Quote:
Originally Posted by CosmicWonder
Do you guys also have troubles keeping the amount of goals narrow? I feel I set too many goals that I try to manifest, so that it takes longer.
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You're manifesting constantly, without even being aware of it. Everything that is in your experience is something you have manifested, most of it completely unconsciously, by default.
So there's no limit to how many conscious intentions you can set.
You only need to set a given intention once. There's not only no need to keep going back, re-focusing on a given intention, and firming it up over and over and over again, but doing that will only hinder its ability to manifest because constantly revisiting it is confirmation that you don't have it. "Set it and forget it" is a common bit of LoA advice, for a good reason.
If you're hung up on certain "big" intentions, that you've launched and are having a hard time letting go of, I recommend taking some time every week—or even every day—to set even
more conscious intentions. Set
lots of them. Set so many intentions, it's easy for you to forget all about what you intended.
Write those intentions down in order to keep track of them, and maybe once every week or two skim back through and see which ones manifested, and in what form.
They can be for literally anything, but I recommend that most of them be for simple things you can feel good about that don't involve any longing or need for them to appear: cups of coffee; flowers; seeing a certain item while out and about; pleasant interactions with strangers; running into an old friend, etc. If you have a slightly bigger and more significant desire, intend it alongside a couple of insignificant ones that you can easily set and forget.
This goes against all the advice to just focus on a small number of important intentions, but in my experience, only allowing yourself to set a small number of intentions at any given time comes from a mindset of limitation. We're constantly being told by the people around us not to be "greedy," and not to ask for "too much," but working with the LoA is all about tapping into unlimited creative potential. So I advocate for launching intention after intention after intention, feeling good about them and just letting them fly.