Occasionally, I find someone who says, “I can’t visualize.” While this may be true in rare instances, it is not most of
time.When someone says, “I can’t visualize,” they usually mean, “I’m not very good at this.”
That’s fine. As Yoda might say, “Practice we can.”
Whether you are practiced or not at
essential success skill of visualization, consider this interesting example of what one mind can do when absolutely necessary.
Professor Stephen Hawking possesses one
world’s more formidable minds locked in one of
world’s most useless bodies.
A victim of Lou Gehrig’s disease, Hawking has lived for decades with an almost total loss of motor skills.
He is also one of
world’s most brilliant cosmologists and mathematicians, holding
chair at Cambridge once occupied by Isaac Newton.
Since he cannot hold a pen or turn a page, he has to work out all
mind-numbing subtleties of his art between his ears.