Taming Your Inner Voice -t Harv Eker-tony Robb... -
Eker teaches us to separate fact from story. That voice saying “ I’m bad with money ” is not a fact. It is a recording you inherited from your parents or past failures.
Go tame that voice.
Your inner voice is that thermostat. If you grew up hearing “money is hard to get” or “rich people are greedy,” that voice will sabotage you the moment you try to make $10,000 in a month.
Stop Listening to the Liar in Your Head: How to Tame Your Inner Voice (Eker + Robbins Style) Taming Your Inner Voice -T Harv Eker-Tony Robb...
Let’s be honest for a second. Who is the loudest critic in your life?
The next time the voice whispers “ You’re going to fail ,” do something physical. Snap your fingers. Jump in place. Change your physiology.
Your inner voice gets loudest when you are tired, hungry, or stressed. That voice is a pattern of neuro-associations. To tame it, you cannot argue with it—you have to interrupt it. Eker teaches us to separate fact from story
Robbins says, “Emotion is created by motion.” If you stay slumped on the couch listening to the whiner in your head, you lose. But if you stand up, raise your arms, and shout “ Cancel! ” you break the trance. Most people try to silence their inner voice. That doesn’t work. You can’t kill your ego; you can only train it.
The victim inner voice says: “ The economy is bad. ” The creator inner voice says: “ What opportunity does this crisis hide? ”
Listen to the whisper of possibility. Ignore the scream of fear. Go tame that voice
It isn’t your boss. It isn’t your partner. It isn’t the comment section on social media.
T. Harv Eker, the author of Secrets of the Millionaire Mind , calls this your financial “thermostat.” Tony Robbins calls it your “limiting belief” or your “map.” But they both agree on one thing:
It’s you .
The moment you hear the negative voice, call it out loud: 2. Interrupt the Pattern (Robbins’ Peak State) Tony Robbins built an empire on one psychological insight: Where focus goes, energy flows.
T. Harv Eker teaches that wealthy people “act in spite of fear.” Tony Robbins teaches that fear is just “False Evidence Appearing Real.” The magic happens when you merge these two ideas.