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Innerliving
Life Guided from Within

Innerliving conscious choices
Listen to Innerliving

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Innerliving is the gentle practice of letting your inner Universe, Innerscape, shape the way you live each day. It’s choosing presence over pressure, listening to your intuition, and allowing your inner truth to guide both your mindset and your daily habits.

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It shows up in simple, meaningful choices—pausing before reacting, preparing foods that nourish your body, moving in ways that support your energy, tending to a garden or growing even a small amount of your own food, and creating self-care rituals that help you feel balanced and grounded. These everyday actions become a lifestyle that honors your whole being.

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Innerliving is where your inner universe and your outer life meet. A softer way of moving through the world. A more intentional way of caring for yourself. A steady return to what feels aligned, one small choice at a time.​


It brings your inner world and your outer life into harmony, so you’re not just getting through the day — you’re moving through it with awareness, choice, and an open heart.

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It creates space for:

  • deeper calm

  • clearer intuition

  • more honest communication

  • healthier boundaries

  • gentler self-care

  • and a sense of inner steadiness

Innerliving supports you in living with meaning, balance, and authentic connection.

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It is not perfection. It’s presence.

It’s choosing to return to yourself — again and again — and letting your inner truth shape how you think, move, speak, and care for your life.

It is the bridge between your Innerscape and the way you walk through the world.

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At ImpromptuEnlightenment, Innerliving is one of our guiding principles:
a daily invitation to live with intention, compassion, and inner alignment.
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© ImpromptuEnlightenment  Written for ImpromptuEnlightenment by Linda Bottero

Happy Money: The Quiet Conversation Between Energy, Belief, and Worth

Money carries an energy that interacts with us
Listen to Happy Money

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Money is rarely just money.

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It’s not only numbers, paper, or digital exchanges moving invisibly through accounts. Money carries stories. It carries memory. It carries the emotional imprint of how we were raised, what we were told, what we watched others struggle with, and what we learned to fear or chase. Whether we acknowledge it or not, money holds energy and that energy responds to us.

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Two voices that have long resonated with me, Lynne Twist and Ken Honda, approach money not as a system to conquer, but as a relationship to understand. Their work invites a gentler, more honest inquiry: What is my inner relationship with money, and how is that shaping my outer experience?

This is not about wealth as status.  It’s about wealth as flow.

As sufficiency.    As self-trust.

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Money as Energy, Not Judgment

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Ken Honda reframes money not as a neutral object, but as an experience shaped by emotional relationship. Money received with fear feels different than money received with gratitude. Money spent with resentment does not move the same way as money spent with intention.

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We often don’t realize how much tension we carry into everyday transactions; paying bills while bracing, receiving income while worrying it won’t last, holding tightly out of fear rather than care. Over time, those micro-moments create a larger pattern. Not because money is punishing us, but because energy follows attention.

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Honda’s suggestion is not ritual for ritual’s sake. It’s awareness.

A quiet “thank you” when money comes in.

A sincere “thank you” when it goes out.

Not because money needs gratitude, but because we do. That small shift changes the nervous system response. It softens the internal conversation. It reminds us that money is participating in our lives, not threatening them.

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The amount is secondary.  The relationship is everything.

 

 

From Scarcity to Sufficiency

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Lynne Twist challenges one of the most deeply embedded cultural myths we carry: the idea that there is never enough. That we are behind. That we must hurry, hoard, or prove.

Scarcity thinking doesn’t just influence finances, it shapes identity. It convinces us that worth is conditional and safety is fragile. From that place, money becomes something to defend against loss rather than something to align with meaning.

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Sufficiency, as Twist describes it, is not denial or complacency. It is clarity. It is the recognition that enough is not a number, it’s a state of relationship. When we orient from sufficiency, money becomes a tool instead of a measuring stick.

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From there, decisions change.

We choose differently.     We give differently.    We stop chasing “more” and start asking “why.”

And in that shift, money begins to move with more ease, not because we forced it to, but because we stopped constricting it with fear.

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Belief Is the Invisible Hand

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What we believe about money quietly directs how it behaves in our lives.

If we believe money is hard to earn, it often is.

If we believe it disappears quickly, it often does.

If we believe it causes conflict, it frequently will.

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These beliefs don’t operate as punishment; they operate as patterns. The inner narrative becomes the outer experience.

When money is viewed as scarce, we tend to grip. When it is viewed as flowing, we tend to trust. One creates contraction. The other creates movement.

Gratitude doesn’t magically summon money, but it does change how we receive, circulate, and release it. And that changes everything.

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Practices for Re-patterning the Relationship

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This work doesn’t require dramatic overhauls. It requires presence.

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1. A Simple Gratitude Exchange

When money enters your life—through work, a gift, a refund—acknowledge it.

When money leaves—through bills, purchases, support—acknowledge it again.

Not performatively. Honestly.

This isn’t about positivity. It’s about coherence.

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2. Returning to Sufficiency

Ask yourself, without judgment:

  • Where do I already feel resourced?

  • Where am I chasing out of habit rather than need?

  • What does “enough” actually feel like in my body?

Write what comes up. Let the answers surprise you.

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3. Conscious Spending, Not Restriction

For a short window, simply notice:

  • Does this expense feel aligned or obligatory?

  • Does it expand me or drain me?

  • Is this choice rooted in care or compensation?

This isn’t about cutting back. It’s about coming back to yourself.

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4. Gentle Generosity

Choose one intentional act of giving not to fix, impress, or sacrifice, but to participate. Notice how money feels when it moves from appreciation rather than pressure.

Generosity is not about amount.    It’s about tone.

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The Larger Field

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Money does not exist in isolation. Every exchange is a small signal sent into the collective field. When money moves with resentment, it carries that forward. When it moves with respect, gratitude, or clarity, that tone continues on.

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Money is not the enemy.    It is not the savior.    It is a mirror.

When we change how we relate to it, we don’t just change our bank accounts, we change our internal stability, our sense of worth, and our capacity to participate in the world without fear.

 

A Quiet Closing

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Happy money isn’t money that makes us rich.

It’s money that doesn’t make us smaller.

It arrives without panic.

It leaves without resentment.

It participates in life without dominating it.

When money becomes a tool rather than a master, it returns to its rightful place, supporting life, not defining it.

And from that place, something unexpected happens:

We feel freer.

More grounded.

More at home in ourselves.

That, to me, is real wealth.

 

Resources: Happy Money by Ken Honda and The Soul of Money by Lynne Twist

 © Original work by Rev. Tina M. Adkins 2025  

Who is Neville Goddard and what is Nevilleizing?

Nevillizing  explained

Ahead of his time, Neville Goddard revealed a radical truth: reality does not begin in the world—it begins within consciousness itself.

Listen to Neville Goddard, Nevilleizing

 

Neville Goddard (1905–1972) was not just a spiritual teacher. He was a revolutionary thinker whose ideas about imagination, consciousness, and reality were decades ahead of their time. While many of his contemporaries focused on prayer or positive thinking, Neville introduced a radical concept: your imagination is the creative power behind everything you experience.

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Today, his teachings are gaining renewed attention, especially in the age of neuroscience, quantum theory, and manifestation practices. Let’s take a closer look at his philosophy, the concept of “Nevilleizing,” and why his ideas remain profoundly relevant.

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The core of Neville’s Philosophy’s central premise was simple yet transformative:

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“Assume the feeling of the wish fulfilled.” He taught that reality is not something that happens to us—it is something we create through our assumptions and Innerscapes. According to Neville, the subconscious mind accepts what we impress upon it through feeling, and this inner conviction eventually manifests in the physical world.

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This principle forms the foundation of what many now call Nevilleizing.

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“Nevilleizing” refers to the practice of living in the end—mentally and emotionally embodying the state of your desired outcome as if it were already real. It’s not mere visualization or daydreaming; it’s a disciplined act of Innertransformation.

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Here’s how it works:

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1. Define Your Desire Clearly

Know exactly what you want. Neville emphasized clarity because vague desires lead to vague results.

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2. Construct a Mental Scene

Imagine a short, vivid scene that implies your wish is fulfilled. For example, if you want a new job, imagine shaking hands with a colleague congratulating you.

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3. Feel It Real

The key is emotion. You must feel the joy, relief, and gratitude of already having what you desire.

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4. Persist

Repeat this assumption until it feels natural. Neville said, “Persist until your assumption hardens into fact.”

 

Neville’s approach to visioning was revolutionary. He didn’t advocate focusing on the process or the struggle; instead, he taught to embody the end state. If you desire success, you don’t imagine working hard—you imagine the celebration of success as if it’s already yours.

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This method aligns with modern neuroscience:
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• Mental Rehearsal: Studies show that imagining an action activates the same neural pathways as performing it.

• Neuroplasticity: Repeated mental imagery rewires the brain, making the imagined outcome feel natural and achievable.

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Neville was teaching these principles long before science caught up.

 
Neville’s ideas anticipated concepts that psychology and quantum theory would later explore:
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• Law of Assumption vs. Law of Attraction

Unlike the popular Law of Attraction, which suggests waiting for things to come, Neville taught the Law of Assumption: assume your desire is already yours.

• Consciousness Creates Reality

Decades before simulation theory or quantum observer effects became mainstream, Neville declared that reality is shaped by consciousness.

• Inner Speech and Self-Concept

Neville emphasized that our internal dialogue determines our external world. A principle now supported by cognitive behavioral therapy.

 

Practical Steps to Nevilleize Your Goals

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Here’s a simple framework to apply Neville’s teachings:

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1. Choose One Desire

Focus on one clear goal at a time.

2. Create a Scene

Imagine a short, sensory-rich scene that implies fulfillment.

3. Enter the State Akin to Sleep (SATS)

Neville recommended doing this in a drowsy state, just before sleep, when the subconscious is most receptive.

4. Feel It Real

Engage all senses—hear voices, feel textures, experience emotions.

5. Persist Without Doubt

Don’t check for results; live in the assumption until it manifests.

 

Neville’s message is empowering:
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You are the operant power. Your imagination is not passive; it’s the creative force behind everything you experience. His teachings offer a practical, spiritual, and psychological roadmap for anyone seeking transformation.

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Neville Goddard was more than a mystic; he was a pioneer of consciousness studies. His concept of Nevilleizing, assuming the feeling of the wish fulfilled, remains one of the most profound tools for personal transformation. As science continues to confirm his ideas, Neville’s work stands as a timeless guide for those ready to harness the power within.

 

 

Here are real-life Nevilleizing affirmations and experiences you can start using today:
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Use these affirmations daily, especially before sleep or during meditation:

• “I assume the feeling of my wish fulfilled.”

• “My imagination creates my reality.”

• “I am living in the end.”

• “Everything I desire is already mine.”

• “I am the operant power.”

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Exercises

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1. The SATS Technique (State Akin to Sleep)

• When: Just before falling asleep or when deeply relaxed.

• How:

1. Lie down comfortably and close your eyes

2. Imagine a short, vivid scene that implies your desire is fulfilled (e.g., a friend congratulating you on your new job).   

3. Feel the emotions—joy, gratitude, relief—as if it’s happening now.

4. Repeat until you drift into sleep.

 

2. Inner Conversations

• Throughout the day, replace negative inner dialogue with conversations that imply success.

Example: Instead of “I hope I get the job,” imagine hearing someone say, “Congratulations on your new position!”

 

3. Mental Rehearsal

• Spend 5 minutes daily living in the end:

    • If you want financial freedom, imagine checking your bank account and seeing the desired balance.

    • Engage all senses—see numbers, feel excitement, hear yourself saying “I did it!

 

4. Revision Technique

• At night, rewrite your day:

    • If something went wrong, imagine it went perfectly.

    • Example: If you had an argument, replay the scene with harmony and kindness.

 

5. Gratitude in Advance

• Write down five things you’re grateful for as if they already happened:

    • “I’m so thankful for my beautiful home.”

    • “I’m grateful for my thriving business.”

 © Original work by Rev. Tina M. Adkins 2025  

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