for those of my beloved clients who are struggling with waiting…..
"All great achievements require time."
~~~Maya Angelou
Light and Love
Sister Bridget Corfield
www.spellmaker.com
for those of my beloved clients who are struggling with waiting…..
"All great achievements require time."
~~~Maya Angelou
Light and Love
Sister Bridget Corfield
www.spellmaker.com
Light and Love
Sister Bridget Corfield
www.spellmaker.com
**begin article***
by Judith Orloff MD
Watch your diet. Notice what foods feel good, which do not. Your body will
tell you what it requires. Usually, denser foods-meat, chicken, fish–have
more of a grounding effect than grains, vegetables, or fruit. I'm not a big
meat eater but if my body announces, "I need a hamburger," I will devour one.
Listen to your body's signals. Notice how they fluctuate.
Do mundane tasks. Mindfully focusing on everyday chores can bring you back
to your body. Grocery shopping, going to the bank, paying bills, washing
clothes, taking out the trash, or cleaning the yard can be grounding. These
activities anchor you in the here-and-now by drawing on the luminous nature
of the ordinary.
Practice Anonymous Service. Do something nice for someone without taking
credit for it. Hold the elevator for a little old lady. Let someone go
before you in line. Serve food to the homeless. Give a charitable donation.
Anything that shifts the focus from you to helping others. No deed is too
small. The act of giving–especially when you're most frazzled–opens your
heart, is regenerative.
Spend Time in Nature. As poet William Wordsworth put it, civilization can be
"too much with us." People, cars, the news, telephone cables matting the sky,
all can keep us from our bodies, divorce us from what is natural. Regularly
take at least a few hours out from your routine. Visit the beach, a forest, a
canyon, a river. Choose a spot that moves you. Aboriginals seek out windswept
plains for purification. Native Americans go to fresh streams to clarify
their inner vision. (Any water source, including a bath or shower, can
cleanse and purify.) Tibetan monks pilgrimage to mountaintops. Allow yourself
to draw on the earth's primordial forces. Savor the beauty of a twilight,
sunset, or dawn. Let them nourish and restore you.
Meditate. Sitting in meditation is a life-line to your center, to the
earth. By calming the mind, you can re-align with your essence. Close your
eyes. Focus on your breath. Then gently extend your awareness downward to
strata, bedrock, minerals, and soil. From the base of your spine begin to
feel a continuity with the earth's core. Picture having a long tail that
roots in that center. Allow the earth's energy to infuse your body and
stabilize you. If you meditate for five minutes or an hour this is sacred
time.
**end article**
more articles can be found at Dr Orloff's website drjudithorloff.com
Hey Gang!
I have been working my way through this great book – Emotional Freedom by Dr Judith Orloff. And I do mean working – its an awesome book with exercises to work thru. I am really enjoying this book! When I saw this article it seemed perfect to pass along, and I am sure some of us can identify with the topic here.
Light and Love
Sister Bridget Corfield
www.spellmaker.com
*****begin article*****
The Emotional Vampire Survival Guide: Emotional Freedom in Action
Adapted from Dr. Judith Orloff’s new book “Emotional Freedom: Liberate Yourself From Negative Emotions and Transform Your Life” (Harmony Books, 2009)
To be emotionally free you can’t remain naïve about relationships. Some people are positive and mood elevating. Others can suck optimism and serenity right out of you. Vampires do more than drain your physical energy. The super-malignant ones can make you believe you’re an unworthy, unlovable wretch who doesn’t deserve better. The subtler species inflict damage by making smaller digs which can make you feel bad about yourself—for instance, “Dear, I see you’ve put on a few pounds” or “You’re overly sensitive!” Suddenly they’ve thrown you emotionally off-center you by prodding areas of shaky self-worth. To protect your sensitivity, it’s important to name and combat these vampires. The concept struck such a collective chord in my book Positive Energy that in Emotional Freedom I illustrate how it applies to protecting your emotions and not absorbing other people’s negativity. In the book I discuss these vampires to watch for and ways to deal with them.
SIGNS THAT YOU’VE ENCOUNTERD AN EMOTIONAL VAMPIRE
(from “Emotional Freedom” by Judith Orloff MD)
• Your eyelids are heavy—you’re ready for a nap
• Your mood takes a nosedive
• You want to binge on carbs or comfort foods
• You feel anxious, depressed, or negative
• You feel put down, sniped at, or slimed
TYPES OF EMOTIONAL VAMPIRES
Vampire #1: The Narcissist
Their motto is “Me first.” Everything is all about them. They have a grandiose sense of self-importance and entitlement, hog attention, and crave admiration. They’re dangerous because they lack empathy and have a limited capacity for unconditional love. If you don’t do things their way, they become punishing, withholding, or cold.
How to Protect Your Emotions: Keep your expectations realistic. These are emotionally limited people. Try not to fall in love with one or expect them to be selfless or love without strings attached. Never make your self-worth dependent on them or confide your deepest feelings to someone who won’t cherish them. To successfully communicate, the hard truth is that you must show how something will be to their benefit. Though it’s better not to have to contend with this tedious ego stroking, if the relationship is unavoidable use the above strategies to achieved desired results.
Vampire #2: The Victim
These vampires grate on you with their “poor-me’ attitude and are allergic to taking responsibility for their actions. The world is always against them, the reason for their unhappiness. When you offer a solution to their problems they always say, “Yes, but.” You might end up screening your calls or purposely avoid them. As a friend, you may want to help but their tales of woe overwhelm you.
How to Protect Your Emotions: Set kind but firm limits. Listen briefly and tell a friend or relative, “I love you but I can only listen for a few minutes unless you want to discuss solutions. Then I’d be thrilled to brainstorm with you.” With a coworker, listen briefly, sympathize by saying, “I’ll keep good thought for things to work out. Then say, I hope you understand, but I’m on deadline and must go back to work. Then use “this isn’t a good time” body language such as crossing your arms and breaking eye contact to help set these healthy limits.
Vampire #3: The Controller
These people obsessively try to control you and dictate what you’re supposed to be and feel. They have an opinion about everything. They’ll control you by invalidating your emotions if they don’t fit into their rulebook. They often start sentences with “You know what you need?” and then proceed to tell you. You end up feeling dominated, demeaned, or put down.
How to Protect Your Emotions: The secret to success is never try and control a controller. Be healthily assertive, but don’t tell them what to do. You can say, “I value your advice but really need to work through this myself.” Be confident but don’t play the victim or sweat the small stuff. Focus on high priority issues rather than on putting the cap on the toothpaste.
Vampire #4: The Splitter or Borderline Personality
Splitters see things as either good or bad and have love/hate relationships. One minute they idealize you, the next you’re the enemy if you upset them. They have a sixth sense for knowing how to pit people against each another and will retaliate if they feel you have wronged them. They are people who are fundamentally damaged—inwardly they feel as if they don’t exist and become alive when they get angry. They’ll keep you on an emotional rollercoaster and you may walk on eggshells to avoid their anger.
How to Protect Your Emotions: Stay calm. Don’t react when your buttons get pushed. Splitters feed off of anger. They respond best to structure and limit setting. If one goes into a rage, tell the person, “I’m leaving until you get calmer. Then we can talk.” Refuse to take sides when he or she tries to turn you against someone else. With family members, it’s best to show a united front and not let a splitter’s venomous opinions poison your relationships.
About Judith Orloff
Judith Orloff MD, an Assistant Clinical Professor of Psychiatry at
UCLA and intuition expert.
www.drjudithorloff.com
**end article**
May
15th is a special day – it is the feast day of our beloved Cousin
Azacca, as well as St Isidore the Farmer, who Cousin Azacca is syncretized with.
You
can read the free Spellmaker.com newsletter about Cousin Azacca here :
http://www.spellmaker.com/SpellmakerNewsletter/Issue2.htm
Isidore
the Farmer, (Spanish: San Isidro Labrador), (c. 1070 – May 15, 1130), was a Spanish day laborer.
Isidore was born to very poor yet very pious Catholic parents in Madrid, Spain.
His parents were unable to support him when he was a youth and sent him to work
for a wealthy landowner, John de Vergas (He ended up working for him for the
rest of his life). St. Isidore loved to attend the
Holy Mass before going to work in the morning. Because of this, he usually
arrived late at work. His fellow workers complained to their master Juan de
Vargas who investigated the matter by himself. He found out the truth that St.
Isidore went to mass daily and arrived at work late. Moreover, he discovered
something – that while St. Isidore was praying in the church, his angels plowed
the field for Him. He also discovered that while St. Isidore was plowing the
field, two angels plowed with him at his sides so that his work was equivalent
to the work of three farmers. From then on, they respected him. He was
known for his love of the poor, and there are accounts of Isidore’s supplying
them miraculously with food. here was also an
occasion when one snowy day, when going to the mill with corn to be ground
which his wife had gleaned, he passed a flock of wood-pigeons scratching vainly
for food on the hard surface of the frosty ground. Taking pity on the poor
animals, he poured half of his sack of precious corn upon the ground for the
birds, despite the mocking of witnesses. When he reached the mill, however, the
bag was full, and the corn, when it was ground, produced double the expected
amount of flour. He had a great concern for the proper treatment of
animals. He died May 15, 1130, and was declared a saint in 1622 with Ignatius
of Loyola, Francis Xavier, Teresa of Avila and Philip Neri. Together, the group
is known in Spain as “the five saints.”
Patron
Saint of farmers, field hands, day laborers, ranchers, livestock, rural
communities and asking for rain.
Saint
Isidore the Farmer is invoked for the concerns affecting livestock,
agriculture, and good weather and is even invoked for picnics.
From the Spellmaker.com newsletter: No matter what you are trying to
grow in your life, May 15 is the perfect day to offer a feast to Azacca! Set up
a small altar using his colors and offerings: A piece of denim makes the
perfect altar cloth for him, yellow and green candles, a container of dirt,
small gardening tools, etc. Spend some time thinking of what plants need
nurturing in your life garden and ask Azacca to nourish them and help them
grow! Ask him to renew and rejuvenate any wilting plants and cut out all the
weeds!
Have a great day and a wonderful weekend! Get out there and play in some dirt!
Light and Love
Sister Bridget
At first, I thought it was a hoax – definately too good to be true. But it was on the news – more than one channel, even. As I was sitting in the waiting room while my car was being serviced, I kept flipping from cable news channel to cable news channel – Surely, they all couldn't be wrong……
So, when I got home later on, I checked out the website that was being mentioned, and it does seem to be TRUE!
The Mars Real Chocolate Relief Act is real! Every Friday at 9am ET thru September, Mars Candy Company will be giving away 250,000 coupons for a free candy bar every week!
Check it out! There may not be any such thing as a free lunch, but there are free candy bars!
Light and Love
Sister Bridget
Hi Gang,
I often get emails asking me about what books folks can read to learn more about Voodoo. Mambo Sam has created a collection of recommended books on Amazon.com. One book that Mambo Sam recommends is called The Divine Horsemen, the Living Gods of Haiti by Maya Deren. This was the first book I ever read about Les Lois and it is one I find myself going back to again and again. There is even a movie/documentary of footage shot by Maya Deren filmed while she was doing her research. It is not as in depth as the book is, by any means, but it is an interesting film to watch. Recently a client sent me a link to The Divine Horsemen on Youtube! Go Figure 😉 So, I thought I would pass the link along as I thought some readers might be interested. If you find the footage interesting, I highly recommend ordering the book and giving it a read 😉
Light and Love
Sister Bridget
Hi There All!
Today is such a beautiful day – the first in many months- that I was reminded of one of my favorite quotes:
“Don't
underestimate the value of Doing Nothing, of just going along,
listening to all the things you can't hear, and not bothering.”
~~~ Winnie the Pooh
Here is to hoping each of you can have a bit of doing nothing today, and just enjoying the sunshine and new grass beneath your feet. Set aside your bothers, whether they be work or family or HD related, and just truly just enjoy the new Spring around us.
Light and Love
Sister Bridget
http://www.spellmaker.com