I’ve said this before and I’ll keep saying it.
Neville Goddard taught that imagination creates reality, but he never taught manipulation. He pointed people back to self—your state, your assumptions, your concept of who you are.
When you ask if you can manifest a specific person to be obsessed with you, to act a certain way, or to come back regardless of their own will, pause for a moment. Would you want someone trying to control your thoughts, your feelings, your choices?
That question matters, because manifestation isn’t about forcing outcomes—it’s about embodying a state of being.
Neville spoke about living in the end, but the “end” is not a specific person behaving exactly how you dictate. The end is the feeling of being loved, chosen, valued, secure. When you occupy that state fully, your world reflects it in a natural and effortless way.
If love is real, it doesn’t need coercion. If you are aligned with being deeply loved, the right person will meet you in that state willingly.
What people often call manifestation is sometimes just attachment mixed with control. And that’s not where true creation flows from.
The deeper work is this: become the version of you who is already loved in the way you desire. Stay there. Let life reorganize itself around that truth.
That’s where Neville was pointing all along.