Tag: healing (Page 3 of 7)

Mind Games

The day Dr. Sue Morter’s retreat was set to begin in Nosara, I still hadn’t established how I was going to get there. The mind was playing games; life was responding. 

My heart wanted to take the long shuttle ride to The Bodhi Tree with friends, but the injured knee was rightfully calling the shots.

It laughed at my original plan, which involved going back to the airport for the shuttle. But when the solo ride the retreat center allegedly booked for me straight from Playas del Coco didn’t show, there didn’t seem to be a choice. Could I even make it to the airport in time, at that point? To make matters even more interesting, the power was out.

Four days of relaxation yielded quickly to stress. Moments earlier, my mind was resisting the idea of leaving the comfort zone of my current haven for a retreat it insisted I wasn’t even going to be able to participate with. Now suddenly, it was all bent out of shape about not getting to the retreat center by check-in, several hours before the welcome dinner.

My driver showed up just as I was about to give up on him, and within minutes, I was sorry he had. He texted while driving and passed every single car ahead on the two-lane road, sometimes with very little time before oncoming traffic. When we stopped for a restroom, I returned to an unlocked running car – with all my stuff in it.

“This is the best driver a five-star retreat center could come up with?” my mind scoffed with judgment. “Assuming this guy doesn’t get us killed, I’m telling the center about this horrific ride and requesting a refund!”

The retreat began right there, in between deep breaths and mind ramblings. I realized that just like the injury, this ride was the experience I was meant to have. The higher version of myself that I was getting in closer touch with had orchestrated it – not to scare me, but to show me how often I still allowed my mind to govern my life.  

Luis returned to the car with a smile that exuded pure joy. Where was mine?

Since Luis and I did not speak or understand enough of one another’s language to hold conversations, I was free to be entirely present with every moment of the magical ride through Costa Rica. Instead, I was allowing my fear-based mind to hijack my sense of wonder and delight.

The mind encouraged me to demand Lois stop driving like a maniac and lock the car if we stopped again. Instead of listening to the mind, or trying to silence it, I lovingly validated its feelings and gave it a project, to redirect its focus. 

“Let’s play a game, mind!” What if you absolutely had to write a positive review of Luis and this ride? What would you put in that?”

“Nada!” 

“C’mon, mind! You love games! And you’re so good at them. I’ll help you get started. What about the view right now?”

The mind stopped spinning long enough to take in the stunningly gorgeous countryside and begrudgingly began its list. “Luis pointed out monkeys and birds in the trees that I wouldn’t have seen. I mean, he should have had his eyes on the road, but…” 

“You can only share the positives in this game, mind. But great start!”

“He stopped at a fruit stand to get mangos, without me even having verbalized my craving. And I liked drinking coconut juice right out of the shell. That was super refreshing!”

“Awesome! What else?”

“He probably left the car running to keep the AC on.  It is, after all, in the upper 90s. And when he vanished at the rest stop, he was getting me snacks, including my first taste of deliciosa Costa Rican chocolate. Now he’s playing really good music and dancing while driving. He’s highly entertaining!”

As my mind focused on the “good,” Luis began to drive like a pro. We hit the bumpy part of the ride that anyone who has been to Nosara can likely feel in their memories while reading this. Other cars and shuttles looked like they were about to fall off the side of the road, but we traversed the bumps and craters with ease. Even the mind felt safe.

I arrived at The Bodhi Tree in one piece, and instead of complaining about the ride, took Luis’s info for a future one. Having won the game, the mind was all for that. But it wasted no time launching back into fear and finding something else to protest as getting to my cabin required 75 stairs.  

“I need a different room!” the mind insisted. This was pretty convincing. I’d already come to terms with the fact that I wasn’t going to make it up and down 108 steps to the shala several times a day for my actual retreat classes, but getting back and forth to my room wasn’t optional. 

In the past, I would have hobbled straight back down to the lobby to ask for the change. But the true self I was learning to think from more frequently replied. “This is the cabin we were assigned. Let’s at least give it one night.”

Needless to say, the mind was not thrilled. So, I gave it another game.

It liked a lot about the cabin, which was off to the side and very quiet. It had a private backyard, with a hammock. The sun was setting in the distance, which was reflecting beautifully through the trees.

“Are you willing to hold off on requesting a change until tomorrow?” I asked while witnessing the mind’s attitude metamorphosizing to a more positive one.

“Si, amiga. We’ll take those stairs one step at a time.”

Stay tuned for posts about the miraculous retreat and the adventures that followed!

Next post: Dr. Sue Morter’s Retreat (Part One) ~ LOVE WITHOUT TRAFFIC

Previous post: Costa Rican Redirect ~ LOVE WITHOUT TRAFFIC

Manifesting Miracles

I’m a huge believer in synchronicities, magic and miracles; in fact, I experience them all the time. But THIS was almost unbelievable, even for my life…

The plan went like this: complete pre-publishing prep at a high-vibe, low-distraction area with a blooming spring, and finally get Love Without Traffic (the novel) into the world. As has been the case each and every time I’ve tried a plan of that nature, it failed spectacularly. At least this time, the list of unexpected distractions did not include any future ex-husbands.

They did include a loud construction project next door that sent me running for the hills. Literally. I packed up my frustration, filled some empty Kumbucha bottles with water and went on what turned out to be a miraculous hiking adventure.

I did some EFT (tapping) while driving, a tool I’d recently reconnected with while guiding a coaching client to higher self-worth with it. Within minutes, I felt calmer and remembered how often construction, despite its violating noise, has often served as a great guide. It has led to necessary life changes, special friendships and even a magical experience or two. I decided this experience was going to be one of those.

First, I needed to surrender the idea of publishing Love Without Traffic on Mother’s Day. Honoring my mom that way had been a special idea; trying to make that day suck less with something to look forward to had not been. What I clearly needed to do was hike, Wild-style, let my heart experience the core of the grief I’d been trying to outrun since August, and find new ways to connect with my mom.

Cheryl Strayed (author of Wild) wasn’t kidding. Hiking may have started as a construction coping mech and escape, but those mountains and waterfalls taught and healed me so much. They also led straight to that new connection with my mom that I’d been craving.

I’d experienced some amazing signs since her passing…but nothing like the almost unbelievable ones that began when I surrendered my self-imposed publishing deadline that day!

I ended up on what I thought was the wrong trail until learning that very day there is no such thing. At an overlook, a woman approached and offered to take my photo. I wasn’t in a social mood so I offered to take hers and began to move on when she also declined. A few steps later, I felt as if a force was pushing me back.

Okay. I’ll receive that photo.

I learned that just like me, this woman had meant to hike Craggy Pinnacle and accidentally ended up where we stood. A few hours of hiking with my new friend and a long soul-nourishing conversation later, I decided to check out my original destination.

Shortly after I reached the summit, a mom and three teens began their descent, leaving me with a breathtaking panoramic view, two men and a whole lot of quiet.

After a few moments of that, one of their phones began to play a Carpenters song from the 70s. It only took me three notes, since I was a Name That Tune master back in the day. It took the guy whose phone it was a little longer.

“What the?…” the guy asked, staring at the device.

“Can you make that happen again?” I asked.

“Probably not,” he said with a laugh. “I don’t know how it happened the first time!”

“That’s not your ringtone?”

“I’ve never even heard it.”

I don’t like to make assumptions based on appearances, but this guy was not someone I expected to tear up when I told him my mom, who passed on in August, has been sending my sister and I song signs – primarily from the Carpenters.

Even though I’m a big believer in signs and magic, the logical part of my brain still sometimes searches for explanations – usually for other people, who may not be as open.

“Do you have a voice activation thing on there?” I asked. “Maybe you said the song title.”

That would have made since we were, indeed, on “Top Of The World.”

He and his friend looked at one another and laughed. Neither of them had said a word since arriving on the summit.

The song was still inexplicably on his music app, so he played it while I filmed, and then the three of us got into a conversation about our travels.

“Where are you heading next?” Chris, the owner of the Carpenters-possessed phone, asked.

“Pawleys Island,” I revealed.

“Stop!” he exclaimed, with a look of utter shock on his face.

Not only had he heard of it, which would have been surprising enough since I hadn’t until a few days prior, but he’d also vacationed there throughout childhood. It had been the favorite destination for his own mother, who had passed on a few years ago. The very last spot she’d enjoyed her last vacation.

He teared up again, and told me I’d made his day.

Although no stranger to magic, I was in awe of that experience, even before learning he and his friend had also ended up at the wrong trail that morning, and arrived at Craggy when they did as a result – just like me.

A few weeks later, I shared my Asheville adventure stories with friends at a Floridian beach, as a live band began to perform at a restaurant across the street.

A cloud shaped like a heart formed in the sky as I heard them play a very unlikely cover song for that scenario. Once again, I could name that song in three notes.

That exact same song!

Thank you, Mom. And thank you, construction, for once again sending me where I was meant to be! I will publish Love Without Traffic this summer. Follow the journey on Facebook or Instagram.

https://www.facebook.com/lovewithouttraffic

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