2nd Grade Mystic’s Guide To Healing A Broken Heart

Julian, 7. Black hair. Twinkly cocoa ojos.  Wiggly.

I. Was. Captured.

By his conversational eloquence. A wicked combination of gifted 2nd grader and ancient mystic wisdom keeper.
By his unwavering unapologetic eye contact. Imploring me to see him. Daring me not to look away. An unspoken test. I passed.

“Julian, what do you know about why you came here today?” Can’t remember. “Did you know that everyone who comes to visit me in this house knows someone who died? Usually it was someone they loved a lot.”

Subject change. Trust the Process. Trust the kid.

“Hey, Is that your piano?”
“Nope. Belongs to the house.”
“Do you know how to play that piano?”
“Sure I do.”
“Will you play it …now?”
“Sure but you’ve  gotta tell me what to play.”

Julian eased over next to his mom. I watched him pat her arm before he tapped into his kid perfect mojo and skipped to the piano bench.  He motioned for me to sit.  I was thinking this would be a Twinkle Twinkle or Dum Dum Ditty kind of day.

Over the Rainbow. Can you play that one?”
I’m not sure I had ever played  Over the Rainbow”.  I noodled around for the right notes. Julian cheered me on. “Yes! That’s it”. “Close”. “Closer”. “You really CAN play it!”.

The maestro requested a musical introduction. I played. Julian swayed to the beat. He closed his ojos and raised both hands to direct our invisible orchestra. Then he started singing. In perfect pitch.

Somewhere over the rainbow way up high
There’s a land that I’ve heard of once in a lullaby
Somewhere over the rainbow skies are blue
And the dreams that you dare to dream
Really do come true

Julian tells me, “That’s really good! Keep going!”

Some day I’ll wish upon a star
And wake up where the clouds are far behind me
Where troubles melt like lemon drops
Away above the chimney tops
That’s where you’ll find me

He sighs. Deep. Holy. Eyes closed. Still directing.

Somewhere over the rainbow blue birds fly
Birds fly over the rainbow
Why then, oh why can’t I?

“Slow down on this part.”

If happy little bluebirds fly beyond the rainbow
Why oh why can’t I?

Do that last part again. Sing it with me.

Gracious. With all the salt water running down the back of my throat, I was doing well just to maintain my airway. And he wanted me to sing.

His dad had died a few weeks before. Julian didn’t know the details. Now the Gifted Seven Year Old Wisdom Keeper Mystic had questions. He wanted his mom to tell him everything. She didn’t know how. And that’s how Julian and I came to occupy the same piano bench for one extraordinary afternoon.

We. Rocked. Out. DUDE we rocked.
We sang loudly and shamelessly. We pretend glued our butts to the piano bench and danced. We practiced our vibrato.  All the while, Julian’s mom was in the next room figuring out how to explain her husband’s suicide to their only child. She was terrified of messing him up. Saying or doing the wrong thing. She’d did fine. And so did he.

He already knew. I saw it in his eyes. I heard it in his voice. When he touched his mama’s arm, I saw it then, too.

His old soul understood Dad was far away…resigned acceptance. His heart, though, was another story. Julian wanted nothing more than to fly to the sky and see his daddy.

Little kids with deep wounds have magical powers. They make sense of the senseless. They transform pain into wild behaviors with a message.

Wiggly at school. I’m. Talking too much. Saving. Day dreaming. Myself.
Forgot backpack. My. Fight on playground. Heart’s. Hiding under table. Broken.

“Play it again. Do the first verse this time.”
The first verse. Crap. What’s the first verse?  “Julian, I don’t know the first verse.”
“I’ll tell it to you.”

A thousand times. I’m sure I’ve heard or sung Over the Rainbow a thousand times.  Never once did I catch the first verse.

Julian closed his eyes and sang…

When all the world is a hopeless jumble
And the raindrops tumble all around
Heaven opens a magic lane
When all the clouds darken up the skyway
There’s a rainbow highway to be found
Leading from your window pane
To a place behind the sun
Just a step beyond the rain

“Play it again!”
“Play the whole thing now”
“I’ll sing the first verse and then you do the intro and then we’ll sing together.”
“Are you crying?”
“Play!!!!”

 

If you liked this, come visit my blog. Forward to your friends. Share with your Facebook buddies.

Have a DARN good week.

 

 

What’s Your Story

She’s standing in front of you now.

Spit flying. Pissed Off. Red faced. She berates your every move. Hates your brilliant ideas. Won’t let you forget the times you messed up. Won’t shut up about how you’ll never be as good as anyone else.

What do you do?

Turn and run? Yell back? Give her the finger and punch her in the head? Sink into a black spiral of nasty ass depression? Agree with all of it?

Random human walks up. Looks at you. Looks at her. Tells you she’s not real.

You know she’s real. You’ve stuffed her with food and pills and drama to make her shut the hell up. She has to be real.

Random human says, no really. Look. It’s all a story you made up. In fact a bunch of stories. They kept you safe. Now they’re just annoying.

A story? A stupid story? WTF? I KNOW this is real. It’s my life. It’s real. This is REAL.

Random human asks what could happen, if just for a moment, you allowed yourself to believe a new story? One where you are happy and content. One where meaning and magic and wonder all flow together. One where your life, your everyday existence on the planet, becomes a gift.

What transformation could happen if you dared believe all that?

Random human invites you to share a comment and tell us.

Imagine. The. Possibilities.

 

 

 

Franco Franklin Ranger Atkins

This morning I paid a feline eye surgeon (I didn’t know there was such person) $1,660 for an emergency corneal flap operation for my gato and his sick eyeball. Surgery done. El gato and bank account now in recovery.

My beloved phoned for an update. “You could’ve put him to sleep for less than that”. True. In case you’re into cost comparisons, option B would’ve been about $165.

But I didn’t choose to put him to sleep.

I love this cat. I met him when he accosted me in a parking lot the week after my mom died. I sat down on the cement. He crawled in my lap, put his paw on my cheek, and held my gaze. I needed comfort just a little bit less than I needed air that day. Not sure how he knew but he did.

Stray cat, said the neighbors. Could I take him?

My two dogs promised to be an impediment. The introductions went like this:

Dogs met cat. Dogs were OHMYGOD beside themselves. Cat was unfazed.

Dogs were LOSINGTHEIREVERLOVINGMINDS. Cat licked himself.

Dogs COULDNOTSTANDIT another second and charged the cat.

Cat puffed his body and DARED them to mess with him.

They tried. A few rumbles ensued. Then, just like that, we were a family of four.

Have you ever felt love at the at the exact moment you needed it? If so, you get why this cat came to live with me.

And you get why I spent half of the money in my checking account to try and give him quality of life for the next however many years he decides he wants to be my cat.

Quality of life. Meaningful living. Franco Franklin Ranger Atkins has given me both. Glad to be able to pay him back a little today.

When The Need Is Greater Than The Fear


You’re ready to launch, to put your creative ideas out into the world, to get your rear in gear. It’s time.

And then – not again(!) – the spinning begins.

I can’t do it yet. It’s not ready.

Who thought this was a good idea?

I need to fix the video. That wording sucks.

Those colors are awful.

The font? Crap, who picked that font. Am I out of my mind?

By now you’ve spun so much you need someone to hold your hair back and you sure as heck have talked yourself right out of progress.

Don’t Be A Thrasher

All this activity is what Seth Godin refers to thrashing. Thrashing happens at the end of a project, just before launch, when all the scared parts of our brain stand up and scream, “You don’t know what the hell you’re doing!”

If we’re not careful, we will start changing things, making new decisions, undoing what’s already been done, and stalling. Forward movement becomes sideways, wonky movement and we get in our own way.

I’ve been thrashing around like a blindfolded crazy person on roller skates, unsure of where I was going or even where I wanted to go with my projects. I’ve been listening to the ‘ole lizard brain sing her tunes; you don’t know what you’re doing, you’re crazy, blah blah blah.


Change Happens When The Need Is Greater Than The Fear

Then, just like that: The need got to be greater than the fear.

The need to move forward, to start, to make things different got to be more important than the stories I was telling myself that caused Atkins Thrashdom 2010.  (I like to name the things that bug me. Some names I can repeat…)

The roller skates and blindfold are gone, traded for running shoes, a Harley (this would be a metaphorical one),  and a Life Is Good ball cap that goes especially well with my Dr. Pepper pajama pants.

ProsperHer is up and going. I invite you to come along for the ride. It’s gonna be damn fun.

If you are thrashing do this:

1) own it – thrashing isn’t bad. It’s serving a purpose.

2) figure out what the purpose of it is – to keep you safe? to keep you still? to keep you from doing something you really don’t want to do?

3) if you’re ready to stop thrashing, stop your sucky thinking in it’s tracks and figure out what you need. Yes, it’s ok for you to need, Gertrude. You’re allowed. Own that, too.

Change happens when the need is greater than the fear, so GO. Figure out what you need, what you want.

Make your life move like you want it to. And don’t forget  to own your power or someone else will.

Want to comment? Go for it. Tell about a time when you made change that got you past spinny, thrashing fear. Inquiring, brilliant ProsperHer minds want to know…






Michele Woodward

As a former White House official and corporate citizen, Michele is a career strategist who works with people who want to be more effective in their work, find new work, or re-enter the workforce. She lives outside Washington, DC with her two teenagers, two puppies and an optimistic outlook. Michele is a published author.

Her latest book, I Am Not Superwoman, is available at Amazon.com. She has also recently created a tool for those seeking clarity around what you really want, who you want to serve, and how you can do it. Michele’s new ebook, 5 Questions That Can Change Your Life, is available on her website www.lifeframeworks.com.

In this interview, Michele talks about coaching, writing, getting clear, rising above fear, and the gifts she found in a divorce she wasn’t expecting. You can learn more about Michele from her website or follow her here: facebook.com/michele.woodward, twitter.com/michelewoodward, linkedin.com/michele.woodward. You can read Michele’s blog at lifeframeworks.com/blog.

Mysteries of Knowing

Horace and my father live at the same retirement center and that’s how I’ve come to know and tell this story.

Horace’s wife, Bea, lived at the nursing home across the sidewalk from the retirement center.

Every day for almost three years, Horace walked over to visit Bea and feed her lunch. And every day was another she didn’t recognize him, even after 50 years of marriage.

Alzheimer’s left Bea without speech or memories. She didn’t acknowledge Horace’s presence, his daily acts of love. The part of her that could do those things had long since gone away.

Horace was summoned to the nursing home a few weeks ago. Her breath slowing, Bea was near death.

Horace talked to her as though she could hear and understand him, just as he always had done. He talked about their life together and said again, as he had every time before they parted company, ”I love you.”

Without fanfare, after not recognizing her husband or speaking to him for years, Bea turned and looked at Horace.  The cloudiness in her eyes gone and with a clear voice, she spoke to him. ”I love you.”  Then she closed her eyes and was gone.

Horace is still trying to make sense of it all. It was a gift he says. Indeed it was.

There are mysteries of this universe we try to quantify, to make sense of, to solve. Sometimes the best explanation is that there isn’t one, at least not one our human minds can comprehend.

Sometimes the best we can do is give thanks for the gift, for the mystery of the moment we were awake enough to see.

Today I offer my gratitude for holy moments, the ones crossing my path with more frequency. These are the signposts, the arrows beckoning me this way or that way as my journey unfolds.

I’ve learned to follow now, mostly without question. When I do, when I open myself up and trust, when I pay attention, the gifts are all around me.

Horace, I offer my condolences on the loss of your beloved, Bea. I thank you for sharing your story and for pointing me again toward the glorious unknown.

What kinds of  holy moments have  you encountered? How do you make sense of your journey when mysteries like these arise? I’d love hear your stories.

Take Imperfect Action

I bought the url, beyond the but, about 2 years ago with the intention of having a new website called www.beyondthebut.com.

I even have an endgame vision board with www.beyondthebut.com on it. There it is in the picture below, smack dab in the middle, sandwiched between strength to get things done, I’ve created inspiration best life, believing is seeing, and finding my funny bone.


When I started thinking about the website, what I would put on it, what the logo might be, I solicited opinions from my brilliant and talented friends and family. I ADORE my brilliant and talented family and friends but guess what? They all, every one of them, had their own opinion about my website. Fancy that.

And guess what else? Not all of the opinions were the same as mine. Eee gads. What was an entrepreneur with confirmation issues to do?

Fret. That’s what I did.

What if all those people I loved and adored, the ones who didn’t really like this new project, were right? What if the colors I picked sucked? What if the word ‘but’ was too, oh, unconventional and would turn off those with delicate sensitivities?

Some I queried liked the logo. Some hated it. Some LOVED the new website name, others thought I was spelling doom for my business.  I listened to all the opinions and let myself get talked out of my brilliant idea and consequently Beyond the But has been sitting alone in my web account like thermal underwear in Tahiti.

Then I turned 40.

My mother always said once I got to 40, I would care less about what people thought and more about what I wanted. I’m happily discovering this to be true. I changed my question from ‘what if I’m wrong and no one likes the new website’ to ‘what if I’m right and this turns out to be as big a success as I think it will be?!?!’

Funny how this all works.  I’m doing what I ask my clients to do – to believe in themselves and what they have to offer the world, to step up, to own their power.  To say ‘so what’ to the people around them who aren’t convinced of their success. To take imperfect action.

Things change. New ideas happen. Things change again.

Beyond the But I still on the radar but now as a product. The focus of my business has changed. I decided I wanted to support women entrepreneurs who recognize they are on a spiritual path and have a fantastic job to do in this world. I decided I wanted to help them start a ripple of good. So that’s what I’m doing, starting my own ripple of good to help others start theirs. How fun is that?!!!

Once I made the decision to set my feet on this path, I got almost instantaneous confirmation. Within thirty minutes of my decision, I got an email from a nurse who is ready to step up her business and quit playing small. A day later, confirmation came from a gifted and hilarious group of 70 Professional Counselors who gave up Friday happy hour so they could learn about setting big hairy audacious goals and creating prosperous practices.  Fun. Fun. Fun.

My 2010 plans are coming to fruition. How are yours coming along?

Jesus, Ali, and the Preacher’s Kid: Finding Me.

From Whence I Come

As a freshman in a new town, at a new high school, I attended a revival at the local Baptist Church.  This was a pulpit pounding, sweat slinging, arm flailing, soul stirring event. Think Benny Hinn with a Texas twang and a bolo.

My father was the Methodist minister at the church down the street. He didn’t go to the revival and I think the only time he pounded a pulpit in his career was purely accidental. I wasn’t into scaring people for the Lord but my posse was attending and I couldn’t miss out. And really, what else is there to do in small town Texas on Wednesday nights? First you go to church. Then you find a mom who will take everyone to Dairy Queen. Church then ice cream. It’s a rule.

I’d been to a lot of revivals as church was the family business. I knew what would happen.

First there would be singing, then praying, then more singing, then some scripture, then special music from a lovely 78 year old singer with her son accompanying on an out of tune guitar, a seriously long sermon for soul saving would follow, and then, drum roll puhlease:  The Alter Call.

I could almost say the words verbatim.

“With all heads bowed (inflection of voice up) and all eyes closed (inflection of voice down), raise your hand if”…there was a long list of ifs. If you need a savior. If you’re lonely. If you’ve sinned. If you don’t like your mother. If you’re not paying attention in school. I peeked. My whole posse had their arms raised high. I was ready for ice cream and then decided I needed to deliberate about the status of my salvation.

I was lonely. I loved my mother but certainly not all the time. I hated math. I had sinned; of this I was sure because the man wearing the turquoise bolo with a cross on it was hollering I had.

“Come forward for prayer if you need Jesus in your heart today.”

My posse went to the front of the church. Crap. I finally went, too, not because I was feeling especially moved to go, but because I didn’t want to be left in the pew by all alone.

My friends and I were prayed over and after the service there were congratulatory handshakes. Then ice cream.

Now remember. Small town church. Small town gossip.

The new Methodist preacher’s only daughter found Jesus in the Baptist church. This was scandalous news for my little town. My mother knew I’d been washed in the Baptist blood before I got home. All the teachers’ at the school knew by second period the next day.

It was official. I was saved. Hallelujah.

I never really ever felt IT, the soul blowing open, live your life for Jesus thing. I thought something was wrong with me. Then I heard a statement from Muhammad Ali, the great scholar that he is, which I will paraphrase for you.

There are lakes, rivers, ponds, and the ocean. They are all water.

This, THIS made sense to me. One God. Many paths. There was more to the story. I could keep searching and I wouldn’t end up in the fiery pit. Hallelujah.

Then

A few years ago I went to a remarkable personal growth retreat called Hoffman. It’s a week-long process that’s a little bit psychology, a little 1970s wackiness that included beating pillows while yelling the ‘f’ word about stuff in my life, and stupid thoughts I had about the stuff. There was also quite a bit of meditation and woo woo. Serious money I paid for this soul searching and worth every cent.

A significant part of my time at Hoffman was completely surreal. I left there with a new spiritual knowing quite different from the religious fervor I’d experienced 22 years prior.

Serious Woo Woo

One of the experiences at Hoffman involved walking through a cemetery. Yes, an actual cemetery where dead people are. Yes, I paid money for this, too.

I was given a sack lunch, a carnation, and instructions to find a place in the cemetery to have my sandwich. ‘You’ll know when to stop’. So off I went into an expertly manicured, bucolic, colossal cemetery to find a picnic spot.

Completely alone, I walked and walked until I found a headstone that read Hardin-Noble. My father’s name is Noble and his brother’s name is Hardin. Interesting I thought. Perhaps this was the place to plop myself and eat my sandwich. Cool breeze. Sunny mild day in the California wine country. Peaceful. Once I got over the whole being in a cemetery thing, it was lovely.

I ate. I marveled at the plethora of headstones and noticed a big one two rows over. Jim – Pop was the moniker.  My deceased brother is named Jim. Pop was my maternal grandfather.

This seemed an odd coincidence of my own family names in a small area of a very large cemetery. I began to study my borrowed slice of this eternal resting place more thoroughly.

From my sitting vantage point I saw Lizzy, my paternal grandmother’s name nickname. Buford, her middle name. I know. It’s hideously southern. My long gone grandfather is also named Hardin so that was covered. My middle brother, John Leonard there, too.

I ate a bit more and mused on these things while I smoothed the hair rising on the back of my neck.

I wondered if this was a spiritual set up of some sort. The proof to me would be the last two names, Dorothy and Verna. Dorothy, my mama, was one row back and two stones over from where I was sitting. Verna, her mama, was right there, too. Verna? Come on. What are the odds?

I was 98% sure of the whole spiritual set up thing now. This was just too weird but of course I asked for more. Just one more sign that this wasn’t something crazy I was dreaming up.

I walked 30 yards and found two more headstones right together. Mann and Watts. These are family names of the closest friends my parents ever had. Cue the goose bumps.

I went the next day to make rubbings from the headstones. As I worked on the one for Jim, the sprinkler system came on a soaked me. I laughed and laughed. Of course my big brother would play tricks on me from the beyond.

And Now

Much has transpired for me since Hoffman. Now is weird and wonderful. Now things are happening I’m scared to say aloud because sometimes I sound like a certifiable crazy person. (Read a super cool article on this topic by Slade at Shift Your Spirits). Now I’m voraciously reading books which previously made no sense to me. Now I’m longing to learn more and more and more. And, I’m trusting.

I trust that the people in the world who need to hear what I have to say will find me.

I trust that the people in the world from whom I need to learn will appear when the time is right.

I trust that the wackadoo, serendipitous, coincidental events happening to me are all delicious parts of this confounding extraordinary spiritual journey of mine.

I’m finally paying attention to my life. Hallelujah.

What Makes a Girl Cuss

Oh my GOD Square 3 makes a girl want to cuss.

Martha Beck defines square 3 as particular times in your life when you are trying to make something happen and you fail. Over and over and over. You have the vision for your dream but the plan isn’t exactly working out like you want it to.

What to do? Eat three bags of Sonic Cheddar Peppers with ranch dressing? Buy yourself flowers? Give up? Nope.

This is the time when you go and read about Abraham Lincoln and see how many times (30 something) he failed to be a political superstar. This is the time when you remember Henry Ford went broke 5 times before he founded the Ford Motor Company. This is the time you think about rapper JZ and how he was selling crack when he was 13, and a drug free, help kids, make a difference millionaire by 30.

This is the time when you go back and look at the times you’ve succeeded. What have you done well? Where have you made an impact big or small? Where have you stuck with something and holy cow, made it work?! When? Say it aloud. Write it down. Get the positive mojo flowin’ again.

I’d been adding to and changing my website since last November and guess what? I didn’t have the right stuff to get noticed on any of the search engines. WELL DUH. It’s only taken me 10 months to figure that out.

Then I discovered my answering machine isn’t working. Now how in the world is anyone going to leave me a message? .

Here are the 2 things I want you to think about worth 13 1/2 cents or millions depending on how it resonates with you.

1. You don’t know what you don’t know so don’t beat yourself up. The trick is to take the WELL DUH and turn it into something super cool. The phone has now been thrown out the window and I have real honest to goodness voicemail. The website is got a makeover and then a whole new website came out of the ether, one with spectacular search engine optimization. I couldn’t have even told you what search engine optimization was 10 months ago.

2. If something isn’t cruising along like you want it to, find some smart person and tell them what’s happening. If that smart person doesn’t know, than find another smart person. And if that smart person doesn’t know….get the picture? Someone, somewhere can help you get things moving again. So…….

BE INSPIRED.

REMEMBER YOU CAN”T KNOW EVERTHING.

REMEMBER YOU ALREADY KNOW A LOT.

Look at your successes. Don’t give up. You can fly if you’ll keep on keepin’ on.

So do, please. The world needs to hear what you have to say.

George

I’m leaving my house soon to go and meet a man who is dying. George I’ll call him.

I think George has cancer though I don’t really know and that’s not so important now. I do know he is beginning to open up to a world that most of us cannot see. He is dreaming but not dreaming. He is experiencing some other worldly things that aren’t hallucinations. Hospice people are caring for him with tenderness. His family loves him.

George is grappling with the realities of having an intact mind and failing body. And now, over the last few weeks, his soul work has begun.

When I first heard about George, I knew I would meet him - didn’t know how or when but I knew. Now I know  without a doubt he has something to teach me that I’m ultimately supposed to pass along to people around me.

That pass it along part has hung me up for a long time.

George is going to share his experiences with me and I will craft them into a story because I that’s something I love to do. Someone will read the story and ultimately be able to help someone else.

Not everyone who reads the story will get it. That’s ok. Those who need it will and that knowledge sits peacefully in my being. I don’t fight it any longer and now that I’ve stopped that silliness, all kinds of wonderful things are happening. I’m in the flow. George is his flow, too –  and what a gift for me to share some time with him.

What you know, those gifts you possess that others do not, are there for a purpose – for a greater good that you may or may not understand. Own them. Use them. Then sit back and watch where you life takes you. You will not be disappointed.

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