Emotional Dichotomy

EQ Vs. IQ
Disturbingly, during an Emotional Intelligence (EQ) Leadership Workshop, I realised that I had been unknowingly deceiving myself. Much to my humiliation, I was struck by the confronting fact that I had falsely mistaken a high degree of self-awareness with EQ. Though self-awareness is one of the cornerstones of EQ it is but one component, and I aptly assessed myself as nearly devoid of the other capabilities; most notably, self regulation. Since that fateful workshop, where I committed to the extremely uncomfortable process of owning and sussing out both my conscious and subconscious (aka suppressed) emotions, my entire life has changed. It wouldn't do anyone any good for me to explain the process in detail because it wouldn't make sense. Hell it didn't even make sense to me at the time and it still doesn't! Emotions are rarely logical, and emotional work is profoundly personal. The adventure looks different for everyone. Suffice it to say it included a series of small shifts as I actively engaged with how I felt throughout the day, every day. Each shift taking place as I observed my emotions, learning to lay judgment at bay and interrupt my habit of suppression; dealing with them in their raw form and acknowledging they had a purpose. At best its a masochistic exercise 😅, but the end result is a liberation so joyful that it's impossible to regret. 💞🐇


For reasons I get into during many of my other articles, emotions have never been my strong suit. I grew up a torrent of worry, anxiety and panic. Even having the stomach ulcers to prove it! My emotions were little more than the contents of my being that I frequently projectile vomited onto anyone who would listen, and without consent from either party as I often horribly embarrassed myself by the things I said before I even realised they were out of my mouth. These emotions owned me, despite every attempt of my highly logical mind to control them. 🤮😳

And so began the inner struggle of the two voices, and what I now understand was the basis of my constant anxiety. One voice telling me to relax, see how shit plays out, urging me to consider how that person thought or felt before I reacted, or to simply focus on myself instead of ruminating on things I knew to be beyond my influence. 'Leave people and their situations to themselves' it said, 'what others think and feel is none of my business.' But I never listened... I physically couldn't, I saw no other way. I knew no other way.

TRUSTING that voice was impossible for me. Why? FEAR. Survival-based fear that led to an overwhelming compulsion to control. If I didn't control the situation by mulling over and analysing every possible outcome and how to manipulate it, then how could I be sure I'd get what I want/need?! There was no trust. Not in myself, not in others, not in the things that made our physical lives possible (like planes ✈), and damn sure not in the Universe.

That inner fight, the power struggle between what I felt and what I thought, coupled with an complete lack of trust and need for control, kept me bound to a vicious pattern that I repeated for over 30 years. It destroyed every type of relationship possible: familial, career, romantic and friendship. Over time I began to think of myself as toxic, unloveable; broken. My coping mechanism became adopting a gypsy lifestyle, never staying in one place or job for too long, never letting anyone too close. F&*#-ing BLEAK!

Of course, all of this completely eluded me at the time..... Oh, the gift of hindsight and confronting our own BULLSHIT. Welcome to the adventure! 👀😅🐇

For those who pathologically suppress emotions, it's difficult to realise when we're doing it.

Odd Ways In Which We Teach Ourselves...
At the beginning of my journey I read all types of personal development books and thought I finally saw the bigger emotional picture; understanding the relationship between thoughts, emotions and actions on both a spiritual and psychological basis. Things were going so well that I forgot about the two voices and the torment I had experienced throughout my life. It's astonishing how quickly those types of lessons fade once we've done the re-wiring, and how rapidly our daily mental routines can change... it's both blessing and curse. 😝💩

Until one day when I felt an odd sensation, as if there was something I had to do. An intuitive compulsion to make a phone call, the thought of which made my brain say "Hell no! I'm not doing that!" All day, that unrelenting sensation. I was nervous and sweaty, my heart pounded, I even felt sick. It was as though my body already knew what would happen. At 6pm, a time I knew to be ideal from nearly two years of living with this extremely regimented person, I picked up the phone and dialled the number I remembered despite more than a year of separation. I watched my fingers press the digits as though they belonged to someone else. Panicking a bit, I wondered what the shit I would say. But I knew, I had figured it out months ago, what I would say if I ever spoke to him again. He answered, saying hello and mentioning something about it being a nice surprise. I hesitated a bit then said "Hi! I finally learned how to flair my nostrils." Laughter, exactly what I expected. With one silly sentence I diffused a potentially difficult conversation, making it safe by addressing an intimate source of amusement we shared during our time together. All fear melted away and we had an easy, amiable and authentically pleasant conversation. The only thing I felt while talking to him was honest caring and interest in what he had been doing over the last year. I had no agenda, no interest in talking about what happened, why he had left me or the nearly paralysing pain I experienced afterward. In truth, I had called for reasons I didn't fully comprehend, yet it brought me peace of mind, emotions and Spirit. 🙏🐇💖


After hanging up I felt extremely proud of myself. How emotionally intelligent! I had held, and even enjoyed, a conversation that I never thought I'd be strong enough to execute without tears. I got on with my usual routine of cooking dinner, getting my running gear ready for the next morning and puttering around my room. My super analytical brain started doing what it loves to do, dismantling and rearranging the conversation... looking for hidden messages. Before I knew it I was experiencing NEW emotions, mainly anger as I constructed false realities about what was, and was not, said and meant. Whoa, wait, wasn't I fine just a moment ago? Peaceful? What the hell happened? Where were these new feelings coming from? 

Voices of ghosts. Phantoms that told me I was never good enough for him, reminding me that I was broken, that he never really loved me, that he is happier without me, and all the other hurtful things that he never actually said but I subconsciously believed. Ghosts born of trauma-driven self-victimisation, keeping me disempowered and feeding my limiting false beliefs. Those self-inflicted sentiments inspiring anger, anger I needed to defend my budding sense of self worth. Ironically however, the person I was defending myself against was me... the scariest reality of all

What a beautiful example of how I think myself into emotional pain. 🙏💔

A few days later, during one of my daily runs, the light bulb came on in a flash so bright that I was literally blinded (I shit you not, it was creepy). THAT PAUSE... Holy shit, that period of time between the actual conversation and when I starting thinking about the conversation! I finally understood the true origin of the two voices! The first one borne of my innate intuitive emotions... pure feeling, compassionate and wise. The latter, what I thought I should feel based on conditioned self destructive inner BULLSHIT, false belief phantoms so deeply ingrained I'd never BEFORE been cognisant of their true impact on my emotional state... until the light bulb went off 💡💥... until there was enough space between what was actually said and what 'I told myself was said (but wasn't)' that I could discern the difference... until I became aware.


Prior to the epiphany that resulted from that fateful phone call, these dichotomous emotions seemed to arrive at the same time. I would become horribly confused and tear myself apart trying to decide which was real. How could I have realised that subconscious thoughts and voices of ghosts from my past were tricking me into feeling and behaving in ways that didn't serve me, keeping me in that vicious disempowered cycle. Indeed, listening to such phantoms are extremely dangerous to our sense of Self, Worth and esteem, driving destructive behaviours and constraining our potential to thrive. Now, I've begun to insert that pause deliberately. Critical time which enables me to distinguish how I genuinely feel from how I think I should feel. 🐇

Practical steps to support shifting into a more emotionally intelligent mindset includes:
  1. Observe How We Feel: Pay attention to inner dialogue that uses 'I THINK I feel...' and/or 'I SHOULD feel...' These are clues that we're thinking our feelings instead of feeling our feelings (Whoa, I know 😳) and/or judging or justifying our feelings instead of allowing them to flow naturally in their own right.
  2. Remain Willing to Learn From Emotions: If we're pissed, be pissed! All emotions have a purpose, whether based in reality or lies we're telling ourselves. It's a great way to learn about our triggers and the conditioning that led to them. For example, my Father bought me Goosebumps books for doing the dishes when I was young, and to this day I love doing the dishes because something insides me thinks I deserve a treat for my efforts. 😂
  3. Learn How to Support Ourselves Through Emotional Discomfort: This is all about self regulation and managing our needs so our emotions aren't suppressed, then come spewing out at inopportune times. Like the countless times I've burst into tears in front of the wrong people, or told perfect strangers about traumas from my past.
  4. Realise that Feeling Emotion Does Not Mean Expressing Emotion: FFS, if we're not sure how we feel, let's all agree to keep our traps shut until we can practice Step 3 and self-govern. Perhaps if more Humans did this, we'd stop shitting on one another to make ourselves feel better.


Original Publication Date 01 March 2019, Revised 07 May 2023

20MRH: The Gift in the Garden of Gratitude



In this podcast I explore the identity of being 'a wife' and the kind of wife I aspire to be; then I morph into a rant about finding gratitude... even in the face of painful situations.

WARNING: It's gets personal

20MRH: My Day in the Sun


Talking Points:
  • My own think-feel-do cycle story
  • Dating someone who's 'just not that into me' and the associated emotions
  • Becoming aware of an underlying thought
  • What emotional healing actually looks and feels like
  • How social conditioning prompts infectious thoughts and how it impacts our emotions and behaviours
Related Article: Pause for the Cause, Costly Conditioning
Related Podcast: The Present of the Present

20MRH: The Tale of Twyla Tooth


Talking Points:
  • The trauma story and history of Twyla
  • Pop ups of self judgment in our stories
  • Confronting the new smile and emotions associated with losing my tooth
  • Contemplating my new identity as a toothless person
  • Relation to the think-feel-do cycle and the story I heard in my head
  • Finding the humour amongst the rabbit holes as a coping mechanism
  • The irony of discovering that the only thing that's wrong with me, is that I think there's something wrong with me
  • Awareness, it's a hard sell, and why 'they' say "ignorance is bliss"
  • The best I can do to move forward

20MRH: Days of Our Lives

Talking Points:
  • The benefit of sharing our pain stories with a trusted friend
  • Being hard on myself without being aware of it until I relate the story to another
  • Friendship at its best (and worst)
  • How our stories build meaningful relationships, both with friends as well as ourselves
Related Resources: The Gifts of Imperfection by Brene Brown


Change

Tomorrow, look not for the season of today.

Tomorrow, today's concerns fertilise new growth.

Tomorrow, hard-wiring softens.

Tomorrow, mindsets permissively shift.

Tomorrow, action replaces reaction.

Tomorrow, resisting innate evolution is of no interest.

Today, I gave gratitude to who I was because tomorrow I cease to exist.

Tomorrow, I am free.
 


20MRH: Creativity, The Highest Expression of the Brain

Talking Points
  • The 'artist' pitfall
  • What a friend told me about my own creativity that never occurred to me
  • My fascination with people watching; it's only upon reflection that I view all forms of human expression, both verbal and non verbal, as art
  • Aha! I create with words! My creativity with words and notorious lack of filter
  • In hindsight I realise that I've changed... I'm somehow wiser... Due to compassion and the courage to face my compulsion to talk, to be heard
  • So no, I can't colour between the lines, and I don't find Frieda Carlos paintings aesthetically pleasing, but I'm a creator all the same, and so is everyone else!

20MRH: Compassion, The Highest Expression of the Heart


















Talking Points
  • Compassion, our highest form of self expression.... But how can we express it when we're next-level pissed
  • F#$* 'just let it go'
  • The struggle; why I feel pissed and how I've tried to cope
  • The light bulbs goes off; my previously mislaid compassion
  • Remembering that I can't drink from an empty cup, finding the compassion within and repercussions of victim-blaming
  • Over compensation and the resulting 'f#$* you' for others
  • Non-verbal and heart-felt expression
  • Extending compassion to those who've hurt me and the nature of resentments
  • The impact of shadow-casting, and why people abuse power and control
  • The importance of healing the underlying thoughts, healing that victim to address mis-assigned blame
  • Compassion for ourselves and our shadows, is compassion for others
  • Compassion versus sympathy, a critical distinction
  • How think and feel cycles land us in shit situations

20MRH: The Present of The Present

Talking Points
  • Why I got into the here and now
  • Why should we stay present?
  • What does being present mean, and how does it enable wise decisions?
  • Dwelling on 'what ifs' and worry
  • The evolutionary reason for worry
  • Staying in the past and a bit about depression
  • The benefits of staying present
  • Practical ways to stay present
Relevant Articles: Pause for the Cause
Referenced Material: The Power of Now by Eckhart Tolle


20MRH: Emotional Roulette and Ways of Coping


Talking Points
- A cautionary tale of re-listening to my stories
- Talking as a way of coping with difficult emotions
- The importance of getting to know myself and how I process/cope with my emotions
- How a lack of groundedness and/or suppressed emotions alter my stories and talking behaviours
- Signs I’d not healed or processed my emotions, and knowing what I need to let go

NOTE: I spelled Chakras wrong, hahahaha

Relevant Blog Articles: One Fool's Emotional AdventurePause for the CauseThe Snake Pit
Related Podcast: Universal Lesson in Letting Go, Present of the Present, Days of Our Lives
Related Resources: Practical Yoga Psychology by Dr. Rishi Vivekananda

20MRH: How Am I Not Myself?!


Part 1
- Hearing myself say 'there has to be a reason.....' And the rabbit hole that opened
- Our obsession with 'reasons' to sate our logical brain
- What happens next when I heard 'Why? Why does there have to be a reason?'
- Learning from Internal Dialogue
- I want to be myself, but who the f#$* is that?! Why do we need to be reminded to be ourselves, or try to be ourselves?
- Deeper exploration of who I was, who I am and who I will be be.....Deeper down the rabbit hole
- Anger and defensiveness is a great awareness teacher!

Part 2
- The danger for the need of reason: The Blame Game
- Ego, the ultimate scapegoat
- How I divided myself so I could shame and blame pieces of me; not the WHOLE me
WARNING: I drop the C-word
- "I am not the teapot"
- We are the same energy, our connectedness to everything; the big 'E'
- Why we fear being whole and healed

Growing Pains

As I ran up a particularly nasty hill this morning I thought 'oh boy, this may cause some soreness tomorrow,' and was fairly surprised to hear 'that's ok, that's kind of the point!' from my body in return.  Yes.... that's right.... pain indicating that I'm getting stronger .... growing pains. Such a seemingly insignificant phrase was enough to fling me down a pretty deep rabbit hole. 🐇🐇🐇

Suddenly I was about 7 years old awkwardly climbing out of my mom's car complaining about not being able to breathe. There was a sharp pain in my diaphragm every time I tried to take a breath. Such a vivid memory, we were at a state park in Alexandria Bay for a hot air balloon festival, I even got to take a wee ride in one! I remember many others times when this mysterious pain would randomly appear throughout my childhood. It was always the same, a razor sharp shooting pain if I tried to take a full breath. Instead I'd have to take very small inhales until it ceased as mysteriously as it had begun. My mother told me that night that they were growing pains, likely due to my extra rib floating around and poking me, which completely freaked me out. I became terrified that this stray rib would some day pop one of my lungs and end my young life. I've always been extremely proficient at worrying about shit I can't control.

So yes, physically, growing pains make complete sense, though despite earning a Masters of Science in Developmental Biology I'm still unable to validate my mother's 'extra rib' hypothesis. Regardless, we can certainly experience these bittersweet growing pains after a great workout. Who the hell goes to the gym with the goal of avoiding soreness or the satisfying feeling of exertion? During my personal training career I asked my clients to rate every session on a scale from 1 to 5 (5 being the best) and was continually astounded to find the more they complained about the pain and how gruelling the workout was, the more likely there were to give it a fully enthusiastic 5; all while cursing me with an ear-to-ear smile on their sweaty faces. I even had one client ask to adjust their previous sessions' score, wanting to raise it to a 5 from a 3 because it had caused them significant pain for 2 days! It sounds like masochism, but gym buffs and buff-ettes know very well that soreness after a session indicates we've sufficiently challenged our muscles to cause tearing, repair and growth as a result of the effort. The pain, by extension, evolves into sensations of both power and achievement.


So what of personal development and growing pains? That's right, holy shit is it painful! But this pain is a catalyst, a powerful stimulus for deep and meaningful change within our mental, emotional and spiritual psyches.

Challenging our conditioned and habitual thoughts, emotions and behaviours to grow into wiser people, taking deliberate control of our lives through conscious awareness, owning and loving the not-so-flash attributes of ourselves to remain authentic to our fundamental and heart-felt intentions is uncomfortable at best. 🙏💖🐇

I catch myself saying it a lot in my podcasts.... nothing I talk about sounds like a walk in the park or fun, but I always assert that it's well worth the effort. Why? Because I'm a completely different person,  but f#$* if there weren't some serious pains in my ass along the way! A lot of people insist that others can not change. I insist that is utter BULLSHIT!. It's extremely uncommon because it takes courage on a level that is inconceivable to most, but it is very possible. I've demolished my sense of Self and rebuilt it multiple times, sometimes intentionally and sometimes not-so-much 😅. I've experienced complete mental and emotional breakdowns, and somehow, each time I bounce back stronger and wiser for having had the adventure. Hell, sometimes it's simply worth realising the hilarity of the situation once I'm through it and can enjoy a hearty laugh at myself. Particularly note-worthy are the tales of my first ever panic attack, addiction to caffeine in Uni, and brush with various psychologists; indeed, these are the most popular articles from my previous blog.

For me, the most important consideration is the 'chicken and egg' nature of the personal growth and pain relationship. Figuring out which came first is not always easy. Sometimes we grow from a painful situation the Universe confronts us with, and sometimes we make a painful decision that leads us to grow (though it may take years!). A partner leaves us, we realise we need to leave our cushy high-paying career to practice authenticity even if we're broke as a result, a tornado rips through our home stripping away everything we've built, we need to pull the plug on a loved one.... In any instance, learning with a grateful heart is our best hope to pull through as a thriver instead of remaining in a victim mindset. Seeing them as opportunities to know ourselves better, modify our coping mechanisms and expand our resilience through a greater sense of inner strength and capability. We all do the best we can with what we have, we're Good People; practicing compassion in the face of pain based on that modest fact is enough to grow into a more whole, balanced and secure being.

Four years later.... Nearly to the very day!

As I foreshadowed in the conclusion above, while physical pain leading to growth is rather obvious this is most poignant in light of the type of gut-wrenching pain that leads to increased self-awareness and growth of our psyches. The very type of pain most humans endure years of discomfort to avoid, ironically. Now after another of my own humbling life events, I reflect and observe the true evolution of myself mentally, emotionally, physically and spiritually. There is a subtle difference this time however, this pain was not born of my typical cycle of self-sabotage, but rather a risk taken in full awareness. How else am I to practice what I preach? 😅🐇


I now understand that growth is a mindset, an ethos, one in which those courageous enough lean-in to whatever the situation is, cognisant of the risks and willing to take them; not out of some sick form of self-punishment but rather from knowing that we're strong enough to handle the worst should it happen. 

And so here I am... I feel neither shame nor regret, only Gratitude. Gratitude on so many levels... for the adventures and love we shared, for experiencing challenges and growth together, for the ability to offer a smile with tears in my eyes and hurt in my heart, for the integrity it takes to walk away with nothing but my fundamental beliefs in honesty and trust, and for the emotional highs and lows that serve to deepen my healing pilgrimage and realising I'm finally able to float where I once fought and floundered.

If nothing else it's worth observing my inner fortitude with renewed respect and admiration. Extreme bravery is required to be fully vulnerable in life; it's the thrill, the fear, of a trust fall into the Universe... into myself.  This is the ultimate Marshmallow Test, a willingness to experience pain for a greater purpose even though there are no guarantees, just TRUST. Without such stimuli, as painful as they may seem, it can be difficult to see the profound shifts we've achieved, the new mentalities and more mature emotions that now govern our actions. I no longer fear the grief of heartbreak as though it were Death itself, I embrace it... beacuse even as it breaks me, I can feel that pain create space for something new to grow... something stronger. 🍃💖🐇


Original Publication Date 02 February 2019, Revised 05 February 2023

The Spectrum

I've already touched upon the enigmatic expanse of confidence, yet feel something remains amiss. I hadn’t yet sussed out what constitutes true, authentic, confidence. How do we know when it’s real, either within ourselves or others? Humans are both competent in and capable of appearing confident when we actually feel almost debilitatingly insecure. Call it ‘fake it until you make it,’ or 'doing the duck;' each carries an element of chaos hidden underneath what would otherwise seem a smooth forward trajectory to others.  Conversely, we can remain entirely blind to these underlying insecurities and subconsciously overcompensate by blowing straight past confidence to conceit. Somewhere between the two extremes we achieve a notion of ‘I've got this’ with no other residual emotional undertones whispering in the depths of our psyche, the sweet spot of security. So how do we know when we've hit this fulcrum upon which we can BALANCE and maintain a healthy sense of Self? 🐇😵🐇


Luckily, a friend who shares my enthusiasm for esoteric gymnastics helped me locate the missing piece of this puzzle. A culmination of what I attempted to describe as dichotomous emotions along with leveling-up in the worth department. These concepts lay on a SPECTRUM 🌈. What we think versus how we feel constitutes the axis of this spectrum, and our inner dialogue allows those two intelligence centres to communicate (or argue, depending on where we are in our adventures 😅). Conflict does unfortunately reign however, as the western world socially conditions us to rely heavily on our logical brains, leaving intuitive feelings for post-modern hippies and batty new-age spiritualists 🙋. This often leaves us confused and frustrated, THINKING our feelings rather than actually FEELING our feelings; receiving the 'communication' as a tried and true heartfelt sense, instead of a thought solely from the Brain (a subtle difference that eludes us until we experience it first-hand). 🐇🤯🐇

Here's my hypothesis after nearly 14 years of polking both head and heart with the double-edged sword of awareness... The interaction between these two sources of information, Head IQ Vs. Heart EQ, establishes a critical relationship within ourselves. For myself, I've discovered that this is the most essential and meaningful relationship I will ever be in, yet I was dangerously unaware of how past traumas had obliterated this precious partnership. My brain grew accustomed to bullying and asserting its control over the calm and quiet pleads from my heart, smothering that intuitive voice, willfully deaf to its input. A rather f&*#-ing BLEAK end of the spectrum to be on! Still, I know others who predominantly ‘follow their heart’ and wind up in the shit for making blatantly illogical/impractical decisions, all in the pursuit of the warm fuzzies, perpetual happiness, or love/attention/approval from others. Worse yet what of those people, dare I say 'The Donald' who seem blissfully unaware of any shortcomings they may have, going through life blaming others for any misfortune they might meet or believing they're legitimately better than them and thus deserve a bigger slice of the pie. Yikes 😳. I'd strongly argue that their inner relationship and heart/brain communication circuits is just as dysfunctional as mine were before undertaking the mammoth effort of healing. 🐇🙏💖


Balancing on this spectrum requires us to REFLECT, become aware and get f**#$ing honest about what we think and how we feel; owning both our strengths and opportunities to develop further, and accepting the current version of ourselves with integrity without regret. Allowing Brain and Heart to listen  to each other, reconcile any points of contention, hopefully resulting in more balanced decisions and growth spurts in our sense of 'wholeness' and wisdom.



And since this is the Rabbit Hole, here’s another caveat to consider: I find that emotions which arise from my hearts' intuitive vibes tend to be more stable and consistent throughout time, that fundamental “I know who I am, what I like, and what pisses me off”... no matter how many times I try to convince myself otherwise to suit the current situation and/or relationship. Alternatively, slippery emotions that arise from thoughts are much more turbulent and transient. These thought-based emotions were almost exclusively instigated by social conditioning and past experiences, which at times make them inherently flawed false beliefs. My hyper-analytical brain tends to operate at squalling extremes, whereas my heart takes a more patience and steady approach. For example, my heart would never feel that putting my hand in a boiling pot is a good idea but my brain might if it thinks I need the $100 simmering at the bottom. 

Our intuition lets us know when something is good (🦋) or bad (💩), and these sensations persist over time; they stay with us for a while. How do I know?... because the phrase 'I should have listened to my gut' is so f*%#ing common! By comparison, the rapidity of analysis, complex interpretation of 'go'/'no go' inputs, has our brains' undergoing emotional whiplash as we transition from loving to hating something, and back again, in a matter of mere seconds. And hey, this is just a 'brainy' concept formed at this specific stage of my evolution, so maybe it'll change... but it feels right. 😂😉🐇


I happened upon this hypothesis honestly as I began to sort through my inner bullshit; sorry, 'opportunites' (it's all about perspective after-all 😝💖😇). The scars left by my aforementioned trauma had these two voices in ceaseless conflict; severe and diagnosible anxiety ensued. My heart yearning to love and trust, my brain opting for rationality and risk-aversion. Allowing my brain to prevail seemed the safer option, in a misled yet well-intentioned attempt to protect my heart from further suffering. Ironically the panic I experienced swinging wildly between IQ and EQ, racing along the axes of the spectrum at a pace even The Flash would envy, literally had my heart beating to bursting point. I’d then beat myself up with a ten tonne naughty stick for making such a righteous mess of everything and failing to be more compassionate. IRONY. Buying into the toxic lie that I deserved the torment because I was imperfect, broken. Intuitively however, I knew all I had to do was sit back and watch things unfold, get out of my own way. Without a belief of the bigger picture, something that knew more than my tiny human ego, what I came to treasure as an avid faith in the Universe, my intuition scarred the shit out of my brain because it was foundless and risky. If I'm honest, it still does. The difference is that I'm now conscious of this spectrum, of the two voices and why they might get it a pissing match from time to time. This allows me to deliberately balance and remain within the Sweet Spot... Plus or minus the odd-tainty. 😂😖😎 

I reckon if having a healthy inner relationship was easy, there would be a lot less assholes and pain in this world.  This is why I strongly feel that the gateway to the sweet spot, to balance, is trust. Trust in ourselves to take care of situations that directly involve us, and trust in the Universe to sort out everything else that’s outside of our scope of our influence.

The result of this integrated TRUST is security. 🔐🙏💖

Original Publication Date 02 February 2019, Revised 25 June 2023