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7 contributions to Understanding Neville Goddard
Identity
You don’t have a manifestation problem. You have an identity problem. And that’s uncomfortable to hear… because it removes every excuse. You say you want more money, more love, more peace. But if we strip it back—what are you being every day? Neville didn’t teach “wish harder.” He taught: become the version of you that already has it. Not for five minutes while you visualise. Not when you’re journaling. But in the quiet, ordinary moments where no one is watching. Because that’s where your real state lives. You don’t get what you want. You get what feels natural to you. So if struggle feels normal… you will recreate struggle. If rejection feels familiar… you will find it again. If lack feels safe… you will protect it without even realising. That’s the part no one wants to admit. You are not “trying to manifest.” You are constantly expressing who you believe yourself to be. Every reaction. Every assumption. Every inner conversation. That’s your true prayer. And life has no choice but to mirror it. So here’s the question that will either change everything… or trigger you: If nothing in your world changed… would your identity still make sense? Because if the answer is yes, you’re not manifesting change— You’re maintaining your current reality perfectly. And that’s the real work Neville pointed to: Not changing the world. Changing the self that is experiencing it.
Identity
1 like • 16h
"Ordinary moments where no one is watching. Because that’s where your real state lives." True words and powerful.
The opportunity to let the old self die.
An ex-friend I hadn’t spoken to in a long time reached out to me in a really difficult moment. Truthfully, I had every “logical” reason to say no. The old version of me probably would have. Out of hurt, pride, or the need to protect myself. But this time, something was different. I didn’t react from memory. I didn’t let the past decide for me. I simply showed up and helped—just as I would for a stranger. No story attached, no emotional charge, no need to make it mean anything. And in that moment, I realised something powerful: I wasn’t the same person anymore. I didn’t feel used. I didn’t feel taken advantage of. Because those feelings belong to an identity I no longer occupy. The version of me who needed validation, who kept score, who reacted from old wounds—that version is no longer in control. This is what real inner work looks like. Not just affirmations, not just visualising—but becoming. Neville Goddard said, “You must be born again.” And he didn’t mean physically. He meant psychologically. He meant dying to the old state of consciousness and rising into a new one. And here’s the truth most people miss: You don’t prove your new self when everything is easy. You prove it in the moments where you could have gone back—but you don’t. That’s when you know. That’s when the shift is real. I didn’t help her because of who she was. I helped because of who I am.
The opportunity to let the old self die.
2 likes • 16h
Becoming is the true inner work. techniques only help us to get into the desired state.
Holding your assumptions
Are you actually holding your assumptions? A lot of people say they’re visualizing, changing beliefs, rewriting inner conversations… and yet nothing changes. It feels like a loop. Like you’re doing everything right but reality isn’t moving. Here’s the uncomfortable truth: you’re not stuck because your affirmations are wrong… you’re stuck because your reactions are unchanged. This is the part most people miss. You can sit in a beautiful state during visualization, feel powerful, aligned, chosen… and then the moment life “tests” you — a message doesn’t come, money is delayed, someone acts cold — you react from the old self. And that reaction is the real assumption. Not what you say in your room. Not what you write in your journal. But how you respond when reality doesn’t match yet. Neville taught this clearly: Your outer world is a reflection of your state of consciousness — not your occasional thoughts, but your dominant state. And your dominant state is revealed in your reactions. If you’re triggered, anxious, doubting, spiraling — that’s the state you’re actually occupying, no matter how good your affirmations sounded an hour ago. So people end up doing this cycle: They imagine → feel good → reality shows the old story → they react → they reinforce the old story → they imagine again… And they call it “trying.” But what Neville really points to is this: You don’t just enter the state. You remain in it. You hold it especially when it’s hardest to. That means: When nothing is happening — you stay certain. When things look opposite — you stay unmoved. When the old story shows up — you refuse to emotionally agree with it. Because your reaction is your agreement. And whatever you consistently agree with… hardens into fact. So the real question is not: “Am I visualizing enough?” It’s: “Who am I being when life doesn’t conform yet?” That’s where the shift happens.
Holding your assumptions
1 like • 2d
@Noah Naderi I believe the confusion here is coming from trying to mentally map the whole subconscious process. You’re trying to understand how the background process works, but that’s not actually your job in this. Your only role is the state you occupy. The subconscious managing things in the background is true, but people misunderstand what that means. It doesn’t mean you can impress a state once and then spend the rest of the time reacting, worrying, analysing, and assume it will still unfold the same way. Because the subconscious doesn’t respond to what you once intended. it responds to the state you are currently embodying. So when she says “keep coming back”, it’s not about reminding the subconscious what to do. The subconscious already knows the end once it’s impressed. What interrupts it is when you shift states. For example: You imagine the wish fulfilled → your body moves into that state.Then the 3D shows something opposite → you react emotionally. In that moment, you didn’t just “notice the 3D”. You identified with a different state, and your nervous system followed that instead. That’s the interruption. So “coming back” simply means returning to the identity you chose. Not forcing it.Not fighting the 3D.Just not agreeing with the old story internally. And this is where people sometimes misunderstand what “holding the assumption” means. Holding the assumption doesn’t mean constantly repeating something in your mind or trying to overpower the 3D. It means remaining internally aligned with the new state, even when the old one tries to pull you back. So if doubt shows up, the mistake people make is thinking they failed or that something is wrong. But doubt appearing isn’t the issue. The issue is identifying with it. If doubt appears and you go into a spiral like: “Maybe it’s not working.”“Maybe I did it wrong.”“Maybe this is impossible.” Now you’ve shifted states again. But if doubt appears and you simply return to the identity of the person who already has the outcome, then nothing was interrupted.
Attachment
Most people are not blocked in manifestation. They are attached. And attachment is not love, desire, or passion—it’s dependency. It’s the quiet belief: “I don’t have it yet… and I need it to feel okay.” You can affirm all day, visualize every night, journal, script, do SATS… but if your inner reaction is still “Where is it?” “Why hasn’t it happened?” “Am I doing this right?” then you are not living in the end—you are waiting for it. And waiting is a state. Neville Goddard said it clearly: “Assume the feeling of the wish fulfilled and continue feeling that it is fulfilled until that which you feel objectifies itself.” Not visit the state. Not touch it for a few minutes and then go back to doubt. Become it. Because manifestation doesn’t respond to what you say you want. It responds to who you are being. The version of you who has it isn’t anxious, isn’t checking, isn’t looking for signs. It feels normal. Certain. Done. The Bible says, “Whatever you ask for in prayer, believe that you have received it, and it will be yours.” (Mark 11:24). Not will receive—have received. That’s where most people struggle, because attachment keeps pulling you back into “I don’t have it yet.” You check the outside world. You react to what’s missing. You measure time. And every reaction is an agreement. “According to your faith be it unto you.” (Matthew 9:29). Your faith isn’t what you say once—it’s what you keep returning to, especially when nothing is happening. So the real question isn’t “Am I doing this right?” It’s “Who am I being when I don’t see movement yet?” Because that version of you is the one manifesting. Detachment doesn’t mean you stop wanting it. It means you stop needing the outside world to confirm it. That’s the shift. That’s the work. And that’s where everything starts to change.
Attachment
1 like • 2d
That's an interseting one, from my experience the more you dwelve into the wish fulfilled the detachment happens automatically without us doing it. Though, i see the point your are making. Many people do the techniques and interally they are like 'it's not here yet and i need to do this to get it' and that keeps them in the state of wanting. True that
Answer to Noah
I hope this answers your questions, I tried to cover everything 😊
Answer to Noah
1 like • 2d
Nice video and to the point. It's the story and the state we identify with that manifests.
1-7 of 7
Rohit Nibariya
2
12points to level up
@rohit-nibariya-4067
Love Singing and playing Acoustic guitar. Live by the Law of Assumption.

Active 5h ago
Joined Apr 23, 2026
SE Asia