My Abundant Life 1-2-26

January 2nd, 2026

Loving The Questions

“You only live once—but if you work it right, once is enough.”

Joe E. Lewis (American Comedian, Actor and Singer; January 12th 1902 ~ June 4th, 1971)

“How often in the past have you turned away from all that is unresolved in your heart because you feared questioning?”

“The last three years have been transformative. The turning away was mostly during my abusive marriage. It was hard to confront my circumstances due to the guilt and shame I silently carried for more than 3 decades. Breaks my heart to say that a huge chunk of my life was in the denial space. However, the freedom and power I have now in my life has opened up a whole new world of possibilities. Dreaming feels possible again.” (Heather Houston 1-2-22)

“2026 marks the time I will not just be selectively authentic as I realize sometimes I even censor myself. I only have this one beautiful life to live into and I commit to LIVING it to it completely with all its blessing and shadows.” (Heather Houston 1-2-26)

“But what if you knew that a year from today you could be living the most creative, joyous, and fulfilling life you could imagine? What would it be? What changes would you make? How and where would you begin? Do you see why the questions are so important?”

“I absolutely see that future. I imagine living in a seasonally warm location. Access to a boat for travel and pleasure. I would be there with the love of my life hosting a podcast and touring for speaking engagements. We would own a tequila/mezcal/whiskey bar that served our favorite cocktails and food. Nightly, there would be various live music and dancing on a sand dance floor. We also travel the world to distilleries and sample tequila/mezcal/whiskey. “The major changes would be to reduce the amount of “stuff” I have; to live more simply. I would put money away in savings and investments to create a funding possibility. I would solicit vendors to sponsor our podcast. I choose to begin now as my life in NOW. I have 100% of my life left and no time to waste. I can begin by researching locations and countries I would like to live in long-term. Researching the commercial real estate of locations that interest me will afford me a strategy and approach to make my possibility become reality. All questions around possibility are valuable to create access to action. New actions lead to unexpected outcomes.” (Heather Houston 1-2-22)

“I really feel I am living into my full authentic self. I am leaning in hard! I live every day as the best date and party ever. Evert day I have glorious sex, have a scrumptious cocktail, eat delicious food, and spend time with the love of my life. I am certain there is nothing finer than this as lived. I am blessed.” (Heather Houston 1-2-26)

“Be patient toward all that is unsolved in your heart and try to love the questions themselves. Do not seek the answers which cannot be given you because you would not be able to live them and the point is to live everything. Live the questions now. …”

René Karl Wilhelm Johann Josef Maria Rilke (known as: Rainier Maria Rilke) (Austrian Poet and Novelist; December 4th 1875 ~ December 29th, 1926)

–Ban Breathnach, Sarah. “Simple Abundance: A Daybook of Comfort and Joy”. Grand Central Publishing. (1976). Kindle Page 2-3 of 501.

My Abundant Life 1-1-26 (Part 3/3)

January 1st, 2026

A Transformative Year of Delight and Discovery

“There are years that ask questions and years that answer.”

Zora Neale Hurston (American Author, Anthropologist, and Filmmaker; January 7th 1891 ~ January 28th, 1960)

“New Year’s Day. A fresh start. A new chapter in life waiting to be written. New questions to be asked, embraced, and loved. Answers to be discovered and them lived in this transformative year of delight and self-discovery.”

“Only dreams give birth to change. What are your hopes for the future as you reflect on the years that have passed?”

I am creating the following possibilities (These are a working list.)

2023 Possibilities

  • Reconnection with my adult children.
  • A new job closer to home.
  • Find a house to rent.
  • Travel, if COVID safe.
  • Visit my parents.✅
  • Trace my heritage via genealogy.
  • Connect and affiliate with my native tribes.
  • Write a mixology/cocktail recipe book.
  • Design sewing patterns for women’s clothing for the transgender community.
  • Attend a sweat lodge.
  • Learn indigenous medicinal tinctures and remedies.
  • Walk 10k steps daily.
  • Explore knitting via old Goodwill sweaters.
  • Explore quilting via Old Goodwill clothing.
  • Write a book.

2026 Possibilities

  • Sharing and connectedness with my mother by reading this book together. Thus, having more regular and timely connection in the present day for both of us.
  • Get closure on my Me Too moment.
  • Plan for wedding #3.
  • Plan for a summer vacation to the Hoh rainforest.
  • Bake more pastries and candies.
  • Complete 10,000 steps daily.
  • Journal daily.
  • Work on genealogy ongoingly and regularly.
  • Connect with family daily.
  • Place my health and wellness first before helping others.
  • Visit Oklahoma to get reconnected to my roots and culture.
  • Participate in South Dakota tribal work via my job.
  • Create new fusion pizzas recipes.

“Gradually, as you become curator of your own contentment, you will learn to embrace the gentle yearnings of your heart. But this year, instead of resolutions, write down your most private aspirations. Those longings you have kept tucked away until the time seems right. Trust that now is the time. Ask the questions.”

“Take a leap of faith and begin this wondrous new year by believing. Believe in yourself. And believe that there is a loving Source—a Sower of Dreams—just waiting to be asked to help you make your dreams come true.”

“Ah yes, the “Sower of Dreams”. I know her best as my fairy godmother! LET THE GAMES BEGIN!” (Heather Houston 1-1-23)


–Ban Breathnach, Sarah. “Simple Abundance: A Daybook of Comfort and Joy”. Grand Central Publishing. (1976). Kindle Page 1-2 of 501.

Ongoing Notes In Reflection

Original blog posted on January 1, 2022. Reread January 1, 2023…This helped me reevaluate where my priorities need to be present. Thank you self. Ambitious in 2024 and put some time into building my gratitude list. 2026 marks my effort to intentionally share this blog with my family to increase interactions and their knowingness of the me today.


I challenge each of you to post comments to this blog series so we all can grow together.

My Abundant Life 1-1-26 (Part 2/3)

January 1st, 2026

January

“And now let us welcome the New Year full of things that have never been.”

René Karl Wilhelm Johann Josef Maria Rilke (known as: Rainier Maria Rilke) (Austrian Poet and Novelist; December 4th 1875 ~ December 29th, 1926)

“Life can start newly at any time and now is as good a time as ever.” (Heather Houston 1-1-24)



–Ban Breathnach, Sarah. “Simple Abundance: A Daybook of Comfort and Joy”. Grand Central Publishing. (1976). Kindle Page 1 of 501.

Ongoing Notes In Reflection

Original blog posted on January 1, 2022. Reread January 1, 2023…This helped me reevaluate where my priorities need to be present. Thank you self. Ambitious in 2024 and put some time into building my gratitude list. 2026 marks my effort to intentionally share this blog with my family to increase interactions and their knowingness of the me today.


I challenge each of you to post comments to this blog series so we all can grow together.

My Abundant Life 1-1-26 (Part 1/3)

January 1st, 2026

“Her eye, her ear, were tuning forks, burning glasses, which caught the minutest refraction or echo of a thought or feeling… She heard a deeper vibration, a kind of composite echo, of all that the writer said, and did not say.”

Willa Cather (American Writer; December 7th 1873 ~ April 24th, 1947)

“…in a time lacking in truth and certainty and filled with anguish and despair, no woman should be shamefaced in attempting to give back to the world, through her work, a portion of its lost heart.”

Louise Bogan (American Poet; August 11th 1897 ~ February 4th, 1970)

Preface to the Tenth Anniversary Edition of Simple Abundance: A Daybook of Comfort and Joy

“And why did my life need to change?”

My own life needed to change so I could further explore and live into my freedom, power and full self-expression. I have already spent the first half of my life in murky waters which had me consumed with the mundane and scarcity in my life. I now choose to see my world differently.” (Heather Houston 1-1-22)

“What is truly magic as I read my sentiments from 2-years ago, my life has completely transformed for the better and I am living my best life.” (Heather Houston 1-1-24)

“…my daily round had become a tug-of-war between other people’s demands and expectations and my own genuinely conflicted desires and unrequited needs. I frantically multitasked from one obligation to the next so fast that my spirit felt as if it was constantly sprinting to catch up with me, which it finally did when I collapsed into bed. Mornings were a major source of dread; my first conscious breath was sigh; my awakening thought was how to make it through the day. Of course, I never complained to anyone else, but I whined to myself and Spirit until, literally, the sound of my own nagging nearly drove me mad and to my knees.”

I read this and feel a pang in my heart as I remember how my first 50 years on this dirt ball had occurred to me. Sad realization, but I have 100% of my life left and see my world ahead as magical, full of joy and abundance.” (Heather Houston 1-1-22)

Amazing how this is not my experience of my life any longer. I look forward to each new day with a zest that thrills me to my core.” (Heather Houston 1-1-24 & 1-1-26)

“As Harry Truman explained it,… …It’s a recession when your neighbor loses his job and it’s a depression when you lose your own. Call it what you want to, but there was doom and gloom everywhere—an absolute pandemic of lack. But when you focus only on lack you become depressed, and when you’re depressed you don’t see the glass half-full; you see it empty. And you’re dying of thirst. This sets in motion a relentless, repetitive cycle of misery and near-life experiences. There’s no light a the end of that tunnel.”- Harry Truman (33rd U.S. President; May 8th 1884 ~ December 26th, 1945)

The last two years has been similarly hard with the COVID pandemic raging. Humans need the grit of past generations who rallied got vaccinated in mass during the small pox outbreak.” (Heather Houston 1-1-22)

“Flash forward to post pandemic and I have a new job, I am living in a love affair with my chosen “one”, I am engaged and planning a wedding. My life is abundant!” (Heather Houston 1-1-24)

“This New Year marks my 3rd re-engagement (3rd fiancé adventure). I’m passionately loving my husband with the full force of a firehose. I love being loved and love loving my chosen one. My life is abundant.” (Heather Houston 1-1-26)

“One morning I woke up physically exhausted and spiritually bankrupt; money was tight too.”

I had this experience in a big way at the end of 2020. The pandemic, dealing with reconnection with my alienated adult children, applying to jobs without an end in sight, money getting tighter…all keeping me wrapped up in scarcity vs. abundance.” (Heather Houston 1-1-22)

“Still applying to jobs like mad, and using my network to help me revise and revamp my approach has yielded me more interviews than before. I believe 2023 is my year to break through on my terms and in my way.” (Heather Houston 1-1-23)

“I have been at my new job for 9-months and starting to feel like I can relax into it without expectations. I work to live vs. live to work now. Everything is centered around getting through my work day to get home to my actual life and love affair.” (Heather Houston 1-1-24)

“I was so sick and tired of concentrating on what was missing from my life, God knows I didn’t want to write about it. I felt drained, depleted, discouraged. Worrying about money had squandered my most precious natural resources—time, creative energy, and emotion. So I forced myself to sit down at the kitchen table and start writing an inventory of what was good in my life, right at that moment. Think Pollyanna on Prozac. When I stopped six hours later, to my great astonishment. I’d created a master list of my life’s many overlooked blessings. I had over 150 and none of them had anything to do with money.”

I too think this is a good practice to acknowledge my gratitude for the abundance in my life. By actively working on this list, it will give me perspective, orient me, afford me hope, reduces stress and be a constant gentle reminder to what matters (This is a working list to add to throughout this year.).” (Heather Houston 1-1-22 & 1-1-24)

2022 Gratitude List

  1. Neil Chasan, the love of my life, who encouraged me to take the “red pill” and awaken into the world newly. He reminds me daily through his actions that I am valued, loved and not alone.
  2. Extended maternal and paternal family who loves me.
  3. Friends I relate to.
    • Tracy Painter
    • Amy Honeycutt
    • Dave Iuli
  4. Eyes that allow me to see the world’s beauty.
  5. Ears that allow me to hear my love’s voice and the music we enjoy.
  6. A nose that allows me to smell food, flowers and the pheromone scent of snicker doodle cookies on my love’s forearms.

2023 Gratitude List

  1. Friends I relate to.
    • Stacey Englert
  2. Friends who gave their time and children power to help Neil and I move. (Thank you Iuli Family)
  3. Finding a new apartment during winter when moving is often a bear.
  4. I am grateful my partner sees me as a growing evolving creature and supports my exploration and discovery.

2024 Gratitude List

  1. Arms that allow me to have held my children, hug my parents and to embrace my love after a long day.
  2. Legs which have carried me many miles and helped me run like the wind.
  3. A mouth that allows me taste the delicious food my love and I create and to kiss him when I arrive home from work.
  4. My hands so I can type on my computer, flip the pages of books, and hold the hands of my loved ones.
  5. Ability to speak.
  6. Sense of touch.
  7. A heart that pumps blood to all the parts of my body every second since I was born.
  8. My immune system for fighting disease that enters my body and for keeping me healthy.
  9. Morning coffee to help me be more alert in the morning.
  10. The schools I have attended for providing a environment conducive to learning and growing.
  11. My teachers for their dedication and for passing down knowledge to me.
  12. Tears for helping me express my deepest emotions; happiness, frustration and sadness.
  13. My bed so that I sleep comfortably every night.
  14. Kindle Libraries and Brick-N-Mortar libraries with endless books to enhance my learning.
  15. Music that narrates the story of my life, lifting my spirits when I’m down and for filling my life with more love.
  16. My doubters and enemies for helping me uncover my blind spots so I can become a better person.
  17. Disappointment so I know the things that matter to me most.
  18. Fears so I know my opportunities for growth.
  19. Pain which allows me to become a stronger person.
  20. Sadness so I can appreciate the spectrum of human emotions.
  21. My mistakes which help me to improve and become a better human.
  22. Happiness so I can soak up the beauty of life.
  23. Mother Nature for covering our world in beauty.
  24. Laughter for serenading my life with joy.
  25. Love for letting me feel what it means to truly be alive.
  26. Animals for adding to the diversity of life.
  27. Life for giving me the chance to experience all that I’m experiencing, and will be experiencing in time to come.
  28. Me for being who I am and touching the world with my presence.
  29. The sun for bringing in light and beauty to this world.
  30. The moon for brightening up the night sky.
  31. My lungs which are healthy and clear to maximize each breath I take.
  32. Today, as it was given to me upon my waking up this morning and marking a new day.
  33. Art that mesmerizes me.
  34. The comfort of the “home” my love and I have created.
  35. Ready access to food.
  36. Earning a steady paycheck.
  37. Being able to pay my bills.
  38. Rain for cooling me when it gets too warm and for making it comfy to sleep in on weekends.
  39. Snow for making winter even more beautiful.
  40. The weekends that afford me more time to live my life.
  41. The internet that allows access to information and resources in an instant.
  42. Clean and bountiful access to water; including hot water.
  43. Indoor plumbing including a toilet and shower.
  44. A healthy body.
  45. My unique personality.
  46. My beauty.
  47. My kind heart.
  48. My integrity.
  49. My strength and courage to press on even when faced with challenges.
  50. Access to a reasonable memory.
  51. Transportation for making it easier to commute from one place to another.
  52. Big belly laughs with my love…the sillier the better.
  53. Smartphones for making it easy to stay in touch with others.
  54. Computers for making my life more effective and efficient.
  55. Watching sunsets…anywhere.
  56. Holding hands with my love.
  57. Walks in the sun on a cold winter day.
  58. Technology for making impossible things possible.
  59. Movies for providing a source of entertainment.
  60. Blogs for connecting me with other like-minded people.
  61. Pets…especially Kiva. Thank you for your empathic superpowers.
  62. Kind hearted strangers with manners; holding a door open, putting a shopping cart back, aware there are other people beside them in the world…etc.
  63. Physicians who have cared for me when sick or injured.
  64. Ready access to some of the best medical care in the world.
  65. Apologies from those who have hurt me or did not honor their word.
  66. Forgiveness I was able to access and give to those who has wronged me.
  67. Birthdays…mine or anyone’s.
  68. The first snowfall in winter.
  69. A sunny day outdoors.
  70. Walks or runs in the rain.
  71. Romantic moments.
  72. Watching waves crash on the beach…tropical or stormy.
  73. Getting a letter or package.
  74. Sleeping in our bed with the softest sheets ever.
  75. Staying up pillow talking with my love.
  76. Seeing a shooting star.
  77. Being on vacation.
  78. Finishing an entry or project on my To Do List.
  79. Emptying my email Inbox.
  80. Dancing
  81. Mixing cocktails.
  82. Family Reunions
  83. A good night’s sleep.
  84. Quiet moments of meditation.
  85. Having a functioning brain.
  86. Being self-aware.
  87. Freedom
  88. Being authentic.
  89. Being powerful.
  90. Being able to be fully self-expressed.
  91. Finding something I lost or never new was missing in the first place.
  92. Learning to let go of the past.
  93. All the knowledge I have stored and accessible in my brain.
  94. My growth and transformation throughout my life.
  95. My willingness to help others.
  96. Creating a lived-in home.
  97. My ability to make good choices.
  98. The fact that I believe things will always get better.
  99. Recognition I received as an athlete, coach and employee.
  100. Coworkers who make my workdays fly by.
  101. The passion and fire to live fully that burns inside me.
  102. Clean laundry
  103. The smell of my favorite perfume, food, campfire, etc.
  104. Having things that money can’t buy; children’s art, scrapbooks, photos, etc.
  105. Eating my favorite foods.
  106. Connecting with others on social media.
  107. Arsenal winning a match/game.
  108. The ability to work a job where I make a difference in peoples lives by helping them hit their potentials; students, athletes, soldiers, etc.
  109. Someone holding a door or an elevator open for me.
  110. A friend or family member calling to check-in on me.
  111. Compliments from strangers.
  112. Surprises
  113. Adventures
  114. The ability and agency to improve my life.
  115. My intuitive ability to read others.
  116. Feeling safe.
  117. Activities that turn my brain off…TV, music, day dreaming, etc.
  118. Being able to read.
  119. My job for giving me a source of living and for being a medium where I can add value to the world.
  120. Comfortable shoes
  121. Shoes for protecting my feet when I am out.
  122. Starlit skies.
  123. Time, a system to organize myself and keep track of activities.
  124. Rainbows for a beautiful sight to look forward to after rain.
  125. Thank you notes
  126. Comfy robe or pajamas
  127. A walk in the forest.
  128. Learning something new.
  129. Autumn leaves
  130. Oxygen for making life possible.
  131. The earth for creating the environment for life to begin.
  132. Positive comments on posts.
  133. Sleeping in
  134. Quenching hunger or thirst.
  135. Finding money in a coat pocket.
  136. Finding a toilet when you really need one in a public space.
  137. Finding the last parking spot.
  138. A driver letting you merge or pass in front of them.
  139. People who donate blood.
  140. Witnessing the success of my friends.
  141. Working from home…teleworking.
  142. Eating cookie batter from the bowl.
  143. Licking the beaters after making a cake.
  144. Staying in or going out on a Friday night.
  145. The feeling I get when I help someone.
  146. Getting goosebumps or chills.
  147. Kisses and hugs
  148. Cuddling
  149. The feeling I got when I found the love of my life.
  150. Finding answers to problems.
  151. Successfully passing work training.
  152. Buying an outfit that makes me feel confident and sexy.
  153. Having electricity
  154. Sitting after being on my feet all day.
  155. Lunch breaks
  156. The day I demanded a divorce to end the mental and emotional abuse.
  157. Amusement parks
  158. Having a creative outlet; sewing, knitting, cooking, blogging, etc.
  159. Having people in my life who support me.
  160. When my employers buys me lunch.
  161. Those who have mentored me; William Houston, Donna Houston, Mr. Baze, Bill Schauser, Coach Lillywhite, Major Coleman, Roberta WIlson, Tom Wells, Steve Dickerson, Jennifer Martyn, Neil Chasan, etc.
  162. Relaxing in a hot tub on a cool night or during a light snow.
  163. Barefoot walks in the sand.
  164. Burying my body under sand at the beach on a hot day.
  165. Getting help when I need it.
  166. The freedom to speak my mind.
  167. Positive people
  168. Looking at old photos.
  169. Endorphins
  170. The fun of planning a vacation.
  171. A clean house.
  172. Scented candles
  173. Facing my fears.
  174. Nostalgia
  175. People who persist.
  176. Clean air
  177. Finishing something ahead of schedule.
  178. Being on a winning team or winning an event.
  179. Getting positive feedback.
  180. Getting a raise at work.
  181. Doing meaningful work.
  182. Feeling inspired.
  183. Listening to a relaxing playlist.
  184. The fact that I was born.
  185. Gratitude Day Meals (Thanksgiving)
  186. Street lights
  187. Childhood
  188. Productivity
  189. Doing complete work.
  190. Growth
  191. Perspective
  192. Travels
  193. Creativity
  194. Open-mindedness
  195. Deep conversations
  196. Inspirational People; Billy Mills, Zola Bud. Bill Kuzmer, etc.
  197. Teeth that are mine.
  198. Bladder
  199. Bones
  200. Balance
  201. Health Insurance
  202. Exercise
  203. Therapy
  204. Manicures & Pedicures
  205. Trees
  206. Being able to garden.
  207. Inspiring speeches
  208. A slice of pepperoni pineapple pizza.
  209. Orange and purple foods
  210. Making someone laugh.
  211. Fruits
  212. Spices and seasonings
  213. Having enough to eat.
  214. Heat in my home.
  215. Being able to trust someone.
  216. My love doing loving things for me.
  217. Date night every single day!
  218. Encouragement
  219. Making love
  220. Bubble baths
  221. Kind bosses
  222. Promotions
  223. Cars
  224. Planes
  225. Television
  226. Motorcycles
  227. Bikes
  228. Microwaves
  229. Ovens
  230. Stoves
  231. Couches
  232. Refrigerators
  233. Freezers
  234. Washers and dryers
  235. Faucets
  236. Credit cards
  237. Cameras
  238. Light bulbs
  239. Paper
  240. Pencils and pens
  241. Wi-Fi
  242. Thunderstorms
  243. Pest-free home
  244. AHA moments
  245. Texting
  246. My sense of humor.
  247. My talents
  248. Diversity
  249. My heritage
  250. Wise words
  251. Toothpaste
  252. I am grateful for my mindfulness meditation on my FitBit.

2026 Gratitude List

  1. Rediscovering my own sacredness.
  2. Understanding my sexuality as a pansexual, demisexual, sapiosexual being.
  3. Seeing the Milky Way in the darkest place in the United States with my husband.
  4. Lamp chops BBQed at our favorite spot in Luther Burbank Park.
  5. Seeing a full moon.
  6. My baking skills.
  7. Gleeking
  8. Perfect grocery shops
  9. Soaking up the heat from a car that has been heating up in the sun all day.
  10. Integrity
  11. Exploration of fusion pizzas.
  12. Exploring new destinations with my husband.

“I realized I didn’t need a single thing, except the awareness of how blessed I was. That was the first time that gratitude beckoned and invited me to use its transformative power, not to revamp my life, but to rejoice in it.”

“If the only prayer you ever say in your life is ‘Thank You,’ it will be enough.”

Eckhart von Hochheim OP (known as: Meister Eckhart or Eckehart) (German Catholic Theologian, Philosopher and Mystic; 13th-century)

“This exercise to create my own gratitude list was eye opening. Because I pushed to over 250 entries, I found by the end of creating my list, I was deeply moved and grateful for what I have in my life. The sheer volume is astounding. I have overflowing abundance in my life well beyond material possessions.” (Heather Houston 1-1-24)

“I discovered just how right he was and got so excited that I started writing down five new things to be thankful for every day.”

“I am adopting this practice intentionally and mindfully to rewire my brain to again see the glasses half full. A lifetime of abuse seemed to have constrained my positive emotive mental muscles.” (Heather Houston 1-1-24)

“Women identified with an angry, envious, resentful, workaholic, careaholic, perfectionist who secretly fretted over everything and everybody but herself; a woman who frequently felt she was holding her life together with double-sided stick tape; who couldn’t remember the last time she’d taken a nap, got a haircut without pretending it was a root canal, or had an hour to do nothing at all. It gave them hope that they, too, could change their lives for the better one grateful moment at a time.”

“This is how I existed in my life until recently. Acknowledging gratitude has given me access to happiness, joy, bliss, love, etc. My days are always bookended with gratitude for the love of my life.” (Heather Houston 1-1-24)

“We read…to find refuge, a soul shelter, a safe place in a world clearly gone mad. We read for pleasure or we read to quiet the pain from a deafening roar to a dull throb. We read to forget who we are or discover it; we read to understand. But most of all, we do read to learn something we didn’t know before we turned the page.”

“I read for all those reasons as well and remarkably, it is quite effective in achieving my goals from reading.” (Heather Houston 1-1-24)

“You must believe your happiness and well-being is not frivolous but a spiritual prime directive.

“If there is a book you really want to read, but it hasn’t been written yet, then you must, write it.”

Toni Morrison (American Novelist; February 18th, 1941 ~ August 5th, 2019)

“Since my divorce, I have been on a pursuit to find, embrace and realize happiness in my life…true happiness. What has been amazing, is that I have never been happier, authentic, free, powerful and fully self-expressed in the novel I am writing/living.” (Heather Houston 1-1-24)



–Ban Breathnach, Sarah. “Simple Abundance: A Daybook of Comfort and Joy”. Grand Central Publishing. (1976). Kindle Location 13-118.

Ongoing Notes In Reflection

Original blog posted on January 1, 2022. Reread January 1, 2023…This helped me reevaluate where my priorities need to be present. Thank you self. Ambitious in 2024 and put some time into building my gratitude list. 2026 marks my effort to intentionally share this blog with my family to increase interactions and their knowingness of the me today.


I challenge each of you to post comments to this blog series so we all can grow together.

My Sacred Life 12-27-25

December 27th, 2025

“Surrender simply means keeping God’s will before your own.”

Radhanath Swami (Gaudiya Vaishnava Guru and Author; 1950)

Chapter 7: Surrender To The Creator In You

“As we move on this journey of life, we begin to recognize that life is a circle. It is a circle that can bring us many blessings and many gifts. Life is also a cycle. I describe circles as those things that create movement and connect us to our sacredness, and cycles are those things that stagnate and disconnect us. A cycle includes wounds and patterns that have come to us in painful or difficult ways… The circles are the elements of nature: the earth, water, wind, sun and moon that are always available to us; our positive ancestral teachings, values, traditions, and life enhancing relationships.”

“So now we move to the fourth lesson; one that is so significant for completing this circle of healing. It is the teaching of ‘Xochitl in Cuicatl,’ that of Flower and Song. This teaching points to us being able to surrender to the totality of who you are, past and present, and allowing your future to flower in growth and sing in beauty.”

“If we don’t get stuck in the old wounds and the expectations of what we thought should be, we can create life from whatever has been presented to us that can flower beautifully and sin g with joy. ..The practice of surrendering is one’s willingness to give up our need to control life’s journey, while knowing that there is a greater plan in place.

“You need to trust to surrender, to ask for guidance and go within for the answers. All you need to do is ask.”

Karen Hackel (Author; September 2nd, 1956)



–Trello, Jerry. “Recovering Your Sacredness: Ancestral Teachings For Today’s Living”. Sueños Publications, L.L.C.. (2018). Pages 125-144.


I challenge each of you to post comments to this blog series so we all can grow together.

My Sacred Life 12-26-25

December 26th, 2025

“LOVE recognizes no barriers. LOVE jumps hurdles, leaps fences, penetrates walls to arrive at its destination Full of HOPE.”

Maya Angelou (American Memoirist and Essayist; April 4th, 1928 ~ May 28th, 2014)

Chapter 6: Dancing With Your Face And Heart

“The third teaching is that of Ixtli in Yolloti, or of Face and Heart – the ability to live your life with a sense of face and heart balance. In this teaching, we discover the importance of seeking balance in our lives. This sacred duality is a part of daily life in every culture throughout the world. Again, in our modern, fast-paced society, it is a great challenge to truly move in balance. Many of us find ourselves stuck and not moving at all, but merely being in a sense of motion, i.e. going through the motions.”

“Motion and movement, although related, are two very different processes. Often we find ourselves in motion, completing our tasks and participating in life, but really, we are just staying in the same place in terms of our spiritual and developmental growth; following ingrained patterns in our lives, but not growing, not learning, not healing, and therefore, not really moving. This is exemplified when people feel stuck, unmotivated, or even lost. Society gives us certain hierarchical markers such as degrees and titles and materialistic measures of success like money, houses, cars, and other luxury items to falsely judge whether we are successful or not. The sad reality is that many people, who are successful according to society’s definition, are not truly happy or balanced.”

“Indigenous cultures look at success in a different way, not based on linear, hierarchical or materialistic standard, but more on a circular nature. To illustrate this paradigm, imagine concentric circles The outer circle is our physical sense. The second circle is mental sense. The third circle is our emotional sense. And the fourth inner circle is our spiritual dimension. In the center of those four circles is where we find our sacred self, our sacred purpose connected to our soul.”

“What happens when we are stuck, or are in motion, is that we continue to go around the same outer circles, the physical and mental rings, without moving closer to our center. We know that if we continue doing the same things over and over again, we’re probably going to get the same results – being caught in the same position around your circle, no closer to balance or to our inner sacredness. This lesson of Face and Heart speaks directly to the process of transitioning from being in that type of motion that leaves one stuck, to true movement. The goal here is to move closer o our true selves, to who we really are; closer to our own sacred purpose and authentic sacredness. It is this sense of Face and Heart that allows us to bring balance to our lives.”

“In cultures all across the world, they talk about a sense of duality. In the Taoist tradition, they speak of yin and yang, and in African principles, they follow the concepts of will and intent. Also, the African concept of Sankofa is being mindful of looking back on the lessons of the past in order to best account for the present and prepare for the future. In my traditional, indigenous teachings in the Nahauatal language, they talk about Itxli in Yollotl. Itxli is the sense of face that looks backward and forward. You may have seen it represented in Mexican or Latin American art or artifacts – a sculpture or painting with a dual face. Some people may think that this represents someone being two0faced, but that is incorrect. In indigenous thought, Itxli is a purposeful duality of face. One face looks backward toward the ancestral teachings and the lessons that have come into our own lives. At the same time, it incorporates a face that looks forward on our journey to fulfill our Sacred Purpose. This creates a sense of true movement that takes us forward with acknowledgement, understanding and acceptance. This enables us to truly live life with our sacred purpose.”

“The other side of the teaching includes being balanced with a sense of heart, which in the Nahuati language is called Yolloti or Corazón in Spanish. It is the sense of heart, an interconnected heart, a compassionate heart, holds unconditional love – one that reaches within us to our soul/spirit. If we look deep into our heart, we begin to hear a spirit, we begin to feel a spirit, and we begin to hear an inner voice that connects us to the true essence of not only our feelings, but to an ancestral wisdom. That heart is also connected to our sacred relationships – the relationships with God, nature, the universe, our ancestors and the people around us. When we live within an awareness of face and heart, we can then experience a sense of balance. When we move through our lives with a sense of balance, we’re allowed to grow and heal with true, interconnected movement.”

Weeding Your Garden From Wounded Patterns

“We begin by ‘weeding our garden’. It starts by weeding away patterns that don’t contribute to our sacredness and our sacred purpose; those things that don’t contribute to feeling in harmony with our journey in life.

“It is said that when the student is ready, the teacher will show up.”

“Addictions come in many forms and mine has been overextending myself to help others to the detriment of my own self which has distracted me from honoring my own sacredness.”

Breaking Wounded Patterns

“I will review five major patterns that keep us from truly moving towards sustainable Face and Heart balance in our lives.”

‘But Why?’ Syndrome

“Often, when we reflect on what has gone on in our lives, and especially the painful experiences, we want to know why.”

“Usually the ‘But why?’ comes up even more in those of us that feel that we have been the best person we could have been in a relationship. We feel that we tried to be the best that we could in our relationships and life, so why would someone treat us that way? We tried to be honorable and we don’t understand why we were mistreated.”

“This is especially true when focusing on an unanswerable ‘why?’ These questions keep us stuck with no resolution, because the lesson is not ours to figure out in the first place. It has more to do with the actions of the other person, not us. Even though hurt people hurt people, it is really their lesson because they committed the act. So for us to search in ourselves as to why another person did something, or why the events happened in a particular way, is a futile battle. We are actually carrying anther person’s baggage when we carry these type of questions as our own.”

” The truth is that while we struggle with these issues and questions, many times the other person that hurt us is off someplace in their…next phase of life without a care at all about what we are still obsessing over. Often people don’t even recognize the degree of pain that they caused others, and in actuality, never will. In addition, as we carry these lessons, it energetically blocks the other person from really learning their own lesson.”

“Release the need to justify or make sense of the experience. It’s time to acknowledge it happened, see the lesson in it, and let it go. Besides, often there is no logical reason in the sense of fairness or balance, for certain actions.”

“Excessive analysis perpetuates emotional paralysis. You cannot heal and resolve your emotional material with your mind. The mind is the great divider. Your emotional material does not evaporate because you watch it. You can heal your heart with your heart. Your heart is the great connector. When it opens, healing happens.”

Jeff Brown (Author & Spiritualist; 1926 ~ 2003)

“Let me just say that the more that you can practice the first teachings of honoring yourself, being present, and paying attention to the gifts in your life today, the easer it is to release the ‘why?’

“As a suggested first step, consider in your meditation or prayers to ask for help. Whatever your belief or higher power, God, Creator, Spirit Guides, Ancestors or whoever, ask them to take the ‘why?’ from you, and the need to understand.”

“I have added this to my midday meditation time. After my meditation, I kneel on the floor with my palms and forehead in contact with the earth. I deposit the negative energy I am carrying into the earth so it can be transformed and thus transform myself. I repeat, ‘O’ Creator please take the why from me. The only things important are that I am loved, blessed and sacred.’ I then sit up on my heels and breath in my 7 sacred breath while thanking the Creator for my sight, hearing, smelling, tasting, touching, heartbeat and breath all while inhaling and exhaling cleansing breaths.”

“Surrender to what is, let go of what was and have faith in what will be.”

Sonia Ricotti (Author; 1965)

Anger And Resentment

“When things occur in our lives that cause us pain, sorrow, or shame, our spirit feels out of equilibrium. …Whatever the justification given, even if your mind wants to accept the rationale that if you would have been different, then things would have been good, your spirit knows the truth. And in that confusion, when you don’t come to a healthy resolution, your spirit feels uneasy, which breeds a sense of anger.”

“Anger is the frustration that we feel when we are unable to resolve and return to a place of truth and connectedness. Anger is often the mask for hurt, fear or feelings of abandonment or disloyalty.”

“Finally, unresolved anger can also breed resentment, which is energetic frustration resulting from wanting to right the wrong, and bring balance. Once again, it’s important to note that when we continue to focus our energy on a past hurt or on unresolved wounds, we divert our attention from the lesson we need to learn. …It’s okay to hold a memory of someone from the past, but it’s up to you if you energetically allow them to take up space and stay present, even emotionally, in your current life. In addition, when we feel the need for another person to ‘understand’ what they have done to us, or what has occurred from our point of view, then we feed the frustration that exacerbates the sense of being stuck. This then triggers the many other frozen emotions that we have repressed, and magnifies these feelings.”

Releasing Anger And Resentment

“God sometimes removes people from your life to protect you. Don’t run after them.”

Rick Warren (American Author; January 28th, 1954)

“If you are going to do this in a good way, you should set aside at least 1 to 2 hours for this ceremonial process. If you feel better having support, you may ask someone that you implicitly trust to be with you in the process. If not, you may do it on your own and/or ask your ancestors or a special ancestor to join and guide you spiritually. Plan to do this in a ceremonial way, with the intentions of goodness and healing (not with a sense of harm), and with the goal of becoming lighter and clearer in your life. If it is part of your ceremonial or faith practice, you can burn a candle, sage, copal, cedar or other herb to assist in the cleansing process. Either way, begin the process by taking a moment, taking a few deep breaths, asking for spiritual guidance and support, and attempting to do this in a good way.”

“The first part of this process is to write a letter to someone with whom you have unresolved anger and resentment. As you are writing the letter, jot your feelings down without hesitation or censorship of language. Just write down what you would like to say to that person. Often, it is not recommended to confront that person directly. Perhaps the person has moved on, or is not even alive anymore. Regardless, the true purpose of this process is for you to release the toxic feelings, not for the other person. So write this letter or speak it into a recorder, just to release everything you’ve ever wanted to say about how you feel, and how the relationship has impacted you. After writing the letter, create a small symbolic ritual where you shred it or burn the paper with the intention of letting it go. To assist your self in releasing this toxicity, it may be helpful after you’ve burned or shredded the letter to incorporate a visualization process to move the negative shadow elements away from you. You can do so by first settling yourself in a comfortable space in front of your alter, if possible.”

  • “Take a deep breath in through your nose, hold it to the count of 4, and release your breath through your mouth. Do this 4 times.”
  • “Now imagine yourself sitting at the ocean, or at a stream, with a bowl of water.”
  • “Each time you exhale, visualize the negative feelings that you wrote coming out of you and falling into the bowl of water.”
  • “As you finish with your words and your tears falling in this bowl, imagine yourself dumping the words and releasing the feelings into the ocean or the river, as you watch them float away.”
  • “As you process this, make sure to breathe very deeply and allow the breath to come through you and out of you, cleansing your body of the angry and resentful feelings.”
  • “With 4 cleansing breaths, give thanks and see yourself emotionally and spirituality free from these toxic feelings.”
  • “Finally, make a commitment to stop telling this story of you as a victim, so that you can shift your energy past that experience.”

Embracing Your Culturally Based Traditions For Growth And Healing

“The indigenous Huichole people of Mexico have a practice that allows them to cleanse…, journeying and praying every year on a pilgrimage. On this journey, they each have a piece of rope with them. As they walk, they pray on what they need to release that takes them away from their sacredness, sacred purpose, and sense of balance. With each of the things that brings up a negative feeling, whether it was a person, something that happened to them or even what they did to someone else, they tie a representative knot in the rope. The intent is to release these feelings or thoughts, no longer carrying these things inside of them. They walk and pray about this baggage until arriving at the ceremonial fire. On this day, so goes the tradition, each person offers these things up to die or pass. They then share with all those present, the things that they needed to let go, and throw their rope in the fire with the intention of releasing the toxic thoughts and feelings.”

“This tradition speaks powerfully to me. I have some red leather cording I plan to use for this. I also think for overall growth, it would be good to reflect at the end of each day any daily baggage and release via a knot so that each day starts newly. Having a piece of cord to knot before bed to release before expressing my daily gratitude could be something transformative. I will attempt to incorporate in my daily practice with the intent that on New Year’s Day in 2027, I could ceremonial burn my cord of baggage and cleanse myself.”

Shame As A Barrier

“The third barrier that blocks our movement and healing is shame. …Often times, oppressed, disenfranchised or immigrant populations have grown up with a sense of feeling ‘less then,’ unwanted or not wanted. They are made to feel like they don’t measure up or that their gender, gender identity, culture or ethnicity is inferior by witnessing racial or discriminatory acts happen to themselves their parents, relatives or people from their community. Science is also now recognizing what indigenous populations have known all along – pain and shame can impact you at such a profound cellular level, that the effects from these acts can get transmitted to subsequent generations.”

“Shame is a reflection of the shadow side of others, which we allow to influence our lives. Imagine standing in the sun and someone coming to stand between you and the sunlight, leaving you in a shadow. The person may be standing in your light unintentionally or ‘for your own good.’ Nevertheless, you don’t feel the light. As an example of this, I’ve heard family members make fun of how someone in their family looks, or their weight, or even their tone of skin ‘in a joking way,’ thinking it didn’t have an impact. But it did. …In the same vein, many women go through life, even from an early age, feeling ashamed of their bodies because of disrespectful remarks or stares they receive. When it happens so frequently, one may even come to tolerate this behavior or accept it as normal, even thought her spirit knows it doesn’t feel right. In the worst case scenario, she becomes accustomed to being in the shadow of shame so much that she believes that it is somehow deserved, and then begins doing it to herself.”

“Our sorrows and wounds are healed only when we touch them with compassion.”

Jack Kornfield (American Psychologist and Writer; July 16th, 1945)

Releasing the Shameful Shadow

“So how do we undo the feelings of shame? It begins by recognizing that regardless of what anyone has told you, whatever you have done in your life, no matter the situations where you stayed too long, or whatever other shameful behaviors you have exhibited because of shame, in the core of your spirit, you are still sacred. It is about knowing that regardless of the circumstances that have brought you to this shameful place, you did the best you could with the awareness, which often included wounds, you had at the time.”

“Part of this cleansing is also having the willingness to release the shame others have bestowed on you, and shed the judgement that we place on ourselves for the actions we have committed. …That’s why there is a dual face – looking back, but not ‘Living Back’ (living in the past). You see, looking back is remembering the lessons and the teachings, which is important. However, there is no need to live back, and remain in the emotions of the past.”

“When it comes to self-trust, there is a powerful choice we must all make. As human beings, we often seem primed to remember who and what hurt us rather than focusing on how we made it through the pain.”

Iyanla Vanzant (American Inspirational Speaker and Lawyer; September 13th, 1953)

Facing Fear As A Trickster

“This then brings us to the fourth barrier – Fear, the trickster of life. …this can also cause us to become slaves of our past burdens. …this can also cause us to become over cautious, hypersensitive, and reactive to everyday challenges…”

“If you live life in fear of the future because of what happened in the past, you will end up losing what you have in the present.”

Nishan Panwar (Author; September 1989)

“Too many of us are not living our lives because we are living our fears.”

Les Brown (Motivational Speaker and Former Ohio State Representative; February 17th, 1945)

Forgiveness

“Forgiveness does not erase the bitter past. A healed memory is not a deleted memory. Instead, forgiving what we cannot forget creates a new way to remember. We change the memory of our past into a hope for the future.”

Luis B. Smeades (Author; August 20th, 1921 ~ December 19th, 2002)

“The lesson of forgiveness is often one of the most difficult processes to incorporate into your life. …Many people believe that forgiving someone means that you release that person from their responsibility of the act. It does not. It also does not mean that if you forgive someone, now you trust them, have positive feelings for them or want a relationship with them. But it is important to understand than unforgiven acts take up spiritual and energetic space within us, and in the end, makes it difficult for us to see and accept new blessings because the big bowling ball is in the way, then you will stay stuck in your journey.

Understanding

“It’s important to accept that you will never truly understand the rationale for someone else’s behavior. …most times, the person who committed the act(s) doesn’t know why. …The question then becomes, ‘Are you willing to stop hurting yourself by putting energy into attempting to undo something that occurred, or trying to figure out why?’ Accept that it happened, that you need to surrender to that truth, and move on.”

“The truth is, unless you let go, unless you forgive yourself, unless you forgive the situation, unless you realize that that situation is over, you cannot move forward.”

Dr. Steve Maraboli (Behavioral Scientist, Motivational Speaker, Author, and Leadership Coach; April 18th, 1975)

Integration

“The third step here is transitioning from the victim of this story, and other situations, by forgiving yourself as well. This means letting go of the negative self-talk about oneself, or the other person. This means being willing to integrate the process of catch and release into your learning. …Yes, this means you must commit to stop telling the story again as you recognize that it is toxic to you when you open that chapter again.”

Movement

“The following will guide you through a healing ceremonial process of forgiveness.”

Forgiveness: Releasing The Story

“Set aside at least half an hour for this ceremonial process. If you feel better having support, you may ask someone that you implicitly trust to be with you in the process. If not, you may do it on your own and/or ask your ancestors or a special ancestor to join and guide you spiritually. Plan to do this in a ceremonial way, with the intentions of goodness and healing (not with a sense of harm), and with the goal of becoming lighter and clearer in your life. If it is part of your ceremonial or faith practice, you can burn a candle, sage, copal, cedar or other herb to assist in the cleansing process.”

“Take a deep breath and settle yourself into good intentions of releasing and healing yourself. As the narrator of the story, what you want to do is tell the story of an incident that still burdens you with just the know facts, trying not to get sucked into the emptions of the incident(s). After you have told the story while breathing deeply, sit for a moment and recognize that you are you, in spite of the incident(s). You are in a safe place where you are at, and you are sacred just the way you are.”

“To assist yourself in releasing this toxicity, it may be helpful to incorporate a visualization process to move the negative shadow elements away from you.”

  • “Now take a deep breath in through you nose, hold it to the count of 4, and release your breath through your mouth. Do this 4 times.”
  • “Now imagine yourself sitting at the ocean or at a stream, with a bowl of water.”
  • “As you breathe in and exhale, begin telling the story of the incident as a storyteller, with just the facts.”
  • “Visualize, with every exhale, that the facts of the story that you are telling are falling into the bowl of water.”
  • “As you finish with your words falling into this bowl of water.”
  • “As you finish with your words falling in this bowl of water, imagine yourself dumping the story and releasing the feelings into the ocean or the river as you see them floating away.”
  • “As you’re processing this, make sure to breathe very deeply and allow the breath to come through you and out you, cleansing your body of the anger and resentful feelings.”
  • “Now with 4 cleansing breaths give thanks and see yourself emotionally and spiritually free from these toxic feelings.”
  • Finally, make a commitment to stop telling this story of you as a victim, so that you can shift your energy past that experience.”

Self-Forgiveness: The Biggest Mountain To Climb

“As we were finishing a sweat lodge ceremony, the medicine man said to us, ‘Now the real ceremony begins: to do the work to live these teachings every day, in all your relationships.'”

Jerry Trello (Author)


“While I know myself as a creation of God, I am also obligated to realize and remember that everyone else and everything else are also God’s creation.”

Maya Angelou (American Memoirist and Essayist; April 4th, 1928 ~ May 28th, 2014)


–Trello, Jerry. “Recovering Your Sacredness: Ancestral Teachings For Today’s Living”. Sueños Publications, L.L.C.. (2018). Pages 83-124.


I challenge each of you to post comments to this blog series so we all can grow together.

My Sacred Life 12-25-25

December 25th, 2025

“People are sent into our lives to teach us things that we need to learn about ourselves.”

Mandy Hale (Author; UNKNOWN)

Chapter 5: Pay Attention: The Ancestors Are Ready To Embrace You

“…you are prepared to begin incorporating the second lesson – the lesson of In Lak’ech, or paying attention to life as your reflective teacher. This Mayan teaching In Lak’ech (you are my other me) is the concept that everything in life is a reflective teaching (your other you).”

“Within this teaching, the elders would describe this lesson as life’s mirror, el espejo, or the way that life and all its experiences reflect teachings to us. This is opposed to thinking that things just happen to us or that we are victims of circumstances. …It also categorizes life’s experiences as good or bad, positive or negative, with a focus on labeling certain experiences as even pathological. It uses this judgement as a way of labeling these experiences with an emotional weight, often making us feel inadequate, ashamed, or irreparably damaged if we’ve experienced certain things. This labeling or categorization then tends to create shame in us which can attach to us forever.”

“This teaching also includes paying attention to the lessons that are brought to us by others, starting with our family. It is usually family and close relations that are our first teachers, and where the first challenges of these teachings take place.”

“In traditional times, in preparation for one’s life’s journey, the elders would observe (pay attention) to the spirit (tonal) of each child as they came into the world to identify their guiding characteristics. Some traditions even begin this process before the baby is born. Mothers often share that they can feel the spirit of the child that they are carrying during pregnancy, and how each child feels different. By way of this process, in certain cultures, elders would ascertain and then bestow specific spirit names to each child. These spirit names were often connected to an animal or ancestor spirit. …The wise elders understood that children have a tonal, or unique spirit.”

“Of all the African tribes still alive today, the Himba tribe is one of the few that counts the birth date of the children not from the day they are born nor conceived but the day the mother decides to have the child. When a Himba woman decides to have a child, she goes off and sits under a tree, by herself, and she listens until she can hear the song of the child who wants to come. And after she’s heard the song of this child, she comes back to the man who will be the child’s father, and teaches him the song. When they make love to physically conceive the child, they sing the song of the child as a way of inviting the child. When she becomes pregnant, the mother teaches that child’s song to the midwives and the old women of the village, so that when the child is born, the old women and the people gather around him/her and sing the child’s song to welcome him/her. As the child grows up, the other villagers are taught the child’s song. If the child falls, or gets hurt, someone picks him/her up and sings to him/her his/her song. Or maybe when the child does something wonderful, or goes through the rites of puberty, then as a way of honoring this person, the people of the village sing his or her song. In the Himba tribe there is one other occasion when the “child song” is sang to the Himba tribesperson. If a Himba tribesman or tribeswoman commits a crime or something that is against the Himba social norms, the villagers call him or her into the center of the village and the community forms a circle around him/her. Then they sing his/her birth song to him/her. The Himba views correction not as a punishment, but as love and remembrance of identity. For when you recognise your own song, you have no desire or need to do anything that would hurt another. In marriage, the songs are sung, together. And finally, when the Himba tribesman/tribeswoman is lying in his/her bed, ready to die, all the villagers that know his or her song come and sing – for the last time that person’s song.”

Releasing Generational Wounds And Patterns

“‘Thee are wounds that never show on the body, that are deeper and more hurtful than anything that bleeds.”

Laurell K. Hamilton (American Writer; February 19th, 1963)

“…fear-based patterns may have been passed on generationally and definitely can affect the way you see yourself, interact in your relationships, and how you parent your children. As a result, if you had parents that were stuck in these fear-based wounds, then some of you may have developed processes that mimic these behaviors. Unfortunately, some of these patterns and stressors may have resulted in some of us going through a variety of hurtful and panful childhood experiences, the residuals of which we still carry. Living in a home with wounded relations often produces patterns where one become stuck in fear, insecurity, and filled with shame.”

“The way we talk to our children becomes their inner voice.”

Peggy O’Mara (Author; UNKNOWN)

“It is an important step for all of us to intentionally acknowledge and release harmful generational trauma and oppressive patterns that have been handed down…”

Barriers To Intimate Relationships

“We all come with gifts and baggage based on our childhood experiences or generational trauma. The questions become: ‘How can we learn from those experiences without being ashamed of the lessons? Are we willing to pay attention and face the mirror of these teachings in our lives so that past hurts don’t interrupt our ability to be present in our relationships going forward?'”

“Blame keeps wounds open. Only forgiveness heals.”

Thomas S. Monson (American Religious Leader; August 21st, 1927 ~ January 2nd, 2018)

“The problem worsens when such deeply intense episodes occur and then they are not talked through or prcessed resulting in energy of trauma remaining stuck in your body, in your cell memory and attached to your spirit. This may leave you confused, uncomfortable, and with a sense of anxiety or insecurity. Years later, you are left wondering why, on occasion, you feel imbalanced or unhappy for what seems like no reason at all. Unbeknownst to you, the unresolved trauma may still be lodged in your body, attached to your spirit and may be inhibiting you from truly paying attention and being present in any relationship. In Indigenous cultures of Mexico, the medicine people call this Susto. In Western society, it may be referred to as posttraumatic stress.”

“This simple task of paying attention to what’s in front of us, to our needs right now, connects us to our true sacred purpose. This also allows us to notice when someone is disrespecting us or treating us in a dishonorable way, pay attention to what boundaries we need to set, and gives us the courage to honor our sacred-self by speaking our truth.”

In Lak’ech: Recovering Your Reflective Teacher

“The final element of this teaching of In Lak’ech, is recognizing that all of our relationships and experiences, especially the painful or difficult ones are teachers for us.”

“The Maestros/Maestras, or wisdom teachers tell us that the way to be in balance is to live in balance; to live in concert with the natural rhythm of life – the earth, wind, water, sun and moon. Rather than reacting or allowing circumstances to trigger and freeze us, we need to reconnect with the vibrations of energy that are in balance and that can heal us. Since imbalanced patterns affect us physically, emotionally, mentally and spiritually, our healing needs to transform all of these areas as well. We can begin by honoring ourselves.”

Consider The Following:

  • The sacred wind, or breath – Take time in the morning, during the day, and before you go to sleep: Take 7 sacred breaths, breathing slowly and fully in through your nose, and releasing smoothly through your mouth. Incorporate this breathing practice anytime you feel anxious or disconnected.”
  • Honoring that sacred ocean in us, the female spirit of water – It is very important for us to drink plenty of water so that we can replenish and restore our tissues, as well as detoxify our bodies from the stress and past trauma that stops our flow. It is also beneficial to go in the ocean, a river or take a bath on a regular basis, allowing the water to bless us and heal us. When we do this, it is important to do it intentionally, with the goal of detoxifying and cleansing ourselves from past wounds and hurts, and reconnecting with the sacred flowing energy of water.”
  • Staying connected to the earth – We know that foods that come from the earth are the best for us; plants, vegetables, fruits and herbs are rejuvenating and healing. In addition, we should take time to have our bare feet and hands feel and connect with the earth. Our bodies vibrate at the same energetic rhythm as the earth and the more we connect with the earth, the more balanced we will be. Some traditions will place their forehead or hands on the ground, as a way of depositing the negative energy they are carrying into the earth so it can be transformed, in only the way a mother can do.”
  • Say good morning to grandfather Sun every day – It is important that we can take some time every day to be in nature and feel the sun, as it is a natural strengthener of our spirit and source of vitamin D. By connecting to the light of grandfather sun, the light spirit within us will be fed. Bathe in the sun’s light and wear it as a protective shield around you.”
  • Honoring grandmother Moon – In addition, connect monthly to the full power of the moon’s energy. The teaching here is to allow our bodies to rest, heal, and rejuvenate. It is also important to acknowledge grandmother moon’s energy, every night, so that we can rest properly.”

Transformational Healing In Today’s Relationships

“Suffering is not holding you, you are holding suffering.”

Osho (Indian Philosopher and Mystic; December 11th, 1931 ~ January 19th, 1990)

“The first step in healing our relationships is being able to accept who we are today – to acknowledge and accept the relationships in our lives today as they are, without judgement. This doesn’t mean you have to like all people or agree with them, but you do have to know the ‘truth’ about who they are and who they are not. When you do this, it then opens up space for shifts and transformations in your relationships to take place. When you finally make this choice about the kinds of relationships you want to have, amazing things can happen.”

“Like the author, Jerry Trello, I have been impacted by my own parents wounded stories. My mom and dad both grew up as the oldest in their large families, 8 and 5 respectively. Both had the responsibility of taking care of their brothers and sisters via babysitting, household chores or employment. Both my parents had to give up their needs as children for the good and survival of the family. My grandparents leaned hard on both my parents for their support. In a large family, there was little time to tend to their own feelings or needs. It was all about the family and about what they needed them to do, especially for their siblings and their mothers. Sometimes, in a family with many children, it is difficult to find time to pay attention to each of their feelings. They were primarily trying to survive. Especially in impoverished communities like my dad, where there is a lot of stress and multiple challenges, they begin to repress or ignore those things that don’t serve their immediate needs. I witnessed this circumstantial dynamic occur for both my parents. They worked long hours and still arrived home to cook for my brother and I and doing whatever else needed to be done to run the household. Rarely did they ever express their personal feelings, other than occasional frustration or anger with situations or how we were acting, and rarely did they do anything for themselves. Growing up this created a dilemma for me because when I began interacting with my peers and visiting their households, I was learning a completely different way families interacted, past experiences of home life confused me. I remember hearing parents praising and reminding their children they were loved. As a sapio- demi creature, I keyed in on this immediately and wondered why this was only occasional in my life. It’s not that my parents didn’t love us. There was love all around us in other forms or expressions = though my parents working long hours and by the way they fed us and took care of us. Despite everything gping on in our home, there was love. I felt it, but only occasionally heard it. I heard my parents brag to others about what their children where up to, and rarely heard it in conversation directly to either one of us. I do remember having a pojnted conversation with my parents about not getting the love I needed and then they would anxiously share their love. At the time, I hated this as it felt forced because I had to ask for it. I know better now to ask for what I want and to not assume others can read my mind. It is in sharp contract to my life now where my husband and I remind one another verbally how much we love one another hundreds of times per day. Seems Like I am making up for a long overdue need. LOL! I know deep down inside of me, that my parents loved me and this is why I am sharing my love with my parents in the way I need for the past eight years. I made sure to hug my parents when we got together, make a point to sit beside them when visiting and even reach out to hold their hand which is a powerful connection for me. My parents loved hugs, and I felt at times it also made them feel uncomfortable. I know my parents knew I loved them and even so there were times when I told my parents I loved them they would seem dismissive due to how uncomfortable it made them feel. Again as a young person this was confusing and often make me feel like I was doing something wrong. What is interesting when you begin having your own children, is that you are confronted with and begin to acknowledge the person my parents were; they were also a man and woman, they have their own spirits, they have their own needs, they have their own issues and they have their own wounds. I don’t fully know either of my parents own journeys, and may never truly know or appreciate their own struggles. I think they key to my own reflection was to finally accept what path my parents had navigated as young parents, what they had sacrificed and to accept who they were/are as a total beings. To heal, I had to let go of the regret that I held about the way my parents raised me, which had kept me anchored in the past. I have been working on accepting my parents as they are, right now. I believe by paying attention and accepting them for who they are today opens a space in me and in them for the opportunity for transformation. This is the power of In Lak’ech, accepting your life in the present and paying attention to your relationships as teachers.”

“That is the significance of paying attention to who someone is in their sacred-self, acknowledging and accepting their gifts and their baggage, the duality of the darkness and the light, without judgement or criticism or expectation. Only then, are we able to live our lives by acknowledging and paying attention to oneself, and to those people and things that surround us.”

“When people can be present in their lives and pay attention to their own physical, emotional, mental and spiritual sacredness, it’s easier for them to accept themselves and others without judgment. As mentioned earlier, nature can help us to heal and grow in this process, learning to appreciate life more. To wake up and be present when the beautiful sun shines, when the rain comes to bless the plants and see the flowers in a joyous way, this is an intentional aspect of healing and glowing. It allows you to live life in a sacred way because you are now showing up, and you are paying attention to the beauty of life. And when you start to pay attention, the blessings that come are amazing.”

“You begin to see the blessings that the Creator sends you, the lessons that are there for you to grasp which allow you to see the journey that is getting ready to avail itself to you. In Lak’ech, the reflective sacred mirror, begins to show you your true path. The answers show up and the healing begins. The tings that you thought were impossible, now become possible. The visions you thought could never be realized, are now within your reach. But it is only when you begin to be present and pay attention, when you realize that the Creator, angels, ancestors, and the universe are just waiting for you; waiting so they could reveal the teachings, the lessons, the helpers, the guidance and the strength that you need to move to the next phase of your life.”



–Trello, Jerry. “Recovering Your Sacredness: Ancestral Teachings For Today’s Living”. Sueños Publications, L.L.C.. (2018). Pages 54-82.


I challenge each of you to post comments to this blog series so we all can grow together.

My Sacred Life 12-24-25

December 24th, 2025

“O’ GREAT SPIRIT…help me always to speak the truth quietly, to listen with an open mind when others speak and to remember the peace that may be found in silence.”

Cherokee Prayer

Chapter 4: Wake Up And Say, “Good Morning/” To Yourself

“The teaching of In Tloque Nahuaque, or being connected to one’s sacredness begins simply with you choosing to create a sacred space and time for yourself.

“In reality, the energetic, affirmative vibration of what you put out and how you live will manifest and grow. So, it is important, every morning to intentionally wake up and say, ‘Good morning,’ to your sacred self.”

“That’s why Grandfather Sun comes up every morning – to remind us that we have that light within us, that every day the light is there. We just have to show up like Grandfather Sun does every day – without the masks, without the shame, without excuses, without sedating, and welcome our self to a new day of learning, growing, healing and living.”

“I love that this morning’s sunrise does not define itself by last night’s sunset.”

Dr. Steve Maraboli (Behavioral Scientist, Motivational Speaker, Author, and Leadership Coach; April 18th, 1975)

” We have to be present with ourselves and acknowledge that wherever we are in our lives today, is where we are supposed to be, sacred as we are.”

“‘No hay mal que por bien no venga.’ (Even when something seemingly bad happens, goodness can come from it.)”

Mexican Proverb

“In fact, we find that many wonderful healers, teachers, and therapists have received their medicine through their own experience with their darkness. In essence, by going through some very horrible experiences, coming to terms with them, and finding the lessons, they now have medicine to help others. Although originating in the darkness, the medicine becomes light, part of their whole, true, sacred purpose.”

“Many ancient healers and teachers teach the importance of beginning with a prayer or meditation. This is called centering. The blessings that are given to us through our breath, the wind spirit, our essence of being, through our sense of consciousness, connects us to our sacred selves. This is turn opens a channel for grace and healing. As we begin to incorporate this life view through practice, we may also begin to recollect other times of grace experienced in our lives.”

“Meditation is not meant to help us avoid problems or run away from difficulties. It is meant to allow positive healing to take place. To meditate is to learn how to stop – to stop being carried away by our regrets about the past, our anger or despair in the present, or our worries about the future.”

Thich Nhat Hanh (Vietnamese Monk and Peace Activist; October 11th, 1926 ~ January 22nd, 2022)

Making A Commitment To Your Sacredness

“I would recommend that you create a special space, alter, or spot where you go every day to ground yourself. On this alter, you can place special objects, sacred elements, herbs and or pictures of ancestors and loved ones. As you continue to pray, your alter will gain energy and spirit. In many traditions, people incorporate the use of herbs (sage, copal, tobacco, and/or incense) and sounds (flute, drums, nature sounds) to further engage their senses, connect with their genetic sound vibrations of ancestors, and bring themselves into focus with their present state of consciousness.”

“Choose to spend a few minutes each day, twice a day if possible, feeling, breathing, getting connected to the Creator, acknowledging your sacredness and giving thanks for who you are. Choose to devote just 5 minutes in the morning and 5 minutes before you go to sleep, to this journey of honoring and healing yourself. …Just try it for 28 days (1 moon cycle) to begin with.”

“Funny how I must have intuitively known to create a place for reflection as I created this space in our small hobbit house. I had filled it with important items that feed my soul.”

Morning Ritual

  • “Let’s begin the morning ritual by connecting with the earth around you, by honoring and feeling the ground and connecting your energy to the earth. Connect to the sounds in your present environment; listen, feel, sense the sacred moment.”
  • “Stop in the quiet of the moment, close your eyes and take a minute to open yourself to healing and blessings.”
  • “Then connect with the sacredness of the moment by taking a slow deep breath in through your nose all the way to the pit of your stomach and then slowly exhaling out through your mouth. Take 3 more breaths in and out in the same way as you honor the moment.”
  • “Now say, ‘I am sacred, I am a blessing.’
  • “Inhale, then exhale. Now say it again, ‘I am sacred, I am a blessing.’ Hear it, Inhale, then exhale.”
  • “Now imagine that your ancestors, your grandmothers, are saying it to you. Say it again, ‘I am sacred, I am a blessing.’ Hear, feel, and take in their message. Do this 4 times, each time inhaling and exhaling slowly.”
  • “Now sit with this thought and feeling for a minute. And if you need to repeat the process, you can do it again – each time sitting with it for a while.”
  • “Attempt to carry this sacredness throughout the day. Show up and be present in your own life, for your own well-being.”
  • “Show up and be present in the lives of your relationships.”

Evening Ritual

  • “Begin by connecting with the earth around you, by honoring and feeling the ground and connecting your energy to where you are. Connect to the sounds in your present environment. Listen, feel, sense the sacred moment.”
  • “Then close your eyes and connect with the sacredness of the moment by taking a deep breath in through your nose, and slowly out through your mouth.”
  • “Stop in the quiet of the moment, and take a minute to open yourself to healing and blessings.”
  • “Take a deep breath in, and then exhale slowly. Connect with your breath and your body again. Inhale, then exhale.”
  • “Hear yourself say it, feel it and embrace it. Inhale, then exhale.”
  • “Now give thanks for whomever and wherever you are right now, without criticism and without judgement (criticism and judgement take you out of your scaredness).”
  • “Now say, ‘I want to thank you, Creator, for who I am and the lessons in my life.’ Say it 4 times, inhaling and exhaling in between each.”
  • “Give thanks, recognizing that wherever you are right now, is where you are supposed to be.”
  • “Recall all the things you feel grateful for today.”
  • “Be with that sense of your sacredness.”
  • “Now say, ‘I put all of my burdens and worries in your hands, as I honor myself by allowing my body to rest.’ Inhale and release. Say this 4 times.”
  • “Attempt to care this sacredness with you, as you allow yourself to rest through the night.”
  • “Try committing to do this practice for one moon cycle (around 28 days). Just 5 minutes in the morning and 5 minutes in the evening. You will see how it begins a process of rediscovering your sacredness.”

“I am committed to giving myself this time in the morning and night to help heal and rediscover my sacredness for the next moon cycle.”

“Nothing is more powerful than a surrendered life in the hands of God.”

Rick Warren (American Author; January 28th, 1954)


–Trello, Jerry. “Recovering Your Sacredness: Ancestral Teachings For Today’s Living”. Sueños Publications, L.L.C.. (2018). Pages 41-53.


I challenge each of you to post comments to this blog series so we all can grow together.

My Sacred Life 12-23-25

December 23rd, 2025

“Some people come into your life as blessings, some come into your life as lessons.”

Mother Theresa (Saint; August 26th, 1910 ~ September 5th, 1997)

Chapter 3: Acknowledging Your Sacredness

Showing Up And Being Present

“…the first lesson: Maintaining our sacredness. In essence, the act of showing up and being present is a manifestation of feeling worthy enough to honor the sacred moment, and to show up and be in joy where you are at. It seems like such a simple thing to do. But what does showing up and being present really mean? …It means, that in order to be able to maintain our sacredness, we must first acknowledge and accept ourselves by showing up and being present for day to day things including the lessons and blessings that life presents. The problem is that we may try to show up and enjoy life, but society also complicates things by reinforcing the opposite. For example, by promoting instant gratification, hyper-dependence on technology, or praising multi-tasking as a virtue. At the same time, some of us may not realize that we are stuck in a pattern (lesson) of attempting to ignore the wounds by keeping busy, which is another way to avoid being present.”

“This is all too painfully true for me. I strived for mastery at multi-tasking so I could remain busy and not have time to look or actually BE in my own life. Simple surviving or getting by in existence mode and I was not even clear that I didn’t know the difference. I was so busy doing that I completely missed the beingness of living. I lived in a state of numbness about by self-created circumstances, I was hiding from myself…hiding from my sacred self.”

“What we also don’t realize, is that one of the residual symptoms of unresolved pain (i.e. not being fully welcomed, acknowledged or accepted; being rejected or abused) manifests in the inability to be present. Whether it be in our bodies, in our relationships, or to be fully present in other meaningful aspects of our lives or with simple things like enjoying a cup of coffee. Some of us get stuck in the pain and trauma of the past and live life reacting to situations based on our wounded selves – as if it is normal to move through life busily and detached.”

“My ancestors would call this place, Susto, or being stuck in a trauma-based state. This state of disconnection makes it difficult for many of us to truly enjoy life or stay focused in our present relationships. It promotes a way of life that is based on unconsciously avoiding feeling; therefore, not truly being able to enjoy the life we have. As time goes on with each passing day, just like a drug, it takes more and more stimulation, excitement, and material goods to sedate the anxiety of this disconnection. These patterns of behavior can even be passed on from generation to generation becoming what I call relational tribal patterns.

“Dividing attention is mentally draining and depleting, and the quality with which the distinct actions are done is ultimately sacrificed. The end result is getting further and further estranged from the joy or the essence of whatever we’re doing.

Doing Things Mañana (Tomorrow)

“When we are always thinking about something else, the next place we need to be, or what’s coming tomorrow, it takes energy away from what is presently being done. By continuing to do things tis way, we end up with a less-than satisfactory experience. As our minds get trained to not fully enjoy the present, where we are and what we are doing, we end up always wanting more, or being discontent with what we have. This may lead to a perpetual feeling of dissatisfaction in our lives.”

“In the midst of turmoil and chaos, keep stillness inside of you.”

Deepak Chopra (Indian-American Author; October 22nd, 1946)

“What are you reacting to? Ask Yourself that question every moment of everyday when your peace is disturbed.”

Kenneth Wapnick (Teacher; February 22nd, 1942 ~ December 27th, 2013)

Medicating Our Disconnection

“…the body, heart, mind, and spirit are magnificent teachers. Sometimes, a person needs to feel down in order to slow down and allow oneself to reflect, learn a lesson, and rebalance.”

“…the first person we need to learn to have a positive relationship with is ourself. Yes, the first step to acknowledging our sacredness and being present is being able to acknowledge, accept, and be present with ourselves. We begin this by acknowledging and accepting who we are, right here and now.”

“The you that is present today. Not the person that you used to be or want to be, but the one that you are right now with both the blessings and the challenges. Only then can you begin having a sacred relationship with yourself; not who people have said you are, or their expectation of whom hey want you to be, but loving and being present with you true sacred self as you are today. Accepting who you are now is the first step. This doesn’t mean that there are not things that you could do better or change, but you must first accept the truth of who you are right now.”

Connecting With Your Present Sacredness

“Another part of rediscovering our sacredness is undoing messages or patterns that stifle our authentic selves. Growing up, many of us have been told how we should or shouldn’t be. We were told not to do this or we can’t be like that. …In addition, many people of color or oppressed populations have been made to feel ashamed of who they are because of their race, color of their skin, gender identity, or patterns of behavior that didn’t fit the norm. This negative reinforcement creates fear of being one’s true self.”

“I was assimilated and not exposed to my indigenous culture. My dad was still living with the fear tat had been passed down from generation to generation to deny our ‘Indianess”. My father also wielded internalized discrimination based on Blood Quantum-Based Colorism (BQBC). Discrimination within the same culture based on blood quantum is also know as internalized discrimination as it occurs within an ethnic or cultural group. His pointedness on this subject was likely based on generations of fear and discrimination. I believe he was trying to protect me, but in fact is harmed me. It was a genocide to my sacred beingness as a native woman.”

“Inevitably, these messages begin to move us, through fear, away from who we really are as sacred people. The result is major confusion in the person’s sense of self, and a disconnection from their sacred being. Where there is no acknowledgement of one’s sense of sacredness, there is little room for feelings of spontaneity, joy, and being present in one’s life. Without this acknowledgement, our sacredness gets lost or frozen (Susto).”

“Additionally, if they have grown up in a home where they have been abused physically, emotionally, mentally or sexually, it is difficult to want, or feel safe enough, to be present in their body, mind and emotions. …What one’s spirit hears an interprets from all of these actions is, ‘I’m not valued, seen or heard at all, so there must be something wrong with me.’ This can lead to more intrusive thoughts or feelings that maybe they are a mistake, not supposed to be here, unwanted, or that the world would be better off without them. …When a person gets used to those messages, they may unconsciously seek out people who reinforce the same negative, critical feelings. …When people get to that vulnerable place, they often end up not knowing who they truly are anymore. They end up living based on their wounded selves rather than their sacred selves. They may even feel like they are outside of their bodies, not knowing how they should be, who they should be, or if they should be, at all.”

“This brings up several painful memories for me. Parents do the best they can with what they have learned and usually filtered through their own wounded stories. My parents were largely emotionally unavailable to me. Especially when my brother began having challenges in junior high school. My parents were devastated by his challenges and devoted all their time and energy to trying to help him. Nevertheless, it didn’t change the fact that I was not getting the love I needed. I have learned that to create relatedness and connection with me I require demi- sapio- interactions and love. I usually got the intellectual stimulation from my parents as they both were/are brilliant. However, they were not available to me on an emotional level…mostly unavailable for these type of conversations and inquiries. I didn’t know how to ask for what I wanted and needed as I was living in my story of already not being enough or worthy. I know myself better now with the love I have with my husband Neil. One memory that comes and goes, is around a moment in college when my trust was broken by someone I thought had my best interests. I was put into a situation where I have come to learn via piecing together flashback memories that I was the victim of sexual assault. I have blocked out most of the particulars of the memory and have insight into part of the beginning of the circumstance and several internalized reactions from the post event experience. I am sure, typical of a victim, I was angry, fearful, ashamed and sacred. This of all the wounding events in my life clarified for me that I was damaged goods and not enough. I remember freaking out and wondering who in the world could I ask for help? If I shared my story I would be most certainly shunned and made wrong. So, with my mind racing, I chose to stay silent and stay. My adult life reflects this choice to stay. My divorce was my own saving of myself. I would no longer accept being treated poorly…I would no longer stay. I told no one for almost 35 years. Then as I was recently leaning into my authentic self and able to connect with my vulnerability, I shared with Neil my experience. I felt a weight lift from my spirit as the ‘secret’ had wings and no longer was weighing me down. I am grateful to my husband who listened, comforted me and continued without faltering to love me even when I shared my brokenness. I am so very thankful for his love as it has healed me in so many ways.

“Sometimes unforeseen opportunities emerge from the remnants of life’s challenges. Sometimes it is possible to transform tough times into great growth and success.”

Kay Douglas (Author; UNKNOWN)


–Trello, Jerry. “Recovering Your Sacredness: Ancestral Teachings For Today’s Living”. Sueños Publications, L.L.C.. (2018). Pages 25-40.


I challenge each of you to post comments to this blog series so we all can grow together.