Blissful Innocence

Blissful Innocence by Alan Cohen

A few years ago I attended a screening of made-for-TV video clips of paranormal and supernatural phenomena. One of the more humorous segments depicted "The Magnetic Family" of the Philippines -- a family that, for some unknown reason, has their bodies magnetized to such a high degree that metal objects hold fast to their skin. The audience gasped and laughed to view paper clips, metal forks, and even a steam iron stuck to the bodies of this family, sheerly by magnetic force.

After the presentation the organizer introduced me to the group, and for a joke I called myself "the Magnetic Man of Maui". The audience laughed, and the gathering soon dispersed.

As I was standing on the porch of the house where the screening had been held, a seven-year-old girl came up to me and tugged on my sleeve. I looked down to recognize her as one of several children at the viewing. Then, without a word, the child took a quarter from her hand and pressed it to my bare forearm. At first I thought the girl was trying to give me the quarter, but then, when the quarter fell to the ground, she frowned, looked up, and exclaimed, "I thought you said you were magnetic!"

A moment of laughter soon deepened to a profound realization: An innocent mind is open to all possibilities. Jesus taught "if you want to enter the Kingdom of Heaven, you must become like a little child."

Ignorance Is Bliss

We have heard that "ignorance is bliss," and we usually judge and criticize ignorant people. Yet there is a form of ignorance that serves us well, and that is ignorance of limiting beliefs. A Calvin and Hobbes cartoon declared, "It's not denial. I'm just selective about the reality I accept." Every reality is available to you -- including ones far more wondrous than the one you now live in -- and you can easily step into a bigger universe if you but drop your beliefs of what you can't do. If you think you know it all, and what you have learned is "the only truth", you cut yourself off from all the truth grander than the one you currently know.

Blissful Innocence by Alan CohenWhen I wrote The Dragon Doesn't Live Here Anymore in 1981, I was blissfully ignorant about writing and the book industry. I wrote for the sheer delight of expressing myself creatively, and I published the book myself. Within a few months the book became popular, and before long I was reprinting in volumes of 10,000 and traveling around the world to present seminars.

Then one day I walked into a bookstore where my book was being sold, and I was appalled at the huge number of books on similar subject matter -- they took up nearly a whole wall! Suddenly it occurred to me that if I had walked into the store and saw all the excellent and successful work already presented in my field, I probably would never had set pen to paper. But I was ignorant -- and that made all the difference.

Later as I got to know the publishing industry, I learned all the rules; what kinds of books sell, covers that attract attention, agents who can influence publishers, formulas to appeal to various kind of audiences, etc. etc. etc. In retrospect, I sure am glad I didn't know the rules, because most of the rules lead to the disappointing conclusion that only a small percentage of writers will succeed. Some of the other people who did not know the rules were Dale Carnegie, Norman Vincent Peale, and James Redfield. Is there a message here?

Running the Four-Minute Mile

Back in 1951, running a four-minute mile was considered physiologically impossible, Then Roger Bannister ran the mile in 3:58, and within six months forty other contenders beat the unbeatable limit. A few years ago in Australia, a 61-year-old farmer named Cliff Young entered a grueling 400 kilometer race wearing coveralls and galoshes. As the younger well-trained athletes who competed with him laughed, Cliff went on to win the race in record time -- a full day and a half before competition forty years his junior. How did Cliff do the impossible? Nobody told him he was supposed to sleep.

The word impossible begins with an imp. Get the imp out of your vision, and you will return to your original innocence. God created the world in perfection, and if we do not see perfection it is only because we are choosing to use a vision that is smaller than God's. A friend told me, "I used to think I was a perfectionist because everywhere I looked I saw flaws. Now I realize that I was actually an imperfectionist. If I was really a perfectionist, I would see only perfection."

Swami Satchidananda teaches, "We started out fine. Then we got de-fined. Now we need to get re-fined." Perhaps children are the happiest people on the planet because they have not learned what they cannot do. They have not been taught to fear and judge and hate, and they have no concept that they must justify their existence by hard work. Lord, please keep me ignorant, so I may remember my innocence and see the world as You created it.


Book by the author of this article:

Dare To Be Yourself by Alan CohenDare to Be Yourself: How to Quit Being an Extra in Other Peoples Movies and Become the Star of Your Own
by Alan Cohen.

In this powerful map to self-discovery, Alan Cohen draws on sources from Buddhism to the Bible, from Gandhi and Einstein to A Course In Miracles, sharing many of his own radiant moments of revelation on the spiritual path. 

Info/Order this book.


About The Author

Alan Cohen

Alan Cohen is the author of many popular inspirational books, including his forthcoming book Enough Already: The Power of Radical Contentment. Join Alan for his Personal Mentorship Program beginning January 4, 2012. For more information about his books, programs, or free daily inspirational quotes via email, visit www.alancohen.com, email This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. , or phone 1-808-572-0001.


Read more articles by Alan Cohen.


Please Share This Article... Thank you :-)

You Might Also Like
A Perfect MatchA Perfect Match...
by Alan Cohen. Chris Chrysler was a skilled and devoted violinist who had a lifelong dream to own a Stradivarius. For many years Chris worked hard to earn eno...
Dining & Living with PassionDining & Living with Passion...
by Alan Cohen. Passion is a very holy thing. You can lose many material things, but if you lose your passion, you're a goner. It is the very juice of life, the...
I Can't Believe It's Not BuddhaI Can't Believe It's Not Buddha...
A man came to a guru and challenged him, "I will give you an orange if you can show me where God is." The guru thought for a moment, then answered, "I will give...
Passion & PrayerPassion & Prayer...
by Alan Cohen. Veronica declares, "I confess... I confess that I find more ecstasy in passion than in prayer. Such passion is prayer." For those of us who have ...
Brain Structure May Affect Reading AbilityBrain Structure May Affect Reading Ability...
New research indicates that "Brain Structure May Affect Reading Ability" - INNERSELF MAGAZINE - Creating new attitudes for the new millennium ...

Latest Self-Help

Is The Weather Deciding What Mood You're In?

by Ashley Davis Bush, LCSW. When you catch yourself complaining about the…

Reasons for Failure: Fatal Alibis That Prevent Success

by Napoleon Hill. People who do not succeed have one distinguishing trait in…

Dreams & Dreamtime: Walking Between the Worlds

by Linda Star Wolf. As far back as I can remember, my Mammy taught me to talk…

Is Your Mind Making Scary Movies?

by Guy Finley. Who you really are, your original Self, doesn’t come loaded with…

Healing the Past & Learning from the Future

by Linda Star Wolf. Daily dedication and a willingness to heal our past will…

Mechanics and Miracles: Which Are You Seeing?

by Alan Cohen. Considering the challenges facing humanity, one might wonder if…

There Is Nothing to Fix: Discovering & Accepting Who I Am

by Agapi Stassinopoulos. For years, I looked at myself through the prism of…

Learning To Be Grateful: Be Thankful for Everything

by David Ian Cowan. When Lynn Grabhorn was asked, “What is one simple thing I…

Translate this page

English Arabic Chinese (Simplified) Dutch French German Italian Japanese Korean Norwegian Portuguese Russian Spanish Swedish

If translation is incomplete,
please refresh the page (F5)

Latest Newsletter

How To Explain Your Illness to Your Teenager

by Kathleen McCue. A teenager facing a parent's illness may go off in all kinds…

Reasons for Failure: Fatal Alibis That Prevent Success

by Napoleon Hill. People who do not succeed have one distinguishing trait in…

Desire: The Starting Point of All Achievement

by Napoleon Hill (original 1937 text). Edwin C. Barnes’ desire was not a hope!…

Saturated Fats: They Are NOT Causing Heart Disease?

by Louisa L. Williams, N.S., D.C., N.D. The much-maligned saturated fats —…

Our Planetary Journey: From Catastrophobia to Spiritual Awakening

by Barbara Hand Clow. Many people are afflicted with catastrophobia — an…

Why & How To Pick A Spiritual Practice

by Sophie Rose. In this age of technology and materialism, when many wonder…

Horoscope Current Week

by Pam Younghans. This weekly astrological journal is based on planetary…