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@chasindopamine
How to GENUINELY create an assumption without feeling like you’re lying to yourself/pretending/have to “convince” yourself. How to actually accept your desire as TRUE.
Please, please understand that an assumption isn't forced or something you have to "try" to believe because it's just something you accept as true without question. You don't wake up every day wondering if you have a name, if the sky is blue or if gravity works. You just know with certainty. That's how conscious manifestation works. You decide something IS true and of course it reflects like every other assumption. You need to ACTUALLY assume you have something to get it please don't pretend or hope. A real assumption isn't forced, it's something you accept as fact without needing proof. If you say you assumed something but then claim it didn't happen you didn't actually assume it lol. You either doubted it, contradicted it or held another assumption alongside it. You assuming is NOT a technique and it's not something you "do" to get something.
The reason some people treat creating an assumption like it's a technique is because they think if they repeat it enough their mind will suddenly be tricked into believing it. That's NOT how an assumption works. An assumption is just accepting something as fact. If you're trying to "convince" yourself you're admitting you don't actually accept it as true. Come on… your mind is not stupid. It knows when you're forcing something versus when you genuinely accept it as reality (assume it). You need to be so certain that questioning isn't even an option and idc if other people disagree because who questions an assumption? An assumption is something you accept as true without proof go search it up. You must stay firm. It's not hoping, testing or checking for results it's about knowing aka accepting it as a fact. When you truly assume something it becomes your reality instantly. Reality will always reflect your truth.
So how do you truly accept something as true? It's actually simple but people overlook because they think taking time to face what's holding them down will waste their time. It's better to find out why you're finding it difficult and address it instead of staying stuck in a loop forever.
You need to find out what is preventing you from accepting your own word as the truth. Why don't you trust your own word as a fact? If you tell yourself "I have my desire" but deep down you're doubting or waiting or looking for proof then ask yourself "why don't I trust myself?" What thoughts are making you second guess your own reality? Is it because you're treating the physical world as more real than your own assumptions? Is it because you think that the physical world is the reason why you think you don't have what you want, when in reality it's because you assumed it first for it to reflect? Did you forget that reality is a mirror of your assumptions? Could it be you're looking at your circumstances and saying ughhh this is what's happening instead of actually understanding that what's happening is just a reflection of what you have been assuming up until this moment? Or maybe you've placed your power outside of yourself right? You believe circumstances or external factors hold weight in your manifestation rather than realising that NOTHING is set in stone and the only thing dictating your reality is your current assumption right? Maybe you think you have to do something and this is far too simple?
Figure it out and actually just spend time with yourself to pin point where you are struggling. Stop running away from your problems and address the reason why you can't accept your word as the truth. Remind yourself of the basics of the Law if you need to.
Now ask yourself what are you ACTUALLY assuming? Look at you telling yourself "Oh I'm affirming for my SP" and that being reflected back: you affirming for your SP. Look at you treating the concept of "just decide" like another method or technique to get to your desire and that being reflected in your reality: you in the process of using "just decide" like a technique to manifest. See how perfect the Law is? It's reflecting exactly what you're assuming. You're seeing your assumptions play out exactly as they are because manifestation is always based on what you're ACTUALLY assuming. You're STILL giving options to reality when there are no options… it's only what you say it is. As soon as you drop the debate you have with yourself in your mind and stop entertaining opposing thoughts you'll see how easy it is. You don't argue with yourself about basic facts of your life do you? You just accept them as true. That's exactly how you need to see your assumptions. Yes you need to be that certain and firm.
I PROMISE you the "key" everyone talks about to getting what you want… repeat with me… is to decide once and for all that it's done and that's it. Just accept it as true. Please just say f*ck all and accept it as true. What will you lose? Just do it.
Manifesting ✨️
The Pacific Northwest is fucking Perfect
Holy shit
After ADHD diagnosis
Day one: started Wellbutrin and Lamictal. Weird feeling, a bit anxious, but then a bit of happiness dare I say? Felt more motivated then usual, but nothing crazy. Could be placebo. Mood definitely better and less snappy throughout the day. However, irritability came back around 6 pm. Still had to take a nap in the middle of the day.
A girl who eats clean things like açaí and protein bowls, and makes the best cup of coffee she’s ever had every morning. She has time to volunteer to clean the beaches and whale watch. She has a sunroom where she keeps her books and plants and has a skylight in the kitchen and bathroom. Her kids are filled with life and experience, seeing the world and learning culture. She’s confident in herself, and everything she does. She works from wherever she wants to, helping people learn to create their own life and she never feels overworked. She has time to take a shower in the morning, with a routine, never rushed. She gets enough sleep, and has time to work on her own goals.
Still chasing this.
ADHD brain dump
Not diagnosed yet but I’m 90% this is what I’m dealing with.
It just makes sense. My need for adventure, my desire for the hot romance and butterfly feeling. People pleasing to keep my dopamine up. The depression from boredom of every day life.
When I was young, pre-mom and pre PRE full time mom, I had time to live, to focus on myself. My patience has dropped below what it ever has been, and I can’t finish a task because I’m constantly needed for other peoples tasks
I swore, growing up, I’d be such a good mom. Better than what I had, and yet I find myself snapping and feeling like maybe I’m not cut out for this. I feel selfish. I feel like a bad partner when I daydream about leaving when things get hard. 10 years later and I feel bored. The honeymoon phase is long over and I feel like maybe my desire to fight when things are rocky is too.
My childhood makes sense—why I always wanted to be doing something to keep me busy. Why I was so obsessed with love and making sure I kept my partner happy. That desire has left, though, because I have kids. And I think somewhere, they just took his place in where I put my energy. Taking care of me and him got replaced by the two little girls who need me. But with that, that means I stop taking care of myself and now I don’t even know who I am. I’m lost, and I feel trapped. I look in the mirror and I don’t know who it is looking back at me. That is NOT what I look like. This isn’t what I want. How do I make room for myself and possibly my partner while also taking care of my kids? They deserve a happy mom. Happy moms love better, parent better, snap a lot less.
With all of the trouble ADHD has given me, I’m also thankful for it. Wanting to be happy and chasing things in life that make you happy (in a safe way) shouldn’t be looked at as reckless. Maybe I’m not cut out for typical mom shit? I think there’s a way to be a good mom and be a happiness chaser. I don’t want to be locked in this “work just to make it” lifestyle everyone else seems to see as normal? I feel like this was a spiritual gift given to me in a mental issue disguise. Yeah, I can’t focus, that sucks. But I have DREAMS and such a strong desire to live. I believe in the law of attraction and I think this gives me the power to really manifest what I want.
How do I feel less caged? How do I go after the things I want as a mother when the things I want are travel and freedom? Abandonment isn’t an option, obviously. So where is the middleman? How can we all be happy? Is this something a psychiatrist can help me with or is my only solution to get medicated and live as everyone else?
I am so fucking lonely
#thechase
Waking up to cool air with no air conditioning on is the best feeling. Washington’s summer temperature is beyond perfect.
Power of Awareness Chapter 23, Neville Goddard success story:
“One afternoon, a young grandmother, a businesswoman in New York, came to see me. She brought along her nine-year-old grandson, who was visiting her from his home in Pennsylvania. In response to her questions, I explained the law of assumption, describing in detail the procedure to be followed in attaining an objective. The boy sat quietly, apparently absorbed in a small toy truck, while I explained to the grandmother the method of assuming the state of consciousness that would be hers were her desire already fulfilled. I told her the story of the soldier in camp, who, each night, fell asleep, imagining himself to be in his own bed in his own home.
When the boy and his grandmother were leaving, he looked up at me with great excitement and said, “I know what I want and, now, I know how to get it”. Surprised, I asked him what it was he wanted; he told me he had his heart set on a puppy.
To this, the grandmother vigorously protested, telling the boy that it had been made clear repeatedly that he could not have a dog under any circumstances… that his father and mother would not allow it, that the boy was too young to care for it properly, and furthermore, the father had a deep dislike for dogs – he actually hated to have one around.
All these were arguments the boy, passionately desirous of having a dog, refused to understand. “Now I know what to do”, he said. “Every night, just as I am going off to sleep, I am going to pretend that I have a dog and we are going for a walk”. “No”, said the grandmother, “that is not what Mr. Neville means. This was not meant for you. You cannot have a dog”.
Approximately six weeks later, the grandmother told me what was to her an astonishing story. The boy’s desire to own a dog was so intense that he had absorbed all that I had told his grandmother of how to attain one’s desire – and he believed implicitly that at last he knew how to get a dog.
Putting this belief into practice, for many nights, the boy imagined a dog was lying in his bed beside him. In imagination, he petted the dog, actually feeling its fur. Things like playing with the dog and taking it for a walk filled his mind.
Within a few weeks, it happened. A newspaper in the city in which the boy lived organized a special program in connection with Kindness to Animals Week. All schoolchildren were requested to write an essay on “Why I Would Like to Own a Dog”.
After entries from all the schools were submitted and judged, the winner of the contest was announced. The very same boy who weeks before in my apartment in New York had told me “Now I know how to get a dog” was the winner. In an elaborate ceremony, which was publicized with stories and pictures in the newspaper, the boy was awarded a beautiful collie puppy.
In relating this story, the grandmother told me that if the boy had been given the money with which to buy a dog, the parents would have refused to do so and would have used it to buy a bond for the boy or put it in the savings bank for him. Furthermore, if someone had made the boy a gift of a dog, they would have refused it or given it away.
But the dramatic manner in which they boy got the dog, the way he won the city-wide contest, the stories and pictures in the newspaper, the pride of achievement and joy of the boy himself all combined to bring about a change of heart in the parents, and they found themselves doing that which they never conceived possible – they allowed him to keep the dog.
All this the grandmother explained to me, and she concluded by saying that there was one particular kind of dog on which the boy had set his heart. It was a collie.”
Mt Rainier reflection from last summer
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Puget Sound, Seattle Washington USA 🇺🇸
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Frink Park, Seattle Washington