Words for the Journey

Words for the Journey is our series of monthly original essays sharing personal reflections on living a life of meaning, creativity, spirituality, and mindfulness. Inspiring, insightful, and informative, each essay is accompanied by thoughtfully selected images and quotes or poems. Writers include facilitators, special friends, and keynote speakers at The Innerwork Center.

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Trusting Nature

These moments make me feel alive and assured that being in nature is my mindfulness practice. Nature requires you to be present and the consequences are obvious and immediate at times if you aren’t paying attention. When I’m fully immersed in nature the chatter quiets in my mind, the beauty of nature fills my senses, and I am present.

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An Interconnected Forest

We can learn much from trees in our present climate. Namely, the importance of community. Evidence exists that trees share nutrients between themselves, thus making sure they and their posterity can survive.

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Reframing My Soul

My mindfulness journey started in January 2017 when I realized the Innerwork Center (then Chrysalis) wasn’t a private organization. I was thrilled to learn that anyone—even me—could join.

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Just Say No

Take a moment to imagine a yard, perhaps your own. What is your yard filled with? Flowers, playsets, beautiful green grass, pets roaming freely, perhaps even an entryway to your home? Now imagine a fence surrounding the yard.

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This Field is my Body Too

So as I took my walk in the woods, I thought about Wilber’s words, and what it means to be “not-two.” My dog and I passed a corn field, now cut down, with dry spent cobs littered about. What popped into my mind was: “This field is my body too.”

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Transforming Trauma: The Path to Hope and Healing

Trauma comes to all of us, and its consequences can be terrible. That’s the truth and the bad news. The good news is that all of us can use tools of self-awareness and self-care to heal our trauma and, indeed, to become healthier and more whole than we’ve ever been.

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Embracing Our Common Humanity…A Path Towards Hope, Love and Healing

“Oneness is not just a spiritual platitude. It is a belief, a core principle and life-defining orientation that we are all interconnected. This ‘we’ is not restricted to just humanity. The ‘we’ includes all living things.” Understand that we are all each other’s consequences. Each of us, individually, impacts the whole. Choose kindness.

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A Higher Love… A Journey 

In February, the month most associated with love, now more than ever with Covid numbers rising daily, I invite you to lean into radical, live out loud love. Not the “significant other” love, I trust you to your own devices and/or preferences there. I speak specifically of love of self, welcoming compassion, and a do no harm approach to yourself.

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Finding Joy in the Remnants

Can you take a moment to recall the memorable remnants that live on in your heart from the precious time spent with your loved ones who are no longer with you - your ancestors? How can you honor and keep those remnants alive today?

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What's in Your Pile?

The political climate, pandemic, and endless assaults against people of color made it imperative that I learn more about health equity, social justice, and anti-racism. But what good is reading if it doesn’t encourage action?

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How To Use RAIN As a Mindfulness Tool

RAIN is a mindfulness tool that creates space between situations, either fantasy or real, allowing relief from obsessive thinking and attachment to outcomes.

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Finding Deep Hope

I am just beginning to climb out of a state of unrelenting hopelessness. Every day COVID numbers escalating, climate change now a global crisis, the fires out west destroying acres and acres of precious trees and wildlife, floods destroying homes and whole towns….not to mention all the serious social and political issues that are present…heaping more and more powerlessness and hopelessness on my heavy heart.

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The Expectations Trap

We all have dreams, hopes, aspirations, preferences. They help sustain life and motivate us to thrive despite “the slings and arrows of outrageous fortune” as Shakespeare observed. I have noticed, however, that when I consciously or unconsciously transform these desires into concrete expectations, suffering often arises - especially when those expectations prove to be unrealistic.

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The Sacred Art of Studying and Teaching

If I can observe myself with detachment from that “wisdom center” that is all-loving and trusting, I can then start “accepting” (samtosha) myself, just as I am, finding more comfort inside my own skin. I can apply it to every relationship I have, including teaching, by offering presence, deep listening and compassion, creating a “sacred safe space” that leads to a synergetic dance of mutual trust and connection with my students.

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Finding REST

“Making time for rest can recharge your ability to deal with commitments, relationships and impact your overall health. This is because your mind and body are intrinsically connected. When you take the time to sit and rest even for a few minutes a day, you are allowing your body's cells to recharge (this is why meditation is so powerful). Having a simple bath or shower with a few controlled breaths can be enough to re-infuse your inner light.” Jessica Sepel, Mindbodygreen.

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What Are You Baking? 

“The practice of mindfulness involves finding, recognizing, and making use of that in us which is already okay, already beautiful, already whole by virtue of our being human.” - Kabat-Zinn

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What Does It Mean To Be Free In The World?

If freedom does not come from the world, perhaps it comes from your body, mind, and soul in spite of the constraints of the world? How does one tap into their celestial nature in spite of this tenuous earthly experience? Does it require more meditation? More reading? More hikes…alone?

The answer may not be found in doing more. It may very well reside in doing less.

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Authentic Prayer

Despite the hours of repetitive liturgy that is at the heart of Jewish worship, I am not much for formal prayer. This is true for three reasons: I don’t believe in the God to whom these prayers are addressed; 2) I find the words of the prayers parochial, patriarchal, and largely irrelevant to my life; and 3) I find reading aloud in community boring: no matter how beautiful the words may be, reading them in unison (or worse responsively) robs them of all value. Given this, it should be no surprise that I rarely attend formal Jewish worship services. This was true before Covid-19 and is all the more true when services are conducted via Zoom where you can see that the vast majority of people on–line are not paying any attention at all.

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