Law of Assumption vs Law of Attraction: Which One Actually Works?
If you’ve spent any time in manifestation spaces, you’ve probably noticed a growing divide: Law of Attraction people vs. Law of Assumption people.
Both camps claim their approach is “the real way.” Both have passionate followers and impressive success stories.
But what’s actually different? And more importantly — which one should you use?
Let’s break it down.
What Is the Law of Attraction?
The Law of Attraction (LoA) was popularized by The Secret (2006) and teachers like Abraham Hicks, Rhonda Byrne, and Bob Proctor.
Core idea: Like attracts like. Your vibration (emotional frequency) attracts matching experiences into your life.
Key principles:
- Raise your vibration to attract what you want
- Your emotions are your “signal” to the universe
- Positive thoughts = positive outcomes
- Negative thoughts = negative outcomes
- The universe responds to your dominant frequency
- You need to “ask, believe, receive”
Typical practices:
- Gratitude journals
- Vision boards
- Positive affirmations
- Meditation
- Raising your vibration through joy, love, and appreciation
What Is the Law of Assumption?
The Law of Assumption (LoAss) comes from Neville Goddard (1905-1972), a mystic and lecturer who taught that imagination creates reality.
Core idea: Whatever you assume to be true — and persist in that assumption — will harden into fact.
Key principles:
- You don’t need to “attract” anything — you already have it in consciousness
- Your assumptions about reality create your reality
- Feeling is the secret — not emotion, but the felt sense of having your desire
- There’s no “high vibration” requirement — just assumption
- Persistence in your new assumption is the only discipline needed
- Everyone and everything in your reality is a reflection of your own consciousness
Typical practices:
- SATS (State Akin to Sleep) visualization
- Revision technique
- Affirmations rooted in self-concept
- “Living in the end”
- Scripting
- Inner conversations
The Key Differences
| Aspect | Law of Attraction | Law of Assumption |
|---|---|---|
| Source | ”The Secret,” Abraham Hicks | Neville Goddard |
| Mechanism | You send out a frequency; the universe matches it | You assume a state; 3D reality conforms to it |
| Vibration | Central — you must “raise your vibe” | Not required — no such thing as “low vibration” |
| Emotions | Must be positive to attract positive things | Bad days are fine; what matters is your dominant assumption |
| The Universe | An external force that responds to you | You are the operant power; there’s nothing outside of you |
| Obstacles | Negative thoughts can block your manifestation | Negative thoughts are just “old assumptions” you can change |
| Techniques | Vision boards, gratitude, meditation | SATS, revision, “living in the end” |
| Self-concept | Less emphasis | Central — your self-concept determines everything |
| Free will | Others have free will | ”Everyone is you pushed out” — a controversial principle |
| Speed | Depends on vibration alignment | Depends on persistence and naturalness of assumption |
Where LoA Falls Short
The Law of Attraction has helped millions of people, but it has some common issues:
1. The “vibration trap” LoA can create a toxic cycle: “I feel bad → bad things will happen → now I feel worse → the universe is punishing me.” This leads to spiritual bypassing, where people suppress genuine emotions because they’re afraid of “attracting negativity.”
2. External locus of control LoA positions the “universe” as an external force you need to please. This can feel disempowering — like you’re constantly performing for some cosmic judge.
3. Guilt on bad days Having a rough day? LoA says you’re going to attract bad things. That’s not only scientifically unsupported — it’s psychologically harmful.
Where LoAss Falls Short
The Law of Assumption isn’t perfect either:
1. “Everyone is you pushed out” can be taken too far Neville’s teaching that other people are reflections of your assumptions can lead to unhealthy patterns — blaming yourself for others’ abusive behavior, or believing you can override someone’s free will.
2. Less emphasis on action Some LoAss practitioners take the “assume and it’s done” teaching too literally and neglect practical action.
3. Steep learning curve Neville’s lectures are dense and metaphorical. Without good guidance, it’s easy to misinterpret his teachings.
So Which One Should You Use?
Here’s my honest take: use both. Take the best from each:
From LoA, keep:
- ✅ Gratitude practice (one of the most scientifically validated positive psychology tools)
- ✅ Meditation and mindfulness
- ✅ The understanding that emotions matter
From LoAss, keep:
- ✅ Self-concept as the foundation of all manifestation
- ✅ “Living in the end” — assuming your desire is already yours
- ✅ Permission to have bad days without fearing cosmic punishment
- ✅ You are the operant power (internal locus of control)
A Practical Hybrid Approach
Here’s a daily routine that combines the best of both:
Morning (5 min):
- Gratitude journaling (LoA) — 3 things you’re grateful for
- Self-concept affirmations (LoAss) — “I am worthy, I am capable, I always get what I want”
During the day:
- When a negative thought arises, don’t panic (LoAss) — just gently redirect to your preferred assumption
- Practice being in the state of having your desire (LoAss)
- Take inspired action when it feels aligned (both)
Evening (5 min):
- SATS visualization (LoAss) combined with the pillow method
- If anything negative happened today, use the revision technique: replay the event as you wished it had happened
The Bottom Line
| If you… | Try… |
|---|---|
| Like structure and positivity | Start with LoA |
| Want to feel empowered and stop “people-pleasing the universe” | Start with Law of Assumption |
| Struggle with self-worth | Focus on LoAss self-concept work first |
| Feel overwhelmed by both | Just start with the 369 method — it works with both frameworks |
| Want the fastest results | Combine self-concept (LoAss) + gratitude (LoA) + consistent technique |
The truth? Both “laws” point to the same underlying reality: your inner world shapes your outer experience. Whether you call it vibration or assumption, the mechanism is the same.
The best approach is the one that makes you feel empowered, not anxious. If LoA makes you feel guilty on bad days, switch to LoAss. If LoAss feels too “out there,” start with LoA basics.
Not sure which approach matches your personality? Take the free quiz →