This movie discusses the "Law of Attraction", supposedly a secret that
will unlock untold and unlimited human potential.
This movie reminded me a lot of when I took "The Forum" (descended from
EST), which is typical of the self-help genre, which tends to have the
following characteristics:
- Hardly any of the presentation is spent discussing the
specific techniques that are supposedly going to improve your life.
- Most of the presentation is spent vaguely praising
itself. There is a lot of dramatic imagery involved.
- A very strong pitch is made that you have the ability to completely control your life, the
implication being that if you adopt the (barely discussed) techniques, everything in your life will improve.
- The actual wisdom being imparted is actually very simple,
not really enough to justify a whole movie or book, the rest is just
window dressing to make it appear to be the core issue of the universe.
The "Law of Attraction" states that the universe delivers to you
whatever you think about. It doesn't distinguish between good and
bad. If you focus on the bad things, they will inevitably come to
you. The way to make good things happen is by focusing just on
those good things. That's it. That's the whole secret.
I think there is value to this. If you
are focused solely on those bad things, without having positive
thoughts about a way out, that's not a very constructive approach.
But I have also seen a couple of the most
catastrophically failed people I've ever met who were totally following
this philosophy.
- One was a drug dealer who I knew in college. He was
totally focused on how he was going to build his drug dealing business
into a billion dollar corporation, and ignored the risks involved -
this risks to his health caused by all the drugs he was taking, and the
risks posed by the dangerous criminals he was associating with.
He lost his sanity because of drug use and never really recovered.
- Another was a guy who read some books about instant
millionaires on Wall Street, who borrowed tens of thousands of dollars
on credit cards to play the stock market. He did not think about
the risks he was taking, and would not listen to my advice that these
books he was reading were not economically sound, but just focused on
the great wealth he was going to be enjoying, He had no health
insurance, he drove without auto insurance. He lost his shirt in
the market (by short-selling a high-tech startup, which makes
absolutely no sense to any investor who takes risk into account), and
last I heard was being sued by multiple banks while unemployed.
Fear is in many ways a very healthy instinct, keeping us from
doing a lot of stupid things. It is a highly underrated
emotion. Thinking about risks, avoiding them, and making
preparations for the unavoidable ones, is very sound practice.
Another drawback of positive thinking comes to mind. I remember
one time the state lottery jackpot was up to 100 million dollars.
Normally I don't buy lottery tickets, but that week I bought one.
The whole week I spent a lot of time thinking
about all the magnificent things I would do with 100 million
dollars. At the end of the week (surprise!) I didn't win. I
realized I had made a mistake in buying the ticket. The $2 lost
was insignificant to me, but the wasted brain time, which
could have been devoted to actually improving my life, which was instead
devoted to stupid daydreams about what I would do with the money, was
unacceptable. I've never bought a lottery ticket since. The
human mind cannot accurately comprehend a one in a million probability,
and does not allocate its time well.
There is a lot of talk about visualizing what you want, but that really
is no "secret" to athletes. I remember being told in football
practice to visualize myself doing the proper technique, and it is
definitely a useful tactic.
But the movie makes claims that the supernatural is behind this
principal. One guy in the movie claimed to "create" parking
spaces for himself
by visualizing them ahead of time. If "the secret" really works,
I'd want a lot more than parking spaces from it -- I'm reminded of the
time Homer Simpson got any wish he wanted and he asked for a really
nice sandwich.
The movie talks a lot about sickness. There are always miracle
cures occurring - a certain fraction of cancers just go away by
themselves, and sometimes people heal when the doctors gave them no
hope. For this movie, they dug up some of these people who then
claim it was all done with the power of their minds.
I am reminded of a study discussed in a
psychology class I took in college. Periodically, wildfires
approach suburbs in Southern California, and sometimes they burn down
some of the houses. People take numerous measures to save their
houses - they stand on the roof with water hoses putting out burning
embers than land on them, they run around the yard stomping out the
flames. So for this study, they went around the neighborhood
taking a survey of what measures were taken to save houses, then
studied the correlation between measures taken and house
survival. They found no correlation. What people did to
save their houses made no difference. In the survey, they also
asked people if the measures taken influenced saving their
houses. The people whose houses survived tended to think their
measures helped. The people whose houses burned down felt there
was nothing that could have been done.
I am reminded of hearing about how people would be
told in EST seminars that they are responsible for having gotten
cancer, and this movie is doing exactly
that. If the sick person actually listens to this drivel, their
suffering is compounded by feeling guilty for having brought this upon
themselves.
Furthermore, people may shun surgery and
medication and try to just think themselves
healthy. Interestingly, the movie offers no actual studies of
survival rates of people who turn to modern medicine as compared to
those who adopt a program of positive thinking according to the
dictates of the Law of Attraction. But this movie isn't really
addressed to the type of people who ask for statistics. Like most
quack medicine, the focus is all on testimonials rather than studies.
They claim that The Secret has been passed down through the ages, in
secret. What is not made clear is If this were true, Why was it
kept secret? The movie specifically states there would be
no ill
effects if everyone embraced The Secret, there is enough abundance to
go around. So the more people knew this, the better. There
would be no reason for a few giants to hoard this wisdom and shut out
the majority of the human race. There is also no specifics of the
history of this secret through the ages, no specific examples of anyone
trying to suppress anything.