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When It Rains It Pours: How to Manage the Eye of the Storm
It is as if my life were magically run by two electric currents: joyous positive and despairing negative - whichever is running at the moment dominates my life, floods it.
-Sylvia Plath
Saturday morning I woke up to…a lot of rain, as I did more days than not in the last week.
If you live in the Nashville area, chances are you’re a little water-logged too.
I’m all for a couple of cozy, rainy days. In fact, those melancholic, if not romantic, parts of me love a good excuse to hole up, drink loads of coffee, and read and write to my heart's content.
Aaaand after a non-stop week of it, I’m officially done. No mas. Vitamin D por favor.
My house has tons of big windows. This past Saturday morning, I got lost just staring out at bucket after bucket of rain, dumping against a foggy, silver day. It reminded me of the big 2010 flood.
I remember so clearly how helpless I felt during that flood. People were losing everything: their houses, cars, and sentimental belongings, while I just sat hearing about it all on the news.
Do you ever feel so helpless amidst the flood of your own emotions? Do the water levels of your own powerlessness feel so high, you just want to hide behind the covers and completely opt out?
I have felt this way more times than I can count. The waves of depression and anxiety were so crushing, every exit door to safety I knew of in my head seemed entirely too far away. My ability to cope was non-existent and I clung to the few safe people around me because I knew I didn’t have the where-with-all to weather the storm alone.
Let’s face it; there are those times in life that the pain of circumstance is more than we can bear. We can’t self-help or positive-self talk our way out of it. The gravitational pull of that pain is the only thing that seems true.
In light of this, I want to share with you three pillars of truth that have kept me afloat.
1) Reach out
This may seem ridiculously simple, yet I’m convinced most of us don’t do simple very well. We love to over-complicate things. My tendency in the eye of an emotional storm is to isolate. I don’t want anyone seeing me weak, ugly crying, or God forbid, without a plan. So, I retreat.
What I’ve wised up to throughout the years is that any act of courage REQUIRES vulnerability and this vulnerability takes bags of strength. What used to seem weak about this now seems powerful and expansive. To reach out when you’re all out of answers and the inner critic rages inside is one hell of an act of courage.
Who are your people? Have two or three people you trust and start this buoyant conversation with them now or when you’re not in crisis. Let them know that you consider them as safe and want to be able to reach out when you’re in need and vice-versa. Pre-empting this brand of connection and conversation is everything.
2) Life’s work
Reb, a brilliant therapist friend of mine, likes to say, “Don’t feel ashamed if you keep stumbling over the same problems. Consider yourself lucky! You’ve found your life’s work. Many people spend their life wandering around never quite sure what it is they should be doing.”
What is the emotion that tends to feel the most overwhelming? What is the lie that feels so heavy and relentless, you can’t seem to catch a break?
Is it depression? Anxiety or worry? Insecurity and self-doubt? Good news, this is the life’s work you must show up to do on a daily basis. What is it trying to tell you? My depression would always say, “You simply don’t have what it takes. You’ll never get there.”
Now I like to say back, “Where? I’m right where I need to be.” It’s taken me quite some time to build these muscles, and they still get sore from time to time, but I know this is part of my life’s work and the emotional fitness I must pursue.
Listen to voices amidst the unruly storms. They will be the roadmap for the internal healing journey that needs to take place.
3) This too
Finally, know this: no emotion is final. Just as storm clouds pass and the sun eventually makes her long-anticipated appearance, those feelings of hopelessness and powerless will too.
When words aren’t enough, and it seems absolutely nothing brings relief, take heart. It will inevitably pass. Sometimes the only thing we can do is watch the storm unfold, observe its strength, and touch its darkness. Don’t make up stories, or fake news about your emotions. Tip your hat and let them pass. I promise, they will.
You’ve been brought too far to simply be left here. Love is far too clever for that, my Dear…
Love & Gratitude,
Katie
xoxo
What is Love? …The Cynic’s Guide to Valentine’s Day
“It’s not easy to define poetry.”
-Bob Dylan
Tomorrow is Valentine’s Day, just in case you need a reminder. Just in case you missed the red heart chocolate explosion that took place in the Kroger nearest you the minute dusty old Santa got swept off the shelves around the first of January… here you go.
You’re welcome.
If you hear a tinge of cynicism in my tone, bravo, it’s there.
Okay, I’m not hating on this sugar-laced, if not well-meaning, holiday to be clear. I am very pro-love, don’t get me wrong. However, for some strange reason, I’ve never been a huge fan of Valentine’s Day.
Perhaps it was those forced little gooey cards we wrote every single classmate back in kindergarten (even the ones who weren’t very sweet) that put a bad taste in my mouth. Or perhaps it always seemed too obvious and Hallmark-y for what my snobbish heart deemed necessary?
After all, as an enneagram four (the romantic), the world will be saved through truth and beauty, right? Hell if I’m going to let a heart-shaped box of waxy chocolates and a trite card oozing with aspartame-flavored words do the trick.
Okay, okay…that may be a bit harsh. However, don’t you think we miss a bigger opportunity to understand the deeper context or nuance of love when we focus so much on the romantic object of relationship?
I’ll qualify this post by saying I’ve always felt this way. It is not contingent on times of singleness or being in healthy, committed relationships.
As someone who is (gratefully) happily married today, I still cringe just a little on V-day.
But I don’t want to.
I want to carry a bright light into this heart celebration because I’ve made it about something so beautiful and true that doesn’t isolate anyone based on relationship status or an unrealistic expectation of romance.
That being said, whatever your “status” this Valentine’s day, here are three helpful reminders to help silence that jaded inner cynic and feel the love.
The Heart is a Muscle
A good friend recently introduced me to the band Gang of Youths, and specifically, a song of theirs called "The Heart is a Muscle”. They/It’s brilliant. You should give it a listen. Ever since hearing this song, I’ve not been able to shake this idea of our heart as this powerful force we must tend to and strengthen.
Just like our arm, leg, back, and ab muscles atrophy if we don’t intentionally build them through exercise, our heart becomes weak and cold if we don’t engage her. This doesn’t wait for another person either. Unfortunately, I can’t enlist someone else to work out for me. Results would be impossible.
Exercise isn’t always fun, either. In fact, it is very much a discipline before it becomes a desire.
How will you tend to, and ultimately strengthen this beautiful heart of yours? Through openness to change? Through putting yourself out there more, even if it feels uncomfortable and strained? Or perhaps, it is simply by spending some time listening to what she has to say through journaling, painting, or writing a song.
Lean into The Longing
So often, we react to unmet desire by shutting it down, denying its presence, and/or a feeling shame or unworthiness. This type of all-or-nothing behavior ultimately will backfire on us because the body and mind will always seek relief where there is imbalance and disconnection. This becomes a problem when we seek relief in places that may seem like a temporary fix, yet ultimately create impairment. (Think: workaholism-or any type of “holism”, isolation, and depression, among so many others.)
As it relates to our own expectations for love and happiness, we must learn how to exist more in the grey “both-and” as opposed to the “either-or”. When I can recognize a longing for relationship and community as a beautiful thing and not a curse, whether or not it has been met, I am honoring that heart space. I’m essentially saying: “I feel the purity and gravity of my longing and realize my situation could turn on a dime at any point.”
Doesn’t this feel more expansive and hopeful? Yet at the same time, it’s steeped in the reality and possibility of “both-and.”
Learning how to creatively lean into the inevitable tensions of life restores balance and raises our energetic vibration so as to attract a more positive flow of emotion.
Let Go of Entitlement
One of the most freeing times in my adult life was when I let go of the romantic comedy (read: emotional porn) that had been reeling in my head for a very long time. I was 34 and felt further from anything remotely resembling a loving, committed relationship than ever before. It was bleak and scary as hell, yet I knew I had to divorce myself from this entitlement contract I’d subconsciously signed with life.
I swallowed the biggest horse pill of my life. You know the one— it promises we are guaranteed each and every whim we can mentally cook up? Yeah, entitlement…that one…
I embraced this idea that there really were no guarantees in love and relationship because love is a choice we all have the freedom to make. Honestly, there are very few guarantees in life at all. When we believe we’re entitled to our stories of happily ever after, we miss out on the reward that is reality.
A whole world opens up when we let go of expectations that keep us chained and dependent on circumstantial happiness. All of the sudden, we’ve been handed the keys to personal responsibility and power, and this, in turn, takes us to places we’ve been waiting to go for a long time.
I want to commit to a greater Love. One that is never in question. One that’s always waiting for me to touch. One that I get to choose, and in doing so, never feel alone. Let’s reclaim Valentine’s Day because, like New Year’s Day, we’re met with this blank slate of possibility.
Let tomorrow, and 2018, be a celebration of your heart. She is wild, and wise, and works very hard to make you feel alive. Thank her big time. It’s been quite a long journey for her as well…
Love & Gratitude,
Katie
xoxo
Let Your Body Talk
"The human body is a river of intelligence, energy, and information that is constantly renewing itself in every second of it's existence."
-Deepak Chopra
What if there was an untapped intelligence source you had an all-access pass to and it could give you accurate answers to questions you’ve been seeking for quite some time?
What if you could give that overworked, overdeveloped prefrontal cortex a rest. You know, that part of your brain that is responsible, highly analytical, and very adult? She makes to-do lists, gets you to appointments on time, edits what you say and write, and generally keeps you zipped up nicely in order to make a good impression.
And my oh my, is she exhausted!?!
I believe wholeheartedly, you most certainly can give her a well-deserved break.
So stop whatever highly important thing you’re doing right now and start by giving yourself a hug. Let your body know you’re listening and curious about what she has to say. I’m dead serious.
Backstory:
In 2016, I set out on a crucial journey to reconnect with my body. Sounds weird, right? Perhaps; however, for me, it was necessary.
Throughout my battle with an eating disorder back in high school and ongoing depression throughout my twenties and beyond, my recovery was largely cognitive (aside from the basic requirement of maintaining a healthy weight).
There were also traumatic experiences along the way that made some deep and painful imprints, emotionally and physically. I don’t think I even realized this then.
Now, when I say cognitive, I mean relying heavily on my thinking mind (prefrontal cortex central) and how to mentally process defeating thought patterns and behaviors in order to replace them with healthy ones. For example, therapy modalities such as Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) and partnering psychotropic medications, or antidepressants.
These were both helpful beyond belief and supported my healing in ways I’m eternally grateful for.
2016 came along, and I began experiencing all kinds of physical pain and tension, manifesting in my upper back, throat, and jaw area. It got so bad, I experienced difficulty singing and even carrying out conversation due to a feeling of extreme tightness.
This wasn’t going to fly as I was ramping up to start writing for a new music project. Discouraged and in pain, I put it on hold in order to find some answers I later learned were trapped inside my body.
It was a catch 22 in that I thought I’d found my voice, yet at the time, wasn’t able to use it.
I set out on a mission to crack this cryptic code within my body. After all, emotionally I felt stronger than I ever had, yet the pain I was experiencing set me back day after day into a downward spiral of discouragement. This mission would forever change the way I lived and worked.
I started knocking on every door. Over the course of a year, I did brainspotting, vocal training, yoga, body work, acupuncture, kinesiology, and tons of meditation, all of which were extremely helpful.
Curiously, though I knew this pain affected my voice, I knew this was not a “talking matter.” Hell, I had talked in circles trying to process this thing out, and apparently, my body would not let up.
From all of the incredibly patient and wise practitioners I worked with (whom I’ll thank here in just a moment), I learned that the body is one of three intelligence centers we have. The mind, heart, and body are all crucial in processing life around us, yet again, western psychology focuses mainly on the brain.
Has your body ever tried to warn you of potential sickness? Energy levels flag, soreness peaks, and all you want to do is crawl into bed with some hot tea and binge on Netflix? It’s trying to tell you to slow down, ramp up the vitamin C, because if you don’t, you might end up with the flu. Your body talks.
This is the first of a new blog series centering on this glorious mind-body connection and wisdom. I wanted to kick it off by telling you a bit of my story and dangling some of these alternative practices in your world as you may be in the market for some new ways of integrating.
Brainspotting is a brain-based therapy that jumpstarts the healing process by moving trapped trauma out of your brain and body. It was so powerful in my healing that I became trained in order to offer it in my practice. This was the first step for me. (For more info on brainspotting, check out an earlier post I wrote.)
Not that I remotely have a green thumb, but I’m well aware that the first thing to come up when you plant flowers is dirt. Metaphorically, this was spot on in my experience. As I began listening to, and planting seeds of physical connection and nurturance through brainspotting, body work, yoga, and meditation, you better believe years of emotional dirt— or pain started to come up.
Yet, instead of resisting or fixing the physical symptoms of pain as I’d done for months now, I leaned into its message with the help and support of this healing community.
What I learned from a wise chiropractor trained in eastern medicine is that my body had so many answers to help me along the way. Yet, by relying primarily on cognitive therapy and medication at points along the way, I had shut out this body intelligence.
Hear me out friend, I am a huge believer in talk therapy as well as psychotropic medication such as antidepressants. Yet, we must not ignore the invaluable intelligence source we have in our bodies. It all works together. Working with the pain instead of against it allows all that dirt to finally come up and out, so we can fully process it.
We must befriend this brilliant body of ours and learn how to feel safe inside its skin.
In The Body Keeps the Score, Bissel Van der Kolk shares:
“Neuroscience research shows that the only way we can change the way we feel is by becoming aware of our inner experience and learning to befriend what is going on inside our selves.”
Fast forward to today. I have spent the last year reconnecting with my body’s intelligence and healing capacity with the support of wise practitioners. Decades of depression and toxicity trapped inside my body needed to get out. Even though I’d done so much of my own work, I learned I was still fairly detached from my body.
I’m beyond grateful for people like Dr. David Grand, who invented brainspotting and was gracious enough to work with me last spring in his NYC practice. Laura Donohue, my vocal coach for the past ten years, you safely held space for my countless emotional breakdowns in your studio because I couldn’t sing a simple note without streaming tears and inexplicable pain. Dr. Suman Chaudhuri, chiropractor and alternative medicine Guru, thank you for connecting the dots and reassuring me I wasn’t crazy, I just had residual emotional pain and trauma that was looking for an exit. Also, to my favorite English healer, Linda Penney (whom I affectionately call Money Penny), thank you for your pristine intuitive work and for helping me uncover the truth in my body through kinesiology and realignment on your table in Marina Del Rey, CA. Our time together was truly life-changing.
There have been so many others, yet I won’t drone on like some lame awards speech. I wanted you to know it takes a village. It takes asking a lot of questions and reaching out. It has forever changed the way I approach my work as a therapist, so as to offer more experiential, brain-based therapies. I’m passionate about supporting you on the journey of total connection, mind-body-spirit.
Transformation and healing is where we’re headed. I do hope you’ll continue to join me on this next exciting leg of the journey. Today especially, if you have any questions regarding this new conversation, I hope you will reach out. It can feel overwhelming, believe me…I fully understand this.
It’s worth every wobbly step.
Love & Gratitude,
Katie
All You Need is Love (& the Enneagram)
"Where we think we need more self-discipline, we usually need more self-love."
-Tara Mohr
Here we are.
No matter how you slice it, we’ve made it (hopefully more than just intact) to a brand new year.
It always amazes me that though certain seasons may bring their own version of emotional inclement weather, people and circumstances largely beyond our control, time gently holds us all to the same standard. You and I share the same amount of moments, minutes, and hours.
In the midst of the storm, it sure doesn’t seem that way.
Yet, steadily, we are all brought to the same here and now, if we choose to allow.
As you may have guessed reading the quote up above, this post is not going to be about New Year’s Resolutions. I swear those people got with the diet and exercise people and brokered a multibillion-dollar deal decades ago to keep us on a very frustrated treadmill.
Even the more subtle versions of resolutions always lose steam for me around early to mid February, not necessarily because I failed, but because the shine or need wore off, and I went back to my cozy old ways.
I believe wholeheartedly that if your goal is success, whatever that may look like to you now, your best bet is developing life-giving habits over time instead of making ostentatious goals in abrupt or ambitious moments of inspiration. Study the lives of the most successful, badass men and women throughout history, and you’ll likely find some pretty strong habits.
Again, this post isn’t about your most successful year in 2018—sorry, not sorry.
The Queen, I mean Oprah, said it best:
“The key to realizing a dream is to focus not on success but on significance. And then even the small steps and little victories along your path will take on greater meaning.”
You see, often the reason our goals and resolutions fall flat is because we are so obsessed with the end result, or the destination, that we miss the significance of the journey. In doing so, we completely disconnect from who we are in the moment — our authentic self, who is deserving of love and acceptance, no matter what’s been checked off the to-do list.
That sounds lovely... Okay, now how? How the heck do I simply turn on the love and acceptance switch?
Hmm…nice try. And oh how I wish there was a pill for that.
But honestly I don’t. Think about it, where would the fun be in simply meeting someone new, say a friend or love interest, and waving the wand of instant love and acceptance for them? We would miss out on all the subtle, quirky nuances that draw us to them over time, not to mention the trust and connection that must be built by showing up, over and over again, and in doing so, gradually building up a picture of love and affection.
In relationships, we observe people around us over time, and they either draw us to them or push us away.
The same is true for your relationship with you. Your significance isn’t how well you succeed over the course of time. Your significance lies in all those glorious, unique things you bring to the moment, and how you choose to share them.
In my experience, it’s much harder to do what I truly desire when I am my own worst enemy. It almost always backfires.
However, when I get out of my own way and start playing for instead of against my team, big things happen.
Perhaps the greatest tool alongside therapy that has equipped me to do this is the Enneagram. Over the course of the last 11 years, it has been a steady companion, giving me language to express lonely truths I thought only I had, as well as reasons for doing the clumsy things I so often do. The Enneagram has gently shown me all the ways I wear false if not fashionable masks of personality to protect myself from being truly seen and perhaps rejected. She has shown me the great potential that awaits (when I do step out of my own way).
You may know about the Enneagram, and if so, I’m grateful. It’s not just a buzz word or cool kid trend. In fact, it’s so ancient experts can’t quite nail down its conception. It’s stood the test of time, and I’m thrilled more and more people are bringing it into their homes, relationships and dinner conversations.
Let your progress in 2018 start by giving yourself the gift of connection. Connect back to the little girl who only knows love and has no clue how to lie or be afraid or confuse success with love.
If this feels wildly out of reach and too esoteric, don’t worry, you’re not alone, I’d love to support you in your desire to truly thrive. 2018 has given us a wide open road to explore the countless possibilities, and I’ve got a killer roadmap to get us there. It’s time to truly connect back to you.
You ready?
Love & Gratitude,
Katie
xoxo
P.S. If you are in the helping profession (or fascinated by the Enneagram and how to practically use it in your life), I’d LOVE to have you at my upcoming workshop The Enneagram in Action: A Training for Therapists and the Healing Arts Community, on January 19th!
Click here to learn more!
Four Crucial Questions for A Beautiful New Year
One of my favorite pockets of time throughout the entire year is upon us; the week between Christmas and New Years. I try my damnedest to carve out some “deep work” time as I call it, in order to clear the space, reconnect to presence after all the going and indulging, and map out a vision for the coming new year.....
One of my favorite pockets of time throughout the entire year is upon us; the week between Christmas and New Years. I try my damnedest to carve out some “deep work” time as I call it, in order to clear the space, reconnect to presence after all the going and indulging, and map out a vision for the coming new year. My inner dreamer gets to dance around boldly and color outside the lines a bit. If I’m lucky, I try to take a whole morning or afternoon to do so.
Today, as you let the turkey and toffee settle, perhaps still surrounded by family in from out of town or friends who stopped by to say hello, I want to leave you with some food for thought as we head into these final days of 2017.
I’m struck by the power of habit or ritual as a pre-emptive tool to greet each new day with, as opposed to drastic measures and knee-jerk reactions. Over time, good habits create this soft light in our lives that accentuate our potential and undergirds our desires with balance as opposed to extremes.
I know, it’s so tempting to let it all hang out the last several weeks of the year only to justify it January 1 with a brazen New Year’s Resolution that, in my experience, lasts about two weeks if I’m lucky.
With each passing year, as I show up for myself and my community, I’m learning something invaluable: extreme, reactionary quick fixes are often just detours. Connection is always king.
If you have battled discouragement in the past because your desire for self-improvement took a sharp turn south when the diet and exercise plan you spent a fortune on went bust four days in, this is for you.
If you rock resolutions, more power to you and I’d love to shake your hand. In my experience, they always end like a hot and heavy, short-lived relationship. I like to call them “whoosh” relationships: they promise the sun, moon, and stars, and then Bam! Like a cotton candy sugar rush, they crash and burn when the lights go up and the curtain falls. It’s like the jerk of whip-lash—the “whoosh” of a cold whip of wind.
Interestingly enough, I think humans find extremes far easier than balance. We like to react out of fear instead of responding out of desire. Marketing moguls exploit this behavior big time, and anyway you slice it, they’re clever. They know that people go off the rails a bit over the holidays and wake up January 1 with a foggy head and a few extra pounds. Swooping in, they save the day with their slashed gym membership prices and 30-day cleanse program promising a new you in just one month.
We’ve been hooked. When those dollars are spent and the motivation trails off the next afternoon, we go looking for another option, or some leftover peppermint bark, whichever comes quicker.
The shame cycle’s begun again.
Perhaps I’m cynical, or perhaps I’ve had LOTS of practice reacting out of fear and manipulation rather than choosing what will truly satisfy me from a place of mindfulness and connection.
*If you jump on my website, you’ll see a logo and the story behind it on the home page.* My approach to therapy and coaching is built on relationship, as I believe that when we begin to soften and mend our inner dialog and heal our relationship with self, external pieces of life follow suit and eventually thrive as well. It’s not magic, it’s a journey and one I’m very much still on.
Today, I want to invite you into deeper connection with you by asking four questions that will lay some groundwork for the edits, goals, and habits you want to see take root in your life in 2018. These are adapted from one of my favorite podcasts “The Accidental Creative” —so good I had to share! Being mindful of desires, feelings, and curiosities will take us much further than stringent rules and regimens we place on ourselves. Without the “why” the “how” is obsolete.
I hope you’ll join me and carve out some well-deserved time to journal around the picture you’d like to build for the coming year. Come back to it over and over again. Realign with its truth or tweak it if you need to deviate from the course. The possibilities are endless.
Here we go:
• What do you want to feel more of in 2018? (e.g., energized, awake, confident, accepted)
• Where do you want to go in 2018? (This can be figurative or literal. e.g., I want to explore a new city, yoga class, or I want to go from full-time to part-time at work so I can spend more time writing)
• What do you want to learn in 2018? (e.g., I want to learn to play drums or I want to learn to meditate)
• What do you want to change in 2018? (Reminder: this is desire driven, NOT fear driven! Approach this from a place of “I’m enough” rather than insecurity. e.g., I’d like to build in more margin for rest and play into my life.)
I can’t wait to hear your feedback on this exercise! When we give voice to this stuff, it crystalizes in our bones a bit more. Let’s ease into 2018, listening, noticing, and responding to its inviting call to action. If you’d like some extra light for the journey ahead, please don’t hesitate to reach out.
Happy New Year!
Love & Gratitude,
Katie
xoxo