Sooner or Later, You Have to See It for What It Is
Sooner or later… you have to become aware of the behavior that’s blocking your blessings.
The constant overthinking. The self-sabotage. The inability to receive love or support. The stories that loop in your head about what you’re not, what you don’t have, and why it won’t work out.
Sooner or later, you’ve got to stop romanticizing the pain and see the trauma for what it was—a moment in time that hurt like hell but no longer gets to define who you are becoming.
And when that moment comes, you must make a radical decision:
To heal.
To forgive.
And to let. it. the fuck. go.
Because here's the truth:
You can’t call in your next level of wealth, joy, peace, or love if you’re still entangled in the emotional debris of the past.
Your manifestations aren’t blocked because you’re doing it wrong.
They’re blocked because your nervous system is still living in a reality that no longer exists.
You’re still trying to create a new life while dragging around the weight of a past one.
The trauma, the shock, the heartbreak—it’s not just what happened to you.
It’s how it lives in your mind now.
And every time you relive it, rehearse it, overanalyze it, or fear its return…
You re-anchor yourself in the same frequency that created it.
But change? Real change?
It doesn’t happen in the mind.
It happens when we surrender the mind and drop into the heart.
When we tame the beast of thought and land fully into the nowhere of the present moment.
This is where the healing lives.
This is where the divine speaks.
This is where YOU are—the real you.
Dr. Joe Dispenza teaches this beautifully in his work (I haven’t attended one of his seminars yet—but it's in my vortex, trust that). He speaks about the power of mentally rehearsing the life you want as if it’s already yours. Feeling it. Becoming it. Practicing it. Because...
You don’t attract what you want. You attract what you are rehearsing emotionally and energetically.
So let this be the moment you decide:
To commit to being happy.
To commit to the unfamiliar path of joy.
To commit to getting out of the habit of suffering.
To stop expecting the worst.
To stop defaulting to lack.
To stop entertaining thoughts that aren’t aligned with your wholeness.
Practice makes perfect change.
Practice brings you back to yourself.
So practice feeling the wealth.
Practice gratitude.
Practice stillness.
Practice worthiness.
Practice the version of you that already has what you desire.
And watch as life shifts around you—not because of magic, but because you finally remembered who the hell you are.