Tag: glennon doyle

Pivotal Influences…

Pivotal Influences…

I often get asked for more information on a piece of wisdom I have referenced from someone’s work whenever I am teaching or coaching. As an avid consumer of personal growth content, I also appreciate vetted recommendations – who wants to waste energy on a book that doesn’t resonate with you?

To that end, I have decided to share some of my pivotal influences. This was a difficult list to prepare, as there have been many authors and teachers whose work I have grown from and enjoyed, but these are the inspired beings, whose brave work has both resonated with and formed me, and continues to heavily influence my work.

Here they are, in no particular order…

Dr. Christiane Northrup
Revolutionizing women’s health, I have learned so much about how to listen to what my body has to tell me, and how to communicate back.
Dr. Wayne W. Dyer
I have consumed a lot of WD material but my favorite book of his is I Can See Clearly Now
Jon & Missy Butcher
This is the couple who designed the 12 Aspect Living Model: Lifebook, that balances your life and guides your decision making
MindValley.com /Vishen Lakhiani
A Global School That Delivers Transformational Education For All Ages
Christine Kane
Christine helps people break through their fears and obstacles to truly connect with their own meaningful work and bring it into the world.
Ashley Stahl
Ashley Stahl is a career coach, empowering people around the world to discover keys to their own authentic selves in order to make the best career choices for them. Great podcasts, asking the exact questions you have in your head.
Craig Hamilton
In his own words, Craig is helping to articulate an authentic evolutionary spirituality — an “integral enlightenment” which illuminates the vital relationship between individual transformation and collective evolution. Recommended for those ready to take a bigger step into what meditation can do for your own growth and humanity as a whole.
Gabby Bernstein
Best Selling Author, International Speaker, and Spirit Junkie. Love her energy, authenticity, and courage to put her work out there in the most honest way possible.
Emily Fletcher
Emily Fletcher is the founder of Ziva, the creator of The Ziva Technique and regarded as the leading expert in meditation for high performance. 
Louise Hay
Through Louise’s healing techniques and positive philosophy, she empowers you with the knowledge of how to create wellness in your body, mind, and spirit. I especially love her index of how unchecked emotions translate into physical ailments, shedding light on what your body might be trying to tell you.
Brene Brown
Researcher/story-teller specializing in vulnerability and shame. She is also a fantastically resonating and super funny speaker. I love her honesty, her sense of humor and her humility. I usually listen to her content first, and then purchase her books as a reference for later, because I love the way she story-tells, but I also want a record of her wisdom to reference later.  She has a great new podcast perfectly timed for what the world needs in 2020, Unlocking Us.
Dr. Kim D’Eramo
Dr. Kim founded The American Institute of Mind Body Medicine to train other doctors and health practitioners how to activate the body’s ability to heal itself. I worked with Kim to transmute some energy I had been carrying for far too long and definitely was no longer serving me. It was a major “re-birthing” in my life. I continue to tune into her content and work to re-ground and find my way back to center.
Glennon Doyle
I was introduced to Glennon’s book, Love Warrior, through Brene Brown’s work. I listened to it on audiobook and was mesmerized by her style of writing, so honest, authentic, and true, complimented by her 20/20 hindsight into what was really happening in each pivotal moment of her memoir. I quickly moved on to her next book, Untamed, and was launched into a whole new level of permission to BE.  Inspiring work she is doing not just with her writing and her organization, Together Rising, but in the very example of how she lives her life. Her books tap on every self-doubt a woman has ever had, and shines a light on the path she took to grow through them, empowering all women to courageously name and grow through their own self-doubts.
Gary Chapman
This is the author of The 5 Love Languages, and it’s various spin offs. It is simplistic in its categorization of the 5 ways we show and receive love, but so powerful in its application. So many “a-ha moments” from this work both in understanding those you care about, and your own triggers.
Abraham – Hicks
Law of Attraction I’m going to list this channel of content as the original path I took into learning about the Law of Attraction but it has spread into many other sources since then. Law of Attraction refers to how your vibration and thoughts direct the energy coming back to you. There are many sources from which to learn the Universal Laws, but this knowledge became pivotal in the way I guided my own life as well as coaching others. Law of Attraction is an energy exchange: you attract more or less of what you want, by how you choose to interact with it, as well as what you believe about yourself.
In short, what you focus on expands. In Alicia Keys book, More Myself, she describes it this way: “If you live with an open palm, rather than a closed fist, you leave room for immeasurable blessings to flow through your hands.”
Donn Smith
I was first introduced to Donn’s work through my husband who had attended one of Donn’s retreats for work. His book was eye-opening for me in how a belief can be formed from a single life experience that can haunt you your whole life, below the surface without your conscious awareness. After the sudden death of his father, my husband’s siblings, spouses and mom all attended a weekend retreat together with Donn to work through it all. Donn’s work is transformative, pivotal, and astonishingly efficient – such profound change in short work, for those that are ready. In more recent years his work has even proven to reverse physical conditions and diseases, re-introducing people to the freedom to live their lives more in tune with themselves.
Anita Moorjani
I have read several books in the pursuit of reconciling religion with spirituality for myself, and while many have been helpful in moving me along, none have had the breakthrough effect that Anita Moorjani’s memoir had for me, Dying to be Me. Her account of her battle with cancer, near-death experience, visit to “the other side” and subsequent return to this life, is a powerfully persuasive reflection on just how much influence we have on ourselves and our well-being, also giving greater clarity to what our purpose is here on this earth. I also really enjoyed her follow-up book, What if This is Heaven, which provides rare insights  into how to reconcile alignment with our higher-self, with the day-to-day challenges we encounter that tempt us to forget why we are here.
Michael Singer
Another case where I listened to the audiobooks first, then bought the hard copies. I first read The Surrender Experiment, which is Singer’s memoir about his incredible life example of how to let go and surrender to the divine help that is being offered to you. Then I savored every word in The Untethered Soul, in which he outlines how to do the same in your own life.

If you have any life-changing, soul-growing content that you would also like to share with the 924 community, I whole-hardheartedly invite you include it in the comments section!

Teen Anxiety – why everyone else knows how to get it right

Teen Anxiety – why everyone else knows how to get it right

So, you know that loneliness you feel when you are with other people, but still feel alone and like you don’t belong? That feeling that few people dare to talk about for fear they might seem weak, and many people are quick to gloss over and respond with “ I shouldn’t feel that way cause others have it so much worse – what gives me the right to feel lonely when I’ve been blessed in so many ways?”   

Relax, exhale,  it’s alright, I’m not going to make you talk about it. I just need you to think about it for a few seconds so you can get into the appropriate perspective to keep reading.

At one particularly lonely moment in my life, I exasperatedly said out loud in my kitchen, with all my children present, “do you ever feel like you are living several different lives!?” It was really one of those moments where I meant to say it in my head but my mouth just didn’t get the memo, and thank goodness, because my children all responded with a huge exhale like they’d been holding their breath for days, and each with some form of “Gawd, all the time!”

I was shocked.  There was nothing leading up to that to indicate that any one of them had been struggling, yet all of them felt that way. That was an “aha” parenting moment for me.

It got me thinking that maybe the reason we are seeing record highs in teen anxiety is because no one has told them the truth about how hard it is to be your authentic self! They are living under an expectation that they should know who they are, and behave as themselves and if they don’t, there is something wrong with them.

 “Just be yourself!” they are told. “Right, if only I knew who that was!” they are thinking.

In actuality, most adults are wearing masks of their own, never truly showing their authentic selves, and never telling anyone, hence the misguided expectation!

Glennon Doyle, author of Untamed, talks about this when she went to her first AA meeting.  She explained how she felt like she was always doing life wrong, how it felt harder for her than other people and she just wanted to know what everyone else knows.  And then she sat down and stopped talking because there was nothing else to say, she just wanted to know. Someone came up to her afterward and said to her “Glennon, it’s not hard cause you are doing wrong, it’s hard because you’re finally doing it right. “

Numbing all those years with alcohol and drugs, and armoring up to protect herself from anything that could hurt her, was keeping everything out. Not just all the bad, but also all the good.

Brene Brown also talks about this in her book Daring Greatly. She explains how it takes courage to be vulnerable, in fact, there is no courage without vulnerability, and that being brave enough to allow ourselves to feel may lead us into pain, but is also the gateway to joy, peace, fulfillment and self-understanding. Makes me wonder how many opportunities I have missed because of the armor I was wearing each time I knew I just had to get it right.

One of the questions I often get asked, is “four kids! How did you do that?!” and the truth is, I didn’t do it well until #3. It wasn’t until my third baby that I began to really understand that there are several types of cries babies make:  hungry cry, tired cry, wet diaper cry, loud noise cry, just-needing-a-snuggle cry. With my first two babies (relying heavily on the trusted knowledge I had gleaned from baby books) I rushed to eliminate the options each time my baby cried (check diaper, try feeding, rock them a little, sing to them, etc.); I’m supposed to know how to soothe my baby if I’m a good Mom, right? By the third time around, I learned how to listen, and connect, and finally gained an understanding that my baby was communicating and if I was still enough to listen, I could discern exactly what he needed. But I had to get comfortable with listening to him cry.

Understanding our own types of pain and what that dashboard is pointing out to us is much the same. Brene says that learning how to feel pain is the pre-requisite for learning how to discern different types of pain. For example, recognizing the difference between “Becoming Pain” (the type we learn and grow from), versus “Self-Betrayal Pain” (the kind we berate ourselves for). We have to become intimate with our different types of pain to know what to sit in and learn from.  What would it take to be brave enough to take off our armor and sit with our pain to better understand it? And do we have the courage to take it one step further and model it for our children? If our children never see their trusted adults as anything but “strong” and “right”, what expectations are they forming about what is acceptable for them? What they learn is that showing pain is weakness, and it is not safe for them to not get it right.

As parents, what is our response to our children when they are in pain? Do we encourage them to tell us more and sit with them in their darkness with an empathetic ear, or do we rush to fix it because we can’t stand to see them suffer? How do they ever get comfortable with discerning what their pain is telling them, if we are always slapping Band-Aids on it? I can attest to several examples where I have jumped directly into fixing or solving the problem my kids have been brave enough to present to me, so that I can help them to feel better quickly.  In doing so, I have robbed them of the growth that naturally happens as they are “becoming”.  Certainly, much easier than having that awkward conversation about feelings that you don’t know how to solve for them, especially when you’re already exhausted from a full day and dealing with your own heavy emotions, right?

Shadow of parents feet under the bedroom door

Recently, my husband and I were watching Reese Witherspoon’s new series Little Fires Everywhere. In it she is struggling with her 14 year old daughter and after one of their conflicts, the mom stands outside the daughter’s closed bedroom door, wondering if she has it in her to go talk to her daughter about it. The daughter sees the shadow of her Mom’s feet outside her door, and then sees her mom’s feet walk away without coming in. The look on the daughter’s face is devastating. As much as she was pushing against her Mom hours earlier, she desperately needed her Mom to care enough to come in. I turned to my husband and said “and that is why you have the awkward conversation”.  He nodded in agreement and said “so true”.

It may not be comfortable, in fact, in many cases it is quite awkward, but the message that comes with it is that they have a parent who sees all of who they are, and loves them, not despite what they are experiencing, but wholly inclusive of it.