Tag: Reflection

  • I Thought I Couldn’t Meditate

    I Thought I Couldn’t Meditate

    by Thela Foxgood

    For years I tried meditation. I came to the conclusion that “meditation” was just a nice-sounding word for a concept that was completely beyond my grasp. It appeared to me, at that time, that meditation was for a select group of gifted individuals.

    And, that I was not one of them.


    I mean

    “f o c u s o n y o u r b r e a t h”

    was interesting for like five seconds.

    I kept hearing Crush in Finding Nemo saying, “Focus dude.”


    Despite my setbacks, I knew there was something in it. I just kept coming back to it.

    While it wasn’t yet within my grasp, I could see it in the distance… something important, almost within reach; if I could just find the right key to unlock it.


    Then one day, I was reading a book called Celtic Myth and Magic by Edain McCoy, in which there is a section on meditation.

    In her book, she mentions holding the image of a symbol in your mind:

    “When you can sustain an image for five to ten minutes without your consciousness wavering, begin to allow your inner-self to feel a kinship to the symbol.”

    I looked at the clock thinking, “Kinship? OK. Five minutes. I’ll try this one more time.”


    The symbol I chose was the triquerta.


    This is how it happened:

    I set my timer for five minutes.

    • I visualized this symbol
    • It was hazy at first, then became crystal clear
    • I gazed at it from a distance
    • Then I stepped closer, scrutinizing every point and curve intently
    • It began to slowly rotate, and I looked at it from all sides
    • I traced it, as though I was drawing it
    • I was fascinated at how the symbol was one fluid line

    My timer went off and I reset it.

    • Small tongues of flame leaped up from the symbol
    • I reached my hand out and touched it
    • I was surprised that, despite the flames, it had a safe and comfortable warmth
    • I let it rest over the palm of my hand
    • The triquerta then changed from flames of orange, yellow and red to frosty blue and white
    • Icicles clung to its frozen surface
    • An icy heat made my hand tingle like drops of peppermint essence

    My timer went off again.

    Ten minutes! It was the first time I had ever successfully meditated.


    From starting out with one symbol or image, you may find in time, that you can add more symbols, motion, color, scent, temperature, taste, and more complex scenes.

    Reflect on the meaning this symbol or picture has to you, and a message you may find.

    Now, I use images all the time. Art and symbolism are wonderful tools. You never know what journey you may take!

    If you haven’t found a specific way of meditating that works for you yet, don’t give up! It’s out there. You’ll find it.

    Now I lead meditations, and this gift that I found for myself has become a gift I share with others.


    My Wish

    I wish you success in finding that key (or keys) that unlock doorways along the path of your personal pilgrimage, journey or quest.


    Edain McCoy


  • Haiku Challenge

    Haiku Challenge

    Teresa of “The Haunted Wordsmith” has given us the following prompt today. 

    If you would like to join the Challenge, please see the instructions below.

    Welcome to the Haunted Wordsmith Daily Prompt (HWDP). To participate, simply read this post and follow where the muse takes you.

    You may select any, all, or none of the prompts…it’s all up to you. Link back to this post, or leave a link in the comments so that others can find you.

    Have Fun!


    Prompt A (genre challenge): haiku

    Prompt B (sentence starter): “Where did all these footprints come from?”

    Prompt C (photo):


    On Meditation

    One technique of meditation is to watch a candle flame.


    Inhale and Exhale

    Breathing keeps us in “Real Time”

    Watch the dancing flame

    🦊 Thela Foxgood 2019


    beckiesmentalmess.wordpress.com

    https://thehauntedwordsmith.wordpress.com/2019/06/07/prompts-june-7/

    https://wordofthedaychallenge.wordpress.com/2019/06/07/public/

  • Simplify your Life Questionnaire

    Simplify your Life Questionnaire

    If 1 represents simple,

    and 10 represents complicated,

    then on a scale of 1-10 how would you rate your lifestyle?


    Have you simplified anything in your life so far this year? If so, what?

    What changes toward simplifying your life would you like to make overall?

    What aspects of simplifying your life would you be willing to change this year?


    Pick any of these simplification strategies you would be willing to try or start in the next few months :

    Pack a lunch

    Have only one credit card

    Get out of debt

    Downsize your home

    Unsubscribe from email lists you don’t read

    Work where you live

    Consolidate bank accounts

    Learn to say no

    Declutter your home

    Vacation near or at home

    Simplify eating habits to whole, unprocessed foods

    Buy in bulk, and shop less often

    Put your phone on silent when it’s not needed

    Take only one suitcase, and pack only essentials

    Stop trying to please people and just be yourself

    Do what you want for a living

    Stop trying to change people

    Get rid of possessions you don’t need or use

    Buy for functionality and durability rather than for fashion

    Delegate

    Drink water


    Some changes are simple. And some will be a process.

    A good way to decide on things to get rid of, is to put them away for a year. If you haven’t needed them or thought of them throughout the year, then it may be time to donate them.

  • Reading Nook 3

    Reading Nook 3

    by Beth Haley

    The Rabbit and the Garden


    The real voyage of discovery

    Consists not in seeking new landscapes

    But in having new eyes

    -Marcel Proust



  • Pine Needle Tea

    Pine Needle Tea

    A journey through swamp land…








    I do gather pine needles for tea. Make sure if you gather pine needles, that they are harvested in small amounts per/tree and that the trees are well away from traffic.

    Some pines are poisonous, so find out what kind of pines are in your area first, and don’t drink pine tea while pregnant.

    Pine Needle Tea

  • Post-It Notes 4

    Post-It Notes 4


    Header Photo:  Pixabay

  • The Messy Middle

    The Messy Middle

    by Beth Haley

    Dedicated to my Dear Friend Alysia, who sends me books that make me think!!

    I can see them…

    these goals and dreams.

    They’re out there, in the distance.

    Are they waving at me? Or taunting me?

    Some are close, and some are farther away :

    sometimes shrouded in wisps of mist,

    sometimes shining brighter in sudden bursts of inspired sunshine,

    and sometimes peeking out between the clouds with all hope…

    At least, they are visible out there in the light, at the end of this tunnel.


    At any rate, whether they are waving or taunting, I am trying to keep a few thoughts securely in front of me. One being that:

    It is the journey that is of most importance. Not just the “getting there” or “arriving.”

    Many times, I think that the major event of reaching a goal, ends up not being all we thought it would be because we put so much emphasis on the end result, and not as much focus on the journey we take getting there. And then once there, we just rush on, toward the next goal.

    Or, we may find that upon reaching a goal, the sacrifice and culmination of work, work, work, ends up not really being as climactic as we had hoped. And we realize, life happened in the middle, in the process, in the journey to get there.

    I don’t want to be miserable in the messy middle, where the work is done to get from point A to point B or Z. I don’t want to focus so much on the “work” or the end result, that I forget to just enjoy the journey.

    “The middle is messy, but that’s also where the magic happens.” – Brené Brown

    Meeting goals is great, but did you enjoy life while you were getting there?

    Did you then, or are you now, finding ways to just enjoy the every-day journey?

    Balance in life, is a bit different for each one of us.

    I would love to hear your thoughts


    Picture Credit: 3dman_eu@pixabay

  • Allow Grief its Time

    Allow Grief its Time

    by Beth Haley

    Grief has its own Timetable


    Grief has it own timetable and it’s own unique expression within each of us. You will heal at your own pace, and in your own way.

    Six months ago my father crossed over. Being a pilot, he was used to flying the big skies, but on this day he flew on different wings.

    He’s flying with the big boys now.


    In Remembrance and Honor



    With Gratitude



    UNITED STATES AIR FORCE, 1951-1954.

    Korean War



    Sitting out at the airport this evening, I caught a wonderful view. And I could hear Papa’s short quip, “Looks like a fair day tomorrow!”


    CATHARSIS:

    The process of releasing…

    Finding ways to honor a loved one who has passed on can be very healing.



    Allow yourself to feel what you need to feel so that healing can come.

    Our physical health benefits when we allow ourselves to heal emotionally and spiritually. It’s all connected.



    “Well, take me back down where cool water flow, yeh

    Let me remember things I love…

    I can hear the bull frog callin’ me”

    by John Cameron Fogerty

  • Reading Nook 1

    Reading Nook 1

    by Beth Haley

    Growing up, my mother read to me for hours. We got lost in the classics: Charles Dickens, Wilson Rawls, Charlotte Bronte, Frances Hodgson Burnett, Kenneth Grahame, Fred Gipson, Daniel Defoe, Laura Ingalls Wilder and so many more! We spent hours on grand adventures, cried over sick or missing dogs and over the plight of princesses and orphans. We dreamed through secret gardens and were in awe as Ebenezer Scrooge met his ghosts.

    Then I read to my children. I started to record books for them so that when I was busy, they could still be following along with their books.

    They are all grown up now. I find I miss both being read to, and reading to others. This is a little bit different from Dr Seuss, but inspiring, I hope.

    Even though the title says “women” I think the message is relevant to men as well.

    This is from the book, “The Woman’s Book of Courage by Sue Patton Thoele.


    And, to the things we miss, and the things we wish for:

    A Dream is a Wish Your Heart Makes