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Gary R. Smith

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Viewing 15 posts - 16 through 30 (of 77 total)
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  • in reply to: Making new friends as an adult #105988
    Gary R. Smith
    Participant

    John,

    Another story from my life came to mind to share with you.

    In elementary school a neighbor boy and I became friends and started doing things together. Then his family moved overseas and we were pen-pals. When he returned, things changed. His interests went to sports and rodeo. I was radically different and spoke against the treatment of horses as objects and possessions. I was always the last to be picked for school sports teams, even though I put my heart into it for awhile (probably to belong.) I was just not naturally attracted to sports or competition.

    I was into Buddhism, metaphysics and the occult throughout high school. My former friend was into football, dating, and things cowboy. He had zero interest in the spiritual, and I had zero interest in football, but we had some good talks while camping under the stars. I persuaded him to jump from a plane with me, and we had one parachuting experience together. In the week after h.s. graduation, I drove him to Rocky Mountain National Park. From there he hitch-hiked to California. I got a ride to Maine and traveled the east coast. He went into the Airborne Rangers and was in the presidential honor guard, while I worked with a wildlife photographer and naturalist and protested the Vietnam War. But we somehow kept in contact over the years.

    45 years later, we still have contact. We are so unlike each other and seemingly have little in common, yet there is a bond of friendship between us that grows stronger while separated by thousands of miles. We have deep respect and caring for each other. He has turned his interests to meditation and the spiritual, and we both would like to camp again and talk together under the stars – before our 70th birthdays.

    I am just saying, sometimes, oftentimes in my experience, life has different ideas than we about how things will emerge. I have learned to let go of my ideas of how anything ‘has to be’ and allow what wants to happen to emerge. That applies to everything in life, including making and having friends. I like the suggestions of the other participant to make small steps to be more extroverted, and add a suggestion to not have expectations or strong ideas of how the results have to look. Does that make sense to you?

    in reply to: Making new friends as an adult #105952
    Gary R. Smith
    Participant

    {{Looking back over the years, I now believe that being so focused on academics took its toll.}}

    John, that is a clear insight. It rings true. Not that I can say what is for you, but you recognize it yourself and I have seen the same happen to others who lost much of their strength and confidence and connection with their spiritual nature by focusing on academics. Those qualities are not lost, of course. They are just hidden from view, layered over by intellectual academia. They can be re-gained by focusing on other values. I suggest that you reserve uninterrupted time for deeper reflection on what is important to you and such questions as, ‘Who and what are you, really?’

    {{What do you feel has been missing from your friendships?: My roommates (3 other guys) from college were a great group with which I could hangout and just be goofy with. Most of my other friendships (people I met in class, extracurriculars, etc.) never really seemed to get past the surface. I’d like to have more people to hang out with. To be honest, I always felt a little different from other kids and never quite felt like “one of the guys”}}

    There is nothing ‘wrong’ with being different. Again I cannot speak for you, and am coming from my own experience of being very different from my family and classmates all through school. People who have been labeled ‘too sensitive’, ‘overly focused’ or introverted can learn through a self-test if they actually are among ‘Highly Sensitive People’ – a term coined by Dr. Elaine Aron who wrote “The Highly Sensitive Person: How to Thrive When the World Overwhelms You.” About 15 to 20 percent of the population, HSP are hardwired differently – with an inherited trait and sensitive nervous system. Carl Jung originally called the trait “innate sensitiveness”
    http://hubpages.com/health/Highly-Sensitive-People-the-gifts-and-challenges-of-this-inherited-trait

    {{How would you like your new friendships to look – what would be the characteristics or attributes of the friendships? As I said earlier, in a perfect world, I want to be one of the guys. I want to have friends with which to discuss serious issues, but also relax with, be a little crazy with, go out to lunch/dinner on the weekends, bar-hopping, etc.}}

    We could have some discussions about how quality relationships are started and formed. I don’t have experience with bar-hopping. The most significant story from my life is the meeting of my life partner and me. It was through psychic predictions, following intuition, and lots of synchronicity. If you would like to read the story, it is http://hubpages.com/health/Is-Destiny-Real

    {{How would you describe a friend? A friend is someone you can talk to about matters both serious and personal, someone you can rely on in a time of need. A friend is also someone you can just share a good laugh with and do fun things together.}}

    I have accepted that so long as I am true to myself, I won’t have many casual friends for doing fun things together with. But it is enough to have a wonderful life partner and our Siberian Husky, Aura, for doing fun things. Your needs may be different at this time in your life. I am not the one to advise, as I separated myself from others socially from an early age. For years it was painful, but later in life I came to feel very well with the natural isolation. I have many friendly interactions with people in daily life. One occurred yesterday, when I brought Aura into the patio area of a coffee shop. Aura would not cross the tiled floor and I carried her through the shop. She is a rescue, and seems to have had some bad experience from that past or is confused by the tile patterns. A woman had a Husky with her, and she and my partner and I had a marvelous spontaneous conversation. When we got up to go, she offered her dog, Echo, as a helper to Aura to walk across the tiled floor. He encouraged her and she made it on her own to the cheers of workers and customers. That type of experience enriches life. We may meet the woman and Echo in the park sometime or that may not happen, but the moment is one I will always remember. If this has a point that applies to you, it may be to relax, enjoy the magic of what life offers, be ready to open up to opportunities that present themselves. You will attract people by the energy, the vibes you emanate.

    {{How can you be a good friend to someone? I believe I can be a good friend just by reciprocating the things above.}}

    Reciprocating is good. Consider to give out first, without expectation of return. Give of yourself, your gifts and qualities. Show interest, caring and compassion (with appropriate boundaries and awareness.) With no expectation, there will be no disappointment. Cultivate compassion. Strengthen your inner core and be true to yourself in all situations.

    {{What are your passions and interests to share with friends? I WANT to be into sports. As of right now though, I really do enjoy exploring new places, being outdoors, trying new restaurants.}}

    Do you really want to be into sports, or do you want to feel a belonging that you think will come by being into sports? I was never into sports and have never felt it lessened me or my life experience. I have had a rich and rewarding life with many outstanding adventures, without interest in sports. At first, again, there was a feeling of isolation. I pretended interest, but had to stop in order to be true to myself. I attended an Atlanta Braves game with my company, and was so bored I got up and walked out. That kind of thing happened over and over until I realized there was no sense in pretending. I am what I am and am happy with that. That is my experience, not yours. I am not suggesting you give up on sports, but to reflect deeply and honestly about your motives for wanting to be into sports. Above all, be true to yourself.

    {{I apologize again for the long rant and the somewhat unorganized post. I just had a lot I needed to get off my chest. I know I am just a recent grad, and I still have many years ahead. But, I want to enjoy these next few years more than I did in the past. I really do look forward to closing this chapter, and opening a new, more satisfying why. As of right now, I just feel very unfulfilled.}}

    No need to apologize. Glad you got it off your chest. There is more to share. Tell me, if you want, about your spiritual life or your interest in personal development/emotional mastery.

    Best,

    Gary

    in reply to: Will you experiment with this? #105882
    Gary R. Smith
    Participant

    Hi Christine,

    Your heartfelt comments and participation are appreciated. It is helpful to know what touches people. Thank you.

    I have realized that living for the moment can create a very different reality and life experience than living to gratify the senses and the persona. My partner is more skilled at acting in the flow than me. It is natural for her. I am still in transition from an old paradigm of having control, being productive, getting wishes fulfilled and so on – to placing more importance and value on the quality I bring to the moment and allowing what wants to happen to emerge. Being the present moment and acting in the flow are part of a way of living that has a core sense of strength and beauty, trust and confidence, peace and joy unlike anything I experienced within the ‘old’ and common paradigm. Letting go of the old, common, familiar habits and behaviors is not always so easy, but oh! is it freeing and richly satisfying. There is nothing more self-empowering than taking on full self responsibility and being a conscious participant in one’s own soul unfolding. Best to you, Christine.

    Gary R. Smith
    Participant

    Thank you for reading and loving the poem, Mimi.

    ~ Gary

    in reply to: Making new friends as an adult #105796
    Gary R. Smith
    Participant

    GROWTH

    “Deep within every life, no matter how dull or ineffectual it may seem from the outside, there is something eternal happening. This is the secret way that change and possibility conspire with growth. John Henry Newman summed this up beautifully when he said, “To grow is to change and to be perfect is to have changed often.” Change, therefore, need not be threatening; it can in fact bring our lives to perfection. Perfection is not cold completion. Neither is it avoidance of risk and danger in order to keep the soul pure or the conscience unclouded. When you are faithful to the risk and ambivalence of growth, you are engaging your life. The soul loves risk; it is only through the door of risk that growth can enter.” – John O’Donohue / Excerpt from ANAM CARA

    in reply to: Making new friends as an adult #105787
    Gary R. Smith
    Participant

    Hello John,

    What do you feel has been missing from your friendships?

    How would you like your new friendships to look – what would be the characteristics or attributes of the friendships?

    How would you describe a friend?

    How can you be a good friend to someone?

    What are your passions and interests to share with friends?

    Let’s talk about this…. Just if you want, and responding to whatever question or questions you feel.

    Gary

    in reply to: The People I love are breaking me. #105318
    Gary R. Smith
    Participant

    Hi Lisa,

    Inky gave you excellent specific suggestions for being pro-active and self-empowered. If you are up for acting on them, you will come through as a stronger person and less subject to the behaviors of others.

    You can also end all contact and walk away. That may be more comfortable at first, but you will resolve nothing unless you face the issue squarely. Face the abusers and face your own issues.

    Marliv and others also gave sound advice. Beyond that, my suggestion is to start a longer term practice which you tailor to you:

    1. Gain clarity about the person you choose to be. What are the characteristics and attributes, such as confidence, equanimity, constancy?

    2. Tune yourself to recognize what hinders you from unfolding all of your potential, from being the person you choose to be. What are your own issues, such as taking things personally, dramatizing, being reactive and so on. Not saying you have those behaviors, they are just common examples. Be fully honest with yourself in a non-judgmental way. If you can laugh at the hindering behaviors, all the better. Let go of all that hinders. You do not have to name what hinders as your innate wisdom knows.

    3. Reflect on what qualities and feelings are supportive of your unfolding potential. Embrace what nurtures and supports your soul growth (soul being heart, mind, will and emotions). Again, you do not have to name the qualities, just trust your in-born wisdom to know and activate your choices.

    4. Start with letting go of what hinders and embracing what supports with some idea of what that means. Then, when you are ready, let go even of that control and when you can trust the greater reality, be able to merge with what is and allow what wants to happen to emerge. That is not to say suffer abuse. Let your actions be guided by listening to what Life is saying to you and act in the flow.

    For more about this approach, check out http://www.wholehuman.emanatepresence.com/

    By the way, about five years ago I moved from Germany to the Canary Islands where my briefcase with laptop and passport were stolen. To make a long story shorter, it meant an unexpected stopover in London waiting for my bank. While there, I enjoyed a full moon walk along the Thames and a visit to Glastonbury. I can understand your working at the Glastonbury festival as that area stood out in my experience. The theft was also a great experience as it taught several lessons in self-responsibility. All experiences can be valuable when they are taken for learning.

    Best to you,

    Gary

    in reply to: Too Criticizing of Myself #105274
    Gary R. Smith
    Participant

    Hi Shirley,

    Your interest in Wicca seems to me much deeper than surface attraction. It feels like an important aspect of your soul purpose and part of the unfolding of who you are. Your depth at 17 is extraordinary.

    If you don’t mind my sharing from my life, with perhaps some relation to yours, at 14 I wrote a paper titled ‘Man’ which expressed my feelings towards the way humans treat animals and each other as objects and possessions and gave it to a teacher with his promise of confidentiality. The story gets too long, but the outcome was I was more or less expelled at age 15 to remote river wilderness for a summer with my dog as a way for me to learn to appreciate society. It was a magnificent wilderness experience and when I returned, my interests turned to metaphysics and the occult. I saw society more clearly and with no more appreciation, and I relate to any isolation you feel from your practice of Wicca.

    {{Wicca is mostly a nature based religion where wiccans use the energy of the universe through meditation to channel the energy for their uses mostly for good because wiccans believe that the god and the goddess created us and gave us life and are seen through out nature, so we as wiccans respect them by worshipping nature and honoring them by not doing destructive things like cursing or hexing. A person can be psychic and have a belief in a higher power without being wiccan, in fact everyone is psychic to some level or degree, but a wiccan is someone who does rituals and makes it part of their daily life to honor nature and channel energy to help heal or create positive energy and is tuned to the psychic world as part of her daily life . i enjoy cartomancy (divining with cards) and clairvoyance. So far i am currently 17 and working on reiki, seeing auras and astral travel (i can project, but travel is still hard)}}

    I am also a Reiki Master, and at 17 seeing auras and astral travel were among my passions. At 20 I started a mail order company called The Golden Aura. I never astral projected or saw auras, and eventually my need to do so waned. It became more important to realize and integrate all aspects of heart, mind, body and emotions, and allow my soul to unfold. If seeing auras and astral traveling were part of my soul unfolding, it would happen in its own time. Letting go of ego interests and trusting the larger picture of life has served me well. I suggest reflection and self-assessment periodically through life, asking such questions as, ‘What is important?,’ ‘Who am I really?’ and ‘What are my motives?’ If you haven’t done so already, connect with your innate wisdom which is beyond gender, doctrine and measurement. Cards are okay but not really needed. You can ask anything of your inner wisdom and when you listen deeply you will hear an answer.

    I would enjoy to know how you feel about this: http://www.wholehuman.emanatepresence.com/one-being.html

    Some time has passed since your last post in this thread and an update on your life would be read with interest.

    Best,

    Gary

    in reply to: Taking care of anger when others disrespect #105266
    Gary R. Smith
    Participant

    Hi Giulia:

    {{I am trying to feel compassion for her – I can see her hatred is probably her own hatred for herself, something she hasn’t been allowed to express. It has nothing to do with me.}}

    Feeling compassion authentically is never a mistake. Trying to have compassion when it is not felt does not serve a useful purpose. When you rise above the behavior of others without feeling superior you are drawing from your inner wellspring. Keep drawing from it and you will not thirst.

    Biologically, humans are mammals. However, we are distinct (not superior) in that we do not function primarily from instinct. We have capacities of self-awareness, self-responsibility, reasoning, logic, morals and ethics which other mammals do not. When you choose real compassion for one who is abusive towards you, you are in a stronger position to set appropriate boundaries and act wisely rather than from bestial instincts and emotions.

    In ‘The Anatomy of Fear’ on Psychology Today, John A Call Ph.D., J.D., A. wrote, “Fear is an emotion we all experience at one time or another, and its effects are important to understand when talking about disasters…. The blood flows away from the heart and out towards the extremities, preparing the arms and legs for action. These effects served us well millennia ago, in situations where we were faced with beastly animals that thought they had found dinner.

    “In modern times, however, bodily responses to fear can be detrimental, especially since the most important one is a negative one: the brain basically shuts down as the body prepares for action. The cerebral cortex, the brain’s center for reasoning and judgment, is the area that becomes impaired when the amygdala senses fear. The ability to think and reason decreases as time goes on, so thinking about the next best move in a crisis can be a hard thing to do…. These dissociative symptoms can make it hard to stay grounded and logical in a dangerous situation. Essentially, the body’s response to fear or stress can be stressful in itself.”

    Dr. Call’s article is reprinted in full, with suggestions for self-empowered ways to respond to fear, on
    http://www.wholehuman.emanatepresence.com/realizations-blog/how-to-recognize-the-great-deceiver

    You have other options than to run away or fight, and only you can find the one which feels right. I suggest you first strengthen your inner core. Know yourself. Listen to the innate wisdom you were born with for guidance. Then act in ways that are true to you. If that results in separations, remain steadfast to being true to yourself and trust in life to see you through. This approach will best serve you to grow stronger and into the person you can become.

    Write again when you feel and to ask for more specific suggestions.

    Best to you,

    Gary

    Gary R. Smith
    Participant

    Hi Evan,

    Our dialogue here is now posted on the Whole Human site at http://www.wholehuman.emanatepresence.com/realizations-blog/one-being

    If you see anything in the dialogue post you’d like me to change, please let me know.

    {{… allow things to evolve and get back to you. From past experience, life reveals itself slowly on a personal level, and tends to include others who benefit greatly. This happens naturally, and the results usually brings joy, and laughter at the synchronicities at play.}}

    Love it!

    Keeping my eyes open.

    Gary

    Gary R. Smith
    Participant

    G’day Evan,

    Your last reply was a delight at the end of our day. Heartfelt thanks from both of us. – Gati

    Yes, removing the persona of the ‘I’ dissolves the mental contraction and makes the line more spacious and universal.

    Removing the statement from the line also shifts it from mental to feeling.

    Contracting thoughts such as a judgment or anything that isn’t actual like a musing from the past or a worry for the future, if caught quickly, dissolve in the replacing thought of ‘letting go of fragmentation’ or ‘being the present moment.’ If I engage with any fragmenting thought, shifting becomes much more difficult. Even dwelling too long on thoughts *about* consciousness contract me into mental mode. Consciousness itself shifts me into expanded feeling, and it will fill where space is made.

    Evan, if you are applying ‘One Being’, I’d love to know in what ways.

    May I have your permission to publish this dialogue with your name, as a Whole Human blog post? I would edit it some and send you the link. I like that it reveals the shifts in writing with your participation. My request is made with no expectation or attachment.

    Kind regards,

    Gary

    Gary R. Smith
    Participant

    G’day Evan,

    Kati asked me to express her gratitude also for your comments. English is not her native language, and she had difficulty to convey how I could bring spaciousness into my writing. She said that your suggestions are exactly what she was trying to tell me. So, thank you from both of us. We (you, Kati and I) have co-written the next version with your suggestions. What would you add, change or remove?

    Namasté.

    :

    ONE BEING

    The one being, ever-present and aware.

    Knowing it is there, whether sensed or not.

    Consciousness pervading and unifying all that exists.

    All universes, all dimensions, all humans, one being.

    Creative source individuated.

    The one being in human form.

    Self-aware and aware of Source.

    Seeing with the eyes of the one being.

    Hearing with the ears of Source.

    Being the observer and the observed.

    Border-less and defined in the same moment.

    Being in the Present Moment.

    Being the Present Moment.

    Acting in the flow.

    Alive in the flow.

    Being the flow.

    Being the river of light.

    Being fluid and grounded.

    Feeling the wind through the trees.

    Being the wind mingling with the flowers and the grass.

    Being the tree and feelings its roots, trunk and leaves.

    Knowing the tree as a living being, namasté.

    Feeling the mountain, its massive presence and the consciousness of its atoms.

    Acknowledging the mountain as a being.

    Seeing the stars as the atoms of the great being, oscillating consciousness.

    Feeling the pulse of the stars through the veins.

    Nurtured by Source and able to nurture.

    Feeling fragmentation and wholeness.

    Feeling compassion for fragmented humans.

    Letting go of fragmentation.

    Choosing to be and make whole.

    Letting go of what hinders the soul from unfolding.

    Embracing what nurtures and supports soul growth and communion.

    Merging with what is.

    Bringing gifts to the Now.

    Accepting the unknown.

    Being the unknown, the mystery unfolding.

    Serving the wholeness of life.

    Gary R. Smith
    Participant

    {{What a graceful response! I appreciate your openness, and receptiveness. Your demonstration is appreciated.}}

    I feel the same towards you, Evan.

    {{I am unsure how much latitude I have here……}}

    Your latitude with me is unlimited, especially when your write with courage and sincerity as you have.

    {{Rereading your Communion, there is still a shift, the reason being the use of ‘I’. If I may….}}

    Yes, there are still shifts to come. An earlier version of the Whole Human site had a page called ‘Holy Shift’ as tongue-in-cheek humor. I like what you wrote, and am continuing to explore depths in myself and write them. Sharing does sometimes require courage. I am aware some of my writing will be met with resistance and am stubborn to write from authenticity not from aim to please readers. And, I see holes in my own writing. Words will never fully convey whole truth, as universal truth is fluid, not static and words solidify. Truth, the actual, can only be experienced in the beauty of simplicity, in the present moment and the mystery unfolding.

    {{This allows the mind to disengage yet the wording is similar.}}

    I value your reflection and contribution and trust this type of inter-action will be on-going, as it is helpful to both of us on our converging journeys. While sitting with Aura (our Siberian Husky friend) yesterday, overlooking a lake, new words came to see with the eye and hear with the ear of the one being.

    My earlier comment, ‘I long to live more as a feeling being, as my partner is. One step for me is to shift my writing from mental to feeling.’ needs some correction to be balanced. I *am* a feeling being, it is just that I feel the mystical and abstract more palpably than most human activity. The longing is to have the opportunity to inter-act in a fully human way with those who are on a similar frequency, who value wholeness over the common fragmentation and act from the heart/body/present.

    This morning I awakened in a sweet space of timelessness and near bliss, and words flowed within. As soon as I checked the time, I went from that spacious feeling to mental contraction as the schedule demanded I get up and drive the grandsons to school. My thoughts on the road were mental and fragmented and although aware, I could not change it. It was the clearest example of a shift, in this case from feeling to mental.

    Just in the middle of writing this, my partner came back from an encounter with a person in the house. She was in a space of serving wholeness, and the young man was engaged in a war game. As a sensitive being, she became overwhelmed by the vibes of violence and came to our yurt distraught. We are finding that our idea of creating an oasis of lived wholeness in the midst of chaos, drama and fragmentation is not fully effective. We have traveled widely and visited several intentional communities and so far found that they just repeat the old patterns of fragmentation, even if they talk about being a conscious model of something new. So we are considering our next move.

    {{I apologize if my efforts disturb you, however, I intend only to offer what keeps me grounded/centered without engaging my mind.}}

    I am grateful for your boldness and caring to reach out. Your comments are valued and will be integrated. If you are up for personal communication, my email address is emanatepresence at live dot com.

    Best,

    Gary

    :

    Communion

    Nothing external.

    No other exists.

    One being is all.

    Be Present.

    Listening to Life whisperings.

    let go, be unhindered, the soul unfolds.

    This allows the mind to disengage yet the wording is similar. I am certainly not a writer, and I apologise if my efforts disturb you, however, I intend only to offer what keeps me grounded/centred without engaging my mind.

    Also to note – I am one in a Dillion eyes that will read you works (if you keep going that is ::hint::) so please continue.

    Best

    Evan

    Gary R. Smith
    Participant

    Hi Evan,

    Your response is constructive and appreciated. I have been aware that my writing is ‘mental’ and my partner has also encouraged me to write poetry instead. It has felt that I needed to start with the mental for my own framework as well as to fulfill an urge to communicate and contribute. I have considered to stop writing and engage fully in practicing the beauty of simplicity in small, everyday actions.

    {{If I may offer my personal experience with your writings to date, is that I get confused and I engage my mind in order to read fully what you are communicating. I feel the shift from my heart/body/present and enter critical thinking to absorb what is written. Perhaps it is within me – I am unsure. Perhaps my vocab needs expanding, however this my experience.}}

    It is not you, Evan. That you shift from heart/body/present to critical thinking tells me clearly that my writing has not served the purpose. Heart/body/present is essential and my challenge, if I continue to write, is to use language that evokes feeling and not thinking.

    I long to live more as a feeling being, as my partner is. One step for me is to shift my writing from mental to feeling. I would share the words of ‘Communion’ and ask if they still shift you to critical thinking or if you can feel them and remain centered and present:

    Communion

    Nothing is external.

    The other and I are one.

    The one being is all that is.

    I am in the Present Moment.

    I listen to what Life is saying.

    I let go of what hinders the soul from unfolding.

    I embrace what supports soul growth and communion.

    I am fluid and grounded.

    I act in the flow.

    I bring my gifts to the moment with quality attention and care,
    and no expectation of return.

    I merge with what is.

    I rest in the unknown, in the mystery unfolding.

    I serve the wholeness of Life.

    I commune with the one being.

    I am the one being in human form.

    ::

    {{For me, beauty is in simplicity – I would enjoy reading your works, remaining centred and present whilst doing so.

    This is not a criticism or an attempt to be derogatory, but genuine feedback as requested. From someone who enjoys your intellect and passion, I hope this is constructive for you…..}}

    ::

    Many thanks, Evan. Best to you.

    in reply to: Starting to make myself whole again #104593
    Gary R. Smith
    Participant

    Hi Zariah,

    {{My question is how do you take time for yourself?}}

    What hinders you from taking time for yourself? If the impediment to taking time for yourself includes the demands of your lifestyle (job, social events, and so on) sort out what you can eliminate and set aside specific time for yourself. If you feel pressure to give in to demands of people in your life, build up your self resolve to set boundaries. It may be uncomfortable at first, but you can do it in a friendly way with firmness and confidence, knowing you value yourself and choose also what is important to you. Know what is important to you by reflecting on it, keeping a journal or simply writing a list and then prioritize. These processes can be revelatory if you haven’t given it much thought before.

    The journey of inner work begins with that resolve, with determination. It is an act of will that sets the course of your life and future.

    {{How do you quiet down your crazy thoughts and be a little bit more content everyday?}}

    Meditation could be a very beneficial means for you to calm yourself and be more content. At least it is worthwhile to find out, if you haven’t already. On this page there are great free resources to help you become informed about 22 different types of meditation, with videos and free PDF files to download: http://www.wholehuman.emanatepresence.com/meditative-life.html

    As a tool by itself or in conjunction with meditation, I suggest reading this article as well and just feel it over. Decide whether or not you resonate with its approach which offers a new paradigm, a non-dualistic perspective which from my experience brings calmness and contentment: http://www.wholehuman.emanatepresence.com/communion.html

    Also, about therapy. I was a house parent to at-risk teen-aged boys in an organization with clinical therapists for over a year and participated in their therapies for the youth. I was not at all impressed with the therapists or their methods and for the second half of the year spoke up against the therapies. I know that every person has the in-born capacity to do the inner work needed. Therapies, techniques, traditions just muddle with and hinder the process. But it does take will and a seed of trust and confidence. Then nurture and allow the innate seed to grow.

    I liked Inky’s “you are your own entity. You be you!” and would enjoy reading a follow-up from you. Best to you.

Viewing 15 posts - 16 through 30 (of 77 total)