Bite your teeth into the ass of life and drag it to you!

Secondo: You know everything has just become… too much.

Pascal: Hey, hey, fucking guy! What is this: “too much”? Hey! It is never “too much”; it is only “not enough”! Bite your teeth into the ass of life and drag it to you! Hey!

Secondo: [pause] That is why I come here to you, you know…

My husband and I watched Big Night again last week. It takes place in the 1950s. Two brothers run an Italian restaurant in New Jersey. They are being out-done by their competitor who runs what my Italian father would call an Eye-talian place.

Tony Shaloub plays Primo, the brother who is the chef and Stanley Tucci plays Secondo, the businessman brother.

Primo refuses to compromise the authenticity of his dishes. He’s not giving the people in this part of New Jersey what they want. Because of this, the restaurant is failing. Secondo is worried, and rightly so. He goes to see Pascal who gives him some unusual advice.

And I love it.

I’ve written a lot lately about facing your fears. About not living a small life. About doing what you came here to do. Maybe it’s my age biting me in the ass, urging me to say, “Not enough!”

Maybe it’s the two memorial services I’ve led lately. There’s nothing like a funeral to remind you that no one gets out of here alive.

One was for a young man, only thirty-six, the one who had lips tattooed on his posterior, the better to moon people with.

The other was for a seventy-one-year-old man. I’ll write about him some other time. Let’s just say he has me thinking about choices and mortality.

It’s important for us to remember that Spirit doesn’t want anything from us other than for us to see clearly.

“When we see clearly,” says Buddhist teacher Sylvia Boorstein, “we behave impeccably.”

What she means is that seeing clearly allows us to align our vision with that of Spirit. And Spirit’s vision for us is that we be joyful and liberated from anything that keeps us from seeing ourselves as Spirit sees us.

We are perfect just as we are. We are loved exactly as we are. Accepting this, believing this, leads us to know that we can’t fail, not in the long run.

The only fiasco would be to waste the fire and passion and love that fills us.

Could our hearts be broken if we take a risk and love fiercely? Sure. But we’ll love again.

Might we be humbled if our venture flames out? Yep. And then we know what to do differently the next time.

The best memorial services are for people who lived big, bold lives. They’re best for me because I have stories to relate to the people there. But they’re also the best for everyone who attends. We love people who take a chance on loving life. We love people who say, “Not enough!”

We love people who bite their teeth into the ass of life and drag it to them.

And when we put ourselves out there and do the same, ultimately, we learn to love ourselves as Spirit does.

The Devil, Death, and Weight Loss

How about a martini, lovely lady? Can I get you a cannoli? You deserve a treat.

The Devil offers you his hand with a promise of delicious release.

Had a tough day? Reward yourself for getting through it. Bored? Something sweet will add a dash of excitement. Happy? Did you accomplish something? Celebrate!

Or maybe it’s the other way around. Does the Devil beckon you by telling you how good you’d look if you were slimmer? Offering clever ways for you to lose weight?

I led a memorial service on Wednesday. The man who died was seventy-one. Sad, yes.

Also senseless. He didn’t want to take insulin for his diabetes because he thought it made him fat.

Would you rather be thin and die young? Or on the heavy and healthy side?

There was a time in my life when I thought I had found the perfect solution to the struggle with my weight. I stopped eating. I was 5’7” and weighed barely 120 pounds.

The Devil is gorgeous and seductive. He whispers pretty lies. “Don’t listen to them. You don’t look like a skeleton. And you’ll be stunning at 115 pounds.”

He shows up after the Death card in the tarot deck, with Temperance, the card of balance, in between. But in our lives, he often shows up before death as dangerous addictions like alcohol, drugs, work, sex, even co-dependent relationships or relying on how others make us feel.

Death is a cycle of transformation. For a caterpillar to become a butterfly, every caterpillar part has to die. We have to let go of the past to allow for the energy of new awareness, new beliefs, and new beginnings.  

But we’re not caterpillars. We don’t have internal clocks telling us it’s time to spin a chrysalis.

The Death card asks us to purge ourselves of anything unhealthy or not beneficial to our souls. It invites us to allow and embrace a fresh way of thinking.

It doesn’t have to be extreme. Small changes can effect profound shifts.

Maybe I’ll try something like putting on a pair of fancy undies to remind me of where I want to be. Because it’s hard for me to feel sexy while I’m overeating.

The Stain of Stinginess

In the last year or so, I have taken to being less frugal.

And by “frugal” I mean so damn cheap. Two paths led me there.

The first came from a business class I was taking. The instructor was talking about getting sales leads and said matter-of-factly, “There are billions of people in the world. You can get all the leads you want.”

Mind blown.

The second came from hearing some people complain about not having enough money, but “knowing” that being rich would only lead to trouble. What? There’s no reason they can’t be rich. Do you know anyone like that? Someone who says having money would only cause trouble?

Don’t you believe it. Because we can do whatever we want with our money. We can give it to our less fortunate relatives. We can donate it to a worthy cause. We can start a charitable foundation. We can hoard it. We can spend it like there’s no tomorrow if we choose.

There is unlimited money in the world. One person being rich, you being rich, doesn’t keep wealth from someone else.

Money is not dirty. It isn’t evil. Nor will it transfer those qualities to us. Money is energy and it does best when it flows.

“Money flows to me and through me with ease” is an affirmation I used for close to a year.

Then the lightbulb over my head went off. To me and from me.

Get the floors redone, Toni. Remodel the bathroom and don’t base hiring the contractor on the lowest quote. And remodel it because you’ll love your house even more, not to increase the resale value.

In Buddhism, generosity is to releive the stain of stinginess. There is plenty to go around.

Generosity leads to releasing attachment. When we loosen our grip on something, money, love, control, whatever, we allow that something to flow with ease.

We see this in the 6 of Pentacles. There is a sharing of the wealth we have, whether it’s money or knowledge or time. There is also a willingness to receive. Those people who say that having money will only cause trouble? They are showing a reluctance to accept abundance.

I taught a class years ago called Building Your Own Theology. A woman taking the class shared with the group that whenever she was down to her last ten dollars, she’d give it away because she knew the Universe would send it back.

That is some radical thinking.

That is a woman who is allowing the flow of money, both in and out, who knows how to harness the Law of Attraction. She believes that Abundance-with-a-capital-A has absolutely no limits.

What do you have to share? What would you like more of? Where do you hold the reins too tightly?

How radical are you wiling to be?

Insecurity is always a collect call

Do you have a friend who complains incessantly? (If it’s me, tell me right now so I can stop.)

Someone who never has anything positive to say? Who feels life is one big punch in the nose?

I need some advice.

It’s never easy to watch a friend flail, especially when you feel she’s bringing it on herself. This friend wants to find her Person but won’t talk to anyone new. She hates her job but won’t consider looking for another one. Has a complaint about almost every product or service she purchases, but never asks for what she’s looking for.

Which is better?
A.) Listen with an open heart
B.) Listen and offer suggestions with kindness, or
C.) Admit that the friendship has probably run its course

None of those options feel right. I don’t think I can listen with an open heart. Not anymore, anyway. No one likes unsolicited advice—and I know that’s not what she’s looking for because I’ve offered my opinion and it’s been ignored. But cutting the ties to her seems harsh.

As I’ve said before, it’s easy to see where someone else might want to do some shadow work. I need to reframe this and look at which patterns of behavior I need to change.

As I write this, I am in an ankle brace inside a boot that has me walking like Frankenstein’s monster. Unrelated, I’m also doing physical therapy for my knee. And I have a huge stye on my left eyelid.

I want someone to throw me a surprise pity party. I can just see me walking in. All my friends jump out and yell, “Surprise! We feel sorry for you!”

But I’m trying not to wallow. P.S. Can I get a “There, there” and a pat on the head?.

When we’re grateful for everything in our life, we open ourselves up to receive more. Thankfulness for every little thing harnesses the Law of Attraction.

Hot water that comes right out of the wall? I am grateful for this every single day. An attached garage? Yes! With a car that gets me there? Yes! A green light? Thank you—more please! The opportunity to learn to slow down, ask for help, and then accept it? I can say thank you, but I might not ask for more.

When we’re insecure or fearful, it can be difficult to admit it. Instead, we shift the blame. Rather than facing our anxiety about rejection from a potential job, we say we have to stay where we are to get our year-end bonus (never mind that there might be a sign-on bonus at that new place). Rather than feel vulnerable and ask someone out, we make excuses. “Online dating? I’ve heard nothing but horror stories!”

But we pay for our insecurities. Insecurity is always a collect call. (Does anyone know what a collect call is? I’m pretty sure I just dated myself.)

Maybe we’re not all the kind of person who grabs life by the horns. But what will you regret most in the end? What you did? Or what you didn’t?

Each time we’re grateful, the Universe sends us more to be grateful for. When we open our arms and accept it, we step closer to our purpose. What did you come here to do? Are you ready to fulfill your destiny? Or would you rather sit there and bitch about all you don’t have?

And don’t forget to give me your advice about my friend.

We have nothing to fear, but…

I was staring down into a thirty-foot ravine, a large group of people waiting to cross a bridge that was not much more than wire and planks and… my feet refused to move.

Will Smith has a short video, it’s on YouTube, called What Skydiving Taught Me About Fear. It’s a motivational talk about the time he jumped out of an airplane in Dubai. In it he says,

“The point of maximum danger is the point of minimum fear.”

He also asks, “Why were you scared? What do you need that fear for?”

“God’s placed the best things in life on the other side of fear,” he concludes.

I’m not so sure I agree.

That time? In Hawaii when my feet could not be convinced to budge? That was not my first time crossing that bridge.

I had already made it across once, terrified beyond belief. We were on a rainforest hike with a group of my husband’s coworkers. We had to cross the bridge once going into the rainforest and then again coming out.

The only thing that would have been scarier for me was to have made the others in the group, people who had paid good money to go on this hike, wait for me while one of the guides led me down the ravine and up the other side.

I had somehow managed to do it the first time, never dreaming that I’d face that same rickety, swinging, primitive, terrifying, unsafe thing again. When I was staring down at it for the second time, I did not feel bliss. I had not been released from my fear by doing the thing that scared me the most.

It had not been conquered. I can feel the vertigo and nausea as I write this.

But I did it. I somehow got my feet to move even though they felt like they were in cement shoes and bolted to the ground.

Would I do it again? Hell, no.

The top fears are public speaking, heights (that’s me!), bugs and snakes, blood and needles, flying, and strangers. And, for some reason, zombies. But there must be a spectrum between ick and terror because some fears are resolved by pushing through and others become worse.

I’ve never been afraid of public speaking. I may get a little nervous sometimes, I wouldn’t be human if I didn’t, but never afraid. There was a guy in one of the French classes I took in college who was petrified by it. And it wasn’t all that public—we all knew each other, he was well liked, we each had to get up and present. Why was he shaking and almost unable to speak? I didn’t understand until I met that bridge in the rain forest.

Tomorrow, I start teaching my class, Inner Wisdom: Finding Your Guide Within. It’s my first online class. My first time recording myself. My first time on Facebook Live. Am I nervous? You bet. Scared? Yes, I can admit I am. Will I let those feelings keep me from doing it? Absolutely not.

Because even when we’re afraid we shouldn’t let anything hold us back. As FDR said, “The only thing we have to fear is fear itself.”

Accepting What Will Never Be

What can you release to make room for the new? Photo by Karim MANJRA on Unsplash

I have a confession to make. I watch Hoarders.

I feel I have to now defend myself. I don’t watch every day, only when I’m feeling overwhelmed. It’s somehow comforting to know I’m not as buried, figuratively or literally, as the people on the show. I had never expected to find wisdom in an episode. But there it was, the psychologist saying,

“It can be difficult to accept the loss of things that could be, but will never be.”

There it was, loss summed up in one little sentence.

I remember the smell of pipe tobacco, Herb Alpert’s Whipped Cream playing on the hi-fi, freshly-baked cookies delivered to us… I loved Denise Meisel’s house when I was a girl.

It was 1968 in Detroit. The riots had shaken us up literally the summer before, helicopters flying low over our neighborhood. The teachers’ strike was over. Things were back to normal.

Except they weren’t. My friends started moving away. Nori, Julie, Tracy, Jimmy, Lisa, Denise. Each loss hurt a little. But I was young and resilient. Until we were the ones who moved. To Wisconsin. From Motown to Moo-Town.

I would always be someone who spent the first ten years of her life in Detroit, but it would never be my Who I Was. All these years later, it still stings a little bit. I identify with the city, not some Podunk town. Under the microscope it seems irrational.

Can we make sense out of our feelings of loss?

Where is your clutter, be it physical or emotional? Do you hang onto two different sizes of clothes, hoping you’ll someday fit back into the thinner one? Does throwing out that size 8 pair of pants mean having to accept you may never be that thin again? Of course not. Stores are full of clothes, size 8 and even smaller.

Is your basement full of stuff from your parents’ house because you can’t bear to get rid of it? The memories live in your head, not in the things. But donating them can feel like we’re letting them go, not just their possessions, before we’re fully ready.

How about the clutter we carry around in our heads? “I should have bought that house overlooking the lake when I could have gotten it for less than $300,000,” we think, having no intention of moving, only of regretting.

“Why didn’t I have a serious conversation with him about marriage when I had the chance? My life would be so much different.” Sure, but would it be better?

“How did I let myself gain this much weight?”

“Why didn’t I keep up with those friends?”

Loss can shatter us. It can crack us right open.

But if we release things when it is time, we open the space, both literal and figurative, for new beginnings. Clearing out our clutter, our stuff and our outdated thought patterns, tells the Universe that we’re ready for something fresh, something even better.

What one thing can you throw away, give away, let go of this week in order to make room for the new?

You Say Your WHAT Hurts?

“Here, I can make it hurt,” I told the orthopedic specialist last week as I knelt on the table, feeling like an idiot.

I had put off having my knee and ankle looked at for way too long.

The words of Dr. Yu, my old acupuncturist, were still ringing in my ear.

“Your body is not a car, not a machine. No cutting!” she had scolded me in her heavy Chinese accent. This was after I had had surgery to remove a significant amount of tissue from my left breast in which they found… nothing.

Treat the cause not the symptom, right?

Louise Hay, the queen of affirmations, said we are each responsible for our experience. Every thought we think creates our future. It’s only a thought and a thought can be changed.

I took out her book, You Can Heal Your Life, and looked up joint pain. She said they represent changes in direction in life and the ease of these movements. If there is difficulty in our joints, we may be having difficulty changing our direction.

Has something similar ever happened to you?

Have you taken a job that was so out of line with your purpose that your body rebelled? Have you felt unappreciated at work and gotten nose bleeds?

Or maybe you’ve had an argument with someone and then suffered from a stiff neck? Felt some aspect of your life was such a burden that your shoulders ached?

Been so worried and afraid that you vomited?

The mind-body connection has been studied by many high-ranking professional institutions. Johns-Hopkins is just one of them. It’s not woo-woo.

How we think affects how we feel. How we feel affects how we thinks. Constant worry over a job, finances, or a relationship can lead to muscle pain, headaches, or high blood pressure.

Likewise, health concerns can affect your emotions and lead to depression or anxiety.

Could starting a new business and changing my daily routine to accommodate it be causing my joint pain? Could I cure myself?

Had accepting these changes, embracing the new routine, breaking through the old thought patterns, made the discomfort disappear? It was the only reason I could see for why the doctor and I couldn’t recreate the pain I had been in when I made the appointment.

That or it’s one of those things like washing your car is the surest way to make it rain.

Louise Hay suggests this new thought pattern:
I easily flow with change. My life is Divinely guided, and I am always going in the best direction.

The Universe completely supports, without judgment, every thought we choose to think and believe. You point of power is always in the present moment.

Remember, it’s only a thought and a thought can be changed.

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