Manifesting your best future requires more than just positive thinking. These vision boards helped me manifest my dream.
Here’s how you can do it too:
Declare your dream or intention. Whatâs your vision of who you want to be in your life?
Let go of attachment to the outcome. Will you trust–even a little bitâthat your positive power can help you achieve your wishes in a way that yields the highest good for all, even if itâs in an unexpected way?
Get to work with growth tools. Will you direct your mind away from your negative thinking and toward loving power, so your desired outcomeâor something betterâwill occur?
STEP 1. Declare Your Dream
The first step is to write an affirmation using the following guidelines.
Use the present tense. State your desire as if it has already happened: âI am relaxed, smart, and successful when I take my exam,â âI see (_________) without criticism and offer kindness instead.â
Use positive language. Make your statement affirmative: âI have strong flexible shoulders.â Avoid all negative language; for example, replace âI am not in pain,â with âI am free of pain and enjoy good health.â
Use concrete and emotionally powerful terms. The affirmation, âMy marriage is strong, loving, honest, and wonderful!â arouses confident, optimistic feelings.
Make it open to loveâs direction. Add the words, âin the best way for all involved,â or âas positive power would have it be.â (Read April 4, 2018 blog for more about âpositive power.â)
âI write wonderful books in a wonderful way. I offer wonderful service for wonderful pay,â are the affirmations that helped me write my book, 50 Ways to Worry Less Now. I adapted them from an example in Florence Scovel Shinnâs The Game of Life and How to Play It. The rhyme of way and pay helped me repeat my intention often. The phrase wonderful service engaged my wish to offer support and hope to others. And, of course, I am open to a positive payoff in whatever form it may appear!
To manifest my goal, I also practiced visualizationâa mental programming technique using vivid images. Many successful athletes use this technique to enhance their performance, among them Jordan Spieth, the youngest winner of the 2017 British Open Golf Tournament, who often refers to seeing the shot before he hits the ball.
At the top of this post you can see photos of the two five-by-seven-inch, laminated vision boards I used to visualize my success. The words âCreate something good. Yes, you! Youâre done,â gave me inspiration. The dove, hearts, and word serenity reminded me of my positive powerâs help. The woman leaping over the round object represents me overcoming my worries and achieving my goal. Oprah Winfrey is a symbol of courage and service to others.
I placed my vision boards on my desk in my direct line of vision. Before I began writing, I said my affirmations aloud, visualized them as true, and then connected my heart with the images on my boards.
I often visualized a future book-signing event where people tell me how much my book has helped them. Two months ago, I lived that dream at my first book signing event.
Suddenly, I looked up from signing a book, and gasped in amazement. I was experiencing exactly what I had visualized for so many years!
Weâll start with Step 1; the next two blog entries will lead you through the other steps for manifesting your own dreams.
STEP 1. Write Your Affirmation
Think of a challenging situation thatâs been worrying you, and imagine how you would like to feel and act in that situation. Just remember, if your goal involves another person, make sure you indicate how you want to be rather than focusing on how you want them to be.
1.    Use the guidelines to write your affirmation in your journal. If youâd like, add the words, âThank you, (the name you use for positive power) for (fill in the blank).â
2.    Copy your affirmation onto a sticky note, and put it in a spot where youâll frequently see it.
3.    Place another copy of your intention in a small box or special place.
4.    Repeat your affirmation as often as you can.
5.    Make a vision board that represents how you want your life to be when your desire is accomplished. Cut words and illustrations from magazines, draw pictures, or use photos. Arrange them in a way that is meaningful to you on a small card or larger piece of cardboard. The only absolute is that your board portray how your life will look after meeting your goal.
6.    Focus on your vision board images a couple of times a day and just before bedtime.
7.    When you state your affirmation or look at your vision board, immerse yourself in the emotions and sensations you would have if your wish were already fulfilled.
Now that youâve chosen your goal, you come face-to-face with the hardest part of the process: STEP 2: Let the outcome go. Your first inclination might be to try to exert control to get the exact results you want. Your best option, however, is to do the opposite: Let go by cultivating the Buddhist virtue of nonattachment.
Gigi holds an MA in Psychology and PhD in Psychological Studies in Education, both from Stanford. âLangerâs frank and empathetic tone will comfort readers, as will the practical steps she teaches.â (Featured Book, BookLife by Publishers Weekly)Â Â âHer honesty will blow you away! It is beautifully written; filled with humor and authenticity.â (Member of Al Anon)