Saturday, March 25, 2017

The Ritual of Goodbye

Lex, adieu. This is the snapshot I’ll carry of you.  

***


I’m in the cradle of the in-between. I’m moving from my home town of Lexington to Austin and exist in a space of what-was and what-is-about-to-be. I witness what is fading and what is blooming. I bid farewell to past, former selves and direct attention to my unfolding becoming.

The momentum of March, the strengthening promise of a-soon-to-be spring, marks the period of my transition. This short stretch of roaring, windy days streaked with tantalizing sunlight teems with opportunities to beam love, express gratitude, and remedy hurts with forgiveness, with conscious healing. I know wherever I go, I bring myself. My joyous light, my mischievous shadow, my bursting passions and imprinted patterns are all coming with me to Austin, the Live Music Capital of the World. All spirited aspects of self will sing in full glory and throw their frustrated fits as they do here in Kentucky.

My hope is to move forward with a deeper, gentler understanding of myself and the colorful, various manners in which I energetically interplay with the world. In the rich psychic landscape of the in-between space, I explore and excavate lessons from the past year and consciously work to integrate these lessons into the fabric of my being. Here are the practices and teachings unearthed and governing the transition forward:

In the in-between, I recharge compassion to lovingly step back into the past to illuminate lessons.

In the blaze of awareness, I revisit the past year, illumining my shadow self, my disappointments, the crippled expectations, burned bridges and painful ending of friendships. From the softened perspective of time, of knowing another chapter awaits, I perceive these experiences as poignant, critical teachers. They instruct me on my patterns and tendencies, proffering significant insights to be acknowledged and incorporated to assist in creating a closer connection to self, and thus, an enhanced and sustained mindful relationship with others, my work, the world.


In the in-between, I practice forgiveness.

Forgiveness may not be an essential part of everyone’s journey. And forcing forgiveness to bypass experiencing the burn and grief of emotional pain threatens to leave a thick residue of bitterness and resentment. For my personal practice, forgiveness is a reclamation of my power. Forgiveness cleanses and frees me. Forgiveness recycles both the mental and emotional energy squandered in analyzing another right back into rich sustenance needed to move forward in clarity.

In the spirit of forgiveness, I consider sending the text, writing the email, speaking to rectify the tension existing between me and former friends. I do try once, only to find in the good-intentioned trying an ensuing mess of miscommunication. Instead, I choose to address and clear conflict in the inner realm, and let the energy I choose to exude be one of peace. I let my thoughts – when they circle to them – be opportunities to inwardly choose understanding and gratitude. The ones who challenge me are my greatest teachers; they are teaching me how to be even more myself and to stand taller in my convictions, and for that, wow. Thank you.

In the in-between, I cultivate ease in the discomfort of saying goodbye.

A memory of a poorly planned goodbye pains me to this day and serves to inform me on how to gracefully respect the ritual of goodbye. Due to a new work position, I had to let go of a yoga class that I had taught throughout college. I deeply adored and loved the students who attended that evening class. There was a sense of connection and lightheartedness within the regular group that enhanced the magic of practicing under the stars.

Younger me didn’t allow herself to feel sad about leaving; she didn’t allow herself to be loved by her students, stemming from the yogic principle of nonattachment perhaps, but in truth, this mirrored a larger pattern of self-worth issues and blocking myself from receiving joy. I couldn’t think of the appropriate time and way to tell them that I had to stop teaching. Before class and risk the announcement distracting them during meditation or practice? Or after savasana, after the Namaste, when the news could dampen the energetic state cultivated on the mat?

I gave too much concern to their response and as a result, ended up spilling the news on the very last class. Heart breaking, I announced in a voice that stuffed down tears, that this – or truthfully that – was my last class.

Y’all. The collage of faces reflecting my own grief resurfaces and causes me to cringe. Transitions, if done mindfully, can be gentle, thoughtful and smooth.


In the in-between, I honor the ritual of goodbye.

What I failed to give to my original yoga students, who were my teachers, my supporters, my stardust yogis, I give to my loved ones, my acquaintances, my students today: a goodbye.

I directly tell people that I am leaving. I don’t wish for a rushed and unacknowledged ending of a chapter with the people and the places who have held me, loved me, shaped me. I choose celebration. I choose an attitude of gratitude. I choose to let myself beam love to my loved ones and I practice receiving their love.

In the in-between, I ask a poet for mindful tips on moving away.

“Don’t look back. The people who love you already surround you.”

The words strike fire, igniting an instant warmth rippling ease into my being, ushering me back to the blaze of love within. This love is the anchor and torch brightening the in-between transitional space.

This love is the Light healing the past, shining the way forward, and centering me in the present, wide awake in transition. 

Tuesday, March 21, 2017

Living From The Overflow: An Ode To Oprah



“Live from the overflow.” Oprah’s words of wisdom inspire and shape my daily practice of nurturing a richer connection to self.

***


I’ve fallen back in love with Oprah. I return to this phenomenal woman in a time of transition. A love affair rekindled. Happenstance reintroduction initiated by David Rubenstein, famous financier whose interview with the TV Talk Show Queen I caught in the midst of late-night packing.

She appears on the screen on my hotel’s TV the last night that I am in Austin. The trip to apartment-hunt and secure a place of my own in a city soon to be my new home required grit. The housing market is competitive, and the Universe tested my resolve to move with waves of challenges. I pass the test because I do want this – a beginning bathed in Texas sunlight, a chapter written in response to answering a call heard years ago now propelling forward movement.

I stand tall in the knowing that this move from Lexington to Austin aligns with my spirit, my evolution, my expansion, my purpose; however, my attempt to explain to grief-stricken loved ones has not been a success. Sadness is an entity hovering around conversations with family, and for a few, the hurt spills out in anger and bitter put-downs. Boundaries become vital to contain and sustain my own hope, clarity, and pride in choosing to begin again, a forging of an independent path.

Oprah arrives on the TV screen as an answer to a question circling on how to stay strong, on how to stay so close to self as I proceed on.

“Live from the overflow.”

Live, love, speak, act from a rich, reverent connection with self.

Living from the overflow shapes into a mantra informing my daily decisions: Does this person/place/project drain or uplift me? What do I need to do to take great self-care so I can be a peaceful and powerful presence? Revolutionary questions I dare myself to ask, because I’ve existed in the alternative of barely living from a constricted, shallow flow of energy.

My experience from overdoing, from saying yes (Oprah calls it the disease to please), and pushing down my needs to instantly respond to the wants and whims of others burnt me out. Exhausted martyrdom left me bitter and hopeless. The overflow to water my creativity dried up. The overflow to spin lightheartedness and play in my relationships vanished. The overflow to replenish myself evaporated because the shriveled streams of energy were instantly recycled to push toward accomplishing the next to-do.

The past year ended with me emotionally drained on the bare floor of my being, and those experiences are teachers instructing me that my self-rejuvenation is the key priority. And only I can be responsible for attending lovingly to the tides and currents making up the universe of my being.

I possess – as we all do – a sharp intelligence emitting constant signals to guide me. The trick for me is to trust what I feel, what I am gleaning intuitively from my environment, the vibe behind a person’s words and actions. I can trace all my difficulties back to one core flaw: second-guessing my intuition. Always, I know when I am overcommitting. Always, I know that I am begrudgingly saying yes when my inner voice is whimpering no. Always, I know when a person is not showing up authentically, and in my second-guessing I am eventually proven correct when their behavior mirrors my original interpretation.

Living from the overflow refines trust in feeling and intuition. Living from the overflow occurs when I redirect my focus to honoring my truth. This actualizes in firmly, unapologetically responding no when I feel the quiet panic of overwhelm. This appears in answering to the yes. I commune with my instinctual self to hear and discern my true yes and valid no. I rewire automatic people-please circuits and practice pausing, breathing, feeling into the befitting response. I choose the path that befriends self.

In the befriending, in the active decision to live from the overflow, there is an assured embodiment of peace, clarity, presence. Living from the overflow restores and replenishes and is a remedy, a gift of light in a heavy-hearted world.

In transition, I learn to live from the overflow. I rewrite my narrative to exist and thrive from a sacred and renewed place of energetic abundance, and ultimately this is the lush space that I intend to live and direct my life. I desire energized compassion to course through my systems, so I can beam love to my adored ones, and river love and intention into my passions, creative endeavors and purposeful projects.

I think of Oprah, this feminine flame who burns in empathy, joy, resiliency, spiritual understanding. Thank the Universe she lives from a joyfully tended, deep well of connection. Look at how her luminous presence illuminates the world.
You are a flame, too. Take care to be exceptionally bright. And blaze.