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.

Wanna read my personal ad? It’s personal!

And not what you think.

So I’m taking Jennifer Hofmann‘s course on Inspired Organizing. And it’s brilliant and amazing.

And …. I don’t know how to say this. Well, I do. I just don’t have a nice way of saying this:

If you’re less than giddy with joy about your current home-office situation and organizing systems, and if you knew about this course (because, you know, I gush about Jen’s work all the time), and you could even kind of afford it and didn’t sign up early enough to get in, you’re a complete …

No, that’s not fair. What I mean is, I don’t understand you. Or: I seriously wish you would tell me what kept you from taking this course.

Because it kicks so many kinds of ass. But in a sweet, loving, compassionate, fun, good-spirited way.

Man, I like to think I’m relatively self-aware or whatever, at least knowledgeable about my patterns, and then this class comes around and let me tell you, it is spinning my head around faster than you can say “paradigm shift”.

Not that you would say that, though, because ew.

But let’s get back to my personal ad

The first class was this week and we were talking about our relationship with space. What it looks like, where it hurts, what gets stuck.

And it was totally like being in couples counseling. Me and my office and all of our crap together and all the things we don’t like about each other.

Everyone else in the class was working on improving their relationship to their space and all of a sudden it hit me. This is never going to work out. I don’t want to repair my relationship to this particular space that I’m in because I don’t even like it.

I’m investing in something that is an uncomfortable compromise … and there’s nothing keeping me in it except for the fact that moving kind of sucks.

And then: Oh. I really don’t have to stay here. I can move on. I can find some other space to love. And it started to get exciting. Scary, but exciting.

So then Jen suggested that I write a personal ad. For an apartment. So I did.

And … in the cheesy but well-intentioned spirit of “planting seeds” and “putting it out there” and “sharing my process“, and in the hope that maybe one of you knows someone in Portland (Oregon, yes?) who has a hunch as to where my new home is waiting for me …

Here it is.

LOOKING FOR LOVE IN ALL THE WRONG PLACES …

Loving, caring, urban couple with adorable toy duck seeking sweet home in Portland — not the one on the east coast — to cherish and adore for long-term rental relationship … (and more?)

Us? We’ll scrub you clean every single Friday morning and generally treat you like the goddess you are.

You: about 1000 square feet with wood floors and lots of light. A porch would be nice too … and maybe a basement?

Ideally you’re located in NE Portland, near Alberta or Killingsworth, but if you’re the one for us we’ll go pretty much anywhere, as long as you’re in walking distance to groceries and such.

The most important thing for us in this relationship is the kitchen. We want it to be big enough for us to eat in there, and inviting enough for us to hang out in.

We both work from home, so we’ll be around a lot, and Richard will cook something that smells amazing every single night except Tuesday.

Havi will bake bread at least once a week. You’ll love it.

We only use natural ingredients (lemon, vinegar, soap, borax) to clean, so you’ll be well taken care of with no chemicals in sight. And we never leave dishes in the sink!

We don’t smoke or do drugs (but you’ll like us anyway!)

No drama. No poltergeists please. Neighbors who are learning to play drums and/or trumpet = dealbreaker. Ahem. *glares out the window*

We’ll tend the space with daily morning meditations and daily evening yoga. You will be madly loved by us.

If this is you, please have someone call us so we can meet in person! (971) 533-7623. Or even better: email. And send a picture!

Personal enough for ya?

Happy weekend, guys. Thanks for reading my personal ad. I love that you’re all looking for the right place with me, at least in spirit.

And, just so it’s clear, if Jen ever does her life-changingly awesome Inspired Organizing course again, I expect to see you there. Because I need some more hand-holding too!

Friday Check-in #9: the “almost naptime” edition

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.

Oy, what a week. What a week.

As my father likes to say — only he says it every single Friday — it was a long week today.

And it’s kinda been a whole week of days like that.

So bear with me.

The hard stuff

Moving? What?

Sometimes a really obvious decision doesn’t get made because you’re too busy focusing on how much you dislike the situation you’re in.

The way out is right there, and you ignore it.

This week I finally realized what I’ve known for six months.

That the place I live with my duck and my gentleman friend is just not the right place for us. Even though we’ve been pouring time and energy into finding ways to make it a place we actually like.

We don’t, though. So it’s really just time to move.

And while I’m thrilled to be leaving our one neighbor with the drumset and the other one whose kid is learning to play the trumpet, and love the idea of being somewhere that’s more supportive of our work and the way we like to live ….

Ugh. Moving. The last thing I want right now is another freaking project.

Yeah, yeah, I know it’s all going to work out. I just don’t want to deal with it right now.

Stupid authenticity. It’s hard!

So a lot of you know that I had a hard time publishing this very intimate, personal post this week.

I feel very differently about that now, after a gazillion people emailed and twittered and filled out contact forms on the site to say how important it was for them to read it. One woman even wrote:

Your quote (everything that is against me is an illusion) quite possibly saved my life today.

And if that’s the case, I’m happy that sharing some of the hard stuff in my own life is useful and inspiring to people needing something genuine and comforting in that moment.

It doesn’t really make it less hard, though. I’m always telling clients that vulnerability is sexy, and that the more human you are on your blog, the better it is for everyone.

And I like to think I’ve been pretty good at modeling that kind of thing.

This time, though, it just felt really, really intimate.

I don’t mean the circumstances in question, because I honestly couldn’t care less who knows that I used to live in total squalor, or that I went through some really rough times financially. Or that I’ve lived with a bunch of drag kings.

It was talking about my sweet, precious system of self-learning and self-work — and how it came into being — that felt really fragile and vulnerable.

Feeling so grateful for everyone who drew strength from my vulnerability and who shared things that made me feel stronger. Thank you!

The good stuff

Internet friends!

So even though I like a lot of my Twitter friends better than some of the people I actually know in real life, I’ve yet to actually meet any of them.

Not even Emma or the wonderful Sparky Firepants, who both live in town. The same side of town.

But @melle — if you’re a Twitterite, or Melle — if you’re not, was in town this week from a place you’ve never heard of in Ontario, Canada. With Andrew, whom I know about only from reading her blog.

Melle is so, so, so one of my favorite people on Twitter.

We have complicated Guilt Bouts (Jewish vs Mennonite), and — for people who don’t actually know each other — spend an inordinate amount of time being inappropriately rude and making fun of each other.

Anyway, we went out to dinner with our gentleman friends and my duck, and now I know for sure that Melle is just as great in person as she is online. Plus she’s cute.

And she has one hundred and four ducks. Can you imagine? I barely manage to stay on top of things just living with Selma and all of the associated duck drama. I love Selma, but man, what a diva.

Tashlich. Tashlich is where it’s at.

So I mentioned at the beginning of this ridiculously long week that Rosh HaShana might be my favorite holiday.

And the reason for this is Tashlich.

Tashlich is a ceremony/ritual/thing that happens on the first day of Rosh HaShana.

You take your duck and you go to a body of water — whoah, did anyone else just get hit with an image of a Gary Larson cartoon?

”Suddenly, Professor Liebowitz realizes he has come to the seminar without his duck.”

You don’t need a duck. You need some bread crumbs. And you go to the water and symbolically cast away everything you regret or no longer need from the previous year. In the form of crumbs.

And it’s the most awesome, wonderful, cleansing ritual ever. I can write more about this some other time, but let’s just say that this was the highlight of my week.

The generosity of others

I announced this already but Dave Navarro from Rock Your Day blew me away by making a super generous offer to all of y’all in the general Fluent Self orbit. He also implied that I’m green and wrinkled, but fine, I’ll ignore that.

The deal is: if you’re quick enough to have grabbed my Procrastination Dissolve-o-matic before this Sunday night when the long launch ends, and you forward your receipt to dave (AT) rockyourday.com, he’s giving you his Never Procrastinate Again program. As a present. You’ll get it by the 15th.

That’s not the amazing part, though. The amazing part for me is this:

There’s so much competitive crap in the online world with people getting caught up in trying to muscle each other out and talk over each other. But it turns out that there are also people who share the love and really get it, because hey, there’s always more love.

And that it’s really about getting the message to the right people in whatever form they need to digest it. Go read his post.

Best part yet to come!

Tomorrow I’m having breakfast with the amazing Jennifer Louden and Mark Silver — two of my favorite … colleagues? friends? people I admire like crazy?

Oh, finish that sentence any way you like. They’re so amazing, and Selma and I are totally looking forward to buttering biscuits with them, if you know what I mean. I have no idea what I mean.

That’s it for me ….

I’m off to bake challah, talk to a client and get a chunk of work done. And yes, absolutely join in my Friday ritual if you feel like it and/or there’s something you just want to say out loud too.

Yeah? What was something hard and/or good that happened in your week?

And, as always have a glorrrrrrrrrrrrious weekend. And a happy week to come.

Two announcements

Housekeeping. Two announcements! Both of which are pretty useful.

Sunday night is the deadline …

I seriously can’t stand those emails that are all in your face every five minutes with “Two more days! and “Hurry the heck up!” and “Buy now!”

But then some people only mention the cut-off date once and you totally forget, and then you resent them for basically being nice and not shouting at you.

Like this week when I wanted to do Jen Hofmann’s amazing Inspired Home Office Spa Day but forgot it was happening and didn’t sign up. And I was all, oof … why didn’t you tell me? Only way more whiny than that.

And it turns out it was in her noozletter somewhere and I just missed it.

The same thing happens to me whenever I end a pre-sale and move something up to its real price. I seriously try as hard as possible to just gently put it out there for those of you who want it and not inundate people with reminders.

And then I’m the one who gets flooded with email from people who are mad at me because they didn’t know, and now it’s too expensive and they could have gotten it, but I didn’t remind them.

So here’s your reminder.

Sunday night is when the price goes up on the Procrastination Dissolve-o-matic. Now you know. Please please please don’t say that I didn’t tell you. 🙂

Also, the coolest bonus ever.

Dave Navarro — not that Dave Navarro — from Rock Your Day, made a surprising, generous offer that just blew me away with niceness.

He’s about to release a program called Never Procrastinate Again, so technically we’re like, in competition or something. Only we’re not, because we like each other. And because our work could not be more different.

The stuff he does is nothing like the stuff I do. It’s louder than what I do and it goes at the whole thing from a totally different angle with a completely different resonance. But unlike the so-called experts I was raging at the other day, Dave is not mean. And he’s not a phony. And he’s not an ass.

He’s a good guy — a really good guy — who just does things differently from the way I do. Though he did imply that I’m green and wrinkled, so I might have to take that back.

Anyway, luckily for you, you don’t have to decide whose method or philosophy you like better, because Dave is a mensch, so you now have a chance to play with both.

Dave’s super generous thing.

Like this:

If you’re quick enough to grab my Procrastination Dissolve-o-matic before this Sunday night when the long launch ends, and you forward your receipt to dave (AT) rockyourday.com, he’s giving you his Never Procrastinate Again program.

As a present. You’ll get it by the 15th.

You just want his stuff and you’re not even going to look at mine? Fine. You just want my stuff and you don’t think his is going to be useful for you? Also fine. You get both when you buy mine, and then you can use them or not as you feel like it.

But of course you already know that getting two different takes on how to get motivated could be a super-charged way to really get going on the stuff you’re working on. I think it’s sweet. Go read his post.

The most amazing things.

Since the Procrastination Dissolve-o-Matic came into being, I’ve been consistently astounded by the great stuff people do with it, the way they just start to run with it and make huge, crazy changes in their lives.

It’s not just that they start getting things done.

It’s that they start moving and shifting all sorts of deep, internal stucknesses and realizing what needs to happen for them to really live their purpose. Cool stuff like that!

And at least eight or nine times a week I get email and letters all about the surprising and beautiful changes people have made with the Dissolve-o-matic.

I don’t want to out people’s breakthroughs or anything, since they’re often pretty personal, but just so you can be as excited as I am, here are two snippets from a pile of things that showed up in my inbox this week:

This is from Rebecca Leigh, who is a freelance copywriter in Australia.

The more I am ‘in’ this process, the more I see how far-reaching it is. It really is about much more than procrastination, it’s about your whole life mindset.

I have had a lot of personal change and growth in the last 8 months – and have been reading a great deal about mindfulness and self-limiting beliefs – but your book has really brought a lot of things together in my mind. It’s making a big difference already – especially as I am in the midst of leaving a corporate job to embark on my full-time freelance career.

And from James Bartley in the UK who writes the super-great Dancing Geek blog.

BTW the procrastination stuff, the dissolve-o-matic? GENIUS!

I’ve got about 1/3 of the way through and then had to stop and let my brain absorb and process. But total genius.

You have a totally amazing view of the world, that is massively accessible, and I am proud to consider myself one of your soon-to-be-1000 true fans that will happily buy anything you produce!

I’m done talking about this.

Yes, I kind of want to jump for joy and celebrate people’s successes for another few pages, but the important thing is that the announcement gets announced.

Sunday night is when the price goes up from the presale price of $67 to the regular price of $108. If it’s not for you right now, no big deal. And if it’s speaking to your heart, it’s right there waiting for you.

And here’s where you get the Procrastination Dissolve-o-matic, if you’re so inclined.

The other announcement!

I’ll make this short.

Every once in a while I lead a fun class on habits-changing work-on-your-stuff stuff. And turns out we’re doing one this Tuesday.

You’re invited. It doesn’t cost anything. You hang out with me and a bunch of people from around the world on the phone for one hour and we work through some stuff, and record it.

I’m thinking that the theme this time around is going to be how to get into a regular-ish exercise-ey routine when you don’t have time and don’t feel like it.

Because that’s been coming up for a number of my clients lately. Seems like that would be a useful thing for us to shift a little.

Anyway, this Tuesday, October 7th, at 5:30 pm PST.

5:30 in Portland means 7:30 pm in Chicago which means 8:30 pm in New York, and if you’re not in North America, you can figure out what that means with the time zone converter.

I’m not going to be sending out a ton of announcements. If you want in, mark your calendar right now and show up on Tuesday. Yay, Tuesday!

And here’s where you get all your information about the call. You know, the call-in number and passcode-ey thing.

You don’t have to RSVP, and a bunch of people probably won’t, but it would totally be useful for me if you would so I have a general idea of how many people are coming.

Got it?

This Tuesday. October 7, 2008.
5:30 – 6:30 pm PST (or whatever that is for you)
Details here.
Calendar this thing because I am done making announcements!

That’s it.

Mad love to everyone.

I hope to hang out with a bunch of you Tuesday on the freebie call!

And who knows, maybe you’ll have had some time to play with your inexpensive copy of the Procrastination Dissolve-o-Matic, and you’ll be all happy and tingly and in the mood to zap some stucknesses. See you there!

EDIT: It’s Sunday now. And I ought to have said that when the sale thing ends tonight, so does Dave’s offer. So if you haven’t sent him your receipt by then, it’s too late. Not saying this to stress you out, heaven forbid Saying this so that poor Dave doesn’t keep getting inundated with email for the next god knows how many months. Thanks!

Bite me, National Anti-Procrastination Day

Apparently — and we’ll talk some other time about why you need other people to take care of your customer support email — I missed Anti-Procrastination Day.

Apparently, as an expert on the topic who has written an entire book on Dissolving Procrastination, I could have taken the opportunity to say something smart and anti-procrastination-ish on such an important day.

On the other hand, I tend to think that the existence of an Anti-Procrastination Day is just about the wrongest thing I’ve ever heard of.

Also, please don’t be distressed if you’ve never heard of National Anti-Procrastination Day. There are a lot of totally made-up days out there to miss.

For example, you just missed National Miniature Golf Day too. And even I can’t remember exactly when the International Day of Borekas and Repression is supposed to roll around again.

And to make matters worse, no one seems to be able to agree on when exactly National Anti-Procrastination Day was. September 6th? September 29th?

I looked it up and apparently it’s both.

Nice job, anti-procrastination people. Way to remind people they didn’t get anything done on the first one, by having the second one a couple weeks later.

Bam! Right in the guilt!

Okay, so at this point you might have guessed that I’m not really a fan of Anti-Procrastination Day. Let’s talk about that.

Problem #1: There is no battle.

What do you think is a bigger time suck? Procrastinating or fighting procrastination?

Because fighting procrastination is just about the stupidest, most ineffective time waster of all.

Don’t get me wrong. The desire to beat the habit to a pulp is natural and normal. It makes sense that we want to do it. It’s just not useful.

“Oh, no! It’s going to win! I need to step up the fight! Maybe if I just kick myself harder I’ll finally do the thing!”

It doesn’t work like that, guys.

It doesn’t work like that because procrastination is not the enemy. Procrastination is a sign that some emotions related to the thing you’re not doing are coming up for you, and that they need some attention.

The process of ignoring and repressing those emotional experiences (and/or filtering those emotional experiences through a mass of guilt and shoulds) is what we call procrastination.

Otherwise it’s just Being in a State of Not Doing, which is fine.

Or it’s Percolating and Absorbing Information While Taking Your Time To Decide What The Next Steps Are, which is also fine.

Remove the guilt, and all of a sudden you’re in a conscious, intentional process with yourself. Take away the self-recrimination, and half the time you’ll realize you weren’t actually procrastinating at all. You just thought you were.

The thinking-you-were was actually the thing that was keeping you stuck. And when you’re stuck you can’t be excited and energized to work on doing the thing.

Problem #2: It could totally end up triggering your guilt mechanisms.

Here’s the thing with knowing it’s Anti-Procrastination Day: it triggers guilt. It focuses attention exactly where you don’t want it.

On the negative. On the finger-wagging. On the you-suck parts.

You want to have a Hold My Calls Because I’m Getting Stuff Done Day? Go for it. You want to have a Whoah I’m Practicing Motivating Myself Through Encouragement And Honest, Constructive Suggestions Day? Please. I think that’s a lovely idea.

Or whatever, you can also have a Guilt-Ridden I’m Going To Focus Negative Attention On How Much I Hate My Patterns Day. If that’s what floats your boat. It’s your choice. But don’t come complaining about how you weren’t able to kick yourself hard enough.

Anyone send you this incredibly obnoxious card for our special day? Because that’s what a real live procrastination “expert” recommended. I’m not even making this up.

Or what about this charming quote on procrastination from another “expert” who wants to terrify you into taking action?

Understand that this enemy is working diligently, 24 hours a day, to prevent any forward progress, so you must work even more diligently at eradicating it from your life.

Lovely. Thanks. Now I totally want to go get a bunch of stuff done. Oh, no I don’t. I want to curl up in a ball and cry.

There’s more stuff I want to say, but it’s not the time.

Whatever, I could rant a bit longer. There’s another three or four problems I have with Anti-Procrastination Day (unless it’s working for you, in which case, rock on, my friend).

But I’d rather give you something useful. Something that you can take comfort in. Something that will help you feel safe and supported so that you can access the internal and external resources you need to take some action.

Here’s what I’ve got:

Why am I taking this so seriously?

You’re right. I am a little upset. Let me tell you why.

Because I work with people who have these issues. People who have big, wonderful things to do in the world and are really, really scared sometimes to put it out there. Or even to talk about putting it out there.

I love these people with all my heart. They’re smart, creative and just generally awesome.

And then these so-called experts show up with their war-mongering and guilt-mongering and an entire day devoted to telling my people how much they suck. And it’s all so well-intentioned!

But it doesn’t help them. It makes them feel worse. They withdraw and retreat deeper into the stuff (guilt, criticism and self-loathing) that’s most harmful for them.

I’m here trying to help people who are traumatized by shoulds learn how to motivate themselves with love and attention. And this stuff freaks them out.

What about all the people who totally need help and aren’t getting it because they’re scared? Because they think it might make them feel guilty and horrible about themselves. Because they think they’ve tried what’s out there and know for a fact that nothing can help.

Well, I hope that everyone knows that not all methods involve kicking yourself and hating yourself. Because ohhhhhhh, that’s just got to hurt.

And not all methods involve forcing yourself to be all lovey-dovey and accepting when you don’t freaking feel like it. Because yuck and spare me. And also because it’s just not very realistic.

Where do we go from here?

If I were you I’d read all the articles I pointed you to. If I were you, I’d make up my own National Something Something Day that I thought was going to motivate me to do cool things. If I were you, I’d probably go ask someone I like for a hug.

And take a nap at some point too!

P.S. Did anyone else notice that the initials of National Anti-Procrastination Day spell out NAP DAY? Best acronym ever!

You’ve got my permission to take a nap. Seriously. Everything will be okay.

And if you ever want to go deeper into my approach, I have a product in the shop for dissolving resistance. You don’t have to get it now. All timing is right timing.

Like I said, everything will be okay. It already is.

How The Fluent Self Got Its Spots

(Or: how not to name your business)

I made the somewhat rash promise yesterday that I’d tell you all about how The Fluent Self came to be called The Fluent Self.

This should really be an Ask Havi post but I can’t be bothered to dredge up a hundred emails asking how come I started a business or how come my business is called The Fluent Self.

As far as popular questions go, it’s probably number three, right after “What’s with the duck?” and “Can you fix all my problems?”.

Answers as follows. 1) Her name is Selma! 2) I probably can’t fix any of your problems, but if I could, I wouldn’t, because you will receive so much more value and magic from the process of interacting with your own challenges with compassion, presence and intention than you would from anything I could possibly do for you.

A little background.

We have to go back some years. I was living in Berlin.

And I was a teacher. Leading change-yer-life-ey workshops on how using yoga concepts and techniques to do things like … quit smoking, or teach yourself foreign languages, or have a healthy relationship to your body.

And then, “on the side”, I taught actual physical yoga. In Hebrew. To a group of fellow expats and some jewish-culture-obsessed Germans.

Looking back, I’d have to say it was one of the most interesting periods of my life. For many reasons, but especially because it was a time of huge mental, emotional and spiritual growth, both in terms of challenges and breakthroughs.

Including downloading an entire system of self-fluency in a series of very intense meditations. Which even I thought was kinda nuts.

It wasn’t clear to me at all whether I was giving birth to something or receiving something, but there it was:

A complete system of self-learning and self-work that you could pretty much use to solve, heal or work through basically any problem or issue the world could throw at you. Scary stuff!

Of course I had no idea how completely useless this was in terms of actually making a living … but that’s another story another hilarious “don’t try this at home, kids” disaster learning experience for another day. The point is, my life felt pretty exciting.

Man, it was great. I was learning and processing so much, and the teaching felt like it was my calling, and for the first time in my life it was like I had a mission. And I was living it. And it had a name.

I’m sorry, it’s just too embarrassing.

So I was teaching this system, and it had a ridiculous name that I thought was just the most perfect thing in the history of names.

Someone will out me eventually, I’m sure. But it’s just too embarrassing lame to type out loud.

That’s not the point, though. The point is, I was in love with it. And I was about to have business card and flyers and a website launch, all with this perfect, perfect name, all on the same day.

It was a big deal, too, because I was poor. Like, “these are my last twenty euros” poor.

And two things were going on.

One, I knew that I couldn’t take another winter in Berlin. Especially not in a semi-abandoned building where the only heat in the cavernous, high-ceilinged rooms came from persnickety, attention-sucking coal-fired furnaces.

Two, I’d had a dream. A series of dreams. And they’d said, very specifically, that I needed to go to San Francisco because that’s where the next step was.

(Which, in case you’re wondering, turned out to be a very good bit of advice, seeing as I fell in love a couple of days after I landed. Thanks, weird dream people.)

Anyway, I needed money if I was going to be able to buy a plane ticket to San Francisco and start living my mission and all that. And I had a plan. One plan. All my sad, scared eggs in a tiny little basket.

This was my (incredibly naive and stupid) plan:

I’d realized that even though I loved teaching my system, it was only the Dance of Shiva workshops (my wacky brain training work) that were paying the rent.

So I set up a series of September workshops, this is 2005 we’re talking about, and planned to promote them with flyers at a big festival.

But what about a website? My ex had just arrived from Israel and needed to turn out a website design super-fast for his graphic design school portfolio. I was the perfect guinea pig.

The website would feature my workshops and the flyers would feature the website, and this weekend festival was going to fund my next adventure. Or else!

It had to work. Because otherwise I was spending another winter in east Berlin, tripping over heroin junkies on my stairs. Plus, it was my mission!

I’d checked out the domain name I wanted and yep, it was available. But then …. thanks to a combination of not-very-good advice and my lack of what I would now call “cashflow”, we waited until the very last minute to grab it.

The name I wanted had been taken. Not available. Gone.

I was sitting in a smoky internet cafe full of loud Turkish teenagers, staring at the computer, completely in shock.

My business name was taken. And not just taken. Taken by pseudo-spiritual, highly branded corporate training bullshit. It looked like something you’d see in Yoga Journal, and I don’t mean that as a compliment.

Ugh. I was upset and anxious and terrified. It was — and here’s where things tie into yesterday’s post — a roadblock. A terrifying, impossibly impassible roadblock.

I already had flyers and cards! The website was all designed and had the name — my name, as I thought of it — plastered all over it.

It seemed like the perfect time to pitch a fit and then figure out a way to pay for another winter’s worth of coal.

But then I remembered self-fluency: Bringing quiet loving attention to whatever I’m experiencing, legitimacy to the feelings, being present with worry-doubt-frustration without being impressed by it. Letting myself be pissed off. Reminding myself that I can get quiet again and feel the next step.

And I remembered what my teacher in Israel used to say:

Kol ma shenegdi ashlaya. Everything that is against me is an illusion.

It wasn’t that I necessarily believed her, but I found a measure of bitter-sweet, ironic comfort in the idea that something which seems like a terrible thing is probably not real. Or that I’m just looking at it the wrong way.

And I started to laugh.

Engaging the roadblock.

It was late at night. My ex agreed to rework the site the next day, in time for the festival — and he and my sweet, generous friends decided to make me new flyers and cards. Yay friends!

But first — I needed to come up with a new name. A name even better than what I’d lost, which I was sure was the most perfect name ever. With fewer than eight hours to do it, and I needed to get some sleep.

For the full effect, let me sketch you a quick picture of this scene:

It’s me and Keren, my best friend from Israel, and we’re sitting at the kitchen table with paper and crayons, brainstorming.

Keren’s German girlfriend is there too, she’s smart, funny, stunningly beautiful, and six feet tall (not counting the mohawk), and Henry/Antonia, our erratic drag king diva roommate. And Selma, my duck.

A pot of tea for me, and a couple of bottles of wine for everyone else.

We’re scribbling down every single word we can come up with that relates even vaguely to who I am, what I do, what it means and how I do it. And nothing. We’ve got nothing that doesn’t mostly suck.

I’m out of luck. Except I have one last card.

You can always go inside.

When in doubt, take a nap. It was bedtime. But first I needed to spend some time in entry. Meeting this exhaustion and anxiety.

I talked to myself. I talked about fear. And love. And the things I wanted to accomplish. And sat with myself quietly for about fifteen minutes.

And then I said, “Hey, deep internal guidance and smartnesses! Help a girl out. I’m going to sleep now. Do me a favor and engage whatever unconscious abilities you have, okay? Because I really need a name by tomorrow morning.”

Next morning, there it was. The Fluent Self.

This is not the point.

I did actually fill all my workshops thanks to those flyers at the festival, and the right people visiting the website. I made a modest chunk of money, and made it to San Francisco.

And along the way it also hit me that I’d have to get good at business fast if I was ever going to spread the stuff I teach, and help people.

There are all sorts of “lessons” someone could take from this, some more relevant than others.

But the thing that sticks out for me from this experience is not “think positive” or anything boring like that.

Here’s what I get from all of this:

1. Not every roadblock is a roadblock.

Or at least, it helps to keep in mind that sometimes something that seems like a block is actually the best thing that can happen to you.*

* Those people who “took” my “perfect” name? No one has heard from them since. Just saying.

2. The thing you need most is inside you.
Or put it this way if you prefer: Spending more time drawing on your internal resources of strength, knowledge and compassion is always a good thing. Always.

3. Help is there and available, even when it’s really hard to find.

Maybe it’s inside you. Maybe it’s your wonderful friends pooling their own meager funds to help you out. Maybe it’s in a dream. Maybe it’s in a meditation. Maybe it’s in a story or a blog post. I don’t know — but it’s there.

The better you get at asking for help, the better you get at receiving it.

I told you it was a long story.

Hope you liked it. Or that it’s at least helpful the next time a roadblock shows up.

I’m definitely lingering with my finger over the publish button today, wondering if sharing this story wasn’t actually a horrible idea, but time will tell. What the hell. Enjoy!

The Fluent Self