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FOR CHILDREN
Being a thought watcher
What are some of the things you spend time watching? Animals and birds? Television? Ballet dancers, skiers, swimmers, or soccer players? From dancers and athletes you expect accuracy, strength, control. And the best performances come from those who have learned to watch and train their thoughts every bit as much as their muscles.
You can be a thought watcher. This kind of watching, which isn't done with your eyes at all, is very important. Right thinking can help you in schoolwork, in sports, in developing any of your talents.
"But," you may ask, "how do I know when a thought is worth keeping?"
Enjoy 1 free Sentinel article or audio program each month, including content from 1898 to today.
June 27, 1983 issue
View Issue-
Nothing shall hurt you
CHARLENE DAILEY WOLFARTH
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Finding heaven here and now
GLORIA ELAINE MARLATT
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Which unemployment problem?
ROBERT W. JEFFERY
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The Reading Room—a spiritual oasis
JACK V. SMITH
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Valuing the motherhood of God
BERYL J. OSBORNE
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To a daughter
EMILY A. SWINNERTON
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"First lessons" in moral and spiritual law (Part II)
JON GIB HARDER
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Prayer for Sunday School
JOYCE NANCY MOSS
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Deeper than words, the healing Spirit!
DeWITT JOHN
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You know enough to heal
NATHAN A. TALBOT
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Being a thought watcher
Aylesa Forsee
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God's child
Beatrice L. Tukesbury
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When our son was at the age of five, he developed...
ERWIN S. CORNELIUS
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One healing I had was when I pinched my fingers in the car...
CYNTHIA JACQUELYN McPHERSON with contributions from LOIS ANN McPHERSON, R. GEORGE BRYAN, JR.
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Christian Science has blessed me these many years
ELLEN P. O'CONNOR
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For fifty years Christian Science has been at work weaving a pattern...
CLARICE EDITH BERGER