I can honestly say that, for the first time in 50 years, I’m learning how to just be. How to relish the present moment, which, magically and mysteriously, unlocks the door to the treasure house that is the rest of my life.
- Jennifer Green, Salem, Oregon
From the moment Jon and I connected, I had this deep experience of loving presence and complete trust. Something bypassed my mind and my ability to figure things out, and communicated directly to my heart and soul that I was safe and in the right place. There was a creation of power in our relationship that he honored and witnessed as being mine. It was my power. I had the experience of being wonderfully, beautifully powerful, in the most loving, energized way.
- Laura Lind-Blum, The Idea Midwife, Waterbury Center, Vermont
Jon can help you recognize where you are, and become more clear. My work with him has not been about plotting out my future, it has been about helping me come into deeper relationship with myself so that next steps unfold easily and effortlessly.
He creates a safe, spacious container for you to go as deep or wide or high as you’re capable of in any given moment. It’s a matter of him being able to see the facets and help me make them real in me.
- Sandra Leader, Carmel, CA
My feelings changed from, “Quick, fix me, I can’t stand how I feel, make it better, hurry,” to, it’s not about hurry, and it’s not about fixing, it’s about staying where you are and getting more and more and deeper and deeper sensations that this is okay. You’re fine, this is okay.
It helps me reframe experience. I don’t see anything that’s happening quite the same as I’ve ever seen it before, because my viewpoint has been enlarged. There’s more, there’s peace, there’s joy, there’s love, there’s health, there’s everything.
- Layne Young, artist, Salem, Oregon
It’s ok. Whatever it is, it’s ok. There isn’t a problem until you think there’s a problem.
The journey home to yourself is filled with experiences and ways of being that defy description. Words are mental, and much of the journey is experiential. Words don’t do well in describing how “it’s ok” feels when you embody it fully, when you live it.
Allowing everything to be as it is, without resistance, is another way of saying “it’s ok,” and it’s something I talk about often with my clients. This is a way of being that is unmistakeable once you’ve experienced it, but is difficult to explain to someone who hasn’t yet felt it. To my clients’ frustration, there’s also no “how,” no step-by-step process, to achieve — or rather, to remember — this way of being. One moment it’s a mystery, and the next moment it suddenly makes inexplicable, glorious sense.
There are, of course, some ideas, tools, teachings, and ways of looking at it that help people make the shift. Inquiry, meditation, relaxation — I’ve written about many of these in the past, and I’ll certainly write about more of them in future articles.
However, in this article I’d like to explore some of the things that “it’s ok” does not mean.
Said in a long-suffering tone of voice, “it’s ok” is often used to mean the exact opposite.
Allowing everything to be as it is — allowing everything to be truly ok — does not entail becoming a doormat for everyone to walk on or being a martyr to circumstance. Used that way, “it’s ok” is a lie, because there’s still a perceived problem.
When everything is as it is, “it’s ok” is a recognition that there is no problem at all. When your mind stops believing its stories about situations, problems drop away and disappear.
People often use problems as reasons for activity, so without a problem, my clients wonder if they’ll find themselves with no motivation to do anything. A life sitting on the couch eating bon-bons doesn’t exactly appeal to them.
Fortunately, nothing could be farther from reality. Action arises clearly and easily out of the space created when there’s no problem. All the energy that had been used for worry and planning and problem-solving becomes free to move — and move it does! Creativity flows, opportunity becomes obvious, and more is accomplished than seems possible.
“It’s ok” doesn’t mean “everything is wonderful.” Preferences don’t suddenly disappear, nor does life suddenly align itself perfectly. You’ll still feel tired, sad, hungry, cold, frustrated, sick; drivers will still cut you off on the highway; you’ll still have communication breakdowns and misunderstandings with your boss, partner, and best friend.
But — and this is where the words and descriptions really start to fail — it’s still ok, and there’s still no problem. Without the story about how being tired or sad or sick is a “bad” thing, without the story about how that driver is a terrible person who “shouldn’t” have cut you off, without the story about how your boss “should” treat you with more respect, there’s nothing left but freedom.
When you don’t contract around your mind’s attempt to create stories about what’s happening, you relax physically, mentally, and emotionally. Internal knots and tensions dissolve into a joyful spaciousness.
Your freedom to be who you really are opens up into horizons you never dreamed existed. As one client wrote, “Self-consciousness has fallen away. I just do what presents itself to be done; there’s no mental chatter considering whether it’s the right thing to do or not, wondering and worrying about what someone else will think, no incipient embarrassment to protect. It’s sublime, beautiful, and totally amazing!”
“There are bad times, but that’s ok, just look for the love in it, don’t burn the day away.” Dave Matthews Band, US-based rock band formed in 1991
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