How To Create A Belief: Where Facts Become Magic
Introduction
In this blog post, I am going to be talking about the science of a belief, the meaning and nature of beliefs and belief systems, then we are going to explore how to create a belief in relation to the application of the law of assumption, clearing resistance and blockages and yes limiting beliefs as well, this is going to be an interesting read, so stay tuned.
What is a Belief?
A belief is a feeling of certainty that something is true. Beliefs are among the most delicate and powerful forces in creation. They are flexible, invisible, and yet they move most everything. Belief is one of 3 links that bridge the gap between visualization and manifestation, between an idea and embodiment into a state of being.
Most people will think belief is something they choose; they are not wrong, but in truth, it goes way further than that. A belief is something they experience; a belief has an emotional signature that the subconscious mind receives and uses as orders in a way. Impressions, they are called. See, one does not believe in something simply because they want to; they believe because of a deep conviction and feeling placed from within that registers confidence in an idea, certainty based on facts and so on. This is how a belief is created.
The Belief - Faith Dyanmic
“Photo by Tien Vu Ngoc on Unsplash .”
They both basically mean the same thing in the sense that they both are related to knowing, confidence and certainty in things, outcomes and situations that transpire all around us. When a person truly believes, they technically stop hoping. No more checking for signs or confirmation. They simply know. Faith
This knowing isn't from blind faith but from experience. " The Faith that moves mountains" is not passive; it’s an active, living, and perhaps even literal and can build something the mind recognizes as real, therefore birthing it into reality.
So how does one create a belief?
You do so when you experience (feel it, touch it, smell it) it, the thing in which you wish to believe, but first in imagination, and then vibrationally through repeated emotional familiarity until it starts to feel less forced and more natural to believe than it does to doubt it.
“Photo by Paul Skorupskas on Unsplash .”
See, it is super easy to believe in a thing that you have seen, touched, or heard about, especially from reliable sources by your own standards. You know this because it is a verified experience. This is the same principle that applies during manifestation as well.
Whenever you imagine something ever so vividly that your mind and body respond to it with emotional resonance, then that experience has been registered in your psyche as a real event, regardless of it being mental (Imagination) or physical (Real). The brain makes no distinction between these 2 when it tells the nervous system about the ongoing brain activity.
“Photo by Giu Vicente on Unsplash .”
Hence, I'd come out of a deep visualization session, and it feels almost like waking from a dream. I even feel that vacuum-like feeling one gets right before the dream dissolves and they wake up. That feeling when you are no longer asleep, just lying there with eyes closed. Suspended between worlds, and my body cannot tell the difference. This sweet spot, this is the STATE AKIN TO SLEEP, and that means all that I think about is being auto-impressed on my subconscious mind.
Therefore, as soon as the mind registers a thought as an "experience," it naturally becomes a belief. Consistency ensures that the conscious mind does not argue with what the nervous system has felt based on brain signals.
The Art of Blending Faith with Logic
“Photo by Alex Radelich on Unsplash .”
If faith or belief is a feeling of knowing, then we can solidify our belief system with scaffolds of logic. People often tend to separate the spiritual from the logical, but in reality, they can coexist. The best beliefs are rooted in logic, even the ones that seem anchored. Like how matter is both a wave and a particle depending on who is looking at it and what they expect to see... Ok, science, I believe you, whatever.
Faith provides the energy. Logic provides the structure.
When these two merge, the belief system becomes stable. Logic says “yeah, this makes sense” and then faith will say “this feels right also... we can totally pull this off” and together they create what I call a belief. An equilibrium between dream and reason. And dreams barely make logical sense 99% of the time, but no worries, because we are not asleep, and the logical mind is still there, just assuming a passive role.
Hence, the manifestation becomes effortless, you feel it, no stress, and you just know. I remember the first time in felt peaceful afterwards. Blissful, I tell ya
Notes on How to Create a Belief
“Photo by Brandon Lopez on Unsplash .”
Here is a process I use to create beliefs, it's simple but deadly effective;
- Step 1: Visualize the Experience - A simple image sustained for 10 seconds at a time is great, a moment is even better. Think about the experience as you would a memory - as if it has already happened, be it a conversation, an object, or an environment get in there and feel how real it is.
- Step 2: Stay Until It Feels True - Don’t rush it, stand in your imaginary scene as you would at a scene in real life with a view. Look around, walk around, pick stuff up, feel them, smell them, if you want to, you can even do an inner dialogue voiceover and say "this smells like lavender". Stay until you feel that subtle click that lets your nervous system know that “yes, this indeed happened”. That’s the bridge.
- Step 3:Let Logic Support It - When you return to waking consciousness, it will begin to pop up at random and this is when some people start to loose their sh*t thinking they are about to mess things up, just chill out for a bit and reason it out gently, think of it like this yeah? If I can experience it in imagination this vividly, this would mean that it already exists in potential. The universe doesn’t create new things; it simply reflects a frequency.
- Step 4: Revisit Until Familiar: Go back to the "future memory" as often as you can, as opposed to avoiding it like an affliction, feel free to repeat the experience until it feels normal. Once it does feel familiar, it’s all yours. The subconscious mind now treats it as memory.
Notes on Belief as a Living Thing
“Photo by kazuend on Unsplash .”
A belief isn’t static; it tends to grow with exposure. And every time you revisit that desired reality in your imagination, you are reinforcing it as a neural pathway, literally rewiring your mind to make space for it every single time.
This is why a person who has an icky belief system finds it difficult to do a 180-degree turn because beliefs flow like water down familiar pathways, and one must put in extra effort to ensure they flow differently.
That’s why Neville Goddard said: “A man can believe himself into any state.” But belief is not to be seen as a switch, rather as a muscle. The more you work it, the more you build it through emotional repetition, through persistence and consistency, the stronger it gets, and with that, it is easier to use the next time around.
“Photo by Victor Deweerdt on Unsplash .”
At some point, this process will stop being an exercise and become who you are; you'd no longer need to visualize, things start to align on auto, and you simply expect. You no longer need affirmations cuz now you assume, no longer chasing but attracting.
And when that happens, reality bends, it’s magical, I tell ya, your subconscious has accepted a new truth. The mind projects, the world reflects.
Creation.
Summary
- Belief is created through experience, with emotion and repetition.
- The brain records imagination as memory when emotion is involved, physical, mental or imaginary. There is no distinction once it's felt.
- The combination of faith (emotion) with logic (reason) creates stability in a belief.
- Repetition will turn imaginary experiences into subconscious knowing and eventually truth.
- True manifestation only happens when your belief system replaces all effort.
Leave a Comment
Comments
No comments yet. Be the first to share your thoughts!