Tuesday 31 December 2019

Miracles

I am clearing out old confusion and doubt so that I can see the miracles today.- Ruth Fishel

Miracles begin to happen when we sit still and begin to look within. Let those miracles be there for you today. As you dare to see that you have been ruled by old programming, know that new programming, positive healthy programming, is taking its place. Know that you are in the process of clearing up and moving forward.

When we discover the still, quiet place that lies within each of us, we can see it as a base to untangle ourselves from the doubt, indecision, ill health, guilt and other forms of old programming that result in confused and defused actions. -Hallie Iglehart

On this day of your life



I believe God wants you to know ...

... that the method of the enterprising is to plan with
audacity and execute with vigor.

Christian Nevell Bovee said that, and it is a valuable
observation. As we experience this holiday season, and
you begin thinking about the New Year ahead, plan
with audacity.

And as you move into the New Year, execute your
plans with vigor. There is excitement in life -- but you
have to put it there.

Incidentally, you may begin executing with vigor right
now. Why wait?  

Things We Can't Control (OM)



We develop grace as we learn, with the guiding hand of the universe, life will unfold exactly the way it should.


The idea of trusting the universe is a popular one these days, but many of us don't know what this really means and we often have a hard time doing it. This is partly because the story of humankind is most often presented as a story about struggle, control, and survival, instead of one of trust and collaboration with the universe. Yet, in truth, we need to adhere to both ideas in this life.

On the one hand, there is much to be said about exerting control over our environment. We created shelter to protect ourselves from the elements. We hunted for animals and invented agriculture to feed ourselves. We built social infrastructures to protect ourselves and create community. This is how we survive and grow as a civilization. However, it is also clear that there are plenty of things that we cannot control, no matter how hard we try, and we often receive support from an unseen force – a universe that provides us with what we cannot provide for ourselves.

It is a good idea to take responsibility for the things in life that we can control or create. We work so we can feed, clothe, and shelter our loved ones and ourselves. We manifest our dreams and visions in physical form with hard work and forethought. But at a certain point, when we have done all that we can, we must let go and allow the universe to take over. This requires trust. It requires a trust that runs deeper than just expecting things to turn out the way we want them to. Sometimes they will, and sometimes they won't. We develop equanimity and grace as we learn to trust that, with the guiding hand of the universe, life will unfold exactly the way it should. We are engaged in an ongoing relationship with a universe that responds to our thoughts and actions.

Different Person, Same Story: How & Why we Kill our Relationships Again & Again.


December 17th, 2019 would have been my eighth wedding anniversary.

Instead, it was the day I was granted my divorce.
As I sat there listening to the registrar talk about irretrievable breakdown of the marriage and satisfying the laws of the country in terms of separation and residence, I felt an overwhelming sense of sad relief.
Divorce, for so many, is a devastating ending to a journey that was supposed to be forever. You never get married thinking of the end, because the fairy tales do not make room for anything less than prince charming or being awakened by the kiss of true love. There’s no room for being battered, disrespected, exploited, abandoned, or even murdered by the one you said “I do” to. When your marriage ends, there is a public expression that somehow you failed at something.  
People put a lot of energy into maintaining the image of the perfect love affair and the perfect family. That’s probably why so many remain married, miserable, lonely, and depressed—because risking admission that this relationship is simply not working is evidently too much for many to do once, let alone twice or even thrice. 
Even though you’re anxious every day, insecure in your love affair, fantasizing of the day you will be loved wholeheartedly, feeling like you’re rowing your marital boat alone, you keep rowing at all costs.
But you know what? Marriages end all the time. There are probably over a 100 divorces granted every month—and many more to come.
So where does this leave us in our journey toward our own healing, toward the prospect of loving again, and toward the ability to create momentum toward a life worth living—from independence toward interdependence? Is there room when the fairy tale ends to begin writing a story of how flawed humans fall, fail, and transform even more hopeful and more loving?
Is there a story of a you not limited by the past—open to loving and receiving love? Is there meaning in this part of your journey, lessons to learn to bring you comfort and peace, and even wisdom as you go forward?
Moving forward is essential, but moving forward differently is significant. Your brain holds the answers for rewriting your personal love story.
Between the years 1996 and 2000, researchers at the University of Parma in Italy discovered what neuroscientists now call mirror neurons.
Mirror neurons “mirror” the behaviour or actions of the other. If you ever laughed when someone else was laughing, you’ve activated your mirror neurons. When you smile at someone and they return the smile to you, you are again experiencing your mirror neurons at work.
We all affect each other so much. When we embody peace, love, and kindness, we can activate the mirror neurons in others toward an upward spiral of peace, love, and kindness in them. Our emotions and energy are contagious.
The same ripple effect is true for toxic emotions, such as resentment, bitterness, hatred, and deep disregard for others. Working in toxic environments is detrimental to health and well-being for this very reason. So too is continuing in destructive relationships. The mirror reflection is activating anxious, depressing, and heavy emotions creating emotional upheaval, disregulations, and instability.
Now let me be clear: I’m not a huge supporter of being positive 24/7. I’m certain that is never a realistic ideal to strive for. Neither am I one for suggesting that we should suppress normal and natural emotions such as anger, sadness, or fear.
But what I am suggesting is to acknowledge and express those feelings in ways that, and for however long, allow them to serve you, free you, and bring real healing into your life.  
How long do you keep telling your story to yourself and to others?
“He cheated on me, so how can I trust another?”
“Nothing I ever did for her was enough.”
“All I do is give and give and get used in return.”
“I’m not enough for anyone.”
“I’m unlovable and undeserving.”
“I choose bad men in my life.”
While acknowledging and validating that this is how you feel about the experiences you have had, retelling this story with no rewriting of the script activates your mirror neurons and those of others, keeping this story on an automatic loop.
Mirror neurons don’t respond to pantomimes, or to meaningless gestures, or to random sounds. In his book Brain Rules, molecular biologist John Medina explains this phenomenon: “When the brain detects an emotionally charged event, the amygdala releases dopamine into the system. Because dopamine greatly aids memory and information processing, you could say it creates a Post-it note that reads, ‘Remember this.’”
Storytelling is powerful. When we tell a story, we not only remember the story; we also remember the conclusion of the story—that is, the point of telling it.
I don’t know about you, but when I watch movies, I feel the sadness and the injustice of the story on the screen. The latest Netflix series “Now They See Us” is a powerful example of my mirror neurons being activated. As Daniel Pink said, “Stories are easier to remember because stories are how we remember.” You feel the injustice, you find yourself holding onto hope, you are filled with a restoration of healing and justice for the exonerated five in the series.
As people enter new relationships after old ones, it’s so important how they present to each other. More often than not, they present with the same story, same beliefs about themselves and others (whether in or out of their awareness).
And guess what? Because we remember the story, we get the same conclusion of the story and a repetition of events. So yes, you move on to someone new—but you move on with the same story. This is why at the beginning of the article, I said moving forward is important—but moving differently is significant.
Because of what I know about how my brain works, I know how important it is to tell stories of yourself and others that are forgiving of yourself for making mistakes and that can let go of anger and resentment—stories of directing loving acts of compassion and kindness to self and others. 
When we channel these magical and powerful emotions through us, our spiritual journey deepens. We start to understand the lessons we need to learn in this life—that make us bolder, lighter, loving versions of ourselves.
Guess what? Because you and others have mirror neurons, your boldness, light, and love allow you to be surrounded by nothing less than those who reflect those values and are on that very same spiritual and magical journey. 
Love, my friend, begins with you. I don’t mean the self-love movement and talking to the mirror with a loving affirmations (whilst there’s merit in this). I simply mean that your mirror neurons project your personal love story on the screen.
I have learnt through a lot of heartache that trusting myself and forgiving myself for making mistakes were definitely themes of my story that I have been needing to address. My choice to end my marriage was a decision to move toward a different story for myself. Rewriting this story can be a lot like walking through fire.
But for me, going forward means deepening my connection with myself, to be kinder to myself, to not hold myself hostage for choices I made when I knew no better, to resist doubting myself and my judgement because others do not see what I see. 
My journey is to pause daily in self-care and surround myself with nourishing connections that mirror the story that I am enough. That my mistakes are no longer my life sentences. 
As a therapist, I journey with many as they embark on changing their limiting stories. I know the pain experienced when we let go of these stories that gave us predictability and a sense of control. 
But you know what I know: there’s power in stepping forward differently. I smile at that, and their mirror neurons cause them to smile back. For in that moment, there is a recognition of a new love story breaking through the tiny opening, shining a ray of hope. I think in that moment I know that life can and will get better for them. 
Watch out, fairy tales. There are powerful, earth-moving, groundbreaking love stories just waiting to be told that will be better than you could have ever hoped for or dreamed off.
As we prepare to enter 2020, our connections with those around us matter more than any material aspect of life. Let us mirror dynamic spiritual connections that uplift ourselves and others. 
The mirror neurons show us how we impact change, in ourselves and other. They hold the blueprint for a 2020 version of yourself that sheds the past and leaves it rested in 2019.
Here’s to an awesome story of love for me, for you, and for those around us.

Giselle Naidu Read Bio

AUTHOR: GISELLE NAIDU
IMAGE: KNIGHT OF CUPS / IMDB

19 Tiny, Beautiful Quotes from Cheryl Strayed that will Split your Heart Open.


Warning: naughty language ahead!
~

My life crumbled into a thousand little pieces last November.

The story is too long and too labored to share here. But suffice it to say that every single part of my life went up in smoke, and I was faced with the incomprehensibly daunting task of putting it all back together.
At the time, I reached out to a friend from college and told her what was going on. She replied, “Text me your mailing address. I’m sending you a book.”
A week later, tiny beautiful things by Cheryl Strayed showed up at my door. I worked my way through its chapters over the course of the next couple of weeks. Reading it was like eating and digesting a 17-course meal. I could only take small bits at a time. Some chapters made me laugh. Others made me weep. Others made me gasp or say “wow” aloud to no one.
Cheryl’s words became my mantra and my bible as I slowly gathered up the fragments of my life. I have read and reread and reread it. I have memorized my favorite sentences.
If you haven’t read this treasure of a book, I have one assignment for you: go to your local bookstore as soon as you can, buy a copy, and curl up with it to soak in Cheryl’s heart-splitting words.
In the meantime, or if you’re lucky enough to have already read it, here are 19 quotes that will leave you tender and gutted and split open:

1. “Love is our essential nutrient. Without it, life has little meaning. It’s the best thing we have to give and the most valuable thing we receive. It’s worthy of all the hullabaloo.”

2. “Nobody will protect you from your suffering. You can’t cry it away or eat it away or starve it away or walk it away or punch it away or even therapy it away. It’s just there, and you have to survive it. You have to endure it. You have to live through it and love it and move on and be better for it and run as far as you can in the direction of your best and happiest dreams across the bridge that was built by your own desire to heal.”

3. “Forgiveness doesn’t sit there like a pretty boy in a bar. Forgiveness is the old fat guy you have to haul up a hill.”

4. “Of this I am absolutely sure: Do not reach the era of child-rearing and real jobs with a guitar case full of crushing regret for all the things you wished you’d done in your youth. I know too many people who didn’t do those things. They all end up mingy, addled, shrink-wrapped versions of the people they intended to be.”

5. “The story of human intimacy is one of constantly allowing ourselves to see those we love most deeply in a new, more fractured light. Look hard. Risk that.”

6. “I’ve written often about how we have to reach hard in the direction of the lives we want, even if it’s difficult to do so. I’ve advised people to set healthy boundaries and communicate mindfully and take risks and work hard on what actually matters and confront contradictory truths and trust the inner voice that speaks with love and shut out the inner voice that speaks with hate. But the thing is—the thing so many of us forget—is that those values and principles don’t only apply to our emotional lives. We’ve got to live them out in our bodies too. Yours. Mine. Droopy and ugly and fat and thin and marred and wretched as they are. We have to be as fearless about our bellies as we are with our hearts.”

7. “Don’t be strategic or coy. Strategic and coy are for jackasses. Be brave. Be authentic. Practice saying the word ‘love’ to the people you love so when it matters the most to say it, you will.”

8. “Your assumptions about the lives of others are in direct relation to your naïve pomposity. Many people you believe to be rich are not rich. Many people you think have it easy worked hard for what they got. Many people who seem to be gliding right along have suffered and are suffering. Many people who appear to you to be old and stupidly saddled down with kids and cars and houses were once every bit as hip and pompous as you.”

9. “Whatever happens to you belongs to you. Make it yours. Feed it to yourself even if it feels impossible to swallow. Let it nurture you, because it will.”

10. “Go, even though you love him. Go, even though you can’t imagine your life without him. Go, even though you’re afraid of being alone. Go, even though you don’t know exactly why you can’t stay. Go, because you want to. Because wanting to leave is enough. Get a pen. Write that last sentence on your palm. Then read it over and over again until your tears have washed it away.”

11. “Be brave enough to break your own heart.”

12. “Jump high and hard with intention and heart. Pay no mind to the vision the commission made up. It’s up to you to make your life. Take what you have and stack it up like a tower of teetering blocks. Build your dream around that.”

13. “Stop worrying about whether you’re fat. You’re not fat. Or rather, you’re sometimes a little bit fat, but who gives a shit? There is nothing more boring and fruitless than a woman lamenting the fact that her stomach is round. Feed yourself. Literally. The sort of people worthy of your love will love you more for this, sweet pea.”

14. “You will learn a lot about yourself if you stretch in the direction of goodness, of bigness, of kindness, of forgiveness, of emotional bravery. Be a warrior for love.”

15. “Most things will be okay eventually, but not everything will be. Sometimes you’ll put up a good fight and lose. Sometimes you’ll hold on really hard and realize there is no choice but to let go. Acceptance is a small, quiet room.”

16. “The best thing you can possibly do with your life is to tackle the motherfucking shit out of love.”

17. “You cannot convince people to love you. This is an absolute rule. No one will ever give you love because you want him or her to give it. Real love moves freely in both directions. Don’t waste your time on anything else.”

18. “It is impossible for you to go on as you were before, so you must go on as you never have.”

19. “Just close your eyes and remember everything you already know. Let whatever mysterious starlight that guided you this far guide you onward into whatever crazy beauty awaits.”

Kelsey Michal Read Bio

AUTHOR: KELSEY MICHAL
IMAGE: WILD (2014)
IMAGE: ECOFOLKS ON INSTAGRAM

The Quote




The unselfish effort to bring cheer to others will be the beginning of a happier life for ourselves. Helen Keller

Monday 30 December 2019

Difference


"The ways in which we express ourselves spiritually are beautiful and loving, creating unity and oneness." -Rob Eichberg

As a recovering alcoholic, I belong to a minority. As somebody with the disease of addiction, I am aware of my difference. I have experienced prejudice and injustice because I was not born like other people. But in a spiritual sense, acceptance of my disease has given me a freedom that united me with other minorities, other "different" groups-the countless shades of humanity. My disease has produced a spiritual unity and bond with creation that make me rejoice in my difference and engender a tolerance of others that was not there before. In this sense, I thank God for my disease. - Leo Booth

You who made the different also created the unity. Help me find both in my life.

CoDA Weekly Reading







WOW did I get some “hands-on” recovery at the airport after leaving the CoDA Convention!

I made it through the airport fine UNTIL the TSA x-ray scanner detected something in my back pocket.

I took out the paper and threw it out.

TSA MASSAGE

The TSA Agent informed me that he would need to inspect me physically.
Normally I’m okay with a “TSA massage” when it’s my shoulders and back, but when he informed he was going to be patting down my buttocks and GROIN I felt UNCOMFORTABLE, but instead of being quiet and co-dependently compliant, I shared “I am uncomfortable with this. There was nothing in my front pocket. Why my groin?”
I tried to collaborate by offering to go back through the x-ray scanner.
In an authoritarian voice and tone, he said “Inspection: YES or NO?”
I said “no”.
He yelled “SUPERVISOR!”

TSA SUPERVISOR!

The TSA Supervisor came over and explained to me the TSA Agent was going use the “back of his hand."
I agreed to the inspection.
But when the “back of his hand” went right up my thigh where the sun don’t shine, I was NOT okay!
I miraculously spoke up again and said “stop” before he could inspect my groin area.
Again he yelled “SUPERVISOR!”

TSA OPTIONS

Guess what happened next?
No, I didn’t cuss him out.
No, I didn’t get angry.
Instead, I was clearer with my boundaries: “I am NOT okay with a man touching my penis.”
I went on to look them both in the eyes and say “I love you, and know this is your job and it’s for safety. What are my other options?”
The Supervisor informed me that he could walk me out and I could enter the lines again.
AHA! I had another option my frontal lobes could understand, so I took it.

TSA ESCORT

But as I was being escorted out out of the security check by two TSA Supervisors, an old voice crept in:
“What are these people going to think about you?”
I felt ashamed.
I immediately surrendered to HP and heard “I’m proud of you, Son.“

FINAL ROUND

When the TSA Supervisor and I parted ways, not only did we shake hands, but he suggested I take “Line 8” because he was going to shut off the x-ray scanners, so I could go through the metal detectors.
WOW, I was FREE!

MAKING THE CALL...

I went through security the second time with NOTHING in my pockets and made it through fine.
But when I left security I felt uneasy, so I called my new CoDA sponsor that I had just got from the CoDA Convention.
He affirmed and validated my experience. He applauded my willingness and courage.
*Sigh*
I felt calm and supported - another miracle of CoDA.
He also shared that using the “love” word with some people may be inappropriate. That saying “I appreciate and respect you” in this context may have been a better choice.
I agreed.
Talking with him was like my inner child was looking up to a parent, and got to ask:
“Was that the right thing to do?”
And it like was God, myself, and my mentor got to say:
“Yes, Son, you done good.”

HANDS ON

This CoDA stuff works! :)
Thank you TSA for allowing me to practice my NEW healthy boundaries and speak my truth while being respectful.
This is what my sponsor calls “hands-on recovery.” :)

Warmly,
JP - 9/16/19