You Can Create Your Own Declaration of Independence

The Ides of March

Today my oldest child turns 29. She
lives out of town – has for the past11 years. I mourn the distance between us, and celebrate her birthday. It is the Ides of March, less than a week before the first day of Spring.

This day past was a windy day full of change, power outages that fortunately lasted only seconds, brief glints of sunshine, hail, snow, and many
moving clouds through alternating hues of gray and blue  . . . and it was a day of work.

Clients come and go on the hour throughout the day and evening, seeking
answers that bring insight and relief; and sharing their pain, hopes, dreams,
fears, and heart’s desires. I also
manage to fit in a “working walk” with a longtime friend and colleague about
how to inform physicians about the services I offer for self-healing,
development, empowerment and achievement.

What I Say to Support and Stimulate
Recovery, Release and Creation?

Those are all long words, I later think, that are probably significantly
overused. Clients have shining faces,
I’ve decided, and look up at me from a place of sudden clearing, open and drawn
within to deeper places of consideration and listening from which they discover
transformational insights that seem to magically fuel new processes of
self-creating.

What are we really capable of, I think, and, as I continue to intuitively ask, where is the energy available to be able to freely move forward? What can I say to support and stimulate
recovery, release, and creation?

Your Inalienable Rights

I fantasize about how we could all could create our own Declaration of
Independence to remind us that we are endowed with inalienable rights to:

  • Acknowledge ourselves and each other as equals, and know it is not only the truth, but enough
  • Grow up
  • Be cared for and about
  • Move past ourselves to consider another completely without expectation, condition, or agenda
  • Ditto thinking
  • Refuse to assume . . .anything
  • Be able to respond (response-able) in a fully recognized present
  • Know that love is quite nonspecific, after all

Our Magical Window to the Future

I think in many ways my four children taught me these truths again, and
again . . . and again . . .

As Kahlil Gibran says in The Prophet , children offer a magical
window to us of their future, a place we can’t occupy, to profoundly touch and
spiritually transform us – the vision I most love to work with in my Centering
practice.

And so I celebrate beyond what I know and can access, which is oddly comforting
to me, honor my daughter’s last twenty-something-year-to-begin, and catch some
corresponding rays of innocence, wisdom, and freedom.

When
we think, breathe, listen and imagine without condition, all possibilities
emerge.