Wednesday, 31 May 2017

God


"Any God I ever felt in Church I brought in with me. And I think all the other folks did, too. They come to Church to share God, not find God." Alice Walker

Iused to think God was separate, unknowable, and judgmental. I saw God more as a judge than a friend and myself more as a sinner than the son.With such low self-esteem, it was hard to associate God with my life! Then I began to search for the spiritual path to a deeper understanding of self. I found a loving, friendly God whose love is so pervasive I was able to discover the Divine in my life and the lives of others.The concept of meeting together to share God made sense.Discovering a God within made God knowable and comprehensible. Because God lives in me, I am alive.

Loving Creator,may I share Your life in my world.

Weekly Reading

Dear Fellows, 

My name is Sarah. I am an alcoholic. I am also a chocoholic, a controlaholic, an obsessaholic, a shopaholic, and lots of other little "holics" too!

My “isms” remain with me even after 11 years in AA. I had a nodding acquaintance with "this codependency stuff" but dismissed it as yet another issue I wanted to avoid. After all, I was told to KEEP IT SIMPLE!

As the years rolled in, I realized that my codependent behavior was in practically everything I stood for. My mind bargained and muddled with every situation from buying a pint of milk to organizing a family Christmas. I realized that I was incapable of seeing things for just what they were, a necessary pint of milk or a family gathering. I'd ask the kids how much milk they thought they would drink over the weekend, did they prefer skim or whole, and then I'd go off and buy almond milk, which no one but me likes. I needed to attach chains and ropes to everything in my life to stop me from sliding off the edge; I was evading taking responsibility by seeking completely inappropriate permission before doing anything. Needless to say, I drove my family insane and ended up separated.

In the past five years of separation, I have had to make decisions all by myself. Very scary for someone who couldn't buy milk without my kids’ validation! I have had to organize my Christmas with the kids, alone, and make it work without letting self-pity and remorse ruin the season and without beating the goodness out of the day with indecision over what to cook. I have learned that a decision is a decision and that there are no "right" ones. The decision I choose to make IS the right one, and life will run its course accordingly. God is in charge, so long as I listen to reason and let my inner voice guide me, all will be well. I have learnt to trust myself. To stop looking for other people to validate everything I do. CO-dependent. Co means join, and I choose to be no longer joined to people, places and things when I have to make a decision. I am IN-dependent! It's very scary at first and I do lapse into old codependent thinking, but I am getting better at recognizing it and not acting on it.

And you know what? I have a job now, I have a contented life, my children CHOOSE to be with me, and I feel empowered. I can be lonely but I don't have to run to someone, or to chocolate or shopping to make me feel better—I know now that all these behaviors come with a price: A MASSIVE EMOTIONAL HANGOVER!! (Not to mention weight gain and financial loss!)

Recognizing my codependency on my ex-husband and how corrosive my codependent behavior was has been the key to freedom in so many ways. Today, if I need to know something, I can ask someone. But I check first to see if it's just attention seeking or controlling. And then I smile.........


Sarah L - 4/15

On this day of your life


I believe God wants you to know...
...that sorrow makes us all children again. 

Ralph Waldo Emerson said that, and he was right.
A good cry can be wonderful sometimes, and sadness
is nothing more than love announced. Sadness and Unhappiness
are not the same thing, and it is good to remember that.

So if you're sad...be glad. It says something about you.
And there are worse things. And there is this:

sadness cleanses the heart.

Goals (OM)



It is vital to take action on your goals in life rather than just daydreaming about them.


Our desires act as fuel, propelling us toward new horizons. Without something to strive for, we stagnate and become stuck in ruts of our own making because we are unsure of what to do next. Goals are the dreams that we are willing to work for. When we set goals, we take responsibility for our lives and choose to wholeheartedly devote ourselves to our aspirations. Even if we only take the smallest steps toward achieving our ambitions, it is vital that we actively pursue our goals rather than just daydreaming about them. Having goals makes us feel good because it adds a sense of purpose and direction to our lives.

When you endeavor to achieve clear and quantifiable goals, your choices and actions take on new significance. Consciously creating your goals can help ensure that the success you seek is attainable and serves you. Your plan must be conceivable, tangible, and measurable. If you cannot visualize your goal in great detail or believe that you can realize them, you may find it difficult to commit to your goals and take the necessary steps to achieve them. Make sure that your goals have the potential to be emotionally satisfying. You may even want to write them down. Putting your goals into words can keep your intention fresh in your mind and remind you of your purpose. As you make progress toward realizing your goals, give yourself a reward each time you take a step forward so that you have the incentive to keep going. If you find yourself stuck in a rut, examine ways in which you can revise your strategy so that your plan can work.

In creating goals, you create your future by outlining your destiny. When you choose your goals using your head and heart, you take the first step in manifesting what you want. You grant your own wishes every time you achieve another goal.

Heal your Mind & your Gut will Follow.



Sitting in the cold, sterile waiting room, she feels her stomach gnawing.

An urgency hits and she rushes to the bathroom, extremely relieved when she finds it is private.
What is wrong with me? 
A message from her physician’s office the prior evening about her blood test has had her mind racing.
Oh my goodness, it must be something horrible if I have to come in person. Who will take care of my children if something happens to me? 
It’s no wonder she barely slept the night before as she sees her fate lying before her and ponders what kind of funeral she wants.
After waiting, stomach growling because she was too nauseated to eat before her appointment, the physician assistant pops out and simply tells her that her routine lab results were inconclusive because they took too little blood. She needed to come in to submit another blood sample.

She feels an overwhelming sense of release over her entire body as her mind lets go of all the morbid thoughts it had been circulating. Her mind clears, but the gut niggles are the last of her symptoms to leave, and it takes another six hours before she feels the butterflies finally fly off to take residence elsewhere and her visits to the toilet lessen.
Does this scenario sound familiar?
To many of you, it will. It’s a classic example of how our mind and body health is intricately intertwined and how physical symptoms can be exacerbated or caused by a stress response in our body.
The very first stress symptom? Our thinking. Like gasoline to a fire, perseverating, jumping to conclusions, catastrophizing, and every kind of “symptom-thinking” greatly increases our body’s stress ante.
While this particular woman may not have a gut disorder that is present enough to hold an official diagnosis, statistics tell us that you, dear reader, very well may have your own digestive issues.
Gastrointestinal diseases are known to affect an estimated 60 to 70 million Americans annually.
Left unattended, those symptoms this woman has experienced may eventually grate on until an underlying condition does develop.
The catch lies in the fact that if our stress level can affect the healthy mortal and give them gut distress, what does it do to those of us who already have an underlying gut issue?
The answer is: Wreak havoc.
And make no mistake friends, the stress response in our body that occurs when our sympathetic drive peaks like Mount Kilimanjaro is not only asking our gastrointestinal system out to dance. It loves to rumba and tango with our blood pressure, anxiety level, heart rate, endocrine system, and every other area of our health.
Having been diagnosed with a serious inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) several years ago, I personally have experienced that of which I speak and have also spoken with many cohorts and clients who have travailed this terrain.
My illness first showed itself as an entire life of right-sided dull pain. An ache. Periodic. Not well defined. At my gynecologist visits, I would mention it and they would start heading toward my right ovary.
A couple years before my diagnosis, having such a persistent reoccurring ache, I said to myself: This has to be something, and I may never find out what, unless it rears its ugly head and formally introduces itself.
That time came in 2009 when, during a particularly stressful time, I became acutely ill, losing 15 pounds in one week, in acute pain, extremely fatigued, with hips that were excruciatingly sore. I had a medical background and a physician for a husband. Being diagnosed with a serious inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) was the last thing we imagined.
But, come to think of it, that woman in the above scenario? She had been shades of me at times in my life.
Sparing you a play by play, when the big event hit, I was started on steroids, then IV treatments. At the same time, I sought out a Naturopath who was of the kind but clueless variety, having no experience with my particular variety of IBD. But I did get a lot of supplements and dietary suggestions thrown at me.
Finally, motivated to look as healthy as possible for a move overseas, I conducted my own research for options to treat my symptoms. Six years and boat loads of stress later, I have remained off meds for that same period of time and follow the map my body lays out for what I need in the moment.
Here are the primary tools that have worked for me:
  1. Breathwork: Conscious even breathing throughout the day and periods of utilizing a technique HeartMath calls “quick coherence,” with a routine 10 minutes of practice, morning and night. Simple. Three easy steps. Effective for resetting autonomic balance.
    ~
  2. Probiotic: Good bugs our gut needs because our modern lives have done an effective job destroying them. Especially if we are germaphobes. Even my specialist MD recommended a probiotic.
    ~
  3. Adjusting diet: My first step in my natural approach to my recovery was to strictly adhered to the Specific Carbohydrate Diet (SCD) because I found so many success stories of people much more severe than I going med free after introducing this way of eating. Since thenthe autoimmune paleo protocol has gotten huge and is very similar. The website’s name may fool you, but the mom responsible for this website is a research scientist who has used this for herself as well. She has a great book out, and I found her information invaluable.
    ~
  4. Fancy words: cognitive behavioral therapy. Real words: Keeping my thoughts based in reality and in the moment and challenging them when they start trying to run my life in a negative fashion.
    ~
  5. Mindfulness. I couldn’t be happier to be living in a time when there are unlimited resources on this topic. Early in my professional and professional journey there were not, and Jon Kabat-Zinn is who brought the topic out of the closet for me and whose work I studied and put into practice. Imagine me waxing lyrical on this topic, but read him. He rocks it home.
    ~
  6. Yoga and movement. My “dis-ease” is an inflammatory process and does not stop at my gut. Movement and stretching is ever so helpful. For me, yoga that is heavy on stretching the spirit and gentle on my body is the kind for me. (Note to self: Start noticing if you are having other inflammatory processes that accompany your gut flares, such as joint stiffness and soreness.)
    ~
  7. Balance. I know. The word is overused, isn’t it? But the delicate juggling of my spirituality, physical health, relationships, and overall well-being is a never ending game of life-Jenga, and I only aim to prevent collapse as much as possible. Of course, I fail frequently, but the fall is gentler because of an ongoing practice for balance.
    ~
  8. Embrace healthThink of yourself as healthy rather than ill. It is so easy to let my thinking attribute every symptom that ever occurs to my previously diagnosed condition. I have to stop and remind myself that it is not unusual to not feel 100 percent at times and assess my needs. If I spiral into overanalyzing every less than perfect symptom I have, my sympathetic drive will soon be revving in high speed with a guaranteed amping up of the underlying condition and causing other symptoms.
    ~
  9. Control your thoughts. Choose an inner dialogue that includes the concept, “I am inherently healthy,” rather than constantly feeding yourself negatives and creating an illness-identity: “I have _____.” Stop yourself when you notice your thoughts trying to predict the future, jumping to conclusions, and otherwise causing you stress.
Consider prioritizing yourself and maintaining an ongoing self-care practice that addresses mind, body, and spirit.
In my work with clients dealing with medical issues, the link between the mind and body has become irrefutable. Not to negate the need for addressing all areas of our health, but addressing our stress-full thinking, I believe, is the number one thing we can do for health enhancement.
Where our mind goes, our body follows.
~
~
~
Author: Becky Aud-Jennison

10 ways to Choose Happiness Now.



“Happiness is not something you get in life, happiness is something that you bring to life.” ~ Wayne Dyer
~

Happiness is not a one-time achievement, it takes constant effort.

When was the last time you felt truly happy? When was the last time you noticed yourself smiling for no reason? When was the last time your heart was full of gratitude and bliss? When was the last time you chose to let go and be truly happy?
My work toward achieving happiness is an ongoing process. Sometimes I succeed and sometimes I falter. More often than not, it’s a task to climb out of the black hole you have just dropped into and get back to your life. The key is not to give up.
What if I told you that you could choose happiness, not just at this moment or this year but always? Are you ready to embark on a roller coaster ride of happiness?

Here are some suggestions to start your journey:

1. DetachMany of us carry expectations and make our happiness dependent on them. Problems arise when we don’t get things we expected and we choose to mope over what went wrong and not focus what we already have.

2. Give and receive. Do you help someone thinking that the favour will be reciprocated? Give and share what you can with no strings attached. Receive openly, accept thanks and compliments you receive with openness. Give your time, love, and affection, and you’ll be surprised at how much comes back to you.
3. Appreciate yourself. Allow yourself to make mistakes. You’re human and you are bound to make mistakes and learn from them. Give yourself some love on a daily basis. Take time to do something you love, pursue a hobby, or spend quiet time in nature. Every day, write a note to yourself, listing positive qualities and telling yourself how awesome you are.
4. Connect with nature. There is something therapeutic about connecting with nature, a long walk in the woods, soaking in the sunlight, walking on the beach, or just sitting in the garden and connecting with the greenery around you. Nature is full of energy. Focus on how your body feels when you are in nature.
5. Be in the moment. We are so busy lamenting about the past and fretting about the future that we forget to live in the moment. Before we realise it, the present becomes yesterday. Learn to live in the moment; there is nothing that you can change in your past and we don’t know what the future holds. Enjoy the now.
6. Love yourself. Don’t let those beauty magazines make you feel ugly or fat. The key to loving yourself is accepting yourself the way you are. Your imperfections should not be berated. You are as pretty and beautiful as you believe yourself to be.
7. Practice gratitude. Sometimes when I’m in a phase where everything seems to be falling apart or not going as planned, I realize that it is so easy to complain, but when you live with gratitude, things can magically change. Have you ever tried it?
8. Get inspired daily. Sometimes this is through a quote that I’ve read or a passage from a book that inspires me. I also visit my favourite websites, and they often provide me with the inspiration to realize and accept how beautiful my life is.
9. Focus on the good. An interesting conversation with a friend made me realise how important it was to focus on the good. When you see the goodness, not just in yourself, but also in others, it is true that you begin to focus and see all that is good around you. Try it for a day, a week, or a fortnight, and you will notice how easy it is to focus on the good and chuck out the bad.
10. Practice self-care. Every day. Self-care makes you feel loved. Focus on your wellness and make time for yourself. Walk or run in nature. Meditate. Do what you love and don’t forget to love what you do! Do all that you need to rev up your mind, body, and spirit.

Last but not the least, love yourself, appreciate yourself and be kind to yourself. Be the person you’ve always wanted to be. Let your inner light be your guide.
Meditate often, choose happiness over anger—and gratitude over resentment. Make a list of all the things that make you happy and focus on it.
You’ll find happiness is more easily attained than you imagined it to be.
~
Author: Pratibha Pal

The Quote








The road of life twists and turns and no two directions are ever the same. Yet our lessons come from the journey, not the destination. Don Williams Jr.

Tuesday, 30 May 2017

Suffering


"Every flower must grow through dirt." Author Unknown

Say Yes to Your Spirit is about divinity, love, and beauty, but it also includes suffering. Nobody is going to get out of life alive, and nobody leaves this life without experiencing pain and suffering. My suffering, although not exhaustively, has been from alcoholism; for others it can be divorce, poverty, racism, sexual abuse, sickness-the list is endless.We all suffer in life. But suffering is not the whole story. If we are to move away from victimization, we need to accept this and be prepared to move on. Day follows night; after the rain comes sunshine; better days inevitably follow. Just as the dirt is essential to the flower, so is suffering essential in the molding of the spiritual life.

I thank God for the dirt I can dust away.

NUGGETS OF WISDOM - 110


·        "Though the apostles failed to comprehend much of his teaching, they did not fail to grasp the significance of the charmingly beautiful life he lived with them."
·        Forgive your enemies. Nothing annoys them so much. _Oscar Wilde
·        Do sober what you said you’d do drunk. That will trach you to keep your mopunt shut. – Ernest Hemingway
·        Read stuff that will make you look good if you die in the middle of it. – P.J. O’Rourke
·        Remember that you are absolutely unique. Just like everyone else. – Margaret Mead
·        "Life without liberty is like a body without spirit." - Kahlil Gibran
·        “The most difficult task with which we are presented is to maintain and bring forth love on a daily basis through all of our life experiences. This, my friends, is the main impetus for returning to our school called Earth.”
—James Van Praagh
·        “In recognizing the humanity of our fellow beings, we pay ourselves the highest tribute.”—Thurgood Marshall
·        "Labor, the efforts of design, distinguishes man from the beast, whose exertions are largely instinctive. The necessity for labor is man's paramount blessing."
·        “We don't need to share the same opinions as others, but we need to be respectful.”—Swift Taylor
·        "The soul's spiritual capacity for receptivity determines the quantity of heavenly blessings which can be personally appropriated and consciously realized as an answer to prayer."
·        "An idealist is one who, on noticing a rose smells better than a cabbage, concludes it will also make better soup." H. L. Mencken
·        He who has courage and faith will never perish in misery. – Anne Frank

·        We carry with us the wonders we seek without us. – Sir Thomas Browne

On this day of your life


I believe God wants you to know...
...that the person standing on the mountain top did not
get there by falling.

You have to climb to where you want to go--and you
cannot get there by climbing over others. It is about
climbing with others, side by side, and even pulling
some others up with you.

Are you willing to do that? If you are, you'll get to
that high place, and others will be happy that you're

there--which is what will keep you there.

Psychometry (OM)



Like you, the objects you encounter have stories to tell as the previous owners have left their vibrational imprint.


Because our bodies exude energy, we leave behind a vibrational imprint each time we touch or live in close proximity to an object. These imprints, which may be positive or negative memories, emotions, or impressions, can become part of the history of an item. Like you, the objects you encounter have stories to tell. Psychometry is the natural art of reading an object's history in regard to the people and events it has encountered. The objects we associate with are by no means silent bystanders. A house in which a tragedy has occurred may feel cold or silent, while handling a much loved toy may make you feel good. It is widely believed that all human beings possess psychometric abilities. All objects vibrate at specific frequencies, and psychometry asks only that one tune in to those frequencies.

It is common to learn the art of psychometry by using items such as jewelry or a watch, because these objects spend much of their time in close physical proximity to its owners. Information sensed using psychometry usually has to do with an object's owner and may be related to a location, a feeling, or an event. Emotions tend to be easier to sense, though it can take time and diligence to perfect your psychometric talents. To exercise your psychometric skills, relax and sit in a quiet place with your palms facing upward. Have a friend place one of their treasured possessions in your nondominant hand. Let your mind wander until you receive any impressions. Finally, relate what you have seen, heard, or felt.

By simply by holding an object in your hand or putting it to your forehead, you can sense an object's past and vicariously experience the emotions, sounds, tastes, scents, or images that have transpired around it thus far. While psychometry is most often performed on small objects intimately connected to its owners, it is possible for humans to leave an imprint on a large object like a home or automobile and to receive impressions from these objects. Once you know an object's story, you can release it of its memories or marvel at the wealth of information cradled within.

On control

Controlling. 


I have several methods of controlling, however the one I use most is being a people pleaser. I try to please people so I can make them be nice to me because I was pleasing them. So I keep trying and trying and doing what I think they will like. 

I also try to control by actions. This is more with my addict spouse. When he isn't going for his meetings or therapy I start to act hostile towards him. Hoping that my hostility will make him change his mind . Usually it doesn't work then I result to shaming him and remind him about all he has done and playing the victim. If it doesn't work then I resort to threats. Usually they don't work and then I go back to rescuing. Suddenly being nice and trying to convince nicely. 

So in summary my control methods are people pleasing, hostility, threats and rescuing/victimising. 

It's crazy that I keep doing them over and over again despite the fact that it has never worked, 



Suzy Jay.  

ESH always welcome

Six Big Life Lessons I Learned from Maya Angelou.



The first time I heard of Maya Angelou was in my eighth grade English class.

We read I Know Why The Caged Bird Sings, Angelou’s most famous and widely read memoir, and I was completely blown away by this book. I thought, “Finally, I’m not alone.”
Like Angelou, I was a child who’d been traumatized, scared, uprooted. Like her, I was a little girl who loved to read, and who was, largely, silent for many years because of the pain I’d endured when I was very young.
After reading the book, I continued to count Angelou as a hero of mine. I read every work of hers that I could get my hands on, and never missed an episode of “Oprah” when she was a guest. Years later, as an adult, I got to see Angelou speak in person at an event in Atlanta—it was life changing.
I came to see Angelou as a sort of distant, wise grandmother and guru, who I’d never actually met, and although I didn’t know her personally (I wish!), her stories, poems, and television appearances taught me so many important life lessons. Here are just a few:
  1. When you know better, you do better. The original quote is, “I did then what I knew how to do. Now that I know better, I do better.” But the message is the same. This is a quote about forgiveness—forgiveness of ourselves and of others. Speaking these words has helped me let go of past hurts. They help me feel compassion for others and for myself.
    ~
    Sometimes the people in our lives couldn’t take care of us, or be there for us the way we needed, or love us better because they simply didn’t know how at the time. They did the best they could. The same goes for ourselves. I’ve made some terrible mistakes in my life. I’ve done stupid things in the past, but when I look back it was because I was doing all I knew how to at the time. Now that I am older and have learned more, I can do better and forgive myself for past errors.
    ~
  2. Quiet people can find a voice through writing. I was always painfully shy. Even as an adult, I am extremely introverted and avoid large groups of people, especially if I’ll be asked to speak. But I truly shine when I’m at my keyboard. My truest voice comes out in my writing—this is the revelation I had when I was 13 and read I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings. Quiet doesn’t mean stupid. There are other ways to speak loudly than with our mouths. My voice resounds from my fingertips.
    ~
  3. “People will forget what you said. People will forget what you did, but people will never forget how you made them feel.” These words continue to resonate with me. I have social anxiety and can dwell on some awkward thing I did for years after, replaying it over and over in my head. But Angelou is right. People always forget the specifics, yet they remember the feeling. When I get anxious about saying the wrong thing, I switch my mindset and focus on how I can make others feel. I stop thinking about myself and how I’m going to come off, and start thinking about how I can best make the people around me feel loved, cared for, accepted, included, and validated.
    ~
  4. “You can only become truly accomplished at something you love. Don’t make money your goal. Instead, pursue the things you love doing, and then, do them so well that people can’t take their eyes off of you.” I had a hard time as an adult finding a career path that suited me. I loved one thing—writing. But this seemed like an unrealistic goal, so I thought I should do something more practical. Yet every time I tried to do something else, I was miserable. Finally, in grad school, I switched my major to Creative Writing. After that, because I was working hard every day on what I most loved, everything else fell into place. I may not have the six-figure fortune of a doctor or a lawyer, but the success I’ve had in writing and in teaching adults has brought me priceless joy.
    ~
  5. Words mean something. When I went to see Angelou speak in Atlanta, she dedicated a large amount of her lecture to explaining how we must always use our words for the highest good in every situation. Words have energy. Words can hurt or they can elevate us, collectively. She spoke extensively about recoding words, like the N-word, and how that was a bad thing. Vile words cannot be made good regardless of context, she believed. Words have histories and lives and spirits. Use them carefully, mindfully, and with good intentions at all times, because language is unbelievably powerful.
    ~
  6. How to make the world’s greatest banana pudding. Here is the link to the recipe, courtesy of O, The Oprah Magazine. Try it—it is truly transcendent.
Angelou was truly one of the great voices of her generation, of her community, and of the entire human race. She was an enormous inspiration in my life, and I will always be thankful for her wisdom, her beautiful words, and the sacrifices she made in her life to learn lessons that would benefit us all.
May her beautiful memory live on forever.

~
Author: Victoria Fedden

The Art of Loving Loneliness.



For all the lonely hearts:
Loneliness only has power over us when we go to great lengths to avoid her. Facing her can be incredibly painful at first. And then it becomes beautiful. Both are true. These words are for me, they are for you, they are for us—to hold close to our chests as we navigate those raw rivers of loneliness that can hurt so much. Because we can find gems there. Solace, too. And the most tender, unexpected bravery.
~
It is 7 p.m. The air is stagnant and heavy, breezeless, begging for rain. The trees are still and thirsty. My temples throb with anticipation and a feeling of anxiety.
It is 7 p.m. The loneliness is so big I swear it could swallow me whole.
Were evenings always this long, this drawn-out, this empty?
Were the moments always stretched so thin, a frayed eternity packed in a single second? 

My voice is low, a hoarse whisper, as I ask these questions aloud, in increasingly begging tones. The tears come now, as darkness slowly falls on the horizon, like a curtain—and I long for the scraping gravel sound of your car pulling up. Then my heart could do happy flip-flops, instead of throbbing with this lead-like heaviness.
My skin seems to stretch out, as though it’s waiting for your kisses, for every ounce of me remembers the tender, salty touch of your lips.
I am hungry. Not for food, after all, I just ate dinner, but for love—your love. I am hungry to be touched by your hands and loved by your lips. It is a hunger I walk around with daily. It has embossed my face, it’s a parched spot in my aura—a deep hunger I cannot satiate.
It’s 7 p.m. Saturday night. I wish we could be together at the river having a picnic, talking about everything, and eating dried mangoes.
I look down at my phone, like maybe it’s an oracle, like it could give me all the answers—searching. Searching. I search for something. But I come up with nothing. Just wishing I had the courage to text you the three words that seem like the scariest things to admit to myself, let alone to you—I miss you. 
But I can’t do that.
Instead, I slip into a bubble bath, the steam and lavender oil eating away a big chunk of this gaping feeling in my chest, like there’s a giant crater where you used to be.
Because, I think, as the bubbles reach up to my chin, if I did reach out to, I would want it to be because I love you. Not just because I’m lonely.
And do I know the difference yet?
Not quite.
So silence sings between us, save for the few texts of arranging when you’ll pick up your things. And I really thought this parting of ways would be so much easier. I didn’t think it would hurt this much.
It’s all the things my mind can’t figure out. It’s all the whys and hows and wondering—will it maybe work out at some point? It’s all the nagging questions and non-answers that drive me nuts.
A neighbor knocks on my door, the rhythmic sound jolts me out of my thought-filled reverie, but I don’t answer.
I’m fresh out of the bath, naked, crying on the bed, and I don’t want anyone to see me. I don’t want to speak, for my lips can’t move, only my fingers reach to type. I hide in these words like they are the thick, soft bosom of a nurturing mother.
I’m so lonely, but I need to find my way through this.
That’s the truth.
My mind races again, cycling predictably—did I give up too easily? What happened between us? Why did everything spoil and turn sour?
But the thoughts lead nowhere.
I don’t want to think.
I want to simply be.
So I breathe in, and do what feels so brave—I don’t call you. I don’t call anyone. I could, but I know that’s not what I need.
I expand into this thing called loneliness.
Slowly, awkwardly, one inch at a time, I explore the vastness of her edges. And as I do, I realize she isn’t so scary. She’s quiet, oddly peaceful, full of these words, ripe with fruits of fragrant possibility, and little sparks of all the things I didn’t know I could do…
I expand into loneliness. I steep in her, like tea.
The result is breathtaking. Shocking, too.
I expect it to feel terrible, upsetting, and harsh, like getting my eyebrows waxed—but I feel held. Courage blooms from the growing softness in my heart. Plumes of fire are born of plush tenderness. My whole body relaxes, for I didn’t realize how tired I was.
I face tonight alone.
And I didn’t know I was scared to be alone, but maybe we all are sometimes—and that’s okay. Let us dive right into the fear. Let us not avoid it, because that only gives it power. And as always, once we face fear, even by just voicing it—it becomes infinitely less scary.
I sit boldly in the lap of this alone—unfolding into her, like a lotus flower blooming one petal at a time.
Stillness comes over me. 
I melt deeper. My bones become silk. And even though in moments my heart still beats so hard it feels like it could smash into smithereens—I find that I do this alone rather well. I’m not bad at being alone. I just rarely give myself the chance to practice.
So practice I do.
I plunge into this spaciousness—to explore the mystery of me…
All the hot, spinning galaxies I am, all the truths and stories and heartbreaks that are packed inside me. And it feels really empowering.
I navigate what felt impossible just moments ago…I rest in the arms of loneliness.
Immense freedom comes over me, in a shiver, in a feeling of excitement and expansion. 
Yes. There is immense freedom in this.
Self-reverence.
Trust.
Celebration.
Loneliness wraps around me like a robe. And it is not empty or barren—it becomes sacred. Luscious in its own, strange wonderful way.
“This time is just for you,” loneliness whispers.
“This time is just for me,” I repeat, the words dripping into me like a prayer. It is my space to heal. To feel. To be.
Maybe this is the thing I’ve fought so hard for—to simply sit with myself. And feel peace in the midst of chaos and “not knowing” that is life.
For is that not life-changing in itself?  
And on this night that I thought would spread before me, long and endless—the most unexpected thing happens—I fall in love with loneliness.
I part her veil, and she slips inside of me.
“Tell me all your secrets,” I beg. But she is quiet. There are no questions. There are no answers. There is just this. The royal weightlessness of being. I paint upon her canvas with the shakiness of my breath.
I become more quiet.
For once, I don’t need to do a thing.
There is nothing to figure out. Struggle becomes irrelevant. 
Loneliness changes faces; she becomes not spikes, not a monstrous entity, not the thing I’ve tried so hard to avoid—but a safe place to rest my weary heart.
She becomes sacred space. A net of holiness.
She becomes a deepened connection with myself. For it is only from this satiated place of soul-deep self-connection that I can connect with others in a healthy way.
I kiss loneliness, and she is not sharp or bitter. She is not poison. She is soft, smelling of a thousand pink roses picked from my mother’s garden. She is sweetness. The luscious pause I didn’t know I needed to take.
And on this night, I fall in love with loneliness.
She becomes the cornerstone of my practice.
I open to receive her blessings, even the sadness.
And I am left speechless.
I don’t need anyone to fill this space. I don’t need anyone to fill the hole inside of me. I need not even fill it with my own worries. It is mine to bask in. To heal into. And even, to love.
Silence reigns. Simplicity just is. Freedom drips everywhere.
I am just here, with my Self.
Everything is now. And none of my problems or pains are fixed, but I don’t need them to be…
Because this. Just this. 
Fresh joy permeates.
And I am left speechless.
This alone is perfect in a way that nothing ever has been.
It is pure, untouchable by logic or mind.
It is art.
It is love…
The song of silent solitude draped graciously in my heart.
~
Author: Sarah Harvey