New Thought Healing Made Plain
Description
New Thought Healing Made Plain is a book by Kate Atkinson Boehme, first published in 1918. Boehme presents a clear, practical guide to mental healing and the New Thought approach to health — explaining how thought, affirmation, and visualization can influence the body’s natural healing processes.
Written in plain language for readers seeking usable spiritual healing techniques rather than abstruse theory, the book walks through exercises in concentration, faith, and constructive thinking that aim to strengthen mind power, reduce stress, and support physical well-being. The tone is instructional and pragmatic, making it useful to those exploring early 20th-century self-help, law of attraction ideas, or historical approaches to positive thinking and affirmations.
Placed within the wider New Thought movement, Boehme’s work reflects the era’s emphasis on personal responsibility and the practical application of spiritual ideas to everyday health and life. Her writing echoes the movement’s blend of spirituality and self-improvement, offering readers both philosophy and step-by-step practices for cultivating inner peace, better health, and a more constructive mindset.
For modern readers interested in the roots of mind-body wellness, mental healing, and early law-of-attraction teachings, this book serves as a compact, accessible primer.
- Formats
- PDF, EPUB, AZW3
- Page Count (PDF)
- 50
Note: All of the books available here were first published generations ago. Care has been taken to produce clear, readable files, and each ebook is fully formatted with features such as a linked table of contents and clearly structured chapter headings. Where applicable, illustrations and footnotes have also been carefully presented for ease of reading. None of these ebooks are DRM-protected. As with any historical text, occasional imperfections may remain.