The Search 4 Happiness
Day 168 - Speak
10/10/20232 min read
The power of a word can become a deafening reality. I think, in many cases, words can have a far more devastating effect when used in a harmful way than a physical attack. Over the years, as I've met a wide variety of people from all walks of life, I’ve seen destruction and received hurtful words, but yet it's the ones that have the 'gift of the gab', the ones who use their words with purpose and nous that tend to own the room. There are most definitely elements of people whose pure presence can absorb energy, but wordsmiths tend to hold the attention.
I've never been great with my words. On occasion I have said things with good intentions, but the delivery has just been poor and misconstrued. However, I do understand the power and have definitely swayed towards more focus in my life on that area. Articulation, delivery, and conviction are all areas I try to improve on consistently, but there is a lot more to those elements than just the action of speaking. Regardless, I think within the words we speak, we can both create and destroy connection. More importantly, the words we speak can have an impact on our train of thought, our mentality, manifestation, and the energy we transmit into the universe. Negative output will create a negative return, and positive output will create a positive one.
The words we speak create fundamental shifts in both our world and everyone else's around us. The ability to consistently project optimism, express positivity, and receive it in the form of speech is a powerful tool in creating the world we aspire to live in and the direction towards achieving success in the search for happiness. Like all the other senses, we are automated to receive and transmit messages in forms of speech. However, through consciously choosing our dialogue and speech to create positive pathways into the universe, we truly create a tangible reality through transmitting energy through the expression of and projection of our sense of speech.
Choose your words wisely, because those words change your world or someone’s world around you, for good or for bad, for disarray or pure happiness.
Thanks,
Dean