| Sometimes To Move Forward
 We Have To Go Back
 Sometimes to move forward, we have to go back. Like                        trying to head off onto a long journey and realizing                        you've forgotten your suitcase. You've got to go back,                        pick up the things you've left behind, then get back in                        the car, start it up and head out all over again.                        Finding the things we've left behind that keep us from                        moving forward--that are blocking us from the freedom of                        growth and change--is not always accomplished through a                        thinking task. Sometimes we have to imagine, let go, and                        be taken. I. When I first began to work with clients through                        dialogue only, I found myself doing a lot of theatre                        with them. I had people on their feet, reenacting                        situations they felt strongly about, feeling deeply into                        their bodies, showing what was important to them, not                        just telling--demonstrating. What I quickly learned from this instinctual                        communication was that we don't always know what we want                        or where we are. Yet, in order to move forward in our                        lives, it is essential that we get to know where we are,                        now, and begin our movements from that place. This                        requires an assessment of our surroundings on all                        levels: physical, mental, emotional, circumstantial. And                        often entails looking back--going back to old                        relationships, old places, old memories. Recently, I was working with a client on her breath.                        "I'm not breathing fully," she reported.                        "When did I stop breathing? Where did I stop                        breathing?" she asked over and again, like a                        mantra. Finally, she opened to a moment when she had been                        startled by some news, and gasped in response to the                        anticipation of what was about to transpire. She had                        never fully exhaled after that moment, and here it was                        five days later and she couldn't take a full breath into                        her lungs. By retrieving the memory of what had startled her and                        caused her to stop breathing, she was able to relax                        around the news and finally let go into a full releasing                        breath--and eventually was able to breath normally                        again. Going back for suitcases, or going back for a long                        awaited exhale, both require a stopping of the momentum                        to move forward, a standing still and receiving of                        information, impulses, memories, sensations, and then a                        turning of our attention toward the time, feelings,                        experiences, that still have some part of our mind,                        body, spirit, and soul. Do you know what's in your past that's keeping you                        from going forward? Is there something in your present                        calling for you to retrieve a part of your spirit that                        desires to be released? Have you any idea what changes                        in your life might occur should you reunite with a lost                        piece of your soul? II. I woke with an image: I'm underwater in a chair from                        childhood--my father's big green overstuffed chair. I                        want to stand up, but as I do I go to take a deep breath                        and my lungs begin to fill with water. I resist the urge                        to rise, and sit back down. I continue to imagine that I can breathe while seated                        and I take the tiniest, most shallow breaths--only                        enough to remain exactly where I am, which keeps me                        alive. This waking image conjures up a dream I had a few                        weeks ago of being at the bottom of a pool. In this                        dream, I could easily breathe underwater. I was nestled                        in a corner, taking short shallow breaths that kept me                        alive. When it was time for me to rise up out of the                        pool, through a series of tiny inhalations, I filled my                        lungs with all the air I could. I was able to store what                        seemed like just enough air and was ready to ascend. But                        when I pushed off toward the surface, I quickly realized                        I would never make it to the top. I let out the stored                        air, sunk back to the bottom, and returned to my                        abbreviated breathing--a short staccato breath that                        would surely keep me alive, but never allow me to return                        to the surface and leave this body of water. This morning I think, Maybe I'll have to allow my                        lungs to fill with water in order to leave this place.                        If I can't learn to breath in the water while moving,                        I'll never move on from here. Deep within this place that I reside--a place you                        might also be in--lies a call to move forward. But we                        can't go forward, if we can't also make an enormous                        change. And the wisdom and courage for this change lies                        somewhere in the present moment, yet is held secret in                        our past. Not a long drawn-out go-back-to-therapy,                        I-can't-do-it-on-my-own kind of visit to the past. But                        rather a                        what-does-this-memory-have-to-do-with-the-present-moment                        piece of the past, which leads to the question, How                        is a piece of the past standing before me now? I return to the vision and begin to imagine how it is                        I got to be at the bottom of this pool--knowing full                        well that this image is a mirror of my present life.                        Metaphorically speaking, surely I must have either held                        my breath throughout the descent, or been knowing of how                        to breathe all the way down to where I now sit. So I                        turn my attention to what I have stopped doing in my                        life that used to serve me well (the metaphor of having                        breathed my way down to the bottom of the pool) and I                        also look to where I have been holding my breath (the                        other metaphorical possibility related to getting to the                        bottom of the pool). Where in my life have I held                        something in instead of speaking up, acting out, or                        letting something go? III. Images always let us know what is afoot. When I say                        image, I mean something we can draw our perception                        around. Like a sound we can recall, a dream that won't                        let go, or an experience we cannot shake. Sometimes an image will be plain and to follow it to                        freedom is as linear as one-two-three. And other times                        we are so wrapped up in its mystery, that all we can do                        is look for road signs like synchronicities, unexpected                        happenings, and undeniable feelings we can't shake. My images and dreams are of being in a place I can't                        safely move from. And from this image I know a new                        journey awaits. What images are drawing you toward your future? And                        what blocks you from moving freely toward it? Sometimes to move forward, we have to go back--to                        pick up the pieces of our spirit, soul, joy or passion.                        And maybe, like with my own dreams and images, you are                        just beginning to explore what moving forward and                        looking back could mean to the present moment and to                        the future, which lay just beyond the threshold of the                        unknown.                         © Copyright 2004 KD Farris, Ph.D.. All Rights Reserved.
 
 
 Read                        KD's Past Columns:
 June-July                        2004 "Soulful Practice: Spiritual Practice--Soulful                        Nature" Jan-Feb                        2004 - "Making Our Dreams Come True Is Living A Truthful Life" December                        2003 - "Graceful Living - Confessions of a                        Professional Speaker" October                        2003 - "Serenity: As Calm, As Clear May                        2003 - "What are Your Needs?" April                        2003 - "Techniques for Clearing the Space for Communication" - Part                        II of II February                        2003 - "HESHE & Clearing the Space for Communication" - Part                        I of II January                        2003 - "Body & Soulful Living" November                        2002 - "Getting Into MESHE with Your Home Through                        Minor Adjustments" October                        2002 - "Being in MESHE with Clearing Clutter" September                        2002 - "Discover Going on Retreat" July                        2002 - "Build Your MESHE - Seek the Space: A Process for                        Reclaiming the Shadow" June                        2002 - Revisiting: "The MESHE Concept - A Path to Soulful                        Living" May                        2002 - "Bodywork 101" March                        2002 - "Being Present Within Your Prosperous                        Life" February                        2002 - "HESHE and The Third Bird" December                        2001 - "Manifesting Your Perfect Partner with                        Personal Truthz" November                        2001 - "Remembering What We Already Know" September                        2001 - "Be Led By What You Are Trying to                        Avoid" August                        2001 - "Draw Your Way to Clarity, Health &                        Balance" June                        2001 - "Tending to the Negative Mind" May                        2001 - "Gentle Conscious Living" April                        2001 - "MISON and The Moment" March                        2001 - "The MESHE Concept - A Path to Soulful                        Living"    KD Farris, Ph.D. is a successful counselor, healer, and bodyworker. For more than twenty years she has taught 
						extensive workshops based on MESHE, HESHE, MISON & ORBIT as well as many other self-discovery topics.
 
 KD began developing her integrated bodywork and counseling techniques in 1983 under the tutelage of many prominent doctors and healers throughout the United States.
 
 Her education into the spiritual and physical aspects of the human experience served as the foundation for her private practice and the development of a new philosophy. She combined her techniques into four guiding principles, which she shares in her book, MESHE, HESHE, 
						MISON & ORBIT: What My Grandmother Taught Me About the Universe. She teaches a companion workshop series, where she creates an interactive environment demonstrating the material from her book with tangible, life altering effects. In these workshops, individuals discover a 
						deepening of their relationship to self, others, and life itself.
 
 Through individual counseling and group workshops, she has taught her results-oriented programs to many different types of people including those confined to mental institutions, substance and food abusers, and generally, people in life transitions, struggling with intimate 
						relationships, or who lack direction in their lives. Visit www.kdfarris.com.
 KD is currently touring a new body of work, Talking About People in Transition, Also Known As
						Liminal Space. She will be writing about liminality and its relevance to day-to-day living in upcoming issues of Soulful Living. For more information on this new and exciting topic, or to learn about more her private practice, workshops and lectures, visit
						www.kdfarris.com.
 Contact KD at: info@MESHE.com
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