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Creative Life Midwife

Inspiring Artistic Rebirth

Archives for October 2023

Day 3: 31 Days of (Self) Belonging

October 3, 2023 by jjscreativelifemidwife

Sometimes when we decide to take action, exactly what you need seems to magically fall into place.

It is as Paulo Coelho wrote, “When you want something, all the universe conspires in helping you to achieve it.”

Does Magic Begin with Habits, Rituals and Our Natural Tendencies?

I have a ritual on Sunday afternoon to go for a drive, a hike and listen to podcasts in a leisurely way as I do. Usually I have two podcasts I listen to, but this Sunday, I listened to a podcast I listen to semi-regularly and it served up exactly what I needed to hear in order for me to feel a strong sense of belonging and recognition.

I saw myself in the description spoken by the host of “Being Well,” Forrest Hanson and his father Dr. Rick Hanson, who shared a brief synopsis of the work of Carl Rogers. The three word description “unconditional positive regard” reminded me of both how I operate and who I am.

My thought was, “There is a name for how I naturally operate?” which turned into “It is a valid, valuable way of being.”

How Unconditional Positive Regard Intersects with Self-Belonging

I first heard myself speak this “Unconditional Positive Regard” aloud in a classroom recently when I said, “I am here because I see the good in you.”

It followed when I advocated for a student I have nothing to do with except we are both humans and on my quest for self-belonging I am also continuing to focus on belonging for others.

When I heard Dr. Hanson talk about unconditional positive regard I thought to myself, “How often do I say things to myself like I said to that random student?”

“I am here because I see the good in you, Julie.”
I don’t know if I have ever said that to myself.

I see you, I am listening to you, I am honoring you

One of the reasons for this exploration was to find areas where I could strengthen my awareness – and this is a definite gift because seeing the good in others and expressing that good that we see is like rolling out the “belonging red carpet.”

I see you; I am listening to you; I am honoring you.

Today when I advocated for the student whose path I just-so-happened to cross, I encountered a whole new group of people, I spoke in a language I sort of know, but I’m stretching my use of it on purpose in order to connect with her. “I am making this honest effort to help you because I see you, I hear your heart and I value you.”

Reaching out to those who are at risk of being lonely and roll out the “belonging red carpet” as best as I can is something I have done since I was a very young child. This is unique about me, something that has been true about me for my entire life. 

The student has now been invited into a social event that will help her with language and hopefully make new friends, I have collaborated with her language teacher to help her fit in through conversing in both of our native languages and I had that deeply satisfying feeling that comes from helping someone simply because we are two humans on this planet.

Vulnerability: an Indication Belonging is Near or Here

Vulnerability alert: I have tears in my eyes as I even think about morphing the words of belonging I thought towards a student I don’t even know:

 “I am making this honest effort to help you, Julie,  because I see you, I hear your heart and I value you.”

This isn’t about parroting phrases of self-love.

These are true statements I am learning and yearning to fully embrace.

I will check in at the end of the week about my overall progress and this study of and usage of unconditional positive regard to myself will be an excellent measuring stick of how I am honoring myself and inviting myself to higher levels of self-belonging.

Do you recognize yourself in anything I have shared here? I would love to hear how you are connecting with my words. Hearing how you are connecting (or suggestions as well) will help me grow to hear how these concepts are landing with you and if you have any questions for me as I continue to develop this series.

Julie JordanScott is a Creative Life Coach, an award-winning storyteller, actor and poet whose photos and mixed media art graces the walls of collectors across the United States. Her writing has appeared on the New York Times Best Sellers List, the Amazon best sellers list and on American Greetings Holiday cards (and other greeting cards). She currently lives in a manse in Sussex, NJ, where she has recently finished her most recent book project, hugging trees daily and enjoys having random inspirational conversations with strangers.

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Filed Under: Creative Adventures, Creative Life Coaching, Goals, Healing, Self Care, Storytelling

Day 2: 31 Days of (Self) Belonging

October 2, 2023 by jjscreativelifemidwife

Doorways have been a meaningful visual metaphor for me for as long as I remember.

An image of a door caused an a-ha moment during my writing practice yesterday.

I realized  if I shut the door on other people, I am also shutting the door on myself. As Walt Whitman reminded us, “Every atom belonging to me as good belongs to you.”

Shutting doors is disconnecting from possibilities.

I remembered times when doors shut, unexpectedly or when I didn’t want them to shut so quickly.

This could be subway doors or elevator doors sliding shut right before you step through them which causes you to miss the opportunity to get where you are going.

How do you respond?

Sometimes I respond with anger, frustration when it would have been more self-soothing to let go with a sigh of realization, I now have a few more moments to contemplate what patience feels like.

Someone closing the door before you have finished speaking is a form of dehumanizing. It is saying  “I don’t recognize you or your desires. I won’t listen to you anymore.”

Hanging up a phone connection works similarly. 

Fourteen years ago I told a friend, “If you ever hang up on me again, our friendship will be over.”
They never hung up on me again.

When the subway or elevator door closes there is no human element, yet I have heard people take the doors shutting personally, when that meaning isn’t there – unless you are blaming yourself for not paying attention or responding quickly enough.

When it is a human who willfully shuts the door and disconnects from you, this may be a valid cause for pain, sadness and grief.

Consider for today if you would rather live your life with both open doors or shut doors or only with one or the other.

What does this have to do with belonging?

Let’s return to Walt Whitman for our answer: the current loneliness epidemic is caused by people shutting doors to open another. When we shut the door to ourselves, we are shutting out others as well. When we close the connection to ourselves, we are closing the connection we may create with others.

Today, even in the smallest ways, practice opening doors to yourself so that tomorrow, it will be easier to open the doors to others.

Doors from the early 20th Century at a Railroad depot in Middletown New York with the affirmation, "Today I will open doors to myself & others."

What does opening the door to yourself look like?

  • Taking extra time in the morning getting ready rather than rushing. Even five extra minutes makes a positive difference.
  • Asking yourself a mindful question throughout the day such as “How am I feeling right now? What would I most enjoy doing next?
  • Stand in front of a mirror and smile at and with yourself. Put your hand over your heart and take three deep breaths. Continue with your day (at a minimum repeat before breakfast, lunch and dinner)

Woman (Julie Jordan Scott Julie JordanScott) seeming to burst through a broken wall on an abandoned home.

Julie Jordan Scott is a multi-passionate creative who has served people worldwide as a creative life coach, an inspiring voice in the darkness and a presence in her writing, creativity and teaching in workshops, webinars, group facilitation and more. 

Watch this space for more as the month unfolds.

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Filed Under: Creative Life Coaching, Healing, Self Care

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