You know... I actually liked the section on energies (not in the voodoo sense though). Where he talks about being afraid of the dog,
Oh I like the concept as well, just not how he formulates it with pseudoscience while actual science can properly describe it. "Emotion" or "emotional memory" or "experience" would've been just as effective; it's true that the sum of our experiences depends on their relative strengths (i.e. lots of positive reinforcement can finally counterbalance a hugely negative experience). It's more toned down in the Zone, but it was way out of hand in his previous book (which I read, but didn't keep). I don't remember the specifics anymore, but it was very bad.

instead of focusing on not doing it, focus on doing things right.
You've nailed how the brain works, and it's most evident in sports ("be the ball") and most common in everyday life in driving: when you're under-steering straight into that big immovable utility pole, look where you want to go and your hand-eye coordination will automatically steer you to safety. How many times do you run straight in say a pothole because you just couldn't look away from it? Happens to everyone.
As a sidebar, that's why I enjoyed a crash avoidance course years ago; shows you first-hand just how much better we can be at something if we just focus on the objective rather than the scary obstacle. Takes practice. I've killed poor defenseless Cardboard Julie the first time... :eek:
I'm just showing you a specific example of a statistically significant use of price alone, which conflicts directly with claims that price is purely random. To dismiss those would dismiss as coincidental the proven concepts of trend lines and mean reversion which is why I have yet to reconcile what I read from other credible sources and from random proponents including yourself.