21. A Crisis of Faith in the Heart of the Chrysalis (or) The Transformation Chamber

The relationship dance.

The relationship dance.

“Forgive yourself for not knowing what you didn’t know before you learned it.” – Maya Angelou

The chrysalis is a metamorphic intermediate stage that shelters a state or stage of being and/or growth. Specifically, it is the protective enclosure or cocoon in which the caterpillar not only immerses itself, but liquifies itself to become something new. To put it another way, it’s a pressure cooker. It’s literally a transformation chamber—the process of which—through force and energy beyond one’s dominion—has the power to transmute matter, form, and being.

At some point in our lives, we are all initiated in the transformation chamber. To be in the heart of the chrysalis is to be initiated into a new way of being, and if you are going to take the next step forward in the evolution of your life’s journey, whether through courage or circumstance—if you are ever going to fly rather than die on the branch of the milkweed—then you need to see the process through. How does one do that? Through the darkest nights of your soul you simply hold on to the walls of the transformation chamber with all your strength and resilience.

When confronted with life’s unavoidable winters, we are called to go inward, for to evolve and become something new we must transform, and to transform is to endure the pressures of metamorphosis. The process of metamorphosis is transformation itself, and processes require energy. But I would argue that transformation is not just a form or function of energy, but in fact it is a specific state of energy in flux. For this reason, its evolutionary design is to expand and evolve consciousness. To resist this natural tide is to be condemned to the fate of Sisyphus.

To come out on the other side of the transformation chamber is to accept that life is a never-ending process of the transference, transmutation, and transfiguration of energy—and it is that energy which reorganizes perspective, matter, and physical reality. From the quantum, the smallest quantity of radiant energy, to the collection of cells that creates tissue, to the exponential ordering of tissues that form the human body, to learn how to move in the flow of transformational energy it is to learn how to master the self.

But I am far from a master, dear reader. I am simply a soul on the journey, which is why instead of surrendering to a new flow of energy, I gave all my power away to a woman. And it is in that transference of my vital force to something outside of myself that I once again found myself in the transformation chamber.

***

Surrounded by mountain flora, Douglas firs, and Ponderosa Pines, as I descended the wooded path towards Little ZigZag Canyon, I felt like a crustacean submerged in a slow boil. For weeks I had been simmering in my own skin and there was nothing more I wanted than to crawl out of it—to molt the energetic exoskeleton in which I found myself imprisoned.

Whatever was emerging, whatever wanted to be shed or birthed, was outgrowing its old form, and to withstand its constraints was to a suffer a psychic pain the likes of which I was not sure how much more I could endure. And yet like an old sweater, to let go of this way of being would be to let go of something familiar and comforting.

It was a mid-July afternoon after a very mid-life birthday that found me hiking ahead of my sisters on Oregon’s Mount Hood. The swiftness of my gait was not out of intention, but rather I was lost in the forest of my own mind. In the process, I kept forgetting to breathe, causing me to take big, deep gasps of air to compensate for all the otherwise shallow or forgotten ones.

When I reached the precipice of the giant gorge, to follow my gaze from the sunlit snow-capped peak of Mount Hood, down the great canyon, and down to the cascading river valley below was to witness a scale of incomprehensibility only known to nature—and only fully appreciated when standing in its humbling, majestic presence. When my sisters finally caught up with me, one of them asked a nearby ranger how much further the trail continued.

“Well, after you descend a 900-foot vertical slope, you gotta climb up the other side. Then you gotta hike another six miles to get to the next camp. And then you gotta turn around. It’ll definitely show you what you’re made of.”

A better metaphor for the current state of my life could not have been more aptly articulated.

***

During the winter and spring of 2019, I experienced a great expansion, the container and catalyst of which was a romantic relationship. To cap it off, in late spring we spent a week driving around the Algarve, Portugal’s southern coast, followed by three dreamy days in an apartment in the Chelsea neighborhood of New York City. We were both living in Mexico, traveled well together, laughed all the time, had talked about kids, and it seemed I had finally found someone whose lifestyle was compatible to the life of freedom I worked so hard to create.

After our vacation, I unexpectedly found myself back in Seattle where my return plan to Mexico was temporarily scuttled. It was during this delayed stopover that she abruptly ended our relationship. Perhaps nothing in life gives rise to disorientation and questioning more than the death of a loved one or a mid-life broken heart. In a sense, they are both a loss of the relational self. In the process of unexpectedly finding myself once again walking alone, I forgot who I was, who I was becoming, and who I aspired to be. Having no idea where life was taking me, or what my next form would bring me, it was out of unconscious fear that I backed myself into the chrysalis.

What I did not know—because I did not yet have the language to wrap around the molten feelings of my internal world—was that I was in the midst of my life’s greatest crisis of faith.

***

It’s not just any old broken heart, nor any run-of-the-mill broken heart, that throws one into a crisis of faith. This woman who I loved, although unaware of what she said or who she was being, used shaming judgements and condemning words to belittle me, causing me to feel as if she had shot holes in the very fabric of the life I had chosen to lead. Not surprising, this was exactly what her mother had spent a lifetime doing to her.

The first time she ever shared any intimate details about her childhood, she cried in my arms. I wanted to make everything all right, but all I could do was hold her to try to make her feel safe. Her rare outward expression of vulnerability was the most beautiful thing I had ever experienced with her, and yet when I asked her more about her childhood, she told me it was too painful to revisit.

As a result of my internalization of her projection, I questioned every decision I ever made with regard to my choice of being a writer—as if walking the uncertain path of an artist and believing in the manifestation of a dream only I can see and feel was not a hard or lonely enough path upon which to tread.

And so I bought into the projection of her own fears and insecurities—not because they were objectively true—but because she had managed to tap into the very heart of some of my life’s greatest insecurities and fears. Although I had done copious amounts of internal work to contain them, they had been patiently lying in wait for me to revive them with my attention and awareness.

Not that I could see them through the oxytocin dream, but there were clues early on that variations of the fears, insecurities, and unrest that lived in me also lived in her, for example, she once told me men never break up with her. She also told me that the men she dated always turned out to be needy, and that in the past eight years since breaking off her engagement, all of her relationships ended at either three or six months.

No one had ever accused me of being needy, in fact I was often accused of the exact opposite, so when she told me I was being needy, I was perplexed. What I couldn’t see at the time, and didn’t yet have the life experience to distill, was the role she played in constructing this perceived neediness—the energetic game of push-and-pull of which she had unconsciously become a master. A few months later, I would learn it’s called a codependent control pattern.

Every time it seemed like things were going great, like we were growing closer, she would swiftly retreat, each time taking with her not only our connection, but a piece of my heart. What I was experiencing as falling in love, she was perceiving as a threat, and what she was perceiving as me being needy, was actually the confusion and loss I felt every time she (her being) disappeared. Despite the strong, independent person she projected to the world, I knew through conversations with her and her friends that she really wanted a partner, but how can one ever expect to have a successful relationship when the feelings and sensations of intimacy trigger such visceral fight or flight responses? In observing this behavior, I later recognized it all too well as a pattern that up until my two most recent relationships, I too had been perpetuating to my own degree.

As you do in a romantic relationship, in the sharing of our stories it became very clear to me that her upbringing taught her love was not safe. It explained the anxiety that arose every time we grew closer, and her resulting retreat into the fortified castle of her heart. I also found it curious how every year around the holidays and summer break, without fail she would come down with severe bronchial problems, the place where it’s said we energetically store grief. As it turns out, this also coincided with the two times of year she would have to spend extended periods of time with her mother.

“What if I’m just a few years behind you in my journey and evolution,” she told me on more than one occasion.

“It’s not a race,” I would say trying to diffuse her anxiety.

What I wanted to tell her was that I loved her, that it was ok, that in the construct of our relationship, we had the opportunity to transform our lives to become something greater. In doing so, in being able to stand before each other in naked vulnerability, we could transcend the conscious and unconscious wounds and fears that held us back—while at the same time becoming the guardian of each other’s wounds and fears. Deep down, however, I knew it would be too much for her. As long as we stayed in the “fun zone,” as long as she didn’t have to jump into the deep end, everything was copacetic.

“It’s ok to be vulnerable. You’re safe with me. I don’t want anything from you and I’m not going to hurt you. I just want to know you better,” I told her instead.

But that message never made it past her emotional moat. Because our brains are a neurological record of the past, we’re wired to only see what we know and have experienced. For many of us, relationships—whether romantic, familial, and so on— have caused a tremendous amount of unresolved pain, so if we don’t enter a relationship with intention, conscious awareness, and openness, we are doomed to repeat the mistakes of our past.

And so from the safety of her guard’s tower, she unconsciously fired shots as to why I was not enough. What hurt the most, however, was that none of them were about my character, in fact, she often said I was the most thoughtful and communicative person she had dated. Instead, they all had to do with material comfort, despite the fact that she did not lack these things, had never lacked these things, nor would she ever. What it all added up to was that she couldn’t see me, nor did she have any belief in me or who I was becoming.

Like my former self, she was looking for someone who was fully formed to complete her, which is the greatest lie we have ever been sold when looking for a partner. The person who seeks this will never be fulfilled, because no one will ever be good enough for them. Another lie I bought into early on was that I always thought I needed to find the place to live, then have the job, then I would be ready for the woman. It took me a long time to learn that the journey is not about two fully-formed people coming together as one, but about who we become in the process.

Beyond her pedigree, success, education, and ability to charm and disarm others, beneath the external facade she projected to the world, I saw the wounded little girl who was actually reciting reasons why she wasn’t enough. I desperately wanted to tell her how beneath the man, the wounded little boy in me felt the same way, but she never got to see that that little boy, nor did she ever get to experience the true freedom and breadth of my spirit, because every time she disappeared, I felt less and less safe to reveal myself. Beneath each of our many layers of survival adaptations and learned behaviors, what we both shared was the outward search for something to complete an inward longing.

When she officially ended our relationship on my birthday, like a rush-hour train departing right on time, we had just reached the six-month mark. While I would love to blame her and make her wrong, because it would be so much easier to disavow my own culpability in the demise of our relationship, with time and distance I recognized that she was acting out of unresolved trauma patterns, just as I was acting out of my own.

To make matters words, as a result of my desperation to be seen, heard, and accepted by her—which was accentuated every time she disappeared—I began trying to become someone I wasn’t for somebody who no matter what I did, would never be able to see me through her own fears, wounds, insecurities, and unconscious programs.

And so in a relationship unlike any other I’d been in, our energies were like warm and cold fronts coming together over a coastal town, and in the uprising of the storm—like some long lost treasure buried beneath the sands of time—surfaced our wounds. Because we lacked awareness, however, we did not recognize them as a calling to transform. The ocean tide, which is another form of energy in flux, is a great reminder of transformation. Whereas at one moment you may see the bay, in a relatively short amount of time, shipwrecks and treasures once concealed are revealed. Thus is the ebb and flow of life. 

***

I’ve often wondered how it was I could “randomly” meet someone, be completely attracted to them, form a deep relationship, and then later come to discover they were inaccessible at the level of inner sanctum where I wanted to meet them. (Granted, I was that inaccessible person more times in my life than I was the open-hearted one.)

The answer is really quite simple, and it’s the same answer as to why relationships fall apart; it’s because we are energy beings, each operating at certain levels of consciousness, or strata of frequencies. We call this the law of attraction. When two energies (people) come together at the same frequency, on the constructive side, like attracts like; on the destructive side, wounds attract wounds.

The stories we wrap around our lives exist at a certain frequency, within a level of consciousness. It was in the gilded stories she wrapped around the experiences of her life that her emotional and spiritual development was arrested. The confluence of our stories and energies only fed my own story of lack, inadequacy, and the desire to be loved—which in itself was a level of consciousness within which I had become incapacitated. My previous relationship to her revealed my affliction of unworthiness, and in the mirror of this relationship revealed my unconscious love affair with lack. Both were unattended diseases of my soul that manifested in my relationships.

And so when two people come together in a relationship, they do so out of a shared level of consciousness (or unconsciousness). This strong woman, who at a another level was fragile and scared—this beautiful woman who caused me so much pain was my mirror, and as a result, she triggered my own unconscious programs. When that happened, she ripped off a band-aid, under which was a scar that hid a much deeper wound, the origins of which I could not yet pinpoint. It was only after the breakup, however, after spending months perseverating over imaginary conversations with her about what a terrible person she was and how deeply she hurt me, that I saw my own unconscious pattern emerge: I was attracted to very strong women who had deep, emotional, unresolved, early-childhood wounds.

While there is no questions in my mind or heart I loved these women, on one level I did so because I wanted to heal them. On another, more profound level, I wanted to love away their pain and sadness, just like I wanted to love away the pain and sadness of my mother.

At a soul level, this woman became the symbol of my pain, of the unhealed wounds I needed to look at. On the human level, she was the source of my pain, and to focus on something external as the source or cause was much easier than having to go within. At some point, the pain of this focus and blame pushed me up against my breaking point, so I had to make the choice to leave it in my past or let it destroy me. Thus, in the name of self-preservation, I had to surrender an old way of being and become someone new.

***

And so perhaps it was not out of pain but instinct that I retreated inward. Unbeknownst to me, on the other side of that retreat, was a precipitous downward spiral. While I was aware of the centripetal force that was syphoning me deeper towards my uncomfortable center, the pull was greater than my will to step outside of it. In the process of passing through this vortex, I felt lost and broken in the labyrinth of myself.

As a result, like so many other similar times in my life, what I thought I had outgrown or outrun had once again emerged in a new form and context. It appeared that as my life evolved, so too did this thing I called my soul ache—and once again it was eating away at my will to live. In the self-indulgent haze of my own pain, I lost sight of the soul ache’s purpose. Instead, all I could see was a 45-year-old man living the 17-year-old self’s actualized dream of being an artist—a dream that in the flesh was much more challenging than anything he could have ever imagined.

More than a dream, though, it was a calling—a calling for which I could not have known from the safe, secure vantage of the past that following this path would at times ask of me to sacrifice jobs, relationships, paid vacations, ease, comfort, healthcare, and more. That calling, which arose in my late teens, has always been greater than my will to resist it. In the youthful naivety of answering the calling’s nascent whisper, I asked to be used as an instrument of peace. While many times since then I have tried to jump off this speeding train, somehow or another life keeps putting me back on it. When life keeps placing us on a certain path, it’s something to pay attention to. Thus, in the end I elected for experiences and worldly knowledge, rather than security and stability. Was I just living in a delusion?

We are an absurd lot, us artists, for above all else we are driven to create, express, and emote. It is not a sickness per say, because a sickness tends to be an aliment of the body, but rather I would call it a madness, because madness is a possession of the mind and spirit. To be an artist is to walk the path upon which no else but you can tread, because you are answering an inner calling to express an ineffable aspect of the universal in the reflection of the particular—that being your soul’s humble Earth walk. Did I have a choice?

Of course I did.

At all times the human condition exists in a state of choice, and within that construct, choice and the infinite pathways, potentials, and possibilities it reveals, empowers us with the prerogative to resist transformation. That is creation’s gift to humanity, free will, for it is our free will and our creativity that separates man from beast.

As for me, I made the choice to believe and internalize this woman’s story of who she thought I was as a reflection of herself, and as I result I lost my way. I bought into her story, which aligned with unresolved stories and wounds within myself, and this caused me to turn away and shrink from the magnetic and generative greatness that is my life—that is all of our lives.

For me, the first lesson is to never again give away my power to someone or something outside of myself. After giving away your power to someone for extended periods of time, when those unspoken energetic bonds are broken, you’re left completely devoid and depleted, and sometimes—such as in my case—that process takes months and months to replenish. When the body no longer has the energy to replenish itself, matter begins to break down. This is how the entropic process of disease begins.

Perhaps the saddest part of this story, which is perhaps the saddest part of the present predicament of the human condition, is that beneath this tug of war, all we both really wanted was to be loved, to feel safe, and to feel secure. Amplify the microcosm of this singular relationship to the macrocosm and you have the global experience of humanity.

The second lesson I learned is that the soul ache is not a pain to be anesthetized, nor is it an adversary to be defeated. Instead, it is a compass, a north star, a spiritual device designed to course correct us so that we come into alignment with our higher self. To put it another way, the soul ache is the shadow self calling us forth from the darkness to the light.

When left unchecked, the soul ache’s purpose is to elicit a crisis of faith, underneath which is the lesson and direction to move us forward. The more we ignore the calling of the soul ache, the more we have to repeat the lesson, the more painful it becomes.

When examined, however, the soul ache is a calling to surrender more deeply in the mystery of creation, and sometimes that requires us to trust in a new direction in which the destination is not known, nor sometimes can the road even be seen. In that light, the soul ache is a catalyst for discovery—a navigation system inviting us into a deeper understanding of who we are during this brief but magical time we inhabit our physical bodies.

What it all comes down to is that life is a laboratory, a great vivarium experiment, within which all experiences are neutral. By wrapping stories around these experiences, however, we naturally inject them with an emotional quotient; therefore, it is the individual who labels and determines whether experiences are good or bad, painful or joyful. Distilled, this discernment is the journey of life.

At all times, we have the power to choose to hold on to anger, hurt, hate, and pain—or we can choose love, celebration, and joy, and to accept our experiences as lessons for our emotional evolution and spiritual growth—for it is in mastering our emotions where growth is to be found. What I am choosing to bring to this experience is the gratitude for intersecting with one of my life’s greatest soul teachers to date, for it was in her mirror that a profound awakening and life lesson was revealed to me. It is in unearthing and extricating the emotional charges from past events where we find the irons and ores of wisdom.

Like a bovine being scored with a branding iron, wounds from the past leave imprints on our soul, and sometimes like scar tissue they remain buried beneath the sands of time. When these wounds are not healed, they act as invisible tentacles reaching out from the past into our present, and even beyond into our future. In this light, the soul ache also calls us to forgiveness.

I recently heard Oprah say that forgiveness means giving up the hope that the past could be any different. That not only requires us to forgive the past, but perhaps more importantly, forgive ourselves, for as Maya Angelou said, “Forgive yourself for not knowing what you didn’t know before you learned it.”

What we bring from the past to the present can imprison us. What we take away from it can set us free.

***

17. Everything in its Right Place

daniel-olah-631653-unsplash.jpg

“The seeker is he who is in search of himself. Give up all questions except one: ‘Who am I?’ After all, the only fact that you are sure of is that you are. The ‘I am’ is certain. The ‘I am this’ is not.”

-       I Am That, by Sri Nisargadatta Maharaj

As I flew high above the vast empty wastelands of northern Mexico’s deserts, there was nothing I could do but surrender and trust. For someone who has a secret desire to control things, I seem to have an unhealthy way of throwing myself headlong into the unknown.  

I was closing the door on an eight-month chunk of hard-expat living and learning in San Miguel de Allende, Mexico; hard living not in the typical pickled-expat way that eventually leads to cirrhosis of the liver, but in a way that deeply entwines winter’s long nights and stark beauty. It is, after all, the dormant, internal functions of winter that enable spring to unfold verdant discoveries in blossoms and blooms.

High above the Earth, who I was as a man in my 40s felt no different from anyone I had been since I was 17. In my mind, I was a kid on a flight, in transition from one thing to the next, hoping the gamble would work out, and turning to the written page to navigate my way—all the while documenting the journey of my physical existence notebook after notebook. Despite the deeply-grooved tracks and well-worn neural pathways that wanted me to remain in the adolescent hopelessness of my past, or the fear and anxiety of an uncertain future, like all of my life’s greatest journeys, I sensed I was on the precipice of great adventure. 

It was in this manner I was on my way to Seattle. From there, ten days later I had a one-way ticket to New York, and from there I was headed out to parts unknown. I was betting on an opportunity falling into place that would bring me to Europe, but if that didn’t work out, I was a man without a plan, especially since my apartments in Mexico and Seattle would soon be occupied. I had other possibilities, but at the time they only existed as unmanifested potentials.

From where I was sitting that afternoon in seat 21F, my perspective afforded me the awareness that everything I had just experienced for the last eight months—the zeniths of joy and the nadirs of despair—were just external reflections of what needed to shatter within me in order to become more awakened. And by awakened, I don’t mean in the Buddha way or the millennial woke way.

I simply mean I was more free from my past.

This new found freedom was the result of sitting long enough in the fire of one of my life’s more uncomfortable incubation periods. We all pass through these anxious seasons where we find ourselves thinking, Is this it? Is this all there is? But by sitting in the fire, and consequently burning down old parts of the self that no longer served me, I was now free to step into the next evolution of my soul’s incarnate journey.

At least in the present moment, age, experience, and the passage of time demonstrated to me how each time life breaks our hearts, it’s just a reminder to take off another layer of armor, to love bigger, and to be more courageous in our vulnerability and open-heartedness. Like a hurricane wiping out a coastline, when your heart gets crushed—in whatever inevitable form that might take—eventually you have to rebuild. If you’ve gained wisdom from the storm, when it comes time to rebuild, you fortify your structure; not in a walled-off way, but in a way that provides a stronger foundation to better weather life’s next storm. It’s for this reason vulnerability and open-heartedness are critical in this moment of human evolution—because vulnerability and open-heartedness don’t build walls, they remove them.

I had a situation recently where how I was operating in the world was called into question, and this caused me to momentarily shrink in the face of my vulnerability. The passive assault on my character was at first startling and rattling, followed by aggravating and infuriating, followed by observing and pondering. In this story arch, I was strong-armed into paying closer attention to my life’s script, juxtaposing the story I had written many years ago on the cusp of being a young man versus who I had become as a man. It was in the third part of the equation—the pause (which creates the space to observe and ponder)—that I found gratitude towards this person for forcing me to look more deeply within, for it was in the mirror of their unconscious affront that I was forced to take an internal inventory. In doing so, the evidence I found in my external world only propelled me to stand more steadfast in my worth and the vision I held for my life’s journey.

What was called into question by this person—whom by the way I love, admire, and respect—was the idea of hard work, because what this person’s idea of hard work looked like was very different than mine. I eventually realized it was because my way of being in the world fell outside of her construct. Simply put, my work as an artist and a writer looked very different than how she had been spending 10-14 hours a day for the previous three months.

I could have taken offense to this lack of understanding, after all—it’s lack of understanding that’s at the root of all wars, both within and without—but instead I took it as an opportunity to get more clear on how I intend to write the next chapters of my life.

Part of the story I have been writing for most of my life, and the one I will continue to write, is that I don’t have to play by society’s rules. Why? Because I say so. But more aptly said—because I am answering to the unknown path of the calling. Critical to setting out on a path less traveled is the surrendering to, and trusting in, something greater that is guiding me, protecting me, and calling me forward. If you’re on this same path, you know it’s not an easy one.

This begs the question, what is it to trust? To me, it is to venture upon a path you cannot see, to a destination you do not know, on a journey in which you can’t rely on others to light the way. Instead, you must be your own guide by generating the light from within. To successfully tread upon this path is to trust there will be terra firma beneath every step, even when you can’t see the next one in front of you.

***

Within the spiritual and creative class (a term coined by the American economist and social scientist, Richard Florida), how I live my life is in some regards quite conventional: I am dedicated to pursuing an internal vision that I imagine to be the greatest expression of myself. Outside of these class structures, however, in life’s more prescriptive avenues, I am an anomaly. There’s a part of me that longs for that perceived stability and security found in routine and building the vaulted walls of 401(k)athedrals, but like anyone else who is living by an internal compass, I have no choice but to obey this more vociferous, more dominant aspect of the self that answers not to a boss, but to the calling.

Personally speaking, the purpose of this more dominant aspect of my self is to lead me into the caverns and underworlds of my life, to move through its uncomfortable layers, and into the places and spaces where very little light enters. Ultimately, this leads to the inner-most labyrinth of the self. Perhaps as my life progresses and I move further into this labyrinth, I will find there is no self. As a friend suggested, perhaps I am only an aspect of consciousness observing consciousness itself,

If I can bring light to those dark places, and if I can navigate my way out of the labyrinth, then I will have completed what Joseph Campbell called “The Hero’s Journey.” The purpose of this quest is to bring back meaningful knowledge, information, and wisdom acquired on the journey so that the greater good may benefit.

As a writer, this is the fulfillment of my life’s work and mission. First, my work is to overcome the fear of diving into my life’s muck and mire in search of pearls of wisdom. If I can apply this wisdom to myself, then I can share it with others. Second, my mission is to translate light, frequency, and energy into story so as to lead others to their truth. Just as each has their own path upon which to walk, this is the path of my soul’s journey into the heart of my own human healing.

The gamble I am betting the farm on is that if I can prove as a living example that the revisitation of the dreams and intentions of the internal world (i.e., directed consciousness) manifest in the outer world, then I can teach the lessons of the journey through story. The most important aspect of this story is not about the destination, as Dr. Joe Dispenza says, but about who you become in the process. If I am going to write about these truths, I need to live them.

As I said in my book, A Curious Year in the Great Vivarium Experiment, “The world changes through two things—story and consciousness.” I know from experience there is a certain strata of people who on a daily basis are undertaking this same journey of healing and soul work. They are the tides who are raising the buoys of human consciousness, first by bringing healing to themselves, then to their families, then to their work, followed by their communities. The journey into healing our unmet needs and unconscious wounds of childhood, as well as the perceived wounds inflicted upon us by others, is the most important journey (and the hardest work) any of us will ever undertake, for this is how we change the world. We don’t change the world by conquering men and women, squashing rivals and competitors, or stealing resources from far off lands. No, if we acted in more noble, more selfless ways we would find there’s plenty to go around.

We change the world by conquering the enemy within.   

The way I see it is you can look at your life in one of two ways. The first is as a series of lessons where you are the hero of a great journey, and the second is as a series of mistakes and arbitrary happenstances where you are the victim. (This has taken me a long time to learn.) Both stories are born out of the perspective and narrative we chose to weave around our life’s happenings and events. It’s from these happenings and events we build the stories of our lives, and it’s our stories that define us, for better or worse.

Personally, I think the journey of life is just a series of events and interactions designed by a higher, more knowing aspect of ourselves. The purpose of this journey is to create intersections of ideas and collisions of people who force us out of our comfort zones. It’s in the exploration of those outer, less known aspects of our being where we find the space to grow, evolve, and step into expanded versions of ourselves, that is—should we accept the challenge—rather than remain in the safe cocoon of the past and predictable known.

To accept the challenge is to step into the unknown, whether that’s moving to a different country, switching to a different career, or journeying into the very heart of love itself. No matter what facet of your existence you apply this litmus test, to not accept that challenge is to remain on a linear, predictable path—void of soul growth, expansion, love, and the greater self that calls the limited self to emergence. This is the journey of transformation, and to transform is to move or change from one state of being, form, or awareness to another. Therefore, acceptance of the challenge is to allow disorder and chaos into our life so that it may transform into grace and good fortune—all in the name of our individual and collective evolution.

***

As I step into a new adventure and close the door on eight months in Mexico, my time there was filled with as much joy, expansion, and grace as it was with uncertainty, frustration, and disorder. But I wrapped myself in the chrysalis and sat in the fire, and although you can’t witness it in my external presence, in my internal world, once again the phoenix has taken on a new form, a new being, and a new awareness.

Beyond forging a deeper trust with this internal guidance system and stepping further into the unknown, I am also stepping further into the idea of I AM. It’s my postulation that if you declare “I AM” within the alignment of your words, actions, and thoughts—or mind, body, and spirit—the universe will conform to the declaration of your courage. At least this is what I am attempting to prove to myself, and thus share with others. This is what the journey of the calling is all about, which is also at the heart of what my third book is about. When you accept the calling, you have no other choice but to follow the unknown path upon which your soul leads you.

Of course at the human level, you always have a choice. We call this free will, but if you recognize and accept that the human experience is about the evolution of the soul—that greater aspect of our self that is only limited by language—then you have to trust the personalized inner-guidance system that most often only speaks in whispers, signs, serendipities, and synchronicities. This is the path of the peaceful warrior, and the path of the greatest expression of our human selves.

Speaking of expression, perhaps the current epidemic of modernity is that the majority don’t feel free or safe to fully express themselves, whether that’s at work or in a relationship, in their religion or sexuality, in their despair or joy, or in their victories and defeats. The tragedy in this repression is that at the most elemental root of human expression is the need for connection—the need to be in communion with someone, to be understood and recognized, and to receive the validation that we are not the only one who is experiencing the inner turmoil, tumult, and confusion that arises through the human experience.

That shared internal journey of consciousness is what unites us, creates compassion—and when the physical journey ends—returns us back to unmanifested potential, the source from which all things arise. If we were all engaged in this idea, that we were all one and part of the same source energy, it’s my belief we could finally bring peace and prosperity to the entirety of this planet.

This is my declaration of I AM.

Feel free to comment below about, declare your I AM, share if you feel so inspired, or simply say hi. Also, I just began a newsletter I will send about once a month. If you’d like to receive it, please sign up at my website.

Finally, the opening quote to this essay opens the first of three parts (Spirit, Body, Mind) of my book. To learn more about my book or watch the book trailer, please visit: https://www.acuriousyear.com/.