Lizzie Lane Lizzie Lane

remembering all of who we are

It all begins with an idea.

Maybe we’re just a heart-breakingly hilarious species plagued with amnesia,

hurtling through space time on a sexy blue-green planet where we amble about forgetting and remembering Where We Come From and What We’re Really Doing Here, until we croak. maybe we’re all here doing this journey of life together the best we can, seeking love and connection the best we know how, however misguided at times. each with various degrees of suffering which we inherit and collect down our ancestral lines and from childhood: fear takes forms of narratives, conditioning, traumatic experiences, and energy patterns. on top of this we’re all in a context, or rather a decontextualization, currently swimming in a current of separatism, a society of seeming chaos (racism, patriarchy, social hierarchy, greed, environmental disregard to mention a few), all of which can hinder us from living our fullest expressions, our pure creative individual being. and we forget, time and time again, (great holy joke!) Who We Really Are: consciously creative expressions of Life itself, here to experience life in this unique operating system we call a body, inherently capable of endless manifestation, built for love, connection, play, and pleasure. the more we re-member the more we remember we always have choice, we have full responsibility, which is response-ability, for everything that plays out on the stage of our lives. when we remember Who We Are we have instant access the infinite creative guidance of the intelligent universe, of divine love always. we are each a journey of shedding what separates us, awakening and integrating divine consciousness, and individuating for evolution as a collective. and maybe we chose to be here right at the very moment in time, dancing in this Great Awakening, mutating ourselves with this Great Change, together.

 

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Lizzie Lane Lizzie Lane

how to be a giraffe

It all begins with an idea.

Pioneer psychologist Marshall Rosenberg, founder of Non-Violent Communication (NVC), has left behind a treasure-trove of work in creating and nurturing healthy relationships based on peaceful communication, since his passing in 2015.

He was known for whipping out puppets during his lectures to demonstrate a point: an NVC-endorsing giraffe, and a habitual communicator jackal, conditioned in generations of violence. Giraffes, he shares, speak from the heart, without judgement, and speak in the language of the open request, while jackals speak from the head and from hurts, in the language of demands.

I recently watched a foundational 3-hour workshop on NVC - it’s worth every second of the ride! - and am still fully shook with gratitude for Marshall’s life-altering teachings. And it’s free! A must-watch, non-negotiable for those interested in healing relationships.

At one point Marshall promises to help the audience to “enjoy another person’s suffering,” as a giraffe does with a jackal, then dives into a different topic altogether and left me absolutely edging on the edge of my seat. Much to my gratitude, near the end of the 3-hour experience an audience member pipes up to ask what he meant by this “enjoyment.” It’s an explanation rooted in radical self-responsibility and divine sovereignty of every person. Marshall elucidates:

“Now to enjoy this person’s suffering we have to release ourselves from two kinds of responsibility. First, that we didn’t cause the pain. We want to release ourselves from that especially when the other person is trying to make us believe we did cause the pain. We do not want to in any way think we caused this person’s pain, because we can’t in any way, cause another person’s [an adult’s] psychological pain. Liberate ourselves from feeling responsible. But the second one, is the hard one.

The second one, is to think we have to fix it, to make the person feel better. The more we think it’s our job to make a person feel better, the more we’re going to make it worse. Because you can’t fix people. The good news is, you don’t have to.

There is a very powerful healing energy always available if we don’t block it. And how do we block it, but trying to fix things ourselves. So how do we help that energy do the job, by empathy. Empathy requires presence. Just to be present. When we are just present, when we are remembering the Buddha’s advice – don’t do something, just stand there. When we do that, and that energy works through us, there is a precious connection between that person and us.

And that precious connection is what I mean by enjoying the pain. Enjoying that precious connection. And whether that person is feeling joy, or pain, if we are present there with them, that’s what I mean. But we block that beautiful energy whenever we step in and try to fix things.”

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