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Grief as a gentle parent
Grief doesn’t come to hurt you.
It comes to guide you home.
It’s arrival, whether gradual or sudden, will beg you to be present.
Forcing stillness, it wants you to open to your own depths. To the previously unexplored terrain. To all the other times you turned away from yourself.
Grief as a gentle parent
Grief doesn’t come to hurt you.
It comes to guide you home.
It’s arrival, whether gradual or sudden, will beg you to be present.
Forcing stillness, it wants you to open to your own depths. To the previously unexplored terrain. To all the other times you turned away from yourself.
Grief as a gentle parent
Grief doesn’t come to hurt you.
It comes to guide you home.
It’s arrival, whether gradual or sudden, will beg you to be present.
Forcing stillness, it wants you to open to your own depths. To the previously unexplored terrain. To all the other times you turned away from yourself.
Chasing the ghost of intimacy
I think so many of us, especially women, are prone to seeing something at the beginning of a connection that we then start building a fantasy upon. Based on our specific conditioning, we cling so tightly to the potential of who this person ‘could’ be that we lose all connection with the reality of what is.
Trauma & the Soul: feeling safe to come home
We can literally feel cut off from any sense of depth, compassion or love for ourselves or others, simply because it’s always been too scary for us to go to these places. Up until this point we’ve only known the shallows, pain, and perhaps everything that isn’t love.
Why practice gentleness?
It wasn’t until my nervous system forced me to surrender to burn-out that I began to open to the realisation that gentleness is each human being’s inherent and powerful nature.