Tell Me What You Did Tomorrow.
“Tell me what you did tomorrow.” That’s what the White Queen said to Alice in Wonderland. I’m intrigued. And I’m convinced. After all, isn’t that one of the keys to living your dream? To manifesting your dream? To reaching what you once thought was impossible?
A few years ago I attended Mary Morrissey’s Dream Builder Live conference. It was a magical, wonderful experience. I learned a lot and we did exercises which helped to demonstrate reaching our dreams. In one, we turned to a partner and described a dream – a goal – we have in detail, complete with how it would make us feel to reach it. We talked about the vibrational frequency that we feel with that dream reached. It left an impression.
The next day we paired up with a partner once again. This time we did some time travel three years into the future, and found we have run into this conference partner once again. We shared what had happened in the three years since we last saw the person – our goal accomplished! We talk with excitement about how it felt to realize the dream and how we feel now. It was awesome. (You know, kind of like telling what I did tomorrow!)
The best part of it is that I can tell you now – three years later — my goals were accomplished, just as I had described in 2019. (Well, except I still haven’t heard from Oprah. That may come a little later . . . ) This is such an important part of reaching for goals – visualizing and feeling what it will be like to actually have accomplished the goal. Already experiencing the feelings of it. That’s power.
Of course, throughout that conference we also did exercises to target self-doubt and other obstacles that sometimes block us from reaching further. Perhaps that will be a topic for another time. But for today, let me encourage you to simply tell me – and yourself – what you did tomorrow. Describe your goal in detail. Be sure to include how you feel with it reached.
You can do it. After all, the Queen goes on to note, “it’s a pretty poor memory that only works in one direction.” And I’m betting you have a pretty brilliant memory.