The Architect of Dream
When Mike Tyson
defeated Muhammad Ali and became world champion, a reporter asked him if he was
excited to win the medal. Tyson replied calmly: “Not at all. I have seen
myself winning this medal a thousand times in my dreams.”
This is the power
of visualisation—living the victory in the mind until reality simply follows.
Every achievement
is born twice—once in the mind, then in reality.
Olympic coaches
use this technique deliberately. Athletes are trained to instill positive
images, to rehearse success mentally, and to guard against negative thoughts.
The film Bhag
Milkha Bhag illustrates this vividly: Milkha Singh loses a medal when a
single distracting thought enters his mind.
One stray image
can break the rhythm; one focused visualisation can secure the triumph.
The subconscious
mind is not merely a hidden reservoir of thoughts—it is the silent architect of
our destiny.
Books like The
Power of Your Subconscious Mind have touched millions, offering living
examples of how unseen forces shape the realisation of dreams.
I have read this
book repeatedly over three decades, and its impact has unfolded in my own
life—some dreams realised exactly as envisioned, some in unexpected ways, and
some still waiting to bloom. Even in my sixties, I continue to nurture and
refine dreams, guided by this inner power.
Prayer,
intuition, and insight are not abstract mysteries; they are practical tools.
Prayer, when harmonised
with the subconscious, becomes a force that activates dreams.
Intuition, when
integrated with prayer, guides decision-making with clarity beyond logic.
To the common
man, these may sound complex, but their essence lies in application.
That simple answer carries wisdom. Let scientists explore theories and
uncover complexities; our task is to use the power.
The same applies to the subconscious mind—it is not necessary to understand
every mechanism in detail to benefit from it. What matters is how we apply it
in daily life, how we harness it to engineer dreams and realise them.
I have written a chapter in my book, My Perspective of
Prayer, and a conceptual paper, Decision Making with
Intuition Integrated with Prayer. My work is focused on
application rather than complex theory.
How to Tap the Potential of the Subconscious Mind:
- Be Transparent – Honesty with oneself opens the
inner channels.
- Be Receptive – Keep the mind open to signals,
insights, and guidance.
- Believe Deeply – Faith is the bridge between
vision and realization.
- Visualize Positively – See the dream vividly, as if
already achieved.
- Cultivate Quality Sleep – Rest allows the subconscious to
work unhindered.
- Feed Positive Thoughts Before Sleep – The last thought at night seeds
tomorrow’s reality.
- Protect Against Negativity – Guard the mind from destructive
influences.
- Offer Prayers – Align your inner self with higher
harmony.
Dreams are
engineered not only by effort but by the silent work of the subconscious.
To envision,
nurture, and refine a dream is to collaborate with this inner architect.
The
subconscious mind does not argue—it accepts.
What
we sow in it through belief, visualisation, and prayer, it works tirelessly to
manifest.
Dr. Mahendra
Ingale Pune, April 11,
2026
Author of Value‑Based
Leadership
#EngineeringDreamsInspiringSouls
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