Archive for Self-Defense

Removing submilimals from your mind

A question from the mail:

… how to disinfect subliminals from your mind…

To begin with, that’s what the book is about. And, of course, I cannot repeat the whole book in a short post.

But in the end, there are only three ways, I know of.

To illustrate that, please, consider computer viruses. If your computer got a virus, your options are limited, you can do three things only:

  1. Try to clean it yourself.
  2. Hire a professional.
  3. Buy a commercial software package that will do it for you. 

The same options exist if you want to get rid of patological mind viruses.

First way allows you to do most thorough job. Unfortunately, it also requires you to be an expert in the area, and most people are not experts in computers or human mind. So, that’s a solution for a few, who already mastered the subject.

Second way may seem to be very hard to find, however it does exists. It’s not available commercially (short of psychoterapy, which is not that trustworthy source of such services), but it’s available along with certain jobs. Say, if you join military, police force, or intelligence you will be thoroughly brainwashed to the point when you are guaranteed not to have anything really dangerous in your head. That is, dangerous to your country. The problem with that is that these services are in the interests of the state, not yours, so it’s not exactly what you want. But it’s fairly close, and it’s still very good, because it does the bulk of work of removing junk from your head and plants instead mostly good memes that has a long history of being associated with success. Is it for you? I don’t know. It’s up to you to decide.

And the last, you can get “commercial package”. Again, it’s not something that you order from a web site and read, but amazingly, there is something very similar to that. Namely, most of time-tested moderate religions have to push very good disinfection package on their followers in order to make them survive, prosper and multiply. It’s very important to join time-tested and moderate church (no matter what denomination it is), because any religion is a system of memoviruses. New memoviruses are damaging, but those, which survived for a while, often become symbiots, actually helping their carriers and preserving them form damaging kinds of memoviruses. I wrote more about why it happens in the book, but essentially time-tested moderate churches spread symbiotic memoviruses that act in your mind very much like Norton Antivirus on your computer. And like with Norton AnitiVirus, you have to pay a “subscription fee” - church fees, donations, etc. But it’s well worth it.

And, of course, all these ways will not clean you up 100%. Both services and packages will hep you to get rid of dangerous ones, but first, they will plant some of their own, and, second, when you serve just as a carrier, they cannot prevent that usually.

Say, Bush or Obama? Even assuming one of the sides is right, you opinion won’t directly affect your current well-being. You are just a carrier, infecting other people with your opinion. Church or miltary does not have a say in the way you do in terms of the elections. How to clean up if you’ve got a wrong one? You cannot do that second or third way, because nobody can do that for you. You have to think rationally and decide for yourself. Generally, rational thinking (as opposed to emotional) is the way to go. You cannot beat that.

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The book “Disinfect Your Mind” is coming soon!

Official day of publication is Feruary 25! The printed copies are on the way to Amazon. See more at the Galiel.Net - the publisher’s site

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The Millionaire Maker

The Millionaire Maker: Act, Think, and Make Money the Way the Wealthy Do by Loral Langemeier – McGraw-Hill, ISBN 0-07-146615-0

The general Guy Kawasaki style stuff, and she ends up with just two kinds of passive income – rental properties and promissory notes. Those who tried rental properties, know how “passive” they are… And finding a reliable person or business who would give you 12-15% as in her examples, that’s not easy either.

But from the memetic point of view the book is done pretty well. It’s filled with anchors – start with “You – a Millionaire?” on the back cover, pitches the cause more than giving a substance (in memetics it’s called anchoring and building bridges) including all famous persuasion anchors like social proof (a story of her building some family’s wealth over TV), confusing a reader with senseless abbreviations (like Wealth Cycle Process or Freedom Day), not to mention making them all capitalized (see the chapter in my book of Pathos and Capital Letters)…

You will not get much advice from this book beyond Kawasaki, but as a sample of persuasion work, it’s amusing.

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Toxic memes in detoxification books

Natural Cures “They” Don’t Want You To Know About by Kevin Trudeau – Alliance Publishing Group, 2004, ISBN 0-9755995-1-8 

It has been quite a while since I decided to avoid reading any health/diet/alternative medicine books. Today I decided to check this title which looked promising. I was wrong.

It’s not that the author lies to the reader or is totally wrong. He promotes a lot of good things – exercise, drinking enough clean water, avoiding drugs including antidepressants, pain killers, et al., eating fruits, sleeping enough, etc. It’s how he promotes these things which make the difference.

Of course, there is a question of inconsistency or, maybe, even conscious misrepresentation of facts.

He claims all information around us is biased to sell us drugs, processed foods, and other stuff damaging to our health. He spends about one third of his 600 page book repeating this pretty trivial statement again and again. He also spends significant amount of time pitching that government agencies, independent associations, news and mass media are all aligned with the interests of the industries selling these things. And still, his book reads as an advertising pitch for a number of products like coral calcium, electromagnetic healing devices, cleansing products and the whole alternative medicine and organic food industries, which are not small players in the United States anymore.

The author claims that animals in the wild don’t have diseases. First of all, that’s not true. They do. Second, they just die earlier. Humans in the wild - in prehistoric times - lived an average of 24-26 years. How many of us have diseases in our first 26 years?

The author also spends time discussing how the FDC and FDA treat him and his partners unfairly. It may be true – governments are known to treat small operators poorly, especially if there is large industry money involved. However, the more you read his book, the more it feels like a marketing ploy rather than a complaint.

He warns “never buy products advertised on TV” whilst his book carries a golden seal saying, “AS SEEN ON TV, OVER 3 MILLION COPIES SOLD!”

Anyway, that would not be interesting by itself from a memetic point of view. What matters are the things he plants into the heads of his readers. While you go through the book, you are repeatedly implanted with memes “You are sick”, “You are toxic”, “You have <a number of very unpleasant things> present and living in your body”. The whole book is about getting rid of poisons, parasites and negative factors from your body, while he actually pollutes your mind with self-destruct memes of enormous negative power.

It’s especially amazing considering what he says about the thoughts: “Thoughts are things. …Every thought you have can have a powerful impact on the cells in your body. … Negative stressful low vibration thoughts can give your body disease. …medical science cannot dispute the “placebo” effect. … Imagine, up to 40 percent of the time a person with a dreaded disease cures himself with his own thoughts! Thoughts can heal, but they can also cause sickness and disease.” (Page 109.)

You see, the guy knows perfectly well how thoughts affect people’s health, and page after page he consistently implants his readers with memes like “You are sick” or “You are toxic”! He claims – in effect and quite correctly in my humble opinion – that selling toxic foods should be considered criminal. Should not the poisoning of people’s minds be criminal too?

You may ask, how do you warn people about negative things and avoid hurting them? Actually, it’s not so tough. First, don’t make claims about the reader himself, skip right to the constructive statements. Don’t talk about toxic readers, talk about toxic foods. Don’t say “You are toxic”, but skip directly to “You can get rid of toxins in your body.” It does not take Einstein to figure out that if he eats something toxic, it’s a good idea to get the toxins out. When you talk about what happens in the body, speak about a third person. Not “if you eat processed food, you are toxic”, but “people who eat processed food are toxic.” It carries the same message, but allows an introspection of the statement without automatic imprinting into your mind. Of course, it has much less selling power this way. Which, by the way, makes me to think why he is not doing it in the first place.

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Retainer Viruses (based on the example of the latest Kiyosaki’s book)

Before Your Quite Your Job: 10 Real-Life Lessons Every Entrepreneur Should Know About Building A Multimillion-Dollar Business By Robert T. Kiyosaki, Sharon L. Lechter – Warner Business Books, 2005, 259 p., ISBN 0-446069637-4

People have different, often opposite views on Robert Kiyosaki’s books, the author of popular “Rich Dad, Poor Dad” series. This particular book is interesting because it talks about excuses that people use to decide not to go into a business on their own. Among those are “I don’t have money”, “I don’t have contacts”, “I’m not smart enough”, “Business is risky”, “I have to support family”. When you look at them from the memetics point of view, you will recognize our old acquaintances – mind viruses.

It’s interesting that the author divides all people into two categories, employees and entrepreneurs. The excuses he lists are typical for employees. He also points out that school is what usually conditions people to become employees, not entrepreneurs. After reading my book, you all know what the school does culturally, right? Yes, it plants a lot of mind viruses in the young minds to cultivate them into a predominantly expected kind of a person.

Let’s consider it in details. First, all these excuses have very strong anchors. “I have to support my family” goes straight to the procreation anchor. In fact, this anchor is so strong that for most people their memetic mind simply can’t notice any flaws in this argument. It’s only the cognitive mind that is able to leave no stone on stone in this virus, because (a) most employees don’t earn enough to support their families as they think they should, and (b) a lot of entrepreneurs are supporting their families just fine.

For other excuses it’s a little harder to find their anchors. Say, “I don’t have money” or “I don’t have contacts”. Where is an anchor here? In fact, there is none. These are not complete viruses, but rather payload parts of special antiviral viruses that are supposed to prevent penetration of the subjects by matching entrepreneur culture viruses. The whole viruses are “success stories” like “this guy had a lot of money, and he makes even more out of them”, or “this guy has a lot of connections, and he makes a load of money out of them.” The main anchors of success stories are both curiosity and self-justification. The self-justification one works like that: “This guy has a lot of money, that’s why he makes even more money, and I don’t have money, so it’s not me, it’s actually the absence of money that prevents me from financial success.” You see? Here we’ve got the payload that later surfaces as an excuse. And it also make the carrier, because by passing a “success story” along, you justify yourself in front of another person for not having the same success. And we are all really hooked on justifying ourselves in front of other people. It seems to be in our genetic make up.

Now, why would such a virus be successful? They are clearly not very successful in entrepreneur subculture. What makes these viruses to proliferate so widely in an employee subculture? An employee subculture itself.

If you consider an employee and an entrepreneur, they have to live in different styles, or, at least, they had to in the XX century. Employee was naturally risk avert, seeking security and stability, oriented for the control of resources, not results. An entrepreneur cannot avoid risk, he has to live with it and enjoy it. He does not have security beyond the one provided by his own capabilities. And if he does not set his mind on the results, he soon may find himself among employees. Naturally, such two different environments resulted in two different subcultures with their own system of supporting memes and mind viruses.

Each subculture to be stable have to keep several kinds of mind viruses. Some of them are useful symbiotic mind viruses that help their hosts to adapt to the environment. Risk aversion in a XXth century corporation was a symbiotic mind virus because it helped people to keep their jobs. But subculture also have to carry mind viruses that prevent their subjects from escaping – retainer viruses. Most of the excuses listed above are exactly these kinds of mind viruses.

Compare it to two extreme environments where these kinds of mind viruses are evident. A religious cult is normally built around a mind virus “leave us and you’ll go to hell.” That’s a typical retainer virus. In a concentration camp during World War II the guards on watch-towers and barbed wire was not exactly communicating a mind virus, but rather a simple meme that escaping is not an option. Although in the second case the meme was mostly correct, the purpose of guards and wire was rather communicating the meme than actually physically killing escaping prisoners. In fact, in the cases of mass escape, guards and wire was normally unable to function with 100% efficiency. Making them evident to the prisoners and implanting appropriate meme into their minds was from all point of view much more efficient measure against escaping than their direct purpose. In fact, killing those who try to escape was rather used to enforce the meme in the minds of remaining prisoners. That’s why guards, towers and wire was not hidden but rather demonstratively exposed, that’s why bodies of those who failed to escape could have been left in a common view. As it often does, perception was more important than reality.

Well, I beg your pardon for making such grim comparisons to the employee subculture, I just wanted to make clear the concept of a retainer virus.

By the way, arguments of Kiyosaki is based on the XXth century employment. Today, most of us even in the employment have to carry some elements of entrepreneur subculture, recognize the risks, and rely on peer relations. Except some obscure corners like some government agencies, employment does not provide anymore stability or security. Read Peter Drucker and Tom Peters on that (see below for some links).

[1] The Essential Drucker: The Best of Sixty Years of Peter Drucker’s Essential Writings on Management by Peter F. Drucker - Collins, 2003, 368 p., ISBN 006093574X

[2] Management Challenges for the 21st Century by Peter F. Drucker - Collins; 1st edition, 2001, 224 p., ISBN 0887309992

[3] Re-imagine! by Tom Peters - DK Publishing, 2003, 352 p., ISBN 078949647X

[4] The Brand You 50: Or Fifty Ways to Transform Yourself from an ‘Employee’ into a Brand That Shouts Distinction, Commitment, and Passion! by Tom Peters - Knopf, 1999, 224 p., ISBN 0375407723

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Human Self-destruct Sequence in Research & Medicine

The Dangers of Chronic Distress: Are you worried, irritable and socially inhibited? A simple test may help predict the health effect by Michael C. Miller, M.D. – Newsweek, Oct 3, 2005, p.58-59.

Miller is editor in chief of the Harvard Mental Health Letter.

“And among people who already have heart conditions, those with the highest scores – the so-called Type D personalities – are less responsive to treatment and have poorer quality of life. They are also more likely to die prematurely.”

Not a big surprise, of course, but a very good illustration to the thesis of a self-destruct programming in humans and how to avoid it. Personality types are all about predominant memes ruling the choices and views of a person. It seems that some memes are capable of bringing our body machinery to premature break ups, whether by design or by mere mismanagement of the body resources.

Of course, when I refer to other authors, they usually talk about much deeper, often cellular-level self-destruct programming. But this example, which comes as no surprise to most people in the XXI century, illustrates it with evidence: a person’s choice of memes to carry is a choice of how good and how long life he or she is going to live.

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To ship or not to ship?

Today, let’s consider an example of how two conflicting mind viruses may result in a thick emotional screen and an elaborate net of lies to ensure that they both survive.

Imagine that you work on a new product. An ancient mind virus “I am what I do” – (Me, is, my product) – makes you to strive for good quality and design. Sounds like a fine idea, right? The problem is that it links your product to your identity. You cannot ship something inferior at the threat of feeling diminished, defective, unworthy of your place in the society.

So, what’s the problem? Just do a superb job and be happy, right? Alas, it’s not always possible. You are allowed to have too few people, too small salary fund to hire the right people, too few resources to do the job, and too little time. In fact, from a business perspective it may make a lot of sense. But not from the perspective of your mind virus that forces you to strive for doing a better job.

Now we have two mind viruses:

(1) “Do a superb product” anchored in your personality and identity (pretty much a survival anchor) and carried in society on reciprocal basis starting from your parents telling you – no, not good grades yet – to eat your breakfast porridge until the plate is clean.

(2) “Finish the product on time on budget” anchored in your job security, enforced by upper management and carried by the need to enforce the same imperative in the whole group.

Now the time comes and the product is not ready. First, the deadline virus strikes, because there is no way you can really ship what you’ve got, and there is no way to fix it in time either. If this is a car, it still misses the wheels; if it is a software product, it has problems installing, not to mention doing something useful; if it is a plane, let’s not even go into it… But slipping the deadline is deadly, nobody wants that. So, you get the quality mind virus and talk to your boss, to your reports, and finally higher powers agree to move the deadline. After all, they have the same mind viruses and they have similar pressures that you do, if not from the upper management, then from their peers.

Let’s see what happened. You slipped. You missed the deadline. Everybody knows that. Everybody does not speak about it. Everybody speaks about “the right decision”, “importance of good quality”, and “interests of a customer”. Mentioning that you slipped becomes socially improper behavior, like eating with hands or sneezing in public.

Then the reality and market forces press and you have to ship something finally. You still don’t have the quality required by your personality mind virus. You cannot abandon the virus, so you have to convince yourself (and everybody around) that you are shipping something of a good quality; something that does not harm your identity; something that deserves your status in the society. At the same time, you have to ship the damn thing, no matter what its current condition is. If you don’t, there may be no company to work for and no product to ship whatsoever. Or, maybe, simply no job at the company where you work on the product. Now comes the time of the “quality” game.

Suddenly, you don’t want zero defects, you just want zero defects that you know of. Actually, quite a reasonable idea except that you don’t want to know what you test team found. Then it becomes zero defects except those that you reviewed and decided that you can live with them. Guess what? You quickly find more and more defects that you are willing to live with. But, if you decide to fix something, that absolutely must be fixed! Your integrity would not stand for anything less. Of course, if another review will not reveal that you can live with it. And now the day comes. You are shipping the product. You are proud of its quality. After all, you fixed all the defects that “must” be fixed, right? And you are proud of delivering on time. Yeah, there were some reviews of schedule, it always happens, but you delivered right on the final schedule! Right? Of course, right. Two little mind viruses in your head would not settle for anything less. And neither would you. :-)

The only little problem is that you did not ship on schedule and you left a lot of problems inside the product. Fortunately for you, everybody around (management, peers, your team) share the same mind viruses and wholeheartedly agree with you. They would not settle for anything less either! Well, almost everybody. Except those dissidents, that you got rid of in the process.

Sounds familiar?

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Dear Stupid!

Hi folks,Have you ever received a mail that starts with something like 

“Dear Stupid,
I am Giving Away My Secrets on Getting Rich with …”

I do. You see, when I subscribe to the mail lists I often give names like “Stupid”, “Fool”, “Junk” instead of my first name. Really, these guys don’t really need my name. They only use it to fool me into a false sense of a personal touch. So, why not pull a little prank on them?

Really, why? Why am I doing that?

Do I enjoy being called “stupid”? Well, not exactly, there is much better reason for that.

Many mail lists on the internet are designed to lure you into buying something – a report that reveals secrets, a guide that should make you rich, schemes that are supposed to bring you wealth beyond your wildest dreams, pills that make you a sex legend, diets that will let you die healthy… You name it, and somebody on the Internet is already promising it.

You may wonder why somebody would ever consider such offers, and the answer is “marketing”. Marketing and advertising. A sales copy filled with anchors and mind viruses. A sales copy that pretends to be a messages from your old friend; a message that tries to start with something like “Hi, Joe,…” or “Hey, Bob, …” to make you think that it was written by an old friend specially for you. There are no friends behinds it, actually, there are no real people either, it all happens automatically. Your name was harvested, put into a database, and now it was automatically inserted into a template like, “Hi, ,…” Once you are deceived into the friendly mood, it becomes much easier to penetrate your mind and infect you with a buying virus. Yes, just that.

Now, you see what my little prank does? Instead of cheating me into a friendly open-mind mode, it automatically arms my defenses with an unexpected offense.

You know, it’s not what they call you, it’s what you do after reading their stuff that makes you stupid or smart.

Till the next time!

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“Weight Loss 4 Idiots” Oh….

Weight Loss 4 Idiots

I cannot resist… Once I posted two notices on health programs, Google served the following ad on this blog: “Weight loss 4 idiots”

Quotes from the front page: “2+2=5″, “I am a certified idiot”, “Lose 9 lbs. by May 31st” (today is May 19, but maybe they mean the next year?), “Click to Begin”

I believe, no analysis is necessary… By the way, I kind of like them, it’s just their first page… you know… To their defense, I have to mention that they use relatively subtle and not too dangerous mind viruses. You know, no death curses, no “leave this site and you will die!”, nothing like that. As to their ideas, you can judge for yourself.

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Fair notice - why I even mention such stuff

Just to clarify: my goal is not to criticize a specific vendor or a program. That’s not so important or interesting. The imporant thing is to help you learn to recognize mind viruses instantly “on contact” — the skill that highly increases your natural immunity to them. Thank you for a chance to help you! (I don’t know, why am I doing this, probably some other mind virus… :-) )

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