inner peace

Why Wait to Pause and Pivot

I was recently inspired by this post on Facebook from writer and author, Linda Hoye

“It’s become this thing we think we need to do. Pivot.

In effect: keep going, but change direction.

But what if pivoting only leads us farther away from where we want to go?

What if the wiser course is to pause. Pay attention. Ask hard questions. Listen. Set a course we don’t need to pivot to stay on. Or at the very least pivot with intention.”

I’ve had my moments, just like anyone else, of feelings of fear, helplessness, and frustration. Yesterday was such a day, though it was more frustration than anything.

It was nearing 5 pm last night when I was feeling just tired of it all, wondering when all the shaming, blaming, and hate will end.

I felt called to light some candles in my living room but hesitated. Normally I only reserve doing that for the weekends or special occasions.

Why?

Wait until tomorrow to do that which comforts me? Wait to practice a good dose of self-care?

I’ve been all about the Pause for quite a few years now – thanks to the teachings of so many dear animal friends I shared my life with. But yet, at times, I forget.

What really stood out to me that Linda wrote is to pivot with intention.

And the way in which to best do that is to pause. And yes, really listen. What was I really feeling frustrated about? Something of which I can’t control which is the action of others and that can sometimes elicit fear in me.

But I can create my own inner world of peace. And that is the pivot I intentionally chose to make.

And the way in which I felt called to begin to create that peace was to light my candles and sit on my couch and call upon remembering all the many blessings I have.

In this case, pivot with awareness to what could change the course of my frustration brought me back home to a safe place in my heart and also literally as I sat in the safe sanctuary of my home where I could make the choice of how I wanted to feel.

Wishing you light and peace for your heart too…

xo,

Barbara

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Radically Accepting Ourselves

Radically Accepting Ourselves

It’s been many years now that I’ve been striving toward really accepting myself as I am. This past fall as I went through the personal mastery level of Oracle School, it was the term ‘radical acceptance’ that was brought up often.

Accepting ourselves for who we are in any given moment. Stopping the harsh inner judgement. Loving ourselves with all our flaws and learning to not live within our story, but to take the lessons learned, leaving the story behind, and taking only the positive nuggets of wisdom gained.

January 3rd I’ll continue this journey by going through the INvision Process which is more about reprogramming the subconscious mind and living a unique and inspired life, not only for myself, but to also to guide others do the same.

So when I came across this article written by Anne Lamott it really spoke to me as we get ready to begin a New Year and going on a diet is the #1 thing most set as a goal.

I truly appreciate Anne’s perspective. I no longer weigh myself (can’t even remember the last time I did and I don’t own a scale). But this conditioning of how we eat and what it is all about is something I’m still a work in progress with, though I’m happy to say I feel like I’ve made positive leaps and bounds with it over the years…though yes, I still have my moments, too. But I’ve found that the more I work on my inner world, the more peace I find with who I am, and the more, by default, I want to put into my body, and do for my body, what is good for it.

So I share this from author Anne Lamott….

We need—I need— to have the same little talk we have every year at this time:

I know you are planning to start a diet on Monday, January 1st, I used to start diets, too. I hated to mention this to my then-therapist. She would say cheerfully, ” Oh, that’s great, honey. How much weight are you hoping to gain?”

I got rid of her sorry ass. No one talks to ME that way.

Well, okay, maybe it was ten years later, after she had helped lead me back home, to myself, to radical self-care, to friendship with my own heart, to a glade that had always existed deep inside me, to mostly healthy eating, but that I’d avoided all those years by achieving, dieting, binging, people-pleasing, and so on.

Now when I decide to go on a diet, I say it to myself: “Great, honey. How much weight are you hoping to gain?” Here is what’s true: diets make you fat. 95% of the time. We gain it back, plus 5 lbs.

I may have mentioned several hundred times that I have had the tiniest, tiniest struggle with food and body image for the last–well, life time. Hardly worth mentioning. It is a long story, having to do with childhood injuries to my sense of self, terrible anxiety, and the inability of my parents to nurture my soul: so starving and chastising myself cannot possibly heal this. I hate to say it, but only profound self-love will work, union with that scared breath-holding self, and not a diet that forbids apples, or avocado. Horribly, but as usual, only kindness and grace–spiritual WD-40–can save us.

Can you put the scale away for a week? Okay, then how about 4 days? I have been addicted to the scale, too, which is like needing Dick Cheney to weigh in every morning on my value as a human being. Can you put away your tight pants, that don’t actually hurt you? Wear forgiving pants! The world is too hard as it is, without letting your pants have an opinion on how you are doing. I struggle with enough esteem issues without letting my jeans get in on the act, with random thoughts about my butt.

By the same token, it feels great to be healthy. Some of you need to be under a doctor’s care. None of you need to join Jenny Craig. It won’t work. You will lose tons of weight quickly, and gain it all back, plus five. Some of you need to get outside and walk for half an hour a day. I do love walking, so that is not a problem for me, but I have a serious problem with sugar: if I start eating it, I sometimes can’t stop. I don’t have an off switch, any more than I do with alcohol. Given a choice, I will eat Raisinets until the cows come home–and then those cows will be tense, and bitter, because I will have gotten lipstick on the straps of their feed bags.

But you crave what you eat, so if I go for 3 or 4 days with very little sugar, the craving is gone. That is not dieting. If you are allergic to peanuts, don’t eat peanuts. Have an apple! Have some avocado.

It’s really okay, though, to have (or pray for) an awakening around your body. It’s okay to stop hitting the snooze button, and to pay attention to what makes you feel great about yourself, one meal at a time. Unfortunately, it’s yet another inside job. If you are not okay with yourself at 185, you will not be okay at 150, or even 135. The self-respect and peace of mind you long for is not out there. It’s within. I hate that. I resent that more than I can say. But it’s true.

Maybe some of us can try to eat a bit less, and walk a bit more, and make sure to wear pants that do not hurt our thighs or our feelings. Drinking more water is the solution to all problems. Doing a three minute meditation every day will change your life. Naps are nice.

I’ll leave you with this: I’ve helped some of the sturdier women at my church get healthy, by suggesting they prepare each meal as if they had asked our beloved pastor to lunch or dinner. They wouldn’t say, “Here Pastor–let’s eat standing up in the kitchen. This tube of barbecue Pringles is all for you. i have my own.” And then stand there gobbling from their own tubular container. No, they’d get out pretty dishes, and arrange wonderful foods on the plates, and set one plate before Veronica at the table, a plate filled with love, pride and connection. That’s what we have longed for, our whole lives, and get to create, now, or on the 1st. Wow!

Join me in not starting a diet January 1st. And God bless you all real good, as my pastor always says.

Moments of Serenity through Creativity

Moments of Creativity through Serenity

I had such a meaningful discussion with my friend Rachel, this past week. She and I are co-creating some workshops we will be offering this year. The wisdom that comes from this young woman in her early 30s just fills my heart with hope for our world.

Whenever we get together we have deep conversations, which feed both our souls in such a positive and nourshing way.  We were talking about how there are many ways to find moments of serenity. But so many get stuck thinking inner peace has to be this or that way or that there is a right or wrong way, or it is strictly only when one tries to meditate…and then people quit if they thinking they are really meditating because thoughts run through their mind.

But I’ve come to realize even more the many ways in which inner peace or moments of serenity happen for me. One of which is writing. When I write, I’m in a different place. Even if it is something difficult to write about, I lose all sense of time and the space I’m within.

I’m realizing it also happens when I’m doing other creative things, such as creating SoulCollage® cards or just this week, working on chalk painting a piece of furniture I was gifted. The photo above is after shot of the finished piece.  I also chalk painted the mirror which was white before. Below is the before.

I’ll bet if you think about something creative you do, or time you spend out in nature, if you really think about it those are times when you easily lose sense of time.

Just something to give thought to next time you do something nurturing for you soul, pay attention to how you feel afterwards.  

It’s not always about sitting cross-legged in complete silence and meditating for a half hour – though there is something quite powerful about that if you can achieve it. I’ve not yet achieved thirty minutes as ten to fifteen minutes is tops for me. But there are days when the alarm on my phone rings and my mediation is done when I think, wow, that was absolutely delightful. Where was I? And of course, then I want more, more, more.

And more serenity I truly believe can be found in creativity, nature, and spending time with animals, just to name a few.

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