Monday, 30 November 2020

Nobility

 


When a man has pity on all living creatures, then only is he noble. -Gautama Buddha

I saw a man on the freeway putting himself at risk to save a runaway dog. Occasionally, I see a lady in my local park feeding the ducks. When I'm at the airport I occasionally observe a blind person being helped by a guide dog. Love, concern, and trust are all aspects of Say Yes to Your Spirit. And none of this is complicated. The above stories that include animals are all everyday experiences. None of them are complicated theory. Rather they represent feelings. They are an emotional response to life. Nobility is demonstrating love as a response to the many happenings in our life. It is the love dance. - Leo Booth

Today I am able to appreciate the creatures who share our planet.

On this day of your life


I believe God wants you to know ...

 

... that imagination is your greatest gift. Do not be afraid

to use it.

 

Imagine yourself as being okay right now. Totally okay.

Imagine yourself as Whole, Complete, and Perfect. With

nothing to change, nothing to "improve."

 

Imagine your heart as being open again, your life as if it

were starting over in the most important ways. 

Can you imagine this? 

 

Then you have just created Tomorrow.

The Excruciating Miracle of Letting Go: 30 Ways to Open Ourselves up to Abundance.

 

The Excruciating Miracle of Letting Go: 30 Ways to Open Ourselves up to Abundance.

Gripping tight onto what you have with the fear of losing it will block you from receiving the gifts of massive abundance waiting for you.

Learning this one law of the universe can change your life.

Allowing change, embracing the pivot, seeing the opportunity being presented to you, and opening yourself to the possibilities—these are game-changing ways to shift the energy.

And you can begin the shift right now. 

“Start decluttering,” my coach said. “Do the underneath space below your bed, your closets, and your countertops,” she continued. “And don’t forget your stovetop!” 

I embraced the habit of physical decluttering with a vengeance after I met her, well into my 40s. Even after Marie Kondo’s book came out, and then the TV show, sparking joy was not on my to-do list at first. At least in terms of the crap cluttering up my closets and junk drawers. Not to mention the thoughts in my head about what was happening in my marriage and my business. 

After my divorce, I walked around my cluttered house looking at things that reminded me of the last 20 years, and I just felt overwhelmed. What are the kids going to think if I get rid of that? My mind was as cluttered as my spaces. I worked on that part though, in my journals, day after day.

“I write to Feng Shui my soul.” I used that line on my website, in workshops, and in my email signature. I felt the power of it. 

And yet there was about a year’s worth of crap to get rid of in my house. Oh, let’s not forget the business I was running out of my home. The business I kept looking at as my bread-and-butter after the child support ran out. Those mortgage-paying dollars were hard to let go of. It would take a pandemic. If only that was as easy as a trip to Goodwill.

“You better smell the smoke before your house burns down.” Another gem from the same coach a couple of years ago. She was a psychic coach who already gently warned me over the past year that my marriage was stopping my flow. 

What did I do about that knowing? I smelled the smoke and attempted to ignore it until I was crawling on the floor trying to find that one-inch layer of air they promised on those Stop-Drop-and-Roll videos, and finally realized there was none left. The chest pains were a clue. 

But what if…

When thoughts begin with those three words, it’s a huge awareness that you’re about to self-sabotage your way into Hell. 

I had a long list of what-ifs. And it was hell until I learned to pause the mental clutter, just like I’d mastered clearing out the physical clutter. It took me a year in the house: first the closets, each bedroom, then the attic, and finally the garage. I can now park two cars in the garage, thank you very much. 

The mental habit of cluttering my system with worst-case scenarios and fear of what might happen was more difficult. Letting go of lifelong thoughts, beliefs, habits, and all of who I was was, well, excruciating. 

And it was the biggest miracle of my life. 

I’ve learned that letting go makes room for miracles. This especially includes letting go of the labels you think define you. Over my lifetime, those labels included: athlete, straight-A student, college grad, wife, mother, physical therapist, business owner, black belt, daughter, sister, and friend. And it definitely included letting go of jobs, careers, activities, and people who didn’t help me feel like a better person anymore. 

I’ve learned that the fear I conjure up during the times I sit around and think about letting go and making those changes is by far much worse than actually making the move. When I take the action with the feeling of fear and get over on the other side of that decision, it’s never truly as bad as I thought it might be. In fact, amazing things begin to happen when I open myself up like that. 

Not just okay things. Amazing things. 

I chose the “physical therapist” role a long, long time ago—when I was 16 years old. Letting go of that role and label this past year—as I embraced the huge pivot I was faced with when COVID-19 hit and shut down my practice—was the best thing I could have done. It took me four years. I’m not sure I would have done it on my own. When faced with no clients, I embraced “wellness book publisher” with a mighty fierceness. I opened to my intuition, my connection with my inner guide, and the possibility I could continue to live out my purpose by sharing brave words and helping others do the same. I had already been doing it. This was just the shove off the cliff. Who knew…I did have the wings. 

The universe had my back this year. I had super-powered wings. 

I chose “wife” a long time ago too. When I began smelling the smoke in my relationship, I ignored it until the universe had to get my attention—the hard way. The miracle of being on my own, having to get my sh*t in order, taking care of myself and my kids, and finding out who I am and what I’m made of…well, I consider that to be one of the “life black belts” I’ve earned. That black belt was harder than the nine-hour exam I passed for my actual belt. But it was the mental discipline I learned over those years of martial arts training that came through when it mattered in my life. I learned to let go of thoughts that don’t serve me and focus on those that do. 

So when life presents the changes, the struggles, the problems, the seemingly impossible moments, I see opportunities for awareness, for letting go, for surrender, for curiosity, for learning. And for miracles. 

I don’t dwell on what-ifs anymore. I feel into the uncertainty, and I sit and wait for the miracle. 

Letting go can be physical, and it’s for sure mental. And that whole process is all spiritual. The mind-body-spirit tool of letting go of something good for something better begins with the awareness and then ends with whatever the thing is you need to let go of—thought, belief, husband, job, career, pair of pants that’s two sizes too small…

Just let go.

Here are 30 ways to do that: 

1. Let go of your extra sh*t. 

2. Clean the clutter from your house. 

3. Clear your mind of what-ifs. 

4. Clear your mind of what you think you know. 

5. Let go of who you think you are. 

6. Let go of what you’re making the reality of your present moment mean. 

7. Clean up your bad habits. 

8. Let go of any piece of clothing you haven’t worn in a year. 

9. Let go of jealousy.

10. Let go of “meh” and align with joy. 

11. Let go of broken, cracked, torn, or worn out things. 

12. Let go of things you don’t really love. 

13. Let go of people who don’t respect you. 

14. Let go of jobs that make you feel miserable. 

15. Let go of being right.

16. Let go of the opinions of others that don’t help you evolve.

17. Let go of the disappointments, the grudges, the regrets.

18. Release the need to be perfect. 

19. Let go of mediocre attempts. 

20. Let go of trying. 

21. Release the need for approval. 

22. Clear your entryways, doorways, hallways, and corners.

23. Clean your workspaces, cooking spaces, and living spaces. 

24. Clear your mind of negativity. 

25. Let go of relationships that don’t help you feel like a better person. 

26. Let go of people who don’t believe in you. 

27. Let go of judgments about others.

28. Let go of caring what others think about you. 

29. Release the need to fix people. 

30. Let go of old, unhelpful, limiting beliefs. 

What else do you need to let go of? When you let go and open up the spaces in your mind, and your environment, you’ll shift and open the energy flow. You’ll create a space for what you desire to flow to you. The universe will notice your hands are open. You’ll set the stage for the miracle.  


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4 Ways to Manage our Emotions & Hold Space for Ourselves.

 

4 Ways to Manage our Emotions & Hold Space for Ourselves.

I never really knew how to hold space for myself.

I always felt like I was constantly being battered and beaten by my emotional nature ever since I was a kid. I would get into stupid, childish fights with my family members, and they would always say, “Stop being so sensitive.”

I would cry and feel defeated—it felt like they won the fight because they didn’t get emotional, whereas I did. As a child, I felt like my emotions made me a weak loser; as a result, I felt lonely and misunderstood. 

Our current society is scared of the emotional world. So many people are numbing out with their TV, drugs, alcohol, and other addictions just to avoid feeling what’s really going on on their inside.

Emotions are energy in motion. They come to us for a reason. They are alive, and they communicate important messages to us about what is really going on and what needs to be understood. Most people don’t want to deal with them, so they shut them off.

When we shut off our emotions, they enter our bodies and can manifest into physical body aches, pains, and chronic illnesses that could even kill us. We were born on this earth to feel and stay in the cosmic space as energy balls of light and love. 

Emotions communicate what’s going on and what needs to be felt and seen under the surface. They’re an aspect of ourselves that conveys important things to us and is crucial to making sure we live authentic lives and make everyday and important life decisions based on the uncoded messages these emotions are communicating. 

This doesn’t mean we should react to our emotions, and it doesn’t mean we should let them bury us alive. No, it means to slow down, breathe, and connect with the emotion. We want to go into it and build an inquisitive relationship with it.

Take a step back from the reaction the emotion is causing and turn within. Feel the emotion and read the subliminal message it has in store for us. What is it trying to tell us? Sometimes, it’s just an unhealed wound from our childhood that’s coming up to say, “Hi, please see me and just be with this.”

Developing a healthy and conscious practice to allow ourselves to experience our emotions is crucial to our emotional, mental, spiritual, and physical well-being.

Here are four things I like to do when I feel a wave of emotion coming through:

1. Become present with the emotion.

Let’s ask ourselves what we’re feeling, what is happening, and look at it objectively. We should try our best not to judge or criticize what we’re feeling and try to breathe through it. It does hurt, and it does bring other emotions of shame, fear, and vulnerability to the surface, but the important thing is to allow it all to come out without judgement and bring love to it.

Where do we feel the pain in our bodies? Concentrate on that area and allow yourself to feel it—to go numb. Now that we know we are no longer interested in shutting down our emotional centers, we want to focus all our attention on the pain and how it is manifesting in our physical and mental experience.

This process can also be helpful to practice with a journal. Writing the emotions out allows us to get present and also powerfully fuels the introspection of the emotion. 

2. Look at it from a higher perspective.

Once we see the emotion, let’s ask ourselves, “Why has it shown up today? What message is it bringing me?” When we look at everything as if it’s happening for a purpose, we can discover why it’s coming up.

We can start to see the patterns and the lessons coming through, and we begin to move past the pain. We begin to see the higher purpose and the larger vision, which allows the emotion to dissolve. 

3. Integrate the emotion.

Once we begin to feel and understand the emotion and what it has to say to us, we can let it settle and become a part of ourselves in a healthy way.

Imagine we’re in a dark forest and can’t see anything around us. We sense that something is there, but we don’t know what it is, and we’re scared of it. However, once we turn our flashlight on, we see it’s a cute bunny grazing for food. Then we relax and allow it to be a part of our entire environment and experience.

This is what I mean by integrating the emotion. The more we bring awareness and light to it, the more we can allow it to be a part of our conscious experience. Sometimes, I like to do some light tapping on the parts of my body where the emotion is coming up. If it’s in my heart or stomach, I lightly tap it with my fingers.

Tapping the feeling allows us to create a physical and tangible connection with the invisible emotion. Doing so grounds the pain and opens up new layers of healing beyond our mental faculties. 

4. Thank the emotion.

When we show gratitude and give thanks to the emotion for bringing us a new level of healing and integration, we are acknowledging and sending positive energy into our entire experience. It lessens our feelings of shame and fear whenever we allow ourselves to be vulnerable. We create a safe space for ourselves and send out a light frequency that calls in more beautiful healing opportunities. 

When we allow ourselves to feel and bring love into our emotions, we create a safe space for them and begin to view them as gifts rather than fearful, unwanted demons. Then we can bring a whole new level of wholeness and internal peace into our lives.

As we continue working through this process, we will begin to see its long-term effects play out in our lives. The quality of our relationship with ourselves will flourish, our need to control our outer reality will begin to diminish, and our connection with others will strengthen and deepen in intimacy.

Through holding space for ourselves, we inevitably hold space for the world around us as well.

And that is a sacred gift. 

~

 


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