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Wrapping October

Even though it’s pouring today, I’ve so enjoyed this month.  Despite the sadness of losing my dear feline companion Emma I’ve had great, sweeping happy days and nights.

October is a time for regrouping, tending to soil in our gardens and hearts and minds and removing anything that is no longer serving us.  All in preparation for a slower, contemplative winter.

In the days of Internet and electricity and constant connection it’s easy to forget our tie to nature.  The Earth calls us to rest and rejuvenate in Winter.  The deep rest we need requires that we prepare carefully to enjoy our down time.  It calls us to go deep and really reflect on what is most meaningful to us.  Most world religions have a winter ritual that calls for endings and new births.

The endings must happen to allow the birth of energy.

This month I’ve been clearing out old thought patterns and old ways of doing business.  I’ve also been clearing out closets, bookshelves and my diet.  It feels remarkable to see so much that I’ve held onto for so long simply flutter away.

Some things are easier to let go of than others, of course.

I had a bit of fear around ending my incredibly low-priced offerings.  I was afraid that I’d alienate people who needed me.  I knew, intellectually, that raising my rates and phasing out low-ball offerings was a smart business move, but my heart and my head weren’t in it together.  My heart really wants to help everyone.

My life school is SERVICE. 

This means I might be a tad prone to turning myself into a servant if I’m not careful.  When I reflected on this year I realized that I’d been so hell bent on serving everyone that I’d nearly forgotten to serve myself too.

I’ve spent years reminding my clients to take care of themselves and to only serve from a full cup of energy and love, not a depleted, empty shell.  Still, I was doing it myself.

That’s when running your own business pretty much sucks.

My coaches and advisers were doing their best to get me to take my own advice, but I was pretty stubborn.

Finally, in October, everything gelled. 

Maybe it was the shift in the season.  Perhaps it was a culmination of the shifts in the Earth.  I simply needed the time to be right to let go of what wasn’t serving me and my business.

I haven’t made major changes, I’ve shifted.  I’ve created a series of more than 36 intensive, deep learning experiences for students of life and palmistry.  I’ve given up the need to fit everything I do into one tight little box.

When I let go of the little box and the prevailing “rules,” I opened up to birth new ideas and the energy necessary to put them into action.

October is a glorious time of year.  A time to mourn the passing of those beings and things we’ve loved and to reflect on what it will take to create new life in the coming days.

I hope you’ve had a great month too.  I’d love to hear what you’re being called to release – share in the comments, won’t you?

 

 

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The Practical Woo

I’m all about the practical application of the woo.

Light after Darkness
Creative Commons License photo credit: JD | Photography

 

I hear people pontificating about the joys of being woo-woo.

I read people who share their divine inspiration and then qualify it by saying, “but I’m not woo-woo.”

I know people who will think (if not say) “Woo is just the ‘in’ marketing tool of the moment…”

Frankly, I don’t care what you call it.

It’s there.

You are psychic, you are intuitive, you are divinely inspired every single moment of every single day – if you’re awake enough to notice.  (Some days I’m sleeping through the mysteries, but that doesn’t mean they are not there for the asking).

You can call it God, god, Godde, goddess, spirit, angels, universe, The One or Applesauce.  I don’t care.  It’s all part of the woo.

Once upon a time I had a teacher who said she’d never use the term woo-woo in reference to her work – -because she thought it demeaned her and her work.  I took that to heart.  Even though I thought to myself, “What’s wrong with owning your woo?”  (lesson here: always trust your own voice!)

I have a friend who tells me that growing up her family used the phrase “woo-woo” to refer to a female body part.  I admit, that gave me pause and made me rethink the use of the term in reference to my work!

Still, I’m a fan of the woo.

Because I know that when I woo the woo (like what I did there?) good stuff happens.  It’s like a rule or something.  When I step into my woo – I know exactly what specific action to take to get things done.

Things can be:

  • Marketing tasks
  • Writing blog posts
  • Meeting a deadline for the paper
  • Caring for my pets
  • Working with my one-to-one clients
  • Teaching a class
  • Pitching a new idea

You see, my brand of woo is all about taking action.

I don’t sit back on the couch, muttering chants and drinking green tea (frankly I don’t really LIKE green tea although I know it’s good for me) and waiting for the woo to work.

Nope, I go inside to my heart, talk with the woo, ask for some guidance and then I let the woo-ness come to me.  In the meantime though, I go through my day, do my stuff,  knowing that the woo will come through.

And it does.

When it comes through – maybe in an email message someone sends me, perhaps in a tweet that I catch out of the corner of my eye, or a particularly stubborn robin baby on my front stoop – I take action.

For me, woo is my not-so-secret weapon.

I have the amazing ability to help people find their secret weapons too. I use the skill of palmistry to do this.    If you don’t believe in it, it still works (if you take action). That’s the power of my woo.

There are definitely lots of ways I’m woo:

  • I believe in reincarnation,
  • I think about the souls of animals,
  • I talk to animals,
  • I ask trees for their opinions,
  • I believe a walk in nature is the most pure form of “church” there is,
  • I explore many different avenues to get to god,
  • I believe in compassion and love over fear and hate.

All of my woo is about making a practical, positive dent here on planet earth. The woo is there – the question is what do you do with the woo?

What about you?  How do you feel about woo?  What’s your brand/flavor?  Does it help? Does it hurt?  Share with me!

Comments { 6 }

How to Fix a Leaky Faucet (Or whatever is keeping you up at Night)

Stop Noirtion
Creative Commons License photo credit: JTHammond

If you have a problem – say a leaky faucet or a hole in your fence you wouldn’t solve it by ignoring it.  I mean, you could spend every day focusing on the rest of the fence that is sturdy and strong.  You can send gratitude into the Universe for the miracle of modern plumbing, but you’ll still have a hole in your fence and a leaky faucet keeping you up at night 6 months later.

Right?!

So why would you ignore a fear or other nagging concern in your life?

You may not know you’re ignoring it.

You may simply have drank so much LOA kool-aid that you believe that focusing on the fear, or the lack, or the illness will bring you MORE of it.  So you simply bury it.

Right?

I’ve done it too.

I’ve told myself to focus on listing my blessings. The things I truly am grateful for – beautiful dogs, a loving partner, strong thighs, fresh veggies in my garden, blue skies.  All that jazz. And it’s true.  I’m grateful for those things.

But I was actively trying to ignore the fact that my debt was spiraling out of control. I was actively ignoring the fact that my body was not as strong or as healthy as it once was.  I was expending a crap-load of energy on focusing only on the good stuff. And I wasn’t expending nearly enough energy into digging into the problem and taking action to fix it.

No matter the problem – it needs your attention.

And by attention, I mean just that.  I don’t mean obsession.  I don’t mean sob stories.  I don’t mean excuses on why it happened or why it’s everyone else’s fault  – if that’s your MO we should talk about your lower chakras and your insistence on martyrdom and/or playing victim. (and it’s possible that if that’s your inner tape, your life lesson is sitting there on your middle and first fingers).

Giving attention to what is broken is not the same thing as reveling in it.  It simply is a process by which you can start fixing, healing or taking control of what’s not working.

If your faucet wasn’t working you could take a look at it yourself.  Maybe it’s just a washer that needs replacing.  All those nights listening to drip-drip-drip and it’s fixed in a half hour!  Or maybe it’s something more complicated.  You can keep lying awake listening to the dripping or you can call someone with experience and expertise to help you.  Your call.  But the faucet leaking is not some sign that you’re a failure in your life.  That you inherently do not deserve a good night’s sleep.  That the faucet manufacturer and the entire plumbing industry is out to get you, is it?  Didn’t think so.

Why would you think being in debt or in the middle of an unsatisfying relationship or stuck at a yucky job is some big, huge honking statement about your worth as a human being?!

Really?!

And if it were (which it’s not) why the hell would ignoring the situation change anything?!

That’s really the point here.

Attention, with intention to take action starts the ball rolling in a positive direction.

This is different than wallowing in pain and anger and angst and blame – it’s about making a conscious effort to assess the situation and create an action plan to get it fixed.  No judgment.  No right and no wrong.  It simply is a situation that exists and you have the opportunity right now to get in there and take action to fix it.

It may be something you need  help with (like the faucet) but that doesn’t mean you are a complete and utter loser and failure for not knowing how to fix it on your own.  The fact of the matter is, you rock.  You took a look, you assessed and you made an executive decision to get it taken care of, once and for all by calling in a pro.  Good for you.

What are you willing to look at today?  What will you approach with curiosity and a desire to make right?

****************************

A big thanks to Melody Beattie and her book Make Miracles in 40 Days, which prompted my thinking about this topic.

If you’re thinking you’ll want some help facing your version of the leaky faucet, let me know, I’m putting the finishing touches on a private and group program that’s dedicated to this very subject.  It’s going to be fun and make a huge difference in all  our lives.

If you have a problem – say a leaky faucet or a hole in your fence you wouldn’t solve it by ignoring it.  I mean, you could spend every day focusing on the rest of the fence that is sturdy and strong.  You can send gratitude into the Universe for the miracle of modern plumbing, but you’ll still have a hole in your fence and a leaky faucet keeping you up at night 6 months later.

Right?!

So why then, if you have a fear or concern or other nagging issue in your life, do you ignore it?

You may not know you’re ignoring it.

You may simply have drank so much LOA kool-aid that you believe that focusing on the fear, or the lack, or the illness will bring you MORE of it.  So you simply bury it.

Right?

I’ve done it too.

I’ve told myself to focus on listing my blessings.  The things I truly am grateful for – beautiful dogs, a loving partner, strong thighs, fresh veggies in my garden, blue skies.  All that jazz. And it’s true.  I’m grateful for those things.

But I was actively trying to ignore the fact that my debt was spiraling out of control.  I was actively ignoring the fact that my body was not as strong or as healthy as it once was.  I was expending a crap-load of energy on focusing only on the good stuff.  And I wasn’t expending nearly enough energy into digging into the problem and taking action to fix it.

No matter the problem – it needs your attention.

And by attention, I mean just that.  I don’t mean obsession.  I don’t mean sob stories.  I don’t mean excuses on why it happened or why it’s everyone else’s fault  – if that’s your MO we should talk about your lower chakras and your insistence on martyrdom and/or playing victim.

Giving attention to what is broken is not the same thing as reveling in it.  It simply is a process by which you can start, fixing, healing or taking control of what’s not working.

If your faucet wasn’t working you could take a look at it yourself.  Maybe it’s just a washer that needs replacing.  All those nights listening to drip-drip-drip and it’s fixed in a half hour!  Or maybe it’s something more complicated.  You can keep lying awake listening to the dripping or you can call someone with experience and expertise to help you.  Your call.  But the faucet leaking is not some sign that you’re a failure in your life.  That you inherently do not deserve a good night’s sleep.  That the faucet manufacturer and the entire plumbing industry is out to get you, is it?  Didn’t think so.

So why would you think being in debt or in the middle of an unsatisfying relationship or stuck at a yucky job is some big, huge honking statement about your worth as a human being?!

Really?!

And if it were (which it’s not) why the hell would ignoring the situation change anything?!

That’s really the point here.

Attention, with intention to take action starts the ball rolling in a positive direction.

This is different than wallowing in pain and anger and angst and blame – it’s about making a conscious effort to assess the situation and create an action plan to get it fixed.  No judgment.  No right and no wrong.  It simply is a situation that exists and you have the opportunity right now to get in there and take action to fix it.

It may be something you need  help with (like the faucet) but that doesn’t mean you are a complete and utter loser and failure for not knowing how to fix it on your own.  The fact of the matter is, you rock.  You took a look, you assessessed and you made an executive decision to get it taken care of, once and for all by calling in a pro.  Good for you.

So, what are you willing to look at today?  What will approach with curiosity and a desire to make right?

Comments { 2 }

Action is the Antidote

Even though I had my fingerprints translated and my life purpose revealed to me more than five years ago, I’m still constantly exploring what it means to have and to be on purpose.

Every day is an adventure into the process of being me.  Sometimes it’s invigorating and sometimes it’s exhausting.  There are times that I just want to throw my hands in the air and say, “enough is enough!  It’s all complete and total random-ness and nothing I do, say, or believe is going to change a thing in my predestined outcome.”

And then I come back to reality and laugh at the cop-out of that idea.

Because if I really believed that I had no control over my life and the things that happen in it, then I really have a hard time believing in the idea of being alive at all.  I mean, what would be the point?!

If I believed that I was floating in a canoe on the sea of life without any navigational input, then, aside from the “what’s the point?” question, I’d have to relax.  I mean, why bother getting all worked up and stressed out and shoulder-to-the-wheel, if I’m not going to change a thing?

Knowing my purpose at first put me back into my head.  I needed to go there.  I needed to spend sometime inside and wriggling around with my beliefs — about humanity, about myself, about my destiny and about the why behind actions I did just “because.” I’ve used this intellectuality as a means of hiding out though.  I can use my big problem-solving brain to create all kinds of outcomes and scenarios – -in my mind.  And never actually come out and take a chance of putting the pedal to the metal and applying myself.

For about two years after my hand reading, I spent a LOT Of time in my head.

I went deeper than I ever had (at least since my teenage heartaches and angst) into my own head and started journaling, meditating and spending long hours alone with nothing but my thoughts.  I read constantly, visited healers, worked with mentors and coaches and psychics and felt like a sponge that was soggy with so much knowing.  I forgot how to squeeze out the knowledge into the light of day so it made sense.

I believed what everyone said about me.  One day I was on top of the world because an editor praised my article, the next day I was dragging my feet and carrying my head low (my proverbial tail between my legs) because someone told me that I’d failed as a business person and why don’t I just get a ‘real job.’

I fought with god about why I wasn’t good enough to just manifest the law of attraction the way “everyone” else seemed to be.  I beat myself up for being wrong or weird or different or too much of something and not enough of another.

All along  I wasn’t TAKING Action.

I was writing long lists about what I wanted and spending ridiculous amounts of time VISIONING my life as having things that I wanted.  And I was spending equal amounts of energy practicing positive language and all that.  Oh, and I was believing I was following signs too.  But only the ones that seemed to say what I wanted to hear — not those that said I’d have to work my behind off to move forward.

All part of the journey I suspect.

Something amazing has happened.

I went back to my thumbs.

Thumbs are miracles and I’m so constantly amazed at the value they add on a purely basic level.  Because of my thumbs I can tie shoes, wash my face, eat my meals, take my loved one’s hand in my own.  I can communicate with letters and gestures and I can hold myself up in a downward dog and an upward facing dog.  My thumbs balance my posture on the yoga mat and as a means to my success – they focus me on my will.

Thumbs are the key to logic and will and they show me, precisely, how important it is to not only wish, but to set goals and take specific action.  For me, the thumbs which hold part of my life purpose, are the key to every other aspect of purpose in my life.  If I’m not taking action, big, massive action (and that massive action can be simply showing up in ordinary ways to ask, to answer, to write to speak and to listen) in pursuit of my goals, I’m actually dying a little bit.

Sure, everything you’ve heard about Law of Attraction does have some bit about taking action — but while you get specific instructions on writing your wishes and envisioning your perfect life, there isn’t a lot of step-by-step instruction on how to take action.

Maybe that’s because it’s different for each of us?

For me, what works is creating an action plan.  And recognizing that there are specific, material outcomes I expect as a result of taking action.  I don’t always get everything I wanted, but I get a whole lot closer when I’m working a plan.  The added bonus is that I have the benefit of always knowing I did whatever it took to move forward.  And moving is the whole point.

What about you?  What actions do you take (either consciously or not) to move forward?

And if you want to know how your action plans may be improved with the benefit of your purpose — don’t hesitate to let me know.  I’d be honored to help.

Comments { 2 }