🚶Getting out of your head

 
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I have a tendency to get stuck in my head when I’m busy, stressed, and spend lots of time starring at a computer screen. I obsessively think about some problem to solve, get lost in elaborate stories about this and that, judge myself and others, worry about the future, … I'm mentally overstimulated and disconnected from my body. Everything feels urgent and time seems to be never enough. Maybe you can relate?
 
During a recent stressful period, getting my second dose of the COVID-19 vaccine brought me straight back into my body, into the present moment. My entire body felt achy and alive. It felt like an intense field of changing sensations – aching, warmth, throbbing, stabbing, tingling, … - which drew my attention.

I remembered a quote by Pema Chödron: “This very body that we have, that’s sitting here right now, with its aches and its pleasures, is exactly what we need to be fully human, fully awake, fully alive.”

I took my achy body to a virtual somatics lab during which we practiced tuning in with our body’s intelligence. Slowing down and doing different somatic practices, I felt fully alive and present amidst the achy sensations and fatigue I was experiencing. My body and mind were in the same place at the same time. Listening inwardly and getting curious, my body told me what my mind hadn't wanted to allow: "Simply rest. Sink into comfort and ease."  
 
The body knows what's needed. The body always lives in the present moment and can bring us back to reality. It can be one of our greatest teachers and guides. I'd trust my body over my thoughts any day. 

Being more aware of our body can enable us to better engage with our family, partner, friends, colleagues, clients, and others. It can help us stay present and centered through moments when we get triggered, challenging conversations, and difficult decisions. It can support us in taking a stand for what we know to be true and better defining our boundaries. 

And yet, it's difficult for many of us to be fully home in our bodies. Trying to control our experience as a survival instinct, we're not fully present to the aliveness that's here. With practice, we can become aware when we're lost in thoughts and turn our attention to what's actually happening inside of us.
 
The following questions have been helpful for me to get out of my head and bring curiosity to my embodied experience: 

What is happening inside me right now?
Can I be with this?
Is there something the body (or a part of the body) is trying to say?

With love,

Sarah-Marie

 

The road ahead - acting from our deepest intention

 
What seeds do you want to cultivate?

“Your mind is like a piece of land planted with many different kinds of seeds: seeds of joy, peace, mindfulness, understanding, and love; seeds of craving, anger, fear, hate, and forgetfulness. These wholesome and unwholesome seeds are always there, sleeping in the soil of your mind. The quality of your life depends on the seeds you water… The seeds that are watered frequently are those that will grow strong.” – Thich Nhat Hanh

You might be as reeling, heartbroken, and worn out as I am by the events this past week, only adding to the crisis load we’ve all been carrying.

Our society is in deep need of renewal and healing. We’re seeing who we become when we cultivate the seeds of fear, hatred, greed, ignorance, othering, White supremacy, …

How do we keep cultivating the seeds for a society rooted in integrity, equity, inclusion, and wellbeing for all?

How do we keep showing up to do the inner and outer work every day?

If you’re in need of rest, give yourself permission to stop doing, unplug, and simply be, even if for a little while. We cannot show up for each other and our world without periods of rest. This is a marathon.

As I think about the long road ahead, what’s been helpful for me to keep going is focusing on a long-term intention to contribute more kindness, integrity, healing, and justice to the world. Our intention is what we’re inclining our mind toward - the seeds we seek to cultivate.

May I meet each moment with clarity and kindness. May life use me well to bring more kindness, integrity, healing, and justice to the world.

Rather than focusing our intention on the wants and fears of our small, fear-based self, we can find strength and freedom in widening and deepening our intention. We can let it be an expression of our core values and what truly matters.

Finding your deepest intention might take some digging. It can be helpful to ask yourself: Does this intention feel alive in my heart and body, not just my mind? Does it energize and inspire me in the direction of becoming my wisest, most compassionate self?

When we get triggered, we can stop, take a breath, and reconnect with our intention before responding. We can let it be a guide as we’re moving through our day, doing our work, interacting with the people in our lives, and caring for our body, heart, and mind.

What’s your deepest intention? What seeds do you want to cultivate?

With love,

Sarah-Marie

 

What's the next best step you can take? 👣

 
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Happy New Year! We’ve officially graduated from 2020. Maybe you’re feeling tired, relieved, sad, grateful, hopeful, or anything in between. I know 2020 has pushed me to my edge many times. So many of us have experienced loss and hurt this past year – I hope you’re creating space for what you need right now.

2020 was an extraordinary year: from the promise of starting a new decade, to the pandemic, to rapidly shifting how we live, work, and connect, to reflecting on and reckoning with systemic racism, to grappling with record-breaking natural disasters, to experiencing a divisive US election – with many big and small moments in between.

It has stripped us of our “normal” ways and unearthed so much that needed tending on an individual and collective level. It has broken us open to create new possibilities for how we live, work, and relate to each other and the planet. It has made some things simpler and others more complex. It has invited us to consider what truly matters.

Upon reflecting on 2020, I wanted to share four (of many) lessons and big questions I’ll be carrying into 2021 below. I welcome your thoughts, reflections, and living some of these questions alongside each other.

I’m deeply grateful for you and this community of wildly curious, purpose-driven, and kind people. Thank you for reading and your support. I hope 2021 brings more joy and ease than difficulty for you.

With love and gratitude,
Sarah-Marie

Turning the Page on 2020 with Four Lessons & Big Questions

1. Embrace our shared humanity.

While 2020 was the most physically isolating year of my life, it has also shown me how interconnected and interdependent we truly are. While I’ve intellectually known that we’re both separate and not, 2020 gave me an embodied sense of our shared humanity. We all experienced difficulty and hurt to some degree. We may have felt lonely and disconnected at times. And we all wanted safety, wellbeing, and connection for ourselves and loved ones. No matter what we go through, we are never alone in our experience. This knowing has given me comfort and allows me to access more kindness and compassion for myself and all beings.

How might compassion and kindness inform your actions in 2021?

2. We heal in relationship.

Most of us have our first experiences of hurt and trauma in relationship with others. And yet as social creatures, we also heal best in supportive relationship with others and ourselves. Our inner work and societal work are intertwined. We make up the communities and systems we’re a part of, and our actions matter and have ripple effects. 2020 has amplified a lot in our collective consciousness – from systemic racism, to polarization, to climate change, to collective trauma. We’ve got a lot to work with in 2021 and beyond.

To heal and address all that’s unjust and broken, we need to be in right relationship with ourselves, each other, and the earth. Reverend Jennifer Bailey said: “Relationships move at the speed of trust, but social change moves at the speed of relationships.” We need to recognize our shared humanity and meet each other across difference. May we remember that we’re all products of our conditioning and look for the goodness underneath. May we approach each other with respect and kindness in all of our interactions. May we honor and protect our planet.

What kind of context do you want to create for your relationships in 2021? What will most serve healing?

3. Give yourself permission to feel and be with. 

"'Free' is not free from feelings, but free to feel each one and let it move on, unafraid of the movement of life." - Jack Kornfield

2020 allowed me to experience the full range of difficult feelings. Fear visited often. As did Anxiety, Grief, Shame, Loneliness, and Anger. Maybe they came to see you as well. Whenever I resisted and turned away from the feeling, it just kept asking for my attention. It wanted to be seen and acknowledged for trying to protect me. Emotions have a beginning, middle, and end. Exhaustion happens when we get stuck in them - when we don’t complete the full cycle. When we fully allow what is to be here, we create space for our experience to change naturally.

For example, when we notice Fear (and associated negative thoughts), we can meet it with curiosity and explore our embodied experience of it. I often ask myself: What’s happening inside me right now? Can I be with this? Where do I experience Fear in the body? Then I try to stay with the changing sensations. I ask myself: What does the fearful part of me most need right now? And I extend kindness inwardly (and often place both hands on my heart to add a soothing touch). In this way, we can expand our capacity to be with more and more of life. We can be free to respond creatively instead of being reactive.

What do you need to give yourself permission to feel/be with in 2021?

4. Everything is workable.

2020 has humbled me. I’ve realized just how much is outside of my control. The year has changed plans for all of us and asked us to be creative and adaptable within new constraints. In my case, I tried settling in a new city while being physically isolated from others, adjusted to being in place after years of frequent travel and movement, adapted and moved all of my offerings online, …

I’ve realized that life becomes more workable when I don’t let the small, fear-based self run the show and make it all about myself. Every day, I affirmed my intention to let life use me well and be a contribution (inspired by my mindfulness meditation mentor). I've grown to trust that everything is an opportunity to grow and that we can pause and respond with intention no matter what happens.

We may not know the whole path, but life will always show us the next best step forward. We can trust in the self-generating mechanism of life. When in doubt, I’ve learned to go further in. Our body knows. We can take a moment to pause and sense how the whole of a life situation feels in us without judging or analyzing it. We can notice and cultivate our body’s innate “felt-sense” capacity—a subtle bodily sensation of a situation that lives somewhere between our conscious and unconscious mind. From this place, new awareness can emerge, and new perspectives and actions become possible.

What’s the next best step you can take in 2021?

 

What brings you joy? 😊

 
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What brings you joy?

I recently asked dear friends this question during a virtual gathering. Here are some of the things they shared that bring them joy:

  • Enjoying nature (sunsets, hikes, observing life all around)

  • Dancing and movement

  • Music

  • Expression (singing, painting, poetry, …)

  • Massages

  • Deep conversations and community

  • Serendipity

  • Sense of potential and possibility

  • CATS!

The more we cultivate joy and wellbeing, the more the benefits will ripple out to all areas of our life. In these difficult times, the world needs all the kindness and joy we can bring to it.

What stands between us and joy?

In our troubled world, it’s easy to fixate on the difficulties and get caught in spirals of anxiety and worry. Our brain’s negativity bias wires us to look for what’s wrong. We’re rarely present in the moment. We’re on our way to somewhere else, doing the next thing and anticipating the challenges that may await just around the corner.

Or we might get caught in “if only” thinking: “If only I had a life partner… If only I had complete financial freedom… If only I lived somewhere else... If only I had a different X…” We think something is missing for us to be truly content.

Henri Nouwen wrote: “Joy does not simply happen to us. We have to choose joy and keep choosing it every day.”

Given our evolutionary pull to focus on the negative, it takes intention to cultivate joy in our life. We can practice turning our attention to what’s good even in the midst of difficult times and facing injustice and oppression. Albert Camus said: "The only way to deal with an unfree world is to become so absolutely free that your very existence is an act of rebellion."

Choosing joy does not mean pushing away difficult emotions when they’re present. Choosing joy gives us more space to feel all of our emotions and hold them with kindness and compassion. We give ourselves permission to be just where we are, while recognizing that things are always changing, and no feeling is final.

What brings you joy?

May you be present to all the goodness in your life.

With love,

Sarah-Marie

Resources 

[PRACTICES]

Notice Joy When It's Here

Pay attention to when you are feeling joyful throughout your week. What does joy feel like in your body, mind, and heart when it arises? Open to and take in joyful moments when you’re in the middle of them.

Keep a Joy List

  1. Take a few minutes to write down everything that brings you joy (simple things, activities and experiences, etc.)

  2. Put a check mark next to the things that are already a regular part of your life.

  3. Circle the things that you could include in your life these days.

  4. Keep your list updated and regularly choose something from the list to practice cultivating joy. Try to be fully present for the joyful moments as you experience them.

Dance to Joyful Music

One of my favorite daily practices! Create a playlist with songs that bring you joy and dance to it by yourself or (virtually) with others for at least 10 min every day.

If you're looking for songs to try, I love Everything by City of the Sun and The Leap by Sounds of Isha. :)

[POEM] 

Walk Slowly from Go In and In by Danna Faulds

It only takes a reminder to breathe, a moment to be still, and just like that, something in me settles, softens, makes space for imperfection. The harsh voice of judgment drops to a whisper and I remember again that life isn’t a relay race; that we will all cross the finish line; that waking up to life is what we were born for. As many times as I forget, catch myself charging forward without even knowing where I’m going, that many times I can make the choice to stop, to breathe, and be, and walk slowly into the mystery.

[GUIDED MEDITATIONS]

 

Let's be human together 💗

 
Permission to be human

"'Free' is not free from feelings, but free to feel each one and let it move on, unafraid of the movement of life." - Jack Kornfield 

These are challenging and unsettling times in so many ways. You may feel like it’s all too much to be with at times. You may be done with 2020. You're not alone. 

And yet we’re alive in this moment right here. This moment is calling us to be with what is. Now is (still) worth showing up for.

The way out isn’t to run away or numb. What we resist persists.

Resistance is how we naturally protect ourselves against vulnerability. We cannot selectively numb though. When we block the grief, fear and anger, we also block the joy, love and our sense of aliveness. 

So give yourself permission to feel. Let the emotions move through you. They have a beginning, middle, and end. Exhaustion happens when we get stuck in them - when we don’t complete the cycle. 

May we let these times be a teacher of who we really are - of presence and love - and what matters most. Rumi wrote: “This turn toward what you deeply love saves you.”

What or who do you deeply love?

We’re all human. We’re all trying to figure it out. And we can’t do this alone. We all need spaces where we can be witnessed in our humanity. Where we can make room to be with the life that's here. 

What are these spaces for you? 

Below are a few resources that I hope might be supportive for you.

With love,

Sarah-Marie

Resources 

[PRACTICES] 

Thanking Your Emotions 

When you notice a difficult emotion arising as you go about your day, you can stop, take a conscious breath, and say "Thank you for trying to protect me. Thank you for trying to take care of me. I am OK for now."
 

RAIN of Self-Compassion

Through the practice of RAIN, we can bring mindfulness and compassion to difficult emotions and experience. It invites us to be with our emotions and actual lived experience with self-compassion. The acronym RAIN stands for:

  • Recognize: Seeing clearly what's going on and how we are stuck inside an experience;

  • Allow: Creating space to be with the experience just as it is; 

  • Investigate: Moving from the story and beliefs to getting in touch with the actual lived experience, with kindness; and 

  • Nurture: Offering kindness inwardly. 

Here's a ~16 min guided RAIN practice.  
 

[POEM] 

Excerpt from "Go to the Limits of Your Longing" by Rainer Maria Rilke
 
"Let everything happen to you: beauty and terror.
Just keep going. No feeling is final.
Don’t let yourself lose me.

Nearby is the country they call life.
You will know it by its seriousness.

Give me your hand."

Guided Meditations 

 

Keep going. No feeling is final.

 
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"Just keep going. No feeling is final." - Rainer Maria Rilke 

I needed that reminder this week as the days, weeks, and months have been blurring together into one steady stream of hyperlocal existence. I reminisced about my previous geoflexible life of 1.5 years, being more at home in the sky than in any physical place. And I dreamed of all the places I wanted to go and friends and family I wanted to see again. 

Being caught in thoughts about the past and future, now felt deficient and unsatisfying. I felt disconnected from myself and others. 

I reminded myself that we mostly can't control things, but we can participate with what's emerging around us, between us, and through us. That requires coming back to the present moment and asking ourselves:

What's happening inside me and around me right now? What am I feeling? What am I sensing? 

From this place of contact with what is, we can wake up to the gifts and shift to an abundance and sufficiency view. We can open to our innate resourcefulness, creativity, and the support around us as we respond and contribute to what's called for in these complex and uncertain times. 

As for me, I was able to relax back into letting things unfold and being patient while doing what I can to serve. 

The future emerges out of presence. What's happening inside you and around you right now? 

Below are a few resources that I hope may be helpful for you. 

With love,

Sarah-Marie

Resources  

Guided Meditations