Tuesday, 13 March 2012

Transformation


The quest to discover and live our truth is the Hero's Journey, a sacred pilgrimage home to ourselves. It's the high road-and a rigorous one. We may try to camouflage our fear of the unknown with bravado, work holism, or apathy. There's another way:  

Step One: Give Yourself Permission to be Passionate

Our resistance is the Refusal of the Call. Change whispers in our ear, and we attempt a high-tech tune-out: call waiting, call forwarding, on hold, voicemail. We fight change because acceding to it feels like stepping off a cliff into an abyss. Out of touch with our vital, intuitive nature, we panic and crawl safely back into the shopping center mentality. We resign ourselves to buying the leopard skin pants because we're afraid to be the leopard. 

How do we answer this call to reclaim our connection to what's true for us? We start by giving ourselves permission to be passionate, to dream beyond our self-imposed boundaries. As we grant ourselves this grace, the still, small voice inside us grows stronger. 

Step Two: Say the First Farewell 

One "symptom" of transition is that the familiar starts to seem strange. You feel a need to distance yourself from the "ordinary world" of others. This leave-taking needn't be physical; it can occur symbolically. In the year before I left my corporate post to start my marketing communications business, I made a conscious decision to mentally "let my company go." I still completed the work to my usual high standards, and freed up enormous emotional energy I'd been pouring into job frustration, which I productively channeled into the launch of my business. 

Step Three: Enter the Void

Pry those mental fingers loose! Your willingness to be in free-fall, to release one trapeze bar before the next has swung into view, is an essential step in restoring your life: looking again at the story you've created about how the world is, and seeing how this filter distorts your view of beauty-your own beauty. 

The poet Rilke encourages us to "live awhile in the question." You're entering a corridor between the worlds; its okay to not know what happens next. As you allow yourself to feel safe inside the space between whom you've been and who you're becoming, the feeling of falling into an abyss will subside. 

Step Four: Enlarge the Lens 

Marcel Proust said, "The real voyage of discovery consists not in seeking new landscapes, but in having new eyes." Look with the eyes of wonder, like a child. When children encounter the unfamiliar, they s-l-o-w w-a-y d-o-w-n; allowing their senses to absorb new information. You can do this with personal transformation. Breathe deeply into the mystery. Ask yourself, how can I expand this experience? 

Keep a journal. If you're more kinesthetic than visual, dance your change process. What does it feel like as flowing movement? You might also paint or sculpt your journey, or make up songs describing your experiences. 

Step Five: Bless the Fear 

Fools rush in; the rest of us tremble. Fear is normal. It's even valuable, because it gives us something to push up against, which helps develop our spiritual muscles. This is positive resistance; Weight training for the mind. Fear itself is only a smoke screen: False Evidence Acting Real. You can defuse it with "affirmative action." Every day I look at my office and give it the thumbs-up sign.  A simple, powerful, YES for success! 

Step Six: Do The Work! 

In the Hero's Journey, this is the Initiation. Goethe said, "Whatever you can do, or dream you can, begin it/Boldness has genius, power, and magic in it." Once you commit to change, a confluence of forces moves to assist you. 

I draw inspiration from improvisational comedy. The core concepts are: Begin with what is. Don't manipulate the action, discover it. Never stop the action by saying "but" or "no"; instead say "yes, and" and add on to what's come before. In this way we build a story, a calling, a life. 


Step Seven: Take The Tests 

There's no hitching a ride to self-discovery (or a new career or relationship) on someone else's coattails! To own your power, you must be willing to scrape your psyche on the rocky road inland. It's the only way to discover and claim your unique gift. You'll encounter tests along the way, which can be innocuous or even pleasant, depending on our degree of resistance. 

I saw a woman wearing a T-shirt that brings this principle home: "If you want to live life on your own terms/you’ve got to be willing to crash and burn." Now that's answering the call! 

Step Eight: Humor Yourself 

We can lighten up our enlightenment. A healer once told me, "One day you will hear laughter and realize it's your own voice." It seemed a strange prophecy. Yet as I peeled away layers of false beliefs and crusty attitudes that kept me enslaved, I felt laughter spontaneously bubble up from some subterranean source, and I understood. This is who we are. Let yourself feel the joy, the light, the love inside your being. 

To encourage dormant humor, play with a young animal or a child. Make up nonsense words to popular songs and walk around singing them-in public. 

Step Nine: Be Grateful 

Gratitude and forgiveness are sisters. Be grateful for all the challenging people in your life-bosses, co-workers, children, and friends-because they're your greatest teachers. These relationships are difficult precisely because of your resistance to the teaching, which might be about compassion, self-worth, generosity, or unconditional love. We're always looking in the mirror. If we don't like what we see, we can blame the mirror, or look within. The latter is the path of personal mastery, and peace. 

Step Ten: Be the Change 

Heroes know that mastering change requires daily practice. I really enjoy the signs in public gardens that say, "Stay on the path." The key to integrating change in our lives is, have big dreams, take baby steps. Gandhi said, "Be the change you want to see in the world." It's a lifelong process of self-actualization. And it's our reason for being here. 

We are 100% responsible for ourselves!!