- This topic has 7 replies, 2 voices, and was last updated 11 years, 2 months ago by Anonymous.
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October 12, 2013 at 6:25 pm #43670AnonymousInactive
Hello,
So I’ve used this forum before to get some clarity with a relationship that ended. I’m still healing from that, but I find my greater issue now to be settling down.
After the breakup, I moved back to my hometown to study Oriental Medicine. Although I love my hometown, I never thought I’d be back until maybe retirement age, or if my past partner wanted to move here with me. So I had wanderlust and went traveling for month to sort out my thoughts and visit old friends. When I got back, I was finally set on being here. I was positive that good things would come my way if I just allowed things to be as they are.
Today I’m feeling unsettled again. It’s been 4 days since I’ve been back and I’m really wanting to move back to Chicago (the city I started my studies in, and where I lived previous to my previous place of residence). I love the city and the friends I have there. Here, I have few friends and there are almost no outlets for making new ones, meeting new people or going on new adventures. I feel stuck and I feel too young to be in this lifestyle. I may be single forever if I stay here.
I don’t know if I should follow my passion, or settle down and wait for the lesson and its teachings to present themselves. Help.
October 13, 2013 at 6:57 am #43684MattParticipantMaile,
It is always important to follow our path of heart, wherever that leads us. That being said, its possible that you’ve been jumping through novel experiences for awhile and crave the excitement, the newness, and that may be clouding your deeper needs of the heart. Sometimes when we have a lot of “new” experiences, the excitement is so potent that old familiar scenes appear boring. Its better to open up, let go of the feeling of boring, and see the beauty that is around us. Said differently, we can look out and see the same old boring tree that has always been outside our window, or we can look out and see the tree in a new way, really allow ourselves to open and appreciate it with the new eyes we’ve grown. That’s when the path of heart opens up before us, because we open to whatever is there, wherever we are.
The path is your own, and wherever you go, the lessons to learn will follow you around… its OK to relax and just do what you want to do. Perhaps you could turn away from “hometown” or “Chicago” as holding the solutions you’re seeking, and accept that you’ll grow no matter where you call home. Its really up to you where!
With warmth,
MattOctober 13, 2013 at 11:00 am #43689AnonymousInactiveThank you, Matt. Such wise words.
I try to stay present and call out the beauty around me. To see the lessons that present themselves when I’m feeling stuck. In moments of enlightenment, I’m able to let go and feel that I’m being taken care of, wherever I am, as long as I’m surrendering.
I feel that the urge to leave comes from 3 things:
1. my biological clock that’s ticking and fears that I may never find a partner in this small town. I think this is what tugs at me the most.
2. my head telling me that there’s much to learn from new environments — about myself and the world.
3. a feeling of lack. That I’m not in control and therefore I don’t have what I want or need.
I really don’t know how to learn this lesson and stop seeking. I feel like I’ve been dealing with this for 20 years, and it never seems to get easier. My only guess for why I feel this way is that in looking back at times when I went off seeking, I found great strength in myself and learned a lot from the experience. I guess I see those things as great life experiences, so why would I want to deny them?
Does this make any sense?
October 13, 2013 at 1:42 pm #43692MattParticipantMaile,
Why do you assume the lesson is to stop seeking? When we get hungry, the lesson isn’t how to sit with hunger…
With warmth,
MattOctober 13, 2013 at 5:39 pm #43732AnonymousInactiveIs the lesson to sit with my feelings of needing to seek? To be present with the feelings that I believe are causing me to want to be elsewhere?
October 13, 2013 at 7:03 pm #43735MattParticipantMaile,
Where to go is really between you and your heart. Sometimes we have a craving for novel experiences(settle), sometimes our heart is telling us to look elsewhere for nourishment(jump). Perhaps if you give yourself a little time to relax and accept that no matter where you go, you bring your own ripeness to the situation, it could be easier to tell the difference. Stay or go, there is Maile… what a beauty!
With warmth,
MattOctober 13, 2013 at 7:12 pm #43736AnonymousInactiveMatt,
I have done some thinking about my thoughts on where I want to go and how that feels more right for me at the time. It’s interesting because I left Chicago wanting to find a more peaceful environment. I ended up regretting that move terribly soon after leaving. When I went back, I went back with an openness that I never had for the place. I opened myself to seeing everything as it is and found myself completely surrounded by beauty, whether it be in the parks or in the somewhat grungy and rundown ‘hood where I stayed with my friend while visiting. I saw all the opportunities that I didn’t open myself to when I previously lived there. I feel I was able to appreciate it for what it was, instead of what I wanted it to be, but only because I was able to live somewhere later that didn’t nurture my soul AT ALL. I feel my heart truly wants to be in the midwest (specifically in the country of Minnesota), so going back there would help me to get closer to that dream.
There’s so much beauty where I am now, and I can definitely open up to it all, minus the boredom of not having friends and being in a place that I know like the back of my hand.
I also can kind of see that my desire to return to Chicago may have something to do with wanting to escape the grieving the end of the relationship that I was in. While I was there visiting, I could fill my heart with all the things that made me feel fulfilled, yet I still was in mourning. While here, without anything to make me feel fulfilled, my mourning is quickly turning to self-hate and disappointment. I wonder how fulfilled I can feel with just living of life of constant practice.
October 13, 2013 at 7:15 pm #43737AnonymousInactiveMatt,
I just read your post right after posting my last one. I’ll ponder your answer and give myself that space to figure things out.
🙂
Thank you so much for your help, Matt – yet again!
Aloha,
Maile
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