Gravity always wins

Are you feeling in fit spiritual condition? This is the most important question you can ask yourself on a daily basis.

Everything is connected. How you start your day affects the rest of the day. How you go to sleep at night affects the start of the day. How you live the day affects how you go to sleep at night. It’s all connected.

So the common denominator of how we experience life (and how life experiences us) really is that spiritual connection to a higher power.

This spiritual connection is always reminding me I’m not alone, always reminding me of my intrinsic worthiness, and always embodying unconditional love.

Some days I choose to call this higher power God. Other days it’s the universal creative energy that connects us all. Some days it’s natural great beauty and the elements of the natural world.

And on days when everything feels a little less spiritually high vibe, my higher power is as simple as gravity.

Yes, GRAVITY. It’s a power greater than myself. It’s a power holding us all here, there’s no discrepancy there’s no preferential treatment, there’s no need to work harder to be held.

We are all held and we have a choice in front of us in every given moment to feel held or feel trapped.

We can choose to wrestle against the nature of gravity. I feel this sometimes when I don’t wanna get out of bed and the pillow goes on top of my head in a feeble attempt to try to block out the sunlight and the rooster and the snoring and the traffic (and the worrisome thoughts). 

So as you contemplate the ever present presence of gravity holding you here now in this moment, take a moment and get honest with yourself. Did you wrestle with gravity this morning? Or did you wake up, smile upon awakening before your feet hit the floor, and realize you’re alive for some reason?

Did you say thank you? Do this now, say thanks to your higher power and ask yourself, gently, what are you gonna do with your one wild and precious life?

I’ve been to hell and don’t want to go back. That is the essence of my spiritual development. So I surrender. 

Gravity always wins.

With much Aloha,

Amy Elizabeth

Relational Health Coach & Compassion Activist  

Invest in Yourself. You Matter. Your Relationships Matter. 

p.s. Surrender.

Let us surrender to win.

Let us surrender to success. 

Trauma as Alchemy

alchemy

Peanut Butter Falcon

This is a great movie that a friend recommended and I watched it the
other night. Near the end of the movie, a scene knocked me sideways and I just started balling. It knocked on the neighborhood of old trauma in my mind and brought it back.

Fresh. Tender. Ow.

During this journey of integration, I’ve dedicated my energy toward 
building resilience, cultivating compassion, and living a life of
service. 

To appreciating the Fresh. To having a Tender Heart.
To acknowledging the Ow (but not dwelling in the past).

I’ve finally made peace with the idea that I will ever have a different past. It’s part of the path of forgiveness. While watching Peanut Butter Falcon, I held onto myself and allowed another layer of old hurts to emerge to the
sunlight of the Spirit. And I asked for extra hugs and allowed myself to be real, raw, and vulnerable with my Beloveds.

Here’s what I believe:

We feel it to heal it. And we forgive. And we grieve. And we shift. 

Forgiveness: Letting go of the idea of ever having a different past.

Consider that possibility as we ask the next big question:

How can we shift our perspective and see trauma as a portal to
alchemy?


Trauma: A deeply distressing or disturbing experience


Alchemy: A seemingly magical process of transformation, creation
or combination. 

What if your life is a movie on the screen of your mind?
What scenes do you replay over and over?
How do they make you feel?
Which ones do you feel dissociated from and wish would be different?
What if you could switch out the reel of the old movie and play a new ending? 

Watch the movie Peanut Butter Falcon and you might get inspired.
Pick up a pen and starting writing answers to the above questions and besure to write about the ideal outcome of your life.

Describe the legacy you’d like to leave behind. Describe in granular detail the joy and pleasure you’d like to experience now.

You matter. Your relationships matter. If you feel stuck, reach out to me.I’m here for you. Holding both you and your unique Moonshot high in my heart.   

 p.s. on a different note, but related on the spectrum of human existence


Time for us to get inspired and have some fun! Please join me tomorrow as I go live, once again, with my beloved friend, Maria Aleandra, in her
Goddess Jam Sessions 


what’s that, you might ask?


‘Goddess Jam Sessions’ is a weekly live show where MA features
incredible women in conversations about following our Intuition,
accessing the Divine Feminine, stepping into Power, leading with Love,
activating Wisdom and living like a Cosmic Creatrix.  

https://www.facebook.com/groups/rockyourlifegroup/ see you there! 

On Wednesday We-Day I make a point to connect with others in
deeper way, face to face if can, which is increasingly challenging
in this pandemic time! I’m headed out on a walk with a friend
soon and wanted to send you a quick message to let you know I’m thinking of you and wishing we could go for a walk together. It’s
incredibly therapeutic. Instead, I’ll offer movie recommendation
and some writing prompts for integration. And invite to join me
in the world of social media. 
see you there

Compassion for self, skillful means with others

On Monday I wrote about the importance of resilience and relating to the challenges of life with tenderness vs. toughness. Today I’d like to dive a little deeper into how you do this. You can actually keep it quite simple.

  1. When you wake up, smile upon awakening, before feet hit the floor.
  2. Make the bed, closing that chapter of your day.
  3. Adopt an attitude of gratitude. 

Tender connections start with compassion for yourself.

Compassion for self, skillful means with others.

What is compassion? com·pas·sion /kəmˈpaSHən/  

  • Compassion ordinary definition: sympathetic pity or concern for the suffering or misfortunes of others 
  • Compassion extraordinary definition: connecting with the tender heart of sadness buried in the layers of life 

Dwell in the Realm of C.O.R.E. Compassion. 
 

Set your intentions to:

  • clear your mind
  • open your heart  
  • rekindle your spirit  
  • energize your life 

With much Aloha,

Amy Elizabeth Gordon MA 

Relational Health Coach & Compassion Activist  

p.s. Hereʻs a panel interview I had (Dec. 2019) with 3 powerful beings to discuss compassion. Joining energy from California, Hawaii, and Vienna, we declare our Moonshots and invite some Magic. The message holds relevancy today in pandemic times. 

This is the SOS  of our times. Tune in now. 

We do the deep dive into the Realm of Compassion. Explore the concepts of Clarity, Openness, Reactivation, Energy with these powerfully kind souls. 45 minutes of thoughtful consideration to your media diet, we discuss the collective unconscious, and the necessity for compassion of Self, Other, Society.

Please take good care. you matter, your relationships matter.  

And let me know what support looks like. 

shift the drift to what matters most

I live with my in-laws. Yep, you heard right. For five years now. We’ve shared our resources, multiplied our joys and divided our sorrows by living at the same address.

Moonshot: Consciously decide to turn toward that which we’ve been programmed by the popular culture to want to avoid at all costs.

On Monday I celebrate 18 years of conscious monogamy and a growing, thriving, beautiful marriage. Time spent breathing through-the-moments-I-want-to-vaporize-somebody have indeed paid off handsomely.

Moonshot: Avoid the lure to cheat, lie, and suffer through a dreadful marriage — the lie that dominant culture promotes. 

For nearly 3 decades I’ve practiced radical self-care. I’ve done work on my addictive behavior patterns (from Bacardi Rum to Ben-n-Jerry’s Ice Cream), healed my relationships (with myself, Beloved spouse, conception of Spirit), and cultivated a contemplative practice (yoga, meditation, breath-work).

Moonshot: Challenge the myth of the consumeristic culture that tells us we can buy our way out of pain. 

Each of these Moonshots–these declarations of something extra-ordinary that wouldn’t otherwise happen–help form the foundation of the extra-ordinary life I have today.

Basically, I focus on What Matters Most and abide by 12 distinctions of an extraordinary life. Join me Friday in a live new moon Zoom Room to learn more. 

There are hard times, I get it. Hell, I’m a human being on this planet, of course there are. It’s the way I relate to them; it’s the willingness to simultaneously love and accept myself and upgrade my life AT THE SAME TIME, that makes all the difference in the world.

The invitation is for you to focus on What Matters Most and dwell in the Realms of Resilience, Compassion & Service. 

It’s time for you, as a social pioneer, to shift the drift from everyday suffering to everyday enlightenment. Ready to declare that something extraordinary that wouldn’t otherwise happen? Curious what’s next? 

my bubble includes grit and grief

grief

Grit and Grief

The bubble I live in expands and contracts with my breath. It’s a daily spiritual practice to create space for grace to enter my bubble and work in a way that is indeed miraculous. The bubble expands into comfort and ease with a deep breath, it contracts naturally when it is time to regroup, to replenish; the exhale is a natural part of this rhythm. Ideally, I hold myself tenderly, not too tight, not too loose, and here, in this breath, I find comfort and ease.

For decades I blamed myself for not being comfortable in my own skin, for being too much for other people, and for being too sensitive for this wild world we live in.

Up until now, the bubble felt cloyingly tight, pinching, gripping. I thought I was doing my level best. Trying to figure it all out, trying to hold it all together. Here, in the bubble, the pungent stench of regret wafted past as I hustled for more, for better, for the purpose of striving to be my best. All that striving created more strife. Striving to be my best gave no space to simply be.

And so I reflect on a prayer, Be still and know that I am God, that I consume in bite-sized chunks.

Be still and know that I am.

Be still and know.

Be still.

Be.

All the while, heartaches and unseen losses piled up. Blocking the sunlight of the spirit from streaming in and inhibiting the windows from opening to allow a fresh breeze of delight to refresh me, the detritus of the past (both mine and others) piled up heavily. Burdened, I found the bubble gravely uncomfortable. Now I inhabit a far more expansive bubble, that I can decorate and fill with the energy of my choosing. Be still and know. Be still. Be.

Living close to the bone, I feel things deeply. I noticed this bubble stretched as the un-lived lives and unnamed dreams gnawed at my gut and vied for even more attention with stomachaches and headaches. Stomachaches, representing the complaints of my inner guidance system, used to haunt me regularly. Headaches, symbolizing the agony of trying to figure it all out still surface from time to time. When stomach and head hurt, I remember my body speaks my mind. When the day is full of new changes, new realities, my dreamscape harkens me with vivid echoes of the deeper voyage of my soul.

My bubble includes grit and grief. It’s purplish hue, the tinged reminder of a massive bruise. The yellow healing phase freshly tender and replaced with the calloused complaints of too much pressure, too firm a touch, too heavy a hand.

My old traumas are showing up in my dreams this week, this week of continued orders to shelter-n-place. I reflect, here, through the lens of grit and grief.

Three nights ago, this nightmare roused me from slumber. Suddenly, some guy named Stanley, bald head, massive gut, showed up and towered over my face, and pushed his crotch further into my bubble. My energetic exchange with him intense, even in my dreams, especially in my dreams.

I awaken cold and clammy, frozen and pissed. Warm fuzzies eluded me. It was hard to awaken to the seemingly innocent husband next to me with any urges of loving connection, much less thoughts of deep appreciation. These qualities of loving connection and deep appreciation are descriptive of the bubble in which I intend to reside.

May my bubble be as wide as the world and big enough to house my hurts, and allow space for the deep sorrow of trauma.

Trauma lives in my body like frozen energy. I thought I’d thawed. I’ve done so much work to get better, to heal, to integrate the lost parts of my soul. From shamans offering soul retrieval to becoming a relational health coach myself, I’ve asked for help, offered help, and embodied the notion, we are wounded in relationship and it is in relationship that we are healed.

Grit describes me, a committed, monogamous and caring women in an almost 18-year marriage. Grief swallows me with the ever-present loss of innocence, adoration, and courtship that my angry-adolescent-girl-inside never had.

Two nights ago, another nightmare. Suddenly, some shot-glass full of gin, a mini-martini, appeared in front of my gaze. I think my friend Andy put it there. Earlier in the day, in my waking hours, I told him I was sorry I didn’t go to his big 60th birthday party at Anna Ranch a couple months ago, pre-pandemic. Wished I hadn’t been so tired. That now, during these strange times of shelter-in-place, in fact today is day 33 of shelter-in-place, the invitation to a loud party of drunken enjoyment sounded good to me.

Not that I consciously wanted to get drunk, but the angry-adolescent-Amy sure the fuck did. I didn’t like gin, found it repugnant and never recalled having a martini. Surprisingly, that’s what landed in my dreams, twenty-five years after alcohol last passed my lips.

Trauma lives in my mind like dark neighborhoods of hoodlums and howling heroines. I thought I’d gentrified and remodeled the wreckage of my past. I’ve done so much work to get sober, to stay sober, to soothe my mind without the need for numbing agents. I woke from the nightmare with a start, sweating, hot, fearful. Questions peppered the map of my mind. Did I relapse? Did I drink that gin? Hellish moments of doubt finally settled as my heart resumed a steady beat, a more peaceful pulse.

Grit describes me, a sober woman of integrity of over 25 years in recovery from addictions. Grief is in the ever-present shadows of lack energy, scarcity, want, longing. Fueling Ben -n- Jerrys binges and Bacardi rum dreams. Howling for more of what it thinks it wants. Robbing my soul of the beauty of the present moment.

Last night in my dreamscape, I faced some twisted form of financial-judgement-day. In reality, it was April 15, 2020, and I didn’t file my taxes. Even though there exists an extension until July 15th due to the novel corona virus pandemic, my guilt, nonetheless, is stoked into inflammation. Via email, for virtual connections are all the rage, my accountant had a come-to-Jesus conversation with me and told me my expenses were too high. Upon hearing this, I dove deep in the (all-too-familiar) pool of self-aggression. I did something wrong, I’m so bad. Harkening on residual notions of original sin, I felt like shit. My bubble became a jail of woe is me.

Trauma lives in my soul, neighboring compassion and grace. The deeper voyage is allowing space for everything. The rising collective consciousness invokes the shadow-dancers to the stage. As I shuffle to the stage with trepidation and awe, my courage rallies me to dive deep into the unlived lives of my ancestors. I breathe deeply, in gratitude, for my grandmother, my mom’s mom, who died of cirrhosis, and for another elder who died telling me my only responsibility in life was death and taxes.

The stage of the greater collective, which now shows up on the screen of my I-Phone, often terrifies me with incredulous horror, moments of inspiration and greater awareness, and recently it delighted me with this:

Message from the Council of 13 Indigenous Grandmothers:

“As you move through these changing times… be easy on yourself and be easy on one another. You are at the beginning of something new. You are learning a new way of being. You will find that you are working less in the yang modes that you are used to.

You will stop working so hard at getting from point A to point B the way you have in the past, but instead, will spend more time experiencing yourself in the whole, and your place in it.

Instead of traveling to a goal out there, you will voyage deeper into yourself. Your mother’s grandmother knew how to do this. Your ancestors from long ago knew how to do this. They knew the power of the feminine principle… and because you carry their DNA in your body, this wisdom and this way of being is within you.

Call on it. Call it up. Invite your ancestors in. As the yang based habits and the decaying institutions on our planet begin to crumble, look up. A breeze is stirring. Feel the sun on your wings.”

I needed to read this.

A permission slip of sorts. A call to action that guides my soul gently and tenderly to the now. My elders are dying. My ancestors, alive and dead, and tidying up their plans. Yesterday, after three nights of major dreamscape activity, we, our family, met with a death doula to discuss concerns about the dying process for my 76-year-old in-laws.

All the while, in Florida, my 83-year-old mom has a fever and possible lung cancer and cardiology appointments. The heart aches and skips a beat. The right lung lobe wheezes for a breath. On Easter we heart-stormed the unresolved religious matters. Nothing resolved, yet finally acknowledged. Again, inviting space for grace to enter. Be still and know. Be still. Be.

One step at a time, one day at a time, we face the grief, the unresolved traumas, no longer seeking resolution perhaps, rather recognition. These concerns matter.

You matter. Your relationships matter, I whisper.

Over and over again, I whisper this, to anyone who will listen.

 

breathe sweetly Dear One, we don’t have a problem here

The Journey by Mary Oliver

journey of transformation

One day you finally knew
what you had to do, and began,
though the voices around you
kept shouting
their bad advice —
though the whole house
began to tremble
and you felt the old tug
at your ankles.
“Mend my life!”
each voice cried.
But you didn’t stop.
You knew what you had to do,
though the wind pried
with its stiff fingers
at the very foundations,
though their melancholy
was terrible.
It was already late
enough, and a wild night,
and the road full of fallen
branches and stones.
But little by little,
as you left their voice behind,
the stars began to burn
through the sheets of clouds,
and there was a new voice
which you slowly
recognized as your own,
that kept you company
as you strode deeper and deeper
into the world,
determined to do
the only thing you could do —
determined to save
the only life that you could save.
~Mary Oliver
 
 
 
Mary Oliver
The Journey