Faith: A Feeling Of Certainty And A State Of Being

Introduction

In this blog post, I will discuss the concept of faith beyond words, specifically the law of assumption, exploring the mechanism behind the law's operation, what makes it tick, and how to apply it in our daily manifestation practice. This is going to be a crash course on manifestation, a manuscript which I have tested to near perfection with a 99.999% success rate. This will walk you step by step on what to do, how to do it, and why it works so well. So make sure you stick around till the very end, it will be totally worth it.

What Is The Law of Assumption?

The Law of Assumption is a concept whereby one thinks an event, person, or object into being; it is simply the act of believing something into existence. This concept has gained popularity amongst the Spiritual, New Age belief communities and now strongly influences pop culture and mainstream media.

The Nature of Faith Beyond Words

Faith is not trusting blindly in something — it is felt certainty and confidence in something. In this blog post, as we dive into the depths of what faith means and the connection between faith and belief, feelings, or emotions, in relation to brainwaves and state of being, we will be learning how the feeling of faith can be created within one's own body as a knowing, as opposed to feeling hopeful. Faith as a knowing is the true foundation of manifestation and the Law of Assumption.

Faith is a word we use often. I never really liked it; it always seemed vague, and when I used the word, I failed to even convince myself of the power of the word that I speak. As I said, often used by many but rarely defined clearly by anyone. For most of my life, “having faith” sounded hollow — like a thing you say to someone when out of logical explanations and just want them to bugger off and quit whining about their luck.

"Just have faith, man, things will all work out... you'll see". So in this blog, I will be trying to find a new expression for faith, not as blind trust in God when we require hope, but as a state of being, as a feeling place — a tangible emotion that signifies an inner knowing that links consciousness, science, and spirituality nicely.

Yes, dearest reader, it is indeed a very common thing to hear someone say, “Have faith,” or “I have faith in God.” I hear it all the time, but it is easier said than done, no?

My whole life, I had difficulty with the idea of faith. I honestly just couldn’t grasp how to “have faith” (full-on blind trust) in something that I couldn’t see, that I am unable to measure, or prove even exists. People toss around the word like a closing to a very uncomfortable conversation, and they didn't want you questioning things anymore. That's how God wants it, here, why not have a little more faith? It felt like being asked to believe in an invisible bridge and step onto it without checking if it was there, i.e., like with a blindfold on. That level of trust didn’t come naturally to me. I triple-check my locks just to be extra sure.

Faith as a feeling and emotional State

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'' “Photo by Guilherme Stecanella on Unsplash .”

Recently, I have been consuming quite a lot of Manly P. Hall's lectures and with that being said I have been entertaining a different kind of thought: see, most of the time when I didn't get something right, it's usually an indication that there was a perception problem on my part, (a most recent discovery I beg your pardon). I wondered, maybe something exists that’s better than the 'faith' as I used to understand it, or maybe I just needed to take a step back and define things for myself. See "Words" as Manly P. Hall once said, are just sounds we have given meaning to. Perhaps faith itself has been misunderstood by me, and I was among a minority of sorts that didn't really get it at all; perhaps I needed to do a bit of homework.

See I always liked to experiment with ideas in the same way scientists would experiment with their gizmos and what not in their labs — I would observe, test, and all that, No expert but I know enough to say that science had always felt grounded to me; I liked structure, something I can lean on that is universal and understood by all. Science demands evidence, a structure, and repeatability. Organised Religion says “just believe,” but Science says “hey, look - see for yourself.” Somewhere between those two options lies the truth about faith and what it truly means to a co-creator.

I won’t claim to know much about faith either, so I did what anybody would do: I looked it up online and referenced a couple of places to get a real read on the various meanings out there. Here is the gist: Faith - to trust in somebody's ability or knowledge, trust that they will do what they promised. Faith on other sites was simply a strong religious belief. As I said, I was no expert on faith, but I do understand a thing or two about belief. A belief is the exact moment whereby a thing happens and suddenly becomes real enough to you that you stop questioning it. When we believe something, it has proper context, substance, and personal evidence. This has become a solidified fact in one's psyche. 2 + 2 = 4. When you believe, you’re no longer hoping it's true — you know it's true, verified by your senses and environment.

The Science of Belief

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“Photo by chris liu on Unsplash .”

From a scientific point of view, the act of belief activates particular brain states. It has a physiological signature that one can measure and is able to see the difference between skepticism and certainty in brainwaves. So this made me begin to wonder... if belief can be measured, faith should be the same. All I needed to do was be certain of what I was having faith in. I mean, it felt delusional, but that was sort of the whole point... Trust an invisible power and feel it before evidence appears?

Belief, after all, was kind of a fact — not an external one, but an inner one. Nobody can tell why a person chooses to believe what they do... I can try to narrow it down to the idea that whatever it was that they believed, just made sense to them. They wanted it to be true, and it was that easy to grasp be it true or false. See, it is a personal knowing born from experience and feelings that go with the experience. I’ve come to realize that the body’s language for belief, or most anything for that matter, was emotion-energy in motion through the nervous system.

The body speaks using emotion as the mind speaks using thought.

So here is the thing, every state of being we entertain throughout the day has its own feeling tone. When your brain is in an alpha state, you will feel calm, euphoric, sleepy and open, think of this as bed time vibes and you just found that comfy spot and will not move; in beta, alert, awake and full aware of things and the logical mind is in drive; in delta, dreamy, detached from the rapid flow of thoughts things are more felt that thought about in this state. What we call “faith” might just be the emotional counterpart of a certain state of consciousness — a neurological signature of inner knowing.

The Feeling of Knowing

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“Photo by Pastor Matt on Unsplash .”

Faith, as I soon came to realise, was not an act of imagination but a feeling of knowing, a deep conviction in something because you have certainty in an outcome before or after evidence arrives. It’s what happens when the body accepts a mental picture as already real.

I used to think faith required endless trust in something external — a God, a universe, a law. But now, after my little bit of intentional research, some unlearning and the re-programming of a few neural links... I now come to see faith as an internal frequency, and it’s not just about hoping it all works out, that life will somehow deliver, but turns out that was about tuning yourself to a version of reality where it already exists. Let me explain: There is this thing in quantum theory which, in a nutshell, tells us all we know about physics is not as we thought it was... this is the equivalent of hearing one side of a story and making conclusions only to learn there are several other testimonies.

In that sense, time is not necessarily linear, and matter is condensed energy, which is literally 99.999% nothingness. The human experience, in literal terms, is a soul - an energetic being embodied in a meat bag living on a rock that goes round a giant ball of fire in the middle of literally nowhere. All that was proven by science as facts, and it does get weirder, but that's not the point.

The point here is that there are so many things that are going on in what we call reality that baffle even the sharpest minds in science. With a little bit of research and self-exploration, one learns that so many things that are happening have little regard for the understanding of the human being to function. It goes on and on like clockwork.

Faith was one of those things. See, I learned that faith can be an assumption. To assume something is to have faith in its existence right now, not later. Neville Goddard once said, “Faith is loyalty to the unseen reality,” which I no longer struggle with because Dr. Joe Dispenza had once confirmed this in a few of his works, "Breaking the Habit of Being Yourself" Mind Over Matter, the needed proof that my mind needed to grasp things. Neville Goddard's line never made sense to me until I experienced what he meant: when I assume something to be true long enough, I start feeling it as truth — and that feeling itself becomes the evidence. You tell yourself something long and hard enough, you start to BELIEVE it.

Experimenting with Faith

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“Photo by Stephen Harlan on Unsplash .”

So I began experimenting again, not with techniques, but with states of being. This time, I had a different approach, instead of asking, “Do I have faith this will happen?” I asked, “What would it feel like if it were already done?” The difference was subtle but powerful. One question kept me waiting for proof. The other one created proof inside me first. See, the issue had always been that I lack knowledge of a higher power over my silly human mind. I was refusing to see evidence due to past conditioning, and once I learned to let that go. I was free. Seek knowledge to help create certainty in what you want to have faith in. Science did it for me.

Faith is not all about thinking positively; it is about the feeling of certainty. It is the same quiet conviction you have when you think of “2 + 2 = 4.” You don’t hope that it’s true; you know it’s true. You can check it to make sure it is true with the methods at your disposal. There’s no emotional resistance, the answer is 4... no searching for signs. The feeling is complete, nothing but a calculator app away.

That’s what I now recognize as the state of faith: the emotion of belief. The feeling of knowing with certainty right to the point of delusion... but not without self-awareness. Once you reach that frequency— that sweet spot where your thoughts and emotions are unified in the knowing of something—you’ve crossed from wishing into being and the universe, or consciousness, responds not to the words we say but to the frequency we occupy.

Faith as Frequency

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“Photo by Hanna Witte on Unsplash .”

Faith is not found in just seeking evidence, but also in the creation of it. Faith was never about pretending or hoping. It was about remembering—remembering a version of yourself who already lives in that fulfilled state. We are talking about faith here, folks. It will require a bit of higher power in something other than self. Faith isn’t a task you perform; it’s a feeling you allow to flow through you. When I think of faith now, it doesn’t invoke the image of a distant God holding all the outcomes in his hand... No, I think of an inner current of knowing that runs through every my being. Here I truly learned that faith is not blind at all—it’s deeply sensory. We see things with our eyes and believe them to be real, the same for things we hear, feel, and smell. Faith is no different except it is sensed or let's say, felt internally, and it feels like balance, calm, and quiet assurance.

See, one doesn't lack faith. They lack the evidence needed to convince them to believe. Something that ushers one to the moment when one stops questioning if the manifestation of one's reality is indeed in sync with their state of being. Mind over matter. The mind stops searching; the heart stops arguing. And that harmony becomes the creative force itself.

So in the very end, faith is not about believing in something out there. No trust needed without proof (seek some...) It’s about believing from within yourself, creating your own certainty. It’s the steady pulse of awareness that says, “I know,” and when you know, reality listens.

Journal Prompt

What does the feeling of “knowing” feel like in your body? How can you bring that same feeling to a desire you haven’t yet seen materialize?

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