The Echo of the Invisible: Living What You No Longer Believe
- Rev. Tracey Harrick

- May 20
- 2 min read
Dear Friends,
Have you ever caught yourself saying, “I don’t believe that anymore”—and then watched yourself act like you still do?
You might believe in abundance, but find yourself shrinking from opportunity.
You might believe you are whole, yet still seek approval from those who withhold it.
You might know you are the light of God—but still walk on eggshells around people who have dimmed you.
It’s not hypocrisy. It’s not failure. It’s simply an echo.
In Science of Mind, we learn that thought creates. But what we sometimes forget is that unconscious thought creates just as powerfully. These echoes—old beliefs we inherited, absorbed, or once accepted—can still shape our actions and reactions long after we’ve stopped agreeing with them.
They show up in:
● The tension in your shoulders when someone raises their voice.
● The self-doubt that creeps in after you speak your truth.
● The guilt that follows rest, even though you know rest is sacred.
The good news? Once we recognize the echo, we can release the grip. We can return to what is true now. We can meet the moment with awareness, and choose again.
This is not about perfection. It’s about congruence.
It’s about letting our inner knowing shape our outer living.
So here are a few gentle questions you might take into your week:
● Where in your life are you still living a belief that no longer feels true?
● What habit or reaction might be a messenger from your past, not a truth of your present?
● What would it look like to act, speak, and respond from who you actually are today?
When we bring love to the places where we’re still haunted by old stories, they begin to dissolve. We begin to hear not the echo of the past, but the invitation of the present.
And from there, Spirit flows freely.




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