Down Time

Do you ever feel stuck in a rut? Just kind of a lingering "blah," or perhaps an "ugh," or maybe a lump in your throat while you're smiling about your busy day? I used to experience big ruts, rather often, and I'd like to share with you how I'm starting to learn some mad driving skills on this life course!

I've identified two major factors that have allowed me to have a down in the dumps day, and not a 3 month rut. The first is that I no longer try to make myself happy when I don't feel it.  It's paradoxical, right? I used be really uncomfortable just letting myself feel like crap. Because I'm committed to living the most positive, energetic, joyful life that I possibly can, I used to fight the low places, and in doing so, they stuck around. Sometimes for a while. Constantly battling the blah created so much negativity!  Self criticism that I wasn't feeling as happy as I wanted. Self doubt that I was capable of living the life of my own dreams. Self defeat that dang, I am just not pulling this vibrant life thing off. That's a lot of adversaries besides just feeling like staring at a wall or crying! Not to mention draining and depleting. And the harder I tried to make myself happy, the faster I spiraled down that staircase. Here's the funny thing. When I started to really be in tune with how I felt, and actually let myself feel it, as deep as it needed to be felt, it's a little magical that it just started to dissipate!  No, really.  At first it was really scary for me to feel the bad guys. They can be kind of... demonic!  They have a fearful illusion of power. Actually sitting with how I felt, and letting myself go to that place - that sadness, anger, hurt, whatever - felt like jumping of a cliff.  No way out and no turning back.  But I quickly realized that when you face that fear, when you feel the emotion and locate where it sits inside you, and stay with it, allow it, even invite it, it melts into a deep, strong peace. Love. Joy even! The process has taken the judgment out of the emotion for me. It's allowed me to just feel crappy one day, and not have it hang around. Not beat myself up, but actually care for myself, and more easily for others, with compassion.  Be with where you're at! 

The second big factor that is ultimately uplifting is what I like to call sustainable energy. When the majority of my time and attention are directed at collecting and cultivating positive habits, inspiring thoughts, and nurturing friendships, there seems to be a lingering carry-over. Maybe it's like having storehouses of food, or an emergency fund. When I have times of lower energy, that feel more negative, there's a little bit of magnetism that happens. It connects me to a place of peace and faith. When I've put the effort into filling and surrounding myself with things that reflect my passion, positivity, and light, often there's enough to shine into the shadows.

Speaking of sustainable energy, I just can't leave out food! Just like negative thoughts don't create positive changes (and feeling bad about feeling bad doesn't create happiness), food without nutrients can not create balanced hormones, strong muscles, or properly functioning cells. I know it seems obvious to say that, but I think many people don't connect the food they eat with their emotions or physical ailments. But in truth, there's no way to separate them! Geneen Roth says that "How you do something, is how you do everything." Our lives are on our plates. What and how we eat reflects our feelings of self worth, our satisfaction, our alignment with the life we're living. I've found that to be true for me. I have used food to satisfy many areas besides hunger. To comfort, to fill, to numb. I noticed a funny thing about feeling full. I used to joke that I did not come with a "full" switch - no matter how much I ate, I never felt full. I was a bottomless pit! It wasn't until I started to understand that we are physically nourished by so much more than food, that I realized I was trying to fill to fill the "empty" areas in my life with food. When I started to really feel and allow feelings, I no longer tried to "stuff" them with food.  When I addressed the parts of my life that I wasn't living to the fullest, I began to feel satisfied with food (quite a delightful feeling)! It really fascinated me to see how intertwined my life is with the food I eat, and how easily it is to be nourished and satisfied by food when I'm not using it to meet needs that can't be met with food.

Have you noticed that with me, somehow, everything is always coming back to food?! I'm a little sorry, but also delighted to share the connection with you! I'm not so sure anymore that we are what we eat. I think, perhaps, we eat what we are.

How is a car detail like a health coach?

Three kids. A dog. A busy mom. You know so much about me from those few words - mainly, that my mini van is disgusting. And it's not like I'm ok with it being filthy - every few... months... I take an hour and fill grocery bags with garbage: crushed granola bars, banana peels and/or rotten apple cores, broken pencils, those little rings that come in store bought cupcakes, wrappers of all kinds, school papers that never made it to me in time... and haul another bag into the house full of water bottles, lunch containers, random utensils, shoes...and then I vacuum the remaining almonds and pretzels and dirt, and wash the dog nose prints off the windows. And you know every time I do that I re-instate the NO FOOD in the van rule. I insist that each person will make sure they take ALL of their things every time they get out. Sometimes it stays clean for a week after that. If I'm lucky.

Enter more normal life: the back hatch of the van getting smashed, and it going to the body shop for repair. But this job came with a bonus: because they had the van a little longer than expected, they detailed it for me. It's like entering a whole new vehicle! Clearly, I am not a car detail expert. I don't detail cars every day, nor do I have the tools to make the inside of a mom's mini van look THAT clean. Before this extra little bonus, I honestly never would have paid for someone to clean my van like that, because heck, I can vacuum and wash windows - and I honestly never would have gotten it that clean! Clean enough that when the kids saw it, they were so wowed they are actually making sure to take all their stuff out, without me even saying it!

Light bulb! Every one of us has an area (or a few) that we excel in; that we keep up on, we attend to, we make sure we're doing a good job. In order to do that, there are other areas that we have to pay less attention to, and sometimes those areas are just as - or more - important than our areas of expertise. Think about the areas that you keep up on. Do you do it alone? Or do you have the help and structure in place to keep you on track?

When it comes to my health and well being, I keep up on it. I don't do it alone. I attend programs and classes and seminars and conferences. I read. I invest time every day into physical, emotional, or spiritual self care. I have a supportive community of people who inspire and encourage me, and motivate me when I get off track. I regularly add new DVDs to my workout collection. I have a network of alternative health care specialists whose input I seek when I need to restore health, alignment, and balance. I create space for spiritual retreat days. I am an expert in wellness and self care because I live it every day, I invest my time and energy, and I know what tools to use and where to turn when I'm off track.

When it comes to cleaning my van, it's an area I don't keep up on. When it's totally gross, I still don't always have the time (or want to invest the time), energy or even desire to get it back to it's sparkling clean, original state, and I definitely don't have the right tools. I've always managed the cleaning of my van alone - and it was neglected. I can't believe what a difference it makes to get into a clean vehicle, and how nice it feels to not have to throw tons of clutter around depending on where people want to sit. Utilizing an expert to achieve this result made this possible. It's still up to me to maintain it, but it motivated me beyond anything I've ever done myself to keep up with it, and it made it so much easier for me to do.

Health, wellness, and feelings of vitality are like this. Not everyone has the time, motivation, tools, or even desire to put effort into figuring out what they can do to feel better. And not everyone has to, because this world is designed for all of us to support each other, to be experts in different areas. You don't have to excel in every area. You can focus on what delights and energizes you, and get the assistance you need in the areas you're struggling! It's amazing how easy it feels to have the support of someone who can help you make a daunting change so effortlessly and naturally.

What areas do you excel at? What areas do you need expert support in?


The Master Plan

So here it goes, it's the shocking Michigan spring snowfall!  You know the one.... the one that comes every year, and yet Michiganders are still expecting warm weather immediately for some reason, and delight at dissing Mother Nature. It's an interesting dynamic that I watch unfold every March 20.  And, as usual, nature inspires me to reflect on life.  Life works and moves this way, doesn't it?  Like everything in nature, it ebbs and flows, comes and goes, is sometimes gentle, subtle, and slow, and at other times is powerful, forceful, and urgent. There is a time and place for each display.

This week, the theme here at my house is revolving around a quote that recently inspired me:

The master fails more than the average person even tries.

I'm sorry I don't know who said it, but while trying to credit him or her, I found this, also anonymous, one:

An expert is a [wo]man who has made all the mistakes which can be made, in a very narrow field.

And one more that ties the subject up with a bow:

“For I know the plans I have for you,” declares the Lord, “plans to prosper you and not to harm you, plans to give you hope and a future.”
— Jeremiah 29:11

To become a master, failing is part of the plan!  "Failing" doesn't indicate some terrible, shameful life circumstance! It indicates that you're on a path headed for mastery, for expertise, for prosperity - if only you will trust that process and embrace what each step can teach you. Yeah, I know it's not always your natural response to delight in the errors, or weather, in life, but I believe it brings you a step closer to well-being when you learn to point your thoughts in that direction, to be present and appreciative of each moment. There's some fine tuning that happens in your heart when your thoughts and feelings are harmonized and aligned with the world around you.

An easy reference point for me has always been that year-long process of watching a baby learn to walk. The process actually starts with tummy time and rolling over (or even before) - mastering one muscle at a time. Ultimately, each one of those muscles are necessary for posture, and each neuron connected in the brain is necessary to coordinate the balance and movement.  When that baby strains and tries to roll over, but doesn't quite make it, it has not failed!  It has exercised a muscle that a few days later will be strong enough to complete the task. Each time you and I attempt to reach a goal, and don't quite make it, we have not failed!  Those life muscles, brain connections, and experiences are part of the process! 

It's at the point of your perceived failure that it is most crucial to trust the process, because that point is the easiest place to feel defeated and give up - and it's also where your most valuable information resides. The path toward mastery, expertise, success is complete with directions, you need only to use the mistakes as your guide.  Built in GPS.  Life is pretty clever... trust your journey toward mastery. Like the process of winter easing into spring, you know it's in progress! Know that the plans for you are not to harm you, but plans to prosper you. Plans to give you hope.  Plans to propel your future into mastery. Plans for the winter to melt into spring.

It's a Hell Yes!

I'm reflecting on intuition.  Have you had opportunities and experiences that you felt clearly led toward, and either said yes or no to them?  Intuition is either a "Hell Yes" or a "Hell No!"  It excites me every time when I reflect on the times I followed mine, and how much I appreciate being in tune with that guidance.  One of those times happened just over a year ago,  when I discovered IIN, signed up, and then, as had been my habit since I became a wife and mom, I persuaded myself that it wasn't the right time; it would require a major budget adjustment and there were things I'd rather get for the kids; it might take some of my time and energy away from my family... and I un-enrolled.  And within 2 weeks, I knew without a doubt that if I didn't do this RIGHT NOW, something in me would die.  I would probably live a great many more years, and probably have many other fine opportunities, but something absolutely necessary for my life would be lost, and I wouldn't get this one back.  The time was now.  I stood at the crossroads of the path I had taken for 10 years, and the path that was mine for the taking if I wanted to continue and create the fulfilling, empowered, vibrant, passionate life of my childhood hopes and dreams.  It was a scary choice, one that by all my analytical calculations shouldn't have been the right time, and one made harder by the habits I had fallen into regarding my own life dreams, but I knew with every living part of my being that it was what I had to do.  I took the leap.  And I just want to hug that intuition (and my awesome guy, who knows what a Hell Yes is!)!

Intuition will never take you the wrong way, but doubt and fear will.  Getting clear on what your Hell Yes and Hell No feel like, and having the courage to listen, is not just empowering.  It also changes the course of your life, from "great but something's missing" to "absolutely amazing!"  Have you followed, or not, your intuition?  How does it feel when you look back at those choices, and what have you learned from them?

Check out Christine Hassler for more of her fun guidance on following intuition!

Opening Day!

FULL of excitement and gratitude!  Today is the grand debut of my website... a culmination of my life's purpose, my talents, persistence, experience, and everything in life that delights me.  I am so grateful for, and rather in awe of, everything that has led me to this point that I don't even know how to thank God, the universe, each person who has encouraged and supported me, properly!  I'm ready to spill love and thankfulness out all over the place!  That's a fine feeling.  :)

I thought I'd share this piece of writing, authored by my daughter's friend, from the Reflections exhibit this past Tuesday.  This is her response to the prompt The World Would Be a Better Place If....


The world would be a better place if people kept the openness and curiosity they had as children.  If they followed their life-long childhood dream and didn't let fear overcome them.

The world would be a better place if adults would live to the moment and be enthusiastic about the little things.

The world would be a better place if adults kept an open mind and heart and used their imagination to guide them down the path of adulthood.

The world would be a better place if adults would have a positive outlook on life and if they loved who they are.

The world would be a better place if adults would trust their gut feeling and never doubt themselves.

-Abby Hartman, Age 10


Abby's hopes rang true to the core of my being, and Abby, I hope I'm an adult that lives into your words.  And a shout out to Abby's beautiful mama, Becki.  The world IS a better place because of you and your children, and the  intentions you just shared with us!