Dr. Wayne Dyer is considered by many people as
the "father of motivation". He is one of the best known
and most respected writer and speaker in the field of self-
improvement and self-empowerment. His books have been translated
into all the
world's languages in the twenty years since he published his
first book "Your Erroneous Zones". His work has been
recorded on tapes and he has appeared on more than 5,000
TV and radio shows including Oprah and The Today Show and The
Tonight Show.
Dyer has traveled the world as a motivational speaker, holding
thousands of workshops.
Dyer has made money – serious money. Just to give you a
clue, 15 million copies of “Your Erroneous Zones” have
been sold around the world.2 And that was just his first of 17
books and countless appearances.
When you listen to the great advice Dr. Dyer shares in his books
and seminars, you might presume he had a traditional upbringing
with loving parents who taught him responsible traditional values.
But you would be wrong. The lessons that Wayne Dyer teaches were
almost all learned the hard way.
Wayne Dyer was the youngest of three boys. Their dad was
abusive and, after he abandoned the family, never paid
one cent for their support. Dyer says: “My father
left right after I was born. He just disappeared and he
spent some time in prison. He was an alcoholic and he walked
away and he never looked back. He never made a phone call.”
He continues: “ He spent years in prison and died of cirrhosis
of the liver. He was basically a very abusive man in almost every
way --- and certainly irresponsible. I look upon his role in my
life as one of the most important; it wasn’t until I was
able to get rid of my anger and hatred toward him and forgive him
that I was able to get off a path of self-destruction.”
When his father abandoned the family, his mom went to work as
a candy girl for seventeen dollars a week. She was unable to support
her young sons and decided to give them over to foster care until
she could find a way to support them. Wayne Dyer spent the first
ten years of his life in a series of foster homes and orphanages.
Dyer draws a lot of strength from those days. He says: “When
you’re an orphan you don’t wake up every morning and
say, ‘Oh my God! I’m an orphan again today; how did
this happen? Poor me! You get up – and you’re six-
and you deal with being six and where you are. You can only deal
with what you know and what you know is where you are.”
His early experience in foster care and orphanages gave Wayne
a direction in his life. The author believes his purpose in life
was to teach self-reliance. He says: “So I had the experience
of relying on myself very early in life in order to have that knowing,
because otherwise I would’ve just read about it. I think
of it now as a great advantage that I had. It certainly taught
me to rely upon myself at a very young age. And that’s what
I’ve been teaching since I was a little boy.
“Growing up in Detroit foster homes and orphanages, I was
immersed in opportunities to learn self-sufficiency at an early
age. Of course, so were all the other children around me…….I
was aware, by age 10, that whatever happens to me, my own destiny
was right in my very own little hands and in nobody else’s.
That’s a liberating realization at any age.”
He continues: “ Being resourceful built my confidence and
not only that, when I put on my little “Oliver” act,
I was so darn cute that doors opened constantly (laughts).
Seriously, I can tell you that I cultivated a deep inner knowing,
early on;
a calm faith that God was with me, and everything would be
okay.
When Wayne was ten years old, his mother remarried and she and
her new husband regained custody of her sons. “But the new
stepfather was an alchohoic”, he says, “and living
with an alcoholic was a great learning experience.” Dyer
dealt with his less than perfect family by taking charge of his
own life and immersed himself in work.
Keeping busy was always a way of life for Dyer. Starting at age
8, he delivered newspapers, cut grass and bagged groceries.
Now, Dyer kept up with his good habits. He attended Detroit public
schools and by age 17 he had read 770 books. And these weren’t
comic books.
“The young Dyer was deeply influenced by transcendental thinkers
such as Ralph Waldo Emerson and Henry David Thoreau. He also
read and reread the New Testament (Dyer, however, doesn’t
affiliate himself with any particular religion).
Dyer joined the Navy at 18, and served four years then went on
to Wayne State University and the University of Michigan to earn
his undergraduate degree and doctorate in counseling and psychology
all the while woriking as a stock boy and cashier at a large supermarket
chain in order to support himself. Wayne Dyer has been a school
teacher, counselor and college professor.
Now Dyer works as a lecturer and writer. He produces video and
audio tape programs on motivation, spirituality, and higher consciousness.
What has been unique about his teaching methods is Dyer’s
ability to use the challenges in his own life as examples: “I
think acknowledging human fraility is an important key to the success
of (my) self help books”.
When he talks about forgiveness he tells about confronting his
feelings after his dad died:
After he died, I went to my father’s grave and told him I
don’t know what motivated you to run your life as you did,
but I forgive you. Afterward I felt a deep sense of relief and
peace. Forgiveness is transforming. I use the metaphor of the snake
bite. It is not the bite that kills you; it’s the venom.
When you hold a grudge, the poisons of anger and blame destroy
you….”
At another time he says: “All blame is a waste of time.
No matter how much fault you find with another, and regardless
of how much you blame him, it will not change you. The only thing
blame does is to keep the focus off you when you are looking for
external reasons to explain your unhappiness or frustration. You
may succeed in making another feel guilty about something by blaming
hime, but you won’t succeed in changing whatever it is about
that is making you unhappy.”
Dyer says that, in spite of his huge success as a speaker and
author, his children are what he is most proud of. He has eight
children with 23 years between the oldest and youngest.
He and his wife and children live in South Florida and enjoy
a home in Maui, Hawaii.
Other Sayings of Wayne Dyer:
"If you take an orange and squeeze it and say, What will come
out? …well, it’s orange juice, because it’s an
orange. That what’s inside. If someone squeezes you – puts
pressure on you, says something you don’t like – out
of you comes anger, hatred, bitterness, anxiety, tension,
fear, stress. It’s not because of who did the squeezing or
what’s
the instrument. It’s because of what’s inside.”
“Having a personal history keeps us from now. This is a
radical idea perhaps, but I am asking you to consider the possibility
of totally eradicating your personal history from your consciousness
and simply living completely in the present moment.”
Books by Wayne Dyer:
Your Erroneous Zones
Manifest Your Destiny: The Nine Spiritual Principles for
Getting Everything You Want
You’ll See It When You Believe It: The Way to Your Personal
Transformation
There’s a Spiritual Solution to Every Problem
Real Magic: Creating Miracles in Everyday Life
Getting in the Gap: Making Conscious Contact with God Through
Meditation
10 Secrets for Success and Inner Peace
You Can Be Happy No Matter What: Five Principles for Keeping
Life in Perspective
Wisdom of the Ages: A
Modern Master Brings Eternal Truths into Everyday Life
Pulling Your Own Strings
Staying on the Path
Meditations for Manifesting
Everyday Wisdom
Your Sacred Self
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