The Power of Mind (Part I)

For Success in Health & Wealth

William James: Belief as Biology

The greatest discovery of my generation is that human beings can alter their lives by altering their attitudes of mind.

Dr. William James

William James suffered from depression and nearly ended his life, but in that frail moment, a thought dawned in his mind--to act by will and to believe. It is revealing when we read the state of his mind in dark despair, suddenly seeing a bright ray of light and hope.

"I mean that the fear was so invasive and powerful that if I had not clung to scripture-texts like 'The eternal God is my refuge,' etc., 'Come unto me, all ye that labor and are heavy-laden,' etc., 'I am the resurrection and the life,' etc., I think I should have grown really insane."

"...when I have felt like taking a free initiative... suicide seemed the most manly form to put my daring into. Now I will go a step further with my will, not only act with it, but believe as well; believe in my individual reality and creative power."

Something changed in that moment as he used his power of choice to transfer from the path of death to a path of hope. This was the beginning of modern psychology, knighting him as the 'Father of American Psychology.' He established psychology as a formal discipline at Harvard, bridging psychology with philosophy.

"The course of destiny may be altered by individuals.... Again and again, success depends on energy of act, energy again depends on faith that we shall not fail, and that faith in turn [depends] on the faith that we are right — which faith thus verifies itself."

Neuroscience would not catch up to his intuition until a century later, confirming that intention and mindset alter prefrontal activity, dopamine release, and emotional regulation, something he experienced firsthand and taught others. His radical idea that belief or faith is the first medicine underpins every placebo study ever conducted.

What is placebo? It is the power of a positive belief that becomes reality.

But most people believe in a nocebo, the power of a negative belief that becomes their reality.

On May 8, 2025, at 11:00 pm, as I saw the results of my CT Calcium heart scan, a score of 505, my heart stopped. I had severe calcified coronary arteries. I immediately thought, I have to give up biking, which I love so much. I realized I could drop dead with any strenuous exertion. I felt a profound sadness and a sense of relegation in my heart. As I closed my eyes in shock, I prayed. 

Like William, a light dawned in me that the Lord will see me through this, that there is hope. In a moment, several things came to light in my heart. I recalled a book I had read over ten years ago, a book I believe was placed in the Regent College Bookstore for me. A health book in a Bible store? "Prevent and Reverse Heart Disease: The Revolutionary, Scientifically Proven, Nutrition-Based Cure" by Dr. Caldwell Esselstyn. I decided I would follow the protocol in the book. The next morning, I started a low-fat vegan diet. 30 months was the time it took for Dr. Esselstyn's star patient to fully reverse his 100% blocked coronary artery to 0%. 

In that moment, I believed I was healed. It would just take 30 months or so to see evidence of physical healing, but in my mind, it was already done. The belief that the Lord was with me and would grant me the wisdom to reverse my disease drove my thoughts, words and actions towards healing. Three months later, all the plaque in my neck arteries had completely melted away, almost miraculously. I am sure the same is happening in my heart vessels.

This is the power of belief: rewiring neurons, redirecting inflammatory markers, and the body reversing cholesterol out of my clogged arteries, rewriting my future.

Viktor Frankl: Meaning Overpowers Death

Everything can be taken from a man but one thing: the last of human freedoms — to choose one’s attitude in any given set of circumstances

Dr. Viktor Frankl

Dr. Frankl had everything stripped from him: his parents, his wife, his freedom, his dignity and his home. He had nothing left except torture for the unknown future, giving just one small piece of bread for the day, no change of clothes and meaningless work, carrying heavy water aimlessly back and forth with no purpose but to drive despair of life into his very soul. 

But he realized he could choose his attitude. He believed this experience in Auschwitz would define him somehow. He watched fellow prisoners die not purely due to hunger, but because of hopelessness and despair. Those who found meaning, a reason to live, a loved one to return to, a purpose beyond reason, found a way to keep surviving somehow.

His book, Man's Search for Meaning, describes his logotherapy, therapy through meaning, because humans are truly motivated not by mere pleasure or power, but by purpose.

Later studies would prove him right. Purpose reduces mortality. In a study from Rush Alzheimer's Center, people with a strong sense of purpose lived 7-10 years longer and inflammatory biomarkers like Interleukin-6 (IL-6) and C Reactive Protein (CRP) are lower.

Meaning modulates metabolism.

I thought to myself that night, rather than treati my heart condition like a 'death sentence', this could be my life purpose. To become the doctor who heals himself almost miraculously in a way never done before. I would discover the power of foods, fasting regimens, and high-intensity interval exercise at a level beyond what has been deemed possible. This is what I saw in my mind and heart that late night. I knew people would think I'm crazy, but I am used to that. I would become the doctor who fulfilled the proverb, "Physician, heal thyself."

In every reversal, there is a Frankl moment of meaning: when the data and evidence look terminal, but the story you believe in is eternal and filled with deep purpose.

P.S. My hsCRP is 0.2, amazingly low, as is my IL-6. Paired with my targeted low-fat vegan diet, my body chemistry has completely transformed in the past six months. Now, I have less than 24 months to go. My mind and my body don't quite crave all the foods I was 'addicted' to. I don't miss fried foods even one bit anymore! And that I find truly amazing. I still do miss ice cream and popcorn, but even those cravings have diminished 95%.

Ellen Langer: The Psychology of Story and Possibility

Mindsets are not metaphors. They are biological commands.

Ellen Langer

Harvard psychologist Ellen Langer invited a group of men in their seventies to live for a week in a monastery recreated to look exactly like it was 1959, with black-and-white TVs and vintage radios. They were told not to pretend it was 1959, but to believe it was 1959.

After a week, the men's posture straightened, their vision sharpened, their memory improved, and their grip strength increased. Their bodies became the age they believed they were.

This study, known as the Counterclockwise Experiment, is a landmark in mind-body research.

She did a follow-up study with hotel maids, who were told that their daily cleaning met "Centers for Disease Control and Prevention exercise guidelines. Their weight, blood pressure and fat percentage dropped within four weeks, without changing their workload.

Their belief that they were exercised became a physiological reality.

Perception became performance.

Langer tore down the wall between psychology and biology with such experiments and showed that the stories we believe shape our health outcomes as powerfully as genetics and lifestyle.

"Small changes can make large differences, so we should open ourselves to the impossible and embrace the psychology of possibility. The psychology of possibility first requires that we begin with the assumption that we do not know what we can do or become. Rather than starting from the status quo, it argues for a starting point of what we would like to be. From that beginning, we can ask how we might reach that goal and make progress toward it. It's a subtle change in thinking, although not difficult to make once we realize how stuck we are in culture, language, and modes of thought that limit our potential."

For my own Reversal Protocols, Langer shows me that people don't just need the protocols or medicines, but they need to tell themselves a new narrative.

A person with diabetes must believe they are becoming healthy, not avoiding disease.

A leader must see their company growing, not declining.

The story you tell yourself has a huge impact on your outcome.

What health or wealth story are you telling and repeating to yourself?

Watch and listen to your thoughts and your actions.

Carol Dweck: The Growth Mindset vs Fixed Mindset

Becoming is better than being.

Dr. Valter Longo

Carol Dweck had a profound insight when she noticed that some students in the classroom said, "I can't do this," while others said, "I can't do this yet."

The keyword, 'yet', while just one small word, made an enormous difference.

This single word, yet, became the lever between potential and being stagnant.

Her research at Stanford revealed that people who believe ability is developable, ie, a "growth mindset," outperform those who believe it's fixed across education, athletics, relationships, and leadership. The growth mindset individuals persist longer, recover faster, and learn more deeply. They keep learning and growing.

In medicine, a growth mindset translates directly into healing. Patients who believe in improvement and full recovery recover faster after surgery and adhere to treatment plans better.

Are you know-it-alls or learn-it-alls? Focus on learning rather than residing in only what you know.

A growth mindset is the single belief that can transform you and heal you, despite any setbacks or obstacles.

Mindset is medicine. Your neurons, cells and companies all obey this law: If you believe you can grow, you already have.

"Why waste time proving over and over how great you are, when you could be getting better? Why hide deficiencies instead of overcoming them? Why look for friends or partners who will just shore up your self-esteem instead of ones who will also challenge you to grow? And why seek out the tried and true, instead of experiences that will stretch you? The passion for stretching yourself and sticking to it, even (or especially) when it's not going well, is the hallmark of the growth mindset. This is the mindset that allows people to thrive during some of the most challenging times in their lives."

In my own Heart Reversal Protocol, I know my heart will become healthy like that of a 40-year-old, even though I am now 55. I already reversed my neck carotid arteries, which had about 20% plaque, and the arterial wall thickness was older than an 85-year-old. Now it is normal for my age, more than a 30-year reversal and absolutely no plaque visible. It started with belief, and I found the protocol to reverse my plaque faster than any study has ever shown. 

The best studies with drugs (statins and powerful LDL-lowering PCSK9s), at best, decreased plaque by 0.04 mm in a year. My CIMT reduced from 1.8mm to 0.86mm, a 0.94mm reduction, a 54% reduction in 3 months.

The power of my mind to believe it was possible led me to search for the best-suited and most focused Heart Reversal Protocol. My belief and discovery of the Reversal Protocol fuelled each other, resulting in my amazing healing.

Reflection

Why can’t a person live a healthy lifestyle if s/he has disease? What is the big constraint that limits their mind and their actions?

Dr. Kevin Ham

As many people are asking me for my help in reversing their own diseases, I see two types of people with diseases or health issues.

One type is dependent on keeping their lifestyle unchanged and is willing to take a pill to manage their symptoms. This is the vast majority of people. I understand lifestyle changes are hard. Very hard.

The other type is a small minority who are willing, able and have decided to change their lifestyle. It is this type that I am highly motivated to help, for half the battle is one of their own minds. The mind is empowered to make that decision and commit to it for x number of months or years. In my case, I decided to start with a low-fat vegan diet for three years. It was already decided in my mind, and I committed to it.

My sports cardiologist asked me at month 3, "But can you keep on your diet?"

I thought that was a silly question at that time. He told me many of his athletic patients try to make a lifestyle change in diet, but get frustrated after a few months and get the stent and take the medications. I passed my modified (harder) exercise stress test, so he wasn't concerned about me at that time and told me to follow up in a year.

It's now been six months for me, and I have 2.5 years left of my mental commitment to this diet, but it has now become 90% easier for me. I know what to bring with me when I travel. I bring my steel-cut oatmeal, chia and flax seeds and my handful of supplements (Vit D, nattokinase, Vit C, Spirulina). I know how to prepare oatmeal without a stove by soaking the oats overnight in hot or room-temperature water. 

My 65-year-old friend, when asked by another, Why don't you go on Kevin's protocol to reverse your diabetes, high blood pressure, cholesterol and visceral fat, said, "I can't because I travel too much." While I care for him, I know it is a mindset issue. He already sees the evidence of healing in Fred and me. I reflected deeper, but why? I believe he can't decide and commit because it would mean giving up some of the foods he loves, like yogurt, dairy, cheese, and fats.

He eats for taste and experience. The difference for me is that it is a far secondary issue. I eat to live, and I eat for health. I no longer live to eat for taste like I used to.

Do you eat for health, for taste, or for experience?

This is an age-old question, at the root of all indulgences, starting with Adam and Eve, who ate of the fruit of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil. "It looked good for food, a delight to the eyes, and to make one wise." These are the three temptations we must reflect upon. John frames it as "the lust of the flesh, the lust of the eyes and the pride of life."

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Life-Changing Question

Do you eat for health or for taste or for experience?

Ponder this question each time you put something into your mouth. Make the question unforgettable.

Next week—

Power of Mind (Part II).

Why Belief is Essential to Success

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Power of Fasting to Fight Cancer (Part II)