What's in the gallery?

We dissolve stuck and rewrite patterns. We apply radical playfulness to life (when we feel like it!), embarking on internal adventures (credo of Safety First). We have a fake band called Solved By Cake. We build invisible sanctuaries, invent words and worlds, breathe awe and wonder.

We are not impressed by monsters. Except when we are. We explore the connections between internal territories and surrounding environment to learn what marvelously supportive delicious space feels like, and how to take exquisite care of ourselves. We transform things.* We glow wild.**

* For example: Desire, fear, worry, pain-and-trauma, boundaries, that problematic word which rhymes with flaweductivity.

** Fair warning: Self-fluency has been known to lead to extremely subversive behavior, including treasuring yourself unconditionally, unapologetically taking up space, experiencing outrageously improbable levels of self-acceptance, and general rejoicing in aliveness.

What's in the gallery?

We dissolve stuck and rewrite patterns. We apply radical playfulness to life (when we feel like it!), embarking on internal adventures (credo of Safety First). We have a fake band called Solved By Cake. We build invisible sanctuaries, invent words and worlds, breathe awe and wonder.

We are not impressed by monsters. Except when we are. We explore the connections between internal territories and surrounding environment to learn what marvelously supportive delicious space feels like, and how to take exquisite care of ourselves. We transform things.* We glow wild.**

* For example: Desire, fear, worry, pain-and-trauma, boundaries, that problematic word which rhymes with flaweductivity.

** Fair warning: Self-fluency has been known to lead to extremely subversive behavior, including treasuring yourself unconditionally, unapologetically taking up space, experiencing outrageously improbable levels of self-acceptance, and general rejoicing in aliveness.

When you feel discouraged.

I’m not sure if you know Maryann. I mention her kind of a lot.

She’s one of the most thoughtful and worth-listening-to people I know.

Anyway, yesterday on Facebook she put out the question:

When you feel discouraged about your art or your business, what helps you keep going?

And there I was scribbling down all sorts of things in response.

Not because I’m a weird genius, but because ohmygod I get discouraged all the time. This is a part of my experience that I am achingly familiar with.

This is not advice.

Experience is so individual. That’s the ever-useful People Vary principle. And at the same time, we’re all in this together.

So my intention is not to tell you what to do/think/feel in times of discouragement.

It’s more the hope that something about this will spark your knowing about all the things that are true for you. And that this remembering of what works for you will be as useful to you as writing this down has been for me.

Some of what I know about discouragement. Starting points.

Reading notes of appreciation in my Box of Wonderful Things People Have Said.

Dancing. Remembering that growth is exponential, that beginnings take time and that you can never see all the progress while it’s underground.

Also: I’m constantly reminding myself that getting discouraged about business, art and creative-expression is normal.

It’s heavy identity stuff happening. Of course sometimes I’ll feel discouraged.

There’s nothing like having a good cry.

And bouncing on the tiny trampoline.

Sometimes I like to think about past clients and students, and the beautiful things they have accomplished.

Here’s a useful thing that is always reassuring to remember:

Seeing our own radiance is pretty much impossible.

What else? Having conversations with my monsters, walls and sad, scared selves.

Taking a bath. Running away. Getting offline. Going to the Playground. Getting a burst of color. Popsicle stick permission slips. Roller Derby. Singing sea songs. Hiding.

I remind myself of what I want to remember.

I remember that there are people who live congruently — they live according to what they want, what they know and how they want to be.

And not in some high-powered Donald Trump-ian way, but with simplicity and grace.
And I have met some of these people: I know them.

Like my teacher Andrey Lappa, my delightful uncle Svevo, my sweet friend Hiro, the hilarious Barbara Sher. There is hope.

I tune into unlikely sources of support.

The unexpected internal resources and deep reserves of strength that I always forget about.

And I list all the times that support did come. Or it was there but I was tripping over it.

As well as the reasons that now is not then, and why things can in fact be better, different and less painful this time around.

Without forcing gratitude (because aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaagh), I look for non-obvious sources of support to lean into: oxygen, gravity, the way trees just stand there full of power.

Then there’s the part about context.

Is this bout of losing the faith at all related to hormonal stuff? Weather stuff? Time of year? The memory of an awful thing from then?

Could it be triggered by External Crap (tragedies and catastrophes, recent political events, someone else’s stuff)?

More often than not, there’s a lot of gunk that is not mine sneaking into my space and holding a dance party there. That part is not mine. That’s mine. Not mine.

Speaking of dance parties…

Turn out all the lights. Put on some 80s music. And dance up a storm.

That pretty much always helps — for me. And it’s not that this makes me feel better about business or artistic endeavors. It’s about coming back inside of what’s important to me:

Body, rhythm, pulse, breath, patterns, structure, form, possibility, flow.

And of course, as much mad flailing as possible.

What else?

Wearing a costume. Being five years old and having superpowers like Joseph.

Arts and crafts. Construction paper and magic markers.

Reassuring myself about the fractal flowers. Changing something in the video game.

Yesterday I went to the Bolivia post because a bunch of you referenced it, and you know what?

Seeing two hundred and thirty eight comments, and the level of self-inquiry and kindness there…. it amazes me. I find it completely astounding that a topic so painful and so controversial — discussed on the internet — didn’t turn into a total troll-fest or an angry fight. We may have even accidentally screwed with Godwin’s Law, the most true thing in the known universe.

Mostly though, I go to the Book of Me.

That’s my version of the Book of You, and where all this useful information belongs. And where I’m going to put this as soon as I finish writing.

Discouragement is such a ridiculously huge topic that I kind of wish I could give it an entire chapter, but even just a sticky note about three things to try or one reassuring truth to remember. It all helps.

And even if I don’t remember, or I don’t record the information I’ve collected about myself and my process, something about the act of noticing is strengthening the neural pathways of exiting the land of discouragement.

So everything counts. It all helps me to feel more at home in those less familiar parts of my internal kingdom.

Can we collect more ideas? And comment zen for today.

What do you know about discouragement and what has helped you come back from it or interact with it?

I would love to keep adding ideas to the pile. Please share.

As always, people vary. And nonviolence wins. We all have our stuff. We’re all working on our stuff. It’s a process.

We let people have their own experience and we don’t tell them what to do.

We own that whatever we give people is our take on something, not fact.

“Something I personally find useful…” versus “This is what you need to do.”

That’s it. Love to everyone who reads. Hugs for the hard, because this is hard. Huge appreciation for Maryann, who keeps writing about everything I want to read.

p.s. Thank you, WordPress, for showing me something I had completely forgotten: that I already wrote a post on this very topic titled On Discouragement eleven months ago. I am hilarious.

I have a request!

Hilariously, right in the middle of writing a series of posts on my philosophy of Intentionally Not Giving Advice and how/why it works, I find myself in the need of some unrelated feedback.

Timing. I love it.

Here’s where I could really use your help.

1. Favorite posts?

Remember way back a looooooooong time ago (December 2009) when I was re-doing the sidebar thing and we were collecting favorite posts?

So Selma and I have written approximately seventeen billion things since then, and I’m hoping for some new recommendations.

What are some posts that you have really liked? Or that you would pass on to other people?

I know the archives are endless, but if there are posts you’ve really enjoyed or found helpful/inspiring/useful/whatever, I would appreciate your input. Thank you!

2. Results or understandings from the Monster Manual & Coloring Book.

We have put off adjusting the price of the Monster Manual & Coloring Book to what it was originally going to be for way longer than anyone ever imagined possible.

Partly because it is my absolute most beloved product of all my babies.

And partly because putting the price back up keeps getting bumped off the list of Things That Have To Be Done Right This Second when we’re having staff meetings at Drunk Pirate Council.

Anyway, it is the time.

But I could really use some love stories of how/why the Monster Manual is so incredibly useful. And how much joyful therapeutic fun it is to use the coloring book.

How you can help.

If you have thoughts on either one of these or both, please leave a comment here. That would be super helpful and so very much appreciated.

In lieu of guidelines: comment zen blanket fort stuff.

Of course now I find myself trying to word this request, and wishing I could just link to my handy feedback-giving guidelines that don’t exist yet.

So I’m going to ask anyway, and just let it be awkward and weird.

My take on feedback is this: we recognize the People Vary principle, and take ownership of the fact that whatever we give people is our take on something, not a descriptive fact:

Useful: “A post of yours that really spoke to me is…”
(as opposed to “This is the best one.”)

Useful: “Something I found really appealing is …”
(as opposed to: “X is good. Y is less good.”)

Thank you. This means so much to me.

I appreciate this. And I appreciate you.

So much love to all the commenter mice, the Beloved Lurkers and everyone who reads. This place is one of the safest, most loving, supportive and goofy places on the internet for a reason. And it’s you.

You help me hold the culture, even by reading and nodding. And that has made this a really special experience for me.

Steal a peek at the Book of You.

Background!

The Book of You is the ongoing project that emerges from collecting notes about how we function and what our patterns are and what we need to feel safe and supported.

Notes, observations, insights, moments of bing!, plus all the stuff you know about yourself that totally disappears when awkwardness or anxiety strikes.

My own Book of Me lives in a binder. Most of the pages are colored construction paper, drawn in magic marker. They are messy. They smell like inspiration and possibility and Rally (Rally!).

I thought it might be fun to let you read some Recent Additions to my own version of the Book of You, to spark some ideas. Here they are.

Yet another page titled Remember This.

It says:

Oh, my love.

It’s a lot easier to know what you know when you’re not being flooded by other people’s prescriptive rules about how you should be, and what your process should look/sound/feel like.

Avoid what is prescriptive.

Follow what is intuitive, appealing, supportive of your sovereignty, and respectful of your experience. Your experience.

(I know you’re not going to remember where this is from. So. You said this. And you are right.)

A page about how my workspace needs to feel.

My workspace needs to be…

Fun, playful, sparkly, spacious, colorful, supportive, open, light, light-hearted, soft, comfortable, inspiring, welcoming, comfortable, and iguana-free.

… in order for me to do my best work.

I do not need to know how to make this happen. I’m just committing to these qualities being in my space, and to learning more about my relationship with space so I can find out why I resist what is supportive.

This process can take as much time as it needs. I will list my tools and take notes and put them here.

The page about AGILITY.

This is your word this year. What is agility about?

Speed of reaction. Being adaptive. Resilience. Grace. Play.

Unfazed by things that appear to be upsets.

I can be grounded and stable, flexible and quick.

Nible and steady. Fearless and clear-headed.

Slinky! Gazelle! Slinky! Gazelle!

Simplicity. Timing. Endurance allows for agility.

Responding to change with ease. Experimentation as a way of being.

I am non-predictive! I am sovereign!

Freedom: imagine a juggler. Improvising. Questioning.

A sustainable way of being (because it can effortlessly react to change)

The page about doing yoga when you’re not at home.

We need a better name for this than Hotel Yoga, but you get the point. Here’s what’s important:

It all counts. And it brings you joy.

Turn your room into a jungle gym. Explore nooks and crannies. Use walls.

A hand towel on the floor to rest your face on is very helpful.

Three poses is enough. Really? Yes. In fact, ONE pose is enough.

You can do reclining restorative poses on the bed.

Five breaths. Play and invent. Be five years old. Be an old Turkish lady. Less is not only more, it is better than none.

By reading this, you are already doing yoga. Ha. So there. The yoga of exhaling guilt and the yoga of consciously and lovingly interacting with your experience.

Play with me? And today’s comment zen blanket fort.

The nice thing about Book-of-You-ing is that there really isn’t any way to do it wrong.

Even if you wrote down useful information and then let it burn or float away, something about the intentional, active observation already changes things.

It makes the things you already know slightly easier to remember.

Everything in your Book of You can change.

It’s just what you know right now. It doesn’t need to be complete, and it definitely won’t ever be done. It’s a process.

I would love to read snippets of things you’d like to have in your own Book of You.

Could be topics or questions you want to ask yourself, or specific bits of knowing that you are trying to remember that you know. That would be awesome.

As always: we all have our stuff. We’re all working on our stuff. We let people have their own experience, and we don’t give each other unsolicited advice.

Love to all the commenter mice, the Beloved Lurkers and everyone who reads.

Very Personal Ads #88: pudding versus tuckered out

very personal adsPersonal ads. They’re … personal! Very.

So my itty bitty personal ads made me realize that it’s time to make a regular practice of trying to feel okay asking for stuff.

Even when the asking thing feels weird and conflicted.

Ever since I posted the first one asking my perfect house to find me, which united me with Hoppy House, I have been a fan of the madness that is personal ads.

And now it’s my weekly ritual for clarity and remembering and stuff like that. Yay, ritual!

Oh, curse you, Daylight Savings Time! My old nemesis has returned once again.

But I’m here! So.

What do we gwish for this week? Or at all?

I have no idea. Let’s find out.

Thing 1: PLUM!

Here’s what I want:

Made lots of progress this past week on the Playground User Manual, and yes, I’m pronouncing it plum, as suggested, because it makes me giggle every single time.

Twenty one pages so far.

And I’ve realized that I’d really like it to be a collaborative effort. To come together at the Playground during the magical events that happen there.

Ways this could work:

I’m thinking that maybe this week at Rally (Rally!), some or all of us could add a page here and there.

May also put out an ask to past Rallions and other lovely people who have come playgrounding with me.

Maybe this will also be the push to help me finish the new Playground website too…

Other than that?

I don’t know. But I would like this to be a joy-filled, fun, colorful collaboration, and for it to come together gracefully and easily.

My commitment.

To see what happens when I don’t try to be in charge of everything but just set the culture for it.

To talk to the parts of me who get freaked out about that and to be curious about what would help them get on board with this.

To say the word PLUM a lot. Plumplumplumplumplumplum. Not plumb, though. No. That would be wrong.

Thing 2: Other binder-ey things…

Here’s what I want:

It’s weird because it used to be that everything in my business was online.

The ship’s log where my pirate crew shares all the important ship-sailing information: in the cloud.

Online courses, ebooks, holding Drunk Pirate Council with the help of a chat room.

Now we have the Playground — a real-life center where this stuff happens. And the Toy Shop at the Playground where we sell things.

And I have binders. Or the Anthologies, as I call them. Because binders remind me of school so I asked metaphor mouse to provide translation services.

Anyway. The anthologies are all kind of half-working. And I’d really like to get them in working order so that I can put them to good use.

Ways this could work:

During the Rally, of course. That would be a marvelous thing to work on.

Or I might have a shivanautical moment of bing that would tell me how best to structure them.

Or the right order could just emerge.

My commitment.

To be curious, loving, inquisitive and playful with this.

To stay receptive to new ways of ordering things.

To notice when I’m starting to turn this into a Big, Stressful, Important Project, which will then result in avoiding the hell out of it, and to try not to do that.

That is, to sweetly interrupt the pattern and find out what I want and need instead.

Thing 3: Closings.

Here’s what I want:

There are some doors that need to be closed, some things I am done with.

Never been very good at endings.

But now is the time.

Ways this could work:

A giant permission slip to have this be as awkward as it needs to be.

I don’t need to try to make this smooth or pretty or anything.

Just to be done and have the ending there.

My commitment.

To be curious about my relationship with endings.

To ask questions.

To feel what I feel and not have to like any of it.

Thing 4: A plan for the mysterious holiday away.

Here’s what I want:

Remember last year when I said that this year I was going to schedule in a holiday each quarter plus regular days off so that I wouldn’t go batty and have to be hauled away on Emergency Vacation?

Well, I did.

What a great plan. Which I totally ignored.

“Hi, days on my calendar that claim to be vacation days.” The fact that I have said this multiple times since January seems to indicate a problem.

Right. So that didn’t work. Trying something else.

In the meantime, I do have a small holiday coming up and I am determined to actually run away in some shape or form. But I do not as yet have plans. And it seems like, weirdly, without planning for this, it might not happen.

Ways this could work:

I’m going to flail on this and use whatever comes out of a whirlwind of Shiva Nata to give me some direction.

I will also ask slightly future me, who knows about these things, to share some information.

And I will ask for a small miracle.

My commitment.

To do the work of figuring out what I want, before I despair that it’s impossible.

And once I know what I want, to find a way to connect to the essence or the qualities of that want.

To play. And then to play some more.

Progress report on past Very Personal Ads.

Just to update you on what’s happened since last time.

As always, I seem to have completely forgotten what I asked for the week before.

I wanted courage and I got it. Hooray!

Then there was some stuff about defining emergencies for the Book of Me. Which I did not do. But I added huge amounts of other information to the book this week, so something is moving there.

Then I wanted prep for the March Rally, which definitely happened, and gave birth to all sorts of good things.

And I wanted to gwish for outlandish birthday gwishes. And while they may not have been so completely outlandish, writing about them was really fun and inspiring.

A good week, all in all.

Comment zen. Here’s what I’d love today.

  • Your own personal ads, small or large. Things you’ve asked for. Or are asking for. Or would like to ask for. Or updates on last time!

Stuff I’d rather not have:

  • The word “manifest”.
  • To be told how I should be asking for things.
  • To be judged, psychoanalyzed or given unsolicited advice.

Wishing love and good things for your Very Personal Ads! I’m so happy to have people doing this with me.

Friday Chicken #136: this picture is too adorable for words.

Friday chickenBecause it’s Friday AGAIN. And because traditions are important. In which I cover the good stuff and the hard stuff in my week, trying for the non-preachy, non-annoying side of self-reflection.

And you get to join in if you feel like it.

One hundred and thirty six chickens? In a row?

Where does the time go?

It’s Friday, so we’re chickening. Yallah.

The hard stuff

A lot going on.

This is a big week.

And I’m trying to get stuff happening before Rally.

And there is just a lot.

Ketchup ketchup ketchup.

So much to catch up on!

Sleep. Work. Ideas. Things that are in transition, which is oh, everything right now.

Crisis switcheroo. Very funny, internal mechanisms.

So I didn’t at all have the existential crisis that I was expecting. Which is good.

But something else popped up that I’m not thrilled about.

And STILL no heat at the Playground.

Though with the weather changing, pretty soon I’ll be complaining about no cooling at the Playground.

I really need this gets sorted before I get too attached to that humming space heater sound and can’t write without it. Ahahahahaha. Oh, that’s not funny.

The good stuff

That was seriously the best birthday ever.

It is a known thing that I pretty much always have a crappy birthday.

Often the crappy-ness is so unique and spectacular that it breaks its own records.

This year? This year was lovely. It was beyond lovely. Exactly what I would have asked for, had I known.

My gentleman friend took me away on holiday for two days to a place with an extremely magical pool.

Spaciousness, warmth, comfort and goodness. Plus terrific food, time to write, warm water, walks in the sun, naps, whiskey, and being sent to the spa. And presents. Who doesn’t like that?

Me: “But how did you know? This is so completely perfect.”
MGF: “I read your mind. Sometimes your mind is really loud.”

The sweetness of all of you.

Thank you for the warm wishes at the Twitter bar and the Frolicsome Bar and everywhere. Thank you for reading my birthday rituals and being with me for the process.

Thank you for the sweet cards and entertaining gifts.

I now have, among other things, a wonderful book from Marie, an insane and fabulous duck-tea-infuser from Jacquelyn, a pink stuffed pig named Rex, and other delights.

Mwah!

Also, Rex the pig is so awesome that he let Selma sit on his head. See adorable picture of them hanging out with Scootch the hedgehog.

The official birthday of my business.

So the birthdays I usually celebrate in my business are when The Fluent Self got its name and website (that will be six years this August), and the birthday of the blog (three years this June).

But my business officially became a thing five years ago when I walked into the San Francisco City Hall and set off on this crazy thing.

Feeling a lot of love, gratitude, appreciation for the madcap run of drama and adventure that’s been my life since then.

And for my business itself.

Thank you so very much, me-from-then, for trusting your instincts and not listening to any of the many well-meaning people who said we shouldn’t or couldn’t do this. They didn’t know. And you did. Even if you weren’t sure. Some part of you knew.

New cool stuff for the Playground.

Like the giant hot pink bean bag cushion in the Refueling Station (next to the hammock, if you can picture it).

And some crazy turquoise tassels because who doesn’t need tassels.

And some new wigs for the Costumery. All very exciting. Yay.

Progress!

I got way more done than expected on the tentatively-named Playground User Manual (PLUM!).

Progress. It feels really good.

Also we had a super fascinating Kitchen Table call, with some smart, interesting questions that I have been thinking about all week. All good stuff.

Stuff I read and loved this week.

This piece by Maryann on slowing down.

Jesse’s playdate adventures.

Leonie’s beautiful guest post about the medicine of Shiva Nata.

Everything by A. Bitterman (scroll down for the bit on Running the hurdles with Harry Potter). He also has a children’s book. Which you should read. Discovered via @susan_marie.

Meet Plarchie, the giant plastic knitted squid.

Paula and her ruby red lips. Inspiring!

And: play this in a loop and everything will be fine forever.

And … playing live at the meme beach house it’s the Fake Band of the Week!

My brother and I have this thing where we come up with ridiculous band names and then say in this really pretentious, knowing tone, “Oh, well, you know, it’s just one guy.”

This week’s band plays flamenco-inspired bluegrass. Which you’d never guess from the name.

That Creepy Blue Mermaid Monster Thing.

Anyway, they have what you would call a unique sound. And yes, it’s just one guy.

That’s it for me …

And yes yes yes, of course you can join in my Friday ritual right here in the comments bit if you feel like it.

Yeah? Anything hard and/or good happen in your week?

And, as always, have a glorrrrrrrrrrrrious day and a restful weekend-ing.

And a happy week to come. Shabbat shalom.

p.s. Lately we’ve had some apologizing about people doing their chickening on Saturday or Sunday, or even later than that. So, for the record, there’s always chicken amnesty, and you can join in absolutely whenever you like. 🙂

The Fluent Self