our expanding consciousness, outdated words willtake on a distinctly sour tone. Those who are not yet ready for this advancewill be ever more distant from us and identifiable by their use of old fashionedlanguage.

In the process of your transmutation, forgive yourself when these word habitsslip out and just call on the higher realms to assist you in the retooling ofthe thought process. Human potential is truly infinite.


A List of Words That Do Not Serve Us Well

Blame: Assigning blame creates delay. This is because once we've found someoneto blame, we stop the search engine; we stop looking to ourselves for theinformation. It is the magician's trick of diverting attention. When ourattention is placed on the one blamed, not on the resolution of the event or ourrole in it, cleanup can be significantly delayed. Even insurance companies havegiven up on blame—not because of a greater evolutionary mandate, but because itcost them time and money.

Blame drops like an anchor in your time line. Have you seen someone go into thetwilight zone while they are talking about blaming someone and it's nowseventeen years after the event? People get stuck in blame. To blame is to be-lame.Walk around the office saying "Assigning blame creates delay."

Block: This is the part of us we don't look at or a decision we have not made—amajor clue that we left for ourselves to find. As soon as we discover it, weremember a big piece of who we really are. It also means blind spot, bump,obstacle— language that places it outside of ourselves. Tell the block topresent itself in a form that is more readily recognizable.

Burden: There is a single burden, and that is guilt. Let us use the example ofbrushing teeth. Our parents manipulate us to brush our teeth, and then itbecomes duty. Later as an adult, the manipulation, the job of "making ithappen," is taken over by us. Therefore, brushing teeth becomes something we"have to do." To release the guilt is to brush because we love a clean mouth, toenjoy the experience (see Expect, p. 18).

But: It originally referred to the butting of heads, and this is exactly whatthe word still does. Consider the ever infamous, "I love you, BUT ..." Ittakes back what was just said. It is a slam. Do you love me, yes or no?

When you hear the word "but," you've heard "I am unable to go to the newthinking." When you hear "yes, but," you've heard "I am unaware of even theconcept of my inability to go to the new way of thinking." In the unconsciouslanguage it is used to refute, redirect, block. It is the last straw of denial.Once you hear it clearly, you recognize that it is always blocking you. This isgood news because it means that you don't have to leave the self, to obviate thebut.

Those of us who teach may have noticed that sarcasm doesn't serve very well as ateaching tool. The student isn't completely sure if you mean it or not. But isthe essence of sarcasm, and sarcasm is a sibling of anger. No buts about it.

Can't: This is the poster boy of disempowered/slave thinking. As soon as you say"can't" you create impossibility. The universe must obey your every command. Inorder to transit out of the use of this word, understand that its purpose is tocreate limitation.

Of course, there are things that won't be happening at this time. This is OK.First decide to call clarity and power. Then replace the word can't with won't.This will bring clarity and power. Won't puts the power of decision back intoyour hands; can't takes it away and languages it as outside of yourself.

Can't is also the poster boy for the language of excuse. It is a convenientexcuse when we take everything personally. "I'm not coming to the party. I can'tcome, because ..."

Can't wraps any concept in the veil of unavailable. When you hear "can't," youhave heard someone enact universal programming to work against something—perhapshimself. Personally I won't feel sorrow for him. Notice how different thisstatement is from "I can't feel sorrow for them."

Complicated: As soon as we hear "This is getting complicated," we know thatthere is too much brain involved. As well, we know that the heart voice has beenignored and there is enormous fear clouding the field. The universe issimplicity itself. No matter how complex it seems, there is a simple path. Thispath is the way toward success (see Genius, p. 72).

Conformist: Name a conformist. It isn't going to happen. Anyone we can name has,in one way or another, rocked the boat.

Criticism: Criticism depends on the ear hearing it. To really hear, hear freefrom ego, free from guilt, is to be inspired by criticism.

Curse: The last excuse of the superstitious mind. When we get the idea that weare cursed, we begin to build a list of things that go wrong. (There is nowrong.) We give this list of "credits" to the one doing the cursing. The more weplace our attention on things going wrong, the more things go wrong. Whatnonsense! There is no such thing as curse.

The excuse is the refusal to take responsibility for creating our life. Rememberwe create 100 percent of our life, the very definition of free will.

Defeated: Defeated is the idea of having no feet. There is always somewhere tostep. There is always more than one place to step (see Choice, p. 62).

Denial: Denial is a form of knowing. It is knowing divided by doubt. We can seewhat a large denominator doubt makes. Call denial the first stage of knowing.

Desperation: Desperation is inspiration without the joy or knowledge of our owncreative potential. It is de-inspiration, it is despair of separation. (All fearis the fear of separation.) Despair occurs in the belief that separation isimmutable. As usual with such a word, there is the idea that whatever is makingus desperate is larger than us; simply the opposite is true.

Doubt: Doubting is another device that takes a decision away from us. Doubtingis no great accomplishment. Doubt is the right hand of fear. To doubt is tobreak the spirit. When you hear a human being doubt, you hear their personalpower drop off. The person gives up the power of their decision to things theythink are unknowable. (They are highly knowable if you have the power ofdecision.) Build it and we will come!

We have been taught denial/doubt so well it is actually quicker than our mind.In other words, we know the answer, and then before we can blink, thedenial/doubt takes over and we don't know what we just knew a moment ago. Watchit happen right in front of the mind. Think of something you know for sure. Nowlet's say someone asks, "Are you sure?" When you check, you are doubting, or youwouldn't have to check. You know what I mean ... now you're not sure.

Doubt is always slightly slower than knowing. We do hear the answer, then thedoubt clouds us. Sometimes this process is so quick that we "think" we don't getan answer. We do actually see the perfect answer.

Instinct is always first; logic is always second. It may be that the entire leftbrain is formatted as the "No" and the right brain as the "Yes" in the binaryversion of our human brain. When both brains are up and online, functioning as awhole, doubt is out of the equation, and neither brain is "superior."

Doubt is always about what could go awry. You could certainly go awry wherethere is no decision made.

Enemy: The inner-me. Have I the eyes to see the inner me? With everyonerecognizing the enemy as themselves, how would war then be conducted? There is abody of evidence that says humankind has been slow on this one. However, ourhistory is certainly not our destiny.

Before entering a relationship with one called "enemy," realize it is yourselfyou are confronting. Recognize the conflict as internal; resolve it and theother guy will not have to show up to do battle because there is no polarphenomenon being generated.

Evil: All evil serves divine intent. After all, without the concept evil, therewould not be the idea of good. There would be no cosmos without chaos. Chaos ispart of cosmos: fact.

In the land beyond right and wrong, evil is not bad; it simply is. The way theword is used today keeps us from recognizing the blessing that evil alwaysbrings.

Good/Evil is polarity thinking. To triangulate such thinking is to realize thatit isn't good and evil, it just is. Thinking in this nonpolar way allows a lotmore freedom of thinking and pain-free thinking. Whereas, the more we speak andthink of evil as the opposite of good, the more we bind it to us. Besides,without evil there is no plot. (On other worlds evil vs. good is employed solelyfor entertainment.)

Expect: To expect is what we anticipate about what someone else has, or whatthey will do. Notice how the power is languaged outside of the self. Thedelightful experience of love changes at the moment our happiness is contingentupon what the other will do. This is codependence, which is a form of love.There are other forms.

Fate/Destiny: Our fate is decided by ourselves. There is no predetermined fate,otherwise there would be no free will. If we are fated to meet someone, then itis because this decision was made, in free will, prior to the incarnation. Whenwe do meet the person, we still have the decision to make about seeing them asecond time. Everything that happens is a decision that we make.

Destiny has a similar complexion. Our destiny is that we will evolve, that wewill love. There is no predestination other than this. Again, if there were sucha thing, it would be at the cost of free will. The word destiny means a chanceup to bat. We have a chance up to bat anytime, anywhere we decide. There is noboat to miss. If there were, there would be another shortly. There is no suchthing as a "once in a lifetime opportunity." Our destiny, our fate, is whateverwe decide it is.

Fear: How many fears are there? Don't go making up the largest numberimaginable. There is only one fear: I can't handle it if. Any thought thatbegins with "I can't handle it if ..." is a fear. Every time we think we can'thandle something we are losing life force. Every fear makes us grow older. Thereis no such thing as "I can't handle it if." That statement, that belief, isunconsciousness itself. We have handled 100 percent of it since we wereconceived. Think we'll continue to handle it? Whatever it is, we're gonna dealwith it, period. Key word: relax.

All fear is based on "I can't handle it if ..." It doesn't matter what comesafter this statement. It is a falsehood. Get over being afraid. It is boring.Would you watch ten thousand I Love Lucy episodes in a row? Of course not! Yetwe will sit here and say "I can't handle it if" a hundred thousand times in arow in our thinking and not even notice. Fear is boring! Make your personalchoice: freedom or another episode of "I Can't Handle It If."


(Continues...)
Excerpted from HIDDEN LANGUAGE CODES by R. Neville Johnston. Copyright © 2005 R. Neville Johnston. Excerpted by permission of Red Wheel/Weiser, LLC.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
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