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Creative
Ways to Transform Challenges:
Reclaiming/Kindling
What You Want In Life
Moving
Away from What Doesn't Work Towards What You Want : An Empowerment
Process Nancy Bloom
When
you go through life challenges, you may discover that certain areas
of your life are no longer working. You're out on a limb getting
shaken up. Sometimes, you're so caught up in your situation that
you even lose sight of your dreams.
While
you may not be able to choreograph all the outer situations in your
life and make the dance exactly as you want, you can at least decide
to choreograph your response to them. As part of this, you can begin
to move away from what's not working in your life and to move instead
in the direction you want to go. I have a three list process, originally
inspired by a process I learned from Unity minister and author Catherine
Ponder, which can help you do this.
List
number one. What do you now choose to eliminate from your life?
Many
times, when you experience a sudden or major transition, you notice
what hasn't been working in your life. This is an occasion to grab
hold and make some positive changes. Maybe you don't even have a
choice. You have to change to respond to what's occurring in your
life.
During
this time, ask yourself what you would like to let go of in your
life. List it in this first list. Include everything-from the most
mundane item, like the clutter in your closet, to the most cosmic,
like self-judgment, self-hatred or friendlessness-whatever conditions
you are ready to release. You can even include health conditions.
Your heart and soul will know everything that belongs on this list.
Why
doing this list can be helpful is because setting the intention
to eliminate and actually eliminating what doesn't work in your
life makes space for what does. Nature abhors a vacuum. As soon
as you get rid of those things, new good can come in.
When
you complete the list, you then help empower the process by including
this written statement at the end:
I
thank these for the growth they've given me. I now release them,
and they release me to my own highest good.
Making
a huge list of everything you want to eliminate from your life can
be somewhat intimidating. When, however, you thank what you're letting
go of for the growth it's provided, you're essentially saying that
you let go of the condition, but you choose to keep the growth and
learning you've received. You're not letting go of everything. Some
of you recognize what those gifts and learning have been. Others
may not consciously know. You may find it beneficial to take some
time as part of this to think about and write down what gifts and
learning you've received from even the most difficult life challenges
that you're hoping to release.
This
statement is also important, because if you keep identifying what
you don't want, you often become hypnotized by it. Writing "I release
them" is the gesture of open hands saying "I let it go." By releasing
your hold or fixation on them, they release you, too.
List
number two. What do I now choose to manifest in my life? (bring
into my life, create in my life-You choose the words that feel best)
This
list encompasses everything that you want your life to include-once
more from the most mundane to more expansive things. It can include
things like positive attitudes, feeling states, and health. It can
include situations like financial support and the types of relationships
you want. Use the first list to help direct you. For example, if
you write on the first list: "I now eliminate friendships or people
that are toxic," you might write on the second list, "I now draw
into my life friendships that meet me on a soul level, where we
are healing for each other, and we grow together."
Relationships
are an important factor to consider on this list because your life
challenge may be inviting you to change the whole context of your
life, and this second list can help you identify and focus on the
types of people who can assist you in leaping forward into your
next stage of greater well-being. You also need support during life
challenges, so if you're letting go of draining relationships or
lack of relationships on the first list, you might ask to draw in
supportive contacts and friends on the second list.
Let
this second list be wildly imaginative. Say what you really want,
even though it seems unlikely you'll get it.
I've
found time and time again, that when I or my clients put something
on a list, it very often does happen. As a result, you have to be
careful what you wish for and be fairly specific. It may be unwise
to write simply: "I want to fall in love." A better approach would
be: "I want to be in a loving relationship with someone who is really
good for me and where I'm really good for them."
There
may be some instances where you know what you want to let go of,
but you don't exactly know with what you want to replace it. For
example, you want to leave your current job, but you don't know
what job you want next. Instead of writing down the specific work
you want on your second list, consider the qualities or circumstances
surrounding a job that you'd enjoy: What do you want to feel about
your work? Do you want to feel glad to get up in the morning and
go there? Do you want to feel like you can be yourself all day long?
Do you want to feel at ease with your co-workers, manager and customers?
Do you want to feel that you're receiving adequate money for your
needs? Writing down the tenor of what you want, even when you don't
know the specifics can still help draw something wonderful to you.
This
list has an ending statement to empower the process, too:
May
this or something better come to me through no harm to anyone and
for the greater good of all concerned.
The
"something better" is important because, at the same time you think
you know what you'd like to have happen with your limited human
awareness, the universe (spirit, god, higher power) might have an
even better idea that you haven't thought of yet. You want to stay
open to that greater will.
The
second half of the statement-"through no harm to anyone and for
the greater good of all concerned"-says that, as you generate your
own greater good, you have a true desire that no one be harmed in
the process and that you want your good to include greater good
for the whole. We can feel positive when we receive what we want,
because we ask that there be blessings in it for others as well.
In addition, many of us don't feel worthy to have something good
for ourselves, but when we affirm it in a way that's for the greater
good, we relax and allow it, and it does indeed then bless others,
which blesses us again.
Here's
an example of how this second list can work. Once, I was living
very rurally in a 17 1/2 foot yurt with wood heat and no running
water. I wanted to move into town, so I listed everything I desired
in a new home: a beautiful natural setting five minutes from town;
a cozy but spacious feeling; roommates with whom I shared a lot
and who grew together; a big workshop room; people with whom I would
have an ongoing relationship; hot and cold running water; a wonderful
bathtub; a swimming pool; a sauna; a hot tub-all by September 1.
When I finished the list, I thought, Nancy, you're crazy. I put
it away and didn't think about it again. That summer, I had an opportunity
to give some workshops in a beautiful house, and the people who
lived there asked me to be their roommate-as long as I could move
in September 1. The house had every single thing I had written on
the list. That was in 1984 and 15 years later, while I now live
elsewhere, I still give workshops in the house and continue to be
friends with the people who live there.
Clients
with whom I've shared the list have found it powerful, too. Some
have used it to get over phobias, find new jobs, and so on. One
client shared it with her hairdresser who had left an abusive relationship
with the father of her children. She was still suffering from low
self-esteem, yet she went home and wrote down 81 things she wanted
in a new partner. Within one year, she found a person who had 80
of the 81 qualities, so she said, "I guess I better marry him now."
She did and they have a wonderful relationship. Most people aren't
going to be that specific, but even three or four well thought out,
personally meaningful items can be very impactful.
List
number three. What I am grateful for.
Once
more, list everything from the smallest thing that you're grateful
for to the most cosmic. Nothing more than that. I encourage you
to make this list at least as long as the others. I just did this
three list process the other day, and I noticed that my manifesting
list was very long, so I really pushed myself to do more on my gratefulness
list.
For
a long while, I was mystified as to why this whole process worked
for so well. Now, I believe, that while each aspect is important
to the result, including the act of writing itself, it's this last
list that is the fuel of the process. I realized that if you have
a list of what you don't want, but it still exists in your life-and
you have a list of what you do what, and it's not here yet, you
can feel dissatisfied or despondent. The gratefulness list helps
you step into another level of awareness, where you're telling yourself,
"Even in this situation or challenge, there are so many blessings
in my life." As soon as you go to that place, your being relaxes,
and it allows the universe to follow the flow of what you've culled
in and culled out of your life.
Another
benefit of making a gratitude list during times of transition and
change is that it's a good antidote to despondency. You don't have
to do it just as part of this process. I recently did a process
recommended by a speaker I heard where I immediately wrote ten things
for which I was grateful, then added one more each day for forty
days. When I was finished, I missed the process, so I started it
again. I was also captivated by Sarah Ban Breathnach's suggestion
from her book, Simple Abundance, which she discussed on Oprah Winfrey's
show. She suggested you write down five things you're grateful for
every day before you go to bed, an act which Oprah personally found
life-changing.
Create
a Ceremony
Doing
the whole listing process as a ceremony can be especially healing
and empowering, because it makes what you're doing more real to
the body. The very act of writing the lists themselves can be a
ceremony if you take this action in the spirit of a ritual. It's
as if you're taking these things out of yourself and putting them
on a page. You're making a statement to the universe about what
you want you want to release, blessing and releasing it. You're
acknowledging what you want your life to encompass at this point
and calling those things or something better in. You're expressing
gratitude.
You
can also take this a step further and create a more elaborate ritual.
For example, you could paint all the things you're releasing on
rocks with water colors. Put them in a stream and they'll get washed
downstream or, at least, the water color will get washed away. Thank
them for their growth and release them. During the same ceremony,
call in what you want and make your second statement. Maybe you
want to take something from that natural spot that symbolically
represents what you're calling in.
Once
you've done the lists as a ritual with yourself, I suggest that
you put them aside for a few days. Then revisit them and notice:
"Did I leave anything out? Do I need to add anything or change any
wording, so that it really fits me?"
If
you want, you can empower the lists with someone else. I invite
my clients to bring their completed lists to a session and we read
them out loud. We honor them.
Once
you're happy with your lists as they is, that's it. You're complete.
You don't have to keep looking at them every day or affirming or
visualizing them. You've done it. You've sent the information all
out to the universe, so you can simply set the lists aside in a
drawer or some other place. In a sense, you've planted them. Now
don't go dig them out and look at them every day to make sure they're
sprouting. That disturbs the gestation and growing process. Plant
them, let them grow and look forward to the wonderful surprises
in store.
Don't
feel badly if not everything on your list happens either. As I mentioned,
sometimes we don't know what's for the greater good. At the very
least, I see these lists as a clarification of your values. They
clarify what you want to move away from and move towards. There's
great power in what you say "Yes" to in your life and to what you
say "No." I knew a woman who badly scalded her hand right before
company was coming for dinner. She got very angry and forcefully
shouted out "No"-refusing to accept the burn. When she looked down,
it had disappeared! Forcefully saying "Yes" can have powerful results,
too.
If
things are falling apart in your life, think of these lists like
sand bags. The flood is imminent. Maybe putting sand bags up will
be enough to stave off the flood waters. Maybe it won't. But you
have to try something. The lists can help sway the percentages in
your favor. Have faith and expect a miracle. Doing so paves the
way for energy to flow. Conversely, when you fear the worst, you
can get in your own way. Research has shown how observers' thoughts
can affect the finest particles of matter. At least focus your dreams
and free will in the direction you want to go. At the same time,
work on being okay with what is-whatever that is.
Most
life challenges, whether you like it or not, come to you in some
form that may feel like a death, where you're letting go of the
form of life as you knew it. You don't know the new that's coming
in or how to call this new to you. The three list process can help.
Each list shows you what's important to you, and my experience is
that the process and your intention truly do create and move things
in your life.
Nancy
Bloom, who has an M.A. in psychology and is a certified hypnotherapist,
has been a spiritual counselor and healer since 1975. Her focus
is on inspiring people with life and health challenges to be more
healthy and whole. Her individual sessions (in person and by phone)
and workshops incorporate a variety of approaches, including psychosynthesis,
hands on healing, psychic readings, and soul retrieval. She is also a singer/songwriter who has a CD of songs she wrote and performs, Spirits Walking The Wind, and she has
produced audiotapes on the healing process set to music-Inner
Harmony, Inner Transformation and Inner Beauty. The tapes cover
areas ranging from relaxation and grounding to healing light, breath
and personal transformation work to guidance in experiencing positive
health shifts. Contact Nancy Bloom at PO Box 921, Ashland, OR 97520,
541-488-5795, nancy@spiritinbloom.com or go to her website at www.spiritinbloom.com.
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Reclaiming/Kindling What You Want
In Life |
| Creative Ways to Transform Challenges
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Copyright
© 1999
Life Challenges
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