Seasonal Wellness: Fall

The days become shorter and what remains falls from the trees and the vines, as we usher in the season of fall.

To recap: I am writing posts on seasonal wellness, starting with the season of spring. If you are new to this series, here’s a quick snapshot: “Seasonal wellness simply means that you live in rhythm with the cycles of nature. We can tap into and use this energy to live in balance with the natural cycles of wellness that nature provides. All we need to do is look to nature for guidance.”  Seasonal Wellness: Spring

Fall: Harvest, Giving Thanks, and Release of the Dead & Dying

As I look out my window writing this, there is a light drizzle of rain. My sedum has turned rose-tipped, birds fly overhead. There’s a hint of color turning in the leaves. It will continue this way until the trees are bare, it’s a spectacular grand finale here in Minnesota.

Fall offers us the opportunity to rejoice, give thanks, learn, take inventory, and then release the dead and dying.

HARVEST & GIVING THANKS

It is honorable to bless the journey.

When we pluck the ripe tomato from the vine, it’s easy to forget that every fruit, every tree, started as a tiny seed.  In gardening, we learn to pick the plants that provide the tastiest, most-robust produce and save the seeds for next year. This simple act, acknowledging what’s working, helps to refine and transform a garden.

So we know I’m talking about life here, right?

Since January you have planted many seeds, watched things grow and fall apart. As you look back on those months, it’s important to acknowledge all the things that have worked: moments, travels, projects, and new friends. Acknowledge and bless all the good things, however big, however small.

If you are like me, and you want to go deep, let me suggest a practice I use every fall: a 30-day gratitude practice. This simple technique written about and introduced to me through my sister-in-law, Josie Robinson, has created tremendous growth for myself and others. For details on her book and this practice, you can visit Josie here: josierobinson.com

RELEASE THE DEAD & DYING

In our acknowledgement of what is working, it is equally important to bring attention to the areas of our life that are not working. If you look at the gardener in fall, he or she is cleaning out the remnants of plants that no longer bear fruit and composting what remains. A gardener knows that, come spring, the compost will help to regenerate the soil for new growth.  

The process of death and letting go teaches us about life.

RELEASING ATTACHMENT

Attachments come in all forms. We can become attached to people, habits, things, even energy. Not all attachments are bad, only that sometimes we move through our lives without awareness regarding the things that fill our spirit and the things that deplete our spirit. Fall is a great time for taking inventory.

You might want to ask yourself: Are there people, places or things in my life that no longer serve me?

The truth is that until we’re able to recognize what’s just not working anymore, we clutter our lives with draining forces that get in the way of future opportunities, new ideas, relationships, and resources.

Let’s take a closer look at the process of releasing attachment:

Career & Projects

As a facilitator, I learned that I cannot help all people. Everyone is in a different stage of their journey, some people are open, ready and inclined to heal their lives.  And others of us are not. It doesn’t mean that one is better than the other, only that desire and willingness are necessary to catalyze positive change. I learned quite quickly, that the desire needs to rest within the client, not just the facilitator. Though rare, there have certainly been a client or two that I have graciously needed to bless and release. I know, that should the desire come knocking for that client, my door will open and the work can begin.

So let me ask you: in your line of business, are there people or projects (or project people, for that matter) that stifle your ability to do your work? Or perhaps you spend your working energy doing things that are not in your “zone of genius?”

To release this attachment, it’s important to set boundaries. The easiest way to set a boundary is to ask yourself: What do I need to be successful (with my clients / on a project / at work)? Outline what those basics are and make a commitment to release all people, projects, and energy drains that rest outside these boundaries.

People

Negative relationships can cause mental, emotional, physical and spiritual toxicity in our lives. Some toxic relationships are easy to spot, and others slow moving, and require us to step out of energetic autopilot to identify. An easy way to bring more awareness to toxic relationships is to look at the energetic exchange that is taking place:

  • When you are around this person, do you feel inspired, happy, able to give and receive?  Or do you find yourself over-giving, taken advantage of, and drained?
  • If you leave your house in a good mood, does that high vibrational frequency match when you share space with this person?  Or do you feel slightly or radically depressed when you leave an interaction with this person?
  • Have you established boundaries, or communicated concerns in the past, but the patterns of imbalance continue?
  • Do you like who you are around this person?

To release this attachment, it’s important to release imbalanced energetic exchanges. This can be done verbally, by communicating what you are no longer willing to contribute to - (remember, others can only take your energy if you give him or her permission).

Another way to release attachment to people is through a "bless and release" visualization. To do this, visualize yourself and the other person in your mind's eye.  Thank this individual for what you have learned or gained in the process of this relationship.  Visually see yourself cutting the cords between you and this person.  You may recognize certain cords, for instance, a cord that symbolizes emotional co-dependency, or a cord of hurt feelings from a trauma or experience with this person. You might decide that all cords between you and this individual need to be cut. With your arm (in the visualization), cut the cords.  Say aloud a verbal affirmation, such as: “I am cutting the cords of our energetic relationship [or specific cords], I release all negative mental, emotional, physical and spiritual attachment to [person’s name] now. Good bye. And so it is.”  If you need to remove physical totems of this person in your life (photos, gifts) that is also a suggestion. A sage cleanse following a release is also recommended.  You can repeat this process as much as needed. Be gentle with yourself in the process of letting go.

Belief Systems

Negative systems of belief are also recommended to clear at this time.  If there are experiences, mistakes, and / or regrettable decisions made about yourself, money, life, relationships - fall is a great time to release these.

To release this attachment, my favorite tool (aside from Emotional Healing) is a fire ceremony. My sister-in-law, Josie, and I are partial to this process.  Perhaps because we are both Leos, and perhaps because fire is one of the most catalyzing elements of change. This is a form of Phoenix energy, burning away old thought systems into the ashes that catalyze new growth. To do this, we simply write thought systems on paper, or find items that symbolize thought systems, and put each one into the fire. We bless and release each as they fall into the flame. Following the ceremony, you may want to state a positive intention for the future, or recite positive affirmations.

This is a great ceremony to do among like-minded friends, a lot of energy can be moved in groups.

Fall teaches us to be active participants in the act of letting go.  Not all change need come from sudden, traumatic events.  If we keep the garden of our hearts actively free from negativity, we open ourselves to cultivate greater outcomes and greater aspects of ourselves.

Here’s to the season of death and rebirth!


 

RESOURCES:

The Gratitude Jar, by Josie Robinson.  
Includes gratitude practice mentioned in this post.

The Producer Personality: and 3.5 steps to find balance

As a society, we have a leaning towards our masculine side: the producer personality type. We’re achievers, doers, goal-setters, and task-masters.  We’re often more comfortable giving than we are receiving.  And when a child walks in the door from school, the first thing we ask is: “What did you do today?”


things that should be asked
often. in every type. of
relationship :
how is your heart.
is your breath happy. here.
do you feel free.

- Nayyirah Waheed

 

Producer Tendencies:

When we are overly exerted in our masculine, we become very attached to the way something should go, look, or feel. It’s easy to become headstrong about a goal or an idea.

At any given moment, producers are focused on the next achievement. Often it can feel like happiness is just around the next corner, an always elusive destination. There’s rarely a moment to stand still.

If you’re like me, you were raised in or adopted the tendencies of “hard work,” “life is not easy,” “no free rides,” “if I don’t do it nobody will”...

Eventually, we tie our self-worth to our achievements, and bolt it together for safe-keeping. Life becomes a rapid routine of hurtling one challenge after the next.

20150626_191548.jpg

Awareness

Any of those tendencies sound familiar?  

They certainly do to me.  And a great number of my clients as well.

In my own work, I have found that even the slightest change of perspective, or awareness, can create a lot of good in our lives.  

At some point, I became exhausted of chasing endless goals and never really arriving at destination happiness. So I came to my own awarenesses around my producer tendencies, that helped me to heal expand. Here they are:

ONE /// Tomorrow is not guaranteed. I don’t mean to go full-throttle “end of days” here, but let’s be honest.  It’s not. Chasing tomorrow’s happiness is a waste of today’s happiness. Instead of focusing on the BIG items that will make you happy down the line (this job, this amount of money…) focus on the small things that make you happy now.

TWO ///  Work with the power of intention. Instead of goal-setting, consider being of intention. This is the ability to set forth a positive affirmation for yourself.  Think in terms of feeling. Here’s the difference:

Goal - I am going to make one-thousand dollars in sales by October 1, 2016.

Intention - Abundance flows to me, easily and effortlessly, in all forms as I live my divine right livelihood on the planet, now.

Neat. Huh?

TWO & A HALF /// Let go. That’s the beauty of an intention, it creates  s p a c e  for good to show up. Meaning, we’re not trying to fit our good through a straw, instead we open up to allow our good to come in all forms (especially those we could not have conceived on our own).

THREE /// What’s the point of building castles in the sky if there’s nobody there to share the view? One of the biggest tragedies I see in the over-achiever is tendencies of isolation / separation. The gift of focus can foray into the extremes of spiritual separation and separation in our relationships with partners, children, families, or friends. Over achievers are often so independent, or used to going it alone, they have not even considered opening to something beyond his or hers’ own capacity. That’s why it becomes important to open up to receiving help from others. That’s right.  We get by with a little help from our friends.

For an over-achiever this can be as simple as saying YES when someone offers a helping hand.

I distinctly remember a fellow healer offering me the suggestion of being more in my Divine Feminine / receptivity. “How on Earth do I do that?”  I asked. She gave a round of examples of common things we often refuse in the form of service, one of them is allowing someone to hold the door open for us. I remember laughing a bit at the simplicity of this suggestion.  Until the following week when someone offered to hold the door open for me and I literally felt a guttural reaction of “NOOO!!” As if someone holding the door open was insinuating I could not take care of myself - thankyouverymuch.

This can be one of the many signs we’re shutting down our ability to receive.  And folks, what I’ve learned in all of this, is that it’s just as honorable to receive as it is to give.

In my own work, I have found I am far more effective, “productive,” and certainly happier when I round out my masculine tendencies with the strength and power of the Divine Feminine. Together, we become a fluid force, like the breath, able to give and receive.

So let me ask:
 
How is your heart?  
Is your breath happy here?

Do you feel free?


 

Resources

Additional poetry by Nayyirah Waheed:

 
nejma
By nayyirah waheed
salt.
By Nayyirah Waheed

Root Chakra: Healing with the Earth

Are you ready to take a deeper dive into your chakras?

Great.

Let’s start at the beginning: the root chakra.

*To get an overview on the seven chakras, you can visit my earlier post here: Chakra Crash Course

The Root Chakra

The root chakra is located at the base of the spine. I consider this the “seat” of the chakra system. The color of the chakra is red, and governs the base organs and body systems, including the skin, spine and bone structure, feet, lower back, and blood.

As you might have learned in my Chakra Crash Course, every chakra connects with a scent, stone, music note, and color. I’ll give a quick overview on each, but the majority of information I’ll be focusing on will be in relationship to the emotional / belief system / archetypal aspects of each chakra.

FAST FACTS:

  • Color: Red
  • Essential Oils: Cinnamon, vetiver and grounding scents such as cedarwood and sandalwood
  • Music Note: C
  • Element: Earth

Lessons from the Root Chakra

Our root chakra helps us to feel fully rooted here on Earth, tribally supported, fully accepting of our human experience. Individuals with a strong, root-base chakra, have a sense of home wherever they go. They recognize that home lives within each human being, no matter geographic location.  A healthy, well-balanced root chakra also means we have the capacity to feel safety and security, supported and supportive of others, while fully accepting of our physical bodies.

What I find most interesting about this chakra is that most spiritualist types have a very robust root energy center, not only does it help to balance the higher, spiritual chakras, it also helps to “ground” their spirituality into their daily, human experiences. I think we all know spiritualist types that “say one thing, do another,” - this is often an indicator of a root chakra out-of-balance.

Patterns of Imbalance

Where we have injuries can often be a very good indicator of a root chakra needing attention:

  • Feet or ankle injuries
  • Spinal / lower back injuries
  • Issues with the skin or blood
  • Anxiety
  • Flightiness / accidents

Patterns of imbalance happen on a continuum, sometimes we are simply not taking in enough “fuel” or energy to the center, and other times, we are blocking the flow of energy.  If we use the pool analogy from Chakra Crash Course, imagine seven pools of water.  At the base (the first pool) is our root chakra energy center.  If the pool is lacking in water, we may not be pulling in enough energy to support the chakra. Other times, we the pool is full of water, but not circulating energy. This can mean we are holding tightly to old belief systems in this chakra, unwilling to let go, or grow. Both are patterns of imbalance.

In practice, root-base chakra issues carry emotional and archetypal patterns.  Here are a few common ones I find when working to heal the root chakra:

If we have plenty of energy in our chakra, but little movement, you might notice in yourself or others:

  • Feeling “stuck,” unable to move forward
  • Extreme discomfort and resistance to change
  • Heaviness: both in feeling and in physicality
  • Overly demanding, authoritarian, or controlling, “my way or the highway”
  • Fight-or-flight / reactive-attachment - trauma patterning
  • Orphaned adult archetype: extreme need to “go it alone”
  • Extreme tribalism - cult-like commitments to religious institutions, jobs, or people

When we do not have enough energy in this center, you might notice in yourself or others:

  • Lack of follow-through
  • Accident-proned, due to “spacing out” or physical detachment
  • Anxiety over safety and security (finances, home, partner)
  • Judgement over body
  • Spiritually-inclined, without the ability to manifest or match guidance to actions (lack of integrity)
  • Inability to nurture or care for oneself (emotionally and/ or physically)

Addictions, anxiety, obsessive-compulsions, and suicidal thoughts can all be connected to the root chakra.

Healing the Root Chakra

When working with the root chakra in session, we are clearing old belief systems and patterns of control to help move out energetic blockages in this area. Through emotional healing, we are shedding light on aspects of our consciousness (systems of thought) we have about ourselves and others. Through awareness, we are able to energetically release that which no longer serves us.

I have found that in nearly all sessions I am touching on the root chakra, even if we are primarily focused on issues in another chakra. The root chakra carries the majority of our generational patterning, so it is often where we focus when healing cycles of trauma and abuse passed down in families.  It’s also a wonderful place to “anchor” our energy. In this way we are able to translate our spiritual insights into actionable guidance in our daily lives.

As most of my clients know, I might recommend exercises following a session, to help continue the process of balancing chakras.  While emotional healing works all on its own, I have found that when we combine active practice with inner work, we make changes easier and with less effort.  Here is an exercise from my toolbox, that can help balance the root chakra:

Boosting the Root Chakra

For those that need to energize this chakra -

Have you ever looked at a tree?  Find the tallest, biggest, most robust tree around you.  If you’re not near a tree - imagine one. Now contemplate how high into the sky the tree reaches. It’s awesome, isn’t it?  

Consider how a tree can stand so tall.  Its root system, right?

Imagine how deep and how wide the root system of this tree is.

That’s the power of your root chakra.  The greater our capacity to anchor ourselves, the higher we can reach to the heavens (Father Sky, God, Source, spiritual insight).

Find a quiet place at home, or even better, go outside. Close your eyes and take a deep, cleansing breath. Picture roots coming out of the base of the spine, anchoring down, down, down into the Earth.

On the exhalation, release any negativity, fear, anxiety or confusion.  Feel burden slip from your shoulders and move down the roots, into the Earth.

Let. It. Go.

On the inhalation, take up Mother Earth’s loving compassion, up through the root system and into the base of the spine. Feel a sense of complete acceptance, unity, and compassion.  Up. Up. Up through the spine until the sensation fills your body.

Relax.

Continue breathing, visualizing, and feeling until you arrive at a sense of inner knowing belonging, unity, support, growth, gratitude.

I have found this practice to work well for those who experience a lot of anxiety and stress. Use this as long or as quickly as you need until you capture the emotion. I have also found it to work well particularly before bed, for those that repeatedly cycle thoughts at night.

*This exercise can still work for those carrying stagnation (lack of movement) in this chakra. If this is the case, I suggest focusing on releasing fear through the root system, and pulling up support and acceptance. Remember, a deep root structure allows a tree to go through change. It bends with the wind. Looses its leaves in the winter and regrows them in the spring. We can be anchored and open to change. In fact, they support one-another.