
When you’re tuned in, tapped in, and turned on—when you’re a vibrational match to your non-physical self—you can feel it. You feel exhilaration, clarity, fun, and love. And when you focus in ways that pinch that off, you feel heavy or fearful. You can feel that too.
Your emotions are your best indicator of your vibrational alignment compared to your inner being. Does that make sense? You have an inner being—a non-physical part of you that existed before this physical experience. That inner part of you focused a part of itself here, and you became this human personality in the making.
You came into your body with tremendous intention and strong desire. You wanted to be on the leading edge—not just of new thought (because contrast inspires new desires) but also the first to witness the unfolding of those desires. You wanted to see vibrations turn to thoughts, thoughts turn to words, and words turn into things.
Long before you understood gatherings like this, you lived enough life to know what you wanted—mostly when you didn’t have it. When you saw someone else experiencing what you lacked, or when you were living something you didn’t want, you craved relief. That contrast—the magnificent contrast of physical life—inspires your clear, new decisions.
You came knowing you’d be inspired by new desires, but also that you’d witness their manifestation. It wasn’t just wishing—it was creating. You were ravenous for this experience—eager to explore, make decisions, find your place, and compare yourself to others. You knew your preferences would be honored and supported. You felt worthy, eager, and ready.
But after being here awhile, you watered down that pure self-love. Others’ disapproval, weird looks, or meaningless opinions made you doubt yourself. Over time, most humans muddy their clarity by observing what they don’t want.
You intended to create what you wanted—to figure it out and focus on it. But as observers of life, you’ve developed a habit of weighing pros and cons, becoming so objective that you dilute your desires. Instead of saying, “I prefer a good meal,” you ask, “Should I spend that much?” Instead of declaring, “I adore prosperity,” you wonder, “Isn’t that selfish?”
You’ve forgotten: You summon what you focus on. Focus on lack, and lack expands. Focus on abundance, and abundance flows. You say, “Abraham, it can’t be that simple!” We say: It is. You’ve just complicated it with doubt.
Watch children—they haven’t forgotten. Watch animals—they’re selfishly oriented and unashamed. We want to help you clarify, purify, and clean up your vibration so you advocate for yourself fully.
Self-interest is real. But are you a self-advocate or a protester? When you push against what you dislike, you’re not advocating—you’re muddying your own energy. Once you decide what you want, choose it. Speak words that align. Surround yourself with those who understand.
Every desire you emit becomes a vibrational cluster—a vortex where cooperative components gather. This workshop answers: What’s your relationship with your inner being and the life you’ve envisioned?
If you’re proud, eager, loving, clear-minded, and a “yes-sayer” rather than a “no-sayer,” you’re in sync with your inner being. Life flows. Others may wonder why you’re so “lucky.” (One of Esther’s grandchildren once asked, “Why do you get the lucky room?” She replied, “Because I’m happy.”)
Comparison can breed deprivation—but you are the only one who can deprive yourself. Every experience helps you choose. As Jerry said: “I want everyone to know their options.”
You came knowing you’d have unlimited options. The limitations do you feel now? They’re self-imposed. You didn’t mean to adopt them—but without understanding the Law of Attraction, focus, and vibration, you did.
When you shout “no” at something, you’re saying, “I don’t want you—but come to me.” When you shout “yes,” you call it in—but then doubt creeps in: “Come on, but you’re too slow… Do I deserve this?”
At your core, you are love. When you’re not loving, you feel empty—an emotion you later interpret as fear or hatred. You knew:
- You are good.
- Everyone else is too.
- Contrast is your buffet of choice.
- Self-interest is natural.
- You are a self-advocate—and so is everyone else.
Cleaned-Up Transcript (No Timestamps, Proper Punctuation & Formatting)
When you’re really tuned in, tapped in, turned on—when you’re really a vibrational match to that non-physical part of you—you can feel it by your exhilaration and your clarity. The fun that you feel, the love that you feel—you can feel that. And when you’re focused in ways that pinch that off, so you feel heavy or more like fearful, you can feel that too. So you have an emotional sense of how much of who you are you are allowing to be focused with you at any moment. We call that your guidance system: your emotions.
Your emotions are your best—not only, but best—indicator of your vibrational alignment as it compares to the vibrational alignment of your inner being. Does that make sense to you? You had an inner being—you have an inner being—but you had an inner being before you had this physical being. That non-physical inner part of you focused a part of you here, and you became this human personality in the making as you respond to the atmosphere around you, while your inner being remains consistently known.
You have come into your body with tremendous intention, really strong desire. You wanted to be out here on the leading edge—the leading edge of two things (we’ve not said this to you before):
- The leading edge of new thought—because contrast inspires you to a new take on life, a new decision, or a new desire.
- But also, not just the new desire—you are the first who gets to witness the unfolding of that desire as the vibrations turn to thoughts, and the thoughts turn to words, and the words turn to things.
That’s what you want most as humans. Long before you had any sense of what goes on in a gathering like this, you lived enough life to know there were things you wanted. Mostly, you knew what you wanted when you didn’t have it—when you saw someone else experiencing it while you weren’t. Mostly, you know what you want when you’re living something you don’t want to live—you want relief from that.
In other words, the contrast—the magnificent contrast of your physical, leading-edge time-space reality—inspires you to your specific, clear, new decisions about what you want. And you came with that powerful knowing that you would be inspired by the new desire, but you also knew you were going to witness the manifestation of that desire. It wasn’t just a fleeting dream. It wasn’t just a hopeful thing. It wasn’t wishing—it was creating.
You knew that you would create your life experience, and you were ravenous about the idea of it. You were so eager to get here where you could look around, make your own decisions, find your place, feel where you are, and compare—yeah, compare yourself to others—and learn through life experience. Because words don’t teach; life experience teaches you what you prefer.
And you knew coming in that your preferences would be honored, supported, and helped. You felt worthy in a way you don’t even understand the word in your body quite yet—eager, knowing, worthy, and ready. But after you hang around here for a while with others, you sort of water that down—that pure love you feel for yourself. You water it down with people who look at you weirdly, or people who don’t approve of you—people who don’t mean anything to you, but still, they matter to you for weird reasons.
And so, over time, most humans sort of muddy the waters of clarity through observations of what’s unwanted. We want you to know that you getting what you want—which is what you intended to do when you came—is because you’re a creator. You knew that just meant figuring it out and then looking in the direction of it. Period. Point at it. Not enough composition of it.
And yet, as observers of life and considerers of what you want, you’ve developed a natural (we will say) propensity to weigh the pros and the cons, the pluses and the minuses—the “Yeah, I want that, but I don’t want that.” And you’ve become so objective that you’ve become waterers-down of everything you want.
Instead of just saying, “Yes, I prefer a good meal,” you say, “But should I spend that much money on it?” Instead of saying, “I adore prosperity, and I would like money to enhance my sense of freedom,” you say, “But isn’t that selfish? Shouldn’t I just take what I need?”
Because you’ve forgotten that you are the attractor—or summoner—of the energy that provides everything you focus upon. So you focus this away and that away, this way and that way, and then you complain that things don’t go more this way. And we say: Stop talking so much about that way, and more things will go this way.
And you say, “Abraham, it cannot be that simple!” And we say: It is. It is that simple. You’ve just forgotten how simple it is because you complicated it. Because when you’ve cluttered your mind in confusion, you can’t see how simple it can be.
Watch the young ones—they have not forgotten. Watch the beasts of your planet (that’s a term of endearment)—the critters, the creatures. Those beasts of your planet are selfishly oriented and not ashamed of it.
And so, we want to talk to you about anything that matters to you. What we want is to help you clarify, purify, and clean up your vibration so that you are more often, more wholeheartedly advocating for yourself in the way that your inner being—and all of us—do.
Self-interest is a real thing. You are self-interested. But are you a self-advocator, or are you a protester against others? There’s a difference. When you look at the world and find a piece of it you disapprove of, and you protest that or push against it, you are not advocating for yourself—you are working against yourself. You have muddied your own waters.
And we know it seems logical that you would do it because nearly everybody does. It seems like that’s the thing to do—to see it and say “no” at the things you want not. And didn’t we say something like that when we said you’re sifting, sorting, and choosing?
But once you have decided—for a minute, as far as you can see from where you are—what you are choosing, then choose that. Say words that line up with it. Hang around with people who get that too. Don’t run around the world trying to get them all to see your point of view. They weren’t born to do that. They’re not prone to do that. They’re not likely to do that. And you have a hard time getting them to do that.
And in the meantime, you point in opposition to what you want with what you think are good intentions—but it’s not what we call win-win. What we call win-win is you deciding what you want, your inner being on board with you.
When you know what you don’t want, you know what you do want. You launch a rocket of desire vibrational energy emits from you, and it culminates (because of the Law of Attraction and your inner being’s attention to your desire or request) into a cluster—into a vortex. It does move like this, where cooperative components are gathered on your behalf. No matter what, no matter how big or little you choose them to be, they are gathered on your behalf.
The question this workshop will answer for you (if you want it to) is: What’s your relationship with your inner being and the gathering of all the things you’ve been identifying that you want?
If you are:
- Proud of yourself,
- Eager for more,
- Easy to love,
- Scarcely to hate,
- Mostly nice,
- Hardly ever mean,
- Mostly clear-minded (not confused that much),
- Mostly an advocate,
- Hardly ever a protester,
- A “yes-er” and not a “no-er”—
…then you’re living a pretty good life because you are in sync with your inner being. You have the juice of your inner being flowing with you, you feel clear, and things are working out for you.
Other people might not understand why it happens that way with you. One of Esther’s grandchildren said to her on his first cruise (Esther has been on many), he came to her cabin and said, “Why do you get the lucky room?” Because it was really big and really nice, and he was much smaller. “Why do you get the lucky room?”
And Esther said, “Because I’m lucky.”
He said, “Well, how do you get lucky?”
Esther said, “Because I’m happy.”
He said, “Oh, I’ve been happy, but I’m not lucky.”
Esther said, “Yes, you are. Yes, you are.”
Right away, at his very young age, he’s comparing Esther’s apparent luck with his own and feeling that he was coming up short—because the comparison, just in that moment between her cabin and his, made him feel less lucky.
Well, that’s a sort of human response to physical life, isn’t it? Comparison with a sort of self-interest that could lean toward deprivation. But if you decide that you are the only one who can deprive yourself and that you are being exposed to experiences so that you can choose…
Esther said to this little guy: “You know, I’m glad you’re noticing the difference. And I just want you to know that you can always choose. You can always choose. And sometimes it takes a while. When I was your age, I’d never thought of being on a ship.”
Now, Esther doesn’t really like to go there with little ones: “When I was your age, I’d never been on an airplane. Candy bars were a nickel in the olden days when I ate candy.”
But what Jerry always said about his grandchildren—and about every human he ever met—was: “I want them to know what their options are. I want them to know what their options are.”
And that’s what you knew coming in. You knew you would be exposed to options, and you knew that you were unlimited. So we’re here to help you find your way back from the limitations you have infused into your life experience—because they’re not real.
There are no limitations imposed upon you. There are only limitations you assume upon yourself. And that’s hard to hear because you didn’t mean to do it—but you did it because you didn’t know about the Law of Attraction, you didn’t know about your focus, you didn’t know about vibration.
You didn’t know that when you focus upon something—wanted or not wanted—it’s a “Come to me.” This thing is wanted or unwanted—when you shout “no” at something, you are literally saying, “I don’t want you, but come to me.”
And when you find something you do want and you shout “yes” at it, you say, “I’ve lived enough life to determine that I would like some of you. Come on! Come on!”
But then what do you do next? You say:
- “Come on, but you’re coming too slowly.”
- “Come on, but what took you so long?”
- “Come on, but do I really get what I want?”
- “Come on—my mother wouldn’t be happy about this.”
So you knew for sure that you were a lover to the very core of the core of the core of the core of the core of the core of your being. And you knew that when you were doing something other than loving, you would be out of whack with who you are.
And you knew that would feel like an empty void within you that you would later come to interpret as a negative emotion—like hatred or even fear.
You knew that you had a stable basis of life experience. You knew that you are good, and you knew that everyone around you is too. You knew that contrast is a good thing and that there would be plenty of it.
And you knew that contrast would be the buffet from which you would choose your life experience. You knew that self-interest would be real. You knew that everyone would only and ever and always be able to see through the perspective of self—and you thought that was a really good idea.
You knew that you would be a self-advocate, and you expected everybody else to be too.
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