Revision: Re-Imprinting the Past to Change the Present
Introduction
In this blog post, I am going to be talking about the act of revision, which essentially is an exercise used to sharpen the sense for visualization and also for deconstructing limiting beliefs and resistance that tends to arise during intention setting and the use of imagination and visualization. Stay tuned.
The Universe as an Inverse Mirror
If the world is truly a mirror, then the past is simply an older reflection still hanging in the air. And if everything physical is born from imagination, then the past isn’t fixed — it’s stored imagination.
Everything that has and will happen is stored somewhere in the infinite server space of the cosmos.
That is what the Revision exercise is all about: changing the stored images, and therefore changing the reflection.
At first, when I learned this trick from Elmer Lockhart Jr., a YouTuber who teaches Neville Goddard’s methods in a way that feels living and practical. I was skeptical, but I was desperate enough to try it.
The Revision Exercise: This is How I Did It
“Photo by Daniel Schludi on Unsplash .”
Each night before sleep, I'd run my day backwards. I would start from the present — maybe 10 p.m. when I’m already in bed, and then I rewind.
10 p.m. - 9 p.m. - 8 p.m. - 7 p.m. - 5 p.m. all the way to Noon and then to the morning when I woke up.
Then I'd go backward again, hour by hour, and as I pass each scene, I stop wherever something felt unpleasant or low-vibration. Maybe I didn’t like what I ate for breakfast. Maybe a conversation drained my energy. Maybe I doubted myself in a meeting.
When I reach those moments, I revise them.
I don’t remember them as they were; I remember them as I prefer them to be. I tell myself:
“Breakfast was wonderful.”
“That conversation was uplifting.”
“I handled that moment with ease.”
Then I repeat this every day for about 2 weeks, from night till morning, and from morning, I move back and forth again — 7 a.m., 8 a.m., 9 a.m. — replaying the day as if it all unfolded perfectly. By the time I drift into sleep, my entire day has been polished. Everything unpleasant has been rewritten into a state of harmony.
Why This Works
“Photo by Tingey Injury Law Firm on Unsplash .”
At first glance, it sounds like self-deception, and you will feel rigid and silly in doing so, but here is what I discovered and what I have heard Dr. Joe Dispenza often say: the brain and the subconscious mind do not know the difference between imagination and a real memory.
Check all the boxes (believe in what you see and feel something about it), and the brain will tell the mind that they are the same thing.
So keep in mind that whenever you feel a revised scene deeply, your brain records it as real. The neural pathways that held the old version of similar scenes and stories will dissolve, allowing the new story to take its place.
By revising your daily experiences, you are training my brain to accept change as normal, and you are showing it that reality is flexible and malleable like a muscle that strengthens with use and repeated exercise... call it the faith muscle.
If I can alter yesterday in my memory and convince my brain and mind that what I did was real, then I can most certainly alter tomorrow because time is not linear as we once thought.
Faith Through Experiment
“Photo by James Coleman on Unsplash .”
So I took it upon myself to treat faith like an experiment, and revision has become my proof as for each time I change an unpleasant event in imagination, I feel a logical confidence grow, and this reflects in the form of me able to make more drastic changes in my "future memory" without my logical mind protesting... see the revision exercise has soften those neural pathways and the are ever more flexible. A faith based on experiment. It’s not blind belief anymore; it’s demonstrated knowing.
Since creation is finished and I have had enough snippets of paranormal and psychic phenomena to know that something sublime is happening I just needed to quantify it... to be able to say "yeah, this was the change I made in manifestation today from weeks ago using the revision exvercise" but directed towards future events and I did just that.
So when I am visualizing, affirming, or scripting and doubt arises, I just say this to myself:
“I’ve changed whole days before. I can change this moment, too.”
Or my personal favorite:
“This is all happening for my benefit and is leading me to the wish fulfilled”
With proper revision to the point where the subconscious mind believes this to be true, then you have got yourself an affirmation that turns doubt into fuel, and baby, you are unstoppable.
“Photo by Benoît Deschasaux on Unsplash .”
This, I realized, is where the true power lies. The technique assures me that manifestation is not limited to future outcomes, nor does any foreseen worry or doubt stand a chance at botching my intentions. It also helps me rewrite memory, emotion, and meaning, basically shadow work and alchemy all wrapped in one with a ribbon on it.
Through it all, I learned that the present is not being built from the past but from a series of scenes, thoughts, and feelings of what the mind has been accepting as true.
At this point, I don't need much convincing that we are living in a simulation.
It’s not denial, it is re-creation. Co-creation. Revision trains the subconscious mind to obey the conscious direction; it is, quite literally, faith in motion.
How to Practice The Revision Exercise
“Photo by Mykyta Kravčenko on Unsplash .”
- Step 1: Rewind Your Day: Start at bedtime and rewind your day, going backward from bedtime to morning, noticing any unpleasant events that you believe could be better. If I could do it all over again, what would I do differently?
- Step 2: Pause and Re-Imagine: When you find these unpleasant events from the day in rewind, you rewrite each moment as you prefer it. You will feel resistance in your first session, push through it, and really feel every new version holding it for about 10 seconds at a time.
- Step 3: Move Forward Again: Upon rewinding to the very beginning of your day. Hit the replay button and start saying all over again, this time you go forward, from morning to night, feeling the satisfaction of a smooth, happy flow. You can go back and forth until you drift off to sleep.
- Step 4: Drift to Sleep: Fall asleep in that state of corrected peace and Bob's ya uncle.
Do this on a nightly basis to create consistency, and you’ll start to notice subtle initial changes in your mindset and state of being, and eventually the outer changes will start to manifest as well.
“Photo by Erriko Boccia on Unsplash .”
People will start treating you differently, situations softening, pressure will be turned down in your etheric and auric field, and opportunities will start appearing.
Summary
- Revision involves reinterpreting past occurrences to alter their emotional and energetic impact.
- The subconscious mind treats all imagined experiences as genuine, real ones once it has an emotional signature; thus, modified memories adjust beliefs.
- This practice enhances logical faith by showcasing the mind's creative capabilities in being flexible.
- When revision is done on a nightly basis, it cleanses emotions, boosts confidence, and re-aligns the person's state of being and psyche into perfect balance with the divine/etheric realms of reality.
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