The journey of embracing one’s self for who you really are isn’t just an item on the to do list that gets checked off all neat and tidy one day and you never have to look back. Embracing your self, finding and engaging in your passion, raising your voice, these things take time, focus, energy, gumption. Last year, I encouraged you to try on five resolutions for 2008. This year, I asking you to add 3 more tools to your repertoire.
Enjoy some body work. I was an overworked and exhausted second year teacher and coach when I scheduled my first massage. I didn’t know how I could afford $60 for an hour of work but my body hurt so much that I didn’t know what else to do. That hour did more than just restore my muscles. It restored me. Now, massage is a regular feature of my self-care regimen, and I encourage you to make it part of yours, too. A study done by the University of Miami School of Medicine’s Touch Research Institute revealed that a 30 minute massage every other week boosts overall body satisfaction, no matter your shape or size. Resolve to: schedule a massage. If it’s too expensive for your budget, consider asking for a gift certificate as a gift, booking a thirty minute session instead of an hour, or calling a local massage school to ask about their practice sessions which can often run a third of the average price for an hour massage.
Invest in someone else. Sometimes we get so absorbed in our own world that we lose perspective. We become consumed with our bad haircut, acne, uninspired wardrobe, or whatever else is plaguing us and lose sight of the world outside of us. Sometimes I think self-consciousness is almost a luxury, an extravagance we get to plague ourselves with when life isn’t filling up our attention otherwise. But, everywhere, everyday, there are so many people who do not have the luxury of time or energy to become absorbed with their bad haircut because their lives are faced with challenges that we will never know. Micro-lending allows everyday citizens to make a loan to someone in the developing world to support his or her small business. As a micro-loan, when the entrepreneur pays back their loan to the sponsoring organization, the lender receives her money back to transfer back to her own bank account or to reinvest. Kiva is one of the companies uniting people from around the world with one another as lenders and entrepreneurs. On its site, you can find photos of entrepreneurs, descriptions of their businesses, and their plans for their loans. Partnered with microfinance institutions in each participating country, there is significant expertise in the field and assurance that investments are handled responsibly. Sometimes it is helpful to get away from the little thing that is bothering us to take a look at something bigger. Resolve to: visit Kiva.org and review the profiles of entrepreneurs from around the world. Make a $25 investment in one whose story particularly strikes you. Print out the story so that you can be revisit it whenever you like, return to the web-site periodically to monitor your entrepreneur’s progress, and enjoy the satisfaction of having grown your connection to the world.
Find your theme. I have had many theme songs, poems, etc over the years– slices of words put out there by someone before me that capture who I was and where I was at the time I discovered it. In high school, my themes were songs by Tracy Chapman, the Indigo Girls, and REM. In college, my theme was Desiderata, written by Max Ehrmann in 1952. It began…
For some of my twenties, my theme was The Invitation by Oriah Mountain Dreamer.
An excerpt…
I want to know if you can see Beauty
even when it is not pretty
every day.
And if you can source your own life
from its presence.
I want to know if you can live with failure
yours and mine
and still stand at the edge of the lake
and shout to the silver of the full moon,
“Yes.”
Having a theme or song can be a touch stone. A place to return to when you need centering and grounding. What’s your theme? Find it, enjoy it, embrace it, bringing it out when you need to put your feet to the ground and rememember who you are.
Cheers to loving your body, investing in others, and remembering your truth. Happy New Year!
This year’s theme: FEARLESS
Life is about to change drastically for me. And although I’ve thought and planned for years about this change, I finally decided to have faith, believe in my dreams and step forward. Now there is no turning back, I have to be, need to be fearless.
That’s my theme.
Icess, I love it. On that note, I wear a necklace at almost all times that says Fearlessness. I love it. It is a fundraiser for Marishka Hargitay’s Joyful Heart Foundation (which supports victims of abuse) made by Me&Ro, and this thing just fills my soul with fierceness. You can google Me&Ro or The Joyful Heart Foundation if you want to wear your theme. It’s not inexpensive (I think my necklace was $100), but I put aside money from a few pay checks for it and was so excited when I had finally earned it. I am asked about it all the time and so I am constantly reminded to live my life with fearlessness.
Thanks Rosie for the positive and self-less ideas for 2009. I’m approaching 40 (a year or so out) and investing in others is an idea constantly on my heart.
I currently volunteer once a month helping out with some high school students, but I’m looking to do even more. Your post let’s me know I’m not alone.
Blessings,
shayonjoseph
Looks like you are doing some really interesting things at Rites Inc, shayonjoseph. I look forward to following along!