"For as he thinketh in his heart, so is he." - Proverbs 23:7
by Julie Telgenhoff
Manifestation has been buried beneath vision boards, repetitive affirmations, complicated rituals and endless instructions about raising your vibration. Jason Brashear of Archaix cuts through all of it. In two short paragraphs, he explains that the desired experience must first be imagined as a memory and then embodied as an identity.
That distinction changes everything.
Most people imagine what they want while remaining conscious that they do not have it. They hope it will happen, wonder when it will arrive and continually search their reality for evidence that it is working. Every time they check, they reinforce the belief that the desired outcome is still somewhere in the future.
Brashear’s method reverses this. Instead of fantasizing about something that might happen, imagine remembering something that already happened. Remember how quickly it appeared. Remember how natural it felt when it became part of your life. Remember the relief, satisfaction or freedom you experienced once it was settled.
Hope keeps the desire at a distance. Memory makes it feel complete.
When a matter becomes clear, it ceases to concern us. We do not spend every day wondering whether yesterday happened. We know it happened, so there is nothing left to chase, force or continually confirm. This is why the imagined experience must eventually be released. Once it feels internally settled, continuing to struggle with it only reopens the question.
The struggle itself blocks the miracle.
When we fight reality, obsess over what is missing or attempt to force an outcome, we continue charging the condition we want to escape. What we resist persists because our attention keeps feeding it. The mind may believe it is searching for a solution, but it is often rehearsing the problem.
Negative situations can remain because we continually charge the field around them. We think about them, speak about them, anticipate their return and repeatedly react to them. In doing so, we keep giving them energy. The condition may be unwanted, but our behavior continues treating it as important, powerful and present.
Letting go does not mean the desire no longer matters. It means no longer behaving as though your life depends upon obtaining it. You stop watching the clock. You stop demanding signs. You stop negotiating with reality. The desire becomes no big deal because, within your imagination, it has already been resolved.
This is the indifference people often misunderstand. It is not apathy. It is the calmness that follows certainty.
You must stop trying to get it. The effort to obtain it reveals that you still believe it is missing. Your behavior must communicate that the outcome is already secure, even though a deeper part of you still cares very much about it. You do not become emotionally numb. You simply stop feeding the absence.
Brashear’s second instruction is to immediately assume the identity of the person who has already received what was wanted. Reality does not merely respond to what we say we want. It responds to the identity we consistently project through our expectations, decisions, reactions and behavior.
Imagination generates reality, but action and behavior water the fantasy until it becomes fact.
You do not repeatedly try to become that person. You begin operating as that person now. The desired outcome becomes something you know rather than something you seek.
Acting wealthy does not require reckless spending or pretending bills do not exist. It means refusing to allow scarcity to define your identity. Acting loved does not mean inventing a relationship that is not there. It means no longer moving through life as someone who expects rejection. Acting successful means making choices from the identity of someone capable, secure and accustomed to opportunity rather than someone waiting to be rescued.
Reality responds to identity.
The more natural the new identity feels, the more powerful it becomes. An exaggerated performance still reveals that the experience feels foreign. The goal is not to force excitement every moment. It is to allow the desired reality to feel ordinary, familiar and expected.
There are also three things Brashear says you should not do.
The first is waiting.
Waiting produces anxiety because waiting assumes the desired event has not happened. The person who is waiting remains focused on time, delay and absence. Anxiety then pushes the experience further away because the behavior itself continues broadcasting uncertainty.
The second is looking for external validation.
Checking your phone, refreshing your messages, searching for signs or constantly looking for confirmation creates worry. Worry is another form of anxiety, and anxiety communicates that the outcome is not secure.
Behavior is what the construct responds to.
You may say that you believe, but if your actions show that you are nervous, watching and repeatedly checking, then your behavior is expressing doubt. The field is not responding to the words alone. It is responding to the identity underneath them.
The third is talking to other people about your intentions.
Your intention belongs to you. Once it is shared, other people can project doubt, fear, judgment or disbelief onto it. Their energy can affect your field, especially if their reaction causes you to question what previously felt settled.
It is your fantasy anyway. Keep it to yourself.
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There is no need to seek agreement, permission or applause. The imagined experience is an inner act of creation. Protect it until it becomes so natural that outside opinions no longer disturb it.
This is a plane of creation, not competition. Another person does not have to lose for you to receive. You are not fighting the world for a limited supply of possibilities. You are occupying a state and allowing the corresponding experience to organize around it.
The formula is almost unnervingly simple. Imagine the desired experience as something already remembered. Feel how ordinary and secure it became. Assume the identity of the person for whom it is already true. Allow your actions to arise from that identity. Do not wait, do not search for validation and do not expose the intention to people who may interfere with it.
Then stop chasing the result.
You do not beg for what is already yours. You do not struggle to reach what has already been settled. You remember, become and release.
Then you allow reality to catch up.
The video below is clipped from a presentation lasting more than three hours inside The Underground. Brashear describes it as a synopsis drawn from thousands of pages of notes and a complete abbreviation, reduced to two paragraphs, of the central manifestation and law-of-attraction principles found throughout the works of Baltasar Gracián, Thomas Troward, Wallace Wattles, Neville Goddard, James Allen, Napoleon Hill, Rhonda Byrne, The Edinburgh Lectures on Mental Science and The Dore Lectures.
Archaix Breakthrough Analysis on Manifestation Formulas
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