In the simplest way I can possibly put it:
Reality = whatever you observe it to be.
Law of assumption, religion, non-duality, law of attraction, shifting, manifestation = all just frameworks through which you observe reality, and those observations determine your experience.
Your current circumstances = not your fault, and entirely subject to change.
Acknowledging that reality can be changed = observing the timeline where change is possible.
Acknowledging that it cannot be changed and that you’re stuck = observing the timeline where that’s true, where nothing moves because you’ve decided it can’t.
Having an intention to shift, manifest, or receive something = the moment it becomes inevitable, no matter how long it takes to materialize.
If we’re talking inevitability, you immediately slap the evitability label on it with “but it’ll take three years, but it’ll take time, but I can’t do it now”
The point is that either way, it’s coming, because it’s inevitable. Whether something you intend happens in 3 hours, 3 minutes, or 3 weeks, the fact remains: it was going to happen either way, and there’s nothing you can do to stop it if you want it.
That alone should dissolve the whole obsession with “what do I do,” “how do I do it,” and all that, because once you fully accept that it’s inevitable and your work is done, you start observing reality as it already is: the shift is inevitable and hurtling toward you at 100 mph.
And that mindset, ironically, is what makes it “happen faster,” because you’re no longer denying the arrival, you’re just bracing for it.
But the moment you start filtering it through the “it’s inevitable, but it’ll take time” lens, you’re sabotaging yourself. You’re not just observing inevitability, but now you’re assigning a timeframe to it.
Which, if reality= whatever you observe,,,ᒊ($;":"!*crashing out noises*
Instead of letting it flow in naturally, you’re building a schedule around it. The second you stop caring about the time, you erase it as an observed factor, and that’s when everything starts sliding into place.
NOW.
Sure, you can respond to all of this with a “yeah, but—” and list every reason why it doesn’t apply to you. BUT THE MOMENT YOU DO THAT, you’re observing the but as justification for why you can’t, why you’re stuck, why you’re the exception. Instead of realizing that you can still change despite whatever conditions you’re naming. The “but” doesn’t negate the point, it just reveals where you’ve decided to stop observing possibility.
AND, WHILE I’M AT IT
People think manifestation or shifting requires this massive leap in observation. It doesn’t. The moment you recognize your ability (not the final result, not the perfect scenario, just your capacity to alter things) you’ve already changed them. And when you look back later, it’ll look like a huge jump. But it always started from that tiny decision to observe your own power instead of your own limitation despite what your surroundings tell you.
Now, if you’re already doing all this and have been for a while— then your only job now is to finally believe that it’s all enough. Anything beyond that is you observing that it’s not enough.
Which brings us right back to:
Reality = whatever you observe it to be.













