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How Tasha Transforms Her Life: Living in the End Amidst a Busy Schedule

Tasha is a busy entrepreneur, brand builder, and self-development advocate who has spent years studying the principles of manifestation, particularly Neville Goddard's concept of "living in the end." We sat down with her to find out what that actually looks like inside a packed, real-world schedule.


Let's Start at the Beginning. What Does "Living in the End" Actually Mean to You?


Tasha: It means choosing to mentally and emotionally live as if your desire is already your reality. Not wishing for it, not chasing it. Inhabiting it.


Neville Goddard, who is the teacher behind this concept, described it as shifting from thinking of your goal to thinking from your goal. There's a huge difference. When you think of something, it stays out there in the distance. When you think from it, it feels like where you already are.


It took me years to stop confusing the two. I used to think about my dream life constantly. I'd visualize it, crave it, obsess over it. But that constant craving just reminded me that I didn't have it yet. The moment I started occupying that state instead of longing for it, things began to shift.



People Assume This Practice Requires a Lot of Free Time. You're Running a Business, Building a Brand, Managing a Team. How Does It Actually Fit In?


Tasha: That's probably the biggest myth I want to bust. Living in the end is not about sitting on a mountain and visualizing all day. Neville never said that. It means returning to your fulfilled state often enough that it becomes more familiar than your current circumstances.


My week involves running a business, looking after my family, working with clients, studying, training, managing a team, and making hundreds of decisions. Life is full. So I've built the practice into the life I already have rather than waiting for the life I want before I start.


The key word is returning. You don't have to stay in the state every second. You just have to keep coming back to it.



So Walk Us Through a Real Day. What Does This Look Like in Practice?


Tasha: The morning and night are non-negotiable for me. Those two windows are sacred because they shape everything in between.


When I wake up, before I check my phone or think about my to-do list, I spend a few minutes in my desired state. I feel what it feels like to already be her. The version of me who has what I'm building toward. I don't force it, I just settle into it. It takes maybe five to ten minutes.


Then at night, before I sleep, I do the same. Neville called this SATS, which stands for State Akin to Sleep. Your mind is most receptive to new impressions in that drowsy, half-awake state just before you drift off. I use that window deliberately. I run a short mental scene, something that implies my desire is already complete. I fall asleep inside that feeling.


During the day, I use alarms. I have multiple set on my phone. When one goes off, I pause for five to ten minutes and reconnect. I'm not doing anything dramatic. I just remind myself: this is already becoming my life. That's enough to keep me anchored.



You Mentioned Journaling. Tell Us About That.


Tasha: I've journaled since I was fourteen. It started as a way to calm my mind. Now it's one of my most important tools.


Every year I write out my goals. Every month I revisit them. And every day I write in the present tense as if they're already true. This is what people call scripting. It's a way of impressing your desired reality onto your subconscious mind through language and emotion.


There's actually science behind this. Research shows that writing in the first person, with emotional detail and present-tense language, activates the same neural pathways as lived experience. You're essentially rehearsing a reality your brain begins to treat as familiar. And familiarity is everything in this practice.


The subconscious doesn't manifest what you want. It manifests what feels normal to you. So my job is to make my desired reality feel ordinary, not exciting and distant, but ordinary and expected.



What Other Techniques Are Part of Your Toolkit?


Tasha: Visualization, scripting, affirmations, and inner conversations. I've used all four consistently for fifteen years and they have not failed me.


But here's what I want people to understand: the technique is not the power. The state is.


Every technique is just a vehicle that helps you get back to the same internal place. The place where your desire feels real, present, and natural. Some days visualization gets me there fastest. Other days it's writing. Other days it's simply repeating a specific phrase until I feel a shift.


People waste so much time debating which technique is best. The only thing that matters is which one helps you return to your state most quickly and consistently.



Let's Talk About Doubts. Because Most People Reading This Are Going to Have Them.


Tasha: Of course I have doubts. I'm human. Anyone who tells you they never doubt themselves is either lying or not trying for anything significant.


The difference is that I don't allow my doubts to become my dominant state. That's the real skill. It's not the elimination of doubt. It's the management of where you spend most of your mental and emotional time.


Think of it like this. Your subconscious manifests based on your dominant inner assumption. Not your occasional thought, your dominant one. So when doubt shows up, I notice it, I don't fight it or shame myself for it, and then I return to my desired state. The doubt doesn't get to take the wheel.


Over time, the returning becomes faster. What used to take me an hour to shake off now takes five minutes. That's not magic. That's practice.



Is There a Moment You Can Point To Where You Knew This Was Real?


Tasha: Many moments. But the one I come back to most is early in my business journey. I was broke, overwhelmed, and genuinely unsure if anything I was building would work. But every night I'd go to sleep feeling like someone who had already built something meaningful. Not hoping, not wishing. Feeling.


Within a year, the circumstances started rearranging themselves. Not because I sat still and waited, but because my inner state changed what I noticed, what I acted on, and how I showed up. Neville called this the Bridge of Incidents. The path reveals itself once you commit to the end point.


I didn't understand it then. Now I'd bet everything on it.



What Would You Tell Someone Who Wants to Start But Feels Like They Don't Have the Time or Energy?


Tasha: Start small and start tonight. You have five minutes before you fall asleep. Use them. Pick one thing you want and let yourself feel what it would feel like to already have it. Don't analyze, don't doubt, just feel. Then fall asleep.


Do that for thirty days and see what shifts. Not just externally, but in how you think, how you carry yourself, and what you begin to attract.


You don't need a perfect routine. You need a consistent return. Even once a day, done with real feeling, is enough to start rewiring what your subconscious treats as normal.


The version of you that already has everything you're building toward? She's not waiting in the future. She's waiting in your next quiet moment. Go meet her.



Final Thoughts


Tasha's approach strips manifestation down to its core: not a collection of rituals, but a consistent return to a chosen state of being. Whether you're a skeptic or a believer, the underlying discipline she describes, managing your dominant inner narrative and rehearsing a chosen identity until it feels familiar, is grounded in both ancient teaching and modern neuroscience.


The busy life is not the obstacle. It's the testing ground. And if Tasha's fifteen years are any evidence, the practice holds up under pressure.


Want to start your own practice? Pick one technique tonight: five minutes of scripting, a visualization before sleep, or a single affirmation you repeat until you feel it. That's where the transformation begins. If you are ready to take the next step on your transformational journey, let us guide you through the course, Becoming. Listen to the free preview now.

 
 
 

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