Archive for the ‘Health and Physical Well Being’ Category

Authentic Power: What Is It?

Monday, January 23rd, 2012

When I say that love equals power, I am not referring to external power. We all know what external power looks like. It is the capacity and ability to control others – mentally, physically, culturally, religiously, politically, economically. Because it seems so much more desirable to control, rather than be controlled, for eons mankind has yearned for such power.

What has not been realized, till relatively recently, is that the defense against others’ power and control is not even greater power. That’s how wars start. The true defense is authentic power, rooted in Divine Love, which provides us with the inner strength, awareness, knowledge and guidance to preserve our autonomy and to remain free, safe and in harmony with all life.

What is does authentic power look like? What is it and how does it manifest as a life worth living? There are so few models of it around us it can be difficult to conceptualize, let alone embody. In his new book Spiritual Partnership: The Journey to Authentic Power, Gary Zukav brilliantly describes the hallmarks of life lived in authentic power, so much so that I think it is worth this rather extensive quote. I couldn’t articulate it better.

Zukav says:

The more you cultivate loving parts of your personality and challenge frightened parts the more your personality becomes aligned with your soul. Eventually, the frightened parts of your personality lose their control over you and the loving parts create without limitation. Fear disappears. Your experiences become meaningful. Your attention is in the never-ending miracle of the eternal present moment. Your relationships transform. You are not “connected” to others any more than you are “connected” to your arm, hand or heart. You are part of them, and they are part of you. When they hurt, you feel them. When they are healthy, you are healthy.

Humbleness, clarity, forgiveness, and love replace fear. The world becomes a friendly place. You see the struggles and spiritual potential of others and the complexity and richness of their lives, even if they are not aware of them. Superiority gives way to appreciation. Inferiority disappears. The energy of your soul flows effortlessly through you in to the Earth school like the breath of a musician through a flute. Neither you nor others can tell where your personality ends and your soul begins. Gratitude, joy, meaning, and bliss fill your days. The seasons of your life come and go, carrying you forward like a river returning to the sea.

You consult intuition, choose your intentions consciously, move forward with an empowered heart, and act without attachment to the outcome. You do not presume to know how the Universe works or question the wisdom and compassion that shape your experiences according to the choices that you have made. You do your part and trust your nonphysical guides and Teachers to do theirs, take responsibility for your choices, and strive to contribute compassionately and wisely to Life. Each moment is full and complete. You think in terms of causes (intentions) and effects (experiences) instead of right and wrong, good and bad, fortunate and unfortunate. You know that a factor of karma is involved in your experiences, and so you do not take them personally. You give without expectation and receive without reservation. All that you need is given to you. This is authentic power.”

The Gratitude Attitude?

Thursday, December 15th, 2011

A lot has been written about the importance of gratitude – how it improves our general health and well being as well as being an integral part of a conscious life, with all the benefits that brings.

What might not be realized is how little gratitude we need to feel in order to have a significant effect. Andrew Weil, MD, who has written extensively on health and wellness, says that studies have scientifically proven that only seven days of being aware during the day of the things for which we are grateful, and then jotting them down at night before going to sleep, can improve our mood for up to six months!

The trick to this, though,is finding the time in our fast paced and complex lives to put our attention to such things. We are so deeply involved in, and distracted by, things external that the effort to pay attention to our interior life can be initially very difficult.

Anthropologist and academic Angeles Arrien says a reflective life, where we take time to acknowledge and feel the joy of our blessings, requires a slower pace of life than most of us live. She goes even further to observe, after studying different cultures around the world that, in fact, the natural rhythm of life is medium to slow. It is only in modern western democracies where we have allowed the pace of normal life to spin faster and faster to such an extent that time for reflection and introspection has been almost completely eliminated.

Arrien cautions that we need time to be able to integrate our life experiences to make sense of them, and to use them to deepen our character through emotional and spiritual regeneration and renewal.

Slowing our pace to create a more reflective life requires more than just a change of attitude. It necessitates a complete transformation of our view of life. Fortunately, the examined life (as Plato calls it) pays great dividends, making any effort we make more than worth it.

One Of Those Days!

Thursday, July 21st, 2011

I remember listening to a CD by Sonia Choquette a couple of years ago, about those days, or times of our lives, we all experience when everything seems wrong, out of sync or just plain cruddy. Rather than resisting the situation, pouring all our effort and energy into trying to change it, she recommends we find what exactly it is we need to cope with the circumstances, to find peace and acceptance.

This is simple, yet profound counsel. However, while it may be simple in concept, it can be difficult in practice.

Firstly, we have to know ourselves, our desire, well enough to know what works for us. Most of us don’t even know what we need in any given situation, let alone know how to find it and acquire it.

Then we have to be able to listen to the dictates of our own heart without allowing it to be hijacked by the needs or demands of others. Most of us have been raised to believe that we should meet others’ needs before our own, that anything less is selfish. And yet, how can I share my oranges with you if I have none in my basket?

Choquette is right because just doing what we think we should be doing is unsustainable in the long term. We can only keep it going for so long. Eventually my empty basket impoverishes everyone in my life.

We find the insight and inspiration to determine what would make the circumstances bearable in the short term, and transformative in the long term, by looking within.

i remember a time when I was so down and depressed I would have been happy to end it all. It was 18 months after Ian had died and I had just moved my son into the college that his sister was already living in. I was sitting in my empty house wondering WTF I was doing.

The irony of my situation was excruciating. Since the birth of my daughter 20 years before I had been (almost literally) counting the days when it would just be Ian and me again – what I used to call, our pure selves (without all the complications of parenting and family life). For two decades I felt Ian was the love of my life – he was certainly my sense of home, the fulcrum around which my heart and soul centered. With Ian in my heart and life, everything seemed possible.

Now here I was – both of my kids successfully through school and into the University courses of their choice and optimistically launched into their new adult lives – sitting in my empty house with no one to care whether I got out of bed each morning or not.

I confided in my friend Alison that I was having increasingly urgent suicidal thoughts. She posed this question: what would I do if I could do anything? What plan could get me excited about life again? In Choquette’s terms, what did I need to be ok with my situation, without trying to change it or resist it, but to work with it?

I went home and meditated on this. I immediately knew I had to get out of my head. To do this, I had to change my surroundings. I already had a trip to Europe planned, my departure four weeks away. I called the travel agent, changed my flights and left within seven days.

I jumped on and off trains and buses all around Scotland and in my quiet meditative moments I had some of the most profound spiritual experiences of my life, nothing like I had ever experienced before. So many things that I believed, hoped, suspected to be true were now physically manifesting so that I now knew them to be true.

Like my kids, I was now launched on a whole new path, and life. It made old habits, routines and attitudes irrelevant, blasting beliefs about myself and the possibilities of what my life could look like into a whole new stratosphere; now, my life looks absolutely nothing like the life I had for 20 years as wife and mother.

And it all came from that simple question: what do I need to make this ok for me?; and then being prepared to listen to, and act on, the answer.

Porthole Judgment

Thursday, July 7th, 2011

If you had been a fly on the wall of my house 17 years ago, your assessment of me, of my character, would have been different to the one I imagine you would have today.

With two young children ( 7 and 5) in tow, we had just moved to Sydney after an international stint spanning 11 years (three years in London, three years in Ohio – including both Cleveland and Columbus- and two and a half years in Wellington, New Zealand). I had a husband who travelled for business almost every week, for at least three days, and it was my sole responsibility to find and choose schools and houses, and to settle the children into each new culture. (more…)

A No-Brainer

Tuesday, May 31st, 2011

So, I have another friend. She’s left the workaday world and headed off on an international adventure. This is exciting, even exhilarating, because the potentials seem endless. Anything, even her heartfelt desire, just might be possible.

But it also can be scary. So scary that in these circumstances we are all tempted to consider, as my friend is, returning to circumstances (in this case, a job) similar to those we have just mustered the courage to leave. (more…)

Yoga, Envy and Truth

Thursday, April 14th, 2011

My beautiful yoga teacher Roxanne continually encourages us to stretch our spine as far as possible, to push out our chests, and broaden our shoulders and hips to their fullest extent, urging us to take up our full space, to move into our fullness of being.

It feels surprisingly good to open, stretch and expand my body to its full extent, and then some. Of course this is what we are meant to be doing all the time. It should come naturally to us. But as I feel the stretch and expansion of my muscles and bones it makes me realize how foreign this is for my body, and how much of the time my spine, chest and shoulders are shrunken and drooping. (more…)

A Man and His Monkey

Thursday, April 7th, 2011

On National Public Radio today I heard an article about a young man, Ned Rogers, who is now a quadriplegic and severely brain damaged as a result of a car accident six years ago. He was told by the doctors that he would never speak or move again.

Enter Kasey the monkey, who has been trained to help the disabled with household chores, like fetching objects, opening lids etc. With Kasey, so much has been possible, and not just for easy access to the TV remote control. (more…)

The Lord’s Prayer in Aramaic

Tuesday, March 29th, 2011

I was at a concert recently in a new age church in Santa Cruz. I picked up their hymn book and found pasted in the book leaves a translation of The Lord’s Prayer from (presumably) the original Aramaic.

Given that Aramaic was the language Jesus spoke, it seems likely this is how the prayer was given to mankind before the Church jumped in and re-worked it for its own purposes. (more…)

Healing Ourselves Part 2

Saturday, March 19th, 2011

I had this searing pain in my tooth. It was debilitating and I had to go to bed to cope with it. In those days I didn’t use painkillers – a leftover from my upbringing – but something had to be done, I couldn’t bear it much longer.

About two weeks previously I’d had a cavity in my tooth filled. It was in the tooth right at the back of my mouth, very close to the gum line. The dentist had had a difficult time accessing it to drill and fill. In fact it had been a slightly traumatic experience, i had felt completely helpless while this dentist pushed and shoved at my mouth and head. (more…)

Healing Ourselves Part 1

Wednesday, March 2nd, 2011

We need a new medical model, and we need it fast. Although the medical establishment will not always tell you this, but we have the power to heal ourselves. Everything we need for this process we already have, if we but knew it.

Ironically the medical establishment has helped to conceal this fact from us. In their efforts to provide a simple pill or a ’scientifically proven’ cure for our ills, they have removed the necessity for us to take responsibility for our own health as well as the need to understand the fundamental principles of healing and the knowledge for how it is actually done. (more…)