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I like the way you dressed! Your headed for SUCCESS:)
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Affirmations include;

*Get any job you want
*Very fast at learning
*Learn by watching
*Learn by listening
*Learn by seeing
*Be reliable
*People trust me
*Employers love me
*co workers love me
*People’s person
*Good teacher
*Good at explaining things
*Work good alone
*Work good with others
*Over achiever
*Take initiative
*Always up to get a raise
*Always up for a promotion
*Always advance at what I’m doing
*Shine at work
*One of a kind
*Always advance in life
*I am a do-er
*I take action
*I’m not afraid
*I don’t get stressed
*I do good under pressure
*I know what I want in life
*I have stability
*I am smart
*I am financially orientated
*I am successful in life
*People look to me for guidance
*I attract positive situations and
*opportunities
*Have good luck
*Have no social anxiety
*Have inner peace
*Have empathy
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Whoever came up with the definition for “subliminal” should be fired. That definition has led to some different interpretations — most of which are wrong. Hopefully this section will clear things up.

Subliminal messages are stimuli that lie below our threshold of conscious awareness. Because they fall below the absolute threshold level (ATL), we can’t perceive a subliminal message, even if we’re looking for it.

That’s important. Many people confuse subliminal influence with subconscious influence. But those two concepts are very different.

A stimulus can influence us subconsciously without being subliminal. If we can see or hear it — even if we don’t consciously notice it — it’s not subliminal. It’s considered supraliminal.

Consider in-store music. When researchers played music in a liquor store, they found a startling result. On days when German music was played, German wine outsold French wine. However, the reverse happened when French music was played (North, Hargreaves, & McKendrick, 1999).

Generally, there are three types of subliminal messages:

1. Subvisual messages – visual cues that are flashed so quickly (generally a few milliseconds) that people don’t perceive them.

2. Subaudible messages – low volume audio cues that are inserted into a louder audio source, such as music.

3. Backmasking – an audio message that is recorded backwards, with the intention of playing it forward to disguise the reversed message.

For subliminal messages to influence behavior, people must already want to do that behavior. For example, researchers found that subliminal messages relating to thirst were only effective toward participants who were already thirsty (Strahan, Spencer and Zanna, 2002). For people who weren’t thirsty, the subliminal messages made no difference.