The concept of the State of Wish Fulfilled is a Neville Goddard concept that has received a lot of hype over the years. It is a very powerful state to be in as it involves embodying the identity of the person who has their desire. I often get comments on my YouTube channel from people feeling discouraged because they keep falling out of that state and feeling frustrated at themselves in the process.
While Neville’s method is very powerful, you don’t necessarily need to literally be there all the time in the manner he explains. You can actually embody the state in several ways, which are easier than one may think.
From my personal experience, there are three approaches to embodying the state of wish fulfilled.
The first is obviously Neville’s way. He says that in order to manifest, you must think and feel like the person who already has their desire. To tap into those thoughts and feelings, you must imagine yourself having what you want. Neville manifested marriage to his wife in that way. He would imagine himself at night falling asleep in the same bedroom with her. He kept imagining that until it manifested. He also manifested his first-class journey from New York to Barbados by mentally imagining himself walking on the beach in Barbados while he was physically walking the streets of New York.
So if you want to be a multi-millionaire, you must imagine yourself being that multi-millionaire and then tap into the thoughts, feelings and actions of that person. If you want to manifest marriage, you must imagine yourself being the wife or husband and tapping into the thoughts, feelings and actions of that person.
This is the usual approach to being in the State of Wish Fulfilled and your subconscious mind has no choice but to objectify that in your physical reality.
Some people find difficulty in doing this because they either can’t visualize, or they can’t maintain the state for long because of their attention to 3D. They may feel foolish or delusional.
So the other two approaches would be helpful in such a case.
The second approach is to perform your manifestation practices (such as affirmations, scripting, visualizations, etc) and trusting these techniques are impressing into your subconscious mind. Essentially, you are trusting in the capabilities of your own subconscious mind to bring about the results. You are not trying to hold the state per se but doing the work, then surrendering to the process. It’s like going to the gym and exercising, and just feeling good about that because you know that your body will eventually slim down or get stronger because of the work you’re doing. That is also the state of the wish fulfilled! While you know that your current 3D does not reflect your desired reality, you are trusting that it will with time!
The third approach is to set the intention and then spend the rest of the time, being in pure presence (meaning, you’re not in your mind thinking about how and when your 3D will change). It’s a state of mindfulness and not engaging with your thoughts. The key in changing states, which is another way of saying changing identities, you must not dwell in the old state, which is the state of NOT HAVING. So technically, by practicing presence, you are automatically not opposing your desire, and therefore, you are already in the state of wish fulfilled. This option works great for people who find it harder to do techniques and practices which may trigger opposing thoughts and/or make it harder to ignore their 3D.
So you really have options! The idea is to not create unnecessary resistance because you can’t hold that state as describe by Neville. You are automatically in the state of wish fulfilled in different ways and it does not have to be in that one way he describes. Even though it is a powerful way, you still have options, and can certainly alternate between the three approaches.
I posted a video about this on YouTube a few days ago, so if you’d like to watch it, then please click on the link below.
Three Approaches to Being in State of Wish Fulfilled | Law of Assumption – YouTube
Enjoy!
Mona