Mum actually understands you more than you think, it just takes her a little while to catch up.
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@t0wardthesun
Mum actually understands you more than you think, it just takes her a little while to catch up.
Support is always there, although perhaps not (ever) in the places we expect.
being soft, gentle and warm is a different kind of radical. the ability to allow yourself to be vulnerable is very powerful
I’m going through this process of reconciliation within myself at the moment.
It’s a weird feeling... letting go of what I thought would have happened, to be present with what is.
Noticing the parts of me that are clinging to the river banks, while Life is begging me to keep going along with the flow - to be flexible, and let the raging water unravel my attachment to unmet expectations.
This is a conversation I had with Life recently. Writing it out like this helps me integrate it.
If you’re debating whether or not to do something and there’s very little clarity, don’t stress, whatever path you decide to take, you’ll always be able to come back and restore balance with yourself through these kinds of dialogues.
You’re always doing the best you can.
Dancing on the beach this afternoon, after a session with @hollymd.kinesiology. We went back to my 13 year old self, to integrate some fear she was feeling. It's so funny as a 30 year old woman, knowing so much more about how I’m turning out, to look back and go, "Ohhhh yeah, that would have been HELLA awful." As a 13-year-old, I was coming to grips with my identity as a unique and insanely wild creative woman, in an environment that was anything but. I felt what it was like to be a girl with so many cool ideas about what to do with her life, and what the world could be, plus this awesome psychic insight into the people around her, met with so little actual autonomy to bring those ideas and visions into reality. No wonder I was freaking out. No wonder I chose to adopt personas. No wonder I chose to hide who I really am. It was so cool to meet myself t(here). I moved so much more freely this afternoon, way more trusting of my body, and just letting myself flow where I wanted to flow. And when I looked down, I saw... not footprints like I expected, but big, messy paw prints, scratching their own trail in the sand. Wild. 😉
Image sourced via pinterest - @ukovalenko829
I get to shout it from the rooftops. I’m an aunty. This was a surprise. To everyone. 😂 Now I know why pregnancies take nine months… it’s so aunties have enough time to get ready. This is squash, so named because she was once the size of a lemon. 🍋 Squashing along nicely in my sisters uterus. Anything I want to write feels too routine to do justice to the miracle that is her, so I’ll just wait til she’s born and spend the rest of my life trying to capture the magnificence. The next generation - and another expression of Divinity - is here! Hallelujah.
My Body and Me; a Love Story.
There was a time when I thought I would never write this post. The battle against my body seemed to be the one mountain I would never climb. I would go around in circles, coming up against the same obstacles; bingeing, emotional eating, restrictive dieting and hating what I saw when I looked in the mirror. I honestly thought it was something I would struggle with for the rest of my life. I think every woman knows this journey, some have walked the path before, others are waiting to begin - each of us up against years of conditioning, programming and subconscious messaging designed to keep us small (literally). This is the story of how I took my power back, went from self loathing to self love and healed my relationship with food and my body.
It’s Australia Day, 2008. My sister and I are riding our bikes around the small town we grew up in, jumping in and out of the crystal clear water wherever we can find the space. The path along the creek is teeming with families and kids our age walking around drinking UDL’s and cans of Smirnoff. Despite already being self conscious about my fifteen year old body, I’m feeling particularly brave wearing just a pair of shorts and my bikini top.
As we climb out of the water and mount our bikes to head home, a guy a few years older than me walks passed with his girlfriend. He looks me up and down and slurs, “Yeah, keep riding,” with a smirk on his face. His girlfriend slaps him playfully, looking back over her shoulder to mouth an apology, but it’s too late. My stomach drops, my world crumbles. Everything I ever feared about myself is true. I'm not attractive, I'm not desirable, I’m not worthy and I’m not enough.
I scroll pro-ana blogs and experiment to see how long I can go without food. I practice putting two fingers down my throat, trying to dredge up the shame I swallowed with that second chocolate brownie. I lament to my mother about the size and softness of my stomach, she shows me which ab exercises reduce belly fat.
My breasts grow almost overnight and suddenly I’m the subject of gossip and the butt of jokes. Relatives and strangers comment on my changing shape, as though my body is public domain to be deliberated. I learn that my body is not my own. I walk into the kitchen after dinner out with friends, “You can’t possibly still be hungry.” I learn that my bodies signals can’t be trusted.
I hold myself up against billboards and pictures on the internet and they all tell me one thing; shrink. Shrink and you will be beautiful, and before anything else, beautiful is what you should aspire to be. I stand in front of the mirror and pinch, suck, poke and prod. I squeeze a tape measure around every inch of skin, using the numbers to define how much I’m worth that week. I hide in the pantry, looking for something to fill me. My mind blanks as I reach for packets and jars, a brief reprieve before the guilt kicks in and I berate myself ceaselessly for a lack of self control.
I’m desperate to be noticed. I crave being seen. I take photos on my phone and send them to boys. When I’m drowning in a sea of insecurity, their shallow compliments keep me afloat.
I grew up believing that “big” was the worst thing a person could be. Worse than being mean, selfish or boring, it was the ultimate failure. The subconscious messaging I received was that being skinny was synonymous with being happy. That having the perfect body somehow made you immune to sadness or other negative emotions. Like, how bad could things possibly get if you looked amazing in a bikini? If you were thin then people paid attention to you; boys wanted to be with you and other girls wanted to be like you. To be thin, was to be beautiful - and to be beautiful was to be adored, cherished, loved. Life was an endless exodus away from fatness and toward thinness.
You can imagine the war that started internally when my e-cup boobs came in overnight. Dance costumes had to be altered, bras and bikinis had to be special ordered and I was constantly asking for a bigger size in change rooms. The changes in my body sparked a downward spiral in my self esteem. In my mind, with every kilo I gained I was becoming less important; my ideas less valid, personality less loveable and my dreams less achievable.
By the time I was sixteen, my body was a tool I used to validate my dwindling sense of self worth. I used it when it suited me, to get attention and validation from guys. The more I was willing to show of it and the more I was willing to do with it, the more approval I got. It made me feel powerful. I traded recognition for respect and mistook attention for love. The rest of the time I either berated it with criticism or ignored it completely.
For most of my teens and early twenties, I felt like a floating head walking around completely disconnected from my body. I didn’t identify as my body, it felt like an annoying attachment that kept betraying me by not doing what I wanted it to do or looking the way I wanted it to look. I hated how easily I could be brought down or carried away by the emotions that arose inside me; a wave of insecurity that would leave me hiding under the covers for days, a flash of anger that always left a wake of destruction in its path. It was too risky and far too painful living in my body, so I checked out. For almost a decade, I didn’t look down in the shower and I couldn’t touch my stomach without a wave of nausea flooding through me. I dreaded walking past mirrors or shop fronts and I used to yell at my mum for taking photos of me when I wasn’t looking.
By the time I left home at eighteen, it became apparent that in addition to my negative body image, I had also developed a pretty damaging relationship with food. Food was my anchor and my security blanket. When everything else in my life was uncertain, I could always count on the jar of peanut butter in the fridge. I would use food to suppress negative emotions; discomfort, anxiety, boredom. Even positive emotions - excitement, joy, happiness - were always accompanied by something to eat. It was as though I couldn’t bare to feel anything fully, so I sought a way to dull the experience.
I would spend hours researching different diets and exercise programs, getting confused and overwhelmed by the mass of conflicting information. Was yoghurt good for me, or bad? Should I be eating carbs with every meal or cut them out altogether? Should I be vegetarian, vegan, paleo or #sugarfree? Is running 5k’s burning fat or telling my body to hold on? I would walk around the grocery store with tears in my eyes, totally overwhelmed by all the choices and torn between what I wanted so desperately and what I thought I should be eating.
“Compulsive eating is basically a refusal to be fully alive. No matter what we weigh, those of us who are compulsive eaters have anorexia of the soul. We refuse to take in what sustains us. We live lives of deprivation, and when we can't stand it any longer, we binge.”
- Geneen Roth, Women, Food and God
Before I even knew what it was, bingeing was a regular part of my life. If had a bad day, a fight with my parents or an assignment due, bingeing offered an incredibly effective distraction. There was no thought or awareness, I would stand at the fridge and put whatever was on the shelf into my mouth. Because I refused to have anything unhealthy in the house, bingeing usually meant raiding my housemates cupboards for whatever had the highest sugar or fat content; four slices of toast with tablespoons of honey, two wraps, half a packet of biscuits and coconut oil straight from the jar. It wasn’t until after I had consumed the entire contents of my kitchen that the guilt kicked in. I felt totally helpless and completely out of control.
The promise of a diet is not only that you will have a different body; it is that in having a different body, you will have a different life.
In 2013, I lost nine kilos leading up to my twenty first birthday. I was eating broccoli with chicken or tinned tuna for every almost meal and smashing myself in the gym 5-7 times a week. Everything in my life revolved around getting the numbers on the scale to drop. I kept a food diary on my phone and wrote down everything that passed my lips and at the end of the day I’d give myself a rating based on how ‘well’ I’d done. A smiley face meant it was a good day, an angry face meant I better try harder tomorrow.
I would measure and weigh myself in the morning and my mood for the entire day, and how I treated myself, depended on what I saw on the scale. I was obsessed with #fitspo blogs and instagram accounts and would spend hours drooling over photos of girls lifting weights or posing effortlessly in bikinis. I would deprive myself all week and have a ‘cheat day’ on the week end, which usually meant buying a block of chocolate on the way home from the gym and making myself sick by finishing off the whole thing in one sitting. A few weeks before my birthday I started taking OxyElite and would happily pop four a day - made me shake and pee constantly - completely ignoring the liver failure warning on the label.
But even when I was at my skinniest, my anxiety didn’t fade and I wasn’t any happier. I still had bad days and moments when I felt unworthy and insecure, and I was so preoccupied maintaining my new weight, I didn’t have time to focus on anything else or enjoy my life. As soon as my birthday was over and I didn’t have a goal to work towards, the weight came back and the battle raged on.
As I watched women my mums age berate themselves for eating an extra slice of cake, apologise for taking up too much space and obsess over their physical ‘flaws’, I started to think maybe this was just part of life as a woman. I hated the idea of passing my insecurities on to my future daughter, but I couldn’t see a way to break the cycle.
So I started working with coaches, and read and listened to every intuitive eating, eating psychology and body positive book, blog post and podcast I could get my hands on. There wasn’t one pivotal moment, but a series of small but deeply significant revelations that helped me improve my relationship with food and lead me back to my physical body…
1. I got angry.
When I discovered the extent to which mainstream media tries to keep us small - literally - as a form of disempowerment, I got angry. By making thinness the ideal and celebrating women who shrink, we get the message that we are not allowed to take up space, a subconscious belief that ingrains itself in our collective psyche. It’s the same belief that stops us from speaking up when we are being taken advantage of, it stops us demanding more from partners who mistreat us, and it stops us creating epic shit and sharing our unique gifts with the world.
As I continued pulling back the veil to expose the corporate agenda behind our BS beauty standards, it got easier to rally against my own inner critic because I knew they were both just trying to stop me wielding the full force of my power as a conscious woman. A woman confident in her own skin is no longer an obedient consumer, she no longer drains her time, energy and resources trying to “fix herself”. She shows up fully as her authentic self. She is a force to be reckoned with.
2. I focused on my strengths.
That insta-famous bikini model posting photos of herself looking toned and tanned in various exotic locations? Yes, she could have done a lot of editing/had surgery/spend thousands on a celebrity trainer, but you know what? Some girls really look like that - and that’s amazing! Go them! You have your own set of unique gifts and God-given talents that are exactly what you need to enact your purpose on this earth, and they might not have anything to do with how you look. Say it with me now, “I was not born to be an instagram model.” (Unless you were, then carry on your merry way). Being trapped in jealousy or comparison usually means we aren’t fully embracing our Genius. Ask yourself, ‘What am I really good at? What do I LOVE?’ then go do that.
BODY IMAGE CHALLENGE: Take a look at the people you follow on social media. Do they make you feel more confident, or less? If you feel ‘icky’ every time you scroll through instagram, it might be time to do a social media cleanse and get rid of any accounts that don’t inspire you to feel good about yourself.
3. I shifted my perspective from the external to the internal.
My journey this year has been letting go of the belief that people will only listen to what I have to say if they like the package it comes in. As women, we are taught from such a young age that beauty equals success, and for so long I was hung up on this idea that in order for my thoughts, opinions or ideas to be taken seriously, I would need to measure up to societies standards of beauty. That belief kept me from showing up fully in my business and in my life. Bullshit!
How many of us are held back from the work we are meant to do and the joy we are meant to experience because of our obsession with living up to someone else’s idea of beauty? How many of us delay happiness and postpone joy, waiting until after we’ve lost the weight or dropped a dress size, to be active participants in sucking the marrow out of our lives?
These days, I’m focusing less on impressing people with my looks and more on empowering them with my energy. I realised I would so much rather invest my time cultivating compassion, sharpening my intellect and developing the kind of inner radiance that inspires people than forcing my body to take on a shape that isn’t natural for me.
I get that some people absolutely love pushing their body to see how far it can go, but when I think about how much effort it took to maintain my ‘goal weight’, I can honestly say - for me, and my standards - it’s just not worth it. As with anything in life, you have to ask yourself, do you want it because that’s the experience your Soul is longing to have, or because everyone tells you that’s what you should want? Is it your dream or someone else’s?
BODY IMAGE CHALLENGE: Start a creative project that you can work on in your spare time. It could be a collection of short stories, a sketch pad full of drawings or a line of your own handmade clutches. Passion projects are good for the soul and you never know where they might lead ;)
4. I let go of my obsession with losing weight.
After nearly a decade of trying to get smaller, the thought of giving up scared the shit out of me. I clung to diets because they gave me a purpose, losing weight made me feel accomplished. It was easier to write a meal plan than it was to map out a plan for my future. And it was easier trying to change my body than it was to change the world.
I also thought that if I wasn’t following a strict eating and exercise ‘plan’, I would completely lose control and binge until I was the size of a house. And for a while, I did go a little crazy. I had to rebuild the trust between me and my body. I needed to prove that I was sticking to my word this time and I wasn’t going to deprive it any more.
But when I stopped labelling foods as ‘good’ and ‘bad’ and started giving myself unconditional permission to eat whatever I wanted, eating an entire block of chocolate lost its appeal. I could have it, so I didn’t want it. If I did end up over eating, I quickly forgave myself and moved on. No judgement, criticism or shame, just unconditional acceptance. I quickly learnt that most of the time I didn’t actually want the chocolate, I wanted the way it made me feel; worthy, deserving, full.
Instead of using food to suppress my emotions, I wanted to tap into my bodies natural wisdom. I started by opening up the lines of communication. I wrote her letters in my journal, apologising for all the times I had ignored her, made her sick and used her to satisfy my ego desires. I promised to take care of her, trust her and always ask her what she needed. I spoke to her like I would my best friend or little sister. Much to my delight, she started talking back.
I’m sorry.
I know.
I love you.
I love you too.
Today, my relationship with my body feels like rekindling a romance with a long lost lover; we’re both still marvelling at all the things we can do together, getting excited about what this means for our future and falling more in love with each other every day. Like any great relationship, ours is based on trust, communication and mutual respect. I speak kind words to my body, I don’t make her do things she doesn’t want to do, and I trust that she knows what she needs in any given moment. Sometimes that means making a big fat pasta dish, sometimes it means stopping when there’s still food left on the plate. I still apologise if I drink too much wine and wake up with a hangover. She forgives me and we go and do something to make us feel amazing again.
Exercise doesn’t feel like a chore, it’s a way to expend all the beautiful energy that runs through my body. I don’t slog it out at the gym to burn calories or punish myself for overeating, I move in ways that feel good. Lifting weights makes me feel powerful, dancing makes me feel sexy as hell. My body is an incredible vehicle I have been given to fully engage in this earthly experience, and I love it regardless of its shape or size.
I know this is an ongoing process - as my body changes, I will need to continue practicing self love and some times are going to be harder than others, but never again will I let insecurity hold me back (for too long).
The beauty standards set by society will continue to change, but I reserve the right to decide what’s beautiful to me, and my definition of beauty is all encompassing - there is room for everyone. I am so excited to see - in our lifetime - a generation of women liberated from the shackles of self loathing, free to share their unique gifts with the world and I am so grateful for the women before me who have publicly embraced their bodies at every size.
Wherever you are on the journey, may these words guide your way home.
Do not be afraid to take up space. Consciously expand until your presence rivals galaxies. Should your body say anything about Who You Are, let it say nothing of willpower or self-control, let it tell the story of your curiosity, your bravery, your compassion. Should you seek to be less of anything, may you be less worried about making yourself look acceptable.
May the only picture of your progress be the feeling of expansion in your Spirit. When you go looking for validation or your sense of Self, may you go only to the Source of all Love that lives inside of you.
May you appreciate your body as the temporary home your soul chose to inhabit. May you honor her sovereignty and listen to her wisdom. May you praise her in public and pleasure her in private.
When you look at your body may you see our mother earth incarnate; in every crevice and fault line, in the veins that run like rivers, in all the mountains and valleys that ripple across your skin.
And when the time comes for you to leave, may it be with gratitude as the veil is lifted and the joy of returning to the infinite oneness from which you came... can no longer be contained.
Jae x
If you are looking for more on this topic, check out the recommended resources below. I also run a weekly circle called ‘Love the Skin You’re In’ and I’d love to have you along. (If you’re based in SE Qld / Northern NSW, check it out here > https://www.eventbrite.com.au/e/love-the-skin-youre-in-tickets-626697347637)
Recommended Resources
Embrace the documentary - https://bodyimagemovement.com/embrace-the-documentary/
The Well-Fed Woman - www.rachelwcole.com/blog
Poodle Science - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H89QQfXtc-k
I Didn’t Wake up Like this - https://www.buzzfeed.com/sonamkapoor/i-didnt-wake-up-like-this?utm_term=.clmdDBLaw#.kboeY8g6O
10 Principles of Intuitive Eating - http://www.intuitiveeating.com/content/10-principles-intuitive-eating
Psychology of Eating Podcast - http://psychologyofeating.com/podcasts/
Lauren Beckett, Body Love Coach - http://dropthestruggle.com/
Why I won't subscribe myself to any outside ideology, worldview, or school of thought (for too long)
When I was younger, I went looking for a blanket approach.
I was operating from the conditioning that told me I had to "win at life", and if I only found the best belief system, and did whatever it required of me, I'd come out on top.
I went searching for the meaning of life like a cheat code because I thought if I could "show the world" how capable I was, by mastering what I considered the "best" human game, I'd feel less like a failure.
The lie was “if I’m not doing more/being better than everyone else I’ll never get to have cool experiences and I'll get left behind.”
(This is bullshit)
This is back when I also thought others were the purveyor of my abilities - and teachers, pastors and parents decided how capable I was, rather than knowing and valuing my Self from within (this still feels like a stretch some days).
In my mid-twenties I came to a fork in the road.
Actually, it was more like a brick wall... and when Life saw me trying to scale it with my bare hands, build a ladder out of my own bones and sit at the base with my head banging against it for weeks... it threw me a lifeline.
I began to see things more clearly. I knew I had to stop what I was doing and choose authenticity over success (or at least what looked like success to the outside world) until I could hold my true self properly.
(If you want to find your authentic voice, you've gotta unravel the conditioning that says your authentic voice isn't good enough or valuable, otherwise you'll keep beating yourself up when you get close to expressing it or ignoring it completely in favor of yet another performance).
I went inward and worked on my inner dialogue - my relationship with myself - and built a foundation that couldn't be shaken... I found (and lost and found again) the core of me and am learning how to live from there.
This meant - less showing up on social media, less creating distractions out of thin air, and basically six years of de-conditioning the beliefs that said I had to be anything other than exactly who I am.
Letting go of this way of operating - unhooking from the paradigm of comparison and success/failure - meant giving up the yard stick I'd used to measure myself. I had to stop comparing myself to spiritual teachers, "successful" solopreneurs, social media influencers, and all the people I'd perceived had "won at life".
Because truthfully, no-one has won at life. No-one has "made it". There's no such thing and Life isn't like that. It's not a win/lose game, race, or a competition.
The deeper I've gone, the more I've realized I - and women as a whole - are more complex, nuanced and utterly original than any kind of worldview - no matter how expansive or progressive - can account for.
And as tempting as it is to believe I can find the holy grail and solve all my problems with one religion or way of thinking about or looking at the world, if I just try hard enough, or give up enough, it's not real.
It's scary to feel like you don't belong anywhere, until you realise by the same logic, you also belong everywhere.
Now, subscribing (which ironically means to "contract") to anything outside of myself for too long feels like a squeeze, and not the good kind.
It feels like a denial of all that I am, the infinite, irrepressible and undefinable.
At the end of the day, I deserve more than a surface level quick fix, that promises eternal salvation and offers nothing more than a momentary relief. I deserve the tools to actually understand and be myself, utilize all I have to offer and make the most out of this journey, not just a ladder to climb, a ruler to measure myself or box of someone else's making to fit myself in.
.
There's a psychology that comes with "success" as the world defines it. It means you're constantly either chasing a carrot or being whipped by a stick (sometimes both). It's usually born out of a sense of powerlessness or inadequacy - constantly seeking a supply that needs to get bigger and bigger. It's an addiction in its own right.
Growth is different. Heart-led living is different. It still starts with the same feelings (and the acknowledgement you can't escape them) ...powerlessness, inadequacy, fear... but instead of being motivated away from them, you allow yourself to sit with, unravel and be unraveled by them. The tool - the symbol, metaphor, sacred text, methodology - is just a tool. And instead of it getting pedestaled and a exalted as an idol, it’s just something you use until you no longer need it.
In a society that's continually programming us to be someone other than who we are - telling us we're wrong and not enough and need to "do better" - the only way to stay intact and aware of our own completeness is to learn how to be ourselves and stay true to that - no matter what.
Taking up our own space and living in our own lane is an ongoing process. It's less about living by others' expectations, and more about creating an internal culture that is natural to you, an environment you can thrive in.
Mine is made up of a combination of all the things I've learnt on the journey so far... which is why I can't begrudge myself the places I've been and the paths I've walked... church... personal development... network marketing... even spirituality... it's all a part of the walk home.
Right now... the tool I'm using is singing. It's connecting me deeper, but I'm not confusing it with who I am, or abandoning myself in order to chase or worship it.
You don't need to chase carrots or beat yourself up with sticks.
(They're not real)
Take them all away and be brave enough to accept what you're left with.
It's good enough.
@t0wardthesun @jaeschaefer
Progress isn't measured, it's experienced.
When you're holding a ruler up to yourself (without even realising it) to measure your own success, it creates expectations that stifle your creative flow and natural wisdom.
When you get in the habit of measuring yourself, the yard stick itself becomes the motivation for your actions, rather than Love.
This is why you feel disconnected from your Soul.
The yard stick is not of the Soul, yet I held onto it for a long time because the fear of not getting what I wanted held me captive.
Even writing this, I can feel my mind wondering if it makes sense, if I'm coming across the way I think I want to, if it's "good enough."
And I keep coming back to the present, fingers tapping, breeze blowing in through the window...
I am here.
That's enough.
So how do we re-orient ourselves and stay in touch with what truly matters to us in a culture that is constantly putting distractions in our path?
It takes work.
- Learn to stay in your own lane. My life path hasn't followed any kind of traditional trajectory. There's no external map I can use to locate myself. This has been hard at times. I've spent weeks at a time being de-railed from my sense of Self because I got caught in the trap of comparing.
- Stay curious, rather than judgmental.
- Learn to be present - and know as long as you're "with" yourself (ie. being with what you're experiencing) you're winning because you're learning. Even if you're in resistance to the experience you're having, you can explore that and unlock what it's showing you.
- Choose an experience that inspires you in the moment.
- Live for today, and love yourself as you are right now, not just because you’re becoming an ideal "future you.”
- Let go of success. It's such a WILD idea, in a world where everything is goals this and success that… It's like we're scared we're going to wither and die if we’re not latching on to our goals for dear life, as though growth is not our natural state and deepest desire.
It's a process of continually getting over yourself (i.e. overcoming your own limitations) and trusting your vision is always making its way through you.
You don’t have to keep looking up to make sure.
Go where your internal guide is leading you and be willing to confront what comes up along the way.
If you're only experiencing yourself, not measuring yourself, what becomes available to you then?
Jae Schaefer
Do you have an inner voice that yells at you when you try new things?I edited the final copy of “What am I Doing with my Life?” ready for print today.The last couple of months, I’ve been working with a voice in my head that has been screaming at me “it hates me”.In the last few days, I’ve been able to get to the root of it (with the help of my mentor) and am dialoguing to integrate this aspect of my consciousness. (Psych talk for “helping the 13-year-old in me figure some stuff out”)It’s been so synchronistic to see how art informs life and as I revisit and understand this part of myself, I’m able to finish a book I wrote for teenagers.It’s like I’m writing to myself.Conclusions you drew in the past are still informing the choices you make now. When you’re able to connect with those parts of you bring them into wholeness in the present, everything changes.Want to learn more about the keys to unlocking your Self?Reach out.
Dear Soul,
Do you have expectations of me?
No, I'm pure energy.
Why would I have expectations of how this life should be?
I just want to show up
in all my incandescent, unique experience and glory
and trust, whatever unfolds
is exactly what is meant to be
Ever felt like your creative process is WAY harder than it needs to be? If your creativity is feeling stifled and strained, it could be because conflicting subconscious desires are draining your energy and keeping you stuck in a loop. In this episode, I share how I was finally able to finish the book I'd been working on for seven years, by clearing up my motives for creating it. I invite you to dive deep into WHY you make what you make and ask the key questions to unlock your outdated subconscious compulsions and bring them back into alignment with the whole. If you're sick of getting in your own way, this one is for you. Ready to debug your creative process, and release more of your own energy by acknowledging your intentions? Listen in and enjoy the ride. If you love this episode, leave a review and share it with a friend. Thank you for all your love and support, Jae
All Decisions Are Good Decisions
There’s no such thing as a right or wrong decision.
All decisions are “for” you, when you decide they are.
Even decisions that lead you into weird or uncomfortable places, are showing you how to navigate those weird and uncomfortable places.
This morning I felt like I was making one “wrong” move after another.
I thought myself into a frenzy until I was literally crying.
I’ve been in this position A LOT before, so I have a huge amount of awareness around what’s actually happening when it does, and how to handle it.
I sat down with my phone and started writing out the thoughts going through my head.
Then, I took the judgements I was having about others, to point me back to where I was abandoning myself.
i.e. “They are so _________.” (Judgement about other people’s behavior)
Okay, where am I currently ____________? (How is this a reflection of my own behavior/what’s going on within me?)
And how can I meet that need/do that thing/use more of that part of myself? (Affirmative action based on the revelation)
Awesome.
What felt like a series of bad moves, lead me to re-connecting with the joy of what I really love.
This happens on a micro level - on a day-to-day basis - and a macro level - with the general direction of your whole life.
Use the things you “don’t want” to guide you back to the things you do.
@jaeschaefer
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If you catch yourself thinking money and world-wide recognition are exclusive measures of virtue and validity, remember…
Scientology made billions of dollars and has had hundreds of thousands of worldwide followers.
#MythBusted
True power has little to do with outward displays of wealth or influence.
It’s more about…
- How you hold yourself through difficult situations
- How much mastery you have in cultivating your internal landscape.
- How deeply you can sink into the present moment and be with what’s really going on within and all around you
- How congruent the life you’re living is with who you really are
The temptation is to chase external markers of power, because you think it exempts you from doing the real work of repairing your relationship with yourself.
“At least I'll look successful,” the ego says, “and that’ll be enough to get me by.”
This especially enticing if you have a history of low self-esteem.
But while you believe you’re incapable of developing the fortitude and skill to live a truly aligned and decent life, you’re still at the mercy of the small self, and no matter how many markers of external success you accumulate, it won’t be enough to turn off the inner-critic or quell the sense of haunting restlessness that comes from abandoning your true self.
On a subconscious level, your bid for material success is an attempt to control how people see you, because you think it will change the way they treat you. And if other people treat you like you are worthwhile and valuable, then maybe, just maybe, you'll be able to believe them, and your relationship with yourself will change as a result.
Rather than seeing other people's behavior for what it is - a projection of their own relationship with themselves - a part of you has decided that how they treat you is an indication of who you are.
Now, at the level of consciousness this part of you is stuck in, its only concern is doing whatever it takes to make sure you have others approval and avoid deeper scrutiny. It is cornered into making sure you are never again treated like you were in the past.
This is what's keeping you exhausting yourself bending to please others.
The real path - the one you're here to walk - is one of liberation from needing other people to tell you who you are.
It's one of asking...
- How proud are you of yourself?
- How good do YOU feel about the work you’re doing in the world?
It's the discovery of your true values and gifts, and the fortifying of your own internal foundations.
This is the journey that cannot be bypassed.
Other people's accolades can only sustain you for so long. The glow of even the kindest words and humblest of adulation has an expiration date.
As you free yourself from the shackles of this conditioning you created, you begin to see the magic and beauty in your current reality, rather than always chasing the gold at the end of the rainbow.
Where you are - and who you are now - becomes the center of your focus, and you get to experience your Self, rather than frantically flailing through your life in a disassociated state.
You create from a place of grounded wholeness, and you show up to all the things in your life because it feels GOOD (even when it doesn't) to show up with all of you for what you love, not because you feel like you have to in order to survive.
You access a level of authenticity and inner solidity that can't be faked... and people can feel it.
Rather than calling in the people who also want to run from their deeper work, and chasing a fantasy together, you're surrounded by salt of the earth legends who nourish and inspire you.
They know and cultivate the best in you, because they know and cultivate the best in themselves, and rather than trying to sell a bastardized version of yourself to prove you belong, you relax and truly feel at home in their presence, and your own.
You're wasting your energy attempting to control how other people see you. Stop living just to feed the beast of your reputation - running a PR department for a version of you that doesn't exist outside your own mind - and honor the truth of who you really are by liberating yourself from the shadows that are keeping you stuck in the past.
The only way forward is challenging yourself to live a life in alignment with what you love and holding yourself to your own standards.
There's no need to do it alone.
DM me now for a conversation about 1:1 coaching.
The most valuable thing I learned doing a Masters degree with depression, anxiety and ADHD was to change my “things I’m bad at” list to “things I can’t do on my own.” Stop thinking of them as things I could do if I tried hard enough, and accept that I can’t accomplish them by effort and willpower alone; they’re genuine neurocognitive deficits, and if I need to do the thing, then just like a blind person reading or a mobility impaired person going up a storey in a building, I need to find a different method.
I’m “bad at” working on long-term projects without an imminent deadline or someone breathing down my neck? Okay, let’s change that: I can’t work on long-term projects without an imminent deadline and someone breathing down my neck. So let’s create an imminent deadline and recruit neck-breathers. Find a sympathetic prof who will agree that 3 weeks before the due date they expect me to show them my preliminary notes and bibliography. Get a friend I trust to block off an hour to sit with me and keep asking, “Are you working on your project?” Write a blog post about my progress. Arrange to trade papers and proofread them with another student.
Accept your limitations and learn to leverage them, instead of buying the neurotypical fairytale that they’ll go away if you just try hard enough.
I needed this so much.
In all of this what comes shining through for me is that nothing can substitute for consistent action toward a goal over time.
It's kind of a relief, to know that. To know that, in all of this, the quantum leaps and the shortcuts to success... the pathways that seem so illustrious with their shiny bells and loud siren-like whistles... can't compare to the true devotion of a human heart, the dedication of an individual over time. It's something that can't be faked, side-stepped, or skipped through, because eventually you realize, there's nothing to side-step.
It reminds me of a quote I wrote through the middle of all this - the good parts. "Go far enough through the process of de-conditioning, and you realize the journey itself is the prize you would never trade anything for."
The people - the parts of us - who are shortcutting, I think they/we have missed the point. It's the daily stepping that our Soul craves - the nuanced, detailed, often arduous - legs of the journey... that satiate the innate essence in us who knows the whole reason it incarnated was to have this experience - to journey with joy, to walk with Love.
- A piece from a new blog post I’m writing.
Feels good to be expressing it all again.
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