More about Dad

I wrote recently about my father being fun and present when I was growing up. He played with us kids when he got home from work, took us “big” kids out on Saturdays, and actually took me to a couple of rock concerts when I was a teenager.

A lot of fathers barely engaged with their childrenin the 1950’s and 60’s. I have come to realize how fortunate I was.

Dad and I experienced some disharmony later in life, and we were estranged during the last few years of his life. Perhaps I will write about this someday; it’s a vulnerable place for me. Our estrangement was largely my doing and was not entirely justified.

More and more I look back and realize that he was a present and loving father. He is the source of much that I am and strive to be.

I met Dad in a lovely dream a couple years ago. We were watching over my older daughter, as we both did when she was little. I told him I hoped we would meet again in another lifetime – and sustain harmony. He said “I don’t know about that. We both have strong personalities and have often opposed each other.”

I guess that explains some things.

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Embracing Love

I had the most amazing experience last week. I went to a local concert with my husband to dance and move a bit and simply enjoy myself. It was lovely.

While I was there I observed a mother and her young son (about 1 year old) strapped to the front of her. Their intimacy and love was palpable. It reminded me of my relationship with my first biological child, my son. The business of giving birth was behind me. And giving birth was transformational – changing me to mother most surely and bringing him life. The stage was set for a blissful connection. We were more aligned than I have ever experienced before or since. (Although I have experienced something similar with my husband at times.) Recently, however, I have been more challenged in my connection with my son, or lack of connection. But as I watched this mother and her child, I felt their love actually wash over me and remind me of the past, of how completely supportive and present I was for my child. I knew there was no mistake, that the experience of the mother-child love that I felt and experienced was a divine gift for me that would serve me. I knew this was the answer for me – to return to a fully supportive orientation with my son.

The next day I was still uncertain about how to shift the dynamics. I shared my challenge and my experience with a friend, and she gave me the most wonderful advice! “For the next couple of weeks just write yourself a quick note about how grateful you are for …. Fill it in describing the relationship you desire with your son. Describe it and feel how you would as if it is already established, in the present. How close you feel to him, the connection that you share, grateful that supporting him has brought this closeness and bond that reminds you of when he was a toddler. Think it, act it, feel it. – It is  amazing what can manifest in such a short period of time. Create and visualize the exact connection as if it is already happening. It has done amazing things for me. The law of attraction.”

On day one I experienced the love that I felt at the concert again. I gave thanks for it at my altar. I started to think differently about my son. I reached out to him in a supportive way on his last day home for Thanksgiving (at his sister’s) and I felt certain that a shift in the challenging dynamic I have been experiencing is possible. This 2 week assignment that my friend provided will help me sustain the supportive orientation and will change everything within me, which cannot help but impact our relationship.

I’m sharing this experience in the hope that others may take on this assignment to transform dynamics in their lives that are not as they would wish.

The truth is that WE are the designer of our lives and experience.

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Daily Practice

One of the best things I do for my personal wellbeing is to connect with God/Spirit/Source every day. For me, this is often first thing upon awakening. It sets the tone for the day and renews my deepest intentions. 

It’s kind of like a visit with my best friend. 

Actually, it IS a visit to my best friend .. and biggest supporter.

An altar can be as simple as a candle that you light to symbolize or enact this connection. Or sage to burn. Or water to anoint yourself. Or a stone to hold.

I have all of these present on my altar because I am oriented in an earth-based tradition where the simplest aspects of spirituality are earth, air, fire, and water. We all carry these 4 elements in this physical realm we inhabit.

Over time, other items have come to sit on and near my altar – small photos of my most beloved ones, reminders of my helping spirits, symbols of my ancestors, seashells + feathers, and reminder notes about how to navigate my life.

I realize as I write this, that my time at the altar IS prayer. The presence of the 4 elements and other items make it stand apart from what I have thought of as prayer. But it is the same action – being present to the spirit within and the source beyond. 

Anything can be spokenor expressed here at my altar …gratitude, requests, intentions. Also songs are sung.

Gratitude – I give thanks daily for my life and for the present day, for my loved ones and my home, for my ancestors who walked this earth before me and brought me forth. I give thanks also, as I am moved, for spiritual support, for opportunities, experiences, teachings, etc.

Requests – I ask for protection, transformation, healing, release, expansion, alignment with my soul, opportunity to help, 

Intentions are woven into my requests – to walk a path of service and humility, to be more aware, to navigate life with love and generosity, to be present and open, etc.

If you are stepping onto a new path of connection with God/Spirit/Source, or if you want to strengthen the path you are already on, you may find a daily practice of your own creation to be a help to you.

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Practicing Letting Go

Last year at Thanksgiving I found myself deeply upset because I couldn’t catch a moment with my 36 year old son, who visited his sister for several days. I hadn’t seen him for 6 or 7 months and I had expected he would come “home” to visit, but his slate was full before he arrived and mom time was not on the list. He agreed that in the future, he would be sure to make time to have breakfast one day – just the two of us.

This year, we set up a time for breakfast before he came home, and we had that breakfast this morning, the day after our Thanksgiving gathering. It was a positive time and I learned more about what is going on in his life, and shared what is up with me. Then, as I dropped him back off at his sister’s house, I said to call me if they were playing cards or a game I could join in, and he agreed. This afternoon I found myself fretting that there might be no call. My “boy” is 40 minutes away and I am not included in the activities.

I had received exactly what I asked for, but it wasn’t enough! I’m unsure what is at play.  I don’t miss my son terribly when he’s at his home, 8 hours away. I’m thrilled that he and his sister are so close. I have a full life of my own. It’s completely rational that he would want to spend time with local friends his own age.

So why this bereft feeling in my heart?

I really don’t get it. I think I’m in a great place and then I am blindsided by these leftover feelings from raising young children(?) Wherever they come from, these feelings are difficult to shake. And they make no sense.

This year, I will not share my disappointment. I will get busy cooking. I will practice my fiddle. I will take a walk. I will spend time with friends. I’ll go listen to some local music with my husband.

As time unfolds, I will continue to sustain positive relationships with all 3 of my children – without (or despite) that clingy aspect rearing its ugly head. I know how fortunate I am that I have positive relationships with my children.

Some days are just not easy.

Last Thanksgiving?

I love Thanksgiving. It has long been my favorite holiday because of its simplicity, the blessing of calling people together, the simple activity of cooking together and sharing a meal, and the act of giving thanks together. Passover, which I learned to enjoy in my 30s, is a close second in its optimism and its celebration of freedom. It is also a lovely gathering of family and others around a specific meal, but …I don’t feel access to it in the same way. I wasn’t born into the tradition. We had a close friend nearby who would preside at our Passover table for several years in another state, but I rarely have a seat at the Passover table these days.

On Thanksgiving, I remember Grandma and Grandpa, aunts and uncles and cousins gathering in the late morning either at our home or my cousins. I remember the dates rolled in sugar that my father’s sister had on her table before the meal. I played with my cousins, Stephen, Kathy and Beth and my sister May. I soaked up some grandparent love and attention. We passed the time in these most pleasurable ways as Mom and Delphine focused on the extensive preparation of our elaborate and standard meal for a crowd on her fine china. This is one of the occasions where everyone would be called together to the living room, while we were waiting for the meal, so Dad could show off by standing on his hands and playing “Little Brown Jug” on his long abandoned violin. I remember Uncle Billy, a pastor, saying a Thanksgiving grace as the food steamed on the table before us and we impatiently waited to EAT!

As a parent, I took the lead in creating the holiday. Due to proximity, we usually had close friends rather than family join us, although sometimes my brother or sister would join the table. (I remember the year my younger daughter at the age of two absolutely would not keep her clothes on and she stood on her chair naked in the picture of us all at the table.) Although my children didn’t have cousins present, they had close friends. We did not possess fine china, but that was inconsequential to me. When we all sat down at the table, rather than listening to a prayer, we each took a turn giving thanks for the blessings of our lives before eating.

This is the tradition that my children were raised with and continue to facilitate, although an evolution has occurred. Now the cooking is shared by the generations. I still get the turkey into the oven and bring pie, but my son and daughter play their role, and my husband even made a pie this year. And now we start eating while the gratitude is shared around the table. I’m ok with that. I’m grateful to simply be there.

I told my children as they grew up that I wanted them to always come home for Thanksgiving when they grew up. The in-laws could have Christmas. This was successful for a long time, but now my older daughter is 3 hours away. She, her partner and my grown grandsons require flexibility away from “Over the River and Through the Woods to Grandmother’s House We Go.” So far my son has always come home, but the writing is on the wall, and I will have to travel in the future if I want to join a family table that includes my descendants. This morning I will go to my younger daughter’s house, about 30 minutes away, where she and her fiance will host the meal. My husband and stepson will be joining us (last year my ex-husband even came, which was nice).

My daughter and her husband-to-be will be moving to my son’s community next Summer, 8 hours away.

I have decided, while writing these words, that I will bring my fiddle to the Thanksgiving gathering today. I will call the memory of my father forth in words and by playing in my imperfect way “Little Brown Jug” before the meal. (I have only been “playing” for 2-3 months and it’s a very challenging instrument, I’ve discovered.) This is one small way I will feel that I can contribute to the passing on of the thread of family love …for my children and theirs.

There’s a plan for some of them to be here for Thanksgiving next year, but …I am unsure whether that will unfold. The future is uncertain. And I suppose I am letting go of this necessity to be at the table with them on this specific day. My oldest is 42, and so I have had a good long run.

Perhaps in the future we will join my brother-in-law’s table, although his wife has a large family. My husband is not inclined to travel hours to my family’s Thanksgiving. My beloved stepson and stepdaughter might be at our table, and possibly other friends – or we at theirs. I’m not ready to join the meal at the senior center, but I can see the blessing of simply arriving and chatting and sitting down to eat with friends. I do embrace change.

Expressing gratitude in community seems a blessed event to me. I am coming to terms with the changing shape of things. However I am not ready to stop. Perhaps I will try to incorporate giving thanks into some other gatherings. Or bring it to the table at home.

And …if my youngest daughter proves true in her intention to bring a couple of new humans into the world, I hope to be traveling to their table at this time of year in the future. Maybe by then I will be able to lure my husband too.

Dad

I recently told my husband that my dad took me and my best friend to a couple of rock concerts in the early 70s. As well as the Rolling Stones, he took me to see Cream.

How generous of him! To sit and listen to that loud rock music with me!

This was not what other friends’ dads were doing.

When I was about 7 or 8, Mom petitioned for a weekly day of relative peace and quiet. Dad, who also worked all week in the city, took the ‘big’ kids out on Saturdays, mostly lunch and bowling or golfing. We held up other golfing groups, and I’m sure navigating us (all under 10) was a challenge, but I don’t recall him losing his patience.

When I was younger, I remember him giving me rides on his back and playing math games with me. He was fun, and I couldn’t wait for him to come home from work every day. I still love numbers.

I don’t know if I ever thanked Dad for the concerts.

I will be thanking him this morning at my altar, for all of it.

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The blessings of channeling

My recent reconnection with Norlen as a result of her channeling has brought me significant healing and expansion. I ask questions of Sri Pune, by Zoom often, about relationships, limitations, how to approach challenges, cognitive abilities, etc.

A few weeks ago I asked for help with feeling ungrounded and for a “frequency adjustment.” A shift occurred within me that I can’t fully explain. I feel more settled, more balanced, more alive, more connected.

Last week they started the conversation! They offered to release something within me that has been buried, and said joy would follow. I said yes! Since then I’ve had some emotional ups and downs, some positive memories, digestive shifts, and some more personal things have occurred.

Norlen is still available for healing and guidance/information (for self or others – although they will not cross others’ lines, meaning that the person in question has to want the help).

If interested, don’t hesitate. You aren’t imposing, but helping Norlen on her path.

My cousin who is working with Norlen is more confident and happy and at ease. A friend has been to many psychics and channelers and says she is “the real deal.” Others are connecting with her too. I make an email introduction and then people contact Norlen directly, so it’s private. And free at this time.

As for me, I am floating through my days, and yet my feet are on the ground and I am not missing anything critical.

Contact me if you want to explore this avenue for yourself.

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Eunice

Eunice is my father’s cousin, and my oldest relative. My sister suggested I connect with her a few years ago, just before I retired, and I did. What I delight! She was wise and open-hearted and liked to write, so we did write. She was 90 or 91 at the time. We wrote about the past – her brother’s closeness with my father, her upbringing, a visit to Maine with my Grandma when I remember meeting her parents, her life in the Midwest, and their move there facilitating the meeting of my parents. We also talked about the present – my children, her husband Don, his poetry, and her continuing sporadic work in counseling others. She pointed me to a decision-making process that helped me decide to retire earlier than planned.

I do recall my childhood being peppered with references to Eunice, but somehow she never entered my life or my awareness.

A few months after connecting with Eunice, during Covid, I was able to visit her in the Boston area that at her assisted living facility – outside with masks on. I had the pleasure of meeting Don briefly when he handed Eunice over to me at the door. He was charming in that moment. More importantly – he was the love of Eunice’s life.

Eunice and I had a good visit, discussing her mother and grandfather (my beloved grandmother Bessie’s sister and father), along with other family members. I shared with her photos of my oldest daughter and my grandson – who carry a resemblance to Bessie and her father. There was no shortage of animated conversation. She tired before our allotted hour was over, and I helped her back to the entrance and a caregiver’s support. I remember being elated to have simply been in her presence. I had been the oldest in my immediate family for well over 10 years and it was a great blessing to be in the presence of an elder …and to hear family talk and details from her …and simply to connect in person.

That day I continued my journey back in time by finding Bessie and Forrest’s (Grandpa’s) apartment building a few miles away, where my memories of life began. I lived across the hall from them briefly in that building, then lived a few miles away. I have treasured memories of playing games with Grandma, brushing her long hair, and also walking to the playground with Grandpa, which was still there. I hadn’t been there for over 50 years!

A few months after that visit, Eunice had a stroke, then Don died. Shortly afterward, Eunice moved into the nursing home where she now resides.

In September of this year, I was in Massachusetts and had set up a time to visit Eunice, 2+1/2 years after she entered the nursing home. I had not been allowed to visit in the interim due to Covid restrictions, but we had emailed sporadically – mostly sharing youtube videos of lectures by wise people. We had had some Zoom meetings to check in and connect – mostly we would talk for a bit and then Eunice liked to be quiet together.

Communicating was challenging during this visit. Her mental faculties are very much in place, but I felt her walls were up. I can understand that, and I cannot imagine living in a nursing home.  She said the people there perceive her as difficult, which was surprising to hear. She didn’t elaborate on that. She seemed very protective, but she is still engaged in life – has made a couple of friends there and has developed a relationship with at least one of the aides.

I did get to massage her shoulders and neck a bit, which was important to me because she had spoken about lack of touch. She was resistant though, and said “oh – you thought I meant physical touch” – so … I was uncertain. But I came and I was present with her in the best way I could be.

I remember now that Eunice really enjoyed the massage at the base of her skull, so I guess there was some value for her in my touch. I was unsure how much pressure to use because I had hurt her arm when helping her reposition when I first arrived. I sustained a fairly gentle touch and that seemed to work out.

I remember my mother-in-law was grateful for touch and seemed to like me to sing to her. I sang to Eunice too and she did like that. There are things I wish I had said and done as I look back on this visit.

I’m reminded now of my last visit with my Grandma Bessie. It was in the hospital, and she had cancer. I was in my early 20’s and my father brought me. I don’t recall whether he told me that she was dying. I think now that maybe Grandma asked for me. I have often wished that I had simply held her hand and said I love her. Instead I just remember feeling awkward. And that was the last time I saw her.

I’m glad I went to visit Eunice. I made it a priority and overcame some obstacles that day to get there.

A nursing home visit is rarely satisfying in my experience. I especially don’t like leaving anyone there when I go home. Not my ex-husband’s stepfather, not my mother-in-law or my mother, and not Eunice. It’s just not home and everyone knows it. And not a lot of people visit. (I worked in 2 nursing homes in my youth.) I’m comfortable with death, but not with nursing homes.

I’m glad I was able to be there and be present with Eunice. However, I haven’t emailed since our visit in September.

I know she is just marking time, waiting to rejoin Don; she has said this repeatedly. I also know that God is her constant companion, and this helps me.

I saw yesterday that Eunice sent me a video. I’ll have to watch at least some of it and respond.

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Decision making

Last week I had a session with a friend/client who had a decision to make about how to move forward in her career. She had a couple of exciting options and yet she felt paralyzed in moving forward.

She had worked with me before and knew how to journey. We talked for a while, discussing the beneficial aspects and challenges of each choice, and then she journeyed to ask what attitude or belief was preventing her from moving forward with her decision. She got an answer. When she went home, she began a process to release the attitude or belief. I also gave her some additional homework – 3 other journeys to do on her own.

She has the option of having a 2nd session with me – or of completing the release process on her own. (I am available to discuss her progress as well and we have talked since.)

I have thought several times in the past week that this process might be helpful to others in sorting out life’s pathways, It’s a process my teacher taught us as part of Soul Retrieval, and I have used it personally myself in overcoming obstacles. This is the first time I used it for another person outside of the SR process and it is a big success so far. My friend is delighted!

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