Wordless Walk #2
14 Wednesday Mar 2012
Posted nature, walks, wordlessness
in14 Wednesday Mar 2012
Posted nature, walks, wordlessness
in13 Tuesday Mar 2012
Posted nature, walks, wordlessness
inTags
Jean Lafitte National Park, Martha Beck, New Orleans, swamp, virtual wordless walk, wordless walk, wordlessness
For the next bunch of days, I’m going to post a photo a day from recent wordless walk. I don’t actually take photos when I host the walk – I think it’s a distraction – but I do take them when I scout the route. And I have a bunch of lovely ones that I haven’t shared yet!
While you enjoy these relaxing photos, I’ll be learning and connecting at the Martha Beck Coaches’ Summit in Phoenix – I’m so excited! I know I’ll have tons to write about when I return…
And if you live in the New Orleans area (or know someone who does who would be interested) I’ll be hosting the next Wordless Walk on Saturday, March 26. Click on the Happenings page to get more information.
Now, if you like, take a couple of lovely breaths and savor a quiet wordless moment for yourself. Ahhh…. spring has come to the swamp!
10 Saturday Mar 2012
Posted managing time, thoughts
inDo you ever have something on your to-do list that you really want to do – deep in your heart you want to do it – you just know you do – yet day after day it doesn’t get done? Something you value. Something you know will make you feel great once it’s done. Something that will benefit you, or someone else. Something that will make your heart feel warm and glow-y.
What the heck? Why does it sit there, day after day? This task or project – this call to make, this card to send, this blog post to write (ahem!), this creative fun thing you’ve been dreaming of for weeks – why does it remain on your list – undone, un-checked-off?
Why would you not do it when you really want to? What’s happening?
Well, perhaps you’ve made it so important in your mind that you’ve made it difficult to start and finish. Or maybe it’s a task with too many steps – pick the right card, find a stamp, find the address, say the meaningful thing from your heart that you want to say (will you be able to express the contents of your heart clearly enough?), get it out to mail. . . so it stays undone.
Or maybe it’s so easy you keep thinking you’ll do it later – it won’t take long to make that call, write that blog post – but then you wait and it’s the wrong time in the zone you’re calling – it’s too early/too late, too close to tomorrow (as in midnight) – so you put it off one more day.
Maybe you finally do it. And it FEELS SO GOOD to get it done.
So you ask yourself, “Why?? Why can’t I remember how fantastic it feels next time this situation happens? Why will I find myself in the exact same boat– at midnight, looking at a list of happy little tasks, none of which are that complicated, and none of which I did today? Why does my mind toss out the ‘doing it later will be fine’ line? Why do I fall for it every time? How do I ever change?
Hmm. I can think of a couple of possibilities.
1. Recognize when your mind is lulling you into avoidance. And when it does, really listen. Sometimes your mind is making a solid point. Sometimes you’ve really loaded up your list – sure they’re all cute little lovely tasks, but there are thirty of them! Come on! No wonder your mind is encouraging you to take a nap!
2. If it’s not because your to do list is overloaded (but I bet that’s the reason, I’m just saying) then picture how it’s going to feel when the task is done. Put yourself there, in that brief Nirvana of glowy-heart-ness. Then set your timer for five minutes and start. Find the stamp, the address, the card. Sit down to write. By the time five minutes are up, you’ll be riding the momentum of doing. You’ll easily finish the job now. Congratulate yourself! Pat yourself on the back! And promise that you’ll give yourself no more than three other happy little to-do tasks today. Not thirty. After all, there’s have-to do things too – like taxes, job emails, whatever. They gotta get done too – and if you’re also avoiding them, well– we’ll deal with that in another post!
Now go sit in the grass in the sunshine for a little while. Buster would approve of that being on your to-do list…
23 Thursday Feb 2012
Posted gratitude
inMy friend Debbie taught me this. She said that when she gets stressed or harried, she says to herself, “Everything’s a miracle.” Then she looks around to find evidence and always does. If she’s in a car, well, that’s a miracle right there that two tons of steel moves around so easily — and that she’s sitting in climate-controlled comfort, perhaps with lovely music coming through the radio. In the supermarket, she’s surrounded by an incredible bounty of food. Often, she’s near her family members who she loves dearly.
I’ve been trying it lately. I’ve noticed beautiful bubbles forming in puddles while I strolled in the rain. I’ve stared at clouds and birds and trees and happy children. My cat is definitely a miracle! As is this computer and the incredible technology that lets me send my thoughts all the way around the world.
And here’s one of the best miracles of late which will make sense if you read the previous post, “Arguing with Mother Nature”. The magnolias are still blooming!! My mom got to see dozens of trees still in pink perfection. Oh, me of little faith . . .
Give it a try. How many miracles can you find within ten feet of you right now?
04 Saturday Feb 2012
The magnolias started flowering in mid-January. And I got sad. And then I started making calculations, and wishing. Wishing for things to slow down. Wishing for time to stop – for the trees to stay in their pink and white spangled glory. Wishing for the flowers not to fade, for the green leaves that follow the flowers to wait a little longer. You see, my mom is coming to visit in about ten days. And last year, around Valentine’s Day, our star magnolia tree in the yard was full of fragrant, saucer-sized blooms that looked like this:
And the city was awash with pink. And I wanted my mom to get to see that this year. But everything is too early – it’s going to be over by then.
So, a couple of weeks ago, when I drove past a tree in crazy full-pink bloom, I would argue with Mother Nature in my head. I thought things like, “Can’t this just wait a little longer?” or my favorite – a simple, “Nooooo!”
Not a great way to enjoy one of the most spectacular annual natural treats in the city.
Then I realized what I was doing. I was refusing to enjoy something beautiful because I wanted it to happen at a different time. I was seriously arguing with reality. No matter how hard I wished or what kinds of imagining I did, the trees were not going to suddenly go back in time to fuzzy buds. They weren’t going to wait. And I could be present and enjoy it, or miss it completely.
How many times do we do this? We do it with the weather — it’s raining right now as I write this — will it still be raining for the big parade tonight? Who knows, but I don’t think I can mind control it to stop! We do it with people we know and love. How many times do we find ourselves trying to change someone else with our thoughts- convincing ourselves that everything would be fine and we could enjoy ourselves if they would just act differently, for heaven’s sake!
The truth is, the only thing we really have the power to change is our own viewpoint. Our own lens. Life gets a whole lot lighter when we aren’t trying to get other people to be different or make the weather the way we want. It gets lighter when we stay in our own business – taking care of what we really can do something about.
So the past few days, I’ve been admiring the trees. Smelling the blooms. Enjoying the fallen petals. Remembering that this blooming doesn’t last, and reminding myself to enjoy this beautiful, rainy, flowering, present moment.
When my mom gets here there will be plenty of lovely, special, and perhaps even surprising things to enjoy, even if they aren’t pink magnolia blooms.