The Forgotten Mothers of Mindset
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Friday, August 15, 2025
By Taylor Boone
Before Napoleon Hill, There Was Florence: The Forgotten Mothers of Mindset
Before Napoleon Hill, There Was Florence: The Forgotten Mothers of Mindset
Let’s get something straight.
Napoleon Hill didn’t invent the wealth mindset.
Dale Carnegie didn’t pioneer influence.
They branded it. Mass-marketed it.
But the blueprint? The soul of this work?
That came from the women.
Long before Think and Grow Rich hit shelves in 1937, there were fierce, wise women pulling back the veil on prosperity, purpose, and the power of the subconscious. And I think it’s time we said their names.
Florence Scovel Shinn (1871–1940)
In 1925, twelve years before Hill—Florence published The Game of Life and How to Play It.
She talked about manifesting before it was cool, about aligning with divine timing, speaking truth, and trusting the process.
“Your word is your wand,” she said.
And she meant it. This was metaphysics in heels.
She wasn’t selling fluff—she was teaching frequency. Energy. Vision. Her words crackle off the page like lightning.
Genevieve Behrend (1881–1960)
Ever heard of Thomas Troward? He was a metaphysical giant. Genevieve was his only personal student. She visualized her way into being mentored by him—literally created the opportunity with her mind.
Her book Your Invisible Power (1921) is a masterclass in manifestation, long before “The Secret” made it a bestseller shelf staple.
She taught us that we are creators, not reactors. That faith is a frequency. That wealth is inner alignment made visible.
Elizabeth Towne (1865–1960)
While Hill was still in grade school, Elizabeth was publishing The Nautilus in 1898—a New Thought magazine packed with ideas about personal power, visualization, and divine prosperity. She amplified the voices of other pioneers like Wallace Wattles (The Science of Getting Rich).
She made mindset a movement.
Elsie Lincoln Benedict (1885–1970)
A bestselling author, psychologist, suffragist, and speaker, Elsie filled massive venues in the 1920s, teaching people how to understand themselves and succeed on their own terms.
Her book How to Analyze People on Sight (1921) explored how your personality type, natural strengths, and mind-body connection shape your path to success.
“Failure is usually caused by trying to be someone you’re not.”
She wasn’t just decoding psychology—she was empowering self-trust and authenticity decades before it became mainstream.
Here’s What I Think:
We’ve built entire industries on mindset, manifestation, and abundance, and forgotten the mothers who birthed the blueprint. That’s not just a disservice to history. It’s a disservice to truth.
Because these women weren’t just thinkers.
They were alchemists.
They taught what it means to trust the unseen.
To speak wealth. To live by inner knowing.
And isn’t that what we’re all craving right now?
Less hustle. More soul.
Less noise. More knowing.
What You Can Do:
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Read their work. Start with Florence. Let her unapologetic faith crack something open in you.
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Speak your truth—out loud, on purpose. Your word is your wand. Use it wisely.
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Build from the inside out. Wealth isn’t outside of you. It’s coded in your being.
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Reclaim your lineage. If you’re a creator, healer, coach, or guide… know this: you are standing on the shoulders of women who were silenced, and still spoke.
This isn’t just history.
It’s a reminder.
You are the magic.
You are the alchemist.
You are the voice they were waiting for.
Until next time,
Taylor, your brand alchemist ;)
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