Do You Expect the Best? Here’s Why It Matters

Have you ever caught yourself asking questions like:

Can I buy a new pair of shoes?
Can I afford a bigger home?

Can I take a day off and not have my business or family suffer?

When do I finally get to take a REAL vacation?

At first glance, these seem like questions about money. But if we look deeper, they’re really about something else—your expectations of what you deserve.

Creating “Stuck” by Settling

Think about this for a minute:

Are you someone who holds onto shoes or clothes well past their prime?

Live in a place that’s “good enough”?

Never takes a break to refresh and renew yourself because if you did everything would “fall apart”?

Again, if you think this is about money, it’s not. It’s about whether you believe you deserve ease, comfort, and the best experiences life has to offer.

If you don’t believe that you deserve these things, you limit your own ability to expand to new levels and keep yourself stuck in the ruts of the limits you’ve placed upon yourself.

The Power of Expecting the Best

Think about someone you know who seems to effortlessly attract opportunities—where things just work out for them.

My cousin Thomas is one of those people.

During architecture school, he landed an internship in Italy but he had no idea where he was going to live.

This would send the average person into a panic-induced spiral, but not Thomas.

On the night he arrived, he went to dinner with a friend and some of his friends. By the end of the meal, not only did he have a place to live, but he already made a group of new friends.

Coincidence? Maybe. But I think it’s something more.

Thomas expects good things to happen to him. And because he carries that expectation, the world rises to meet it.

Calling in More for Yourself

What if you trusted that the right people, places, and opportunities would show up?

What if you expected that the flow of money and resources would support you, not restrict you?

What if you started making decisions from a place of worthiness instead of scarcity?

Try this at home: Pay attention to how you ask for things today. Do you assume you can’t afford it? That you have to “make do”? That it’s too much?

What would shift if, instead, you expected the best?

Let me know how it turns out!

Download a quick exercise to Release a Money Block here: https://www.adelemichal.com/releaseamoneyblock