Align With Your Shadow Self This Blue Moon Halloween

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Halloween, especially with a Blue Moon, is a perfect time to align with your Shadow Self. To face the things hidden deep inside, and make peace with your past shame so you can unlock your truths.

Around Halloween I tend to get retrospective. I love this time. The weather starts to cool and a sense of fall is in the air. Pumpkins and skeletons decorate yards and lawns. I like to read spooky things and think about mortality. This is all part of the ancient rituals surrounding Halloween and also part of searching into the Shadow Self.

If you’ve never heard the term, Shadow Self, it’s the hidden things in your subconscious, things buried because of fear and shame. Our anger, fear, and sadness reside inside our Shadow Self.

But the shadow is not something we should be afraid of. It is as much a part of us as the light. Shame and guilt make us feel like things are worse than they are, or that we are somehow different than others. In truth we all have these traits within us to varying degrees.

For me the Shadow Self was my truth, my childhood, and my lost joy.

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I find that in times of great grief the valve connecting my conscious to this shadow self open. It is within these deep moments that suck my chest and make gulp in sobs, that I see my shadow self clearly.

I work well with visualization. When I work with my shadow self I imagine her as my inner child.

She is the person I had to leave behind when the demands of my parents, one an addict the other an enabler, forced me to behave as a miniature adult. She’s the one who I wish I could hug, and often imagine hugging in mediation to help heal so much past hurt.

She is my loneliness, my innocence, my dreamer, and the one who knew full joy.

I faced my inner shame and realized shame is not something so bad. Shame reveals a truth I wish to keep buried. Accepting shame made me realize I was queer. That realization gave me strength to make changes, no matter how hard, to become authentic.

Once I faced this shame, the grief began to surface. I started to grieve everything in my life. I grieved the childhood I lost, the mother I wished I had but will never have, the childhood pet that died, the frailly members who died, the addiction that wrecked havoc on my childhood and now my marriage. I grieved the loss of a pregnancy and ended friendships.

I had not grieved things in my past because I never had the opportunity. When my childhood pet died, I did not grieve. My mother needed me to be strong because her grief was greater, her emotions more important than my loss. When my grandparent died I held in my grief, again. My mother, who was besides herself with grief and had been the one to lose a parent needed me to be strong.

Too many times I shoved my own feelings aside to put others first.

No more.

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My inner child still needs space to mourn. She needs the space to cry. She needs the gentle acceptance that her feelings are valid, that she is not less-than because of all the pain she had buried and tried to be strong. It is her vulnerability that makes her strong because that is where her truth lies.

I get angry, but that anger tells me something about my values. I no longer burst out with rage and yell or snap. I let my anger exist in my chest, and I listen to what it is trying to tell me, what value it is worried about in the moment.

My sorrow also speaks of my values. It speaks of how much I loved. I weep because of the deep love I have lost. I am reminded that my connection to this loss meant it was important to me. The relationships that end, the expectations that are not being met, the death that took someone I loved, all speak of how much I have lived and how many things I am connected to.

It is okay to grieve the loss of things, no matter how small. It is okay to be angry with grief, to be weary.

For all the things I have grieved I still feel there is a long way to go.

I will walk into a room and remind myself, my pet is no longer here. Sometimes I say this with acceptance, it is a fact that I now live with. Sometimes this fact grips my chest and pulls deep sobs from my heart. When the tears come, I let them. I release them and cry until I feel relief. I don’t stuff them down or hold them back. I feel them and I visualize my pet. I think of what they meant to me, what they were to me, what they looked like and felt like. It hurts and I miss them, but I remember and I grieve.

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There is no shame in crying over things we have lost.

Tears bring healing. Healing brings relief. Relief leads to a full life.

I’m still doing shadow work. Trying to tap into that inner child and those hidden values and joys that I have lost connection to. I am hoping that while the veil is thin during this Halloween season, I can connect and discover more about myself. The truth is there and it is setting me free.

Blessings be.

Good Grief: How Grief Heals

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I have been in a state of grief for several years. Going through a pandemic has only made this grief stronger. In all this time I have finally made peace with my grief and have found there is healing on the other side.

My grieving started when I finally faced the “mother wound,” or the hurts from childhood that had not fully healed. I thought that was all I was dealing with, old wounds that need to be reexamined in light of a safe environment. Turns out I was also grieving a childhood and a whole other part of myself. My queerness.

Grief is not a comfortable feeling. Like my previous post about outgrowing your skin and becoming free, grief feels like you’re being suffocated. It feels like depression, and sometimes anger. Grief cloaks you in heaviness and weighs you down. Unprocessed grief will keep you stuck, anchored in misery.

I was anchored in misery, when I finally had a break through thanks to therapy.

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I was depressed for months before the pandemic hit. Then we were forced to stay indoors, cramped together. I started facing myself and looking within. What I found shocked me back into grief, but this time I was able to go through my grief. I finally faced what was true and now for the first time in YEARS I feel like I can breathe.

I started unraveling my feelings towards my husband. It was easier to focus on his flaws than it was to look inside and say, hey, I’m queer. It was easier to point outward and play victim than own up to my truth and make the inherit changes needed.

Once I said, I’m queer and no longer want a heterosexual relationship the grieving process started all over again.

This time I was letting go of hetero-normative ideals. Letting go of the life I thought I was living. The lies I had armed myself with. I was facing the truth for the first time and finally accepting it. I had to grieve the lies I had told my spouse. Grieve the broken promises and the visions of a future that will no longer be.

There are moments where my grief feels so great I have to stop, sit down, and just sob.

I let these feeling roll through me like crashing waves. Let them flow with all the ugly tears and wrenching sobs. When I give my grief space to exist, it tells me I am finally letting go. I am finally moving forward, and yes it hurts. Pain isn’t something to push away anymore, it’s time to face it, accept it, and finally feel it.

Now that I have been feeling the pain of grief, I am starting to feel the hope and healing that comes after.

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There is healing at the end of the grief cycle. Accepting what I am, who I have always been, is so liberating. I feel joy in ways I never could before. I didn’t realize how much of myself was buried under the constant need to please, and be what others expected of me. Now that I am grieving that failure, I can find my new place, my new life, and who I have always been.

I am excited, though scared, and ready to start this new chapter. I still have moments of grief. I’m sure I will continue to, and that’s okay. I’m going to give my grief a safe place to exist and stop pushing it away, no matter how painful it might be. The more I do this the easier the grief is to feel, and the quicker it passes on, bringing a lighter heart and hope for a brighter future.

After the rain comes Rainbows.

Read more about Mindful Healing and my journey to letting go of self-hate:

Metamorphosis is a Painful, Necessary Change

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Look at the caterpillar. It molts multiple times in its small larvae life. It grows too big for its exoskeleton and must shed it in order to continue eating and living and growing. I’ve watched these caterpillars up close, and trust me this necessary change does not look comfortable. In fact it looks painful.

Imagine being stuffed into a too small outfit that is so tight you feel it must rip or you won’t be able to breathe or move. This is what it looks like when a caterpillar molts. Like they are trapped in a too tight corset and if they do not break the strings and shed the old skin they will suffocate.

I imagine the metamorphosis to butterfly is excruciating.

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When caterpillars ready themselves for the final change, they shed their skin and turn into goo. The new skin outside that goo hardens into a chrysalis. After a few weeks of quiet meditation, self reflection and change, they burst out of their skin for the last time as beautiful butterflies.

Not only do they look like a completely different creature, they can FLY.

The pain they had to endure to get this to this point might seem a distant memory as they flutter and explorethe skies.

Necessary change can be painful.

It can be scary. In fact I think true necessary change is horrifying, at least it has been for me.

Like a caterpillar outgrowing their skin, my own life has gotten quite uncomfortable. I’ve tried to make things work. Tried ignoring my truths. Tried to fit into the expectations others had for me, but alas, I know I’m meant for something different. I have to change.

I’ve discovered my own truth and I can no longer live within the safety of what I know. I have to face the uncertainty of change, the fear of something different, because it is the only way I can spread my wings and fly. It is the only way I can be my true self and grow into what I was meant to be.

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Lives will be effected, which is why it’s hard to make the choice to change. But ultimately my inner truth is more important than the disappointment of others. I am the one who has to live with myself. I have to face the mirror and accept who I am.

Change can be painful, but necessary change is worth it, or at least I hope. I guess after I spend time alone and in silence I’ll finally see if this chrysalis of change will truly transform me into something beautiful, but unrecognizable, or if it is as scary as I truly believed. I have a feeling I’ll learn to spread new wings and be better than I ever imagined.

May your pain bring necessary change and may the change bring you new life and beauty. May the future be better than the past and may you fly on new wings.

Blessings Be.

Explore other posts:

Juggling Stress During COVID? Time to Let the Ball Drop

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I envision my current life like a bunch of glass balls I’m struggling to juggle. If one drops it could break, so I have to keep the constant motion going. I have to hold everything up. My responsibilities as a spouse, parent, child, friend, employee, coworker, etc. are up in the air. Stress is already running high most of the time. Enter COVID. Suddenly life is chaos. I have to figure out how to keep the juggling act or decide to let some of the balls drop.

I have to figure out how to keep the juggling act or decide to let some of the balls drop.

The responsibilities above shift the minute the coronavirus stretched across my area. At the start everyone was sent home. Schools closed. Companies either furloughed employees or sent them home to work remotely.

My small family was forced to stay home for months. We are all under the same small roof, struggling to juggle are individual responsibilities. We all have our unique weaknesses and strengths, but with a pandemic the stress has skyrocketed.

I struggle with general anxiety and often depression. Before the pandemic shut everything down I was going through a depressive episode. I was just starting to pull through when Covid 19 hit. The metaphorical glass balls I was already struggling to juggle were suddenly multiplied and became impossibly heavy.

Parenting took on another layer. Marriage took on more layers. Being the only introvert in a house of extroverts took a huge toll on me. Not only did I no longer have time away to tend my own needs, but I was forced to be the “person” my extroverts needed to give them energy. I was feeling drained. Burned out.

Then I realized I was juggling too much. I was burdened by too many things, too many glass balls. That’s when I decided it was. Time. To. Let. One. Drop.

Time. To. Let. One. Drop.

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I’m going to drop some of the balls anyways, might as well choose which ones to let go. Making the choice gave me some sense of control. I could let go of the things that aren’t important. Then I could focus on what needs the most attention, and let the rest fall away.

The first ball I chose to drop is “being a good child.” I’m a parent now, my parents are adults. It is past time to let the responsibility of being a perfect child drop. I am not responsible for my parents’ emotional health and well-being. They are fully capable of handling themselves. I can let this one go and focus on my own child, and on being a better parent.

It felt good to drop that ball. So good that I started to consider which other balls could be let go.

It felt good to drop that ball. So good that I started to consider which other balls could be let go. Some will be temporary drops. Chores and things will only be dropped while I adjust to new schedules. Once a new sense of normal or a new routine sets in some of these balls and responsibilities will be resumed, others I can happily say are gone forever.

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I’m certainly not perfect. In fact I struggled with this so much that I started therapy, which has also helped gain perspective. Talking to a therapist feels like I’m giving my own mental health priority, something I have not done in a long while. It has also helped me calm my emotions enough to think more clearly, so I can make decisions about what to shift with confidence.

It’s okay to not be perfect at everything and to let some things go. These are not normal times, and even if they were, no one can do everything. It’s perfectly okay to let a few things fall.

I give you permission to let a few balls drop right now. You don’t have to juggle it all. Focus on what matters to you.

Blessings be.

Search for more Mindful Tips and learn about how I overcame Spiritual Bullying in the links below:

Sitting With My Big Emotions: Anger and Fear

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Sitting with my fears, anger, and other big feelings is not an easy task. I was raised to ignore, to shut down, to put myself last. I am learning to unlearn the coping skills of my past.

This is codependency at its finest.

Growing up my family was more important that myself. The raging alcoholic and the enmeshed matriarch were the ones who had the biggest needs. There was no space, no comfort, no soothing for me to explore my feelings. I had to be an adult. I had to comfort my parent who felt worn down because of the addict. I had to care for my siblings, and shoulder the burdens of everyone in the house.

I felt like the glue holding it all together, but I was constantly falling apart.

I felt like the glue holding it all together, but I was constantly falling apart. There were and still are many cracks in my being. Holes and wounds invisible to the eye, but felt in every moment of my day. These are the child wounds I never healed. These are the fears and doubts and big emotions I was not allowed to safely experience. I became terrified of not only my feelings, but other people’s feelings too.

Anger is a huge trigger for me.

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Anger is a huge trigger for me. When someone raises their voice I start to shut down, hiding and trembling deep inside myself. I fret and sweat and my heart races. I am worried that the person angry at me will lose control.

When I feel angry, I fear I will lose control. That anger will rage out of me like the Hulk, and I will sit outside myself feeling shame and guilt. This, sadly, was how I handled much anger in my life. I either shut down or lost control.

The key to healing those wounds is to let them be felt

I have recently learned that the key to healing those wounds is to let them be felt. This sounds crazy. Why suffer the negative feelings? Why pull up all that old hurt?

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The answer is to heal it.

If I don’t heal the mother wound, the inner child, the past, I cannot enter a healthy future. If I don’t clean the old wounds of their infections I will continue to suffer and lose myself.

Now, I try to sit with my feelings. To become aware of what I physically feel in my body. Give the emotions a name, identify what they are, and if possible, where they are truly coming from. Then I am able to let them wash away. I can accept myself as I am, broken, but still alive, still making progress.

Mindfulness has helped me immensely in this process. I sit quietly and simply acknowledge what I feel, where I feel it, and pay attention to it. Then I move on, without judging the emotion or physical reaction.

I used to try pushing away all the feelings, which only made them push back. I struggled against fear and anger, now I sit back and let them happen. I feel the anger, I call it by name, I thank it (silently of course) for being present inside me, for showing me something important.

Anger is usually present to show something is unjust, unfair, or goes against one of my values

I find that for me, anger is usually present to show something is unjust, unfair, or goes against one of my values. Anger is important because it helps identify what’s important to me. I don’t have to be afraid when I get angry. I don’t have to react when I get angry. I can simply accept my anger. Then I can work out solutions to why I feel angry and solve any problems my anger has shown me. Knowing why I feel what I feel is empowering and helps me let go easier.

Knowing why I feel what I feel is empowering and helps me let go easier.

Fear is the same. I feel it, I calm my heart and remind myself that I am safe. I breathe into the fear and any tension in my body and try to relax those muscles and areas. It helps. I realize what I’m afraid of isn’t what I thought, and that my fears may not be as extreme as first imagined. I am safe. I can take steps to remain safe if things escalate. I know what to do if my big fear starts to become real, and that is empowering.

Fear tells me that something could go wrong. That pain might be coming.

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It’s okay to feel fear. Fear tells me that something could go wrong. That pain might be coming. It helps me be aware of myself and others.

I don’t have to live in fear. I don’t have to let it flood me. I can breathe it in, let it exist, and breathe it out again. I know what to do, that alone gives me power to let the fear go. I can then plan for worse case scenarios from a clear mind.

The little child I was in the past is a grown adult now. I no longer rely on my parents, I can rely on myself. That alone is powerful.

I can sit with my big emotions, give myself a hug, validate my feelings, and move on with peace and acceptance.

I am enough.

And so are you.

Spilling the Tea – Where Are You Looking?

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I used to be rubbish at pouring tea from a teapot. I’d always end up spilling tea or having it drip down the spout onto the nice tablecloth. I assumed this was the way it was with teapots, they drip. Only recently-in the past week, actually-I started using a teapot daily at home.

For me, tea is a self-care ritual that makes me feel warm and fancy. Using a teapot also keeps my tea warm longer so I can enjoy more than one cup of hot brew.

All that to say, I finally figured out WHY I was failing at pouring tea properly.

Oh, I still get a drip here and there, I’m not perfect. I even keep a napkin under the spout to catch the drips. But the key to preventing drips is to watch the tea pour FROM the spout. That’s it.

Keep your eyes on what you’re doing, the pouring.

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I never really knew where to look when I poured tea previously. When I pour the boiling water from the kettle into the mug or tea brewer, I usually just watch the waterline and make sure I have the right amount to make the perfect cuppa. When it comes to pouring from a teapot into a teacup I have to shift my focus and watch the tea move from the spout while keeping an eye on the level in the teacup from my peripheral.

Once I figured out WHERE to look, it’s all in practicing how slow or fast to pour, and that’s it!

I find that life is similar.

Oftentimes I am looking at the wrong place.

Watching the waterline, or in my case external forces, whether they be people or just the things I have no control over. I pour my emotions, feelings, words, and parts of myself out to these external factors and focus on them so much I start to drip, spill, and make a mess of myself in the process.

My focus is on others instead of myself.

Once I shift that attention back to ME, to my internal feelings, what I am saying, and what I hope to achieve I am no longer making a mess, or losing bits of my sanity and peace.

Again, I am not perfect here either, but as many programs say “progress not perfection.”

I am doing my best to focus on what I can control, what I have power over instead of the external. I will make mistakes and still be a little messy from time to time, but I will get better with practice. Hopefully, one day it will come naturally.

Just like I’ve gotten better at pouring the tea instead of spilling it… Unless it’s the latest take, but that’s another story.