In a recent biography of Alexander the Great, the author, in
exploring Alexander's motivations and driving forces, makes some
fascinating observations.
It would seem that Alexander was a devoted reader of Homer's
great epic poems, The Odyssey and the Iliad; particularly the
latter. The Iliad deals with Ancient Greek ideals of hero,
warfare and glory in the context of the war against the city of
Troy. Alexander, it would seem, read these stories from an early
age and imagined himself to be in the same line as the classic
Greek heroes of yesteryear. He was quite obsessive about this
poem epic and could recite large sections of it by heart. In
fact, he had a special copy made for himself and took it with him
on his exploits and conquests of two million square miles of the
ancient world.
In particular, his great hero was Achilles, from whom he was said
to be a direct descendant through his mother. Throughout his
life, Alexander engaged in a sort of rivalry with his hero and
sought to outdo Achilles' exploits by his own. He also encouraged
comparison between himself and Achilles.
All of this is fascinating from a number of aspects. First and
foremost, it is yet another proof - as is repeatedly evidenced by
all great achievers in life - that the mind creates reality. In
other words, what you dwell upon becomes your reality. Dwelling
on a fictional account of heroism and conquest made one man
realize that reality in his own life and conquer most of the
known world. This was his role model and what he continually
fantasized becoming.
Secondly, in so identifying with Achilles, he effectively made
him a mentor. This is another common feature of highly successful
people. They all have someone they turn to, or seek to emulate.
Usually, that person is alive. Even Bill Gates has a mentor. His
name is Warren Buffett; one of the greatest living stock market
investors and, like Bill Gates, a multi-billionaire. So if you
seek excellence in a particular field, the first thing to do is
to try to find someone who already excels in it and try to make
their acquaintance and ask that person to be your mentor. If that
person is inaccessible (for now), then read their writings, watch
their videos and imagine yourself doing the same. Ask yourself
what that person would do in each situation. Imagine being that
person.
However, if you have no living mentor who will do, you can create
one in your imagination as Alexander must have done with
Achilles. You can imagine your mentor performing at the level of
excellence you desire and then, as Alexander the Great must have
done, step into that person's shoes and imagine it is you
excelling and leaving the rest of the world behind.
It is so striking that all highly successful people do a huge
amount of imagining and daydreaming. Most of us do not because we
feel it is a waste of time and achieves nothing. Strangely,
enough, it could be the most important thing we ever do. Without
it, all our other "practical" efforts could go for nothing.
In conclusion, (a) seek a mentor in your field of choice - either
living, dead or imagined - and seek to emulate that person's
excellence; (b) imagine and visualize your future vividly and
continually. Imagine even the utterly impossible, as Alexander
the Great did. If you do, who knows what might happen? Your
vision of what is possible might just have to expand a lot to fit
a much grander design!
© 2001 All Rights Reserved Worldwide Asoka Selvarajah
Dr. Asoka Selvarajah is an active writer/researcher on personal
development and esoteric spirituality. Asoka's work helps
people achieve their full potential, deepen their understanding
of mystical truth, and find joy in their true soul's purpose.
Subscribe to his FREE ezine, Aspire To Wisdom, and receive his
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