What you want is “impossible”?
Or is it just unfamiliar to the version of you that exists right now?
Fifty years ago, the device in your hand would have looked like magic.
Twenty years ago, entire careers you see today didn’t exist.
What feels “impossible” is often just something that hasn’t been normalized yet.
The truth is—nothing new ever feels realistic at the beginning.
If it did, it wouldn’t be new.
This is where people misunderstand Neville Goddard.
He never said “chase what already exists.”
He said: assume the feeling of the wish fulfilled.
Not when it makes sense.
Not when you see proof.
But precisely when it feels impossible.
Because “impossible” is just the mind trying to protect what is known.
You’re not here to repeat what’s been done.
You’re here to embody something that hasn’t fully taken form yet.
Every reality you admire today
was once a thought someone refused to dismiss.
So the real question isn’t:
“Is this possible?”
It’s:
“Am I willing to be the version of me for whom this is normal?”
Because the moment it feels natural in you,
it starts organizing itself outside of you.
There’s always a first.
Why not let it be you?