What fascinates me is how she viewed life as something entirely different from how most people perceive it. Where many walk around believing they’re being punished by circumstances, she suggested we’re actually playing a game. And not just any old game, one in which your words, thoughts and inner expectations shape the entire experience.
Most people don’t like hearing that. It means responsibility. It means you can’t blame the boss, or the traffic, or the economy. But it also means something far more powerful: you can choose your next move.
Florence had this way of cutting straight through human nonsense with a smile. She’d tell someone, “My dear, you’ve been handing out negative commands all week. Naturally, the universe has obeyed.” That’s the kind of spiritual humour people either love or get offended by. But if you really listen to it, she’s pointing out a truth we all feel deep down: our words are doing more behind the scenes than we would care to admit.
Think about how often we casually say things like, “I’m always unlucky,” “Money slips through my fingers,” or “Nothing ever works out for me.” We think we’re venting. Meanwhile, as Florence would say, the subconscious mind is standing there like a loyal but slightly confused servant, responding, “Very well, we’ll arrange that.”
The genius of her teaching wasn’t in telling people to be positive. She wasn’t that shallow. Her insight was that you can speak from fear or you can speak from faith, and whichever one you choose becomes the architect of your future.
And here’s where it gets interesting for us today.
We’re living in a world where people express themselves more than ever. Posts, comments, tweets, Instagram captions, etc, your thoughts are no longer hidden. You’re broadcasting them. You’re amplifying your own vibration in real time. Florence couldn’t have predicted social media, but she didn’t need to. The law she taught applies to anything you say, write or think, whether you’re holding a pen or an iPhone.
The game hasn’t changed. But the playing field has.
And if life really is a game, then the question becomes: are you playing intentionally, or are you letting the board move you around like a pawn? Florence believed you are a player with agency. A creator with authority. A being whose inner state shapes the outer experience.
When you start looking at life through that lens, everything shifts. A delay isn’t a failure; it’s a strategic placement. A closed door isn’t rejection, it’s redirection. An unexpected change isn’t a loss; it’s a new level loading in.
But you only see life that way when you’re willing to step back and ask, “What am I impressing on my mind right now? What words am I using to sculpt my day?” Whether you’re conscious of it or not, you’re always impressing something. The universe doesn’t stop listening just because you stop paying attention.
So the real challenge becomes awareness. Not perfection. Just awareness. Awareness of the tone you speak in. Awareness of the stories you tell yourself. Awareness of the vibration you’re sending out, even when you think no one’s listening.
Florence would probably say something like, “You’ve been talking to the universe all your life, darling. Isn’t it time you noticed what you’ve been saying?”
And she’d be right.
Life is a game. Not a punishment. Not an accident. A game. And once you understand the rules, the laws of faith, speech, intuition and alignment, you can play it on a whole new level. Not by force, but by awareness. Not by struggle, but by intention.
It’s your move now. Make it count.
If this post resonated with you, please share it with someone you know who may be looking for a message like this. And, why not leave a comment below?
Have a great day
Keith
P.S. For more on The Legacy Code philosophy, check out my latest book. It’s available at all Amazon stores and is now also on Audible.
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