Relationships


When I observe two people agitated, annoyed, angry, in conflict, I often wonder to myself why can’t they just “let it go.”  How did their need to be right or to be in control override a very basic instinct to just be at ease?   When I observe my niece (age five) and nephew (age eight) at play, they do get into small disagreements like children do.  But typically just as quickly as the frustration occurs, they move past it.  I have found that they very naturally own their stuff.  It seems to me that it is instinctual to let go, as children quickly decide that their need to be right isn’t serving them and is blocking them from their ultimate aim which is to play, laugh and love.  It takes them only a few split seconds to move from being upset to letting go, forgetting, coming back to present and happily moving back to play.

The only time I find these little spats escalate is when they can involve an adult to try to justify their position.  The adult tries to analyze and rationalize with the children to try to get clear on who was right and who was wrong.  But more often then not, this typically doesn’t resolve anything and has everyone spending way too much time on something that really didn’t matter in the first place.

I remember at a certain point in my life after college, I made the decision to let go more and control less. I quite distinctly remember getting it that I was the one suffering by not letting go. I was the one getting hot and bothered and stressed.  And none of those reactions were healthy for me.  To be honest, it has taken this type-A woman (who always had to be right) a good ten years to finally really feel like she has mastered “the art of letting go.”  And how did I master it? I practiced it all the time.  Life gives us plenty of opportunities to practice this one.

This decision to “practice letting go” has served me well. It has offered me freedom instead of pain. It has provided me access to solutions instead of more problems.  It even gave me back time, for when you “let go” you actually gain back the time that you would have spent doing all the things to prove that you were right.  I even believe it has brought me more health over the years, because I didn’t have to stress out over proving that I am right.

Often people can’t move toward letting go because they believe that their power is in question, that if they let go they will be seen as weak, unworthy, wrong, powerless. Quite the opposite.  “Letting go” brings the power back to your court. It gives you power back because you can choose to react from balance and present moment, rather then from reactivity.   To be clear, letting go is not doing nothing when you are wronged.  It is finding your way to peace so you can fully choose the correct action to take that serves you and others best.

The most magnificent thing when you start letting go is that you find it is actually far easier to do then holding on to the need to control.  Needing to control or to be right requires a significant outpouring of energy and prana-life force.  Energy that quite frankly is better suited for other things like having fun, moving forward and play!

Traveling beyond the comfy borders of your home is always an adventure.  But when you go on a journey to a far off destination you are almost guaranteed new perspective.  These past few weeks I was certain were going to be a mind blow. I was going to India.  I was ready to be changed.  But as life had it, in my stopover city of London, I broke my foot and ended up staying there my whole vacation.   London is familiar to me as my sister has lived here for over 7 years, and it was always a popular spot for me on connections to other parts of Europe during summer vacations. Thus I wasn’t expecting much of anything new.

And let’s face it.  London is not a far off-shoot from the US.  People speak the same language, although sometimes it is hard to understand them with their proper Queen’s English, and most things just aren’t that different.

However, one day on this trip I realized why people need to go away and experience new places. Why traveling has been, forever, a topic of excitement, of stories, of awe, of a way to rock your world.   For as you stay longer in am unfamiliar place, you begin to question long held beliefs, from the mundane, to the more complex.

One day shopping for groceries with my sister she asked me to grab a bag of chips.  Perusing the aisle of chips, oops I mean “crisps”, I noticed two flavors that really 100% disgusted me.  Chicken Tarragon and Honey Ham& Cranberry. What the…what the?  Meat flavored potato chips. Even if I was not vegetarian the thought of poultry powder on a potato chip did not sound appetizing to me at all   As I thought about the chips, I thought what a wide variety of taste buds there are out there.  But I still could not make the chips fit into my belief of what chips should be.

This idea that when things don’t fit in our mental model our most inner beliefs are questioned became clearer as I rode “the Tube” (London’s subway). In the US, we are so bombarded with images of people who look, sound, smell, and appear a certain way.  Everyone is constantly trying to fit into that image we are being sold.

But in London, especially riding on the underground, you see people being more themselves, not trying to fit into the US cookie-cutter ideal. Of course you have those that are buying into local marketing too, but Londoners seem to retain an element of originality.  One morning, as I mixed, mingled and observed, I was fascinated by two young men I saw on the Tube.  One boy had extremely bloodshot eyes and shoes that were too big, and he looked sullen. And the other sat pensively next to him.  They didn’t speak to each other and seemed disconnected from the world around them.  The image of them stayed with me for the day.

As I thought about them throughout the day, I wondered who they where and where they were from.   I couldn’t place their ethnicity and all of a sudden I had no way to make them fit in my mind of what was known and familiar to me.

I realized this is how we humans get stuck.  Our beliefs keep us tied to what we know – even if what we know should be questioned.  We want things to fit in our mind. Neat. Tidy.  And when they don’t we either draw lines in the sand, start wars or change.  And since change is so hard for humans it seems often we opt for war.

The thing about beliefs is that we formulate them when we don’t have the education or information needed to develop rational beliefs grounded in truth.  Beliefs are created in early childhood and for the most part we do not question them even if they no longer serve us in adulthood.  This is because other, new beliefs feel like they don’t fit.  And it can be uncomfortable.  For example, if you carry a belief of unworthiness with you from childhood and all of a sudden you have insight that “hmmm maybe just like every other human on this planet I am worthy just because I am alive,”  it can seem almost impossible to hold onto the insight.  It doesn’t easily fit in your mind’s mental model.  So when life’s situations (like rejection, or an upset of some kind) happen, giving you reason to believe in your old belief, for the most part you cuddle back up to it like a good old blanky on a cold night:  “there now, you see you are unworthy.”

In Brene Brown’s TED speech, “The Power of Vulnerability,” she explains that one of the most important findings of her work was identifying the variable between people who had a sense of worthiness and those who didn’t.   What she found is this:  “People who have a strong sense of love and belonging BELIEVE they are worthy of love and belonging.  That’s it.  They BELIEVE they are worthy.”

So how do we attack, combat and slay those dragons of beliefs that no longer suit us?  First, you need to understand that you have beliefs and that they shape your action. Then you need to face and acknowledge them every time they arise,“oh hello-there you are my good ol’ belief of not being good enough”.  Then you need to take steps to replace the old belief with present reality and truth. You must do this every time to reshape your mental terrain to allow the new belief to take up the territory the old belief used to hold.  On our own this can be a challenge. It is why working with a coach can be so effective at letting go of old beliefs while cultivating new budding beliefs into a bouquet of beautiful blossoms.


There is nothing like a funeral to remind you that life is short, and that breath, prana, life force, indeed at a certain point simply stop.  The surviving family and friends are never ready for the passing of those they care for, and the unknown of this time period, because it is so much bigger than the certainty of the moment that existed right before the last breath.  As the priest spoke about my best friend’s mother, he so eloquently described that her death was just a new beginning in her spiritual journey.  He brought comfort to our grief as he explained that death, this part of our human experience, is a normal part of everything around us, just as a seed first breaks and dies before it blooms into a beautiful flower; our spirit too dies and transforms into a new, yet unknown experience. In this metaphor, we all could find peace in faith that the seed would indeed once again transform into a beautiful flower.

Thinking about our human fate, and my own life, I thought about how many “deaths” my spirit had already experienced and continues to experience as I push the limits of her growth.  The imprints from childhood that etched grooves on my psyche, which as I aged I had to confront in order to thrive.  I had to see how these limiting beliefs and behavior patterns that were formulated so long ago wreaked havoc in my adult life.   I made bad choices and stayed in bad situations for too long. Looking back now I see these were all the Universe’s way of helping me understand, befriend, and dissolve those parts of myself that didn’t believe in herself or didn’t believe in her own worth and power.

By confronting the untruths I formulated and lived by, I was able to let go of the limiting beliefs and behavior patterns that were keeping me in a permanent state of dis-ease.   Each time I confront these patterns, it is like a death. I cry with grief at the pain I had lived with and the loss of my old ways. But by filling the space that is left with faith and trust, I walk a little closer to a new life finding myself that that much closer to blooming.

Our willingness to transform from the carcass of our past is connected to whether we have faith and trust – or we don’t.  Faith is tricky, and we lose it at times, because it can take some time for a seed to germinate into a flower. As we shed old ways that no longer serve us, we need to experiment with new ways that more closely match who we truly are.  It can feel a little lonely, scary, and definitely uncertain.  Yet as you step forward into the new with faith by your side, you can trust that life will provide you the sun and water, through experience, necessary to blossom.

Learn the three things to do to live and be AWAKE!

When I graduated Wellesley in 1997, we were very fortunate to have Oprah Winfrey as our commencement speaker!  Yes, having Oprah as your graduation speaker is something you never forget.  Women from the class of ’97 still quote various parts of her speech that was so full of helpful life’s nuggets that there was no way to forget its impact.   One of those nuggets I often recall (especially in talking with my sisters) is, “the first time he is a jerk believe him.”  It is a simple lesson, but not one that is so easily practiced.

Yesterday I was watching the Oprah show, and once again in trying to help others avoid loss, hurt and betrayal, Oprah evoked the life lesson Maya Angelou taught her and I had heard at graduation (in slightly different words): “The first time someone shows you who they are, believe them. If a person lies, he/she is liar.  If a person cheats, he/she is a cheater.”

Hearing her talk about this idea again I questioned why is it so difficult for many of us to live by this principle?  Why when someone shows us their true colors do we either ignore our intuition or lower our standards of what is tolerable for us in the way we are treated?  Of course the person who is doing the misleading has their own demons to work out, but really in order to “believe others the first time” we must turn the mirror on ourselves.

When we choose not to believe someone when they show us who they are, we are living with a depleted spirit.  With little belief in ourselves, in our own power, we lower the standards of how others treat us.  Our need to feel loved and our need for approval keep us tied to people who might be saying one thing but doing another.  When we are living from a part of ourselves that feels less than, unworthy of love, in fear of the unknown, we are targets for those who manipulate and keep us in a cycle of lies.

When we are seeking approval from another, our awareness is externally focused. Everything we do is linked to the other’s acceptance of us which keeps us living from our ego. We live in fear of losing what we have built up in our minds to have.  In this situation, fear has severed our connection to our own inner knowing.  When you live in fear and without a strong definition of self, a gigantic red flag may be flying right in front of your face and you won’t see it (or you will choose to ignore it).

Another clever game we play with ourselves is when we see that someone is acting like a jerk toward someone else we rationalize that they wouldn’t ever treat us that way.  This rationalization is absolutely illogical.  A person is who they are, period.  But when we feel powerless within our own being, our ego is seduced into this rationalization.  We avoid having to look at the painful part of ourselves, which feels powerless and keeps supporting the illusion.

Luckily, our lives are healing spiritual journeys. Many of our closest relationships come in to heal those parts of ourselves that don’t serve us, that take us away from the essence of who we are, away from God.   This is why more often than not it is after the experience of disappointment, hurt, and betrayal that we recognize we have ignored all the signs, that we indeed had not “believed them the first time.” When this pain stops us we have an opportunity to dig deep and heal the soul.

There are many ways to begin to heal the spirit from imposed limitation and fear.  Going to yoga classes and starting to awaken the body is key. Yoga helps us open up to sensations in our body which are great indicators of what is actually going on in any given moment.  Even more supportive would be working with a coach who helps us examine how feelings of unworthiness, powerlessness or of not being loveable stem from childhood beliefs that no longer have to determine our present actions.  With the coach we can begin to set out forward action to diminish the fear.  So if you find yourself struggling in a present relationship (with anyone, these emotions are not limited to intimate partners) or in one that has completed, take action meditatively in yoga or in coaching conversations to heal yourself so the next time (not the 5th time!), you are ready, able, and willing to “believe them the first time.”

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