Law of Assumption
Law of Assumption by Miles Braven is not a guide to “pretend your way into a better life.” It’s a direct confrontation with the truth that what you assume to be real, deep in your mind, beneath your words and your wishes, is already scripting your world. Every delay you’ve faced, every breakthrough you’ve chased, every outcome you couldn’t explain, it all traces back to your assumptions. Not the ones you say aloud, but the quiet, persistent beliefs that sit beneath your daily actions and reactions.
This book reveals that reality doesn’t ask for your effort, it obeys your identity. And your identity is built not through effort or willpower, but through what you accept as inevitable. You may think you’ve been manifesting, visualizing, or working toward a goal. But if, beneath it all, your assumption is still rooted in lack, in waiting, in hoping something might change, then the universe can only echo that same state of being.
What Braven offers here is not just an explanation of the Law of Assumption, but a recalibration of how you exist. He doesn’t feed you techniques. He reshapes your perception. You begin to understand that every version of you already exists, and your assumptions are the doorway through which you walk into one or the other. The future isn’t waiting. It’s listening. And it bends to the version of you that you silently agree to be.
Through powerful insights and grounded spiritual logic, this book shows why trying harder often makes things worse, why your inner world always wins over the external, and why everything you want is already here, simply out of reach because you keep assuming it’s not.
Law of Assumption is not about fantasy. It’s about finality. It’s about deciding that something is already yours so completely that reality has no room to argue. And once you understand how to live from that inner finality, not just think about it, not just affirm it, your world no longer reflects your doubts, but your decisions.
If you’re done waiting and ready to live from the end, not toward it, then this is not just a book. It’s the shift you’ve been missing.