Scripting the Life You Want
Manifest Your Dreams with Just Pen and Paper
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- $11.99
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- $11.99
Publisher Description
A step-by-step guide to the process of “scripting” your future and successfully manifesting what you want in life
• Explores the science behind how the scripting method works and shares the vivid journal entries from the author’s big breakthrough--when he successfully used his method to land a lead role on a TV show
• Details how the understanding of incredible new (and, until now, mostly unheard of) scientific discoveries and emerging technologies is the most important key to creating and manifesting in your life
• Reveals fun, easy tools for manifesting and self-help, updated for a new generation
In this step-by-step guide, filled with success stories and practical exercises, Royce Christyn details a simple “scripting” process for harnessing the Law of Attraction and manifesting what you want in your life--happiness, wealth, travel, love, health, the perfect career, or simply a productive day. The process is backed by science and experience, yet it feels like magic. And all you need is a pen and paper.
Inspired by New Thought and Positive Thinking classics, Christyn explains how he developed his scripting method through 4 years of trial and error, keeping what worked and dropping what didn’t until he brought his success rate from 5% to nearly 100%. Sharing pages from his own journals, he outlines how to create the life you want with daily journaling exercises, beginning with a simple list-making practice to figure out your wants and intentions and then progressing to actual scripting of your future, whether the next 12 hours or the next 10 days. He shows how, over time, your scripts will increase in accuracy until they converge with reality. He shares the vivid entries from his big breakthrough--when he successfully used his method to land a lead guest-starring role on Disney Channel’s Wizards of Waverly Place with Selena Gomez. He explores how “feeling” your future success as you write your daily scripts helps attract your desired outcomes, and he shares the key phrases to include to make your script come true. The author also explores the science behind how the scripting method works, including a down-to-earth examination of quantum mechanics.
From small dreams to lifelong goals, this book gives you the tools to put your thoughts into action and finally close the gap between where you are and where you want to be in your life.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Actor Christyn (Eigengrau) argues that "you really can be anything you want and have anything you want even if it seems impossible" in a work that's long on conviction but short on advice. Christyn writes of how he discovered "scripting" (articulating a desire in some fashion) as a means to manifest one's desires, and of finding what he believes is the most effective way. To do this, he recommends writing a daily want script and want list filled with desires and actions to carry them out. There is a pleasant earnestness to Christyn's excitement, but despite the author's declared love of science and research, citations often refer to blogs, websites (including Wikipedia), and other sources that lack peer-review by professional organizations; as such, it's tough to swallow some of the book's wilder claims, among them the technological singularity and that reality could just be "conscious beings causing each other's experiences." Still, those already interested in the concept of scripting and the actualization of one's intentions will be moved by Christyn's optimistic work.
Customer Reviews
This book will change your life!
This book will change your life in one aspect or another! I feel like a new person who is so hopeful and overjoyed for what is to come from all I have learned! I love learning how to script better and I am touched by this book! Great job Royce!
Juvenile
I thought this book would be more scientifically backed with more how- to then flashback stories of a teen who seems to think she controls her life with her mind. I feel like I am reading out of an 8th grade journal. This was not what I was expecting at all. Most of the time she is referencing back to the book, “Excuse Me, Your Life Is Waiting”. Uninspired and regretful.