What’s the biggest risk you’d like to take — but haven’t been able to?
Actually starting the podcast I have been talking about for years.
What’s the biggest risk you’d like to take — but haven’t been able to?
Actually starting the podcast I have been talking about for years.
What have you been working on?
Working on letting go of control issues and leaning into faith.
Working on releasing my anger in healthier ways and not shaming myself.
Working on acknowledging and celebrating my progress.
Working on improving my mental health.
What’s something most people don’t know about you?
Unless they are close to me or have read my blog, I’d say most people didn’t know I was an only child who was being raised by functioning alcoholics.
Do lazy days make you feel rested or unproductive?
Now I am able to lean into the idea of resting and feeling restored, but back before I ever started my healing journey I would go through downward spirals about feeling unproductive. I would start bashing on myself about how I could have done x,y and z and just feeling so down about being lazy.
I remember reading a quote that really had me think about rest a different way: “If you don’t make time for rest, your body will do it for you.” Back when I was in the thick of my anxiety, I would even feel upset with myself if I was sick and resting. I feel very grateful that I have healed and improved my mental health, as now I can rest and feel like I am doing myself and my body a service.
I will say, having a few lazy days in a row is still a bit too much for me and I usually have to get up and start being productive.
I’m so tired this morning as I write this, but wanted to take a moment for gratitude.
I’m grateful for my job, as I am blessed to not work in a toxic environment any longer.
I am grateful for my health, as I can do all things on my own without assistance which is a huge blessing.
I am grateful for my husband, who is respectful, kind, and supportive of me and who I am.
I am grateful for our financial state, although there is always room to improve, we are blessed to be where we are today.
What we choose to see, we will see more of. When we are grateful, we will see all of the blessings around us. I choose to see the light in the world, and I choose to recognize just how blessed I am.
What could you try for the first time?
I could try skydiving, but I really don’t see myself doing that LOL. I’d try parasailing though!
I’ve been thinking a lot about my relationship with the divine. I say the divine, the universe, source, angels…I have been hesitant about using the word “God” for most of my life, until recently.
I think my main issue with using “God” is that it comes off that there is one powerful entity that is above all, which sounds quite narcissistic and really just wrong. I have never been a devout Christian, and although my parents claim they may have been at one point, I never really saw it.
As a child I watched Veggie Tales and sang in the church choir as I collected my Precious Moments angels and pretended to understand the verses that were read to me during my first couple years of being home-schooled. I sang “Jesus Loves Me” with all of the other kids in my Sunday school classes and really just looked forward to the cookies and juice that came after service. I had zero concept on what the higher power was.
When I was seven, I was told that my Grandpa had gone to heaven to be with God. The person who pulled me around on the sled in the snow, who always let me have that extra pudding cup, and who always let me sit on his lap in his comfy rocking chair had left to be with God. This crushed me and honestly I think this is where my disconnect with “God” came from.
At such a young age, I recognized the permanence that death brought. I remember feeling so helpless and devastated at the funeral, just knowing that I would never be able to speak to my grandfather again while my physical body was here on earth. I was so confused and hurt, and really just overwhelmed by all of the heavy feelings my tiny seven-year-old body was enduring.
As years went by, there was no more going to church, and no more reading the children bibles, as I had finally started public school at age eight. The last memory I had in a church as a kid was throwing up violently while singing hymns while visiting my family in Iowa- so it kind of makes sense why I never really wanted to go back.
When I was in seventh grade, my mother became interested in “The Secret.” I remember her loving the book and she even encouraged me to read it. As the people-pleaser that I was, I did decide to read it, but at age twelve I hardly got what I needed from it. I remember it feeling very boring to me, other than this story about a special feather that had me kind of interested.
The whole book is really about the Law of Attraction. The person in the book was sharing different stories and wisdoms and at one point they start talking about a drawing of a feather. If I remember this correctly, someone had drawn up a very intricate, colorful feather that was not from any real bird on this earth. This person would look at this drawing of the feather every day and apparently one day they ended up seeing this exact feather outside.
I just remember feeling like there was no way this was possible, but also feeling like I wanted to be hopeful that it was. My mom and I always enjoyed watching shows like “Long Island Medium” and “Psychic Kids,” but my dad would always say how all of it was fake and staged. It was hard to trust really in anything, because it definitely all felt real, but without scientific proof, was any of it real?
This is something that I still battle with to this day; I love to believe in the magic of the world, but part of me often still craves that solid evidence. As I write this, I think it stems from a lack of trust within myself. I often will have gut feelings about certain things, and because I don’t have solid evidence I will ignore it or try to push it away. However, there have been times where I have felt like even though I have no true proof that signs or synchronicities are real, I have enough proof for myself to believe and have faith in a higher power. As I continue to grow and heal, I find myself leaning back into faith in something bigger than us.
When I think of a higher power, I see it as a large light that lives within each and every one of us. I believe that we are truly a collective, and the more that humans can lean into this light or “soul,” the better the world will become. The more we can lean into empathy and compassion, the more we can truly connect and communicate with others around us. The more understanding we have of one another’s struggles and challenges, the more we recognize how we are more alike than we are different.
For the longest time I would write off the signs I’d see as being “delusional” or I’d just remind myself of the confirmation bias that our brains naturally have. However, now I am working on letting go of the shame/doubts I’ve had, and instead I am fully leaning into faith. I have been so blessed and protected in this life, especially in these last few weeks, that I can’t help but to believe and trust in a higher power.
I am so grateful to live the life that I do today, and as much as I can thank myself for all of the hard work I’ve done, I’d also like to thank the universe for all of the work that was done in the background. I feel so blessed to be married to my best friend, a kind and respectful man who loves me for me. We are in good health and we have a roof over our heads. We have great friends and family who love and support us. Life is so good and I am so grateful to be present for it all. Thank you, thank you, thank you. 🤍
What principles define how you live?
What have you been putting off doing? Why?
Opening my new juicer and using it LOL! I’ve never had one so although my friend says it is easy and there are very clear instructions, I still tend to psyche myself out and get intimidated. I’m hoping I can get myself to open it today or tomorrow.
When was the first time you really felt like a grown up (if ever)?
It’s such a weird thing to think about- feeling grown up. I was always the child who was praised by other adults for being so mature for my age and so smart, but that is because many times it felt as though I was the grown up at home. I did most of the chores (which I wanted an allowance and I was the only child), and I often tried to jump in and be the mediator for my parents fights.
I’d like to say it was when my husband and I got our first apartment that I felt grown up, but just being as we were still in the same building as my parents, it was still too close to home. When we bought our townhome I definitely felt like we had a bunch of adult paperwork to deal with and we also had to deal with a broker, realtor and those at the bank, so that was definitely a grown up experience for us.
Have I ever really felt like a grown up though? Or have I just done grown up things as an adult child- because it definitely still feels more like the latter. I mean we just spent our honeymoon at Harry Potter World in Universal Studios because we are still literal children in our hearts! Honestly, I enjoy that childlike joy and awe about the world, so maybe I will never really feel like a “grown up.”