Summary
Highlights
The speaker begins by discussing changes to her coaching services, moving from email coaching to video calls with follow-up emails for better effectiveness. She highlights the power of direct communication in uncovering deeper issues. The main topic, revision, is introduced as a highly effective, yet often overlooked, manifestation tool from Neville Goddard's teachings. She shares her personal re-engagement with Neville's works and the benefits she has seen from applying revision.
Revision helps clean up old stories, eliminate negative thought patterns, and heal wounds from past traumatic events. It's described as 'cleaning out the junk' and enhancing self-concept work. The speaker acknowledges that revision can seem 'crazy' initially, especially the idea of changing the past, but urges an open mind and a honest effort. She argues that revision is about changing history to benefit one's future, getting rid of detrimental past experiences that influence current beliefs and experiences.
To help accept revision, the speaker introduces the concept that time is an illusion and not linear. Everything, including past, present, and future, is happening simultaneously in multiple realities. By choosing a different 'state' or reality, we are essentially selecting a version of the past that serves us better. This is not about denying what happened, but about changing the impression it has on our subconscious and therefore our future.
The speaker draws a parallel between memories and visualizations, stating they are essentially the same mental process. Both can evoke strong emotional responses that impress upon the subconscious. Negative memories can create detrimental beliefs. Revision, therefore, involves removing the power of those memories by changing them into a desired narrative, impressing the subconscious with a new, positive version of the past.
For patterns in relationships, go back to the first event that caused pain (e.g., being cheated on). Clarify the event, then rewrite it (through journaling, scripting, or visualizing) to your benefit, e.g., you broke up with them. Visualize the revised scene for 5-10 seconds, looping it daily for a week, or reread the scripted version. If other painful events surface, address them as they arise, as they are your subconscious highlighting areas for revision. This process is about changing the outcome to align with desired beliefs.
The speaker explains that revised events will manifest in your 3D reality, either by people involved in the original event showing up differently or by you simply remembering only the new, revised version. The subconscious accepts what it's fed, so feeding it a new history will alter your reality and boost your self-concept by removing the impact of negative past experiences. This will cause your 3D reality to 'catch up' with the revised memory.
Neville Goddard's approach of revising the day before sleep is encouraged. This involves going into a 'sats' (state akin to sleep) and mentally replaying any undesirable events of the day as if they went perfectly. Revision isn't limited to bedtime; it can be done 'on the spot' during the day when encountering an undesirable situation, by mentally altering the immediate outcome to a preferred one. The key is to fully immerse yourself in the revised scene or thought.
The speaker advises that if the old story keeps resurfacing after a week, re-engage with the revised version. She acknowledges that revision can determine whether manifestations come to fruition, especially for long-term manifestors with persistent negative patterns. She offers to answer further questions in the comments or create a follow-up video, emphasizing that understanding and implementing revision is crucial for success regardless of age or the number of events to revise. It's about focusing on significant patterns rather than every single detail.