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.
The Business Savant.
I am one.
Which is weird, because I spent the first couple decades of my life thinking anything even remotely business-related was extremely icky. At best.
But for reasons that I don’t understand*, I am like Rain Man. But for business.
*Actually, I kind of do understand, because I’m pretty sure it’s all the years of having Dance of Shiva restructure my brain.
It’s kind of creepy.
I don’t know how I know these things. I just know them.
Like this week at Barbara’s retreat. I knew what every single person needed to be doing in her business.
And it’s not like …. oh, the normal, conventional things. Most the time it’s not even things I’ve ever heard before. I just know.
Of course, I also know that most people aren’t going to apply it, but that’s more of a Cassandra thing than a Rain Man thing.
That’s not important right now. What’s important is that even without having bizarre intuitive superpowers, you can grow your thing.
You can grow your thing through the kind of biggification that happens in a really mindful way. Through the growth that comes from having agreed to work on your stuff.
And through knowing where you come from.
Beginnings.
As you know, I started my business from nothing.
But really from nothing.
I’ve posted about this all over the place, so I won’t bore you again with the details (no, wait, I will, living-in-a-semi-squat-in-Berlin-with-no-heat really is not fun), but yes.
I started the whole thing with my last 15 euros and they weren’t even mine.
And since I thought that making money was gross, there were possibly some problems with my plan.
The thing about coming from poverty that is really, really good is that it made me a fierce risk-taker. I see some of my clients terrified to do anything until they’ve built up say, a $30,000 cushion, and I think cushion? What’s that?
But the thing about coming from poverty that is really, really hard is that it’s very difficult to have a biggified perspective about anything.
Because what you know is so very, very small.
You have to have a sense of what’s possible before you can start biggifying.
It’s pretty hard to accomplish anything in business when your conception of what is possible is narrow, stuckified, and limited as hell.
When I started my business, I couldn’t imagine earning more than two thousand dollars a month. EVER. Like, at the peak of success. And even that seemed like a completely obscene thing to want. A guilty wish.
All those years working behind a bar in some dive in south Tel Aviv had created … narrowness.
There is nothing beyond survival. You either sell your soul or you don’t, but if you don’t (and I couldn’t) you can’t do more than tread water. And that is the entirety of what is real.
Flash forward five years. Not only is my own business thriving to the point that my gentleman friend was able to quit his job, but the limits on what I can imagine possible are pretty out there.
Not just financially, but in every way. Not just for me and my duck, but for my clients, my students, and all the neat people I meet.
Biggification without mindfulness is pretty useless, though.
If you ask me, the most important thing you can do in a business situation is work on your stuff.
This is also true if you’re growing your thing in a non-business-ey way. Like, if your thing is your poetry or your art or your teaching, and you don’t think of it as something that might become a business.
Either way. You have a thing (your thing!) and you want it to grow (even if some of the time you don’t because it’s scary).
Pretty much none of the stucknesses that come up in this process of growing your thing are connected to the thing itself, or to the practical aspects of making the thing happen.
Most of the stuckness is about your stuff wanting attention.
Which is legitimate, yes? That’s what your stuff does. And that’s why interacting with your stuff in an intelligent, conscious way is the best way to start biggifying.
Or to start being slightly less afraid of eventually biggifying.
Mindful biggification is way, way better than any other kind of biggification. Because you’re destuckifying as you go. You’re taking care of yourself. It’s important.
Where I’m taking this right now.
I’ve been thinking a lot this week about what I can do to give other people what I know.
Not the intuitive stuff — I don’t know how to teach that yet.
But I want to give people more than just go become a Shivanaut! Though yeah, that’s an important part of it too.
I want to contribute to the essential vocabulary of how business is done. Good business, non-icky business of the kind that my right people are interested in.
And I’m feeling both anxious and excited about that.
Because the stuff Selma and I have to teach is really freaking counter-intuitive. What I know to be true goes so completely against the grain. Against what all the boring experts say.
And even against what some of my friends-who-are-experts-and-not-even-slightly-boring say.
Anyway.
Expect that we’ll be talking a lot, as always, about working on your stuff and how that relates to biggification.
Expect some manifesto-ing it up for the dammit list.
And don’t expect any explanation of how I know this stuff. Because it just comes into my head. And then I do it. And then it works. And then I make my clients and students do it. And that works too. I can’t explain more than that.
But I’ll share what I can. Because it’s important.
Comment zen for today.
Hmm. Biggification = full o’ triggers. I hope it’s been really clear that I have my own share of stucknesses around this, and that I really do recognize how scary it is to work on this stuff or even to talk about it. That’s it. We’re all practicing.
Item! Where is my fort?
A somewhat goofy mini-collection of stuff I’ve been reading, stuff I’ve been thinking about and oh, some completely random crap.
Basically the stuff that never gets mentioned here because I’m not the kind of person who can just make some teeny little point. Not into the whole brevity thing, as the Dude would say.
Actually, I’m under the strict compulsion to write ten pages about anything on my mind. So this is me. Practicing brevity.
Oh boy oh boy oh boy oh boy. Items!
I’m Itemizing all over the place this week.
Item! Post No. 40 in a series that would get you through exactly that many days and nights in the desert if you clicked on everything I’ve linked to, which you shouldn’t.
Item! I need this.
It’s a fort.
In one of my Kitchen Table program calls we were all hanging out in the chat room, and somehow we got onto the topic of wanting to make play forts. Or sparkly nests.
And in a fit of “oooh, is there such a thing as a fort for grownups?”, I realized of course there is, and promptly googled “portable forts”.
Which gets you to all sorts of interesting things but this is the one I must have in my office.
Awesome.
Also (semi-related), Julie hooked me up with some excellent tree house possibilities (!)
She’s @juliestuart on Twitter.
Item! The artistic funk.
Beautiful post from Pirate Fi (she’s not one of my pirates, it’s her own thing) about getting through an artistic funk.
“– doubt that I have enough passion to be an artist. Artists make art. I just think about it. A lot.
— fear that I’ll never have the requisite energy and stamina to earn an income doing this. Because you need perseverance and persistence and I feel I have neither. And I get so damn tired all the time — tired, tired, tired.
— fear that if I live the dream of being an artist and it doesn’t work out, what will I have left to dream about?”
She’s @fibowman on Twitter.
Item! Speaking of me not knowing what I do …
Okay, we weren’t speaking about that, but it’s the topic of the day in my head.
There’s been all this hubbub about Twitter lists.
Personally, I am liking them.
But my favorite thing is reading what lists I’m on and then cracking up at the hilariously bizarre collective picture you get from them of what I do.
Some of them totally make sense like “blogging” and “writers” and “helperish”.
Others are also understandable like “non-icky-biz-advice” and “people-worth-a-shit” and “interestingness”
But the funny part is when you see “woo-woo” next to “thought-leaders” next to “a-list” next to “real-bad-ass”.
Though I can live with real bad ass.
The ones that seemed completely incongruous were things like “stylish-people” (whaaaaaaaat?), “social-media” and “knitting”.
And the ones that made me gleefully happy were more like “sparkle-motion”, “fairygodmothers” and “non-sucky-marketing”
Fun. I totally want to be the sparkly godmother of non-sucky marketing. Who stabs people with her stylish invisible knitting needles.
Item! Speaking of Twitter …
I know, I know. I’ll stop doing that already.
But this was so so great.
Girl Detective dressed up as the fail whale for Halloween.
The fail whale, if you don’t hang out with us in the bar, is the image you (tfu tfu tfu, may it never happen to you) get when Twitter is overloaded and not working, right before you cry. It has its own fan club.
Never mind.
She’s @Girl_Detective on Twitter.
Item! The uterus edition.
Powerful, brave post from Jen, who gives one hell of an acceptance speech (in more ways than one) as she goes through surgery.
“I’d also like to thank (my own uterus academy awards)
To all the shamans and healers who healed me. Just because I’m having surgery doesn’t mean you failed.
To all the acupuncturists and herbalists and hormones specialists.
To all the yoga teachers and massage therapists and authors who wrote healing books.
To everyone who prayed, visualized, and gave smart (really) opinions.
To ME for trying so hard, as always, to be healthy.
And to modern science for getting me out of pain!”
She’s @jenlouden on Twitter.
Item! I am flattered by your title!
Remember a couple of weeks ago when we went on a Say Anything run while writing our dammit lists?
Lloyd Dobler is back. In the form of a … Lloyd Dobler flash mob.
Also known — wondrously — as a mobler.
Say what you will. I don’t care … because now the word mobler exists.
Item! Things going bad. Periodically.
Denise pointed out this excellent Table of Condiments that Periodically Go Bad.
I can’t even tell you how big my smile is right now.
She’s @deniseds on Twitter.
Item! Comments! Here’s what I want this time:
- Things you’re thinking about.
- A thing that is cuter than a Yorkie wearing a powder-blue raincoat. Poor Yorkie.*
*I knew him well.
My commitment.
I am committed to giving time and thought to the things that people say, and I will interact with their ideas and with my own stuff as compassionately and honestly as is possible for me.
Even though asking for what I want still feels awkward for me, I’m just going to remind myself that this is a thing I’m practicing.
That is all.
Happy reading.
And happy Blustery Windsday. See you tomorrow.
Ow.
So Selma and I are at Barbara Sher‘s retreat in North Carolina.
It’s about biggifying your work through writing and speaking, and it’s fabulous because Barbara is even more Barbara in person than you think she’s going to be.
Man. That is one smart, loony, insightful, creative, magnetic lady. With sharp, sharp eyes and a dirty, dirty mouth.
And I love her.
If I’m that cool when I’m seventy-freaking-four, the world will be a good place. She’s hot.
And this thing happened that I really need to talk about with you guys.
We did a very interesting series of exercises yesterday.
The first part involved embodying someone who totally disagrees with our message in a loud, obnoxious way.
Channeling Dr. Laura, as Barbara so perfectly put it.
So we each stood up in turn, on camera, and gave a shout-ey fist-shaking rant — a rant about why anyone who teaches the stuff we’re trying to put out into the world is a moron, a reckless maniac and a selfish bastard who should be ashamed to be alive.
Fun.
You really got to feel the essence of what Barbara calls the anti-message. And it just makes what you know that much more clear and powerful. Good schtuff.
And then?
The second part was an opportunity to refute everything your evil preachy Anti-You has said.
To talk back to those arguments. To speak your truth and all that stuff.
Each person gets up (again, on camera) and imagines that the room is filled with his or her people. Well, the people who need their specific message the most.
Except that — oh no! — your people have been listening to the bitchy, authoritative doomsayers and assorted loud-mouthed “experts” who have been convincing them how wrong they are to want whatever it is they want.
And now your people need you to show up so you can say it like it is and remind them why it’s okay to be themselves.
Powerful, right?
But that’s when it all went weird. For me, at least.
So I’m thinking, oh this will be brilliant.
This is where we get to speak to our people and meet their pain.
To be the antidote. To show them what is false about this anti-message and to remind them about what they really need.
To turn it around so that their people get to be met where they are again. You know, bring the compassion back. The empathy. The love.
Awesome.
And I know people have different approaches, blah blah blah, so of course I figured that my version would be probably include more of a hippie-ass thing than most people’s.
I mean, my whole thing is about meeting the pain first, so yes, I’d probably end up acknowledging the stuck before getting around to talking about why not to listen to the dream-killers.
Fine.
But I was not even slightly prepared for what actually happened when it came time for us to speak to the people — our people — who have just gone through some really crappy brainwashing.
What actually happened.
People did show up with their messages, yes — with power and conviction.
But then somehow they stayed in the role of the yelling, accusatory, finger-wagging authority figure.
Once they stood up to talk to their people, they dished out the same kind of abuse they’d delivered in the Dr. Laura role — just with the message flipped around.
So, example:
Instead of the (fake) message being “you’re wrong and your dreams should curl up and die”, the (real) message became “you’re wrong and the people who try to kill your dreams should curl up and die”.
Instead of the message being “it’s not okay to be yourself, who do you think you are, anyway”, the message became “it’s not okay to not trust yourself and how dare you listen to anyone who says otherwise”.
When people in the audience (still in character) raised tentative questions, fears and what-ifs, they were pushed aside with sarcasm and maybe even derision.
It was as if taking on a Dr. Laura persona automatically shut off all possibilities except for “I’m right and you’re wrong“. Like, the sweetest people in the world were totally yelling at their people.
And I got scared and ran away.
Here’s my thought on this.
I absolutely get why we have this desire to just shake someone until they get it. To “spit the truth in their face” as we say in Hebrew.
It makes sense. You have a message. You want to get it to the people who need it before they lose themselves.
Double especially when you’ve seen the people you want to help most — your people — be abused like that by someone whose advice is not only not helping, but actively harming them.
That is a scary, sucky, frustrating feeling (I have it too) — you just want to set things straight. Completely legitimate.
And at the same time, I really, truly believe that it’s up to us to meet them where they are — where they are now.
Think about what someone goes through when, instead of meeting their pain, we push it aside.
We negate their experience.
And if we’ve done that, the essence of our smartnesses is lost in the rant.
It’s not helpful at all.
Not. Effective. Trust me.
You don’t actually get anywhere by being mean to your Right People. Well, that’s not completely true.
You do if you’re a dominatrix. You do if your Right People happen to love being ranted at. That could totally be a great fit. And if that’s the case, awesome. Yell away.
But let’s assume for now that your Right People are in pain because of where they are right now, and you’re screaming at them for not doing the thing you want them to do that will resolve that pain.
As far as I can tell, that’s not giving them a much different experience than the one they got from the people who burdened them with abusive advice to begin with — or that they’re getting from themselves.
I really, truly believe this:
Our various Right People aren’t there to be yelled at and chastised.*
*Unless, again, they’re consenting adults and they’ve told you that this is what they really want — and you’re okay giving it.
Bottom line: there’s really nothing wrong with respecting the pain of the person who happens to be in it.
Your Right People are the ones you want to help.
Obviously your dream, whatever it is, is born of truly wanting to help people who have or have had your pain.
So your Right people are the ones who share that pain. They’re the ones who need your ways of interacting with that pain and moving through it.
You’re not really going to make them see the light by yelling at them for having pain.
But even if that worked? Even if that were the most effective approach in the entire world? It still makes you look a lot like the abuser. Even when you’re totally not.
The whole point of giving the world what we know is that we get to be the ones who meet their pain and honor their pain.
It’s pretty freaking hard to give people ways to recover and heal from that pain if you’re inflicting more of it by insisting that they’re stupid for not understanding that you’re right.
Finding the way to your Right People.
So yeah. The key thing about meeting people where you are is (annoyingly!) … meeting yourself where you are.
So … instead of talking about that, I’m just going to do it.
This is me, meeting myself where I am.
I feel tired. That’s where I am. Permission to feel tired.
I feel disoriented because I’m a huge introvert, and spending three days in a row with people and practically no alone time is tearing me apart. That’s where I am. Permission to feel disoriented.
I feel frustrated and helpless when I see people yelling at their supposed Right People (even in an exercise) when those people express their pain, because I need my environment to reflect the things that are important to me. Like support, kindness, patience.
I feel anxious when I see some of the people I’m retreating with yelling at their Right People because they (my fellow Retreaters) have such amazing, loving things to give to the world and totally deserve to be all biggified.
And I feel concerned because I suspect that it’s not going to work. Maybe because the kind of people who need their messages most aren’t going to be open to a violent message (even if it’s about something cuddly like self-love or whatever).
Anyway. That’s where I am. Permission to feel frustrated, helpless, anxious, concerned.
Permission to not want to feel frustrated, helpless, anxious, concerned.
Permission to take my time to work through this, to find out what I need, to ask for what I need, to take it to the Whine Bar.
And to practice cursing like a sailor because I want to be like Barbara when I grow up. Only me. And with a duck.
You don’t need to take the leap.
I have to say, all the talk about leaps of faith and jumping off cliffs and waiting for nets to appear is … kind of disturbing.
Not that I doubt the legitimacy of the sensation for a moment. I don’t.
In fact, those are pretty accurate descriptions of what it feels like to take the first step in doing the thing.
Like you’re walking off into nothing. Plunging into a black hole. Taking first one step off and then … it all works.
The problem with this metaphor (and its associated variations) is that it’s freaking terrifying.
Which is just … oh, I don’t know, not helpful? It’s really, really not helpful. Or necessary,
Because there is no cliff.
I’m not saying it doesn’t feel like a cliff or look like a cliff or smell like a cliff.
And I’m definitely not saying that you shouldn’t be scared (I would never say that).
Just that the most important thing about these kinds of internal cliffs is remembering that they are not cliffs … and then rebuilding the metaphor. Transforming it into something that isn’t so impossibly scary.
Because honestly, there is no reason that I can think of to have to work through that much fear. It just doesn’t make sense — and it’s totally unfair.
We have more than enough fear to process in our lives already without turning each transition into the kind of experience that throws our nervous systems into panic and terror.
So if it’s not a cliff, what is it?
I don’t know.
But there’s a lot of power when it stops being a cliff.
I want to throw out a couple concepts and examples, and maybe I’ll figure out where we’re going with this.
Implied safety is not the same thing as feeling safe.
You know that thing at the Grand Canyon where you can walk out over a glass floor and stand over the canyon?
You’re not getting me to step out on that thing.
You can explain a thousand times how it’s completely safe. You can demonstrate in every possible way how physics is on your side and physics (like the house) always wins.
You can deliver social proof all over the place. You can show me people walking out and doing it. You can prove it in every way possible.
It’s still not going to happen. I’m not going to do it.
Not because I think I’m going to fall to my death. But because I’m not going to put my nerves through that kind of fear. The kind of fear that — to me, maybe not to you — is traumatizing, and takes years to heal from.
Not going to do it.
Point 1: There are enough legitimately fearful things in life. Not everyone needs to learn to face every single scary thing that exists.*
* Great example of this “facing fear” thing totally backfiring: my friend’s ex-girlfriend who jumped out of a plane to do just that. Oy.
From the jump to the path.
When I moved back to Israel, it scared me to pieces.
I was telling a friend and he said, “It’s like throwing yourself into a black hole, right?”
Exactly. That was exactly what it was like.
“Here’s the thing nobody tells you,” he said. “There is no black hole. You go from living your life here to living your life there. It’s just you and your life, with slight variations. No holes.”
He was right. I’ve moved countries twice since then and there was no black hole.
What there is instead is this big Continuum of You (ooh, fake band name!), and wherever you are on it is a part of you. You can contain different cultural and emotional identities at the same time.
That’s because you’re not constantly hurling yourself into space or off of cliffs.
You’re just going for a walk, and around this next bend is a new piece of terrain. But it’s not really all that different from what you already know.
Point 2: Not that the thing you can’t see yet isn’t scary by virtue of being unknown … it just doesn’t make it a cliff.
It’s about new structures.
I’m about to do a couple of scary new things right about now.
When I tell myself that I’m not ready to take the leap, it gets scarier.
So that’s not what I tell myself. What I tell myself is this:
“Even though this new house isn’t completely built yet, it does have a good foundation. I’m going to call on everyone who is capable of helping me, and we’re going to figure out what kind of windows I want it to have.”
I’m still on the ground. Not going anywhere near a cliff. Just building a new thing. Not alone. With help.
It’s still unknown because I can’t fully imagine what it will be like when we’re done, but at least it doesn’t require me jumping off into the fog.
Point 3: Your metaphor doesn’t have to be a building. It doesn’t have to be a path. Just try, if you can, to find something less terrifying than the cliff.
Because it pretty much always turns out that there is no cliff.
No cliffs.
Not that I want to negate your experience of the existence of your cliffs, because I don’t.
My point is really only that things get easier when I give myself these three things:
- permission to be scared.
- permission to not want to do it.
- enough distance to be able to remember that the metaphor is mine
and I get to play with it.
Because not jumping off cliffs is so completely on my dammit list. I don’t jump off cliffs, dammit.
Because I don’t have to.
Comment zen for today.
We all have our stuff. We’re all working on our stuff. We’re practicing.
Very Personal Ads #19: Love letter
Personal ads! They’re … personal! Very.
So last week I wrote an “awkward love letter to a place that might or might not have a labyrinth”.
This week it’s a different kind of love letter. Not the awkward kind. Not one to something I’m trying to find. One to something I already have.
Background: I’ve been getting ready to welcome in the second year of my crazy-wonderful Kitchen Table program in January.
Which means that I’ve been doing huge amounts of reflecting on this past year (and — surprise! — will probably be sharing some of this reflecting with you in future posts), and what those experiences have given me.
But right now I’m just feeling overwhelmed by love. Love for what is right now, and the way it is right now.
So before I make an ask for the Right People for next year (probably next week), I want this week’s Very Personal Ad to be a place to be in appreciation.
Dear kooky, beautiful Kitchen Table,
I don’t always tell you this, because I am not a gushy, lovey-schmoo kind of person, but … man, I am so outrageously full of love for you.
What I love about you:
Your name.
From a strictly “business” perspective, I admit that it might not be the best metaphor in the world. Since the thing you have become is so much more than “at the kitchen table with Havi and Selma“.
So much more than late-night brainstorming and support and cameraderie.
But I love the hominess of it. The look of it. The comfort and hanging-out-ness of it all.
The people.
Someone said that I “curate” awesome people. And I don’t know what that magic something is that lets me find the exact right combination of people, but I genuinely like all of you.
And I especially like the mix.
Man, you are all sooooooo refreshingly different from each other.
Sure, each of you thinks that he’s the outsider or that she’s the weird one (or the non-hippie one), but really, every single person brings something cool and unique. And the combination of all those qualities meeting is just perfect.
Hanging out in the chatroom during calls. Goofing off. You guys are honestly some of the silliest people I know.
And some of the smartest. You probably just think that everyone else is the smart ones, but believe me, I like the way your mind works.
I love what I have learned from you.
I have learned to be really, really honest. I have learned about apologies. I have learned how to stop shepherding and start being a very different kind of leader. I have learned about clearing out my own stuff.
And I’ve watched you guys become different people. Or more yourselves. I don’t know.
I’ve watched you go from not feeling sure of what you want or how to ask for it … to being the kind of person who can communicate really clearly about what they need and how they want to receive it.
I have learned how crazy powerful it is when you have a bunch of people who have learned how to ask for what they need.
I have met my own hard.
This year has had its hard moments. I’ve doubted myself. I’ve had to untangle my own stucknesses.
It’s been one hell of a training in what it really means to be a leader. You guys have been with me for that process too. And I appreciate it so much.
The classes.
I love coming up with the classes. Love teaching. Love the fact that at some point each class devolves into hilarity. And I especially love the Ask Havi Anything days. Ooh, and I love it when someone else teaches and then I get to run wild in the chat room.
CrankyPants McGrumbleBug’s Kvetchtastic Whine Bar.
This might be my favorite part. And yes, I am a total genius for coming up with it!
Because it is so wonderful to have a forum (literally!) to complain about stuff without anyone trying to fix it. And then — once the stuck has been listened to — I always know when I’m ready for advice, and there’s a forum for that too.
It’s just such an amazing experience to show up with a stuck (and I’ve shown up with mine a thousand times) and have everyone be so completely understanding and comforting. And funny.
Also I appreciate the extremely creative and entertaining cursing that sometimes goes on in the whine bar. But also the kittens.
The changes.
When I look at people who back in January were stuckified about everything and terrified of the thing they wanted to be doing (or beating themselves up for not knowing what that is yet) …
And I see where you are now: strong, capable, confident, knowledgeable about yourself and your stuff, able to ask for help when you get stuckified, no longer thinking that receiving help and support says something bad about you …
It must makes me want to cry. You guys are serious helper mice. So gifted. And even if you can’t see it or hear it yet (or you just get occasional flashes of it), I know it.
I can feel the truth of it.
And it’s so beautiful it makes me cry. To prevent impending gooey-ness (or more gooey than I’m already getting into), on to my commitment.
My commitment for the remainder of this year and for this coming-right-up year:
I will keep loving you.
I will continue to read every single thread, even when there are a gazillion of them, as there so often are.
I will keep maintaining this space, clearing it and caring for it.
I will rewrite parts of the welcome orientation manual thing, to make them more clear and to help you guys figure out how to get the most love and support possible.
I’ll do everything I can to make sure that the group leaders are getting what they need.
I will try to remember to trust myself and this weird, wonderful process that is all of us working on our stuff together and individually.
The other thing I want to say.
This one is an ask.
And it’s about maintaining my energy this week while I’m on retreat.
Here’s what I want:
To not get overwhelmed or cut off from myself. To stay centered and grounded, whatever that means for me this week.
Ways this could work:
I could remember that this is what I want. I could remember my tendency to get disconnected when I’m experiencing too much.
And I can keep working on the sovereignty stuff.
My commitment.
I will notice what’s going on for me. I will remind myself to stay grounded. I will ask for help when I need it. Or try to. 🙂
Progress report on past Very Personal Ads.
Just to update you on what’s happened since … last time.
I asked for the perfect spot to lead a retreat. With a love letter. And got a bunch of good leads. Will have the short list very very soon. Tomorrow, I hope.
And no news on a power-hitting outfielder for the Giants. I think I should have mentioned that we don’t want Milton Bradley, if the Cubs are listening. Which they should be. Anyway, I think that ask was mostly just to make me feel better.
Also, remember two weeks ago when I asked for support cranking out blog posts? Nothing happened with that last week, but yesterday I wrote one in the airport and three on the plane. Unheard of.
Especially since I can pretty much never work on the plane. But it was so quiet that it totally worked. Yay.
Comments. Since I’m already asking …
I am adding to my practice of asking for stuff by being more specific about what I would like to receive in the comments. And that way, if you feel like leaving one (you totally don’t have to), you get to be part of this experiment too. 🙂
Here’s what I want (just leave them in the comments):
- 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!
What I would rather not have:
- Reality theories.
- Shoulds. As in, “You should be doing it like this” or “That’s not the right way to ask for things — instead it should be like x, y and z”
- To be judged or psychoanalyzed.
My commitment.
I am committing to getting better at asking for things even when asking feels weird. I commit to giving time and thought to the things that people say, and to interact with their ideas and with my own stuff as compassionately and honestly as is possible.
Thanks for doing this with me!