Friday, March 26, 2010

Is This It? Is This All?


I've only had two dreams that have NEVER changed in my 36 years. To be a wife and to be a mother.  Though I have had many other wishes, dreams and ambitions to come true, these two have yet to become a reality and have proven to be QUITE DIFFICULT to achieve.  Dating for me has been up and down.  There hasn't been any great romances that didn't involve sneaking around the "baby-mama" or wife. I have observed friends and family marry, divorce and marry again.  I have hosted innumerable baby showers. I have witnessed the most horrific women completely consume what I feel are decent men and yet, I stand alone.
I have read many books and articles on love and relationship.  I have talked to both men and women, of various ages about the subject.  Their advice, comments and opinions vary greatly.  So, I find myself feeling alone and completely depleted today.  Today, I just need it!

It has crossed my mind over that past few years that these dreams probably won't come true and that maybe they were never supposed to.  I think it may be time to finally make my peace with this.....I mean REALLY accept it.  The expectations that I hold continue to lead me to constant disappointment.  Don't get me wrong now, I don't have a monster list of haves and have-nots for a mate.  I just want that "feeling" and a good strong mutual respect in a relationship.  (SIGH!!!) I never imagined that it would never happen for me.  

So, Honey....What's next?  I am learning to let go of many things, but I think this is going to be the hardest. Look forward to more posts on this as I deal with these feelings.

Monday, March 8, 2010

Owning Failure

When you fail to get the desired results, what's the first thing you must do? Take credit for it. If you don't take credit, you don't learn the extremely valuable lesson for which you've just paid dearly. If you don't take credit and own your failures, you'll continue to experience more of them. Instead, go ahead and take complete credit and ownership of your failures. Because when you take full ownership of your failures, you fully empower yourself to successfully get beyond them. What you own, you control. When you choose to own your results, then you put yourself in control of those results. When you own your results, you can decide what those results will be. And they can be whatever you wish to make them.

Admit your failures, take credit for them, embrace them, and own them. When you willingly take responsibility and ownership even for the failures, you're positioned for magnificent success.


-- Ralph Marston

Read more:
http://greatday.com/motivate/090928.html#ixzz0haq36BK4


Saturday, March 6, 2010



"All the adversity I've had in my life, all my troubles and obstacles, have strengthened me...
You may not realize it when it happens, but a kick in the teeth may be the best thing in the world for you."     Walt Disney

Wednesday, March 3, 2010

ANGER: Fuel For Change!

Everyone knows that anger is a destructive emotion that causes all kinds of harm, to ourselves, to other people, and the world at large. Yet despite our knowledge that anger is unhealthy, and despite our best efforts to get over it, sometimes we get stuck in an angry rut, and we can't seem to let it go.

The good news here is that anger is a powerful energetic force, and it contains tremendous intelligence. Normally we think anger is just this terrible, immature emotion that we should never experience, that we should be beyond that. Yet if we can utilize the energy of anger, riding its energy rather than it riding us, the possibilities for positive change are huge.


  1. Exercise Your Anger
    Take your anger out for a workout. Use the powerful energy in the anger and go to the gym, get on your bike, or go for a run around the block, or whatever your exercise routine is. Channel all that energy into some kind of physical activity, burning it up, rather than letting it burn you up.

  2. Play Out Your Anger
    Channel your anger into a creative process. Get out the paints or the clay or the notebook, and start expressing your angry feelings into some kind of tangible, earth bound shape. This gets the anger out of your brain where it causes all kinds of problems, and into a healthy expression, where it can move and transform into something creative and useful. You might even get insights into the causes of the anger, and this may even help you to let it go.

  3. Use Your Anger to Change the Situation
    Rather than stewing in anger, examine it to find what’s causing you to be angry, and then change the cause or causes. One way to do this is to use a writing process. Begin by writing your experience down without editing it, just getting all the heavy aggressive stuff out on paper. Then ask yourself, Why am I angry at this situation? Reflect for as long as you need, and write out your response.

    Once you have some understanding of what’s causing your anger, you're now in a perfect position to do something about it. The next question is: What can I do in this situation to make positive change? The options will usually fall into three categories: change your response to the situation; change the situation; exit the situation. Think about what possibilities might work best for you and for the situation as a whole, and then take action.

  4. Change Me, for You
    Anger holds a strong conviction that we are "right". We feel so righteous when we're angry, but that righteousness goes to waste because we stifle it with the self absorption of anger. To flip it around, think of someone you've wronged in the past. Think back to a time when you were hurtful to another person. Then pick up the phone, get them on the line, and offer a sincere heart felt apology, regardless of how long ago it was. This may sound like a very weird idea, but chances are that the person at the other end of the line will appreciate your call and they’ll soften up to you, whether they remember the hurt or not. This will flip your self righteousness around to "other" righteousness, and will benefit you as well as the other person.

  5. Get Intimate With Your Anger
    The writing process in number 3 is one way to discover the message in your anger. Another method is to encounter your anger face to face. Look your anger directly straight in the eye and ask it, "What are you trying to tell me? What is it that you need me to see?"

    Anger is a wake up call. It's there yelling at us, "Something's not right here. LOOK!! This needs to CHANGE!" Fearlessly step into your anger, naked without any filter, and ask it to reveal its message to you. Normally we're so busy reacting to our anger that we don't actually pay attention to it. Flip the pattern of running from your anger, and face it head on so you can see where it's coming from.
Normally we think anger is just this terrible, immature emotion that we should never experience, that we should be beyond that. And it is and we should. Yet sometimes we get bogged down in dark states of mind, and sometimes we need strong medicine. And sometimes diving right into the energy of our anger to make use of its creative energy may be just the trip to the doctor we need.


Tuesday, March 2, 2010

DONE

I thought I could, but.....I can't.