
WE TEACH WHAT
WE MOST NEED TO LEARN
Everywhere
on my website is what I call my “sentence
of passion”: Cross the bridge
from fear to fearlessness and fly! People
have seen that and assumed that I had no
fears – that I was eternally courageous,
unflappable, and unstoppable.
My friends, I’m flattered. But it wasn’t the case. I am human,
and like all of us spiritual beings choosing to experience humanity,
I had my phobias, my can’t-watch-moments, and my middle-of-the-night
terrors.
In the face of the adage “we teach what we most need to learn,” I
decided I needed a good dose of fearlessness education myself to dismantle
some of my own underlying stopping points. It certainly would help me
to live my life more fully, and such lessons are things I can then pass
along to you, my clients and companions on the Earth-road.
And so the third week in September found me at the Option Institute in
Sheffield, Massachusetts, participating in their FEARLESS program. Option
is always potent magic for me, a place of clarity and laser vision where
I can address those things that I stop myself with, and change them solidly
and long term.
The fear that I concentrated on -- that I wanted to dump forever -- was
around health. Like my father the cardiologist, whose encyclopedic knowledge
of medicine sometimes backfired on him in his personal life, I have been
a real hypochondriac since childhood. I spent years assuming that a twinge
here or there was cancer...a stroke...a heart attack. This pattern had
gotten to the point where I had constant anxiety, and the panic always
waiting to break out was grievously harming an otherwise marvelous marriage
-- not to mention taking its real toll on my health simply because that
kind of attitude depresses your immune system.
By the end of the week at Option, I was able to dissect where the fears
were from -- why they were logical for me, and how I always used fear-generating
questions and worst case scenarios to prompt myself to stay safe. I even
had a bit of what I laughingly called "work study": the second
day there, I was slammed by a hormonal migraine and the worst nausea
I have ever experienced. (While I've been blessed never to go through
it, I imagine this is what chemotherapy side effects are like.) Taking
the situation as a prompt from the Universe to put my "money where
my mouth was," I treated it completely differently than I would
have previously. Simple things such as an internal wellness mantra instead
of a repeating panic prediction, looking for the next moment of peace
rather than pain or nausea, enabled me to ride the event and come out
whole on the other side. And when I woke up at 4:30 the next morning
with the pain and nausea gone, I did not wonder where it went. I merely
felt gratitude it was gone, and completely accepted it was past.
One of the simplest but most powerful reminders of what the future could
be came at the very end of the course, when Clyde Haberman (one of their
great teachers) reminded us that "the course this week was just
a prelude. Your fearless work really begins the moment you leave here." I
always leave Option on a wave of love and possibility, but this time
decided to start working it the moment I came home. Talks with Carle
-- serious, open, loving, and accepting -- have yielded a new mutual
understanding of where we are and where we want to go, allowing him to
be part of my path in ways I never allowed before. Coming up on our seventh
wedding anniversary, the old "seven year itch" people talk
about is, for us, an itch to learn more, love more, and make the next
seven years even better.
Some of the thoughts I brought away from the week – and which you
can adopt for your own:
I
have gotten through [X] years and am still
me. Change does not alter my Self, only
my landscape.
 When
I am fearless, I am an eternal flame of
love and possibility.
Thinking “best
case” instead of “worst case” scenario
simply feels better – and clears
my mind of fearful pitfalls. Consequently,
I can take any worst case scenario that
comes along and turn it inside out.
If
you “own” it (that is, accept
your total responsibility for how you feel)
you can change it.
We
fear what’s in the future. That’s
where fear lives. In the present, all
is possible.
And my favorite quote
from the whole weekend? "My ability
to create is unlimited without fear." Screw
the news reports...the flu pan(ic)demic...the
fear mongers and naysayers. I've got my
life ahead of me and intend to live the
way Robert Heinlein’s beloved protagonist,
Lazarus Long, always advised:
To enjoy the
flavor of life, take
big bites. Moderation
is for monks!
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