Depth Of My SoulsteemCreated with Sketch.

in steempress •  7 years ago 



Finding value in the space of uncertainty


No one told me it would be this way: regrets, remorse, grief, sense of loss, loss of confidence, lack of motivation. This separation has been the hardest — but its not a separation from a partner, but the change of career.


I still want you by my side,
just to help me dry the tears that I’ve cried,
’cause I’m sure gonna give you a try,
and if you want, I’ll try to love again.
—  Cat Stevens


It’s funny how ‘changing your life’ is always used by coaches and therapists to promote their services to help you find your way to the life you want to live. Positive outlooks, new-found sense of freedom and sense of self. However, the other side of such changes are never used in promotional copy: the fear, uncertainty, and doubt that comes with change — these are usually the things that stop most of us from making those bold decisions.

I followed my own advice and did precisely that — I changed my life by ending my career as a therapist, and in the past few months have felt like I’ve had a separation from a lover.

I’ve realised that my identity was so entwined with my professional life, that I got out of touch with the real me. And now I’m taking the time to get to know the person I’ve always been while at the same time stripping away the layers of personae and masks.

Yes, it is dark and foreboding at times. I have those days where I want to stay in bed and wonder where all my drive, creativity, and willpower have wandered off to.

I have resisted the temptation of labelling it ‘depression’, as I’m sure any other clinician may want to do. I don’t feel that in this instance that diagnosis is useful, nor entirely correct. This is not something that needs fixing — rather it is the place to be, to get to know, and experience in all its shadowy gloom. For me, this is not a mental health condition; its just a phase I’m experiencing.

Although somewhat challenging, the depths that I am experiencing is at the same time nourishing a part of me that has been starved for the last few years.


You believe what you see, All the things that you know, But oh you don’t know, The depth of my soul – Thievery Corporation


Saturn’s child

In his book Care Of The Soul, Thomas Moore writes:

The void and grayness of depression evoke an awareness and articulation of thoughts otherwise hidden behind the screen of lighter moods.

He suggests that not only is melancholia and sadness a sign of experience, but also a maturing and a gaining of wisdom that allows one to grow as a person. In fact, Moore describes it as a necessary part of living a sacred life.

I’ve devoted a quarter of my life to caring for others’ wellbeing; now I’m putting my energy towards caring for my own. I’ve certainly read, studied, and lectured on these ideas for years — but I haven’t really made the space to live by them whole-heartedly. I haven’t afforded myself the time or space to go deep, deep, deep in an extensive or protracted way. I’ve touched the surface of these depths; but never completely dived in.


Photo by Sean Mungur on Unsplash

Making the choice to leave my chosen career has afforded me the opportunity to do so. And the perspective I have now is refreshing.

It certainly feels like a separation of sorts, a divorcing from my ‘old’ life. So of course there are going to be the sensations of grief and regret; but there is also the revival of the parts of my true nature that have been latent or ignored for so long. I feel like I’m getting to know myself again.

F.U.D.

There is still plenty of confusion and uncertainty about what will come next. That’s where I find solace in the I Ching, itself an enigmatic map of uncertainty. In the obscurity of these ancient Chinese symbols, my imagination is able to connect my experiences, my embodied feelings, and all the knowledge of past learnings in order to make sense of the world. In a recent reading, the wisdom I received was to “strive for little things” — sobering advice for someone who always likes to make grandiose plans and look at the bigger picture.

I keep reminding myself that the theme for the Earth Dog year is Presence and Integrity. The alchemical symbol of the mountain wolf to represent this theme is a particularly potent reminder of the power of stillness, calm, and patience in a world that is currently so fast and furious and demanding of every shred of our attention.

I have, for example, removed myself from all social media. I have closed and deactivated all my accounts, and spending very little time online. My choice of reading material is now offline, returning to print books instead of e-books, browsing the shelves of bookstores instead of online stores, and even looking to street press to find out what’s happening locally instead of simply searching online.


Even in the silence, I hear my heart – Enya

There is a sense of calm that has emerged from this. And I attribute the emergence of the ‘darker’ thoughts and feelings to this stillness. Having reduced or eliminated the noise from ‘out there’, it has allowed my attention to be drawn to inner aspects of my being that have been drowned out.

Imagine a society where everyone was afforded the space to make their own explorations in this manner. I wonder whether we would have such a continued need for medications, treatments, and courses that all sell the promise of coming out and staying out of these depths.

In this moment, being ‘in the dark’ (so to speak) is wonderfully mysterious. From this emptiness, all things seem possible.

And that is a marvellous thing to consider.


I invite you to consider the following questions, and share your thoughts in the comments section below:

  • Do you allow yourself the luxury of darkness, depth, and melancholia?
  • When you do, what do you discover?
  • Do you judge it as ‘bad’ when it happens, or do you embrace it and stay curious as to what emerges from these depths?

Originally published by Petah Raven on June 5, 2018.
Canonical link Exported from Medium on August 1, 2018.



Posted from my blog PANDORA'S LOST GIFT with SteemPress : http://metametheus.net/depth-of-my-soul/
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Hey NM member, you're upvoted 100 percent and re-steemed. Love your work xx

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So many moments of my life since the last few years have had, world tumbling, face punching darknesses thrown into my face. To only find these are but the same for each and every human. Those darknesses took me deeper into what I have hidden in the past. My fears tears and angers which were suppressed. My sexuality, covered in a manhole, for it being too 'strong'. The list could go on, but ah these moments looking back, the really strongly polarising ones, believe me they went deep, are the most sweetest of memories, for these have brought me the most, most beauty.

So go in, dive deep and crash yourself apart, blow everything to smithereens.

Cordial blessings on the trip

Wow @thematoog, thanks for sharing your personal insights into all of this. It's the paradox of all of this, the beauty found in the depths of ugliness, the good buried deep within the bad, like seeds of a fruit... this is normal, human life, don't you think?!

Well if I want to find a beautiful tribe of people here, t'is the only way I can truly be myself, by joining in where my voice has a weight :)
Just simple plain duality.
To see this side of life, is blessed, VERY blessed, for most just don't and probably won't for a very long time.
A very rare privilege

Thanks for the post and the insightful questions near the end of it. They are things that I wish more people asked!
I was diagnosed 2 decades ago with a mood disorder, and I dare say, having a mindset similar to what you are describing here is what I believe was the cure to my symptoms. I try to be aware of my mental state as well as physical, and the state of my breath as well. Then I go from there, by giving myself space. It's counterintuitive at first (since us people want to be fixers, and quick fixes are what the brain craves) but I have very much gotten used to it as well as even learned to thoroughly enjoy the process, although it's uncomfortable at times.
Search on into your mystery, and please keep writing. This is an excellent post, thanks for sharing. I will be resteeming. Have a lovely day.

Thanks @thetreeoflife for your comment. Appreciate the feedback. There's plenty more where this came from to come...

I'd love it if you could share here your further insights and experiences in what you did, and how you do it.

And YAY for the mystery.

😊🙏🏽☯️

I'd love to share. I've used primarily mindful breath (in fact just blogged about it that one!), NLP and other subconscious and neuroplasticity hacks, mindfulness practices (starting with CBT almost 2 decades ago), yoga, chen style Taijiquan and qigong, supplements, and a healthy diet. All in all.... Those things all helped, but cultivating a mindset of spaciousness and allowing for healing rather than energetically living in a place of need and lack, with breath to guide my way, was what helped the most. It has been such an incredible journey, and most often I have gratitude in my heart for having to have lived with mental illness. It set me on a path toward healing and wellness, and energetic playfulness, that I may have otherwise never discovered. Life is such an incredible gift, as is illness! If we have the courage to live these experiences fully.
I celebrate your journey as well. Just awesome, friend. Enjoy and find the enthusiasm even (especially) in the tough moments. It's the essence of the spiritual warrior. 🙏 ♥

Really looking forward to reading more of your stuff @thetreeoflife, I'm reading some similar path-finding there 😉.

I think that's why books like Moore's Care Of The Soul are important for folk to read, or at least become familiar with the idea that darkness, shadow, and melancholia are as normal a part of life as joy, light, and sunshine. It's how we adapt to the changes between states that is more important than denying one or the other.

Same here.
More often than not, I am finding that the real differences between darkness and light or happy and sad or melancholy and ecstacy are exactly what we choose to attach to them, or how we degide to judge those feelings. Also, you can feel it energetically when you sense resistance vs attraction. Of course people always want to be feeling good instead of bad, but energetically (and chemically) speaking, they are not that different. They are just feelings. All the feelings can teach us something, and just cause we want to reject the "crappy" feelings doesn't mean it's the best choice if we are interested in becoming more self aware. Same with our attachments to the happy feels, for that matter. Haha thanks for the conversation friend.

This is a very long post according to my standard, however it was worth every second. The voice and mood of this writing is nostalgic. It takes me deep into a similar place--my mind.

Do you allow yourself the luxury of darkness, depth, and melancholia?

There is a simple saying that the heart's only happy when it is sad. Melancholia is good, to an extent, for the soul. It always one to introspect and those times alone with my thoughts are usually the best.

Hey @nonsowrites, thanks for the comment.

I guess as long as we don't wallow in melancholia, its fine. It's good to spend time in both the light and the darkness, so we gain what Gregory Bateson calls "news of difference".

It's the yinyang of it all which fascinates me.

certainly. this is how we find balance as human beings. when we experience both sides, we become well rounded individuals and we tend to appreciate and understand life better.

Hey @metametheus what a beautiful in sight about life. Doubts, failure and uncertainity do take people towards the darkend i.e depression...where there is no scope of forward movement...but being lonely is the best time to be as i read somewhere.

the most sacred space is when you find yourself again and again.

The only way out is being positive and keeping a positive approach towards life

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Thanks for your comment.
I don't think there is anything wrong with the darkness - this is the yinyang of life. We need to experience and appreciate the darkness in order to also experience and appreciate the light, in contrast.

Well, that's my take on it anyway.

Me-time is valuable, and I am definitely valuing it more and more these days.

😊🙏🏽☯️

Thats correct as well...unless you dont get into sadness you will never understand the value of happiness...

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Leaving profession and take time off to know himself.