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Whether it's getting a degree, landing that big promotion, being married, having a child or any of the other markers of personal progress, milestones are universally acknowledged as happy times in our lives. But what if they make you sad?
Well for starters, you're not alone. While there's no doubt that beginning a new chapter or accomplishing a long held goal is exciting and in many ways fulfilling, it can also be overwhelming and scary. Nevermind the often-ignored fact that every new beginning brings with it the end of something that came before. Contrary to greeting cards and wedding websites and congratulatory toasts, managing milestones is not always as simple as celebration. Moving through life is a thoughtful process - and the memorable times that mark transition deserve just as much attention (and reflection) as all the others… maybe even more.
If you're faced with a milestone that needs managing (and in one way or another, all of them do), keep the following tips in mind.
Don't ignore what's eating you
Everyone around you is telling you how happy they are for you, how much you deserve this great thing or how well-suited to it you are. Beyond the initial excitement or sense of achievement, however, you feel something akin to panic, dread, loss or fear. You know that what's happening is something you want - or at least something you've wanted - but it's not as joyous and carefree as you'd imagined it would be. It might even be downright terrifying! In turn, you assume there's something wrong with you. Maybe you're just not like other people and you're not meant to have these things… maybe they're not what you really want anyway.
Well, that may be true (it's always important to pay attention to how your goals and desires change along the way), but one thing's for sure. You're not crazy to feel mixed emotions - and mixed emotions don't mean you shouldn't proceed. Unless the negatives truly outweigh the positives (in which case, you may want to give pause) cut yourself some slack and have a closer look at what's going on inside! Sure, it may be easier to shut out whatever is making this transition complicated, but you're much better off to face it head on and experience it so it doesn't rear its head later.
Confront your emotions - even if you have to figure out what they are first! Odds are a little self-exploration and honesty will bring you to the source of the complexity… and that understanding will help ease your fears.
Acknowledge your loss
One of the troubles with our celebratory approach to transition is that we're 100% future focused without acknowledging that we're letting go of a piece of ourselves in the process. Never again will you be that kid struggling for their big break at work or the single person searching for the one… Even if you are in a similar situation again, it'll never be without this experience.
Opening a new chapter means closing another one and it's vital that you give that last chapter its due. After all, you changed and grew and laughed and cried and got to know yourself a whole lot better in the process of getting to where you are at this moment. Reminiscing over times gone by - mourning the parts you'll miss even - doesn't mean you don't want to move on into this new phase! It means you're human. Letting go of the old you is part of this rite of passage. But don't worry… even as your life is changing, at your core, you're probably not as different as you think!
Accept that change is scary
Finally, by their very definition, milestones imply change. What's scary about change is that it removes certainty. You know what your life has been while you've been single or working toward your goal, but you don't know what to expect now that you're transitioning. So you're scared… Well here's the truth: you'd be strange if you weren't at least a little bit worried! Fear about the unknown is normal - and universal. If you acknowledge this fact you'll probably find everyone else will too.
The upside here is that fear brings with it excitement. And believe it or not, the two go hand in hand. While fear provides you with the caution you need to assess your options wisely, excitement supplies the nerve you need to take a chance every once in a while. So, if you can relax and let your seemingly contradictory emotions co-exist for a little while, you'll find you can face any challenge that comes your way.
After all, you've always done it before. Resilience is what brought you here in the first place, and the universe never gives us anything we're not already equipped to handle.
With summer upon us, visions of blessedly unplanned waterside forays come to mind. But after you slather on the SPF gazillion, how will you spend your time on the beach blanket? Perhaps you will want to nap or meditate, but when you're done with all that and out of fresh ideas to ruminate upon, your best bet is a good book to capture your imagination.
Better yet, you may want to choose from the bounty of books that will keep you feeling upbeat and give you some of the tools to help you tackle the world once your summer break is over.
Secrets to success
Where to start? How about with Positivity, by Barbara Fredrickson? She stresses optimism's effect on your creativity. By taking note of your physical surroundings and viewing life as a glass that's half-full, you are more likely to derive the positive energy that will open your mind to new concepts and allow you to flourish.
In the book, Fredrickson - a psychology professor - points out that positivity isn't merely happiness. It is something that is exuded from such positive emotions as "love, joy, gratitude, serenity, interest, and inspiration" as they "touch and open your heart." You know how you get that slightly choked up, get that goosebumps-on-your-arm feeling when you've done a true kindness to someone else? According to Positivity, you should latch on to that feeling, and let it spread over you. While you're awash with that positive energy you are primed for vibrant thoughts and creative gusto. She also points out that people who have positivity in their lives tend to bounce back from adversity faster, and live more productive lives.
In Rapt: Attention and the Focused Life, Winifred Gallagher writes about focusing more while undertaking endeavors of various kinds. She cites Tiger Woods as an example of someone whose discipline contributed to his success as a golfer. Presumably, he wasn't pulled away from his focus by techno toys or Twittering, which would have kept him from his primary intent. Furthermore, she notes that happy people tend to focus on the positive, whereas unhappy people don't. Not surprising! But she says that even a "Debbie Downer" can use cognitive theory and mindfulness meditation to eventually look - as Monty Python's Brian did - on the bright side of life.
Another reading option for manifesting positive life circumstances is The Circle: How the Power of a Single Wish Can Change Your Life by Laura Day. This updated version contains a workbook to help you define your path and reach it with greater cognition. Day stresses that you can change your world by making "subtle, organic changes in yourself," and that "often, the change comes as a result of timing and opportunity." It's no coincidence that this is also the formula for success. But the subtle shift that occurs when you find yourself at the crossroad of "Timing Road and Opportunity Boulevard" is what opens you to positive change. You'll learn to create your own reality through exercises, explanations, and visualization techniques that are designed to allow change for the better.
Self-defense
If it's resilience that you need to work on, then try reading The Secrets of the Bulletproof Spirit: How to Bounce Back From Life's Hardest Hits, by Azim Khamisa and Jillian Quinn. The authors state that there are essentially two types of people: There are those who fling their arms skyward and cry "why me?" when hit with adversity, and then lash out at others and become defeatist in their attitudes. And there are those who face adversity head on, acquiring greater strength from it with a sort of "that which doesn't kill me makes me stronger" attitude. We see this in Holocaust survivors who embrace life even after the unthinkable was inflicted upon them. They are likely to live longer, happier lives than those who become mired in the darkness that befell them. Khamisa, a peace activist, and Quinn, an inspirational speaker, collaborate to provide 30 keys that define your resiliency quotient, types of negative thinking that may be keeping you down, and ways to take control of your life. You will find yourself emotionally bulletproof if you can absorb the advice imparted in this book, the authors promise. Sounds like a winner!
As for all those excuses you like to throw out for any number of issues, you'll have to quash them once you read Excuses Begone!: How to Change Lifelong, Self-Defeating Thinking Habits, by Wayne W. Dyer. No more will you be able to point to your age as an excuse for being single, or your busy life as an excuse for lack of exercise, or your emotional ties as an excuse for staying in a dying relationship. This book teaches you to change your habitual thinking, and open yourself up to reexamination by attacking each excuse with specific questions - and then following a step-by-step process to achieve a new awareness and approach. Don't have time to read this? Excuses, excuses!
Emotional cleansing
Finally, there's Emotional Freedom, by Judith Orloff, which teaches you to trade anxiety and stress for happiness and serenity. She helps you pinpoint your emotional weaknesses and find emotional strength via anecdotal information, psychology, and energy techniques. With constructive plans to ward off everything from energy vampires to feelings of being overwhelmed, she leaves you feeling in control of your life and better able to handle the challenges that arise. The book is written in a conversational style, and Orloff draws you in to each of her chapters while giving you exercises to combat your emotional issues (and, yes: everyone has them).
With all that good reading and sound advice filling up your beach bag or backpack, you should have a full summer's worth of spiritual uplift awaiting you!
Heartbreak is something we're all very familiar with. It's never fun, and though we do survive it, no one is sitting around wishing for it to come along again. Yet we all look for love, lasting love, the kind that doesn't make you feel like all your insides were just shattered with a jack hammer.
Ah, if Cupid had an evil twin brother, wouldn't it all make sense - but he doesn't. So just remember in love…during love, after love ends, before love can begin again - your love is always a temple.
Ritual
Maybe you're thinking, "My love is not a building." Fair enough but here's what it means. We all carry, give and receive love all the time. Love is not just an emotion that comes out of us or our hearts or minds. Our love is its own entity, and we need to treat it and respect is as such. And we need to make certain that others have the same respect for our love.
When you enter a place of worship, whether it is a church or Jewish temple, mosque or Buddhist temple, there is often a ritual when you enter that displays your respect. Perhaps you cover your head or you put blessed water on your forehead or light a candle and say or chant a prayer or meditation. In some way, you show respect to the divine.
Every day in everything you do, you must show yourself and your love that same respect. Maybe you don't feel comfortable enough to stare off into your mirror shouting I love you to your reflection (though it works for some people!) but try not being so hard on yourself at least one day a week. You don't have to be Stuart Smalley, but you get the gist. Pay homage to yourself and your love daily.
Respect
Places of worship demand respect. Whether you take off your shoes on entering or whether you maintain a clean sanctuary, we all know the disrespect and judgment that comes from those who desecrate places of worship. You wouldn't want to see graffiti on your local church or a fire set to the Buddhist temple in your city right? So don't let others desecrate your temple. If someone enters your space and shows that they are not fit to worship there, tell them kindly that you have too much respect for yourself to put up with that. We all give people the benefit of the doubt but if you are pouring your love out to someone who is consistently disappointing you, lying to you or breaking commitments, you are allowing your temple to be desecrated. Only you can put a stop to that.
Intruders
But still heartbreak happens. Maybe we saw it coming, maybe it came out of nowhere but someone you loved and trusted, someone you let into your temple, decided to go in and break all your beautiful vases and stomp on your fresh flowers, while lighting all the candles… setting fire to all the beautiful tapestries you'd thoughtfully hung in your temple. You get the picture.
Sure sometimes relationships don't work but there is a responsible respectful way to handle things and destroying a temple is not one of them. This can be so painful. All of a sudden our beautiful sanctuary is a mess. All the things we took so much care in have been damaged. So we mourn the wreckage, we sit there in disbelief, but eventually we need to clean up the mess.
Healing
When you're ready, get in there and pick up the pieces from the broken statues and glue them back together, find ways to fill your temple again with love. Talk to friends, write about it, meditate and let yourself heal. Ask yourself for forgiveness for taking a chance and forgive the person who hurt you. It sounds hard and often times all we do want is to wish ill on the other person, but if you can truly forgive them (which doesn't mean you have to talk to them in person or let them back in your life either) you can truly move on. Once you feel everything is whole again, you can begin to allow others in again. Take care to remember your love is divine and special.
"My brain and my heart are my temples…" - Dalai Lama
What's your philosophy of life? Do you believe that we are predestined to experience certain losses and tragedies in order to learn our lessons in this lifetime? Or, perhaps you get the feeling that the Universe just throws out random events to see how we'll react - and that's how life happens.
Have you ever wondered if the concept of free will can trump all - even change your destiny? These are some of the basic questions that callers ask our psychics to try to understand the tough breaks they may have to deal with in order to continue along their life journeys.
Not surprisingly, our psychics' answers to these deeply spiritual questions are mixed. Here's what they had to say:
Generally our intuitives follow the school of thought that everything happens for a reason. Their beliefs are based on their experiences - helping callers with issues, and then watching their futures play out. Many have a firm belief that we choose at least some of the basic circumstances which we are born into, and some of these circumstances, they also see, can be changed.
It is the losses and tragedies that help us understand life, explains TeriLynn ext. 9625. "How they work out, and how our lives unfold because of them is our journey through emotional and spiritual growth."
"I am a firm believer that we chart our lives beforehand, and have always viewed this earth as a school, so we can evolve on a soul level. We choose lessons that we can learn from," reports Alison ext. 9885.
Ariel ext. 9775 believes that we choose our parents and our character, explaining that, "through our character we make choices that become our destiny."
Anastasia ext. 5167, who is sure that she chose her parents and endured family trauma so that she could focus on healing in this lifetime, maintains that "our souls choose our key losses and tragedies before we come into this life, in order to learn lessons or resolve Karma."
Lemuria ext. 5114 adds that through her work with sprit guides she understands that we do choose our familes, as well as the abilities we'll need to do the work we are predestined to accomplish during our lifetimes.
"My guides have shown me that sometimes difficult events are chosen before we reincarnate," Tammy ext. 9380 reports. "However, not all events appear to be predestined. I believe that we all made our sacred contracts before we came here - contracts between us and our higher selves. What's very important to understand, I believe, is that there is no one other than ourselves holding us to this contract."
So how do we use our free will? How do we opt to make choices, when say, in a reading it appears that our destiny is moving us directly into more unhappiness, more stagnation, or more heartbreak? What can we do? Some soul choices can be changed with conscious awareness, many psychics say. Often we are offered choices, and at other times our growth may lead us to different beliefs that again offer us more choices as to how we will live out our lives. But the key is always that we need to be aware of what's going on in our lives. We have to see the choices, seize opportunities, and learn our lessons in order to change our lives.
"I definitely believe that those soul choices can be changed," Verbena ext. 9615 reports. "But you can't just change them because you want to avoid any difficulties. They can be changed if the soul recognizes an even higher and more wonderful possibility that can be achieved in this lifetime."
"That's because our free will has more power than a contract," Tammy points out. "The beauty of free will is that you can always override the outcome of a psychic reading that you don't like by making different choices. Look at all of the possible outcomes, should you decide to take different pathways. What will your parallel reality be? This is one way to use your readings to your best advantage.
Paisley ext. 9661 , who sees our spirit selves making these choices with our soul groups, those with whom we will be incarnating together in the next lifetime in order to learn our soul lessons… gives a strong yes to the possibility of changing our soul choices. "You just need to learn the lessons first. So instead of holding on to resentment and pain for an entire lifetime - for instance, because the man you love doesn't treat you well, let it go. Understand the lessons of detachment, forgiveness, and unconditional love."
It's when we learn from these difficult but divine assignments that we understand why we need to have these experiences in the first place. In other words, as Paisley points out, "if you can change your mind, you can change your life!"
What is your destiny? Get insight in a psychic reading today. Call 1.800.573.4830 or click here now.