Hi beautiful people, how are you?
One of the reasons I’m so passionate about supporting all of us in anchoring in the love from within is because I’ve spent so much of my life looking outside of myself for love and being deeply attached to things outside of myself.
How can we love something that we’re attached to?
There’s this deep desire to be free of it all. Filled up with inner love and connection to all of life. I know that feeling of being the love that is always here, and radiating it outward, as opposed to being “not love” and trying to get something from others. Once experiencing it, there’s no going back.
As I lie in bed, 4th night being sick with the flu, all the attachments, all the “not love” tendencies are in my face.
I see that when days are busy and full and feel productive and the money is flowing in, it feels good.
When lying in bed for days on end, almost no physical contact with others, not able to do much, watching the figures rapidly go down in the bank account, it doesn’t feel so good.
I also notice that previously my way of being was pure, clear and being love with one of my lovers, and recently the shadow of attachment and possession has subtly crept in, becoming more obvious as I’ve felt blergh.
Do I need to not engage s3xually when there’s stories around it, in order to stay centered around myself?
Can I change the story? What even is the story that is creating the attachment?
Can I transmute these ideas so I don’t need to stop, fix or change things to stay centered in myself?
Why does s3x with someone I am attached to have me believing in the illusion of separation?
Yet, when I’m coming from oneness it amplifies oneness and dissolves separation.
How do I transmute attachment and come back to oneness with this person?
Why did I start believing they are separare to me and that I need them to feel love/ one?
Why did I slip into ownership over another sovereign being?
Did it start with believing that we are separate?
Did I simply forget that this is a dream?
I see myself relieved that he’s leaving the country yet I know this isn’t love. Love was what I WAS experiencing before. Knowing I can’t lose anyone or anything and knowing nothing is separate and knowing that physicality is an illusion and wherever he is in the world, I can still tap into the Love that was flooding my being when I thought of him. Knowing that that Love is available always as it’s me.
Where did that version of me go?
Am I needing to hold space for the parts in me that need my love? Is this the little girl inside of me needing me?
My first ever Ayahuasca experience told me I am on my way to celibacy as this is how I am the most loving version of myself.
Is this what is happening?
It seems like the easy way out.
I’d prefer to have more mastery over this experience. To be able to dabble in the human s3xual experience whilst not losing myself in ideas of separation.
Also, other questions arising is:
Whilst being sick and frolicking with the shadows, how do I use this experience right now to be of service?
Can I utilise these shadows to benefit all of us?
Can we as humans truly be free of needing outer circumstances for happiness?
Can we be present and grateful whilst being sick and having no money?
Is this experience a gift from life to show me where I’m not free?
Can we be truly free in this human experience?
Can we love unconditionally, human to human, in this human experience?
Or is it an ideal to strive for?
Is it just a moment-to-moment thing?
Is it about truly feeling gratitude in the moment?
Am I just completely overthinking because I’m sick?
Should I simply observe the monkey mind?
Is this all just part of the contraction, the expansion?
The more I ask, the more I realize I don’t know.
And the more I realize I don’t know, the more I come back into acceptance and bliss in the moment.
It’s funny—after days of trying to quiet the monkey mind, it wasn’t through trying to stop the thoughts, but through asking questions that the mind softened. Almost like outsmarting it in a way.
Maybe that’s why I’m so passionate about asking questions with curiosity. There’s something freeing about letting go of needing to know and opening into exploration instead.
After days of my mind trying to work it all out, I still don’t have the answers. I’ve worked nothing out. Yet somehow, the need to fix it, change it, or figure it out has dissolved into the bliss of presence. And now, here I am—totally available to be of service, to do whatever life asks of me in the next moment.
Have you ever used questioning as a way to quiet the mind and come back to presence?