They say if you ever spoke to him, your life would never be the same. He left behind no widely known grave, no public record, only whispers of a man bent reality itself. Known as Abdullah the mystic, the man who shaped the greatest spiritual thinkers of the 20th century. In this video, you will discover the hidden law he taught. One so powerful rewrites reality, no matter who you are or where you stand right now. and what he taught. It defied every rule of logic, but it worked. Harlem, 1933. Nights were cold and hungry. Jazz music echoed through the streets, a soulful soundtrack to a world weighed down by the Great Depression. Yet on West 7 Street, in an unexpectedly grand mansion, astonishing for a black man in that era lived Abdullah the mystic. Bookshelves sagged beneath ancient Torah, scrolls, and coalistic texts. The mansion was a treasure of sacred texts, and at the center of it all, shrouded in mystery, was Abdullah, a Jewish Ethiopian mystic and rabbi who lived as if reality itself obeyed him. For those who crossed his threshold, the impossible became law. Amidst racial discrimination, his vast home filled with sacred texts and ritual objects radiated power. Bankers, rabbis, and powerful elite gathered there not just for knowledge but for transformation. Abdullah reportedly lived to the remarkable age of approximately 109 years. Decades passed under his steady presence. Through eras of change and challenge, his longevity became part of his mystique and enduring testament to mastery over mind and matter. Those who met him recalled a man whose presence subtly shifted the world around him with quiet sovereignty. When segregation shaped every corner of life, the theaters of New York stood as fortresses of exclusion. Black patrons were rarely allowed inside, let alone near the stage. The front rows, reserved for the city's elite, were spaces no black person ever dared to enter. Yeah. On the night of one of Broadway's most anticipated shows, Abdullah, the Ethiopian mystic and rabbi, walked calmly through the crowds. Draped in his turban and quiet authority. He approached the ticket office with a presence that seemed to soften even hardened skepticism. Without fanfare or demand, Abdullah simply asked for two front row tickets. Then, as if moved by something unseen, the tickets were handed over free of charge. Abdullah took his place at the front. Not as a defiant rebel, but as a man, he created his reality. True sovereignty belongs to the mind and spirit. He was unshaken by the boundaries others impose in their realities. Neville Goddard, a young dancer from Barbados, was desperate in freezing New York to get home. He confessed his longing to Abdullah. Abdullah, I want to go home to Barbados, but I have nothing. Abdullah replied firmly. You are in Barbados. Confused, Neville said. But I'm here in New York. Abdullah smiled. Tonight, do not sleep in New York. Sleep in Barbados. Feel the salt air. Hear the sea. Sleep in Barbados and the world will catch up. Neville followed this every night. Living in the end. Weeks passed with no ticket. Doubt crept in. He pleaded. Ab, if I miss the next ship, I'll never make it. Abdullah said, "Who told you you are going to Barbados?" "You are in Barbados." Then the door slammed a lesson not of rejection, but of initiation. You don't bargain with reality. You assume the end. Refuse contradiction. Then the impossible. A letter arrived with passage and money. Third class ticket. Neville rushed to tell Abdullah the great news of his third class tickets. Abdullah said, "You went first class. You are in Barbados. Door slam again." On departure, Neville was upgraded to first class due to a cancellation. Neville stood on the deck, salt wind on his face, realizing Abdullah had been right all along. This was the law of assumption in action. One night by candlelight, Abdullah traced the Hebrew letters alf, a and tav, tate, alf, the spark, the beginning, tav, the seal, the end. In Hebrew, he said alfav spells at the alphabet of creation. The Bible says in the beginning God created at everything you will ever be is contained already in the end. Creation begins at tav not alf. He looked each student and you in this moment in the eye. If you want to create start at the end assume it live in it. Let the beginning arrange itself. This is why he taught Neville to sleep in Barbados. Abdullah shared a metaphor for his teaching that still echoes. Imagine you're watching the biggest suspense movie you've ever seen. The audience gasps and panics at every twist. But you you've already seen the ending. You know the hero will survive. You know the resolution. So you sit calm, completely unshaken. He leaned closer and said, "This is how you live your desires." Already at the end, unmoved by appearances. When you live from the end, the world bends to you. If asked how, Abdullah's answer was simple. When you turn on a light switch, do you understand electricity? Neville shook his head. Of course not. But you flick the switch anyway, and the light comes on. Stop asking how. Assume the end. Flick the switch. Watch the world light up. Acclaimed writer and PhD Joseph Murphy learned from Abdullah. He was astounded when Abdullah said, "You are one of six children." Murphy insisted, "No, I'm one of five." Later, he learned of a sixth sibling who died at birth. Abdullah didn't guess. He simply knew. But his greatest gift was this. There is no power outside your mind's arrangement. Neville echoed. You believe in God, believe also in your imagination. The I am of scripture is you. The only question is will you dare to live from it? Tonight write your desire not as a wish but a fulfilled memory. Close your eyes. Inhale alf the beginning. Exhale tav the end. Feel the scene alive and complete. Sleep in that feeling tonight. Tomorrow walk as if it's already real. Don't wait for proof. Live as though your ending is certain because Abdullah lived a long life marked by quiet mastery and profound influence. His fire, the alphant Tav, ignites the minds of those bold enough to claim it. Assume your ending. Live from Tav and watch the world appearances to the contrary. Catch