You don’t lead your imagination by forcing it… you lead it by changing what feels natural to you.
Right now, your imagination is on autopilot.
It’s replaying what you’ve already accepted as true — your past, your wounds, your old identity. That’s why it feels so real and so hard to change.
So if you try to “think positive” on top of that, it won’t stick.
Because your imagination doesn’t follow words… it follows what feels believable.
That’s the part most people miss.
Here’s how you actually start leading it:
First — become aware of what you’re already imagining
Not just your thoughts, but the quiet assumptions:
What do you expect to happen?
What feels likely?
What do you automatically go to when you’re not trying?
That’s your current state.
Second — don’t jump to the end if it feels fake
If your mind rejects “I have everything I want,” don’t fight it.
You’re not here to lie to yourself — you’re here to shift yourself.
Instead, move into something that feels like a bridge:
“Things are starting to work out for me”
“I’m becoming someone who gets what they want”
“It’s possible for me now”
Let it feel a little bit more true than your old story.
Third — use imagination with feeling, not effort
Close your eyes and don’t try to control every detail.
Just place yourself in a moment where it’s already done.
Not a big dramatic scene — something simple:
A message received
A calm moment knowing it worked out
A version of you who is no longer worried
And then ask yourself:
“How would I feel if this was actually my life?”
Stay there for a few seconds. That’s enough.
Fourth — repeat until it becomes familiar
You’re not trying to manifest in one perfect session.
You’re training your nervous system to accept a new normal.
The moment it feels natural… that’s when your imagination starts following you.
And this is the truth most people avoid:
You’re not manifesting what you visualize once.
You’re manifesting what your mind keeps returning to when you’re not paying attention.
So the real work is not control…
It’s redirection, over and over again, until it becomes effortless.
That’s when the shift happens.