Very few people in Hiroshima woke up that day wanting to die. Very few people in Auschwitz where there because they felt they somehow deserved to be there. Bad things happen to us that we clearly do not wish, and good things happen to us that we do not expect. It is a perversion of sorcery to say that our thoughts determine our reality. Keep in mind most of the earth's human population live in the basest of poverties.

Would you say that a child born anecephalic is the fault of a mother who didn't listen to the "Good Birthing" subliminal tape? Would you say that the population of Nagasaki should have added "Bomb free is the way to be" to their daily affirmations?

Beliving in the posibility of your desired outcome has great power. Cutting out the belief that there could be any other outcome is also powerful. Indeed, our beliefs become the filters by which we judge our reality, including possible futures. However, cause and effect do exist, and believing that gravity is a suggestion, and not a universal force, will not give you the power to fly like superman.