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“This is a story of a very unexpected result of an
interview with a lady who came to consult me:
One afternoon a young grandmother, a businesswoman
in New York, came to see me. She brought along her grandson,
who was visiting her from his home in Pennsylvania. In
response to her question, I explained the law of assumption,
describing in detail the procedure to be followed in attaining
an objective. The boy sat quietly, apparently absorbed in a
small toy truck while I explained to the grandmother the
method of assuming the state of consciousness that would be
hers were her desire already fulfilled.
When the boy and his grandmother were leaving, he
looked up at me with great excitement and said, ‘I know what I
want and now I know how to get it.’ Surprised, I asked him
what it was he wanted; He told me he had his heart set on a
puppy. To this the grandmother vigorously protested, telling
the boy that it had been made clear repeatedly that he could
not have a dog under any circumstances... that his father and
mother would not allow it, that the boy was too young to care
for it properly, and furthermore the father had a deep dislike
for dogs-he actually hated to have one around.
All these were arguments the boy, passionately
desirous of having a dog, refused to understand. ‘Now I know
what to do,’ he said. ‘Every night just as I am going to sleep
I am going to pretend that I have a dog and we are going for a
walk.’ ‘No,’ said the grandmother, ‘that is not what Mr.
Neville means. This was not meant for you. You can not have a
dog.’
Approximately six weeks later, the grandmother told
me what was to her an astonishing story. The boy’s desire to
own a dog was so intense that he absorbed all that I had told
his grandmother of how to attain one’s desire-and he believed
implicitly that at last he knew how to get a dog.
Putting this belief into practice, for many nights
the boy imagined a dog was lying in his bed beside him. In his
imagination he petted the dog, actually feeling its fur.
Things like playing with the dog and taking it for a walk
filled his mind.
Within a few weeks it happened. A newspaper in the
city in which the boy lived organized a special program in
connection with Kindness to Animals Week. All schoolchildren
were requested to write an essay on “Why I Would Like to Own a
Dog.”
After entries from all the schools were submitted
and judged, the winner of the contest was announced. The very
same boy who weeks before in my apartment in New York had told
me, ‘Now I know how to get a dog’ was the winner. In an
elaborate ceremony, which was publicized with stories and
pictures in the newspaper, the boy was awarded a beautiful
collie puppy.
In relating this story, the grandmother told me that
if the boy had been given the money with which to buy the dog,
the parents would have refused to do so and would have used it
to buy a bond for the boy or put it in a savings bank for him.
Furthermore, if someone had made the boy a gift of a dog, they
would have given it away.
But the dramatic manner in which the boy got the
dog, the way he won the city-wide contest, the stories and
pictures in the newspaper, the pride of achievement and joy of
the boy himself all combined to bring about a change of heart
in the parents, and they found themselves doing that which
they never conceived possible - they allowed him to keep the
dog.
All this the grandmother explained to me, and she
concluded by saying that there was one particular kind of dog
on which the boy had set his heart. It was a collie.”
From The
Power of Awareness, by Neville |