Open Hear post #3
Posted: March 2, 2011 Filed under: Community, Food, Open Hear | Tags: Community, family, Food, Open Hear, Yes! Magazine 2 Comments »
Opening Hear#3
Inspirations that come from anywhere that cause us to listen with our hearts… unlocking them in the process.
∞
Yes! Magazine’s Winter 2011 edition has wonderful articles based around “What Happy Families Know“. I encourage anyone who hasn’t read Yes! Magazine in a while, or ever, to pick up a copy – or a subscription – or go to the library on a quarterly basis, to soak up it’s positivity and wisdom. I have never been disappointed with the content. As a matter of fact you’ll probably hear me talk about it quite a bit as time goes on.
My favorite story, “You Are Who You Eat With” by Katherine Gustafson has this quote: “When food advocate and chef Tom French asked a student how she felt after his organization, the Experience Food Project, began replacing the bland, processed food in her school cafeteria with fresh, healthy school lunches, he received an unexpected answer. “She gave it some serious thought,” he told me over the phone. “Then she said, ‘you know, I feel respected.’”
Food, and what we do to it – growing it, transporting it,
cooking, and serving it can make us feel respected, or not.
Great-full and Opening Hear
Posted: February 10, 2011 Filed under: Community, Open Hear | Tags: Open Hear Leave a comment »I woke this morning and read a few of the blogs I follow.
I was shaken to the core by reading this post from Karen Maezen Miller’s Cheerio Road.
She talks about a woman who emailed her about her husband finding out he has leukemia. This woman, Rose, has two sons, as I do. Her posts can be read here. Her real and eloquent words made MANY tears come from me this morning. When I get whiny or otherwise sink in a negative mood, I’ll read Rose’s posts. I’ve been getting so many reminders lately about the fact that I need to stay in gratefulness. I do not have a husband that is being treated for cancer. I have healthy boys. I am healthy. My daily worries are small compared to what so many others have to deal with. I have so many many things to focus my attention on that I am grateful for.

My mother once told me, after she had died during a drug overdose, that when she “woke up” she was amazed at how close death is to us all. She likened it to a veil, so thin that we can barely realize how thin it is. “Death is with us ALL, all the time,” she said. I feel it closer to me today. I also have held my loved ones closer today having realized, again, the singular chance we get, each day to Love.

Open Hear post #2
Posted: February 7, 2011 Filed under: Creativity, Open Hear | Tags: Creativity, Gustave Flaubert, Open Hear Leave a comment »
Opening Hear – inspirations that come from anywhere that cause us to listen with our hearts, unlocking them in the process.
∞
Here is a quote that upon first glance may not scream “open your heart!”
but, for me, I need my feet on the ground so my heart can soar!
“Be regular and orderly in your life,
so that you may be violent and original in your work.”
– Gustave Flaubert
I found this quote on this blog.
Open Hear Post #1
Posted: February 3, 2011 Filed under: Open Hear | Tags: Open Hear, shame, Soul, vulnerability, wholeheartedness Leave a comment »

Opening Hear
Inspirations that come from anywhere that cause us to listen with our hearts,
unlocking them in the process.
∞
Here is a link to a video by Brene Brown, about Wholeheartedness – one that caused me to sign up for the Mondo Beyondo January Dream Lab because she is the guest facilitator. From her blog:
“She has spent the past ten years studying vulnerability, courage, authenticity, and shame. Brené spent the first five years of her decade-long study focusing on shame and empathy, and is now using that work to explore a concept that she calls Wholeheartedness.”
It really spoke to me since I’m so cerebral person, often finding it challenging to live from my heart and not my head.
She defines Wholeheartedness as:
“Wholehearted living is about engaging in our lives from a place of worthiness.
It means cultivating the courage, compassion, and connection to wake up
in the morning and think, No matter what gets done and how much is left undone; I am enough.
It’s going to bed at night thinking, Yes, I am imperfect and vulnerable and sometimes afraid,
but that doesn’t change the truth that I am also brave and worthy of love and belonging.”
No Sugar – One Month – Many struggles!
Posted: February 3, 2011 Filed under: Food, Parenting | Tags: eczema, fibromyalgia, Householding, no sugar, Open Hear, Parenting, vulnerability 2 Comments »Monday was the last day of my family’s resolution to not eat sugar for the month of January. Pizza night was not the same without root beer, and I have to say I missed the occasional mocha. Sylas, at 11 years old, did splendidly! He didn’t miss it even a little! Rick says he’s going to keep going for another month – we’ll see about that!
I, on the other hand, struggled with emotional eating in a big way. I hadn’t realized how compulsive I had become with sugar.

Sugar sugar (Photo credit: dhammza)
My intellect knows all the dangers, like: sugar can suppress your immune system, sugar causes a loss of tissue elasticity and function (which is a huge issue for people with Fibromyalgia, like me!), and, Sugar can contribute to eczema in children. (This is an interesting one, because Ben’s eczema was getting really bad around the end of December….within 5 days of Jan. 1st, his rash cleared up almost completely!)
But the heart, in it’s sometimes wounded ways, wants what it wants. And I wanted to bring sweetness into my life by eating sugar. I did, however, surprise myself with finding sweetness in other ways. Primarily through being sweet to others – which pushed my vulnerability limits to the max! I’ve often equated “being sweet” with pollyannaishness…(is that a word?). And I’m no pollyanna. But I have developed a taste for being sweeter to others, which is a good thing. As is the 7 pounds I lost during January, by doing nothing else but stopping the sugar addiction.
To read a great comprehensive article about sugar, go here.



