Hello, 2013!

2012 was a pretty rough one, and I’m super grateful to my guides the messages they brought me throughout the year, and also deeply grateful for the practices that were given to me by Spirit.

In 2012 I realized that I know how to do “hard,” and “heavy”, and “work at it”, and “scary”. I’ve been doing those for a long time. I decided I was ready to learn how to do “easy” and “fun”. And I even got tools and Medicine that helped me to define what that even meant, and how to actually know how and when to do it, safely.

Fun and easy doesn’t automatically feel fun and easy for some of us. Some of us do, actually, need to learn it.

Turtle Medicine showed up for me with the Beltaine Full Moon in Scorpio. So many things came clear with Turtle Medicine. Even things I had been teaching for years gained a deeper purchase in me.

Honestly, I have no idea how I would have made it through all that made 2012 what it was without the “fun and easy” mojo going, and the tools to back that up. Don’t get me wrong; it wasn’t about everything all of a sudden becoming fun and easy. It was about knowing how to tell when the tide was turning, and being fine with retreating into my shell if things started feeling anything less than safe. Something about knowin’ when to hold ‘em, when to fold ‘em, when to walk away, when to run…

That said, there was much fun to be had. And I had a lot of it! I allowed myself to have fun in ways I didn’t know I was capable of, and watched the grace and ease with which others have fun, and learned from it. I look forward to expanding on these lessons in 2013.

I love learning. 2012 called for a lot of it. And I feel like I’m a better person for it. And that I know myself better. And I do have more fun, and more ease. And I have amazing kids, and an amazing man, and a roof over my head, and food to eat, and for chirissake more abundance than I can easily sit with sometimes.

And, yeah, did I mention that I do have the most amazing kids and the most amazingly perfect-for-me husband? It bears repeating. Because whenever I feel even the littlest bit off center, that’s what I fall back on. My family. It’s a good one. A little pod full of love and respect. My life-raft.

So, from this place of gratitude for all that I have, and all that I have learned, and all that I am embracing for the coming year, I wish you and yours, and me and mine, a magickal 2013, full of ease, fun, abundance, and joyful flow.

Now, in the tradition of my own tradition – not so traditional…commitments, intentions, and why-the-hell-nots?

Commitments:

I commit to rebuilding an even better relationship with this body of mine. Good food, lots of water, exercise, activity, dance, singing, being in it because it feels good to be, and the more I’m in it the better it feels.

I commit to treating my man with continued devotion. This is where we are. THIS is ALWAYS where we are. Right here. I will show up for and with you exactly where we are at. No expectation; only love.

I commit to treating my daughters with love, respect, and JOY! I promise to support both of you in growing more and more fully into who you are becoming, in ways that are healthy, supportive, and just. I also commit to making time to have fun with you both, together and separately. Watching The New Girl, going to yoga or dance class together, taking little trips, crafting days, summer road adventures and festivals, picnics in the parcourse. I promise. (And you promised too! I heard you!) You guys are growing up so quick, and you’ll be moving out before we even know what hit us. I will treat the time we have together like the cherished thing it is.

I commit to my larger family to use my voice, and my lack of voice, in service of healing. Sometimes silence truly is golden.

I commit to my community of friends new and old to come out and play. And to teach. And to learn. And to dance. And to sing. We will sit in circles, and dance in meadows, and learn and teach from and with one another. And together, we will heal.

I commit to my friends from across the world, who I never get to see, to continue keeping the prayers in my heart and on my lips.

I commit to all beings pervading space and time to work the work of enlightenment, for the benefit of all beings.

Intentions:
I intend to have more fun, to walk forward with ease and trust, more trust and more ease every day. I intend to experience joy in my family, my work, my body. I intend to write. I intend to reinvest in my yoga practice. I intend a major shift toward the light. |

AND, I intend to maintain awareness of the magicks of Turtle medicine. Slow and steady wins the race.

I intend to dress up and go out, and to do so with my man when he wants, and by myself or with friends when he doesn’t. I intend to go DO things, just because they sound fun.

I intend to worry less, and laugh more this year.

Why-the-hell-not?
You know, this is a category I don’t really have such a huge need for right now. Crazy, but I’m already doing a whole lotta “why the hell not?” Okay, maybe one; cherish the down-time. Make space for it. Create an altar to silence. Ah. Yes. That.

For My Love…

This is the beginning
all possibility and nubile gestures
the soft, damp dawn
touched with dew and whispy, whispery fog
we live in a valley of green
hills of gold
crowning moist, damp earth

there will come a time
where we gather these days around us
an aged bounty of petals
strewn whimsically on a sturdy, well-worn floor
and, creaking with the walls
flesh earth-like and joints like stone
we’ll dance gently into night

Creative, DIY Valentine’s Day Gifts

The Gift of Recognition

Altruistic Fostering: http://balneus.wordpress.com/2010/01/30/chimps-altruism-and-helping-with-the-kids-of-others/

This week in my teleclass series, A Course in Deep Acceptance, we’re working on the theme of “Family”. Here I’ll share one of the exercises from the course materials with you.

The Gift of Recognition

Sometimes when I’m in the middle of a project it’s hard to hear a request for my attention as anything other than a distraction. And the less I pay attention, the bigger my child’s need gets for a moment of connection.

Soon, the chant of “mom! Mom! MOm! MOM!” begins, and my edge starts rising.

The energy shifts the moment that I remember this is an opportunity for presence and a chance for a moment of divine interaction. All I need to do is come present in love.

Today, I invite you to consciously enter into interaction as a moment-to-moment opportunity for the experience of pure presence. Bring your whole self into your heart, and connect from there.

Recognize the inherent wholeness, integrity, perfection in your loved ones, in strangers, in yourself. Make “love” a verb.

Want more? Read The Devotion of Presence and The Presence of Devotion; Dilemmas of a Householder.

Confessions of a Bad Polyamorist

Polyamory (from Greek πολυ [poly, meaning many or several] and Latin amor [love]) is the practice, desire, or acceptance of having more than one intimate relationship at a time with the knowledge and consent of everyone involved.
-Wikipedia

Love is God, God is love, both are the same, and as God, love is limitless.

This is what I have been told, have even known, deep in my cells. My love for God is limitless. God’s love for me is limitless.

But what about when it comes to the human realm? Somewhere along the way my wires got crossed, and I can’t seem to transfer the limitless love that exists on the metaphysical plane into the human experience.

We were all raised on romanticized, idealized versions of love. Love that translates to need, to desire, to longing to possession, to jealousy.

Men have killed and died for love. Love of land, love of country, love of beauty – Helen of Troy’s face launched a thousand ships.

We all saw the reality of what was called love playing out in our lives – sometimes gruesome, sometimes fragile, often fleeting, and so easily broken.

Wrapped up in my stories of “not enough” – not enough food at times, never enough money – and my personal childhood story where grown-up love meant fits of blind rage and jealousy, where threats and fists were romantic expressions, my wires got crossed.

After threatening the most heinous things when my mother would get “too close” to another man, my dad left our family for a younger woman.

I decided, as all young women raised in abusive households do, that this would never be my story as an adult. That fist and fury were not love. That jealous threats of injury or death would not in my life equate with romance.

I held to this decision in the only way I knew how to; never let anyone close enough, and they can’t hurt you.

I broke hearts, I cheated, I destroyed relationships by holding everyone I could have loved (and even did) at arm’s length.

I found resourceful ways to create a reality in which this was acceptable. I read Anarchists texts about the abolition of relationship-as-possession, I fell in with the right crowd, I found a home in the anti-establishmentarian movement of Anarchism, where non-monogamy was the norm.

All the same, at 19 I ended up in a relationship where fists were kisses, and threats were love, and jealous rages stormed both ways. I had let someone in, and he had let me in. We thought it would be forever. And the four years we were together felt like it was. An endless entrenchment, a battle.

When I finally got my head together and left the abusive relationship that closed the eternal-return-of-same loop handed down by way of my familial imprinting, I made my own rules. I didn’t let anyone claim me. I didn’t claim anyone.

My “orientation” toward non-monogamy was a wall. It ended the argument before it started. No one had any right to be jealous, because they knew what the rules were. And as long as I stayed on the surface of things, my own jealousy didn’t rear its ugly head.

When I was 25, I got married to someone safe. To someone I knew would never hit me.  To someone I knew I wouldn’t be with forever. To someone who would be a gentle father to my children. To someone I knew I could live without.

And I cheated on my (now ex) before we even got married.

When we married, I stopped. And though we were theoretically in an open relationship, for the first four years of our marriage we didn’t have other relationships. We were building a foundation.

I came clean to him about having cheated. He wasn’t jealous. He wasn’t upset.

When finally we opened our relationship again, I was the one who dove into a new relationship with an old lover; the same lover I had cheated on my husband with four years earlier. My (now ex) husband still wasn’t jealous. He even okayed the relationship before hand.

Some part of me read his lack of jealousy as a lack of love. As a lack of passion.

But I was in too deep to have an easy time allowing him the same freedom he allowed me. Some of it came back to the sense of “never enough” that has roots deep in my childhood. The never enough was a lack of passion, a lack of engagement, a lack of sexual interaction.

I felt I was always running at a deficit.

I relied on non-monogamy to fill the gaps left by the lack I felt at home. The lack I had built myself into.

But it was unfair. I was unfair. I expected the freedom to get my needs fulfilled but felt hurt when he sought the same. I felt neglected, not just by the actions themselves, but by never feeling loved enough from within the walls of safety I had built around myself.

Walls and all, I was in too deep. Too deep to not get scared when he took his love elsewhere.

Love was finite. Sex was finite. Passion was nearly non-existent. It’s harder to share when the cupboard is bare.

I still tried my best. I still believed in the ideals of non-monogamy, of polyamory. We were activists about it, my (now ex) husband and I. I taught classes on how to negotiate open relationships.

It didn’t feel hypocritical – I never entirely gave in to my jealousy and let it run the show.

Well, never except when I was faced with my (now ex) husband falling in love with a younger woman. Falling in love with her a way he had never loved me. After ten years of working on his lack of passion, lack of intimate touch, years of supporting his working toward a more substantial relationship with embodiment, after working on helping him to overcome deep-rooted sexual issues, someone else was benefitting in a way I never had. And in a way I knew I never would.

Ten years in, we separated. It was time.

After we did, I fell head-over-heels in love with a couple who were having their own troubles. I rode that wave, willing to give it my all. But it was a doomed experiment. So I fell back to my default position; non-monogamy; “You don’t own me!” And I don’t own you. And you can’t touch me. My heart already hurts enough.

In all of this, I found the love of God, intact, strong, resilient. The true center of love of self, in my experience. No matter how deeply I might fall out of love with me, It was always there to pick me back up, put me back together, make me whole through my own surrendering.

God told me to keep working on it.; to work on balancing and healing Love, balancing and healing relationships between men and women. I asked “HOW?”, “How am I supposed to do this when attachment arises, and hunger looms, and I feel there’s never enough, never enough to fill me?”

An answer came in a rush of images. All beings are God. If God is Love, and God is limitless, than Love is limitless.

Shortly thereafter, I found love in the experience of , by reputation, the most culturally jealous men on the planet; Islamic men. I found love – albeit “chaste” and courtly love, and loved more than one.

I found my way through jealousy in the complex terrain of new cultural formats. I loved a man who was married. He could have taken me as his second wife, as it was culturally acceptable.

I felt no jealousy toward his wife. And as long as I kept it all in perspective, even this deep relationship had no need of going deeper. There was no chance we would actually marry.

But for a time period I was monogamous to a man who was in a committed, lifelong, primary relationship. And I wasn’t even having sex with him!

It was my first experience of being truly monogamous. I didn’t cheat. I was fulfilled. I felt full with this love, even though the physical consummation of that love was impossible.

I felt safe in that love.

Perhaps I felt safe because there was no future in it. Perhaps I felt safe because he told me what to do, gave me parameters.

Perhaps I felt safely held by his jealousy.

Fast forward; this has all been history, back story.

Two and a half years later, I’m married to a man who is not Muslim. Who is never jealous. I’m married to a man who is a committed polyamorist.

I’m married to a man who chose me partially because he knew me by reputation as an educator, and as an educator about open relationships.

All freshly forming relationships fall under a glamour in the blush of new love. We both asked the “right” questions in our courting, and heard what we wanted to hear. I asked, “Do you believe in monogamy as a possible relationship choice?” (or something like that), and he answered “Yes, absolutely, as long as both partners are happy in it.” I heard, “Yes…” and that was what I needed to hear.

I don’t recall what he asked, or perhaps he was just relying on my reputation for the certainty that “poly” would never be an issue.

We could both have been more clear in our questions, answers and desires in this arena. And of course it’s not the only area where we were perhaps vague in our communication of desire of expectation.

Polamory is just the biggest. It’s our albatross.

My husband and I don’t have any regrets about having chosen one another. It was a coming home when we found each other, and we entered into a life-long commitment of love, devotion, trust, and faith.

We are wildly passionate in our love, we are best friends, we are deeply caring with each other, we have allowed ourselves to be known by each other more deeply and completely than we have ever been known before.

In the art of true transparency, we know – and help to hold – one another’s deepest fears and greatest hopes.

These are some confessions of a “bad” polyamorist:

Confession: Even though I know how deeply and completely my husband loves me, even though he touches me with tenderness and passion, even though he wears his love for me on his sleeve, I still can’t always find trust.

Confession: Perhaps it’s been a self-fulfilling prophesy, but I have been burned again and again over the years by the open-relationship format, whatever you call it; non-monogamy, polamory, swinging.

Confession: In my fear, I’ve done my own share of burning, too.

Confession: I often see my husband’s old lovers who still want something from him as a threat.

Confession: Sometimes I see his lack of jealousy as a lack of love, a lack of devotion.

Confession: I am scared to death of losing him by clinging too much, and scared to death of losing him by letting him loose.

I am scared. And, confession; in that fear I retreat to the same place I always have, my too-sensitive warning system rings loudly, a robotic voice in the back of my mind clanging, “Danger! Danger! Danger!”, over and over again.

In our hearts and home, our life together is beautiful. Gentle. Passionate. Almost always understanding. Almost completely peaceful.

But, confession; there is an elephant in the middle of the room. Sometimes it walks away for a while, but it always comes back.

That elephant’s name is Jealousy, and she is mine.

What Women Want – The Ten Secrets Every Husband, Lover, or Partner Needs to Know!

hot couple in loveA preface for the ladies;
Feel like you want your guy to know a few things about you? Like maybe what you want, and how you feel? If those things aren’t covered in this article, I invite you to write your own note to the man you love, and tell him about your top ten desires, dreams, wants, needs, or fantasies. It may become the beginning of an amazing, deepening, or even super-hot conversation.

However, if this list rings true for you, please share it with your man. I hope it brings you both to a place of pleasure, and deeper understanding.

Hey guys, I know you sometimes feel mystified by what is expected of, or desired from, you.
And it’s not like I can clear all that up in a few simple words. Hell, we’ve been working on this one since the dawn of time, I’m pretty sure.

But I’m also pretty sure we’re starting to get somewhere with all this. Men and women have never before had quite the opportunity we have right now to build a whole new way of relating. A new way, based on some pretty old truths, mixed with some brand-spankin’-new ideas.

I may be a dreamer, but I say there’s a chance that we can get past the wounding that you and I have both endured, and grow into shared desire, honesty, truth, and trust.

Here are a few steps to start you on your journey down that sometimes challenging, yet always rewarding, path. Pretend I’m your lady, and I’m talking to you.

Ready? Here are ten secret desires that may change your life forever.

Secret Desire # 1: Focus, or Presence:
Get totally present. Allow this moment, right here, right now, to be the only thing happening in the whole of time and space. Let the world fall away around us, and let me be your whole world.

This state of grace will usually only last a moment, but that moment goes a long way towards filling a well that often gets low; the one you want to drink from! Take the time, and let’s let the levels rise together.

This focus is a great way to greet me when we haven’t seen each other all day. Or, before we part ways in the morning. Or, first thing upon waking. Or last thing before we fall asleep. Or, all of the above.

Secret Desire # 2: Noticing, or Paying Attention:
When you notice what I like, it makes me feel seen, and cared for. In or out of bed. When you notice that I’ve changed my hair, or that the pants I’m wearing look hot, or that I look like I could use a hug, it makes me feel proud, relieved, happy, grateful that I chose YOU.

When you notice how I like my coffee, and prepare it for me without even thinking twice, I feel worshipped.

When you figure out that I don’t like soft, repetitive strokes on the hand, but I love strong hugs from behind, it makes me feel understood. Big bonus points to you if I never have to whisper a word to you about it, and you figure it all out on your own; after all, that’s what noticing is about.

Take the time and attention to notice me. I’ll do the same for you, and let’s see what happens!

Secret Desire # 3: Showing me Gratitude:
When you show me that you’re thankful that I chose you, it makes my heart soar. When you tell me you’re grateful that you get to go to bed with me, and wake up next to me, i feel nourished.

When you tell me you’re proud to be seen with me, I feel claimed. And as transgressive as it might be for a “feminist” to say, I love it when you claim me.

When you tell me you’re grateful that I’m such a good mom to our kids, I feel touched, and relieved. When you show your gratitude by fully parenting them with me, I feel like I won the husband lottery!

Remember to say thank  you for the small things; those everyday, tiny, repetitive things we do a million times without thinking about it. If I do the laundry, a thanks makes it less of a chore. And if you do the laundry, you know I’ll be thanking you.

Secret Desire # 4: Confidence:
Don’t second guess yourself. When I say I want you to take control, that’s what I mean.

And, don’t second guess me! When I tell you that I want you to make the choice, that’s really what I want. When you don’t believe me, I’m likely to get annoyed, especially on this touchy topic.

I know it’s a wound we’re working our way through as a culture. Ten years ago, women weren’t supposed to ask for help, and men weren’t supposed to offer it.

Well, the time they are a changing – again!

Even as a woman who can still handle it all – if I have to! – I want to be taken care of sometimes. Sometimes I want you to drive. And sometimes, I don’t want to have to say it at all. I just want you to step up, and take the wheel.sexy married couple

Secret Desire # 5: Vulnerability:
This is not the opposite of confidence, as some men assume. I see your willingness to be vulnerable with me as a huge statement of confidence. And, it makes me want to support you, take care of you. Not in some mommy/boy way, but in this, “oh, wow, he trusts me!” way.

Not only that, it makes me trust you. If you’re willing to get vulnerable with me, I’m going to be less guarded with you. And you never know to what fantastic places that could lead.

Trust that I can support you in those moments when you need to be held, listened to, or even just vent. Trust that I’ll still be here when you’re through it. And as you trust more, so will I.

Secret Desire # 6: Honesty and Transparency:
Scarier words are rarely spoken, right? But how are you going to get what you want, if you can’t, don’t, or won’t ask for it? Speaking our desires is the first step to getting them fulfilled.

And, when you speak your truth, you allow me to do the same. You never know…that fantasy you’ve been holding back on sharing might be just the one I’m dying to explore.

Let me tell you a secret; I like it dirty, and I like it rough. I also like it gentle, and loving, and sweet. If I trust you enough, there’s no edge that’s point-blank off-limits. Make it possible for me to trust you, and you’ll gain the golden key.

Your honesty is what cements my trust. Let’s build that foundation.

And, it would be less than honest of me to leave this part out; there’s another part of transparency that’s really important to me.

If I ask what you’re thinking, or feeling, or what’s wrong, please don’t say nothing, when it’s really something. I’ll be the first to admit that this kind of thing makes me, quite literally, crazy. If you don’t give me the low-down when something’s up, as you probably already know, I’m going to make up some kind of crazy story about what’s behind your silence.

Any story I make up is very likely to be much worse than whatever it is you’re not sharing with me.

Whatever the truth is, it’s better than confusion or paranoia. So man-up, and spit it out! This courageous act will save both of us a lot of misunderstanding and frustration. And it’ll save me a lot of hurt, wondering, and heart-ache.

And you know what’s awesome about this more challenging part of honesty? Once the air is cleared, we can get back to the yummy stuff, which is where both of us really want to be anyway. Right?

Secret Desire # 7: Face Fear Head-On:
Always be willing to face any fears that come up, whether they’re mine, or yours. And always be willing to go deeper with me, and work through that fear. Maybe not all at once, but over time.

In bed or out, we all have fears that arise around letting each other in, trusting, independence versus intimacy, personal power versus shared experience.

When you get scared, remember; I get scared, too. One thing you can be sure about is that getting scared is common ground – we’ve all been there!

Bring it to me, and I promise to do my best not to hurt you, make you wrong, or close you down in your fear. Open to me, and I’ll open to you.

Secret Desire # 8: Responsiveness:
In bed or out, paying attention becomes a worthwhile practice when you learn to respond appropriately to the information you gather.

That doesn’t mean doing what you think is supposed to come next. It means actually paying attention AS you respond, and honing your response to meet my desire. Sounds complicated, but it gets easier when you get present in the moment!

There’s no playbook for life, or for our interactions. No step 1, step 2, step 3 mentality is going to work in every situation. Instead, learn to read me. And then do whatever comes naturally.

Look, listen, then walk, as we learn in crossing the street. Give our interactions as much thought, and we’ll find our way.

Secret Desire # 9: Sharing Responsibilities:
In sex, that means doing your part regarding safety, birth control, and shared pleasure.

In life it means parenting with me, house keeping with me, making decisions with me; not around, or to, me. It means making goals and building dreams with me.

Sharing responsibility sometimes means taking control of the situation. Sometimes it means allowing me to. And often, it means coming together and working it out, in a way that makes sense to both of us.

And, The Big Secret Desire # 10! Be Willing to Cultivate and Invest in Love Through It All:
When my ex-husband and I separated a few years ago, I loved my way through it. it wasn’t always easy, but now that I know I can do that, I know I can love through anything.

Even when I’m angry at you, I can find the love I have for you within and around the anger. Even when I’m hurt, scared, and tired of the b.s., I can still find, connect with, and foster that love.

And if I can’t, something might really be wrong!

Practice may not make this one perfect, but it gets you there. Loving through the annoyance, anger, frustration, and pain is something that can become a natural response.

Remember; I’m loving you. Love me, too. If we can pull that off, I’m pretty sure we’ll be able to make this thing work!

Happy 2010 from Lasára and the Allen Household!

Robert and Lasára Allen, Dec. 25, '09Tired of New Years Resolutions? Why Not New Years Commitments, Intetionstions, and Fun?

Have you made any resolutions? Many of us make resolutions and then fail. Many of us make resolutions and then fail. I’m choosing to make intentions and commitments. But always with one cautionary caveat, which I encourage YOU to adopt as well; remember that while today is the first day of the rest of your year, this is also the first day of the rest of your life! And, this moment is the first moment of the rest of your physical existence. Every breath is a chance to make a new choice.

When you “fall short” of that commitment, offer yourself compassion instead of self-denigration, and gratitude instead of blame.

This new year, I’ll be making three lists. Each has a higher level of commitment 1: Commitments; 2: Intentions; 3; My “WHY NOT?” List.

List One; Commitments:

  • To recognize that every area of practice towards my own health is an act of dedication to the liberation of all sentient beings pervading time and space.
  • To recognize that serving my husband, my children, my family and my friends are part of my spiritual practice, and to treat it as such. And, to remember that this also serve the liberation of all beings.
  • To continue following the path that my gratitude practice opens for me.
  • To train towards my physical and fitness goals with passion and dedication. Failure is not an option.
  • To remain open to the idea, realization, (fact?), that love can be easeful, and that I am safe in it. And, safe in the arms and grace of my Mr.
  • Without expectation, to celebrate every anniversary and celebration that my Mr. and I can count as momentous; Valentines day when he moved in, reconfirmation June 26 in Seattle, August 12 when we eloped, Oct 3rd when we reconfirmed our vows, and Christmas when he was delivered to me – my greatest Christmas Miracle ever.
  • To build a circle of similarly minded friends here in the area, and to actively commitment to this as a practice of faith, desire, and love.
  • To continue working in acceptance of the choices I have made to support my growing balance and mental health, even when those choices feel like limitations.
  • To continue sharing my gifts with the world in whatever ways I am capable of at any time.
  • To continue trusting that God has a plan for me that is greater than I can see, and that every day I’m fulfilling that plan by living my life in as much consciousness as I can achieve.

Ror, Dec. 25, '09

List Two; Intentions

  • To begin praying and meditating again in a way that serves to ground and inspire me instead of making me too high and open.
  • To allow financial, desired, perfect abundance to enter and flow in my life, and have less attachment about how that flow occurs. To trust that God knows best how to deliver this abundance.
  • To follow the attraction and direction of my heart with grace, trust, and joy.
  • To invest in and develop forgiveness for myself and and the harm that occurred in my past.
  • More and more, to allow the support I so deeply desire.
  • To take what I have learned of trust, honesty, and openness from my husband and begin generalizing it to the rest of the world.
  • To hold regular gatherings as part of my community building adventure.
  • To close at least one book deal.
  • To write my next book, or books.
  • To shop Gratigories to a card publisher who may also want to publish my gratitude books.
  • To take trips outside the area more regularly.
  • To begin reading more books again.

List 3; My “WHY NOT?” List (next year and beyond):

  • Plan a belated honeymoon to Europe (Italy primarily) with my Mr.Sollie, 12.25.09
  • Run a half marathon.
  • Work toward my best comprehensive health in my life.
  • Get yoga instructor 200 hour certification.
  • Trust that love and sexual sharing can be exactly as I hope for it; easy, safe, based purely in shared desire and trust.
  • Explore new religions. (Catholicism, traditional Tantra, deeper into Tibetan Buddhism and Tantric teachings and ritual.)
  • Explore excavation of darkness and shadow, in the light.
  • Go dancing.
  • Take a dance class (again after all these years).
  • Take a voice class (again after all these years).
  • Visit different churches just to see what part of me the services sing to.

And, my final commitment; to visit this page at least once every three months, and mark off the things that actually have a completion point, and star the things I’m doing well on that are a path without destination.

What are your commitments, intentions, or WHY NOTs? I look forward to seeing what you have to share.

And with wishes of joy, abundance, and greatest gratitude, a very heartfelt prayer for a 2010 that is beyond your sweetest dreams, from our home and family to yours.

In GRATITUDE! (heart here!)