And it got me to thinking that, if that’s the case, this might be a great time to take a brief pause from trying to draw more great stuff into your life and applaud yourself for what you’ve attracted already. In other words, you might consider tallying up your “inventory of riches.” You attracted them: you may as well count them, add them up, and get the full impact of their wonder and your good fortune. This is a way to boost your gratitude quotient and your self-esteem, because all these blessings are a reflection of not simply the intensity of your affirmations or the artistry of your treasure map, but the reality of who you are.
For myself, I can say that I have a beautiful, talented, compassionate daughter, and an accepting, supportive (also funny and good-looking) husband who loves me like crazy and who writes screenplays that are so touching they make the hairs on my arms stand up. I’ve attracted New York City with its energy and diversity and excitement and possibility. I’ve been given work that I love and that moves people, and when they tell me that it does, I feel as if I could fly.
I’ve been blessed with health and friends and passions: my family, animals and wanting to help them, and movies and theater (especially musicals: in my opinion, life at its best has lyrics and a chorus and a tap routine). There’s feng shui for making my home into a prayer, and natural living and natural food for feeling fabulous, and this life as a female and loving girly stuff, although I stopped being a girl a long time ago. There are good books, of course, and God most of all — this spiritual quest that gets more alluring the longer I’m on it.
This is not to say that if I were inventorying every aspect of my life that there would not also be “the rest.” That would be the goals I haven’t reached yet, the net worth that was, on paper, higher last year, and the imperfections and aggravations I could focus on and feel crummy about. But I don’t care to focus on those. I’ve been taught that what I focus on grows, and I don’t want that. Besides, staying in touch and in tune with the good stuff is much more enticing and much more fun. And it reminds me of who I am and what I can be.
So do try this, making your own list, in your head or on paper. What have you attracted that’s so dazzlingly wonderful you’re taken aback by it? That’s who you are. Wayne Dyer reminded me, and I thought I’d pass it along.