QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS

These questions and answers came
from the end of the 5 lessons which can be reviewed from the buttons
above.
1. Question: What is the meaning of the insignia on your
book covers?
Answer: It is an eye imposed upon a heart which, in turn
is imposed upon a tree laden with fruit, meaning that what you are
conscious of, and accept as true, you are going to realize. As a man
thinketh in his heart, so he is.
* * * * * * * * * *
2. Question: I would like to be married, but have not
found the right man. How do I imagine a husband?
Answer: Forever in love with ideals, it is the ideal state
that captures the mind. Do not confine the state of marriage to a certain
man, but a full, rich and overflowing life. You desire to experience the
joy of marriage. Do not modify your dream, but enhance it by making it
lovelier. Then condense your desire into a single sensation, or act which
implies its fulfillment.
In this western world a woman wears a wedding ring on the
third finger of her left hand. Motherhood need not imply marriage;
intimacy need not imply marriage, but a wedding ring does.
Relax in a comfortable arm chair, or lie flat on your back
and induce a state akin to sleep. Then assume the feeling of being
married. Imagine a wedding band on your finger. Touch it. Turn it around
the finger. Pull it off over the knuckle. Keep the action going until the
ring has the distinctness and feeling of reality. Become so lost in
feeling the ring on your finger that when you open your eyes, you will be
surprised that it is not there.
If you are a man who does not wear a ring, you could
assume greater responsibility. How would you feel if you had a wife to
care for? Assume the feeling of being a happily married man right now.
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3. Question: What must I do to inspire creative thoughts
such as those needed for writing?
Answer: What must you do? Assume the story has already
been written and accepted by a great publishing house. Reduce the idea of
being a writer to the sensation of satisfaction.
Repeat the phrase, "Isn't it wonderful!" or
"Thank you, thank you, thank you," over and over again until you
feel successful. Or, imagine a friend congratulating you. There are
unnumbered ways of implying success, but always go to the end. Your
acceptance of the end wills its fulfillment. Do not think about getting in
the mood to write, but live and act as though you are now the author you
desire to be. Assume you have the talent for writing. Think of the pattern
you want displayed on the outside. If you write a book and no one is
willing to buy it, there is no satisfaction. Act as though people are
hungry for your work. Live as though you cannot produce stories, or books
fast enough to meet the demand. Persist in this assumption and all that is
necessary to achieve your goal will quickly burst into bloom and you will
express it.
* * * * * * * * *
4. Question: How do I imagine larger audiences for my
talks?
Answer: I can answer you best by sharing the technique
used by a very able teacher I know. When this man first came to this
country he began speaking in a small hall in New York City. Although only
fifty or sixty people attended his Sunday morning meeting, and they sat in
front, this teacher would stand at the podium and imagine a vast audience.
Then he would say to the empty space, "Can you hear me back
there?"
Today this man is speaking in Carnegie Hall in New York
City to approximately 2500 people every Sunday morning and Wednesday
evening. He wanted to speak to crowds. He was not modest. He did not try
to fool himself but built a crowd in his own consciousness, and crowds
come. Stand before a large audience. Address this audience in your
imagination. Feel you are on that stage and your feeling will provide the
means.
* * * * * * * * * *
5. Question: Is it possible to imagine several things at
the same time, or should I confine my imagining to one desire?
Answer: Personally I like to confine my imaginal act to a
single thought, but that does not mean I will stop there. During the
course of a day I may imagine many things, but instead of imagining lots
of small things, I would suggest that you imagine something so big it
includes all the little things. Instead of imagining wealth, health and
friends, imagine being ecstatic. You could not be ecstatic and be in pain.
You could not be ecstatic and be threatened with a dispossession notice.
You could not be ecstatic if you were not enjoying a full measure of
friendship and love.
What would the feeling be like were you ecstatic without
knowing what had happened to produce your ecstasy? Reduce the idea of
ecstasy to the single sensation, "Isn't it wonderful!" Do not
allow the conscious, reasoning mind to ask why, because if it does it will
start to look for visible causes, and then the sensation will be lost.
Rather, repeat over and over again, "Isn't it wonderful!"
Suspend judgment as to what is wonderful. Catch the one sensation of the
wonder of it all and things will happen to bear witness to the truth of
this sensation. And I promise you, it will include all the little things.
**********
6. Question: How often should I perform the imaginal act,
a few days or several weeks?
Answer: In the Book of Genesis the story is told of Jacob
wrestling with an angel. This story gives us the clue we are looking for;
that when satisfaction is reached, impotence follows.
When the feeling of reality is yours, for the moment at
least, you are mentally impotent. The desire to repeat the act of prayer
is lost, having been replaced by the feeling of accomplishment. You cannot
persist in wanting what you already have. If you assume you are what you
desire to be to the point of ecstasy, you no longer want it. Your imaginal
act is as much a creative act as a physical one wherein man halts, shrinks
and is blessed, for as man creates his own likeness, so does your imaginal
act transform itself into the likeness of your assumption. If, however,
you do not reach the point of satisfaction, repeat the action over and
over again until you feel as though you touched it and virtue went out of
you.
* * * * * * * * * *
7. Question: I have been taught not to ask for earthly
things, only for spiritual growth, yet money and things are what I need.
Answer: You must be honest with yourself. All through
scripture the question is asked, "What do you want of me?"
Some wanted to see, others to eat, and still others wanted to be made
straight, or "That my child live."
Your dimensionally larger self speaks to you through the
language of desire. Do not deceive yourself. Knowing what you want, claim
you already have it, for it is your Father's good pleasure to give it to
you and remember, what you desire, that you have.
* * * * * * * * * *
8.
Question: When you have as assumed your desire, do you keep in mind the
ever presence of this greater one protecting and giving you your
assumption?
Answer: The acceptance of the end wills the means. Assume
the feeling of your wish fulfilled and your dimensionally greater self
will determine the means. When you appropriate a state as though you had
it, the activity of the day will divert your mind from all anxious
thoughts so that you do not look for signs. You do not have to carry the
feeling that some presence is going to do it for you, rather you know it
is already done. Knowing it is already a fact, walk as though it were, and
things will happen to make it so. You do not have to be concerned about
some presence doing anything for you. The deeper, dimensionally greater
you has already done it. All you do is move to the place where you
encounter it.
Remember the story of the man who left the master and was
on his way home when he met his servant who said, "Your son
lives." And when he asked at what hour it was done the servant
replied, "The seventh hour." The self-same hour that he
assumed his desire, it was done for him, for it was at the seventh hour
that the master said, "Your son lives." Your desire is
already granted. Walk as though it were and, although time beats slowly in
this dimension of your being, it will nevertheless bring you confirmation
of your assumption. I ask you not to be impatient, though. If there is one
thing you really have need of, it is patience.
* * * * * * * * * *
9. Question: Isn't there a law that says you cannot get
something for nothing? Must we not earn what we desire?
Answer: Creation is finished! It is your Father's good
pleasure to give you the kingdom. The parable of the prodigal son is your
answer. In spite of man's waste, when he comes to his senses and remembers
who he is, he feeds on the fatted calf of abundance and wears the robe and
ring of authority. There is nothing to earn. Creation was finished in the
foundation of time. You, as man, are God made visible for the purpose of
displaying what is, not what is to be. Do not think you must work out your
salvation by the sweat of your brow. It is not four months until the
harvest, the fields are already white, simply thrust in the sickle.
* * * * * * * * * *
10. Question: Does not the thought that creation is
finished rob one of his initiative?
Answer: If you observe an event before it occurs, then the
occurring event must be predetermined from the point of view of being
awake in this three-dimensional world. Yet, you do not have to encounter
what you observe. You can, by changing your concept of self, interfere
with your future and mold it in harmony with your changed concept of self.
* * * * * * * * * *
11. Question: Does not this ability to change the future
deny that creation is finished?
Answer: No. You, by changing your concept of self, change
your relationship to things. If you rearrange the words of a play to write
a different one, you have not created new words, but simply had the joy of
rearranging them. Your concept of self determines the order of events you
encounter. They are in the foundation of the world, but not their order of
arrangement.
* * * * * * * * * *
12. Question: Why should one who works hard in metaphysics
always seem to lack?
Answer: Because he has not really applied metaphysics. I
am not speaking of a mamby-pamby approach to life, but a daily application
of the law of consciousness. When you appropriate your good, there is no
need for a man, or state, to act as a medium through which your good will
come.
Living in a world of men, money is needed in my every day
life. If I invite you to lunch tomorrow, I must pick up the check. When I
leave the hotel, I must pay the bill. In order to take the train back to
New York my railway fare must be paid. I need money and it has to be
there. I am not going to say, "God knows best, and He knows I need
money." Rather, I will appropriate the money as though it were!
We must live boldly! We must go through life as though we
possessed what we want to possess. Do not think that because you helped
another, someone outside of you saw your good works and will give you
something to ease your burden. There is no one to do it for you. You,
yourself must go boldly on appropriating what your Father has already
given you.
**********
13. Question: Can an uneducated person educate himself by
assuming the feeling of being educated?
Answer: Yes. An aroused interest is awarded information
from every side. You must sincerely desire to be well schooled. The desire
to be well read, followed by the assumption that you are, makes you
selective in your reading. As you progress in your education, you
automatically become more selective, more discriminating in all that you
do.
* * * * * *
* * * *
14. Question: My husband and I are taking the class
together. Should we discuss our desires with each other?
Answer: There are two spiritual sayings which permeate the
Bible. One is, "Go tell no man," and the other is "I
have told you before it comes to pass that when it does come to pass you
may believe." It takes spiritual boldness to tell another that
your desire is fulfilled before it is seen on the outside. If you do not
have that kind of boldness, then you had better keep quiet.
I personally enjoy telling my plans to my wife, because we
both get such a thrill when they come into being. The first person a man
wants to prove this law to is his wife. It is said that Mohammad is
everlastingly great because his first disciple was his wife.
**********
15. Question: Should my husband and I work on the same
project or on separate ones?
Answer: That is entirely up to you. My wife and I have
different interests, yet we have much in common. Do you recall the story I
told of our return to the United States this spring? I felt it was my duty
as a husband to get passage back to America, so I appropriated that to
myself. I feel there are certain things that are on my wife's side of the
contract, such as maintaining a clean, lovely home and finding the
appropriate school for our daughter, so she takes care of those.
Quite often my wife will ask me to imagine for her, as
though she has greater faith in my ability to do it than in her own. That
flatters me because every man worthy of the name wants to feel that his
family has faith in him. But I see nothing wrong in the communion between
two who love one another.
* * * * * * * * * *
16. Question: I would think that if you get too much into
the sleepy state there would be a lack of feeling.
Answer: When I speak of feeling I do not mean emotion, but
acceptance of the fact that the desire is fulfilled. Feeling grateful,
fulfilled, or thankful, it is easy to say, "Thank You,"
"Isn't it wonderful!" or "It is finished." When you
get into the state of thankfulness, you can either awaken knowing it is
done, or fall asleep in the feeling of the wish fulfilled.
* * * * * * * * * * * *
17. Question: Is love a product of your own consciousness?
Answer: All things exist in your consciousness, be they
love or hate. Nothing comes from without. The hills to which you look for
help are those of an inner range. Your feelings of love, hate or
indifference all spring from your own consciousness. You are infinitely
greater than you could ever conceive yourself to be. Never, in eternity
will you reach the ultimate you. That is how wonderful you are. Love is
not a product of you, you are love, for that is what God is and God's name
is I am, the very name you call yourself before you make the claim as to
the state you are now in.
* * * * * * * * * *
18. Question: Suppose my wants cannot materialize for six
months to a year, do I wait to imagine them?
Answer: When the desire is upon you, that is the time to
accept your wish in its fullness. Perhaps there are reasons why the urge
is given you at this time. Your three-dimensional being may think it
cannot be now, but your fourth dimensional mind knows it already is, so
the desire should be accepted by you as a physical fact now.
Suppose you wanted to build a house. The urge to have it
is now, but it is going to take time for the trees to grow and the
carpenter to build the house. Although the urge seems big, do not wait to
adjust to it. Claim possession now and let it objectify itself in its own
strange way. Do not say it will take six months or a year. The minute the
desire comes upon you, assume it is already a fact! You and you alone have
given your desire a time interval and time is relative when it comes to
this world. Do not wait for anything to come to pass, accept it now as
though it were and see what happens.
When you have a desire, the deeper you, who men call God,
is speaking. He urges you, through the language of desire, to accept that
which is not that which is to be! Desire is simply his communion with you,
telling you that your desire is yours, now! Your acceptance of this fact
is proved by your complete adjustment to it as though it were true.
**********
19.
Question: Why do some of us die young?
Answer: Our lives are not, in retrospect, measured by
years but by the content of those years.
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20. Question: What would you consider a full life?
Answer: A variety of experiences. The more varied they
are, the richer is your life. At death you function in a dimensionally
larger world, and play your part on a keyboard made up of a life time of
human experiences. Therefore, the more varied your experiences, the finer
is your instrument and the richer is your life.
* * * * * * * * * *
21. Question: What about a child who dies at birth?
Answer: The child who is born, lives forever, as nothing
dies. It may appear that the child who dies at birth has no keyboard of
human experience but, as a poet once said:
"He drew a circle that shut me out, Infidel,
scoundrel, a thing to flout. But Love and I had the wit to win! We drew a
circle that took him in."
The loved one has access to the sensory experiences of the
lover. God is love; therefore, ultimately everyone has an instrument, the
keyboard of which is the sensory impressions of all men.
**********
22. Question: What is your technique of prayer?
Answer: It starts with desire, for desire is the
mainspring of action. You must know and define your objective, then
condense it into a sensation which implies fulfillment. When your desire
is clearly defined, immobilize your physical body and experience, in your
imagination, the action which implies its fulfillment. Repeat this act
over and over again until it has the vividness and feeling of reality.
Or, condense your desire into a single phrase that implies
fulfillment such as, "Thank you Father," "Isn't it
wonderful," or "It is finished." Repeat
that condensed phrase, or action in your imagination over and over again.
Then either awaken from that state, or slip off into the deep. It does not
matter, for the act is done when you completely accept it as being
finished in that sleepy, drowsy state.
**********
23. Question: Two people want the same position. One has
it. The other had it and now wants it back.
Answer: Your Father (the dimensionally greater you) has
ways and means you know not of. Accept his wisdom. Feel your desire is
fulfilled, then allow your Father to give it to you. The present one may
be promoted to a higher position, or marry a man of great wealth and give
up her job. She may come into a great deal of money, or choose to move to
another state.
Many people say they want to work, but I question that
seriously. They want security and condition security on a job. But I
really do not think the average girl truly wants to get up in the morning
and go to work.
* * * * * * * * * *
24. Question: What is the cause of disease and pain?
Answer: The physical body is an emotional filter. Many
human ailments, hitherto considered purely physical, are now recognized as
rooted in emotional disturbances.
Pain comes from lack of relaxation. When you sleep there
is no pain. If you are under an anesthetic, there is no pain because you
are relaxed, as it were. If you have pain it is because you are tense and
trying to force something. You cannot force an idea into embodiment, you
simply appropriate it. It is attention minus effort. Only practice will
bring you to that point where you can be attentive and still be relaxed.
Attention is tension toward an end, and relaxation is just
the opposite. Here are two completely opposite ideas that you must blend
until you learn, through practice, how to be attentive, but not tense. The
word "contention" means "attention minus effort." In
the state of contention you are held by the idea without tension.
**********
25. Question: No matter how much I try to be happy,
underneath, I have a melancholy feeling of being left out. Why?
Answer: Because you feel you are not wanted. Were I you, I
would assume I am wanted. You know the technique. The assumption that you
are wanted may seem false when first assumed, but if you will feel wanted
and respected, and persist in that assumption, you will be amazed how
others will seek you out. They will begin to see qualities in you they had
never seen before. I promise you. If you will but assume you are wanted,
you will be.
**********
26.
Question If security came to me through the death of a loved one, did I
bring about that death?
Answer: Do not think for one second that you brought about
a death by assuming security. The greater you is not going to injure any
one. It sees all and, knowing the length of life of all, it can inspire
the other to give you that which can fulfill your assumption.
You did not kill the person who named you in his will. If,
a few days after your complete acceptance of the idea of security, Uncle
John made his exit from this three-dimensional plane and left you his
estate, it is only because it was time for Uncle John to go. He did not
die one second before his time, however. The greater you saw the life span
of John and used him as the way to bring about the fulfillment of your
feeling of security.
The acceptance of the end wills the means toward the
fulfillment of that end. Do not be concerned with anything save the end.
Always bear in mind that the responsibility to make it so is completely
removed from your shoulders. It is yours because you accept it as so!
* * * * * * * * * *
27. Question: I have more than one objective Would it be
ineffective to concentrate on different objectives at different periods of
concentration?
Answer: I like to take one consuming ambition, restrict it
to a single short phrase, or act that implies fulfillment, but I do not
limit my ambition. I only know that my real objective will include all the
little ones.
**********
28. Question: I find it difficult to change my concept of
self. Why?
Answer: Because your desire to change has not been
aroused. If you would fall in love with what you really want to be, you
would become it. It takes an intense hunger to bring about a
transformation of self.
"As the hart panteth after the waterbrooks, so
panteth my soul after thee, O Lord. "If you would become as
thirsty for perfection as the little hart is for water that it braves the
anger of the tiger in the forest, you would become perfect.
**********
29. Question: I am contemplating a business venture. It
means a great deal to me, but I cannot imagine how it can come into being.
Answer: You are relieved of that responsibility. You do
not have to make it a reality, it already is! Although your concept of
self seems so far removed from the venture you now contemplate, it exists
now as a reality within you. Ask yourself how you would feel and what you
would be doing if your business venture were a great success. Become
identified with that character and feeling and you will be amazed how
quickly you will realize your dream.
The only sacrifice you are called upon to make, is to give
up your present concept of self and appropriate the desire you want to
express.
* * * * * * * * * *
30. Question: As a metaphysical student I have been taught
to believe that race beliefs and universal assumptions affect me. Do you
mean that only to the degree I give these universal beliefs power over me,
am I influenced by them?
Answer: Yes. It is only your individual viewpoint, as your
world is forever bearing witness to your present concept of self. If
someone offends you, change your concept of self. That is the only way
others change. Tonight's paper may be read by any six people in this room
and no two will interpret the same story in the same way. One will be
elated, the other depressed, another indifferent, and so on, yet it is the
same story.
Universal assumptions, race beliefs, call them what you
will, they are not important to you. What is important is your concept,
not of another, but of yourself, for the concept you hold of yourself
determines the concept you hold of others. Leave others alone. What are
they to you? Follow your own desires.
The law is always in operation, always absolute. Your
consciousness is the rock upon which all structures rest. Watch what you
are aware of. You need not concern yourself with others because you are
sustained by the absoluteness of this law. No man comes to you of his own
accord, be he good, bad or indifferent. He did not choose you! You chose
him! He was drawn to you because of what you are.
You cannot destroy the state another represents through
force. Rather, leave him alone. What is he to you? Rise to a higher level
of consciousness and you will find a new world awaiting you, and as you
sanctify yourself, others are sanctified.
* * * * * * * * * *
31. Question: Who wrote the Bible?
Answer: The Bible was written by intelligent men who used
solar and phallic myths to reveal psychological truths. But we have
mistaken their allegory for history and, therefore, have failed to see
their true message.
It is strange, but when the Bible was launched upon the
world, and acceptance seemed to be in sight, the great Alexandria Library
was burnt to the ground, leaving no record as to how the Bible came into
being. Few people can read other languages, so they cannot compare their
beliefs with others. Our churches do not encourage us to compare. How many
of the millions who accept the Bible as fact, ever question it? Believing
it is the word of God, they blindly accept the words and thus lose the
essence they contain. Having accepted the vehicle, they do not understand
what the vehicle conveys.

* * * * * * * * * *
32. Question: Do you use the Apocrypha?
Answer: Not in my teaching. I have several volumes of them
at home. They are no greater than the sixty-six books of our present
Bible. They are simply telling the same truth in a different way. For
instance, the story is told of Jesus, as a young boy, watching children
make birds out of mud. Holding the birds in their hands, they pretend the
birds are flying. Jesus approaches and knocks the birds out of their
hands. As they begin to cry, he picks up one of the broken birds and
re-molds it. Holding it high, he breaths upon it and the bird takes wing.
Here is a story of one who came to break the idols in the
minds of men, then show them how to use the same substance and re-mold it
into a beautiful form and give it life. That is what this story is trying
to convey. "I come, not to bring peace, but a sword."
Truth slays all the little mud hens of the mind; slays illusions and then
re-molds them into a new pattern which sets man free.
**********
33. Question: If Jesus was a fictional character created
by Biblical writers for the purpose of illustrating certain psychological
dramas, how do you account for the fact that he and his philosophy are
mentioned in the nonreligious and non-Christian history of those times?
Were not Pontius Pilate and Herod real flesh and blood Roman officials in
those days?
Answer: The story of Jesus is the identical story as that
of the Hindu savior, Krishna. They are the same psychological characters.
Both were supposed to have been born of virgin mothers . The rulers of the
time sought to destroy them when they were children. Both healed the sick,
resurrected the dead, taught the gospel of love and died a martyr's death
for mankind. Hindus and Christians alike believe their savior to be God
made man.
Today people quote Socrates, yet the only proof that
Socrates ever existed is in the works of Plato. It is said that Socrates
drank hemlock, but I ask you, who is Socrates? I once quoted a line from
Shakespeare and a lady said to me, "But Hamlet said that."
Hamlet never said it, Shakespeare wrote the lines and put the words in the
mouth of a character he created and named Hamlet. St. Augustine once said,
"That which is now called the Christian religion existed among the
ancients. They began to call Christianity the true religion, yet it never
existed."
* * * * * * * * * *
34. Question: Do you use affirmations and denials?
Answer: Let us leave these schools of thought that use
affirmations and denials. The best affirmation, and the only effective one
is an assumption which, in itself implies denial of the former state.
The best denial is total indifference. Things wither and
die through indifference. They are kept alive through attention. You do
not deny a thing by saying it does not exist. Rather you put feeling into
it by recognizing it, and what you recognize as true, is true to you, be
it good, bad or indifferent.
* * * * * * * * * *
35. Question: Is it possible for one to appear dead and
still not be dead?
Answer: General Lee was supposed to have been born two
years after his mother, believed to be dead, was buried alive. Lucky for
her she was not embalmed or buried in the earth, but in a vault where
someone heard her cry and released her. Two years later Mrs. Lee bore a
son who became General Lee. That is part of this country's history.
* * * * * * * * * *
36. Question: How could one who was deprived in his youth
become a success in life?
Answer: We are creatures of habit, forming patterns of the
mind which repeat themselves over and over again. Although habit acts like
a compelling law which drives one to repeat the patterns, it is not a law,
for you and I can change the patterns. Many successful men such as Henry
Ford, Rockefeller and Carnegie were deprived in their youth. Many of the
great names in this country came from poor families, yet they left behind
them great accomplishments in the political, artistic and financial world.
One evening a friend of mine attended a meeting for young
advertising executives. The speaker of the evening said to these young
men: "I have but one thing to say to you tonight,and that is to make
yourself big and you cannot fail."
Taking an ordinary fish bowl, he filled it with two bags,
one of English walnuts and the other of small beans. Mixing them with his
hand, he began to shake the bowl and said, "This bowl is life. You
cannot stop its shaking as life is a constant pulsing, living rhythm, but
watch." And as they watched the big walnuts came to the top of the
bowl as the little beans fell to the bottom.
Looking into the bowl the man asked, "Which one of
you is complaining, asking why?" Then added, "Isn't it strange,
the sound is coming from the bowl and not the outside. A bean is
complaining that if he had had the same environment as the walnut he, too
would do big things, but he never had the chance." Then he took a
little bean from the bottom of the bowl and placed him on top saying,
"I can move the bean through sheer force, but I cannot stop the bowl
of life from shaking," and as he shook the bowl, the little bean once
again slid to the bottom.
Hearing another voice of complaint he asked, "What's
that I hear? You are saying that I should take one of those big fellows
who thinks he is so big and put him on the bottom and see what happens to
him? You believe he will be just as limited as you because he will be
robbed of the opportunity of big things just as you are? Let's see."
Then the speaker took one of the big walnuts and pushed
him right down to the bottom of the bowl saying, "I still can't stop
the bowl from shaking," and as the men watched the big walnut came to
the top again. Then the speaker added:
"Gentlemen, if you really want to be successful in
life, make yourself big."
My friend took this message to heart and began to assume
he was a successful businessman. Today he is truly a big man if you judge
success by dollars. He now employs over a thousand people in the city of
New York. Each one of you can do what he did. Assume you are what you want
to be. Walk in that assumption and it will harden into fact.