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July 26, 2016 at 2:34 pm #110604RobinParticipant
Greetings, everyone! This is probably going to be a long post, so I hope you’ll bear with me.
I’m a 53 year old woman facing the exciting and somewhat scary reality of starting over. Background: Physically and emotionally abusive childhood; very little time on my own before entering a marriage that turned out to be emotionally abusive, controlling, and isolating; divorced after 26 years of that nonsense. I’ve spent the last 2 1/2 years coming to terms with my role in the marriage and divorce, reclaiming parts of myself that I had to repress, and learning to make my own decisions.
My ex brought out the worst in me, and encouraged me to be weak so he could be in control, but that’s only part of the reason I didn’t have a job during the marriage. Another part of it is that I have a phobia of working for other people. I’ve had severe stress reactions at work, bordering on panic attacks, and I don’t feel that this issue has changed. To make matters worse, I left college to get married and never finished a degree, and after nearly 3 decades out of the workplace, I have no relevant experience, so my job options are limited at best.
I’d like to add that I’m not lazy. I can put in 12-14 hour days when I’m writing, doing artwork, cooking for and running a food sale for my social group, or helping a friend move. I know that I am dedicated enough and smart enough to run an online business of my own, if I could narrow my wide range of interests down and focus on one type of business.
When I was a kid, I wanted to be a writer and artist. I’m pretty good, but my parents and ex convinced me that I could never make a living at either one. And I was brought up to be viciously critical of myself and my abilities. It hurts when I say the same things to myself about my artwork or stories that my parents used to say to me. It makes me feel like telling my past tormentors, “Say what you want to about me, but leave my creations alone!” I’d like to do something with these abilities, but self-confidence is an issue.
On the other hand, I’ve been told by many psychics, shamans, oracle readers, even my own natal chart, that I am here to be a healer and intuitive counselor. Looking back throughout my adulthood, I realized that it makes people feel better to tell me deeply personal things about themselves and the struggles they face, even people who I’ve just met. It happens so often that it stopped being a surprise years ago. Friends tell me they love the feeling that someone is really listening to them. And I have to admit I’ve been able to help more than a few people.
That’s where the “conflicted” part comes in. Do I pursue what I love, which is fantasy writing and artwork, or do I pursue my calling, which is to help people heal? Is there a way to combine them? I’ve tried for so long to figure this out, and I’ve looked at it from so many different directions, that I’ve worried myself into a standstill. A nudge in the right direction would be very much appreciated!
July 26, 2016 at 4:36 pm #110611365daysofkindnessParticipantI don’t see why these two couldn’t be combined? Or why you can’t do both?
I would say in times like this when I think too much, I say, “just do it!” Stop overthinking it.
Get a whiteboard out. Create tactics and brainstorm under each idea. How can you incorporate these passions into your every day life? What can you accomplish over the next 30 days to get you closer to these goals?
Oftentimes the first step is the most overwhelming. It’s so wonderful you’ve identified what makes you happy. It’s all in taking the next steps and just doing something that gets you closer to the general direction of your dreams.
July 26, 2016 at 7:26 pm #110641AnonymousGuestDear Robin:
Congratulations for starting over!
You asked: “Do I pursue what I love, which is fantasy writing and artwork, or do I pursue my calling, which is to help people heal? Is there a way to combine them?”
I say: both. Tell such fantasy stories, decorate your fantasy book with your artwork that heal.
Here is an example of a fantasy story that helped me start my healing and has been a guide I my over five years of ongoing, day in and day out healing. It is The Never Ending Story, the 1984 original, one and only. It is a fantasy story/ movie that well… if you watched it, or if you will watch it, you can pick up on the healing potential in it.
If you didn’t watch it or didn’t watch it attentively by this point, I recommend you do and let me know what you think about this story as a combination of a fantasy story, art and healing.
anita
July 28, 2016 at 9:14 am #110773RobinParticipant365daysofkindness and anita, thank you both for your thoughtful, supportive responses. 🙂
After giving your words a lot of thought, I’ve realized that I have been devaluing some of my gifts. Past hurts have made me see my artwork and writing as childish hobbies, not important like the “real” work of having jobs that I hated because all “real” adults have jobs they hate, right? *eyeroll* That may be where my borderline panic attacks at work were coming from: my subconscious mind rebelling against the belittling of my creativity and the exalting of things I wasn’t meant to do. It’s funny how contradictory that is – my heroes are writers, artists, actors, explorers, and spiritual teachers, yet I’ve been taught not to value those aspects of myself.
Even when I consider doing something with my gifts, I try to force myself to concentrate solely on healing, because it seems more practical and more like “real” work than doing something creative. It’s as though I’m pitting one group of abilities against the other, like enemies. Again, this is contradictory, because intellectually it makes more sense to me to blend my gifts into a unique synergy, rather than focusing on some while letting others wither away. It seems to me that the Universe gave me all of these gifts to use to help others, but that’s not how I’ve been living. No wonder I am out of balance with myself.
I’ve always felt that stories, artwork, and a strong belief in fantasy were what got me through my violent, frightening childhood, so on some level I know that these things can heal. I guess I just haven’t dared to hope that other people might see the healing value of works of imagination. I’ve been afraid that other people would tell me that these things are silly and not practical, the way my parents and my ex did. Anita, The Neverending Story is a wonderful example of a work of fantasy that has the power to heal. I don’t know what it says to you, of course, but to me it says that I don’t have to let my depression put an end to me as a person, and that no matter how bad things get, if I believe and keep trying, my world can be reborn and be as wonderful as I choose to make it.
Again, thank you both!
Blessings and love,
RobinJuly 28, 2016 at 11:34 am #110785RobinParticipantThere’s a word for it! There’s actually a word for the healing power of reading! Bibliotherapy. Isn’t it beautiful? I’m so excited! 🙂
July 28, 2016 at 11:58 am #110787AnonymousGuestDear Robin:
It is exciting: Bibiliotherapy and Art Therapy, both, bibilio-art therapy perhaps?
I like your last post, combine all your gifts. And I like you being excited over valuing your creativity.
The Never Ending Story- the swamps of sadness, was it? The deserts of depression.. I am not sure. To me that movie meant a lot: it is a representation of what I call my Healing Path, starting with the quest to find a cure for the Empress, it being a child chosen as the warrior, Atreyu, taking no weapons, surviving depression (the death of his horse), hardships, the indifference and pessimism of the Morla, the ancient turtle (“I am allergic to… youth”), GMork, who works for The Nothing that takes over people who lose their dreams and hopes, so to control people.. (makes me think, were you married to a Gmork who “brought out the worst in me, and encouraged me to be weak so he could be in control”), and so much more. Eventually all of Fantasia was gone except for one grain of sand.
I am thinking your awakening, your excitement is that one grain of sand that is going to make Fantasia come alive in all its magnificence. I hope so.
anita
July 29, 2016 at 12:27 am #110840Hello beautiful angel. Thank-you for sharing your story. We love you and you are important. You deserve to be happy. The past has made you stronger and teaches us things and help us become the person we are today. Everything means something <3 you are strong and your purpose is whatever makes you happy. ITS YOUR LIFE ISNT IT amazing!! Woo! yes YOU CAN DO WHAT you love as a job and forever. You can combine these things helping people and writing
Write helpful articles draw motivating artwork and with your own themes and artstyle the possibilities are so endless isn’t that amazing! It’s never too late to be happy or love the life u lead. You can alwyas go back to college. It’s never too late. You are good enough and beautiful . be the good in the world and help people u are doing great. <3 thank you for being you. Sweetie best of luck to you in life. You are an amazing woman and you helped many people I’m sure and I’m glad it gave you joy to do so. Never stop being you and glad you exisr. It’s your time to shine and enjoy the life you have <3 do anything that makes you happy focus on being happy and do stuff that makes you feel good <3 anything is POSSIBLE AND miraxles happen everyday its a jog to be alive to love laugh wake up see te sun etc<3 keep shining and work hard. Write down what u want I know you’ll get them somedayJuly 30, 2016 at 2:27 pm #110994RobinParticipantLivelovelifeeleni, thank you for your encouraging words! It means a lot that you took the time to send so much positive energy my way. 🙂
Anita, you are so right about my ex being a Gmork, suppressing my spirit and my creativity. I know I allowed it to happen, but it was difficult for me to look after the children and fight against the Nothing at the same time, so I chose to take care of the children. That’s just the way things were. Now that the kids are grown up, things can be different. It’s funny how I subconsciously gave up trying to make the marriage work when the younger child was almost 18, nearly a legal adult – I didn’t even recognize the significance of the timing until I looked back at it later.
Now I’m facing the difficulties of a habit that was instilled in me in childhood and reinforced during my marriage: I will come up with an idea that I like, one that excites me, and then immediately start telling myself all the reasons why it can’t work and why I’m not good enough to even try. Of course I base these hurtful comments to myself on real-life concerns, so they’re harder to argue against. In the case of combining fantasy with healing, I don’t know how to structure it in a practical way, or what form it should take, and my negativity is keeping me from seeing things clearly. I’m tired of doing this to myself. I need to take a chance on making this work, if for no other reason than to break that habit. It’s just going to be a bit of a struggle, trying to figure out how to turn the idea into an everyday reality.
July 30, 2016 at 8:10 pm #111016AnonymousGuestDear Robin:
You are talking about the Inner Critic. I have one too. I call it the Inner Bully as it bullies me. It rains on my parade, that’s its job and reads like yours does the same.
I am not a business person so if you talk about the finances of combining fantasy and healing, the prospect of marketing it, I know nothing about that. If you talk about creating healing fantasy, then forget about the marketing part of it and just make it happen. I can’t wait to read it, if I get the chance!
anita
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