The brain is one of the most complex and mysteriously fascinating organs. It contains tens of billions of neurons—brain cells—and governs the function of the human body. When we remember something, hesitate, or make a decision, thousands of signals flash through the brain in a matter of milliseconds. These signals travel through neurons, each one connected. And in that microscopic space, called the synapse, the most fascinating thing happens. The neuron releases molecules and other messengers that carry the signal forward. And that special chemistry shapes everything we human beings are potentially capable of.
Up to 95% of the brain happens out of sight. It's not about breathing or the heart beating. It's the rapid analysis of signals, reading faces, smells, and gestures that shape how we connect with others. Experiments show the brain makes decisions hundreds of milliseconds before we are even aware of them. The amygdala, for example, can detect danger in just 12 milliseconds, faster than the visual cortex can process what the eyes have seen. The conscious self is just the tip of the iceberg. Beneath it lies a vast network of processes steering our lives. But some of these processes can be noticed and gradually brought under control. That's how habits shift, attention sharpens, and even more wonders can be fulfilled.
And this shows the power of such vast knowledge: psychology—or, as I would refer to it, the path to supremacy.
The architecture of our all-powerful brain has never been random. It begins forming even before birth as axons reach toward their targets, following the genetic code embedded in our DNA. Each axon reads signals and finds its path, building the map of future perception, memory, and imagination.
This is the foundation nature creates, but genetics only sets the rules. Then life takes over: experience, learning, stress, chance events. All of it rewrites its fundamentals, strengthening some connections while erasing others in our consciousness and especially our unconsciousness. That means everything we feel, experience, learn, and discover—it all leaves its traces in the brain, and it's through that process that we are able to change… emotionally and physically.
And herein lies the paradox: human potential is not directly written into the code. It emerges where the algorithm of biology meets the experience you lived through, the environment, and how you let yourself get consumed by it. The basic choices about what you allow to shape your mind determine which networks flourish and which simply disappear.
Genius is not a myth and not a rare gift. Everyone is born with a unique neural network—billions of connections ready for great potential. We aren't even fully aware of the various mysteries lying inside, waiting to be unlocked.
Isn't it wonderful? Everything—and I mean everything—can be changed just by your thought process, your understanding of your own psyche, and mastery over your innate psychology.
Your natural mental affinities to certain elements can change everything and grant you power you have only dreamed of. Deeper understanding of this precise knowledge and of yourself will lift you to even greater heights.
Seek control, get better, and never give up.
True strength lies in doing something not because it benefits you, but because it aligns with your will.
Now, directly looking at me, he said:
"Your will, and your will alone, will determine how the future will turn out. Amidst all the struggle and terrible façades, remember what you are capable of. Envision a future where you prevail, and you will prevail. Doubt yourself, and there is no chance of winning. You need to understand that you… you are your greatest asset. Have conviction, and never forget who you are and what you care about."
Mr. Grey smirked, as if recalling something long buried, before finishing with words that struck me like lightning:
"Don't wait for miracles—create them. Your will is law."