Words for the Journey
Welcome to the IWC blog—a space to nourish your journey of inner work and connection. Here, you’ll find Words for the Journey to inspire reflection, 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.
Tending to Our Inner World
This season, I’ve been thinking about the simple ways we tend to our inner lives. For me, it’s the quiet moments when I allow myself to sit with gratitude for the small, good things: the crispness of an autumn morning, the sound of my child’s laughter, or even the stillness in my own breath. It’s the practice of softening my grip on perfection, letting what I have and who I am be enough.
Nurturing Ourselves and Others
What if our religion was each other/ If our practice was our life/ If prayer, our words/ What if the temple was the earth/ If forests were our church/ If holy water – the rivers, lakes, and ocean/ What if meditation was our relationships/ If the teacher was life/ If wisdom was self-knowledge/ If love was the center of our being.
Are You Ready to Be the Artist of Your Life?
As I reflect on the question, “How Can I Be Me?”, I invite you to ponder the same: “How Can You Be You?”
Creative Heartwork
Stop asking: Am I good enough?/ Ask only/ Am I showing up/ With love? - Julia Fehrenbacher
Inner Space
"by tending to the river inside, keeping the water rich and deep, keeping a bench for you to visit." - Here at the Innerwork Center, we are “keeping a bench for you to visit.”
A REPORT FROM THE PATH
Sometimes, the most important thing - the most skillful strategy - is to recognize and accept when help is needed.
Exploring the Depths of Joy: A Journey of Inner Work
Many of us avoid, distract, project, shame, and blame to escape the hard work of inner exploration. Yet, deep down, we all long to be our true selves.
We Are Woven Together: Holding Space for CommUNITY
In our journey towards healing and self-discovery, one of the most profound realizations is the importance of connection. When we truly connect—with ourselves and with others—we create a space of belonging that nurtures our souls and fosters a sense of CommUNITY.
Deepening Connections: Nurturing Spiritually Profound Relationships in Today's World
We all yearn for love and understanding in our closest relationships, but achieving that consistently has been elusive for many, especially recently. The truth is, every individual has imperfections. These intricacies make sustaining love and mutual acceptance challenging at times.
Becoming Imaginal
Imaginal cells hold the information code for the butterfly, and while no single imaginal cell has all of the information, collectively, out of apparent death, they bring forth the majestic creature. How poetic that scientists knew to call them imaginal, for indeed, they are keepers of imagination.
The Detox I Didn’t Know I Needed (But Absolutely Did)
Back in January, I facilitated a program for The Innerwork Center called Digital Detox. The goal was to help participants explore their relationship with technology, bringing conscious awareness of how, why, and when they are engaged with it - and most importantly whether it was serving them. When researching this program, I found a few statistics published in a Forbes article from January 2023 that help to pull the necessity for a program like this into focus
A Letter to My Missing Piece
Dear Pleasure,
I know you left because I was emotionally neglected. What I thought and felt wasn’t a concern to anyone. I was scared, anxious, and overwhelmed and no one checked to see if I was okay. I was taught to mask my feelings by “fixing my face” when I was upset around others. I wasn’t allowed to feel unpleasant things.
Guided Walking Meditation: I Breathe the Earth, the Earth Breathes Me
This is a guided walking meditation ritual that may be practiced in a park, on the beach, by a river, in the woods or any natural setting. Please adapt this offering to your accessibility needs, any movement outside is fine. If you can’t be outside, sit comfortably where you are and imagine that you are reveling in nature. The intention of this ritual is to support you in embracing your connection to the natural world, as you connect these words with your movement, speaking aloud and planting this truth inside your body.
“…words didn’t come. They weren’t needed, I guess.”
I am a woman of many words - a hyper-explainer and an over-describer. My favorite type of word is the adjective because we can pile them on top of one another, each addition providing more specificity and distinction.
Finding Stillness in the Eye of the Storm
When I first attended a Mindful Self-Compassion workshop at the Innerwork Center, I couldn’t imagine my three kids and my demanding day job giving me time or space to break free and meditate. Once I arrived, I wondered about the wall of meditation cushions in the Center’s meeting room.
Letting Go of the Illusion of Control
I discovered a mental health hack that helped me cope with the stress of being a CEO: the silent retreat. It was the one thing that helped me stay grounded, balanced, and refreshed, and I started attending one every year.
The More You Resist, The More It Hurts
May we be happy
May we be well
May we feel loved
And grow from the ground
of loving-kindness.
Happy August
Happy August! This poem was shared by our Executive Director, Rachel Douglas during one of our mindfulness orientations. It resonated with me and I wanted to share it with YOU - our community. Perhaps, you may sip a cup of tea or enjoy your morning coffee as you allow each word to permeate your spirit.
“Forgiveness is giving up all hope of ever having a better past.” ~Lily Tomlin
How many times a day do I ask others “How are you?” as a passing by, as a habit, as a greeting. Hi! How are you? I’d like a small coffee please. Cream no sugar. Thanks. Hihowareyou. I’m here to pick up my _________. Hello….good thanks how are you? I have an appointment.