Tuesday, January 30, 2024

Loving Remembrance of My Brother and His Legacy That Lives On


John was happiest and most at peace when sailing. Orchard Lake, 1966


Loving Remembrance of My Brother 
and His Legacy That Lives On

It was 46 years ago today on January 30th, 1978 that my twin brother ended his life. John and I were just short of our 27th birthdays. Over these many years of my own deeply healing and transformative journey, how it is that I carry this loss and remember my brother has changed and evolved.

* * * * *

John was no doubt a highly sensitive child. While I disassociated in the face of the trauma that permeated our childhood home, my brother was a sponge, absorbing everything. And while I survived by being "good," John was driven to fight back against that which sought to devour him. And we, therefore, fit perfectly into our mother's narcissistic compulsion to project her unaddressed trauma onto each of us, with me being the "perfect" child and my twin being the "bad" one. Of course, this worked except for when it didn't and when I strayed from the perfectionistic demands put upon me to set aside my own needs and emotions in order to solely reflect and meet hers. But John would have nothing of it and he met her rage with his own.

Being born into this family with its unaddressed intergenerational and cultural traumas cost my brother and myself dearly. As it also had both of our parents and their parents before them and on back through time. Those who are unable to recognize and meet the basic needs of their children — for bonding and attachment, safety and security, compassion and nurturance, listening and mirroring, creativity and play, laughter and joy, tenderness and love — do not just fall from the sky. Today I understand deeply how it is that hurt people hurt people... including our own children.

* * * * *

The last time that I saw my brother was in May of 1977. It was my first visit back to the home of my childhood after moving with my first husband from Michigan to Oregon in the summer of '75. It wasn't until after I arrived that my mother told me that John wasn't staying with her then, but had checked himself into another psychiatric ward, this time at Cottage Hospital in Grosse Pointe. This followed years of ineffective and harmful therapy, attempting suicide or being at risk of suicide, and many unsuccessful attempts again and again to heal his young lifetime of devastating pain and trauma.

Tragically, the "help" John received then were shock treatments and Valium and no safe environment or wise and heart-centered human being who truly understood his depression, addictions, shame and rage, ocean-deep grief, and the many faces of John's trauma. The suffering of my brother continued unabated.

And so here once again was my twin on this psychiatric ward. There is one thing that I remember clearly from that last visit with my brother.  And that is when John told me, "I know I need to get away from Mom. And I know I can't." I knew how toxic and dangerous our mother was. I knew the obsessive addiction with endlessly seeking her love. And I knew that it was killing John.

So I understood in those moments on the psychiatric ward that my brother was telling me goodbye. Despite all my desperate attempts to save him, I knew in my deepest self that I would never see my brother again. And I didn't. Just over eight months later John checked into a motel room with his vodka and valium and spent three days killing himself, writing increasingly incoherent poetry, calling the suicide hotline, and writing a suicide note so the motel staff would know who to contact in the wake of his death. My brother was found on that Monday morning shortly after he had died. 

* * * *

If Only

I love to be loved.
I need to be loved.
And I am angry when I am not loved.
If only I weren't angry
about not being loved,
maybe I could find the 
love that I need.

— John Strong
3/25/51-1/30/78

* * * * *

There is another side to all this tragedy and trauma. Yes, there were the happy times, the fun experiences we shared, the memories with my twin that I treasure. There was more than living in fear and shame and pain. And, that said, it is the trauma of unpredictability of when the next rage and terror would strike that left John and me huddled and suffering alone.

And that could be the legacy of my brother's life and death. But it is not. I could have gotten stuck in my own "if only's." Or I could continue what John began. And this is what I have done.

John had sought to heal his heart, to break through all the trauma and loss, to live a life where he loves and is loved. Tragically, what I know today about the therapists my brother saw and the treatments he received is that all of these resources only served to increase his trauma and addictions and the unbearable experience of loneliness and loss and shame that is at the core of being disconnected and starved for loved. And this was especially true for John as it related to our mother, who throughout our childhoods demonstrated that she was not capable of compassion or love.

Despite his efforts, my brother was not able to find the help he needed to root deeply into the generational shadow work that had gone neglected and denied and which had haunted and plagued our family for generations. John was unable to discover a path of heart, of tenderness, of grieving, of compassion and love that would support him in healing his broken heart and growing into the wholeness of being a fully embodied human being. And so it was that my brother remained fragmented, isolated and disconnected from loving relationships, and unable to recognize and cultivate the skills and wisdom of the alchemist.

* * * * *

The Guest House
This being human is a guest house.
Every morning a new arrival.
A joy, a depression, a meanness,
some momentary awareness comes
as an unexpected visitor.
Welcome and entertain them all!
Even if they’re a crowd of sorrows,
who violently sweep your house
empty of its furniture,
still, treat each guest honorably.
He may be clearing you out
for some new delight.
The dark thought, the shame, the malice,
meet them at the door laughing,
and invite them in.
Be grateful for whoever comes,
because each has been sent
as a guide from beyond.

 — Rumi

* * * * *

The legacy of my beloved brother that lives on in me is my fierce and passionate quest to pick up where John left off. I have stopped the endless running away from what has caused so much trauma and pain for so many generations. I've gotten clean and sober and sustained my sobriety. And I've moved towards the suffering and fear, the delusions and pain, and the many layers of trauma within myself and my ancestors. And, critically, I have found the wise and loving support which has empowered me to discover and root deeply into this path of heart.

Forty years ago when I was experiencing the early weeks and months and even years of opening and healing my heart, Rumi's "Guest House" would have made no sense to me. I was just overwhelmed with this journey of thawing out and coming back into my body and my heart. Feeling the enormity of grief, rage, shame, and fear that my brother and I had covered over with our many addictions was overwhelming. It is incredibly hard to be the first out of so many generations to stop, to find the wise and compassionate help and support needed, and to gradually embrace, integrate, and ultimately receive as a gift from beyond this sacred journey of awakening.

Without opening to both grief and gratitude, I would have stayed stuck in the if only's, the addictions and resentments, the bitterness and blame and shame, the mistrust and separation and isolation, and the trauma that had been passed on for so very long. And I never would have learned how to grow into the nurturing, loving mother within myself that little Molly had always so deeply hungered for.

Through this long and amazing journey of the heart and soul, I am living the life that my brother did not experience in his lifetime. And as I do, it is my belief that this healing, this deep and ever-growing compassion and connectedness and love that I am able to embody and experience today, ripples through, not just myself, but also my brother and our ancestors and the generations that have followed my twin and myself. This is an awakening that is boundless, that weaves its way through and beyond what I can comprehend and imagine. This is the sacred process where what is ultimately discovered is the love that will not die.

* * * * *

The Love That Will Not Die

Spiritual awakening is frequently described
as a journey to the top of a mountain.
We leave our attachments and our worldliness
behind and slowly make our way to the top.
At the peak we have transcended all pain.
The only problem with this metaphor is
that we leave all the others behind --
our drunken brother, our schizophrenic sister,
our tormented animals and friends.
Their suffering continues, unrelieved
by our personal escape.
                  
In the process of discovering our true nature,
the journey goes down, not up.
It’s as if the mountain pointed toward the      
center of the earth instead of reaching into the sky.
Instead of transcending the suffering of all creatures,
we move toward the turbulence and doubt.
We jump into it. We slide into it. We tiptoe into it.
We move toward it however we can.
We explore the reality and unpredictability
of insecurity and pain, and we try not to push it away.
If it takes years, if it takes lifetimes,
we will let it be as it is. At our own pace,
without speed or aggression,
we move down and down and down.
         
With us move millions of others,
our companions in awakening from fear.
At the bottom we discover water,
the healing water of compassion.
Right down there in the thick of things,
we discover the love that will not die.

 Pema Chödrön

* * * * *

And that is the legacy, the legacy of my beloved brother. That out of all this trauma and pain have emerged the extraordinary gifts of the alchemist that I have birthed within myself and the life I am so blessed with living today. Through being a loving parent and grandparent, through sharing life with my beloved husband, through my work of over 30 years with abused and neglected children and families and others, through all the ways that I have received and am now given the opportunity to give back — all of this and more has emerged out of trauma and loss.

How else are we to forgive, to shed bitterness and judgment, to free ourselves from so much fear and pain and trauma if we don't cultivate the awareness that we must, we truly must, seek the gifts that are buried in even our greatest losses? The path is not over or under or around. It is through.

Do any of us deserve to experience the trauma that life inevitably visits upon all of us? No, we do not. And I will never believe that it's just our karma or fate or some ordained divine punishment that plunges is into years, lifetimes, and generations of hell and trauma. Never. I've seen too much heartbreaking abuse and trauma of tiny vulnerable children, of whom my brother and I were once its victims.

The good news, the exquisite and hopeful takeaway from all of this is that often our hearts are much stronger than we imagine. Generational and cultural shadow work is hard. It is really hard, as many of you already know. There is no denying that. And it is harder to stay asleep, to remain estranged from ourselves and living our lives fragmented rather than whole. 

Breaking our hearts open strengthens our hearts and connects us with all of life. What an extraordinary gift it is to end the long estrangement. Our greatest strength truly does lie in the gentleness and tenderness of our hearts.

The deep trauma of losing my twin to suicide, my "wombmate" as John called us, has become the fertile ground upon which that which has caused so much pain and loss over so many lifetimes has come to die. And in its place has grown Love.

As I reflect on the life changing and wise and loving support that I have received over so many years, I bow with heartfelt gratitude to my many teachers and healers, authors and wisdom-keepers, friends and family, and God/Goddess/Spirit/Mystery. What an incredibly miraculous and sacred journey! My gratitude is limitless...

I also hold my brother so tightly now. And weep. And I say to John, we did it. We opened our hearts and souls to love. Thank you for being my angel. Thank you. I will always love you. 💗

Bless us all,
Molly

Monday, January 29, 2024

Henry Nouwen: Did I Offer Peace Today?

Photo by Molly

Did I Offer Peace Today?

Did I offer peace today? Did I bring a smile to 
someone's face? Did I say words of healing? 
Did I let go of my anger and resentment? 
Did I forgive? Did I love?' 
These are the real questions. 
I must trust that the little bit of love that 
I sow now will be many fruits, here in 
this world and the life to come.
 
― Henry Nouwen

Dorothy Day: The Final Word Is Love


The Final Word Is Love 

The greatest challenge of the day is: how to bring about a revolution of the heart, a revolution which has to start with each one of us?

People say, what is the sense of our small effort? They cannot see that we must lay one brick at a time, take one step at a time. A pebble cast into a pond causes ripples that spread in all directions. Each one of our thoughts, words and deeds is like that. No one has a right to sit down and feel hopeless. There is too much work to do.

What we would like to do is change the world ― make it a little simpler for people to feed, clothe, and shelter themselves as God intended them to do. And, by fighting for better conditions, by crying out unceasingly for the rights of the workers, the poor, of the destitute--the rights of the worthy and the unworthy poor, in other words--we can, to a certain extent, change the world; we can work for the oasis, the little cell of joy and peace in a harried world. We can throw our pebble in the pond and be confident that its ever widening circle will reach around the world. We repeat, there is nothing we can do but love, and, dear God, please enlarge our hearts to love each other, to love our neighbor, to love our enemy as our friend.

Love and ever more love is the only solution to every problem that comes up. If we love each other enough, we will bear with each other's faults and burdens. If we love enough, we are going to light that fire in the hearts of others. And it is love that will burn out the sins and hatreds that sadden us. It is love that will make us want to do great things for each other. No sacrifice and no suffering will then seem too much.

The final word is love.

― Dorothy Day

Sunday, January 28, 2024

Chelan Harkin: Luscious Darkness

Each morning after lighting our candle, and just 
before our meditation, my husband and I read
a poem from one of Chelan Harkin's books. 
This is the one we shared today.
💗
 Molly

Photo by Molly
 Luscious Darkness

"I've arrived!"
said the full moon.

"I've figured it out!
I'll stay whole this time.
I won't wane anymore
No more darkness!"

And hasn't your heart
thought the same thing
right before another plunge
into its necessary school
of shadows?

To insist on staying light
is unnatural
and without elegance.

Darling, embrace the rhythm
of descent
into your darkness.

— Chelan Harkin
From her latest book, Wild Grace


Marion Woodman: A Life Truly Lived

Photo by Molly

A Life Truly Lived

 A life truly lived constantly burns away 
veils of illusion, burns away what is 
no longer relevant, gradually reveals 
our essence, until, at last, we are strong 
enough to stand in our naked truth.
 
 Marion Woodman

James Hillman: The Final Years Have a Very Important Purpose

These are amazing times in which we live. The role for each of us who are growing into Elderhood is significant. My deep and ongoing prayer is that we are finding our path, our creativity and voice and imagination, our courageous Self and soulful purpose, our unique expression of how it is that we are here to make a positive difference in the world. No act is too small. Every act rooted in wisdom, kindness, and love matters. And our grandchildren and the children yet unborn, and the children of all of the species everywhere, are looking to us now to step into our place in the family of things and claim our part in doing what we can to leave the world a better place. Another world is truly possible. It is up to us. Then, when we are at the doorway passing from this world to the next we will be able to answer with a resounding Yes! to the question: "Did we love well? Were we kind? Did we become who we are?"

Bless us all,
Molly


The Final Years Have a Very
Important Purpose

Anytime you’re gonna grow, you’re gonna lose something. You’re losing what you’re hanging onto to keep safe. You’re losing habits that you’re comfortable with, you’re losing familiarity.


The easy path of aging is to become a thick-skinned, unbudging curmudgeon, a battle-ax. To grow soft and sweet is the harder way.

We can't change anything until we get some fresh ideas, until we begin to see things differently.

An individual's harmony with his or her 'own deep self' requires not merely a journey to the interior but a harmonizing with the environmental world.

It's important to ask yourself, How am I useful to others? What do people want from me? That may very well reveal what you are here for.

Aging is no accident. It is necessary to the human condition, intended by the soul. We become more characteristic of who we are simply by lasting into later years; the older we become, the more our true natures emerge. Thus the final years have a very important purpose: the fulfillment and confirmation of one’s character.

 James Hillman

Friday, January 26, 2024

Pema Chödrön: The Love That Will Not Die

Photo by Molly

The Love That Will Not Die

Spiritual awakening is frequently described
as a journey to the top of a mountain.
We leave our attachments and our worldliness
behind and slowly make our way to the top.
At the peak we have transcended all pain.
The only problem with this metaphor is
that we leave all the others behind --
our drunken brother, our schizophrenic sister,
our tormented animals and friends.
Their suffering continues, unrelieved
by our personal escape.
                  
In the process of discovering our true nature,
the journey goes down, not up.
It’s as if the mountain pointed toward the      
center of the earth instead of reaching into the sky.
Instead of transcending the suffering of all creatures,
we move toward the turbulence and doubt.
We jump into it. We slide into it. We tiptoe into it.
We move toward it however we can.
We explore the reality and unpredictability
of insecurity and pain, and we try not to push it away.
If it takes years, if it takes lifetimes,
we will let it be as it is. At our own pace,
without speed or aggression,
we move down and down and down.
         
With us move millions of others,
our companions in awakening from fear.
At the bottom we discover water,
the healing water of compassion.
Right down there in the thick of things,
we discover the love that will not die.

 Pema Chödrön


Arab, Muslim Leaders in Michigan Refuse to Meet Biden Campaign

The insanity is how Biden is being used as Netanyahu's puppet. Because, truly, who would the narcissistic, psychopathic, fascist Israeli leader prefer to be sitting in the White House? Of course his preference would be trump, who is a mirror image of himself and who would 100% continue to support the bloodbath and obliteration of the Palestinian people. Trump would be even easier to cajole and manipulate than Biden. And with each passing day that our current president is complicit with the Israeli genocide of Palestinians is one day closer to another even more horrifying trump presidency. No one can say that Biden isn't being warned over and over and over again that he MUST STOP funding and blatantly supporting mass murder. — Molly

Protesters in Detroit, Michigan hold flags and placards calling for a cease-fire in the Gaza Strip on October 28, 2023. (Photo by Matthew Hatcher/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images)
"I will not entertain conversations about elections while we watch a livestreamed genocide backed by our government," said Dearborn's mayor.

By JESSICA CORBETT

U.S. President Joe Biden narrowly won Michigan in 2020, but his reelection campaign's trip to the key swing state on Friday made clear that his support for Israel's war on the Gaza Strip is angering Arab American and Muslim voters.

Assad Turfe, a deputy Wayne County executive, was coordinating a Friday afternoon meeting with Biden's delegation, led by campaign manager Julie Chávez Rodríguez. He reached out to over 10 Arab and Muslim leaders in the Dearborn area.

"As the community got to learn about the meeting, there was definitely a lot of outrage and, ultimately, the decision was made to cancel the meeting," he told The Detroit News, adding that the cancellation was "in the best interest of the community."

Turfe also publicly warned the Democrat's campaign that "unless something drastic happens, you have lost the Arab American and Muslim community."

"At this point, from what I can see, there's no winning them over. That was the idea of the meeting," he said. "Until there's a cease-fire, the overall consensus in the community is they're not welcome here, essentially."

Dearborn is saying NO to #GenocideJoe\n\nCan\u2019t kill our people then ask for our vote. See you in November, @JoeBiden.

— (@)

Democratic Dearborn Mayor Abdullah Hammoud was among the local leaders who declined an invitation to the scrapped meeting.

"The lives of Palestinians are not measured in poll numbers. Their humanity demands action, not lip service. When elected officials view the atrocities in Gaza only as an electoral problem, they reduce our indescribable pain into a political calculation," Hammoud said on social media Friday, noting that Israel's U.S.-backed war has now killed over 26,000 Palestinians.

"Our immediate demand is crystal clear: The Biden administration must call for a permanent cease-fire to a genocide it is defending and funding with our tax dollars," he continued. "Dearborn residents have tirelessly protested and organized in demand of a cease-fire. As their mayor, I follow their lead."

Hammoud added that "community engagement is powerful when it is used to shape policies that save lives—these conversations must be had with policymakers, not campaign staff. I will not entertain conversations about elections while we watch a livestreamed genocide backed by our government."

The canceled meeting was set to be held on the same day that the International Court of Justice issued its initial ruling in the South African-led case accusing Israel of genocide in Gaza—to which the U.S. government responded by making clear it would not push Israel to end the devastating military assault.

Others who were invited to the meeting include state Reps. Alabas Farhat (D-3) and Abraham Aiyash (D-4), Michigan's House majority floor leader, who said on social media that "we will not allow our communities to be utilized for political expediency."

I highlight this for several reasons:\n\nMichigan has a significant Arab and Muslim community. \n\nMichigan is a critical state this November. \n\nI am the highest ranking Arab and Muslim state elected in Michigan, and the lack of outreach only suggests there isn\u2019t a legitimate concern\u2026

— (@)

Farhat said that he agreed with the decision to cancel the meeting.

"This pushback is not just about failed policy—it's about humanity," he explained. "It's unrealistic to expect that political conversations will re-secure our support for the president when only a cease-fire can truly reopen that door."

Citing an unnamed source familiar with Rodríguez's schedule, The Associated Pressreported that she still "held multiple meetings across Detroit and Dearborn that have been in the works for weeks, and that included talking with many Michigan leaders, such as local elected officials and leaders from the state's Arab and Palestinian American, Hispanic, and Black communities."

According to the AP:

"People in the community, like community leaders, don't want to meet with Mr. Biden," said Dawud Walid, the executive director of Michigan's chapter of the Council on American-Islamic Relations. "I don't know who he's planning on meeting with, but the major organizations are not interested in meeting with him."

Hundreds gathered Friday for an "Abandon Biden" rally movement at the Islamic Center of Detroit that included prominent civil rights activist Imam Omar Suleiman. The event was timed for when organizers heard Rodríguez would be visiting to urge otherwise sympathetic voters not to support Biden in November.

The frosty reception to the president's team came just two days after the United Auto Workers formally backed his reelection—after which Reuters reported that "a Biden campaign official said this endorsement will mean more in November in Michigan than the anger among Muslim voters in the state over the administration's support for Israel."

Turfe suggested Friday that the Biden administration is misreading voters and clearly does not "understand how big of a problem this is and how upset and angry the community is."

With recent wins in the GOP's Iowa caucuses and New Hampshire primary, former President Donald Trump is expected to face Biden in November, despite his ongoing legal trouble.

Biden is throwing away electoral support to back a right-wing Israeli government that would prefer Trump wins in 2024.

— (@)

In response to how the president's campaign handled Michigan on Friday, Nina Turner, a senior fellow at the Institute on Race, Power, and Political Economy, warned that "Biden is throwing away electoral support to back a right-wing Israeli government that would prefer Trump wins in 2024."

Please go here for the original article: https://www.commondreams.org/news/gaza-michigan

US Court Hears Case Alleging Biden Complicit in Israel's Genocide in Gaza

We all must stand together united in calling out and strongly opposing all who are complicit with the genocide of the Palestinian people. And that certainly includes Joe Biden and the American government and war machine. This madness and utter evil must be stopped! We need to know what is happening and care! — Molly

Protesters displayed the message, "Biden complicit in genocide" outside a courtroom in Oakland, California on January 26, 2024. (Photo: @ashoswai/Twitter)
"We are watching a genocide unfold in Gaza in real time and, despite the government's view that a U.S. court can do nothing about it, CCR and our clients argue that it certainly can and it absolutely must!" said one advocate.

By JULIA CONLEY

Calling for an emergency injunction to stop the Biden administration from aiding Israel in its bombardment of Gaza, which has so far killed more than 26,000 people and pushed roughly 2 million more to the point of starvation, human rights organizations and Palestinians in the U.S. on Friday took federal leader to court to stop U.S. "complicity in the Israeli government's unfolding genocide."

The U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California in Oakland held a hearing on the case, in which the Center for Constitutional Rights (CCR) is representing groups including Defense for Children International - Palestine (DCIP) and Al-Haq in suing President Joe Biden, Secretary of State Antony Blinken, and Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin.

The groups, joined by individual plaintiffs whose families in Gaza have been subjected to Israel's assault and decades of occupation, argue that the U.S. is violating domestic and international law and breaching the Genocide Convention, of which it is a a signatory.

The hearing was held hours after the International Court of Justice (ICJ) released its initial ruling in South Africa's case accusing Israel of genocide in Gaza. The ICJ found that Israel must "take all measures within its power" to prevent genocide.

Laila El-Haddad, one of the plaintiffs in the U.S. case, said the group entered the courtroom "proud and hopeful" on the heels of the ICJ ruling.

The CCR reported that the court's livestream was at capacity during the hearing, while outside the courtroom, supporters painted, "Biden complicit in genocide," and, "No bombs to Israel" on the street.

"A recording of the hearing will be made available by the court in due course," said CCR.

Dena Takruri of AJ+reported that in the "unprecedented" hearing, a doctor testifying remotely from Rafah, Gaza told the court that "cases of childbirth in the streets are widespread at this time."

Along with relentless air and ground attacks by Israeli forces, Gazans have for nearly four months faced a near-total blockade on Gaza, with aid deliveries severely curtailed by Israel. Roughly 90% of Gaza residents are now frequently going without any meals for at least a full day.

South Africa's case at the ICJ outlined numerous statements of genocidal intent by top Israeli officials.

Despite the mounting evidence of ethnic cleansing, the Biden administration has called South Africa's accusations "meritless" and has continued to arm Israel without congressional approval.

"Our community mobilized to put Biden in power after [former President Donald Trump," Basim Elkarra, executive director of the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) in the Sacramento Valley and another Palestinian American plaintiff, testified at the hearing. "It hurts. It hurts deeply."

The plaintiffs planned to hold a post-hearing press conference.

"The takeaway from today's court hearing," said CCR executive director Vince Warren, "is that we are watching a genocide unfold in Gaza in real time and, despite the government's view that a U.S. court can do nothing about it, CCR and our clients argue that it certainly can and it absolutely must!"

Please go here for the original article: https://www.commondreams.org/news/us-complicity-genocide

Chelan Harkin: Our Human Social, Relational, and Emotional Evolution

There are many things about Chelan Harkin that I appreciate, respect, and feel deep gratitude for. It isn't only her three amazing books of poetry, which I treasure. It is also her vulnerability, humanness, courage and fierce commitment to truth. I imagine a time where more and more of us can be inspired and feel safe and supported enough to own these deep truths and struggles and pain that have been so disassociated and layered in shame. As more and more of us open our hearts and honestly share, how freeing it is to know that we are not alone. How freeing to know that we are still loved. How incredibly freeing it is to come out of hiding and to root into this journey of shedding our shame and separation and shoulds and suffocating fear. And what a profound gift it is to open and undefend our hearts and come to increasingly embody the sacred wisdom, beauty, strength, connectedness, compassion and love that has always been there. As always, thank you Chelan. 🙏

May we be at peace.
May our hearts remain open.
May we know the beauty of our true nature.
May we be healed.
💗
— Molly

Photo by Molly

Healing and Wise Quotes From
Chelan Harkin

Human social, relational, emotional evolution has to do with one thing—the bringing forth of truth.

The only thing wrong with any of us is we have deeply absorbed the idea that it is threatening somehow to experience and express almost any authentic emotion to its fullness. Our misery, then, is that we are idealogically imprisoned in a fragmented and malnourished internalized law that our social survival demands we cut ourselves off from the flow of Life itself.

The line between enlightment and madness is narrow. Often both are simultaneously straddled. Madness could be said to be a pre-requisite to awakening. Certainly it must be recognized and contended with before one can experience anything beyond it. And what is madness but believing in and acting upon falsity? And who among us could be said to be free from that? To normalize madness is to make awakening more accessible. And often what looks most mad to those whose madness is both more powerfully driving them while more hidden, is someone beginning to take off the garb of the world. The process of molting facade isn’t elegant. But we must grow weary of the yield from our attachments to the world before we release ourselves from them. We must go through the harrowing heroism of allowing everything external to let us down. And often to get to this great point of release, our self image must be damaged beyond repair. True madness is protecting our pain upon which our self image is built with the maintenance of our favored external factors. The madness of awakening is tossing out the self-image protections and going headlong into the pain and the deep unknowns beneath it. The bud of the mad holds the secret blossom of the Buddha.

Each release, each offering up of the self to The Self is a sacred surrender, a death and a birth. We release old history from our bodies into the field of shimmering presence. To anchor ourself as we go through this passage where our hearts roar and dilate and the light of the new world crowns and more inspired divinity is brought in, we need the stabilization of the doula of empathy. We need beings around us who understand, support and honor the pain in the name of what’s beyond it.

People who love and support you are everywhere. This world is made of love and there are myriad hearts overflowing with it. The narrow tales that create confirmation bias from your past don't know this. But it's time to step out of those confines and experiment with a wider way. The tales of your past are not true. Go where your potential is watered. Life wants to nourish your growth and as soon as you say, "Yes," beings arrive with clear mirrors for your beauty.

A caterpillar eats itself to transform. It metabolizes its form to grow wings. We do the same. We metabolize our trauma. We metabolize the past in our bodies. We do this through meeting it, through feeling it. The metabolizing of our trauma directly feeds the emergence of our capacity. The wings we grow are colorful tapestries of truth, authentic love, radiant beauty. With them we paint the world.

There is no prayer more powerful than choice that moves you in the direction of what you love and most desire for yourself and that takes risks in the name of the fullness of your potential.

Please go here for Chelan's website: