Skip to main content

“Wheels Within Wheels”: The Many Eyes Of Awareness

"The Bible, rich in symbolism, is the true source of manifestation and the Law of Assumption—as revealed by Neville Goddard" — The Way

One of the most mysterious and poetic images in the Bible appears in the Book of Ezekiel: “a wheel in the middle of a wheel” (Ezekiel 1:16). At first glance, this vision may seem abstract, mechanical, even confusing—but through the teachings of Neville Goddard, we discover a deeply meaningful symbol of inner transformation, conscious movement, and the multi-layered nature of our imagination.


The Vision: Ezekiel’s Wheels

Ezekiel writes:

“Their appearance and their work was as it were a wheel in the middle of a wheel.”
Ezekiel 1:16

This heavenly vision shows complex, living wheels full of eyes, moving in all directions without turning. Rather than a literal machine, Neville would interpret this imagery as a symbol of the self-regulating, multidimensional movement of consciousness.


Neville’s Take: The Inner and Outer Wheels

For Neville, all movement in life begins in the imagination. What you experience in the outer world is a direct reflection of your inner state. The outer wheel represents what appears to be happening around you—the conditions, people, and events you encounter. The inner wheel, hidden but central, is your own awareness, turning quietly beneath the surface, generating the movement above.

“The world is yourself pushed out,” Neville often said. In this sense, the “wheel within the wheel” becomes a powerful image of how your outer life rotates in accordance with your inner assumptions.


Consciousness in Motion

Unlike static ideas of the self, the wheel suggests perpetual motion, transformation, and evolution. Your beliefs, emotions, and assumptions are not fixed—they turn. When you change the inner wheel—your perception of self—the outer wheel must eventually follow suit.

Neville would say: Change your concept of yourself, and you will automatically change the world in which you live.

The two wheels are connected. As one turns, the other must respond. The synchrony is perfect, even when not immediately visible.


The Many Eyes: Self-Awareness and Watchfulness

The wheels in Ezekiel’s vision are full of eyes. To Neville, the eye is the symbol of awareness. These eyes represent your ability to observe yourself, to notice your inner conversations, reactions, and states of mind.

This self-awareness is not passive. It is the key to deliberate manifestation. You cannot shift your reality without first watching where your inner wheel is pointed.


Spirals, Layers, and Dimensions

A wheel within a wheel is not merely about cause and effect—it’s about depth. Consciousness isn’t linear. It spirals. It loops. Sometimes we return to the same challenges or patterns, not because we’ve failed, but because we’re moving deeper into their meaning. The wheel is not only turning forward; it is also turning inward.

Neville often emphasised that your state of consciousness determines everything. But these states are not flat—they exist in levels. What appears as repetition in life may in fact be the ascending spiral of growth, a wheel turning inside another, leading you closer to full self-realisation.


Conclusion: You Are the Centre

The wheel within a wheel reminds us that we are not powerless observers of reality. We are the centre of it. The core wheel is your imagination, your I AM, spinning the visible world into being.

So, when life feels chaotic or repetitive, remember: the outer wheel responds to the inner one. Your assumptions, feelings, and inner speech are turning the mechanism of your world, even when you don’t yet see the results.

And when you dare to move the inner wheel consciously—to imagine boldly, believe faithfully, and feel deeply—you align with the sacred machinery that drives all things.


Comments