Expect And You Shall Receive
A few days ago a reader of this blog questioned my authority on the law of attraction. There was a statement about me “building a financial empire”. Wow! Thanks for the Manifestation! All help is appreciated. Seriously, I’m an Aussie and laugh more than I frown. That’s a quality in the part of the world I’m from. I expect that the rest of the world is the same.
My motto is:
If you beleive you will think back and laugh at it 1 year from now - You Might As Well Laugh Now !
After watching a great video on my friend Ange’s blog, I thought about this post. So, I have decided to share a part of my precious childhood with you and the influence the 2 greatest people in my life had on me. This is what I have attracted in my life so far:
Pay extra attention to the word “Expect”
When I was in my late childhood and early-mid teens, I didn’t have a lot of the “stuff” that other kids had. I’m talking materialisticly. I had a great childhood and I wouldn’t swap for the world. My parents gave me the best possible upbringing I could possibly ask for. They grew their own veggies and only bought spices, sugar, milk, soft drink, flour and (very occasionally) some mince. Dad made his own red wine and port from our own cherries and berries. I bred rabbits and that was our primary meat source. Minced rabbit, rabbit stew, roast rabbit, you name it.
OK guys! Get off the floor. Stop rolling around from laughter and start reading the post. I’m getting to a point…
When I was a teenager, my dad started to get ill. The activities and exposures a man endures working in many industries are outright criminal. His lungs were giving in and exposure to lead, heavy metals, chemicals etc took their toll. My decision to get out of the workforce was very influenced by watching the man I loved, admired and called my father slowly die over 20 years from emphysemia. I was not going to go through that.
You Want - You Earn It
My mum worked about 2 months a year and my dad stayed at home doing the other work such as the gardening, being mainly vegetables. We lived on mum’s income. We had a lifestyle that required very little money. We didn’t go without, or at least it didn’t seem that way to me. I didn’t expect any more than what I had. Most of the other kids had the toys, bikes and gadgets that I ended up getting (some of) when I had earned the money. My dad installed a work ethic in me that meant: you want something, you work for it.
We didn’t have a bathroom. The bathtub was a “tub”. Our WC was a long drop. To get hot water we had to fire up the stove and run water through copper coils in the stove (that dad built). Our heating was firewood which dad and I spent weeks on end every year collecting and chopping. We got water out of a well in the back yard. When the pump eventually died, we did it with a bucket and a rope until we had money to fix the pump. 90% of my clothes were hand-me-downs from my cousins. School excursions were normally not something I could do. Even in high school. If it had a cost attached to it, I didn’t even tell mum & dad about it. I knew they would spend the money but I knew it was needed elsewhere. The things that people take for granted as living essentials were not things that we expected.
100% Matter Of Perception
I don’t even recall other kids giving me a hard time for these things. I had some very good friends and they took me for who I was. I suppose (actually, now I know), it is 100% a matter of perception. I didn’t perceive it as something bad. Therefore no one gave me a hard time about it. If they did, I certainly didn’t notice.
As a matter of fact, it was good. Very Good! My success today very much related to what my Mum and Dad gave me: Integrity and Ethics
I never recall mum or dad ever complaining about (lack of) money or going without anything. They were very happy with their lifestyle. One of the happiest (material) moments I recall is when my dad brought home a new TV. The old black & white model had lost its picture and only had sound. All the other kids would talk about last nights TV programs on the school bus and for the 40 minute ride to school, it was the big event; talking about the TV from last night. The going joke was to ask me if I had “listened” to TV last night. It seemed like 6 – 9 months until we finally got the new TV. I knew mum & dad were getting the old one fixed. They took it away and I waited at home until they got back. Dad took it into the lounge and switched it on. I sat for about ½ an hour watching it, glued to the screen (literally).
That’s when dad turned on the colour. He had deliberately turned it down to black and white to tease me. He turned the colour on and that was definitely a Kodak Moment for my parents. My jaw dropped and I was the happiest kid in the universe at that time!
My Dad literally had to peel me off the TV that night.
It was such a happy moment for me I have tears in my eyes from thinking about it. The thing is that I didn’t expect a colour TV. All the other kids had one and still I didn’t even contemplate getting one. That would have been a big chunk of their savings at that time. And the look on my face would have made that a worthwhile investment for them. Having kids myself, I know what a parent feels like on occasions like that.
Don’t Talk About Money
Money was something we didn’t talk about in public. Mum and Dad bought a house and paid it off in about 6 - 7 years. They were never totally comfortable until the bank had no hold over house. They both grew up during the 2nd world war in occupied territory. They had seen some pretty bad stuff (from both sides). There were good and bad guys on both sides. They had seen the government reset mortgages and people dying from malnutrition. They grew up with recent history of entire families of children wiped out from disease such as the flu. (My great grandmother was the sole survivor of 5 kids when the flu hit Copenhagen. She was sent to the country being the youngest and weakest of 5 kids. She returned home later that year an only child)
Mind you. I only know these stories because they have been told once or twice. The bad things are rarely told in public. Money was definitely kept quiet.
Don’t Expect? - Don’t Get!
Many of us are brought up to be modest about any success we have. Money is (perceived as) bad. “Keep your financial situation to your self” – people say. “Don’t tell anyone you’ve got money, else they might take it away” – seems to be the story. These stories originate from several generations of our forefathers (and foremothers) that experienced these things in the past and have passed on their beliefs to us.
I had to break that mould. I know, in life you only get what you expect. Don’t expect – don’t get. It’s as simple as that.
I went totally against everything my upbringing (school and society) had taught me when I posted my personal success story in a public forum in 2005 and made it publicly available online. It scared the **** out of me. I still did it. Now I get emails almost every week from someone that was inspired by those few words.
Success stories are important. My story wasn’t a great deal. It was simply the words of someone inspired at the time. That was the day I changed my Expectations of Life. The story means more to me than anyone possibly can expect. I now know what is possible and what I deserve out of life. The same as everyone else. I hope to make as many people realise this as possible.
If you don’t expect (i.e. you don’t believe) then surely you won’t be getting it because you won’t be actively chasing it or making any effort to achieve it.
That’s why I expect to live a much longer life that anyone that expects to live a normal lifespan. I know I have to expect it to truly get it. I’m not planning to switch off my Life-Clock at 70 - 80 or 90. No way! I expect to go to 100 and beyond! I owe it to the world to give as much as I can and that can only be done in MANY years!
Expect and you shall receive
1000 quiet achievers won’t inspire anyone. 1 public one will. Imagine what would happen if 10% share their spiritual success, the growth of their confidence, their renewed outlook on life…. The list of success stories is endless. Money is just one success and it’s also only a tool to achieve success with.
So, The Law Of Attraction does work. But don’t expect it to do the work for you. You use it like a tool - a tool that is used through Taking Action and loving life!
I was brought into this life by 2 beautiful people. I’m sure I would have expected that. My parents are everything to me and without them I would’ve been nothing…
Appreciate the people around you and most of all: Tell Your Parents You Love Them
It’s (almost) Biblical: Expect and you shall receive
Have a most outstanding day!
Sean Rasmussen
Success Communicator
SeanRasmussen.com © 2004 - 2008
Niels Rasmussen 1930 - 2001 R.I.P. I love you Dad

Tags: Ethics, manifestation, perception, Spirituality, Success, The Law Of Attraction



October 18th, 2008 at 5:15 pm
Thanks a lot.
October 18th, 2008 at 5:38 pm
lol… Sean, fantastic post ^__^ good on u!
Thank for sharing, your story is so inspiring!
Grace
October 18th, 2008 at 5:48 pm
Sean I have sent out a digg on this - you have nothing to justify but I have loved reading your story!
It gives me now a bigger picture of the man I count as a friend and exemplar!
October 18th, 2008 at 6:00 pm
Thanks for sharing mate.
October 18th, 2008 at 6:21 pm
Great post Sean! I am still reading your new book and will let you know when I’m done. I’m not really a proponent of “the law of attraction” (I don’t call it that), but it’s because I think of it in terms of my Zen religion - which really amounts to the same thing. If you know what you want and are working hard and smart, you must expect to win! If you don’t, you are expecting to lose.
Bobby Revells last blog post..The Federal Reserve: The Enemy Within
October 18th, 2008 at 7:01 pm
Cheers Bobby. Yes, I agree with your view on the law of attraction (I read your blog). The bottom line for me is to get the point across to people that the must believe in themselves, then put it into action.
Believe - then receive (with “taking action” in between)
or: Expect and you shall receive (include taking action)
Thanks mate. Your views are always appreciated.
October 18th, 2008 at 7:23 pm
So true, I love the stuff on perception. I experience the same stuff with my friends at school. They are into video games and gadgets. I’m not as rich as them, but they are actually jealous of me, due to the fact that I can live and totally enjoy life without gadgets etc. I have friends who stay in a multimillion house in a luxurious area, and I stay in a humble small apartment/villa. But I center the focus around the wonderful neighbours I have, and they all like to come to my house a lot :D.
Expecting is really important too. Simply ‘wanting’ won’t help. But sometimes you fail recognize that you are xpecting bad and wanting good.
Great post!!!
October 18th, 2008 at 9:39 pm
Inspiring story Sean, especially the point on how your parents taught you integrity and ethics, something that seems to be missing in the mainstream today
October 19th, 2008 at 12:19 am
What an inspiring story you’ve got, Sean! Thank you for sharing that! It gives us all a better appreciation of what a true inspiration you are to the rest of the world!
October 19th, 2008 at 8:58 am
Wow Sean! It’s true what they say. Some people who’ve had it easy all of their life just expect good times to keep rolling & don’t bother doing anything good.
I know some people like that & I have no time for them now.
Good on you for finding a way in which to improve your life & share it with others!
I have been on the disability support pension (DSP) for almost 5 years, I live in public housing & I struggle from week to week, because of a serious car accident.
My whole life changed in that instant & I lost pretty much everything (inc my health & my kids), but I don’t see myself as a victim of circumstance; no sir. I see my situation as an eye opener which has made me see what’s really important. So I can relate to what your saying.
I have big goals & I will attain them, it may take me a little longer than most, but I always look at the positive & I’m grateful that I’m still alive & I found you.
I guess that what I’m trying to say is that I could relate to your story, and never ever stop going in a positive direction.
Who cares what others think, say or do.
Jen
October 19th, 2008 at 11:28 am
I read your first post and now this one and I liked them both - you are making a difference.
October 19th, 2008 at 11:49 am
Awesome read Sean! Well done, you are truely living from a place of inspiration and its also nice to hear you are sharing and caring.
love it
Pam
October 19th, 2008 at 12:11 pm
Sean I can relate to all you have outlined , as I was the eldest of six children who came from a poor but happy family and we also ate rabbits which we caught in the wild & between them and rolled oats we survived. I could tell stories that people would not even believe , but will leave it at that.
Hey……..life is good………
Allen Sentance
FISHERMAN
Allen Sentance (FISHERMAN)s last blog post..My MINDSET Matters
October 19th, 2008 at 11:06 pm
Thank you Sean for sharing. It’s all in the attitude and nothing beats ‘positive’. I too have that gem the Aussie sense of humour. Certainly not always understood, but that’s their loss and you never know one day they might even see the light.
October 20th, 2008 at 8:57 am
Sean, I grew up with some fantastic people who are Italians,and the message that you have sent in this message is the exact same up bringing I saw my friends have, I myself can remember a lot of things about my up brining and are very proud to say that i love my mother and father very much and as you i’m here with a tear in my eye as well.
You know my life up bringing was very much the same we had to help and do chore’s which at the time I probably did not like but I’m certainly a better person for it now.
I could go on Sean but I get your message here and I EXPECT to give all the time and receive back what ever come my way.
Thank you
Richard Colum
October 20th, 2008 at 10:18 am
To all the above people responding: Thanks! Your words are appreciated and I value every single comment you make. It shows you care and more importantly: You are participating in life! i.e. taking action.
Bless you all
October 21st, 2008 at 4:34 am
This is such a great insight - particularly your thoughts about keeping a sense of humor! That is a great thing to remember as you learn about and use the universal laws of attraction. Thanks!
Sharon Wilsons last blog post..How Can You Use Universal Laws of Attraction to Make Selling Into a Whole New Process?
October 21st, 2008 at 9:47 am
Hi everyone well done sean.I have a similiar story we moved to an outerwestern suburb what seems a long time ago.Unfortunately my mother died so we were left without a mother.As you we basicaly had nothing but the clothes on our backes.Dad had to keep working to provide for us.Our lives from that moment took a dramatic turn for the worst so I thought at the time.We were locked out of the house by our stepmother and let in two minutes before dad arrived home.To cut a long storey short I lived on the street for a couple of years and ended up with nothing and nowhere to live.Believe it or not I meet some amazing people on the street.I now have a beautiful family which brings me to my point I believe if you put your head down aand chase your dreams they will happen you only get if you put the effort in.But mostly care about the people around you.Next time your at mackers put that spare coin in the charity box and I promise you it will come back to you in ways you will never imagine it did for me.Help poeple who need it it may be you next.enjoy life
October 22nd, 2008 at 5:52 pm
Hi there Sean, TrudyVan here
I believe in your statement: expect and you shall receive. I also believe is as you give so shall you receive.
I love your teachings and have only one regret and that is I am so far away. It would take a miracle to me and my hubby to even attend one of your meetings but maybe in a year or two. That would make my year.
I hear from allen and I hear the motivation in his voice that he is following your teachings. I love it.
Kindest regards
TrudyVan
TrudyVans last blog post..It sure is hard to move house
October 23rd, 2008 at 3:27 pm
I’m now inspired to write another post. LOL. Thanks guys
November 1st, 2008 at 9:15 pm
Hi Sean,
A bit of that Aussie humour in there too, sorry.
You know, if you build a “financial empire” then that would be a GOOD thing because I just know you would be helping so many others even more than you already do now. So, to that person who questioned your authority…..what are YOu doing to help others as much as Sean already does? Anyone with that sort of mindset needs to visit your posts every time they come out and learn a little about the law of attraction. That person is fortunate in that they have come across someone like you Sean. Perhaps they are just still in de-nile
If you look at people such as Dolly Parton, Oprah and others who came from a poor (money wise) family, you can see that the law of attraction really does work. We all have our own awakening moments in life; some of us in the up-bringing and others in life’s experiences along the way. It is what we choose to take from those experiences that makes us who we are today.
It was a pleasure to read the posts here tonight and know that people have open hearts.
Tonight, I add to my “grateful list” that I have such an inspiring blog to read from and learn from.
Warm regards, Eileen.