Your mind is a very strange thing. As soon as you give something a name, logos, and a genuine aim, it’ll reconfigure the world in keeping true to that aim.
It’s actually how you see to begin with. We don’t see the world as it is, we see the world as we are. If you set the intention of aim as a task, as best you have to be genuine (integrated) about the aim as a task. Bring your thoughts and emotions together, then make your actions match your words. Then you have to get them in your body so you’re acting consistently. To be genuine about the aim is beautiful. Once you aim, the world will reconfigure itself around that aim, which is very strange but it’s technically true. Perhaps the best exemplification you’ve no doubt seen is the video where you watch basketballs being tossed back and forth between members of the white team versus the black team. While you’re doing that, a gorilla walks up in the middle of the video and you don’t see it.
If you thought about that experiment for about five years, that would be the right amount of time to spend thinking about it, because what it shows you is that you see what you aim at. The maturity of intention stops colliding with expectation, and then you’re able to see things you’ve never seen or imagined before. Maybe this is why Einstein said that imagination is more important than knowledge.
TRUST has no agenda, even when it aims.