The Becoming God

Thursday, October 01, 2015

Write Your Right Life as Your Future Diary: The Miracle of the Word of God

A very interesting post by Drew Canole, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qdyqLLGvjLE. His good friend Brittany uses the question 'why' positively to help visualize and get the things she wants. We usually use the question 'why' NEGATIVELY and get the things we do NOT want:

Why do I have to struggle with this?
Why is everyone else such a bad driver?
Why can't I get my way?
Why do my relationships not work out?
Why can't I get ahead financially?

One thing about asking the question why -- It Works! Brittany flips it around:

Why is this so easy for me?
Why is everyone so nice to me?
Why do I always get my way?
Why does everyone love me?
Why is it so easy for me to make money?

(Drew's whys are better, but I can't remember them all.)

Asking these sorts of questions sets up a persistent assumption in your imagination. You see yourself having an easy time with the thing in question. You feel the appreciation of other drivers driving conscientiously, the joy and satisfaction of people being nice to you, the security of solid relationships flowing streams of money.

Drew mentions his book, "Whydentity" -- the why you are here or the purpose of your life -- find out the 'why' of your being here and make it your identity, your "whydentity." -- Live to fulfill God's purpose becoming you.

He also mentions his creating three different stories relating to each of the desires he is trying to bring about. He reviews these stories daily. This does not set up a vibration but a persistent mental image. His mental images he fills with emotions. Drew feels in them as he would if they were his real experience. This CREATES the experiences, not magnetically draws them. I totally get the different "vibes" of different imaginal feelings, and they are causative, but they are not attractive. God don't need no vibrations to attract what he creates. It is manifestation, not soup! But I digress.

Write the stories of what you want with a word processor -- the "Word" of God -- to give yourself persistent mental images you can emotionally feel and get "into." Like Neville's revising the day's events and rehearsing the way he wished they had gone in his mind, you write your stories of what would be right for you and read them over and over again. YOU CAN VISUALIZE IT LIKE WATCHING A MOVIE, AND THEN REPLAY IT BEING THE CHARACTER -- ENTERING INTO ALL HIS OR HER EXPERIENCES. It is like writing your diary before things happen, or your autobiography before you live it. Some people give themselves a new name, the name of a winner, to disassociate themselves from the loser they feel that they are. They take on the new identity and become a new person. (Thank you Rabbi David A. Cooper for sharing this Jewish mystical practice years ago in God is a Verb.) Know that the character in your story is actually YOU (or that you are actually him or her) and maintain first person perspective when you review your stories. Pick a name that is meaningful to you.

Do not write in all why questions, of course. Neville used the example of the child in Russia who imagined the bank teller making the mistake of giving him a roll of silver coins instead of copper coins. The next day the teller did exactly that. Learning from that experience, the boy grown into a successful businessman would, when payment for goods was not received, write a letter of thanks and appreciation for the payment as if it had been received. He imagined and felt that it had been, and then the payment would come. "Thank you for . . . ," said with belief and gratitude is a great expression.

Would you write your story as a novel or documentary? A game show? A play? "The story of Jesus Christ is persistent assumption," said Neville. Write to form your assumption and read it to perpetuate the assumption. And of course, "believe ye receive," that you ARE what you desire to be, the possessor of what you desire to have, full of joy and gratitude. Have gratitude not to a vibration but to the person who is orchestrating your life . . . who also happens to be you.




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