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NEXT Wish

Silently whisper

Adult goals

There is a passage in life between childhood and adulthood that involves new descriptions of random stuff. Human children are encouraged to make a wish, blow on the wispy tops of weeds or create thoughts about what the future holds. Adults can still blow out candles after making wishes, but they may not really believe that there is a possibility of celestial magic making it occur. Since the pandemic, even blowing out cake candles has decreased. Spitting on something so delicious increases nervousness. The reason for this hard barrier between wishing and hoping can remove some of the technicolor aspects. If adults could start to make silent wishes more often and some of them happened, belief would be reinstated in the reality of wanting. It is okay to want stuff or events or a better life. When minor magic shows up in life, it puts a little smirk on our faces. We feel special again. Just like kids do when they whisper their wishes, and they strangely happen. Parents take great delight in fulfilling these types of wishes and even corporations come forward to grant these for children in medical hardships. Humans want to believe in wishes because they have supernatural power. But there is every chance that paying attention to those around us can make us more aware of how to grant wishes. No fairy grandparents have to be involved. Just us.

Wave your wand

Option #1: When did you last make a real wish?

Option #2: Can you grant someone’s wish?

Option #3: Is there any reason to believe in magic?

That’s it. After you choose the option that best describes making wishes to you, take a few minutes to describe why you chose that option and what action, if any, may come next.

nextordinaryday

Nancy Pyle is a Master Practitioner in NLP and a Master Certified Strategic Life Coach