A Magical Sweetness Messenger

August 15th, 2012

As I wake up on Monday morning, July 16, 2012, a sense of rebellion fills my soul. I am so tired of writing. I have written eleven blogs in fourteen days and I need a break … at least a tiny rest.

After a morning of internet, a few games, a bowl of oatmeal with papaya, and some Spanish study, I begin to contemplate what I will do next. Finally, just before noon, strong intuitive feelings tell me that today is an ideal day for me to make another journey with Magic Mushrooms – to see if just maybe I can make more progress in working with that stubborn logical-mind control that will not allow me to relax.

Today, I take a slightly higher dose than I took last week, again hoping that I might have a more powerful experience than the last.

(Note: If you want to judge me on this topic, and you have not yet read my previous blog titled “A Personal Stage Play,” please take a moment to read that one first. Then, if you still feel inclined to do so, judge away. I seek no outside validation or approval in what, for me, is a genuine journey of self-discovery.)

Inopportune Moments

Less than an hour after I take the mushrooms – on a day where I crave alone time and privacy – my dear roommate shows up unannounced, and with friends. She has been staying at a friend’s house for a few days, and I had expected that she would be gone longer. This unexpected disturbance to my privacy comes with such synchronous timing that it almost makes me laugh.

“This is the story of my life,” I giggle with frustration. “Here I am, doing something “culturally forbidden” and my privacy is invaded. This is a perfect mirror of what happened to me throughout childhood and youth, and even my marriage – especially when attempting to explore my “forbidden” gender struggles. It seemed that “adult supervision” always showed up at the most inopportune moments. I had no right to privacy during most of my life.”

It is clear to me that the universe is giving me a profound opportunity to make a new choice … to release more of the emotional charges of my youth … to remember that rather than feeling upset and being a victim, that I can simply own my loving power, share my truth with heart-based confidence, and love whatever happens.

I am quite proud of myself when I soon lovingly express my feelings to my roommate – sharing my genuine desire for uninterrupted privacy. A short while later I again have my apartment to myself, and all is well.

A Repeat Performance

As I continue the mushroom experience, I quickly realize that my head is still in charge, not letting me relax, surrender, or enjoy. My logical-minded head is that same “invader of privacy,” refusing to allow me a moment of time alone with my heart. The experience is quite similar to the one I had last week. A lot of strong and involuntary energy pulses through my body, but I am not going anywhere with it. Finally, in frustration, again giving up on the idea of a “psychedelic trip,” I decide to pursue normal, everyday (for me), subconscious journeying.

Soon, a whole new series of metaphors intuitively flood my mind. For a couple of weeks now, I have used spare/ down time to begin watching another television series – one that I found hidden among the computer files given to me by a friend. This one is titled, “Merlin” and was originally produced by BBC television in 2008. This series tells the story of a young Arthur and Merlin during a time when Uther Pendragon (Arthur’s father) was the King.

Uther Pendragon had an obsessive hatred for magic. He had lived in a time when evil sorcerers had used dark magic to gain power and to harm others … and he could not possibly imagine that any magic could ever have a positive and loving purpose. In fact, King Uther hated magic so much that anyone caught using magic in any way was executed without question – no matter who they were. In the meantime, Merlin was Arthur’s humble servant, struggling to use his magic to keep Arthur alive and out of trouble, while trying to keep his secret safe in order to preserve his own life.

Metaphorical Faces

I have always loved magical stories, but it is not until in the middle of this meditation that the metaphors suddenly hit me so strongly.

“King Uther represents the ego conditioning of the world – the voice in my head that will not surrender control – the dysfunctional power-hungry masculine side – the micromanaging part of me that cannot and will not trust my inner magic,” I ponder with giggling clarity. “This part of me would literally destroy anything magical.”

“And Merlin represents the forbidden magical side of me – the heart-based, intuition-connected, healthy feminine side – the part of me that was my real strength, but which had to remain hidden in order to survive,” The profound parallels continue to unfold. “As I attempt to give Merlin a genuine voice in my life, there yet remains a great deal of fear and mistrust because of what happened in the past.”

“And Arthur (future King Arthur) represents the loving healthy masculine side of me,” I ponder with a giggle. “His heart was so pure, and he had the desire, along with the strength and power to be an amazing and benevolent King who would serve and love his subjects. Yet his father (Uther) could not honor and respect that purity.”

I have a delightful time exploring these metaphors for an hour or two. The journey provides such clarity, putting understandable faces on what are very real internal energies – inner aspects of self that are striving for healing and balance.

Exploring Gender Balance

Soon, I focus solely on the integration of masculine and feminine aspects of self – doing so while at the same time accessing sacred symbolism from the “Tree of Life” – the core of the Kabbalah studies that I engaged in here at the pyramids two years ago. (Note, we did not study the pure Jewish version – instead we studied the “mystical” version, which includes a study of Tarot and many other mystical topics.)

There are two sepiroth (spheres) in the “Tree of Life” that aptly represent the masculine and feminine energies. Geborah represents the strong right arm of the masculine side, the side that makes the difficult choices to eliminate things in our life that do not serve the higher good. Chesed represents the loving left arm of the feminine side, the side that is the loving ruler, doing all he/she can to bless the kingdom with loving abundance in all areas.

After exploring the deep metaphorical symbolisms of these energies, I then visualize “The Lovers” card from the Ryder Waite Tarot deck. Through symbolic imagery, the card clearly shows how the masculine and feminine stand together … but the masculine side looks into the eyes of the feminine for guidance, while the feminine side looks into the eyes of Higher Powers above, seeking that same guidance.

“Metaphorically speaking, the masculine strength and power without the feminine heart can do nothing but destroy,” I ponder. “And the feminine heart without the masculine power behind her can really not create much of anything at all. True joy and abundance comes from that divine balance between both aspects of self … between my masculine and feminine sides … between power/strength and heart … between logic and heart-based knowing.”

I giggle as I remember how Keith has frequently reminded me that the logical mind is a very valuable tool, but that it is not the tool to use when working with Higher Energies … when connecting with my heart.

Common Ground

I play with this feminine/masculine exploration for some time, spiraling deeper and deeper into clear metaphorical understanding of the inner balance toward which I am moving.

Finally, I feel these two sides of myself beginning to find some loving common ground.

It is clear that my feminine side still has growth to traverse in learning to trust her magic, and in learning to open and share her magical gifts with the world. And it is also clear that my masculine side still struggles to access and to own his own loving power – to stop giving away his strength by seeking outside validation from an external reality. But it is also clear that the two continue to harbor a certain amount of distrust toward each other. That is an ongoing and magical work in progress.

Flash From The Past

As I continue pondering, I suddenly remember an experience back in about 1980, when I was a newly graduated software engineer, perhaps twenty-five years old, in the second or third year of my career. I was an extremely talented young engineer, already making major contributions to my project. The manager of my team was leaving to pursue other interests, and I was deep in conversation with one of the prime candidates to replace him. In fact, I too was considered a candidate at the time.

“If I were made manager,” I shared with my friend Nick, “I would see my function as serving the group … as doing everything I could do to enable the group to succeed while seeing myself as only a facilitator and an organizer.”

At the time, I had been shocked when Nick slammed me, telling me that my method was a sign of weakness … that it would never work in a business environment.

“Society believes that power needs to be used to control and manipulate other people,” I pondered at that time, feeling deep confusion, “but in my mind, true power does not control or manipulate, it serves the people.”

After that conversation, I never let go of my beliefs about true power being a servant to others … but I learned quickly to never share such beliefs with others who lived in that particular cultural box, ever again.

Force, Form, And Guidance

“Wow,” I ponder in the present as I look back at the past. “It truly is an upside down and backwards world out there. I had somewhat forgotten, but I have always believed that a healthy masculine side is a tool, a servant to others, doing so through the guidance of the feminine heart. But I was raised in a culture where the opposite was the norm – where the heart was scorned as a sign of rejected folly and weakness.”

“The masculine energy is the gasoline for my car,” I ponder another metaphorical thought, “and the feminine form is the car itself. But even with all the fuel in the world, I will not get anywhere if I do not have divine guidance to help me know where to go. I definitely need the fuel to serve, and the car as a vehicle of form, but that divine connection to source is what allows me to truly move forward in joyfully pursuing the inner passions of my heart.”

As I ponder this latest metaphor, I giggle as I remember back to my studies of the Kabbalah – studies that clearly indicated that the masculine energy was the force, and that the feminine was the form – and that both, in balance, were necessary to create.

Worrywart Wonders

After a long, magical, and insight-filled meditation, I suddenly I sink into massive “worrywart” energy as memories of recent stage-play dramas flood my mind – recent events during this or that chocolate ceremony where my buttons had been abrasively pushed by well-meaning individuals.

As the pain-filled emotional memories swarm my awareness, I first begin to feel anger toward that worrywart energy – an energy that I perceive as being the masculine controller/ micromanager in my life that needs things to be a certain way or else I cannot and will not be happy. This worrywart energy essentially gives away all of my power to the situation itself.

Then, I suddenly realize that this worrywart energy is a frightened little boy who feels desperately cornered by dysfunctional masculine power. He is cowering in fear, trying to serve with genuine heart-based integrity, trying to please those in power … and trying to help others to also please those in power.

“The worrywart is not the dysfunctional micromanaging masculine,” I ponder with clarity. “The worrywart is the wounded part of me that is terrified of not pleasing that dysfunctional masculine – terrified of the consequences that will follow if the micromanager in others is not appeased and pleased.”

“That innocent worrywart needs my love,” I ponder with wonder. “He is the wounded product of the upside down and backwards victimization – not the dysfunctional perpetrator of the pain and fear.”

As I further ponder past memories, I clearly remember countless situations where I deeply worried, almost in a panic – all with a goal of protecting myself and/or others from the consequences of someone else who was judgmental or angry at the time.

“Wow,” I again ponder the turnaround in perspective. “That worrywart in me has been maliciously maligned all these years … but all along he was a frightened and genuine little boy simply trying to serve and protect others from doing something that had gotten him in trouble.”

An Inside Power Drain

Later, after taking a much-needed break for physical nourishment, I resume this deep meditation – a meditation that lasts right up until bedtime.

As I ponder how I have given away nearly all of my power, throughout my life, it is no wonder that my “magical theme park” has no power source – that my power center has a “blown fuse” – that my “protective shields” are draining all of the power reserves. But as I again revisit all of these “powerful” metaphors that have come up during my inner work, I suddenly realize that the “external” draining of my power (how I give power away to others) is nothing more than an external mirror of how I do the same thing on the inside.

“I continue to give away a great deal of my power to inner fears, doubts, judgments, and debates,” I ponder with profound clarity. “Wow, it is time for me to clean up my energetic world on the inside. It really is an inside job.”

Eventually, after a very vivid and productive meditation, I rest on my pillow and drift off to sleep.

Distracted Focus

Tuesday, during a trip to Panajachel for banking and shopping, I can only giggle at a beautiful opportunity to use a reliable internet connection to Skype with a dear friend – yet another magical three-hour conversation. I love how my continued growth is allowing me to share in the healing of others – to be an inspiration in their own parallel journeys.

Later Tuesday afternoon, and pretty much all day Wednesday, I surrender to exhaustion and rebellion at writing … instead following guidance to further immerse myself in additional episodes of the “Merlin” television series.

I loved my meditation experiences on Monday, but the continued energy released by the mushrooms seems to linger in ways that distract me. I do not try to analyze or understand them, but the energies in my head continue to swirl and make me almost dizzy – demanding my attention – distracting my focus.

Yes, I did indeed experience deep clarity during that meditative journey – but no, just as before, I do not feel that the clarity lasted as long after the fact, and I do not especially like how my focus continues to be so distracted by ongoing, opening energies. While I still love how Magic Mushrooms have given me glimpses, I am now more convinced than ever that I much prefer chocolate as my journeying partner.

Another Healing Integration

But another reason for my distracted focus is that I do not really look forward to my next writing task.

Finally, on Thursday, I force myself to go deep into the excruciating integration as I write and publish “An Excruciating Emotional Reality.”

The writing journey takes me, once again, deep into the agonizing emotional pain of a twelve-year-old me – a “mini-me from the past” who had just gone through a profoundly humiliating swimming pool incident (written about in “Sordid Social Secrets”) and who was now experiencing the deep excruciating reality of wishing that I were dead.

As I write about this painful experience, I again re-experience another layer of the emotion as this reality flows through me. I am astounded by the depth of the unfelt and unexpressed suicidal emotions that had consumed my youth – that had been an underlying theme of emotional dysfunction throughout my life.

As the day finishes … as I finally click on the “publish button” … I relish in the joy of having once again completed another beautiful healing integration. I absolutely love how each time that I pass through these nightmares from the past, I derive new and profound healing.

Shifting Triggers

Early Thursday evening, when my wireless internet source dies, I walk down to the nearby internet café to seek loving resolution.

To my shock, just as I step back onto the path to return to my apartment, Paul happens to be walking by. Had I not been synchronously forced out of my apartment because of an internet outage I would have missed the entire experience.

“Brenda, I am leaving early tomorrow morning, and I would like to hug you goodbye before I go,” Paul shocks me with his joyful and loving innocence.

Soon, I eagerly give my young projection-buddy a warm hug. Paul seems quite happy and excited to be following his heart in a new direction, and I can feel his joy and excitement.

I am deeply grateful for the growth that I have achieved as a result of Paul having played the other end of my painful scripts – and I am even strangely grateful for his constant triggering that painfully and repeatedly pushed every one of my core-issue buttons. I am now quite clear that his divinely manifested presence has served me in profound ways.

But a part of me is also quite joyful to see my sparring partner following his heart in a new direction. I clearly recognize, however, that if I have more painful growth to be triggered, that I will skillfully manifest another projection-buddy. I would love to believe that this might no longer be necessary. Only time will tell.

Another Layer

Friday, with continued internet problems, I attempt to write anyway, but as I do so, intense energies swirl around in my head, and my solar plexus swells with sharp pains – pains that had begun in a mild fashion late last night.

Finally, unable to do much of anything else, I spend another day watching videos. As Sufi returns later in the evening, we begin to talk about social issues, and the possibility of doing our own chocolate ceremonies here in San Marcos during the period where Keith is gone.

To my shock, this entire conversation triggers a deep “Hell No” response in me. It seems that I am once again running paranoia-based, deeply-painful, teenage emotional realities through me. The frustrating dilemma is that the emotions that suddenly surge through me are so powerful and convincing that I want to believe them … I want to reenergize them and to make them real.

“I am such a social loser that I simply do not effing care about life,” the voices again scream through my head.

For the next hour or so, everything around me pushes my buttons and triggers inner resentments – whether it is Sufi innocently singing in the shower, or Friday night social noises echoing through the town.

“Duh,” I finally ponder, “Just yesterday I wrote about excruciating suicidal feelings from age twelve. What I am feeling is just another intense layer of that never-before-felt emotion running through me. It is not real in the present … it is just an old reality that I need to feel so that it can leave.”

Emotions Flow Through Me

Soon, I step into my bedroom and crank up my IPOD. I am ready to detach from the emotions and allow them to flow unobstructed. While doing so I plan to listen to soothing, healing songs.

But as I listen to the second song on my playlist, the surging emotion is so strong that I can do nothing but surrender. To my shock, the intense suicidal feelings cause me to pseudo-vomit emotional energy for ten nonstop minutes. Agonizing dry heaves consume me and I can barely breathe during the occasional inhaling gasps that I manage to take.

“Wow that layer was strong,” I ponder when the excruciating emotions subside. “How did I possibly survive that period of my life?”

Soon, I am back in the living room, talking to Sufi, explaining my crazy triggers and the process through which I am passing.

“You are going to be a master healer when you finish this,” Sufi congratulates me for the depth to which I am journeying.

I desperately need to hear such feedback right now, because the emotions running through me are so strong that I can barely remind myself that I am not a major loser.

Emotional Clinging

Shortly before 10:00 p.m., as I continue to meditate, I now feel much lighter.

But then, I am shocked by an intuitive recognition that part of me really does not want to give up this emotion … it wants to hang on to it … to keep it. This part of me wants an apology first … it wants to heal this reality before letting it go.

“No,” I talk back to this part. “We do not need to micromanage this process. We do not need to go into and feel every last emotion before we release it. It is time to let this emotion go now – to give it to the light. If the light does not take it and transmute it, then I will go deeper into it. But it is time to release the insane belief that I have to personally feel and heal every emotion before I can let it go.”

Finally, I drift off to sleep, and sleep more soundly than I have done in several days.

An Energy Pressure Cooker

Saturday morning, July 21, 2012, I feel better than I have felt in a long time. During a beautiful early morning healing conversation with Sufi, I note that my inner wisdom is now grounded and flowing with loving peace. I feel delighted that I am again able to resume my writing, eventually publishing “Surviving Distraction.” I continue to marvel at how writing about past events so closely synchronizes with present day processing.

Sunday morning, after a short Skype call to yet-another dear friend, I sit down at my computer, hoping to write for the second day in a row. But as I do so, I am overwhelmed and struggling with intense energy that swirls with distractions in my head. I am so dysfunctional that I cannot even bring myself to read my previous blog.

As Sufi steps out into the living room, intuitive guidance strongly tells me that “today is not a writing day” … that instead I should engage her in conversation. We talk nonstop for several hours, after which I take a much needed nap.

At 4:30 p.m., as I return to the waking world, Sufi and I begin to discuss the possibility of shared dinner plans. As we talk, it soon becomes obvious that each of us is experiencing an intense energy explosion in our head. I describe it as feeling as if my head is locked inside of a pressure cooker. Sufi compares it to the intensity of a massive storm brewing outside.

In the presence of this overwhelming shared energy, neither of us can commit to dinner plans, so in my starvation, I quickly opt to cook up a quick plate of rice and beans for myself.

“The energy has shifted so much,” Sufi comments a while later. “The pressure is so much lighter now.”

As I listen to Sufi’s observation, I suddenly realize that the intense pressure in my head has also lifted. I giggle as I realize that I am becoming so much more sensitive to energies … and that my own personal experience is so profoundly validated by that of another.

The Almighty Time And Money

For the next few hours, Sufi and I engage in delightful conversation about the concept of “following time commitments no matter what” versus “being present in the moment, and being willing to shift plans based on intuitive guidance, even if it means standing someone up.”

As we talk and talk, I feel inner resistance begin to rumble inside as I ponder giving up yet another layer of social conditioning – one so deeply engrained in my behavior that letting it go causes me to cringe inside.

It is a beautiful conversation – one that causes us to both rethink many social rules about “time commitments to others.”

Soon, I grab my watch and place it on the floor between us. Remembering a silly experience I had with my friend Joy, in April 2011, I bow down to that watch and respectfully say, “All hail the might clock God.”

For the next hour, Sufi and I laugh and giggle with profound insights as we further discuss how, in our society, we literally do worship the clock, even to the point of worshiping it more than our own inner guidance. Soon, we bring money worship into the silly mockery. It boggles my mind how such basic concepts as time and money have so much overwhelming and subtle conditioning hidden behind them. It takes great courage to stray from such societal beliefs.

As I later prepare for bed, I giggle as I clearly recognize the synchronous setups that guided this day to be out of the ordinary – to be a day of exploring social conversation, profoundly shared energetic experience, and deep-but-giggling discussion into the absurdities of our cultural beliefs about time and money.

Surprising Hidden Emotion

After a beautiful Monday of writing and publishing “Owning The Game”, I find myself again staring at my computer early Tuesday morning while contemplating my next writing task.

I begin to read my notes about a bizarre dream where Angela and I had gone to the yoga retreat center to perform a chocolate ceremony – but where Keith had not even shown up and then Angela had abandoned me with inadequate supplies or preparation.

As I immerse myself into memories of this crazy dream, deep and overwhelming emotions begin to consume me. By the time I finish reviewing my notes, I am lost in sobbing – deep gut-wrenching, dry-heaving, hardly-able-to-breathe emotional release that goes on for at least ten or fifteen minutes.

I am experiencing another layer of deep God-drama emotion – issues of abandonment, betrayal, hopelessness, and my refusal to play in that arena any longer – at least not until God apologizes.

I had no idea so much emotion remained hidden around this issue.

Profound And Plentiful

Rather than fight the emotion, I surrender to it, diving in headfirst, allowing it to flow through me and out of me. Finally, when the raging river of pain dries up, I immerse myself in deep meditation, further analyzing the dream and its supporting symbolism.

The insights are profound and plentiful – deep insights that I use in my blog when I eventually regain my strength to write about the experience – but that will not happen for three more days – not until Friday when I finally write and publish “Profound Parallels.”

Finally, after a beautiful discussion with Sufi about my ongoing emotional journey, I surrender the remainder of my Tuesday to the watching of three nonstop movies. I feel emotionally hammered, physically drained, unmotivated, exhausted, and weak. This intense emotion continues to shock me.

Residual Tremors

Wednesday is a similar story. As I get out of bed, shortly after 7:00 a.m., I continue to feel the same unmotivated exhaustion.

As I finally force myself to sit at my computer in a futile attempt at writing, another freight train of intense emotion suddenly rages through me. I recognize the emotions as more of that all-too-familiar God-drama anger that is relentlessly releasing through my conscious awareness.

The emotions are so intense that I pass through another flash flood of emotional release – through several agonizing minutes of dry heaving while being mostly unable to breathe.

“Wow,” I ponder in shock, “This emotion just continues to flow. Where is it all coming from? How could all of this be locked away inside of me?”

I am deeply grateful for my training in not fighting the emotion … to just let it flow with nonattachment … but wow, this is intense.

For the next few hours, I sit in this river of emotion. The initial burst of unbearable emotion has long since passed on, but I continue to feel residual tremors rocking my world.

As I finally resolve that, “today will be another day without writing,” I quickly follow guidance to engage Sufi in more delightful conversation. It is a beautifully healing discussion that applies to us both.

No Emotions … Or Are There?

Later Wednesday evening, I enjoy a delightful social evening while helping my dear friend Isaias bag and weigh another 250 pounds of slightly-liquid, freshly-ground chocolate. The experience is quite different without Keith around, and we are slightly short-handed – but we make due quite nicely, finishing the task in just over three hours. In fact, it is the most fun I have had bagging chocolate in a very long time.

Thursday morning, I again sit at my computer, for the third day in a row, determined to write about Sunday, June 17, 2012. I start by innocently beginning to read my notes. But I do not get beyond the first line, which states:

“Father’s Day … no emotions about it … but I wish??”

As I read these words, I go completely emotionally numb.

“This is why I am still unable to write about that day,” I suddenly realize. “There are huge reservoirs of painful emotions hiding under that Father’s-Day lid. I have long since dealt with all of the obviously-related emotions – but then I put a lid on the rest of those excruciating emotions in an effort to find some semblance of stability and peace in my life.”

“It seems that the Universe will not allow me to move forward until I take that lid off of this ignored issue, and take it deeper,” intuitions scream at me with deep clarity.

A Betrayal Dilemma

As I quickly realize that what lies beneath that sealed lid remains very raw, I begin to cry. Seconds later the tears turn to sobs, and then dry heaving. The release quickly escalates to maximum intensity – so much so that I isolate to my room and allow this deeply repressed sadness to freely flow with a vengeance.

Suddenly, clarity begins to form.

“I have felt deeply victimized and betrayed by others, many times in my life,” I ponder with insight. “And I have been ultimately projecting that betrayal energy onto God … as the underlying factor in my God drama.”

“But through the eyes of my children,” I begin to get brutally honest, “I, as their father, was the “God-figure” in their life – the respected adult in their life who betrayed them, breaking up the family, doing the unthinkable to them as vulnerable young children and teenagers.”

“And I experienced and internalized all of that intense guilt, right down to the very last drop,” I ponder the repressed agony.

“Wow,” I suddenly realize, “I was feeling that guilt even when I myself was just a young boy – long before I ever got married. It was unbearable guilt that had shadowed me throughout life. It was a guilt based on absolute knowing that the confusing gender feelings in my heart would make family hate me – whether I acted on those feelings or not – and that I could never be my true self without hurting those that I love.”

I must be quite clear here in stating that when I got married at age twenty-one, I really believed that I would be able to cure myself of what I perceived as “those evil gender feelings.” I would never have married if I did not deeply believe that I could, and would, cure myself.

Crushing And Overwhelming

Finally, by age thirty-one, I was drowning under the weight of that guilt – but I was also drowning in a sense of spiritual death and hopelessness, no longer wanting to live if I had to go on pretending to be a man, living a fake life behind an unbearable mask.

I had reached a point where I clearly recognized that I was facing a no-win situation: I would either have to face literal physical decline and death (and probable suicide) … or I would have to move forward in what I knew would be seen as an unforgivable act of betrayal to my family.

“Would my children rather have a dead father or a living Brenda,” I pondered what I absolutely knew were the only possible outcomes.

Seeing no other way out of my painful dilemma, I finally faced my desperation and made the decision to live – to begin embracing Brenda – fully knowing that those I loved would most likely hate me, or possibly worse. To make a long story short, I attempted to break up the marriage at that time, but in a twist of loving gestures, my wife and I decided to give it another try – to take gradual steps into exploring my confusing feelings.

My wife and I remained married for ten more years while I explored options and compromises, hoping to find some way to be happy as an outwardly-visible pretend male. During that period, I gobbled down all the guilt and responsibility for the stress that I caused in the marriage. I literally felt like a voodoo doll, constantly and intentionally sticking pins into myself in an effort to ease the emotional burden of my family. The guilt I felt was crushing and overwhelming. But my desire to live was even stronger.

Finally, at age forty-one I reached a point of intense suicidal feelings, clearly knowing that it was a time to either transition or literally die. Again, I chose life – but this time it meant divorce and moving on. The guilt ate me alive, but I had to live.

Thrive Or Die

After divorce and a quick transition into Brenda, my guilt continued. My family loved and remained in my life beyond my wildest possible dreams – yet things were still extremely awkward. I was that huge elephant in the room that no one could talk about.

I would be remiss if I were to attempt to speak to the feelings of my family. I can only say that during that period I clearly perceived myself as both the betrayer and as the betrayed – as both the perpetrator and the victim. I did everything I could to ease the burden of my family while simultaneously attempting to internalize all of the pain and guilt so that no one else would have to feel it. But that was an impossible task.

In retrospect, I clearly understand that I was wallowing in my own pain while minimizing and intellectualizing the feelings of family – not fully honoring or understanding what they must have been going through. Yet I was acting from the purest of hearts and from a place of inner integrity – genuinely doing the only thing I could possible do to choose a future in which I might thrive rather than die.

It has taken me years to understand, but I now clearly see that I played out both sides of the painful betrayal issue – in an agonizing way – doing so in a way that would one day help me to deeply understand the God drama.

A Forgotten Festering Foundation

As I ponder these painful life transitions, I sob and dry heave for a great while – deeply feeling the anguish – profoundly fearing that I have again opened “Pandora’s Box,” and that I will never again come out of this frightening loop.

“I hid away that semi-healed emotion for safe keeping,” I ponder the past. “I tried to forget about it … and eventually did. Finally, I managed to build a loving and stable life on top off that forgotten festering foundation.”

“What was in that forbidden box was an intense reservoir of off-limits pain,” I ponder with fright. “Now, that pain has been opened and exposed. What if I get lost in it, yet again?”

Finally, after meditating through these emotions for nearly an hour, focusing on bringing in light to assist in transmuting the pain, I begin to feel much lighter.

A Magical Sweetness Messenger

Soon, as I walk into the bathroom, something amazing begins to unfold. As I stand by the mirror, I hear a honeybee buzzing on the bathroom window. Confidently placing my hand by the bee, the little messenger of sweetness quickly climbs up onto my finger. It is my intention to release the bee back into the open air, so I hurry to open the bathroom window and hold my hand outside. I then notice Sufi on the patio.

“Go to Sufi,” I encourage the little honeybee to fly to his freedom.

But the bee refuses to move. Sufi walks over and attempts to coax the honeybee onto her hand, doing so quite aggressively … but the bee refuses to let go of my finger. Finally, I carry the bee with me back into the living room, holding it on my finger for a very long time. The little honeybee is deeply lethargic, almost not moving at all, as if it is dying or in distress.

Delight And Aliveness

“This is my message of sweetness,” I giggle inside. “This little bee is telling me that all is now OK, reassuring me of the genuineness of my heart, and telling me that it is time to love myself and be joyful.”

The little bee continues to just sit there, almost motionless. Occasionally it slowly crawls around my fingernail, but mostly it just rests.

Finally, at precisely 11:20 a.m., the little messenger suddenly becomes quite active, as if he knows that his mission is now complete. As if suddenly awoken from a deep sleep, the little sweetness messenger comes to life and busily buzzes to my front window. When he becomes temporarily stuck in a small cluster of old spider webs, I rescue the bee with my hand. Then, when I carry the bee to my patio door, it buzzes away with delight and aliveness.

Giggling Insights

Suddenly, I ponder the amazing insights that flooded my awareness two mornings ago – meditative insights about a very strange dream where I felt abandoned at what was supposed to be a chocolate ceremony in a yoga retreat center – insights telling me that the actual clock times in that dream had been quite significant.

“This little bee brought me a magical message of sweetness returning,” I again ponder with strong intuition and giggles. “And he even did so with a hidden metaphorical message. The time of 11:20 – a time that is shortly before age eleven and a half, is precisely when the sweetness originally left my life – exactly when I began to deeply struggle with painful gender and self-image issues.”

“That little bee knew exactly what he was doing,” I giggle with joy.

I sit in stunned meditative silence as I ponder the synchronous messages. The experience may sound quite silly to others, but intuitions strongly confirm that I have received the message perfectly.

All of that agonizing and guilt-inducing emotion has now completely vanished, having been replaced by joyful delight.

“What more of a confirmation do I need than that,” I ponder with a deep smile.

On A Roll

Finally, early Friday morning, July 27, 2012, I make my fourth consecutive attempt at a day of writing – an attempt to write about that bizarre dream with a chocolate ceremony at a yoga retreat center.

After three days of rehashing new layers of old emotions, and taking the lid of a frightening Pandora’s Box, I finally succeed in a magical day of writing, eventually publishing “Profound Parallels” late that evening. It has been a long but very rewarding day of integration and healing.

The fourth attempt does indeed turn out to be successful.

Finally, I am back in the smooth groove of writing, and I publish three additional blogs in the next three days … including “A Big Stick,” “An Aloe Vera Adventure,” and “Magical Star Trek Metaphors.”

I am on a roll. I am having magical conversations with my roommate Sufi; I am healing; I am writing up a storm; and I am learning to speak my truth and set loving boundaries.

Early Tuesday morning, the final day of July 2012, I discover that the electricity is off all over town. I use the opportunity for a day off – a day to hike, to run errands, to study Spanish, and to read. Finally, later in the evening, when the power comes back on, I top of this vacation day with a relaxing movie. As I finally rest on my pillow, I cannot believe that in just a couple of hours, July will be over.

Uther, Arthur, And Merlin

Wow, these last sixteen days of July 2012 have been intense. The roller coaster ride has been wild, taking me all over the emotional playground, gentle ups and steep frightening downs, mixed in with sharp unexpected curves with many new twists thrown in for extra credit. Who could have guessed that continued writing would keep bringing up so many old, and even new, issues?

Right off the bat I jumped into another intense journey with the partnership of mushrooms – a journey taking me into Merlin metaphors, which then led to profound understandings and insights into the areas of balancing and healing of masculine and feminine aspects of self. I love how mythical names like Uther, Arthur, and Merlin can trigger such unexpected growth and insights.

I have a new loving appreciation for that “worrywart” side of me. Rather than judge it harshly, I now see that aspect of me with loving compassion. It really is the wounded child in me, desperately attempting to protect both me, and others, from future emotional harm.

And then, wow did that next wave of suicidal emotional reality catch me totally by surprise. It continues to boggle my mind how such a reality can come raging into awareness so quickly and powerfully, and can then transmute so magically with the help of Higher Energies.

But perhaps the most intense moments of these two final weeks were those repeated attempts at writing “Profound Parallels.” I have gained an even greater respect for the synchronous flow of the Universe – for how important it is to listen to what at first can feel like depressing emotional obstacles blocking my path, but which are instead magical teaching opportunities that will take me even deeper into further understanding and growth if I will but surrender and allow.

And then, how can I forget a magical little sweetness messenger – a little high-vibration winged wonder that guided me from the depths of pain to joyful giggles.

Copyright © 2012 by Brenda Larsen, All Rights Reserved

A Personal Stage Play

August 14th, 2012

Emotional burnout and mild God-drama rebellion have both taken their toll on me this past week. It has been an excruciating nine-month journey of nonstop and intense emotional inner work, followed immediately by another five weeks of deeply integrative writing – writing in which I worked tirelessly to publish twenty-one tediously written blogs and five photo postings – consuming at least an entire long day for each entry published.

“I am so effing tired of inner work,” I pondered to myself last week as I tried to figure out what to do next – as I tried to find the motivation to write a few final blog entries documenting my integrative journeys of July and early August.

A Tiring Dilemma

As I write today, it is now mid August. Deep emotional waves have come and gone in the past week as I have wrestled with this “to-write-or-not-to-write” dilemma. It seems that a sense of obligation had replaced my passion for writing. Resentment at a sense of “further needing to document my journey” caused me to rebel with “What’s in it for me?” and “When do I get my reward?”

Suddenly, this morning, I realized that I have fallen into an old and familiar trap – one of thinking that I am writing for others.

“I do not care if anyone ever reads what I write,” I suddenly remember a long-believed truth with a giggle. “I am not writing for anyone outside of myself … I am writing for me … for my own healing … period.”

“What is in it for me is that I get to integrate my healing in a way that only happens when I go back-in-time to write.” I smile in recognition. “My reward comes from the process of following my passion. When I write, I have the opportunity to practice speaking my truth while letting go of a lifelong tendency to give away my power to those who might judge me. Writing for me is like spending a day in deep, healing meditation.”

The subject of this blog today is one that has caused me to think long and hard for quite some time. Out of fear of being “judged by others,” I have mostly avoided the issue … but suddenly, as I ponder the purpose of my journey, I no longer fear the potential backlash of external opinions and judgment.

I need no outside validation. Write I must.

Collision Of Beliefs

In the summer of 2009, while talking to a spiritual friend in Playa Del Carmen (on the mainland of the Yucatan, across from Cozumel) I heard words that triggered deep anxiety in my soul.

My new friend told me about one of her friends who had spent considerable time in Peru studying with shamans there … doing a great deal of amazing healing with the assistance of Ayahuasca. At the time, I had no idea what Ayahuasca was, other than what my friend told me – other than that it is a natural plant medicine – a psychoactive substance used for journeying into other dimensions.

Immediately, two intense feelings surged inside me. The first feeling was a sense of deeply triggered curiosity – and the second was a sense of culturally induced horror.

“I could never do any type of psychoactive substance like that,” I pondered with fright. “What would family think if they found out … and what would my friends think?”

When I left Cozumel to begin further unplanned travel, I did not leave my curiosity behind, nor did I abandon those guilt-inducing fears. Both were frequent meditation companions.

Unquestioned Beliefs

Growing up in the latter half of the twentieth century, I was inundated with cultural and religious dogma about the horrible evils of any mild-altering substance – no exception. I was filled to overflowing with judgment and fear about the evil and life-destroying qualities of such behaviors. I was saturated with dogmatic belief systems that I never questioned, not even once.

I even spent the final year of my “Master’s degree in Mental Health Counseling” training as an intern counselor at a substance abuse treatment facility. The thought of me ever experimenting with any type of psychoactive substance, even for spiritual purposes, was out of the question. I had an image to uphold … I had beliefs to live up to … and I had a family who would be severely disappointed if I did so. Even though the curiosities were high, my unquestioned inner programming caused me to reject all thoughts of exploration in this area.

When I found Keith, The Chocolate Shaman, in the summer of 2010, even then I was quite hesitant to drink pure traditionally-processed Mayan cacao for fear that something else may have been added to it. For me, the chocolate was safe because it is an everyday substance that is not widely classified as a drug.

Pure, traditionally processed chocolate has beautiful heart-opening properties. It is not a psychedelic and does not take anyone on an involuntary trip. But make no mistake about it … for a spiritual seeker with energy sensitivities and an open heart, pure traditionally-processed chocolate (from the right source) is a powerful partnership facilitator in helping to connect with Higher Energies, with repressed emotions, and with the subconscious mind. For many people, simply drinking the chocolate has a way of popping-the-cork on suppressed emotions – or of opening one to the possibility of a spontaneous Higher-Energy experience.

And just as caffeine is technically a drug, so are the natural consciousness-compounds in chocolate.

Steadfast Curiosity

During my two years in San Marcos, I have engaged in repeated and numerous conversations with spiritual travelers of all types, from all over the world. Whenever I became somewhat close to a person who had experimented with various psychoactive substances, I always took the opportunity to pick their brain – to find out why they took the substance, what it did for them, and how it did or did not help them in their spiritual path, etc…

I soon began to realize that, while there are many extremely harmful and addictive substances out there – that there are also many natural psychoactive plant medicines that many people find to be quite useful in opening up to multi-dimensional energetic experiences. Even more impressive was that these people had positive things to say, they were not addicted in any way, and most found their experiences to be quite helpful. Many, however, told me that their progress with chocolate was much more significant and long lasting than their healing through plant-medicine psychedelics.

In these occasional conversations, I have gleaned considerable insight into people’s experiences with Ayahuasca, Peyote, Magic Mushrooms, Marijuana, and the list goes on. In the course of such discussions, I quickly reassessed everything that I was ever taught by the mainstream culture.

But through it all, I have remained steadfast that I will not actively seek out any of these substances. I reached a peaceful resolution in my heart – a resolution telling me that I am not opposed to any such substances for the people who are guided to use them – a resolution telling me that I too would explore such a substance if I were clearly and unmistakably guided by Higher Energies to do so.

“I feel as if I am supposed to complete my spiritual journey only with the assistance of chocolate,” I have repeatedly told myself. “If I were to deviate from this path, I might disappoint others, blah, blah, blah…”

Deep inside, however, I have always known that my personal resistance was based on the fear of judgment by others – especially from family.

Questions Of Reality

And now, I return to the present day.

During the months of May and June (2012), it was hard for me to ignore the unmistakable widespread availability of a regional variety of Magic Mushrooms. Someone – a person that I knew – was selling them in San Marcos, and doing so with considerable visibility, even to the point of hosting word-of-mouth gatherings where Mushrooms were used along with chocolate.

Given that the person selling the Mushrooms was not exactly on my “favorite-person-to-hang-out-with” list, and given that I still had an inner resolve that I was not going to try Mushrooms (especially from this person), I simply ignored what was frequently and unavoidably flaunted in my face.

Nevertheless, by mid-June, I began to question myself, wondering if this widespread availability was “my creation” – wondering if this was the Universe synchronously trying to tell me something. In fact, there really was no question on this one fact.

“I know that I do indeed create my reality,” I reminded myself, “and I know that I manifested this situation for a reason. I wonder if mushrooms might help me get past this intense rational-mind stuckness?”

But I continued to fight the deep curiosities … being unsure of myself, and fearful that others (especially family) would judge me if I engaged in such an out-of-the box journey. I pondered the option of exploring without writing … but inside my heart, I knew that this would not be possible. I am fully committed to being honest in all aspects regarding my journey of self-discovery.

A Six-Day Marathon

It is Monday, July 2, 2012, as I begin an intense writing marathon. I am hopelessly behind in my writing, but excited to get started – excited by the prospect of beginning to catch up on more than an eight-week backlog of intense emotional journeying.

At midday, as I continue writing, a substantial little earthquake shakes my apartment, and my life, for about fifteen seconds. I can only giggle later as I publish “Energetic Suicide,” sharing an intense journey that began on May 4, 2012 – especially after having passed through such an intense suicidal past-reality experience just this past weekend.

Over the next four days, I publish a four-part series titled “Deity Drama Depths.” Again, the writing journey is extremely intense and taxing, but I giggle when I even find time to interrupt my days with social conversation with Sufi – even going out to lunch one day. It seems that my newfound optimism is allowing me to multitask with more emotional stability – writing about intense emotions while simultaneously beginning to participate in an occasional social encounter – something I desperately crave at this point in time.

However, by Thursday, as I prepare to write part three of this series, I find myself spending a morning regressing into social nightmares, temporarily processing ever deeper into teenage paranoia-like realities of projection and self-hatred. In fact, I am shocked by the intensity of additional self-loathing that surfaces, exploding via unexpected emotional release, and then flowing out of me. I then giggle, when after such an intense morning, I still manage to write and publish part three, finding deep clarity and inner healing in the process. It seems that I am now becoming much more capable of allowing an emotional reality to flow through me without attaching to it or identifying with it.

Friday, as I work on part four of that “Deity Drama Depths” series, I again hit a period of deep emotional release in which I can hardly breathe and my heart feels cramped. I cannot believe the intensity of emotions that continue to be re-triggered as I go back into the past to write and integrate. But again, I giggle later that evening when I hit the publish button on a very difficult-to-write blog. I am so happy to have that portion of my writing behind me … and so happy to have further integrated those beautiful lessons.

By Saturday night, I am glowing inside when I finish writing “Soaring Possibilities.” It has been a bizarre day … one in which I have repeatedly heard a next-door neighbor sobbing through the shared wall … one in which I synchronously bumped into Keith for a short and very healing conversation. I am actually quite surprised that Keith is still here as he continues to focus intently on preparing for his journey northward.

Oneness Wisdom

And then comes Sunday, July 8, 2012. I am exhausted from six long days of nonstop writing. Curiosities about Magic Mushrooms are heavy on my mind. Part of me really wants to try them. I no longer harbor any judgments toward anyone else who might do so, but I still refuse to allow myself even to even consider the thought.

“I need to maintain an appearance of following a mainstream path,” I ponder my sense of obligation to family and friends back home. “I don’t want people to judge me. They might never understand.”

As I ponder the dilemma, I realize that I continue to make decisions based on guilt … thinking that I need to please others … and worrying about what loved ones might think.

Finally, after doing a little Spanish study, I open the book “Oneness,” channeled by Rasha. As I read in chapter 29, on page 281, I am profoundly touched by the first two paragraphs:

“It is pointless to walk away from one’s religious heritage because the dogmas do not ring true – and at the same time to feel guilty about it. It is equally pointless to continue to go through the motions of adherence to such modes of belief and to harbor feelings of resentment about it. Either way, the energetic contradiction between the action expressed and the emotion repressed would set up conditions that would nullify the potential inherent in the act of devotion.”

“In order to be truly free of the shackles of obligation perpetrated upon so many of you, it is necessary to shift one’s loyalties. Your obligation is not the so-called “truth,” that may have been handed down through generations of misguided seekers. Your obligation is to the truth that has been unearthed within the depths of your own heart – and to that alone.”

Appeasing And Pleasing

“I am still trying to maintain loyalty to old beliefs and obligations, even though I no longer believe them,” I ponder with clarity as I consider the above words of Oneness. “I have walked away from many aspects of my childhood cultural and religious heritage because they no longer ring true with my heart … yet, even so, I continue to go through the motions of surface-level adherence to some of those old dogmatic beliefs … doing so out of fear … doing so in an attempt to appease the potential judgments of others.”

“What about my own inner truth?” I ponder with a rush of inspired energy. “My own truth sees nothing wrong here. Why would I sacrifice my own truth just to please others?”

By mid-afternoon, a friend has helped me anonymously acquire a small supply of Magic Mushrooms. After all, I do not want anyone to know what I am doing.

“It is time to break through the stigmas and the dogmas of my cultural box,” I ponder with inner heart-based clarity. “Even if I just do it as a token statement, it is time to tear down the artificial walls of the stifling box that keeps me in line as a sheep, blindly following the leader, unable to trust my own heart.”

I will begin with a very small starter dose. It will not be enough to take me on a psychedelic trip – but it will be enough to give me a tiny energy connection to the plant spirit of the Magic Mushroom.

Inquiring minds want to know … and I feel no guilt whatsoever.

Unworthy Of Love

Quickly, after swallowing the tiny dose, I feel a very nice and pleasant vibrational energy in my body, especially in my lower chakras – connecting me to the earthy energy of Mother Earth. But finally, after three hours of nothing but “nice energy,” I become slightly bored, opt to watch a movie, and later go to bed. Even so, as I rest on my pillow, I continue to feel a lot of nice Higher Energy flow that keeps me awake well into the night.

Monday morning, July 9, 2012, I feel a little overwhelmed by new energy swirling around in my head. I try to meditate, but I am tired from lack of sleep. Soon I return to my bed, hoping simply to relax into the flowing energies. I know it is not likely that what I am now experiencing is still the physical result of the tiny miniscule dose of Magic Mushrooms that I took yesterday afternoon. But intuitions tell me that I have connected with the plant-spirit of the mushroom, and that some new energetic flow is trying to open in me – but that I am energetically blocking it, causing the swirling “overload” feeling in my head.

As I rest meditating in bed, trying to further surrender to the trapped energy flow in my head – trying to coax it to flow freely throughout my body – intuitions clearly tell me that a very strong part of me is still resisting and blocking love and other forms of Higher Energies from flowing freely in my body.

“I feel undeserving of such love,” I ponder unfolding emotions with shocking clarity. “After all this inner work, I still have my walls up … I am still blocking out loving energies because part of me is afraid. This part does not feel worthy, and feels threatened by such love … threatened just as I was when I felt suicidal as a teenager.”

Anger At Ongoing Walls

I focus on allowing higher love … but I feel nothing.

I focus on trying to send love to my inner children … but I feel nothing.

When I focus on thoughts of relationship intimacy, I am flooded with strong intuitive awareness of deep inner resistance. It seems that I still adamantly resist the idea of allowing someone to give me such love.

I then imagine a Higher Being just holding me … spooning me from behind … giving me beautiful, safe, pure, and unconditional love. It is indeed a comforting energy flow, but I continue to experience profound inner resistance to receiving such loving energy.

“I still feel like an unlovable and defective transgendered freak,” I ponder.

These emotions are not conscious, but I feel their presence festering deeply in the subconscious, continuing to influence daily life.

As I observe my feelings, I note that I actually feel quite shocked and angry at the subconscious part of me that continues to sabotage and thwart my attempts at inner opening – that continues to maintain such high and thick walls against allowing Higher Energy assistance. Then I remind myself that this is the “game that I am playing” … that “I need to own it.”

By midday, with much thought and consideration, I am still deeply curious about what might happen if I actually went on a “psychedelic trip” with mushrooms. I am determined to tear down those protective shields that prevent me from deeper multi-dimensional connections. I am tired of being stuck in my energetic isolation.

“I know I still need to do the inner work,” I ponder with determination. “But perhaps if I try a higher dose of Magic Mushrooms I might be graced with a temporary glimpse at what I seek to accomplish.”

A Stubborn Head

Shortly after noon, having repeatedly checked in with inner guidance, I feel quite confident in approaching another experiment. This time I take four times the tiny starter dose that I took yesterday. Again, I feel a beautiful energetic connection with my lower chakras – one that happens almost immediately – far too soon for any physical effects to be occurring. I clearly recognize that this is an energetic connection with the plant spirit.

By 3:00 p.m., I am still quite annoyed. I have a beautiful connection with vibrating energies that actively flow in my head, and when I look out the window, the flowers outside seem especially vibrant in color – yet my rational mind continues to be very much in the way.

I would describe the experience as having a heart that really wants to surrender and to go on a beautiful journey, but I cannot quite get there. Instead, I have a head that is fighting and trying to do a play-by-play description of everything, refusing to sit in the back seat, refusing to give up control, insisting on calling the shots and interpreting what is now a very frustrating experience.

I feel heightened energy flows pulsing in my body – a flow that (unlike chocolate) is forced and involuntary – but my head will simply not get out of the way. My head insists on remaining in the driver’s seat, refusing to relax and allow, hanging on with constant vigilance.

“This is that same stuckness that I fight on a regular basis,” I ponder with frustration. “My head will simply not give up control.”

A Micromanaging Face

For a very long time I focus on relaxation. I feel a beautiful energy – an energy that is easy to attain, but not much different from what I am capable of feeling when deeply connected to higher energies in normal meditation.

But I am beginning to get quite angry at that micromanaging head of mine that will simply not cease and desist in its attempts at maintaining control.

Finally, as this anger and frustration strengthens, I give up expectations of ‘going on a psychedelic trip’ and instead decide just to engage in normal subconscious inner-work processing – the same type of subconscious journeying that I do on a very frequent basis with chocolate.

It only takes a minute or two after connecting with this “rational mind” resistance in my inner-conference room before I realize that I am face to face with that controlling and manipulative energy that my mother’s face so aptly represents. I love my dear mother, but she is definitely the one who taught me to repress my right-brained, intuitive, heart-based energies and to use my head as the micromanaging tool to do just that.

For a while, I process some deep anger and tears as I allow myself to feel an upsurge of newly accessed resistance emotions.

As Simple As It Sounds

Suddenly, intuitions clearly guide me to visualize this whole scenario as a skillfully scripted stage play – my own personal “Muppet Show.”

I imagine my mother walking onto the stage. I thank her, I hug her, I cheer her Oscar-winning performance with standing ovations, imagining myself in the crowd calling out “bravo, bravo, bravo…”

“It is time to let all of those emotions go,” I ponder with profound clarity. “None of those emotions define me now. My mother was simply playing a necessary role in my script.”

It is strange, but right now, I am deeply clear that it really is as simple as it sounds. Without effort, I say goodbye to those emotions and even laugh at them.

Flowing Stage Play Realities

Soon, I visualize myself as a young child and speak to my childhood-self with loving power.

“This is not real,” I speak silently. “It was all a stage play … a Muppet Show … and it is now time to let it go.”

As an empath, I sit for a while, allowing childhood emotions to flow through me on their way out. I feel deeply powerful and quite emotional as I actually feel layers of emotions from this period of my life flowing through me.

Continuing with the vibe, I soon repeat the same scenario with my teenage years.

“Bravo … bravo … bravo,” I silently call out to my teenage self. “It was a beautiful performance … I am so proud of you … It was incredibly painful, but you made it and can now see that it was only a stage play.”

“Awesome performance,” I again cheer silently. “Bravo … bravo … bravo … now let it go.”

Ouch … the emotions are strong as I begin to feel them flowing through me. I again imagine myself as the adult empath, receiving the emotional energies and sending them on to the angels for transmutation. I feel as if I am profoundly “in my element” … in my power … with a great deal of vibrating energy saturating my hands.

Just A Story

Next, I repeat the scene with my twenties. The emotions are intense, but I detach from them and allow them to flow.

Then comes my thirties … one of the most painful decades of my life, and one of the least visited in my inner work.

“Congratulations,” I call out to my thirty-year-old self. “Bravo … this emotion no longer defines us … it is time to let it go.”

Again, I repeat the process for the last two decades of my life. I am alive and powerful as I observe this process with deep clarity.

As I complete this process, I am enthralled by the clear understanding that my entire life was just a stage play – a play that was beautifully performed.

“It was all just a story,” I ponder with a giggle. “It was just me playing out my lines. None of it defines me now. In fact, it seems utterly ridiculous to allow a silly story from the past to tell me who I am today.”

For the next hour or so, I reflect on this process, repeatedly transmuting the power of all the old stories while experiencing beautiful energy flows. Occasionally, I go into deep emotional release … some of it quite gut wrenching.

Soul Retrieval

Finally, I reach a state of feeling impermeable and completely in the present. Absolutely no emotion from the past has any power over me in this moment. I am free.

“The past is simply an old reality,” I ponder with confidence. “It is all just old emotion flowing through me, and all I need to do is not attach to it and not identify with it.”

At this point in my process, I feel no doubts whatsoever. I am bringing in a great deal of loving light, fully trusting what I am doing and intuitively knowing that it is not make-believe. I have relegated all inner doubters to hang out in the bleacher seats where they can watch and observe.

Finally, I focus on connecting with my Higher Self while acknowledging that I pushed out a lot of my true self when I was a child. Intuitions tell me it is time for some soul retrieval.

Suddenly, I burst into repeated waves of deep emotional release, intermixed with periods of focusing on bringing in more light.

Finally, when the emotional charge is gone, I ask Higher Self to bring back whatever parts of me are now ready to return. Then I simply sit back and observe my energies. I first feel a strong connection in my heart, followed up by tingling in my throat chakra. Soon, I also feel energetic activity in my third eye, and then my abdomen.

“I have no idea how to do this,” I speak to my Higher Self, “but you do. My intention is for this part of me to come back as fast as possible, but as slowly as needed, pacing itself as guided.”

I then express my intention for the process to go into autopilot mode, not requiring my attention. For a while, I simply sit in the beautiful integrative energies.

Star Performers

Soon, inner guidance causes me to shift to a new arena – that of working with those who, in the past, have triggered my betrayal energy. First, I connect with Paul’s energy, cheering on his stellar performance – cheering him for how he triggered my emotions, how he masterfully played the exact role that I needed him to play for my growth and healing, etc…

One by one, I visit the energy of every person I can think of, who, in any way pushed my buttons and deeply triggered my inner emotions.

“Wow,” I silently giggle as I continue this process. “I am filled with deep, all-encompassing love. I literally feel profound and genuine unconditional love for all of the leading actors and actresses in my life.”

A Method Actor

Finally, I feel guided to imagine myself as a “method actor” – an actor who fully immerses himself into the role that he is playing – doing so even in his real life so that he can be more convincing on the stage or in the movie.

“I was merely a “method actor” in all of the stage-play dramas throughout my life,” I ponder with clarity. “But I soon became so deeply immersed into the roles that I was playing that I got lost in them, believing them to be real, forgetting my true divine identity. All along, the only thing I needed to do was to wake up and really remember that it was all just a stage play.”

For the next hour or so, I have a great deal of fun imagining myself as that budding young actress, learning about the various scenes that I needed to play out – learning all of the background and emotional information for my character.

“Hmmm,” I ponder with a giggle. “Today is July 9, 2012. I am living in San Marcos La Laguna, Solola, Guatemala. This is my bedroom. That up there is my roof. That is the sun out there through that opening called a window.”

“Let’s see now,” I continue, “The script tells me I was raised in a fundamentalist Christian background, I have six children, and I am a woman who was born into a man’s body. Wow! What an interesting and fascinating story that I get to act out. What a drama to share!”

I repeat this script review with all elements of my life, feeling no attachment to any of the trauma or drama, overflowing with a feeling of pure unconditional love. I literally see my future as an empty script, yet-to-be written. I have no attachment to the cast, to the stage scenery, or to anything at all.

“At this moment in my life, I am literally free,” I ponder with a giggle. “I can do anything I want, anywhere I want. There is no judgment, no anchors to hold me back, and a passionate heart to guide me. It truly is a script waiting to be written.”

A Detached Yawn

As I ponder my blog and my writing, I simply laugh at all of the silly emotional stuff.

“Why am I even writing this?” I ponder with puzzling curiosity. “Oh yeah, I wanted to integrate my growth, and perhaps shine a light on the path for others to follow.”

“I guess so,” I yawn with detachment.

Finally, after almost eight hours of meditative journeying through the stage-play of my subconscious mind, I surrender to physical hunger. I am starved and in need of nourishment.

Soon, after a filling meal of rice and beans, I return to my bedroom where I drift off to sleep in continued relaxation and meditation.

A Healing Metaphor

Wednesday morning, July 11, 2012, I am up early, deep in meditation. Suddenly I remember a small message I saw written in one of those cutesy quotes that get forwarded all over the place on Facebook. This one had influenced me quite strongly. I do not remember the exact words, but the quote talked about the healing process of bruises – reminding the reader that we do not need to consciously heal our own bruises. Our body already knows how to do that, and it does not need us to direct or to understand how the process works. We do not need to sit and watch the bruise day after day, coaxing it to heal. It just does.

But now, as I ponder in meditation, the metaphor takes on a whole new deeper meaning.

“Wow,” I ponder with sheer delight, “that is exactly the same way our emotional healing works. I do not need to understand or micromanage the emotional healing process. My emotional wounds are a lot like an energetic bruise. My Higher Energies know precisely how to heal each emotional bruise, all by themselves, without me needing to do any of the complicated work.”

“But I do need to be willing to allow the bruise to come to the surface where it can be healed.” I continue. “And I actually do need to feel the surface-layers of the pain as it heals. The trick is not to get angry at myself for feeling those emotions, yet again … not to attach to the pain … not to reenergize the pain by re-bruising myself … re-bruising via self-flogging, self-hatred, self-judgment, and self-loathing for still having the emotional wounds inside me.”

“If I can allow the emotions to come up and out, flowing and releasing without attaching to or identifying with them, they really can just flow out and heal,” I giggle inside. “And I do not need to do anything except love myself and cooperate with the flow of my process.”

“And I do not need to meditate twenty-four hours a day while the bruise heals,” I giggle. “I do not need to babysit the process. I just need to treat myself with loving kindness.”

“If I am present in the moment, and following guidance, I can trust that an ongoing process will proceed and complete all by itself.” I ponder with deep clarity. I do not need to know or understand how my densities will transmute or how long it will take them to do so. I just need to invite the light and remain in the loving glow of Higher Energies while being willing to go wherever any metaphorical breadcrumbs might take me.”

Smooth Writing, Smooth Healing

With the newfound clarity and detachment from the stage-play called life, and with a new trust in the divinely orchestrated flow of my emotional healing, I again re-focus on writing. Peaceful energies continue to vibrate and flow through my body as I trust that inner emotional bruises are healing on their own. I do not need to micromanage the process.

For the next five days, I write and write and write, even with frequent interruptions, successfully publishing five additional blogs, including “A Toothpaste Tale,” “Reality Quicksand,” “Flowing Effortlessly,” “Magical Metaphorical Mirrors,” and “A Tale Of Two Ceremonies.”

Things are flowing smoothly, and synchronous events seem to make everything fall into perfect alignment. Even during a beautiful and inspired Skype conversation with a dear friend, early on Saturday morning, a temporarily lost internet connection seems to have been timed perfectly for her process.

Later that afternoon, after finishing yet-another long day of writing, I find a beautiful email from this dear friend.

“Do you realize we just enjoyed three hours of magic today?” My friend writes regarding our delightful Skype call this morning. “Thank you so much for holding space for me and for your divinely guided observations and insights. They have totally rocked my world and thrown open the windows on my spirit.”

“Wow,” I giggle inside. “I love how all of my own healing is now flowing so easily through me, allowing me to be of magical assistance to others.”

Jumping Between Realities

Saturday evening, as I open another quote from Oneness, I feel deeply inspired by the words of this “Wisdom of Oneness #76” quote:

“When the hoped for result is not forthcoming easily, you have learned to sidestep the circumstances and go within, calming the turbulent inner seas that may be manifesting as discord in your outer world. You have learned to dematerialize one set of circumstances and substitute another variation on the same theme, simply by modifying your own inner state of beingness. You have become adept at jumping between realities, marveling at the sudden improvement of a situation, or groaning as your bubble bursts, yet again. You have become a master of the art of ascension, and most of you have not even been aware of it.”

Wow, this quote describes exactly what I am trying to learn … exactly what I am finally beginning to understand. I truly am getting profound experience in sidestepping one reality and jumping into another. I have repeatedly experienced that “sudden improvement of a situation,” and also that “groaning as my bubble bursts, yet again.”

“I am not yet a “master of the art of ascension”,” I ponder with confidence, “but I am indeed learning more and more how to recognize when I am in a dense, lower-vibration reality, and gradually learning how to release it and shift gears into a higher-vibrational one.”

Shifting And Shuffling

Early Sunday evening, July 15, 2012, after finishing my eleventh blog entry in fourteen days, I walk out to Keith’s home to say goodbye.

I have only had very brief and sporadic communication with Keith ever since that magical day in his Kitchen, exactly two weeks ago, where an agonizing and very real suicidal reality literally transmuted into a reality of light, hope, and giggles. Keith has been busily and methodically working through a massive to-do list of things he needed to accomplish before he could leave Guatemala, and I have been back at my place, writing up a storm.

Tomorrow, in the wee morning hours, Keith, and another young friend will begin a long journey of driving from Guatemala to Texas. Even though I have already been essentially on my own for two weeks, it will seem very strange knowing that Keith has actually left San Marcos for the rest of the summer.

On the one hand, I will miss Keith greatly, but on the other, I am profoundly eager to see him go. Right now, I desperately need changes in my life. I need the world as I know it to shift; I need the people in San Marcos to shuffle; and I passionately crave a break from chocolate ceremonies, from deep inner work, and from writing nonstop (not quite there yet).

As I hug Keith and my young friend goodbye, wishing them both a happy and a safe journey to the United States, my heart fills with suspense and excitement, wondering what comes next for me. I honestly do not know what I will do once I catch up with my writing. The only thing I do know is that bringing my writing up to date is priority number one. After that is an empty slate of possibilities.

An Audience Of One

Late Sunday evening, as I prepare for bed,” I find another quote from Oneness, this one being “Moment of oneness, #77” which reads as follows:

“Yours is a world unique to you alone. It is a custom-made set of variables that reflect the nuances of your choices set in juxtaposition with the resonance of the environment in which you have chosen to enact them. And even though you may share parallel circumstances with many of the beings that populate the theater of your awareness, yours is a drama that plays out before an audience of one. It is you alone who encounters the world in precisely the way you do. And it is you alone who determines how long you will continue to watch the same predictable performances.”

I love, love, love this quote. It resonates with every cell of my being – with every reality-creation belief that I have. The words describe my “personal holodeck” belief with such flowing clarity. We are each engaged in our own personal stage play – one where we share many parallel circumstances and scripts – but ours is indeed a drama that plays out before an audience of one.

Profoundly Pertinent Observations

As I reflect back on these first two weeks of July, the dominant factor has indeed been nearly nonstop writing – writing that has been intense and profoundly healing and integrative.

In the meantime, two deeply related themes continue to intertwine in my journey – the theme that of each of us is indeed creating our own reality, realities that can shift in beautiful ways – and that each of us is the leading actor in our own personal stage play, with our own supporting cast of thousands.

As I reflect back on that meditative journey with Magic Mushrooms, just a week ago, one observation is profoundly pertinent. For me, the mushroom experience was very much like an intensely deep and clear chocolate ceremony – but one that I could not just walk away from in the middle because the energies could not just be turned off.

While my immersion into the energies was more rapid, forceful, and involuntary, I did not actually feel that much more energy with mushrooms than I do during times that I am deeply connected during a profound meditation (with or without chocolate) – and the experience did absolutely nothing to take me out of the stuckness of my head.

Yes, I would have to admit that I did feel less doubt with deeper clarity while in my subconscious meditation with my “personal stage play,” but when it was all over, I also have to say that the clarity of that meditation faded much faster than it does when I only drink chocolate.

When all is said and done, I enjoyed my experience with mushrooms, and will likely do it again, perhaps soon – but in the long run, I feel a profound and deep partnership with chocolate that will not be going away anytime soon. With chocolate, I have to do more of the work myself, but the work I accomplish also seems to be much more long lasting and meaningful.

Increasing Clarity

Utilizing any substance, even chocolate, is a personal decision – one that must be made based on a truth radiating from within one’s own heart.

I have long struggled with deep curiosity about other psychoactive substances – long suffered from religious and cultural guilt while going through the motions of adhering to childhood and lifelong beliefs that no longer resonate in my heart.

I do not currently see mushrooms, or other psychoactive substances for that matter, as a major part of my future … but then again I am not planning my future, I am simply following the flow of inner guidance.

In this instance, I felt deeply guided to burst out of another restrictive and stifling cultural box – a box trapping me into a sense of obligation to adhere to the truth of others while denying my own inner truth. That box, at least in this context, no longer exists.

But regardless of what the future holds, I will forever be grateful for a meditation that gave me a strong and powerful glimpse – even though quite fleeting – of the profound and absolute truth that this life is indeed nothing but a personal holodeck – a personal stage play where everyone on our stage is simply acting out the other end of our script.

For a few hours on that Monday afternoon, just a week ago, I was free. I absolutely knew, with perfect clarity, beyond any doubt, that none of the “struggles of my past” define me in any way. I am merely a “method actress” – an actress who has immersed herself so deeply into my character (Brenda) that I have temporarily forgotten who I really am, and that I am merely acting.

Through an act of grace, I have now experienced a glimpse of the clarity toward which I am moving. Step by step, as I continue to undo the conditioned beliefs and emotional densities, I increasingly enter a state of growing awake-ness in which the divinity within is no longer forgotten – in which this entire earthly reality will be clearly perceived as the illusion that it really is.

Copyright © 2012 by Brenda Larsen, All Rights Reserved

A New Mayan Sacerdote (photos)

August 8th, 2012

In late September of 2011, my young friend Isaias made a deep committment — a committment to himself, a committment to follow his heart, a committment to follow in the traditions of his ancestors. He began studying to be a Mayan Sacerdote.

In English, we typically use the word “Shaman” when refering to indigenous people who choose to be a leader in the traditional ways. Here in the Mayan culture of Guatemala, the preferred term is “Mayan Sacerdote” or, directly translated to English “Mayan Priest.” I often hear people referring to these Sacerdotes, preceeding their name with the title “Tata.” For instance, a well known Mayan Priest in this area, whose name is Pedro, is often called “Tata Pedro”. But Isaias tells me the proper term has no “a” on the end … that it is just “Tat.”

On June 1, 2012, I had the privilege of being present at the magical graduation fire ceremony for my dear young friend as he completes his training. Gathered on the sacred hill above San Marcos were many Mayan Sacerdotes from all over this region, as well as other teachers, leaders, and friends. Of special note, something that I can only guess does not happen very often, is that a handful of “westerners” were also invited to this sacred graduation ceremony. Since Isaias is also Keith’s long term worker, he has built deep friendships with many people from foreign lands.

That Friday morning ceremony was perhaps the most magical indigenous ceremony that I have ever had the privilege of attending — with several hours of deeply devoted spiritual ceremony, intermingled with beautiful music, dance, and tradition.

Following is a small collection of the hundreds of photos that I took during the ceremony. I was not going to take photos … but when I saw many of the indigenous Mayan people taking their own photos, I joined in. Once I started, I could not stop.

A Pre-Gathering

Prior to the ceremony, Isaias’s friends began gathering at a local hotel at around 7:00 a.m. in the morning. I was privileged to be among them…

This is a beautiful fire pit adjacent to the dining area of the hotel restaurant where we all gathered. My beautiful friend Terry, owner of this hotel, has lived in San Marcos for almost twenty years. Being an avid student of the Mayan calendar and Mayan beliefs, Terry built this Mayan calendar around the fire pit. Each of the little glyphs around the circle represent one of the Mayan “naguales”, or one of the twenty months, each of which has thirteen days. My nagual is “IX” (pronounced “Ish”) which means “Jaguar.” My full birthday is “10 IX” … which means the tenth day of IX.

This is a photo of the glyph for “IX” … my nagual.

At first there was only a small group of us waiting for the ceremony. This young woman playing the flute is the daughter of another Mayan Sacerdote. I really enjoyed the music.

The whole family was playing in their own little magical band. The father (and Mayan Sacerdote) is the one sitting on the right, with his head showing between the two small tree trunks.

About an hour later, the rest of the group showed up … including Isaias’s teacher and an entire entourage of beautiful people … musicians … friends … and more Mayan Sacerdotes.

Of special interest to me was what they brought with them … a large Marimba. In this photo it is hidden under blankets, behind the man on the right.

A Marimba is a large hand-made wooden Xylophone — a very traditional instrument here in Guatemala. I have had the privilege of being in the home and workshop of one Marimba maker, located in the remote mountains just a couple of hours from here. It is a very tediouis and complicated art.

My friend Terry, playing the guitar. I spent two months studying with her during my Hollistic Healing course in the fall of 2010. She has several sacred Mayan fire circles on her property, and I have had the honor of participating in a few of those ceremonies.

Ceremonial Setup

After the whole group finally gathered, we all helped carry things up to the top of a sacred nearby hill — the same hill where Pyper and I went hiking in late April. I was shocked that even the Marimba was carried up that steep and slippery trail.

The woman in the right-center, dressed in blue, just above and to the left of the fire pit is Isaias’s teacher — a devoted Mayan Priestess. Prior to today, I have had the privilege of participating in two other fire ceremonies with her, both in her home village in the mountains. My last trip to see her was with Isaias and Pyper, in late April.

Note, I am intentionally not mentioning her name, nor the names of very many others — all in an attempt to preserve privacy.

I was quite surprised to see that several large bundles of pine needles were carried up the hill. Soon, I understood why. Several men soon began to cover the entire ceremonial area with a blanket of these pine needles. I do not know the significance of such a tradition, but it gave me a feeling of deep sacredness … as if they were creating a very sacred space for a very sacred ceremonial purpose.

 

Soon, even the Marimba was set up, and these men (and boy) provided us with beautiful traditional background music as the preparations continued.

I am not sure if it will work, because I do not often post video clips in my blog, but clicking on the following link should give you a few-second video sampling of their music.

(Note the video is just over 6 seconds long, and is 8.1 megabytes in size. The only way I was able to watch it from my blog (slow internet link) was to right click on this link, select “save target as,” and then to click on the actual file later.)

H2 – Jun 01, 2012 – Isaias Graduation Setup (6)

Isaias and his beautiful young wife, posing while participating in the preparations. Isaias has obviously not yet changed into his ceremonial clothing.

 

Preparing the fire pit. What they are placing as the base of the fire are some type of incense, mixed with flamable materials. As with all the Mayan ceremonies I have witnessed in Guatemala, they do not build their fires with wood. They use incense discs such as these, along with lots of candles. The fires burn hot, for a very long time.

Seated on the bench, in white is Mark — a beautiful man that has deeply researched the Mayan calendar and traditions. The other man seated, and the one standing to the left are a couple of people I know from chocolate ceremonies (names omitted for privacy).

Isaias’s teacher, and others, rushing around to make preparations.

Continuing to work on the fire pit …

More ongoing preparations.

These women are busily removing the corn husks that are used for packaging little tiny chunks of incense. They are placing the incense discs into baskets, for later use in the ceremony.

Angela (center) and another beautiful woman that I know from Keith’s chocolate ceremonies.

Soon, extending due east from the fire pit, an assortment of candles is arranged …

The man in back (red shawl) is a well-known shaman (priest) from the area. He works primarily with foreigners, introducing them to Mayan traditions. His name is Tata Pedro.

Standing around … watching and waiting …

Another view as this man continues the setting up of this sacred area between the candles. Sorry, I would love to explain further, but I do not know the sacred symbolism or significance of anything I am witnessing …

And another photo of the same general area.

More eager anticipation … my friend Terry on the right

Another photo op with Isaias and his beautiful wife.

The young man with the camera (on the left) came to San Marcos to do a little filming for a documentary. Since then, he also began doing a lot of filming about Keith and what he does on his porch … including an interview with me that I wrote about in my blog.

Today, Isaias has gotten special permission for him to film the ceremony. As I understood it, no one else was supposed to used their camera during the actual ceremony, but when almost everyone was doing so, I joined in too …

Gradually, the fire pit becomes more and more prepared. In this photo, a small container of honey is being poured onto the fire base.

The candles are all mounted atop metal railings that have many little looped rings. In this photo, tiny ceramic mugs have been placed in all of the looped rings on the outside of the candles, and now, small muffin-like pieces of baked bread are being placed in the inside rings.

The man in white is carrying an incense burner filled with glowing hot charcoal, that is smoking with copal incense. He is doing a traditional energetic cleansing using the incense smoke — doing so on Isaias’s beautiful teacher who is kneeling on the ground in front of the fire pit (directly behind the man in white).

Isaias’s teacher kneeling before the fire.

I cannot interpret the symbolism, but in this photo, Isaias’s teacher is holding and waving portions of the ceremonial clothing that will later be placed on Isaias, as if cleansing the clothing in the aura of the ceremonial area.

The man with the incense burner, cleansing the ceremonial area using copal incense.

More sacred preparations …

Isaias’s teacher, and the man in white, standing in front of the ceremonial area …

Two little boys who sat next to me. If they were not so darn cute, I might have been annoyed by them as they kept standing up and walking in front of me, blocking my views.

Doing more incense cleansing of major participants …

Cleansing the energy of the band members…

Another photo of the marimba band. The man at the far left (not visible in the thumbnail image) is one of the many Mayan Sacerdotes present. I love his apron with all the colorful Mayan glyphs on it.

A woman and her baby, observing the surroundings.

A closer view of the Mayan Sacerdote with the Mayan calendar glyphs on his apron … and his two daughters on his right.

Another photo of the same.

 

This large container of a traditional Mayan soup shows up quite late. Someone told me the name, but I cannot remember. Each of the tiny mugs on the outside of the candles is soon filled with a scoop of this drink/soup. It is a very thick, creamy mixture that tastes as if a large ingredient is corn … I wish I remembered what it is called …

Continuing to pour the hot, creamy, steamy, soup-like mixture into the mugs.

The Graduation Ceremony

The setup itself has been quite fascinating, but finally, it is time to begin.

Soon, Isaias returns in his ceremonial clothing. The young man with the incense burner is cleansing Isaias with a large dose of copal incense..

Isaias and his young wife then walk to the ceremonial area to greet his teacher.

Isaias kneeling on the ground, his teacher standing behind him.

Isaias glancing up at his teacher …

Isaias stands proudly in front of the crowd …

Isaias with his teacher …

Beginning conversation … sharing words of wisdom with isaias.

A delightful mix of worlds … Isaias kneeling on the ground while his gorgeous young wife checks her cell phone (I’m guessing a family member was late and trying to communicate).

A beautiful young woman looking on while holding Isaias’s precious baby.

More ceremonial beginnings …

Isaias and his wife have been presented with huge orange candles. I am not sure of the significance, other than I know that white candles are often used for single people, and orange are given to married or formerly married people. Isaias’s young wife is quite emotional, wiping her eyes …

Heart-to-heart sharing with family members. This is quite difficult, because most of the Mayan people are now either Catholic or evangelical … and returning to the old ways is seen by many of them is akin to me having left my own childhood religion. It is seen by some as an act of betraying the family and being lost into an evil (non-Christian) path.

Beginning a slow walk around the ceremonial area …

The procession is about half way around the circle …

Slowly completing a march around the ceremonial area.

Oops … I spoke too soon. They are walking around again … doing so with a traditional Mayan step … the same one that I witnessed with Pyper during a beauty-pageant-like ceremony as women from all over the area danced down a runway in traditional clothing and fabulous head wear … during the Feria at San Marcos in late April.

Almost around for the second time …

I love how the marimba band plays during the ceremonial stroll. It provides a festive feeling mixed in with the beautiful sacred event that is occurring.

Standing back in front of the ceremonial area.

Isaias approaching front and center…

More of the marimba and its talented players …

A closer view of some of the hand-made traditional artwork on the marimba.

During the traditional part of a Mayan fire ceremony, the 260 days of the Mayan Tzolkin calendar are counted off. There are twenty months (naguales) with each containing thirteen days. In this photo, Isaias is preparing to throw thirteen small pieces of incense (the ones the women unpacked earlier) into the fire, each representing one of the days from one of the naguales that is presently being honored.

And into the fire they go…

In this photo, Isaias’s teacher holds out a beautiful flag. I do not know the true significance, but I can guess that the four colors around the outside (red, yellow, black and white) represent the four colors of corn, the four cardinal points of the compass, and the four races of humanity. I cannot speak for the blue diamond in the middle that seems to unite them all together.

This flag looks very similar to a mural I saw painted on a wall in San Juan when Pyper was here in April.

Oh … and I forgot to mention that somewhere in the previous few minutes, Isaias was given his traditional headwear and belt — brilliant colors dominated by yellow. Each Mayan Sacerdote has his own colors. I do not know the significance of those worn by Isaias. Perhaps it has to do with his birth Nagual … perhaps it is his choice … but I am sure it has deep significance to him.

Isaias kneeling before the fire…

I cannot remember what they are holding in their hands …

Continuing their count of the 260 days in the Mayan Tzolkin calendar. In the baskets are more of those tiny chunks of incense.

 

Another look at this portion of the ceremonial area … showing how it now looks when fully adorned. I love the little mushroom-like things in the middle. These are more of those ceramic mugs, filled with the drink, and covered with little pieces of round bread.

Continuing to count through more of the 260 days in the calendar. Note, the Mayan Tzolkin calender is sometimes called the short count calendar. It covers a period of just under nine months — and is believed to parallel the human gestation period (of the length of a human pregnancy). There are two Mayan calendars. The long-count calendar (can’t remember the Mayan name) is not used at all in this region. That long count calendar is the one that archeologists interpret … the one that predicts the date Dec 21, 2012.

Preparing to throw something else into the fire. Note how bright and hot the fire burns with just incense and candles…

I am not sure what Isaias is holding in this photo.

You cannot see it in the thumbnail image, but a straw mat (called a petate) has been placed on the ground to Isaias’s left. I am eager to see what it is for …

Soon, Isaias is asked to lie down on the ground. Note, the beautiful and ornate wood-carved ceremonial staff that Isaias’s teacher is holding in front of her. The center of the staff is a lighter brown color … and the snake-like coil that winds up the outside is much darker brown.

Soon, the staff is placed on Isaias’s body. Over the next while, the staff is moved four times, such that the top points in each of the cardinal directions. In this photo, the top of the staff is pointing east.

I do not know the significance, but in this photo (and the first four cardinal point movements) Isaias is on his back, looking at the sky. Then, Isaias is asked to lie on his stomach, and the staff is again placed on him, being moved four times, once for each compass direction.

A closer view of Isaias with the staff in the first direction.

When these eight positions are complete, Isaias is then guided to stand up, and to slowly walk around the circle with the ornate staff on his shoulders.

 

Continuing his walk around the circle, following his teacher, as they both do the same traidional Mayan two-step dance I mentioned earlier.

Once the circle is complete, Isaias stands in front of the crowd, with the staff still on his shoulders.

Suddenly, the ceremony shifts to one of colorful, cultural flare. Several young men enter from the far side, dressed in ancient traditional clothing, performing a small selection of traditional dance.

I do not understand the symbolism or significance of any of it … but it is beautiful.

More of the dancing. you can see the flames of the fire in the bottom left.

 

And more …

The beautiful show continues…

And one more photo of these two young men with their fancy footwork.

Observers in the crowd.

Another piece of Isaias’s traditional clothing is held over the sacred fire.

Isaias’s teacher, holding one of two beautiful doves that were a part of the ceremony. In this photo, she is holding the legs of the dove, cleansing it over the smoke of the sacred fire.

She then holds the beautiful dove above Isaias’s head.

And then places the dove on Isaias’s head…

The backs of the two cute little boys who frequently stood in front of me to block my view … especially near the end.

At one point, during many of the delightful musical interludes, Tata Pedro gets up to play the drum.

Isaias, doing another traditional walk/dance around the ceremonial area.

The marimba and drums continue to play as Isaias works his way around the circle.

Back in the front … Isaias was given a new incense burner for his use. It is filled with charcoal that is just beginning to burn.

Keith, who has moved closer to the ceremonial area near the end. He has spent much of the ceremony perched above the fire on a small nearby hill, taking photos from afar. Soon, he will need to return to his house to prepare for an afternoon chocolate ceremony.

Soon, Isaias is presented with some type of ceremonial pouch that is tied around is neck. I am not sure what, if anything, is being carried in the back. I can only assume that it is something sacred, related to his practice as a Mayan Sacerdote.

Continuing to tie the fabric pouch …

Isaias then completes another walk/dance around the circle.

Here he is walking by the marimba, as the music again plays with festive energy. If you look closely, you will notice that all of the candles in the middle have burned to the ground …

Continuing his walk. Note that he is holding his ornate wooden staff in his right hand, his beautiful wife holds the two large orange candles behind him, and his teacher follows up with a close third…

Continuing what I believe is his final ceremonial stroll around the circle.

I love this photo with Isaias and his wife (not visible in the thumbnail) kneeling in front of the fire … with Keith kneeling in the near background. Keith had become like a father to this beautiful (or should I say handsome) young man.

And another beautiful photo of the same scene. The smoke from the fire lightly clouds the clarity of the view. Note, the large white candle (smaller than the orange ones) is for their little baby boy.

And another similar photo …

Post Ceremony Hugs

Soon, the formal ceremony is over, and Isaias begins a round of hugs with those who are present … beginning with his beautiful teacher.

I love Isaias’s young wife …

I love this young Mayan girl looking on. It is unusual to see a young Mayan girl not wearing traditional clothing.

Such a gorgeous smile …

Posing for the camera …

And now it is my turn. I love my young friend … Tat Isaias.

And my favorite photo of all.

 Final Wrap Up

After a final round of hugs with the newest “Tat” in Guatemala, I hurry back down the hill to change clothes and scurry out to Keith’s porch for a Friday afternoon chocolate ceremony.

I am torn between two options. Most of the guests are staying for a yummy chicken dinner that will be served to them at the hotel where we first gathered. I have been invited to the meal, and am starved. I would love to visit more with the beautiful guests from around the area.

But alas, my heart guides me to go to the chocolate ceremony.

It has been such an amazing morning … such a magical ceremony.

I am so proud of Tat Isaias, my young Mayan friend, and now Mayan Sacerdote. There is no doubt in my mind that, as his life unfolds, he will be a powerful influence in serving the world, and those around him (as he is already doing).

Copyright © 2012 by Brenda Larsen, All Rights Reserved

Giggling Pyper Photo Adventures, Part 3

August 8th, 2012

This is part three of a three-part collection of photos taken during the final week of April when my friend Pyper came to visit. These photos cover Thursday, April 27 and Friday, April 28, 2012. Included are photos from a delightful trip to Xela (and its huge market), hiking around San Marcos, Keith’s porch, a chicken bus breakdown on the highway, and a few photos from Antigua.

As usual, the photos in this post are thumbnail images. Please click on any photo to enlarge it. The thumbnails leave much to be desired as far as colors and resolution — plus the thumbnails clip all of the edges. I use thumbnails for the post itself, because it gives people the opportunity to get a summary glimpse without downloading huge amounts of data for the high-res photos.

CLICK ON ANY PHOTO TO ENLARGE.

Xela Or Bust

Early Thursday morning, Keith picks Pyper and I up at around 6:00 a.m. near the basketball court at the center of town. Soon we zoom away in his little Toyota pickup truck, first going to San Pablo, and then turning to zig-zag up the mountain side on our way to the Inter-America highway.

Views From The Top

This first photo is taken at a small view area at the top of our first climb. Behind Pyper, and to the left, is San Pablo. If you look just above San Pablo, beyond the small inlet above it, you can see portions of San Marcos. (In fact, San Marcos sits in between those two little inlets.)

Pyper and I, giggling in the clouds.

And now Keith joins us. (Pyper is really good at reaching her arm out and taking self-portraits.)

Pyper and I. If you expand the photo, San Pablo is visible on the left, and San Pedro on the right.

A pensive Keith, with beautiful Lake Atitlan views below.

And another fun photo of Keith.

Keith’s little truck parked by the winding two-lane highway. A large truck is carrying supplies down into the lake.

A view of the mountains. San Pablo is visible in the bottom right.

A view of the San Pedro volcano. The town of San Juan is on the right, and San Pedro is on the left.

Another mountain view. Note … for perspective, “The Nose” mountain is somewhere just behind me. Lots of people actually hike to the top of it from somewhere in this vicinity. I have never done the hike.

After another drive up even more mountains, we stop at another view area.

A really cute photo of Keith and Pyper.

This very interesting church is near Xela (pronounced Shay-luh). I love the “fallen angel” on the left.

People coming and going through the entrance, carrying things on their heads, as all the local women do.

A close up of that fascinating fallen angel.

A closer view of the top of the church.

Time for a snack … we’re hungry after a long drive (about  two and a half hours so far).

More women carrying bundles of flowers on their heads.

I just don’t know how they balance this stuff so easily … but they start doing it as young girls.

Xela Market

The huge market at Xela is among the largest in Guatemala. We stop here for various reasons. Keith and I both need to buy fruits, nuts, veggies, etc…

And then Pyper has never seen such a huge authentic market.

And finally, we need to fill up our large two-liter bottles with fresh coconut milk to provide us with electrolytes for our long swim in the hot springs after we finish our time in the market. I do not have any photos of the hot springs, but we go there for a private chocolate ceremony — an amazing mix, hot water, chocolate, and inner work.

This first photo is the coconut vendor where Keith buys our coconut milk. Each large bottle costs us only 10 Quetzales (about $1.30 US) … a wonderful deal.

Pyper wanted to see how cacao is sold in bulk, so we stopped at this one small vendor. Keith is sticking his hand in a large bag of cacao beans.

And now it is Pyper’s turn. “Cacao” is the name of the plant before it is processed into chocolate.

A closer view of the cacao beans (with the skins still on them). These are the beans that are lightly roasted and peeled before being ground.

Because Keith serves so much chocolate on his porch, he goes through a lot of “panela” … aka “raw cane sugar”.

This is how Keith buys it — in bulk. It comes in blocks, about six inches square and three inches thick. In this photo, you can only see how bundles of those panela blocks are tied together.

In this photo, you can see the panela blocks wrapped up in the closest bundle.

Would you like some lemons? Yes, they call these lemons here. To me, they are limes, but the people here insist they are lemons.

Me, reaching in my purse to get money for a papaya.

You have to pay attention when walking around. Large carts like this often squeeze between the shops, barreling through while people almost have to jump out of the way. I got banged in the head once on a previous trip when I was not paying attention.

This guy has huge bags of oranges on his cart.

And I cannot quite tell what he is carrying.

One young girl selling her fruits.

This market is huge, having acres of both indoor and outdoor vendors. This is an outdoor street where lots of fruits and vegetables are being sold.

A very colorful assortment of yummy fruits and vegetables being sold by these beautiful Mayan women in their traditional clothing.

Keith browsing in one of the small booths.

I wish I remembered what these are called. They are little fruits, actually quite sweet on the inside. I have photos later of Pyper eating one … showing the insides. Keith bought a bag for us to share.

This is a closer view of these cute little fruits. They look like they are out of a Dr. Seuss book.

Does anyone know what they are called?

More of the outdoor market … getting into an area where clothing and  craft items are sold.

More of the outdoor market.

Keith, walking around looking for edible treasures.

Another unique view of colorful fruits and vegetables.

These interesting goodies are homemade chocolate, Guatemalan style. This is chocolate that has been heavily roasted, peeled, and then mixed with three parts of sugar to one part chocolate. I have never tried one.

After finishing our ceremony at the hot springs in nearby Almolonga, we had to stop for one more errand … buying items in a hardware store at the center of Xela.

I love these machetes.

Exploring San Marcos

After returning from Xela, it was late and dark … but Pyper wanted to get more photos of those trumpet flowers.

This is the best photo we could get that night.

And another gate … at nighttime.

A Final Stroll

Early Friday morning, before taking a chicken bus to Antigua, Pyper and I took a hike to a nearby hill where the views are gorgeous. I mentioned this hill in a previous photo post.

On the way, we bumped into yet another sign forest. This one is on the second main north-south “road” that runs through the lower part of San Marcos. Along this path are several hotels, homes, and a couple of restaurants.

This is part of that same “road/path” as we walk down toward the lake.

And another section of this busy thoroughfare.

These trumpet flowers were much more photogenic during the day (and it was much easier to find them than it was last night).

A closer view from below. Again, I am calling them trumpet flowers, but I have no idea what their real name is.

More of the beautiful flowers, accented by purple ones.

This is more scenery that we pass as we turn back to the west and walk parallel to the lake.

Soon, we are climbing a steep trail on our way to the of the hill. This is looking back down at the lake just a short distance below.

I absolutely love this photo of the trees with the glimmering lake down below.

This is part of the trail leading up to the top.

Pyper, up on top of the hill.

Me, on top of the hill. That is San Pablo visible beyond the trees. These nice benches did not used to be here. Two years ago, during my Sun Course, I came to this very spot several times … but then it was overgrown with tall shrubs and weeds. It was a very private and isolated space to meditate.

Me, standing by a small firepit, with the lake and the San Pedro volcano in the distance.

Pyper, standing in the same spot.

A view of San Pedro (left) and San Juan (right). The San Pedro volcano is rising to the left.

Pyper standing by a large cactus that looks something like a Yucca. San Pablo is in the background.

I LOVE that tree behind Pyper. The dark-brown, peeling, bark looks magical.

A closer view of that same beautiful tree.

A large prickly-pear cactus on top of the hill.

It even has a little flower bud.

As time grew short, we started walking down the other side of the hill, planning to return on a trail that follows the lakeshore below.

This is the backside of some structures that belong to the Sun Course at The Pyramids.

A magical view of a beautiful tree, looking steeply down to the lake, with a Mayan man in a small canoe right in the center.

Another view of one of Pyper’s favorite mountains.

Walking down the trail.

The same man in his canoe, as seen from below.

Looking toward San Pedro (left) and San Juan, doing so from lake level.

Another similar view, but with the canoe and without the trees.

Final Visit With Keith

After leaving the trail, we hurry over to Keith’s so Pyper can say goodbye. He has a private session scheduled at 9:00 a.m., and we have to get there before he starts that session.

When we get there, Keith gives us a few more of those “Dr. Seuss” fruits. (I like that name).

Here, Pyper has removed half of the skin. The inside is a moist, slimy, sweet, white fruit.

“I like it … I lilke it,” Pyper giggles.

Then she sticks out her white tongue at me. Actually this is really the fruit before she bites into it.

And inside of that white fruit is this large seed … which is not very fun to eat.

Pyper and Keith exchanging a goodbye hug.

Me, Pyper, Keith, one of Keith’s workers, and Isaias (Keith’s worker for more than 8 years now).

After quickly returning to my apartment to grab our things, this friendly black dog stopped by to wish Pyper a “bon voyage.”

To Antigua And Beyond

First we catch a tuk-tuk to San Pablo. Then we catch a chicken bus (which we almost miss because the tuk-tuk driver left us at a stop that I did not recognize). The chicken bus is supposed to take us to Chimaltenango (it goes to Guatemala City, but we were going to get off in Chamaltenango).

After a couple of hours, there is a LOUD bang directly beneath Pyper’s seat. It soon becomes obvious that one of the tires blew out. The driver stops to check, all seems OK (There are double tires on the axel) and we keep driving for 15 minutes until we get to a tire repair place.

This is me sticking my head out of the bus window, supervising the workers below as they hurriedly change the tire on the bus. The old tire was totally destroyed.

Soon, we are back on the road. Suddenly, I notice a lot of smoke drifting down the left side of the bus. Soon the driver pulls over to check it out. Ten minutes later we drive again, and then the smoke starts again. An hour later, after receiving help from many people, we are told that the bus will go no further.

Soon, Pyper and I squeeeeeeeze (and I do mean squeeze) onto another already crowded chicken bus that stops to pick up extra passengers. As we pull into Chimaltenango an hour later, we cannot even see through the people to find our stop. We manage to get off the bus, but we do so one stop too soon.

Finally, we get an Antigua bus and make the final hour of our journey together.

After dinner, Pyper just has to stop to visit with Ronald.

First, we found a hotel. We got a room here, with two twin beds, for a total of 100 Quetzales (about $13.00 US).

This is the dead-end alley/street where our hotel resides. Our hotel is at the very end.

After getting our room, we go out and purchase a 5:00 a.m. airport shuttle ticket — for a small minibus that will pick Pyper up at 5:00 a.m., right in front of our hotel, and then whisk her away to the airport in Guatemala City. Once she is on that shuttle, I will not need to worry about her getting lost.

This is an old church that we pass as we stroll around Antigua (the old capitol city of Guatemala).

Motorcycles are a popular form of transportation here.

Pyper doing some final souvenir shopping in a local artesan market.

Buying a beautiful Mayan belt (for her traditional woman’s clothing). I love this beautiful Mayan woman. Oh … and I love the shorter one dressed in traditional clothing too.

For our final tourist stop, we head down to the central town square (zocalo) and visit in the dark while watching the fountains and the beautiful people. Several young school girls (who are studying English) stop by to have a chat. We laugh and giggle with them until we are so tired that we have to go back to our Hotel.

At 4:45 on Saturday morning, Pyper’s shuttle shows up early. I only get a few seconds to give her a quick goodbye hug before her van zooms away out of sight.

It has been an amazing giggle-filled week, but I am exhausted. First I try to go back to bed. When sleeping attempts fail, I pack up my bags and walk over to the market where I catch a 6:00 a.m. chicken bus headed back toward the lake. With a bus change in Chimaltenango, another at Los Encuentros, and another change at Solola, I finally arrive in Panajachel where I run to the bank for cash, purchase a few groceries at nearby stores, and catch a boat back to San Marcos.

As I sleep most of the day, a profound giggle lights up my heart.

I sooo needed to laugh again, and Pyper gave me the perfect opportunity to do just that. Come back soon, Pyper.

 Copyright © 2012 by Brenda Larsen, All Rights Reserved

Giggling Pyper Photo Adventures, Part 2

August 7th, 2012

This is part two of a collection of photos taken during the final week of April when my friend Pyper came to visit. These photos cover Tuesday, April 25 and Wednesday, April 26, 2012. Included are photos from Keith’s porch, and various areas of San Marcos, San Juan, and San Pedro.

As usual, the photos in this post are thumbnail images. Please click on any photo to enlarge it. The thumbnails leave much to be desired as far as colors and resolution — plus the thumbnails clip all of the edges. I use thumbnails for the post itself, because it gives people the opportunity to get a summary glimpse without downloading huge amounts of data for the high-res photos.

CLICK ON ANY PHOTO TO ENLARGE.

Chocolate Or Bust

Early Tuesday morning, Pyper and I have a private chocolate ceremony with Keith. Since our time is short, we decide to drink chocolate before walking out to Keith’s home.

 

In the little plastic container in my hand, I hold three ounces of chocolate. Keith buys whole cacao seeds/beans, being careful to choose those with the highest quality for our needs. Then, the beans are lightly roasted and hand peeled by the women from five different local Mayan families here in San Marcos. When we need more chocolate, those peeled beans are then taken to a mill in San Pedro, where they are ground. The mild heat from the grinding process heats the beans just enough to melt the cacao butter. The semi-liquid chocolate is brought back to San Marcos in five-gallon buckets, where a group of us spoon the chocolate into plastic bags. Once they are weighed and sealed, the bags quickly harden. When I need to use the chocolate, I chop up a one pound block into small pieces.

What I hold in my hand is three ounces of those small chopped pieces.

In this photo you can see into the plastic container much better. I have heated two cups of water to a temperature of about 120 degrees farenheit, just hot enough that I cannot keep my finger in the water. It does not need to be boiled. I am pouring the chocolate into the hot water.

A typical ceremonial serving is 1.5 ounces per person. Normally, you do not want to drink more than 2 ouinces, because chocolate is a natural bitter substance, and as those familiar with bitter substances know, if you consume too much, it can make you quite nauseas.

The finished product (in the mugs). With the chocolate melted in hot water, we then add spices. The contents of that blue plastic container are what we call “Panela” here in Guatemala. This “raw cane sugar” has different names in various other parts of Latin America. The sweeteners and spices are optional, but today I add panela, vanilla, cinamon, and a little cayenne pepper.

Off To The Ceremony

A beautiful view of the Atitlan and Toliman volcanoes, as seen from the top of the steep road leading down to Keith’s house.

Pyper standing at the top of that road, the same volcanoes in the background.

Looking down the steep road. At the bottom, you end up at the lake.

Me, posing at the same spot, but from a different angle. The San Pedro volcano towers above me.

Some beautiful flowers in Keith’s window.

Keith, sitting in front of his kitchen door as we prepare to begin the ceremony.

A papaya tree, filled with papayas. This tree is just a few feet from Keith’s porch, in the garden on the way down the steps.

An old armadillo shell hanging on the wall of Keith’s bodega (storage shed). I have never seen one here, but I am told that there are indeed armadillos in this area.

A clump of bananas hanging on one end of the porch. Keith has many banana trees on his property, and almost always has a large supply of ripening bananas. They are cut from the tree while they are still green. Otherwise, the birds would get into them and make a mess of them.

A cute little Mayan rug hanging on Keith’s bathroom door, at the far end of the porch.

Pyper and I, preparing for the ceremony.

And of course, we cannot forget Squeaky … Keith’s healer cat. I have seen Squeaky do some amazing things.

She adopted Keith a few years back when she showed up on Keith’s porch and asked if she could live there. Being as friendly as she is, she was probably raised by westerners who then abandoned her when they left. Keith resisted calling her Squeaky, but he finally chose that name because she literally “squeaks” at everything … especially when it is dinner time.

Time For Tortillas

After our private morning session with Keith, there is a special Tuesday-afternoon public ceremony. Since we do not have time to eat before the ceremony, Pyper and I quickly run into town to purchase some tortillas.

 

A view of the volcanoes while walking back in to town.

If you stand on the top of the steep road in previous photos, this is the road that leads from there, heading west in a generally winding way, back to the center of San Marcos.

This Mayan woman is making tortillas in the center of town. To her right is a wood stove with the fire going inside. It has a metal griddle for a top. In the large plastic container in front of her is a lot of freshly ground maize (corn). There is a complicated process involved to soak the corn before it is ground.

 

In this photo, she is molding a new tortilla in her hands. The tortillas they make here are about four or five inches in diameter, and perhaps an eighth of an inch thick.

In the background are tortillas (and other things) cooking on the wood stove. In the foreground are freshly cooked tortillas in the basket lined by a colorful cloth.

Pyper and I waiting for the tortillas. There are lots of booths lining the street this week because this is the annual week of “Feria” for San Marcos … the birthday celebration for the town’s patron saint, Saint Mark.

A small sampling of the vendor booths lining the main street of San Marcos.

This man in the front is selling snow cones out of his little wheel-barrow-like cart. Snow cones are quite popular here. In the back, you can see two more of the carts, one selling ice cream and the other selling more snow cones.

The vendor has a large block of ice and a scraper that shaves the ice.

This is the river/canal that runs back to the lake. There has been so much plant growth that the view is blocked from this vantage point. In the center of this photo, just below the volcanoes and behind the first building, you can find a delightful little Japanese restaurant.

Pyper’s Explorations

Part of the way through the afternoon public ceremony, Pyper decided to grab some personal time to integrate and rest. These are some photos that she took during her own little adventure.

In this photo she is back at my apartment, throwing her feet up on the hammock of the empty apartment next door.

Pyper, taking a self-photo in the hammock.

More playing with my favorite (and only) little aloe vera plant.

Men working in a vacant lot (left center) with the gorgeous San Pedro volcano in the background.

An interesting gate on the way down to the lake.

Pyper did not know it when she took this photo, but this is actually the gate to Isaias’s home. The clothes drying on the line belong to Isaias’s little son (almost a year old).

In this part of the world, most everyone does their laundry by hand and then hangs it out to dry.

Some beautiful hanging flowers. I think I heard someone call them trumpet flowers.

 

Another beautiful gate. This gate belongs to the house barely visible above the hedge. This house is owned by the same man who own’s my apartment. This is just down the street and around the corner from Keith’s house. The lake is less than 100 feet away from this gate.

And this is the lake as seen from a little public dock in the same general area. The San Pedro volcano towers on the right.

By that little public dock is a small two-story building. The top floor has a picnic table and a beautiful view of the lake. Pyper hung out here for a while.

A beautiful home as seen from the two-story building. I know a couple of people who rented a tiny apartment at the bottom of this house (a year and a half ago).

Now, the whole house is in danger of being consumed by the lake. If you look closely, you can see that the water is only feet away from the base of the house.

Pyper enjoying the lake views.

Pyper sharing energy with the San Pedro volcano.

Looking west-south-west from the small dock. The edge of the Toliman volcano is visible on the right. Panajachel is way beyond that penninsula on the left.

A Mayan man in his canoe. Note that he is standing on his feet. It is quite common for the people here to stand up in their canoes.

This is one of my favorite photos so far. Two young boys sit on the end of this dock, enjoying the lake and the views. The San Pedro volcano towers on the right. On the left is Volcan Toliman.

A gorgeous flower somewhere in this part of San Marcos.

The same flower from a different angle.

Another fascinating gate and door. In case you haven’t figured it out yet, Pyper loves the doors and gates here. As I go through these photos, I think I am developing that same love.

With perfect synchronous timing, Pyper just happens to return to Keith’s porch at the moment I am preparing to walk home. Soon, we walk home together.

Pyper loves this flowering tree. We later learn that it is a coffee tree in full bloom. I was a little embarrassed that I did not already know that.

Early the next morning, before beginning a new adventure, Pyper takes a photo of this beautiful banana tree right below my balcony.

The same tree, with less zoom on the lens. The building at the top of the photo is a little house on the property below me.

Exploring San Juan

Early Thursday morning, Pyper and I board a boat headed for San Juan. There are several “Women’s Textile and Weaving Cooperatives” in San Juan, and even though I have lived here two years, I have never been to see them. Our main goal is to give Pyper an opportunity to purchase souvenirs, but it is also a delightful tourist trip.

 

On the boat and leaving San Marcos (which is behind the small hill in the center). Note, it is on top of this small hill where Pyper and I hike on Friday morning … and where a month later Isaias will have his graduation fire ceremony.

 

There are two small towns between San Marcos and San Pedro. The first (traveling from San Marcos) is San Pablo. It is in San Pablo that I am able to take chicken buses to other parts of Guatemala, as there is a steep winding road filled with switchbacks that climbs over the mountain at San Pablo.

The second town is San Juan, which is very close to San Pedro.

In this photo you can see San Pedro. We are almost ready to turn in to the San Juan boat dock to begin the next phase of our journey.

Some of the mountains between San Marcos and San Juan.

Another view of San Pedro as we turn toward the San Juan boat dock. On the right is the base of the San Pedro volcano. In the far distance you can see the Toliman and Atitlan volcanoes.

The sign reads “Cooperative … Natural Dyes … Heart of the lake”. This is one of the shops on the way up the road from the San Juan boat dock.

On the right is an art gallery. We go in and meet the young Mayan man who is the artist whose paintings are on display (and for sale) on the inside.

One of the man’s paintings, showing all of the different colors of corn (maize) (red, yellow, blue/black, and white) — representing the four cardinal points on the compass and the four skin colors of humans on the planet.

 

This is the young artist standing in front of a few of his paintings. In order to get permission to take this photo, Pyper purchased one of his smaller paintings.

A couple more of the young man’s paintings. This style is very typical of local Mayan art.

And another painting with a style quite common to this area.

This is the second place we entered after leaving the boat dock in San Juan. We went inside and had a fun time talking to the woman who owns the shop. She is part of a cooperative, and is selling goods in her shop that she herself made. Pyper purchased many items from this beautiful woman.

When we passed this man, I really wanted to get a photo of a man in full traditional clothing for the area. I always feel silly taking photos without permission. When we asked if we could take his photo, he gave us permission … IF we paid him a Quetzal (about 13 cents).

Horses are not very common in Guatemala, and when you do see one, it is usually loaded with firewood like this one is.

A group of women and children hanging out around the entrance to a small indoor market in San Juan.

After passing by the market, we got another view of this man with the horse, carrying his firewood down a cobblestone street.

A beautiful mural painted on the outside wall of a business in town. If you look closely, you can see that the top of the mountain looks like the face of someone lying down. This is actually a nearby mountain called “The Nose” or “The Indian Nose”.

Another mural on a different building, this one showing an actual face on the mountain.

This is a view of the actual real mountain itself … along with a typical street scene in San Juan.

Coffee beans drying on a tarp on a sidewalk … right in the middle of town.

Pyper standing in front of yet another beautiful mural in town, this one depecting traditional Mayan figures with sacred symbolism. Please do not ask me to interpret.

San Juan is famous both for the artists and for their textile/weaving cooperatives.

After asking questions, walking a block, getting lost, asking more questions, walking a block, getting lost, and asking more questions, etc… we finally find one of the larger weaving cooperatives where many hand made fabrics and clothing is on sale. This is me inside the cooperative.

When we asked for a tour, this woman gave us a demonstration on how they hand make the cotton yarn, and how they dye it to all the beautiful colors — all with natural plant materials.

In this photo, she is spinning thread/yarn out of a clump of raw cotton. There is a large batch of cotton on the floor in front of her.

 

This is a close up of the same process. She is holding cotton (blurry) in her left hand and winding it up as thick thread/thin yarn onto the spool using her right hand.

This photo (you will need to click on it to enlarge it) shows the colors and the names of each plant/vegetable/spice/ or substance that is used to produce that color. These are listed in both Spanish and in English. Note, that a substance from the trunk of a banana tree is used to set the colors so that they will not bleed and fade.

Left side, top down: cherry, carrot, rue, coffee fruit, avocado pit, poplar tree bark, bougainvilla and guava, lobilia, guava.

Right side, top down: ???, coconut paste, curry, cochineal, basil, onion, anil and lobelia, charcoal, oak, …

 

In this photo, the woman is showing us yarn colored with a dye made from carrots.

The bowl that she is pointing to contains one of the dyes …

This is a “photo of a photo” — a photo hanging on the wall showing how the local women weave some of the fabrics. Each woman weaves fabric in her own home. All finished items are brought to the cooperative to be sold at a fair price.

An interesting (and very typical) painting that was hanging on the wall.

A wall that we passed by, showing many of the Mayan glyphs … Not sure what they represent, because there are far too many here for the Mayan calendar.

One of the glyphs painted on this same wall.

Off To San Pedro

It is easy to get a boat to drop you off in San Juan, but the boats rarely pick people up at the San Juan boat dock. Therefore, our only way to get home is by taking a tuk-tuk to nearby San Pedro, and then catching a boat from there. We have our tuk-tuk drop us off up on the hill, in the center of San Pedro.

Me in a tuk-tuk as we prepare to ride to San Pedro.

Looking at our driver as we zoom through the streets of San Juan.

Pyper and I in the tuk-tuk.

A better view of the mountain called “The nose” that I talked about earlier.

A very crooked shot as we round a sharp bumpy corner. If you tilt your head to the left and look just below the tree, you can still see “the nose.”

Driving through the narrow streets of San Pedro. Note the cobblestone street, the variety of colors, and the mish-mash tangle of wires crowding the sky.

Pyper getting off the tuk-tuk near the San Pedro market. The whole ride cost us a total of 10 Quetzales (about $1.30 U.S.).

Exploring San Pedro

We do not have time to do much, because we need to be on the 11:30 a.m. boat back to San Marcos (for another chocolate ceremony) … so we hurry around the center of town for a few quick photos.

 

Our first stop is the San Pedro market. Today is not a full-fledged market day, but there are many vendors here and there. In this photo, many women are selling their items right on the street, in the shade of the building.

A beautiful display of tomatoes. It is hard to find nice ones like this in San Marcos.

Inside of the market itself. Much of the market is closed today.

Our next stop is the large Catholic church at the center of town. This is the inside of the church.

A glass-sided coffin with Christ inside. I can only assume that this is what the San Pedro people carry through the streets on the Friday night before Easter.

The front alter of the church.

In front of the church is a beautifully landscaped plaza with a statue of “San Pedro” or “Saint Peter”.

Straight ahead is another view of “the nose”.

 

Looking back at the church and the statue of Saint Peter.

A look at buildings surrounding the church plaza.

One final view of the nose.

Back To San Marcos

Being in a hurry, we barely catch the 11:30 a.m. boat.

Glancing back at a lake-level section of San Pedro, near the boat docks.

This is me being totally ripped off by a very shrewd business-girl. The young woman on my left is going to San Marcos for the first time ever. She is carrying a wooden box filled with an assortment of nuts, and hopes to sell them at the Feria. I am craving cashews, and when she quotes me 50 Quetzales for a half pound, I readily agree. It is only later, when I do that math, that I realize I paid about $6.50 US for that half pound. Normally, I pay about $5.00 for a pound in the Panajachel market.

 

Pyper on the boat.

Pyper’s favorite mountain … she giggles every time she sees it. San Marcos is just to the right …

Our boat pulling up to a very crowed San Marcos boat dock … lots of people waiting to travel to Panajachel.

As we started up the path, Pyper noticed this little ant carrying a flower home to his sweetheart.

After quickly stopping at home, we rush off to Keith’s house for a Wednesday afternoon chocolate ceremony. This intersection by the orange wall joins four roads together.

Straight ahead (around the bend to the left, following the mountain) the road leads to the neighboring town of Tzununa. I walked there a couple of times two years ago. It took me about an hour round trip. I love the big tree straight ahead.

If you make a sharp left and go up the hill (on top of the orange wall) the road leads to the upper part of barrio uno (neighborhood one). I walked up there one day. It is very steep and very far … an exhausting climb. I cannot imagine living up there and making that climb every day.

If you turn right, you go down the steep hill that passes by Keith’s home and ends up at the lake.

If you turn around and go back, you end up in San Marcos in just under ten minutes.

This is a zoomed in photo of that large tree. I am not sure, because I have never gotten close enough to see, but I wonder if this might be a Ceiba Tree — the most sacred tree of the Mayas.

A Fun Visit

After a beautiful Wednesday afternoon chocolate ceremony, Pyper and I are just preparing to go out for dinner when Isaias and friends show up on our doorstep. Isaias brings his wife, his baby, his sister, and his best friend. We laugh and giggle for nearly an hour. I love these beautiful friends.

Isaias, his wife, and his baby. I am intentionally not saying their names … for privacy reasons.

This photo has the addition of Isaias’s sister, sitting right in the middle.

I love the giggles … I love my friends.

And now, we add Isaias’s friend, on the left, holding the baby. We were having a lot of fun taking pictures.

More laughing and giggling.

And another one …

I just have to include a few more photos of this gorgeous little boy.

Makes my heart giggle …

We’re number one …

And one more photo of daddy and his little boy.

Day Four Wrap-Up

Wow, the first four days of this trip have seemed like four weeks. We fit so many fun adventures into such a short time. This is the end of this “part two out of three” posting.

Tomorrow, I will continue with Thursday and Friday of this beautiful week — with a trip to Xela and the huge market there, and with final goodbyes in San Marcos and a trip to Antigua in preparation to get Pyper on an airport shuttle for Saturday morning.

Copyright © 2012 by Brenda Larsen, All Rights Reserved

Giggling Pyper Photo Adventures, Part 1

August 6th, 2012

On April 22, 2012, my dear friend Pyper flew all the way from Alasks to spend a magical week with me, enjoying chocolate ceremonies, exploring colorful cultural adventures, and best of all giggling, giggling, and more giggling. The following is part one of our adventure — an adventure that took us all over the highways, from the airport in Guatemala City, to Lake Atitlan, and to Xela — an adventure that found us riding chicken buses and chicken boats, exploring markets, women’s textile weaving cooperatives, and hiking here, there, and everywhere.

As usual, the photos in this post are thumbnail images. Please click on any photo to enlarge it. The thumbnails leave much to be desired as far as colors and resolution – plus the thumnails clip all of the edges. I use thumbnails for the post itself, because it gives people an opportunity to get a summary glimpse without downloading huge amounts of data for the high-res photos.

CLICK ON ANY PHOTO TO ENLARGE.

From The Airport To Beyond

On Saturday, April 21, I took a chicken bus to Antigua, the old capitol city of Guatemala, where I spent the night so I could be close enough to meet my dear friend Pyper at the airport. At about the same time, she began her long flight with many hops and layovers, leaving Juneau Alaska on her own adventure.

Sunday morning, I took an airport shuttle to the Guatemala City airport, arriving perhaps thirty minutes before Pyper’s plane landed.

Pyper took this photo as she circled above Guatemala City, preparing to land. As you can see, Guatemala City, the capitol city of Guatemala (often called Guate) is spread out, nestled in a high-mountain valley. Today was a particularly smoky day, as often happens in March and April when sugar cane farmers on the coast begin to burn their canes.

Shortly after landing, Pyper and I connected in front of the airport, giggled and hugged, and then took a taxi for a ten minute ride to a nearby bus stop where chicken buses from all over northwestern Guatemala congegrate.

At first we got on a bus that would take us straight to San Marcos (ten minutes away anyway) … but we soon giggled and switched buses, climbing into one that would instead take us to Panajachel. The ride would be about an hour shorter, plus the change of plans would give us a chance to do a little souvenir shopping before taking an hour-long boat ride to San Marcos.

This is the first photo we took together, with the two of us gigging in the front seat of a chicken bus (old refurbished school bus), seated right behind the driver.

Seconds later, Pyper is giggling as she spots several goats wandering around the street — right in the middle of Guatemala City.

This photo shows a view of a typical broken-windshield chicken bus while showing the goats out on the street.

Soon, one goat was checking out a large bag of garbage.

I can only assume this must be the goat’s owner. At least, I cannot imagine a perfect stranger walking up to milk one of the goats.

Oh wait, we are in Guatemala. Yes, I can imagine that.

One of the goats checking out a potentially-edible substance at the base of the steps for our bus.

This is the first of many photos that Pyper took as we rode in the chicken bus from Guatemala City to Panajachel. The ride is just under three hours, with many short stops to pick up and unload passengers along the way.

This is very typical architecture for this area.

Some beautiful pine trees along the roadside, with an old unfinished building hiding in the shadows below.

A very typical scene in the mountainous agricultural regions of Guatemala.

Following a tuk-tuk through Chimaltenango. Tuk-tuks are three-wheeled motorcycle taxis. you can usually squeeze three people on the back bench (if you exhale first) and often one person sits on a tiny wooden ledge on either side of the driver in the front seat. They can get quite crowded, and are very bumpy and noisy.

A beautifully decorated chicken bus driving by in the opposite direction.

Looking out the door as we stop to pick up a passenger. A Mayan couple stands on the street.

More typical countryside farms and homes.

And another one.

 

Very common building style. Unreinforced cuts in a hill to build a road. On top are wooden tree posts with corregated metal fencing. Behind are unpainted block structures, square and basic. The top of the roof on the left has rebar sticking up into the air, indicating that the owner plans to someday add another level on top when he has more money, time, or needs more space etc…

Road construction on the Inter-America Highway The right two lanes are currently unoccupied, while the left two lanes are two-way traffic. Note that there are no signs or barriers to prevent people from driving into the deep ruts that separate the two lanes …

Another typical farm view.

A very typical way in which hillsides are cut away when roads are built. It is construction methods like this that create all of the mudslides and rockslides that invariably happen during huge storms. But there is no money for more permanant building methods.

A beautiful farm on the side of a hill.

Another cut-away mountain along the highway … just waiting for heavy rains.

Another very typical scene in the populated areas along the highway. Note the political signs painted onto the hardened dirt wall.

A beautiful view of the Inter-America highway as it winds through the mountainous countryside of Guatemala.

After about two and a half hours of driving, we stop briefly at a place called “Los Encuentros”, which is the name of a highway intersection where the road to Panajachel and Lake Atitlan intersect with the highway.

Our bus stopped hear briefly, and many different vendors suddenly hopped on to sell various types of foods. When pyper saw someone selling French fries, she had to have some.

Me, holding Pyper’s yummy (well sort of) bag of French Fries, already drenched in ketchup. We shared them.

A view after we turned off the main highway and began to drive toward the lake.

Of particular interest in this photo is the Mayan man at the center, dressed in full traditional clothing. Not many of the men wear traditional clothing anymore. This man wears a skirt-like cloth over the top of very colorful pants. When it is warmer, some men omit the pants and wear just the knee-length skirt-like cloth.

Driving through a typical small community on our way toward the lake.

“The Great Viewpoint” restaurant. A small restaurant that we pass by. On a clear day, you would be able to see the lake below and several volcanoes in the distance.

 

Beginning to descend the hill, on our way to Solola, the capitol of this “departmento” — which is the name given to major regional division within Guatemala, literally translated it is “department”, and functionally in United States terminology, a department is like a small state, or a very large county.

Continuing to wind down the mountainside. Palm trees like this are not very common in this region.

More typical views as we descend through a populated regions.

Driving into “Solola” – the capitol city of the Departmento of Solola.

Looking through our cracked windshield at another Mayan man dressed in traditional clothing.

Another beautiful view of the colorful flare of small cities like Solola.

The Panajachel Market

After finishing our chicken-bus ride to the bottom of the mountain, all the way to Panajachel, we got off near the large indoor market. I took Pyper inside for a quick tour, but since it was Sunday, most shops were closed.

This photo is taken from the top of a little ramp that leads down into the market.

One thing that Pyper noticed almost immediately, is that many of the locals drink their soft drinks from glass bottles. They are much cheaper than the plastic ones, and much more environmentally friendly. Disposal of plastic bottles is a real problem in this part of the world.

A look inside one of the small stores that line the outside boundaries of this indoor market. They are very space efficient, and if you don’t see something, they might have it hidden in a cabinet or box under all the bulk goods stacked in the middle.

A small “carnicero” or “butcher shop” at the back of the market. In this part of the world, the meats are just hung out in the warm air.

A small fruit vendor on the street, just outside the market entrance. Yum yum … watermelons, papayas, apples, grapes, bananas, cantelopes, pineapples, oranges, mangos, pears, … and the list goes on.

 

Pyper grinning while satisfying her hunger on a slice of watermelon. The lady behind the counter cut it for her.

Exploring Panajachel

After leaving the market, we spent a couple of hours walking down the main street leading to the lake. Of course, Pyper stopped to buy several souvenirs, and the local vendors swarmed her with “good deals” as soon as they realized she had money with an intention to buy.

I am not sure, but I think this is either a health clinic or a doctor’s office. Pyper loved the playground equipment in front. This man is dressed very typically for a man not wearing traditional clothing.

Exploring the wonders of how different things are in this part of the world. I love this old gate with the beautiful flowers above. Note the street and the walls — all very typical of this area.

A typical street that leads toward the Panajachel boat dock. Note the reddish covers on the storm gutter on the left. During my first month in San Marcos, I slipped part way into one of these large open slots and skinned the side of my foot. Ouch :D

Another common site in some of the nicer areas — razor wire to keep people out. Burglaries are quite common here, given the disparity between the rich and the very poor.

Also note the mish mash of power wires etc… This is very typical.

Oh, and how can you miss that brilliant blue gate. I love it.

Another typical wall and gate with flowers to make it gorgeous.

 

Not the most flattering photo of me, being tired and dirty after two days of traveling, but I love the photo anyway.

Pyper’s First Boat Ride In Guatemala

After finishing a whirlwind walk through Panajachel, we caught the first lancha (boat) that would take us to San Marcos.

 

Tired but giggling faces — Pyper and Brenda.

Many nicer homes line the shores of various parts of Lake Atitlan — most owned by foreigners or rich Guatemalans. Some are even owned by famous movie stars or drug lords.

This is a typical fancy home along the way. This one, like many such homes, is threatened by the rising water levels.

Pulling into Santa Cruz — our first stop in this forty-five minute (average) boat ride. The orange building centered above the boats on the left is “La Iguana Perdida” (The lost Iguana) — a very popular hostel for travelers. The actual town of Santa Cruz is high up on the hill. You can see part of the town here.

All of the homes and businesses along here are being threatened by water levels.

Looking back after leaving Santa Cruz — beautiful mountains and homes.

The boat dock for a home high up on the hillside. This little hut used to be way above the water level.

Looking ahead, on the right, at the “Casa Del Mundo” … one of the most famous and nicest hotels on the lake. The lower levels used to have beautiful swimming terraces and a few rooms. Those areas are all under water. The upper areas are beautiful. I have assisted in a couple of chocolate ceremonies at this hotel, and I love it here … peaceful, beautiful views, etc.

This hotel is right before our second main stop, the little town of Jaibalito.

Some nicer homes right before the Jaibalito dock.

More beautiful scenery near Jaibalito. Of interest is the fact that the very center of this photo is the mouth of a flood channel — right where all of the beautiful flowers are growing. Two years ago, after Tropical Storm Agatha, this area was barren and dead, freshly torn earth covered by large rocks. What a difference two years makes.

This is what is left of what used to be a beautiful new boat dock in Jaibalito.

In this photo, our boat is pulling up to the present-day dock in Jaibalito. The town is up the hill … up the steps and beyond.

Another beautiful home as we approach our next stop at the town of “Tzununa”.

A view behind as we approach Tzununa.

The small town of Tzununa, up the canyon on the left.

Another interesting home between Tzununa and San Marcos.

Looking back toward Tzununa. Next stop San Marcos, only five minutes away.

Exploring San Marcos

A few minutes later, our boat stops and the San Marcos boat dock. We giggle as we pay the driver and begin to walk up the path.

Me, on dry land, just after leaving the San Marcos boat dock (which is just behind Pyper about 100 feet).

Pyper, skillfully taking a photo of herself, standing on the ground of San Marcos.

As you walk up the path toward town, this side path is the first main “road” that goes west, parallel to the lake. Just down this path is “Las Piramides Del Ka” — The Pyramids — where I spent four months of my life only two years ago. Further down this path are beautiful lake views.

The beautiful gate of a small kindergarten/pre-school facility … along the lower part of the path leading from the boat dock up into town.

This little sign forest is intended to reduce the confusion of tourists who do not know the area. If you ask me, it makes me a little psychotic, LOL. Most of these signs are pointing in the general direction of a path that will take you to another path, where, if see more signs and turn the right way, you might find what you are looking for.

I love it. This is about half way up the path from the boat dock to the center of town.

A few of the Mayan Calendar signs painted on the walls of the Hotel Paco Real, just below where I live.

One of the hotel rooms, less than 100 feet from my balcony.

Brenda’s Apartment

Yippee … we are home … at least at my home.

This is a hammock on the porch of the tiny one-bedrom studio apartment that is right next door to me. It is usually empty, so I can occasionally use the hammock.

 

This is the view from my apartment balcony, looking down at the banana tree, the Hotel Paco Real, and the path below — a path that leads down to the boat dock. The tree on the left is an avocado tree, as are most of the trees in the background.

My favorite little Aloe Vera plant, as documented in a recent blog titled “An Aloe Vera Adventure.”

This gorgeous plant is in full bloom, with beautiful orange blossoms.

The Path To Chocolate

Shortly after freshening up, Pyper and I walk out to Keith’s house. He is just finishing up a Sunday afternoon chocolate ceremony. I want to introduce her.

This is an empty lot with a gorgeous view of the San Pedro volcano — a view that we pass on the way to go see Keith.

After a ten minute walk, this is the steep road that leads back down to the lake. Keith’s home is the first gate on the left (you can’t see it from here).

A giggling photo at the top of the road to Keith’s house. After introductions, Keith goes to dinner with us. After fun dinner and conversation, Keith introduces Pyper to a little subconscious journeying…

Day Two – An Adventure In The Mountains

On Monday morning, April 23, Pyper and I prepare for our first big adventure. We are going to travel with my young Mayan friend Isaias, first going across the lake back to Panajachel, and later, riding chicken buses, minivans, and pickup trucks back up into the mountains to spend time with his teacher. Isaias is studying to be a Mayan Sacerdote (Priest). Many westerners might call him a Mayan Shaman.

We begin the day with a relaxing and restful morning at my house.

Yummy – a breakfast for two … oatmeal mixed with traditonally processed Guatemalan cacao (the name of the chocolate plant) … topped with fresh mango.

We are eating on my balcony, looking out over the beautiful view while listening to the chirping birds.

Pyper is fascinated by my gorgeous flowering aloe vera plant, standing on top of the table to get a birds-eye view of the flowers from above.

A side view of the flowers with banana and avocado trees in the background.

Another top-down aloe vera view.

Pyper having more acrobatic fun with my aloe vera.

Love that in-the-moment, playful, silly grin.

My daredevil giggling friend. It is not as easy at it looks. I am standing part-way down a very steep flight of sharp stone steps that drops about twelve feet. One slip and …

If you click on this thumbnail image and blow it up to larger size, you can see a couple of men with redish/orangish shirts, climbing high in these distant avacodo trees, harvesting avocados from the treetops.

These trees are a couple hundred feet down the path from my balcony.

 And We’re Off … First Stop Panajachel

 

After meeting at my house and having a delightful discussion about Pyper’s Mayan Calendar signs, we walk down to the boat dock to begin our journey.

The weather is beautiful today. Most of the smoke from yesterday is long gone. The volcanoes are spectacular.

By the way, this is Isaias.

Pyper and I on the dock … beautiful volcanoes in the distance.

Looking to the east. Panajachel is at the base of the far mountains.

And looking more to the west … a view of the San Pedro volcano. The town of San Pedro is at lake level on the far right.

This little duck is unique to Lake Atitlan. It used to be an endangered species and was only found in the San Juan area. After laws were passed to make it illegal to kill these ducks for food, they are beginning to flourish all over the lake. These ducks are black in color.

Our boat is here and it is time to board. Next stop, Panajachel.

One last photo from the San Marcos boat dock.

Isaias and Brenda in the boat. I laugh at the life jackets overhead. These boats can often have 25 to 30 people on them, and there are rarely more than 10 life jackets.

I love these Mayan canoes. It is quite the contrast to see such humble people, with so few worldly goods, going about their daily life in front of such western displays of prosperity (the rich homes).

Another beautiful view with a canoe added in for special effects.

More fancy homes along the shoreline.

Zooming along, almost to Panajachel. I love the bubbles of spray thrown into the air. Such a magical addition to a beautiful scene.

Just in case it is not obvious, left to right is Brenda, Isaias, and Pyper.

Giggling Pyper, having the adventure of a lifetime.

Looking back at our boat captain as we approach the Panajachel dock.

Turning the camera around to the front of the boat. The young man at the very front is the captain’s helper. He handles the ropes when tying up to docks etc…, and he collects the money at intermediate stops.

Of all the times I have been to Panajachel, I do not believe I have ever taken a photo of the Panajachel (Pana for short) boat dock. This is Pyper standing in front of our boat that just arrived. The San Pedro volcano is on the far side of the lake, behind the only tree. San Marcos is on the far side of the lake, behind the little pumphouse at the far right of the photo (not visible in the thumbnail image).

A view looking up from the boat dock, climbing a steep hill before hitting the streets of Panajachel. At the top of this hill are tuk-tuks waiting to take people where they want to go. I almost always walk. It is only a ten minute walk from here to the bank.

 

The young man with Isaias is another Mayan Sacerdote. He got on the boat in Santa Cruz, and Isaias introduced him to us. He seems like a beautiful young man.

Some very unique street art on the walls as we walk through Panajachel. Isaias has an errand to run, and we will eat lunch, before heading for the mountains.

An old church near the market. A little tuk-tuk in front.

Same church without the tuk-tuk.

Eating a yummy meal at the market in Panajachel, in a little “comedor” (kitchen). This entire meal of fried chicken, drink included, cost 15 Quetzales (about $2.00 US).

Off To The Mountains

After a chicken bus ride followed by a minivan ride, we end up in the back of a little pickup truck, headed into the mountains to visit Isaias’s teacher — a beautiful Mayan Priestess woman.

Isaias and Pyper, hanging on the the back of the pickup truck as we drive up the canyon.

Looking back at a small pueblo (town) where we boarded the pickup truck.

A house along the way.

Isaias and me in the back of the pickup. Is it me, or does he seem bored with me? LOL

A house along the way.

Beautiful scenery as we head for the hills.

A baby corn (maize) field with a typical farmhouse behind.

Continuing up the beautiful road.

Approaching the small community where Isaias’s teacher lives.

A beautiful home along the way.

Another home in the midst of farmland and beautiful views.

I love Pyper’s contagious smile … her inner child excitement is about to burst.

Isaias says hello.

I love the unique flavor of this beautiful culture … and their way of life.

Another magical mountain farm.

Some of these photos are slightly out of order. In this, we are back on the dirt roads. (I tried to systematically merge two sets of photos from two cameras).

I love these mountain scenes. What a peaceful and quiet place to live.

Almost there …

A young boy playing in the field (behind the telephone pole. Many of these children have never seen and/or interracted with anyone outside of their village.

Gobble gobble … did someone say turkey? The farm animals run wild and free here.

 

One final turn in the road … almost there.

At last … the home of Isaias’s beautiful teacher.

The Ceremony

Unbeknownst to any of us, Isaias’s teacher has decided that this training ceremony (his second-to-last before graduation) will take place up in the mountains. Soon, the four of us are hiking up a narrow trail leading up into the hills. We end up at a large rock that is a sacred ceremonial site from ancient times. Isaias chooses to do the ceremony on top of the rock, with a beautiful view of the valley.

Isaias’s teacher unpacks supplies for the fire ceremony.

Isaias and his teacher beginning to make preparations. The fire will be in the black charred circle in front. You can see the valley in the distance below. What a beautiful sacred space for a ceremony.

In honor of the sacred space, we do not take any photos during the ceremony.

A view of the valley as we begin to walk back down the trail after the ceremony is complete.

Walking back down the trail, nearing civilization. I love that cloud in the center background. Yup, that is me in the white pants, purple sweater, and wearing the backpack.

Looking back up the trail at a very interesting field. Lots of different rocks and piles of rocks.

It appears that a local farmer has decorated the trail near his house with plastic streamers.

I love this fascinating glowing cloud as it towers above the humble farm houses in the foreground. These people live in very humble circumstances. Yes, that is an outhouse in front.

One last view of Isaias and his teacher walking on the trail in front of us.

 Off To Feria

After finishing the fire ceremony, we again hop on the back of a pickup truck with a group of school youth. Isaias tells us that most of them have never seen a foreigner like us. Soon, we switch to a chicken bus … and then a tuk-tuk … arriving back in San marcos late that evening.

After a so-so meal of street pizza, Pyper and I are fascinated as we observe what appears to be a beauty-pageant of sorts. But it is not a contest, and is instead more of an exhibition, with women from all over this part of guatemala dressed in traditional costume with fascinating head wear.

This is a grouip of young women who were posing for someone else. I love their costumes.

Another view of the same women from slightly further away.

A few women with fascinating carved wooden crowns.

A few other women in their traditional clothing.

Two young women posing for photos.

 

But these are my absolute favorites. I love the intricately carved wooden crowns that these young women are wearing.

After the show is over, Pyper and I walk out to the street and enjoy browsing through a little of the town Feria (the annual town festival).

I bought a bag of these very interesting cookie-like, doughnut-like biscuits. The local people love them, and primarily use them to dip into their coffee. Not being a coffee drinker, I found them dry and bland, but I did somewhat enjoy them for the next week or so.

Temporary Wrap Up

And thus ends the first two days of my magical giggling journey with Pyper. Tomorrow, a whole new adventure begins, but for now, it is time to sleep (in spite of the very loud music that plays till early morning hours, blasting from the basketball court). I love Guatemala.

Copyright © 2012 by Brenda Larsen, All Rights Reserved

Playing Photo Catch-up

August 5th, 2012

It has been over nine months since I posted photos. For several weeks now, I have used moments of my spare time to organize and categorize all of my photos from the last year. Yesterday, I spent considerable time babysitting the uploading of 538 photos, the last few of which I finished this morning.

Wow, I had no idea I was so far behind. This first post will contain a little over 80 miscellaneous photo, including lake levels, a trip to the mountains for a fire ceremony, and a few photos from Easter. In subsequent days I will be posting several additional photo blogs, containing photos from the week when my dear friend Pyper was here in April, and photos from an amazing ceremony where my dear friend Isaias graduated his training and became a Mayan Sacerdote (Priest)

As usual, each photo here is a thumbnail image. If you desire to download, or see a larger, higher-resolution photo, you can simply click on the small photos and view to your heart’s content. Many of the thumbnail images are poorly clipped at the edges, and too small to see the details, so if you have the internet bandwidth, click away to see more details.

Lake Levels

As usual, the lake levels here at Lake Atitlan continue to rise during the rainy season. Usually, they rise about three feet in the rainy season and drop back down in the dry season, but the last few years the rising has far out paced the falling. I am fascinated by watching how the local people deal with the water levels. This first group of photos shows lake views, boat dock views, and river views …

This is a photo of how the boat docks looked just after I first arrived at the lake. This photo was taken on May 18, 2010. Note the dock in the forground with a nice covered waiting area (roof) on the left. This dock is not even finished yet, and is much too high above the water to use at this time. The dock we used when I first arrived is a lower one, behind this foreground dock — barely visible in the background.

I include this photo only as a reference. Pay particular attention to the roof and the foreground landscaping.

This photo was taken on Sept 13, 2010, still in the middle of rainy season. Again, this photo is just for reference. Note that the waiting area is already covered with water, and that the foreground is now completely under water.

This is the boat dock on July 2, 2011. The other dock with the roof and waiting area is no longer accessible. It is about 100 feet off to the left … Again, this photo is for reference.

This photo was taken on Oct 12, 2011. I am standing on the smaller dock from the previouis picture, looking toward the original dock with the roof. The roof is now barely above water at the upper right in the background.

Note, this photo was taken in the middle of an intense rainstorm that caused considerable damage throughout Guatemala. It was only a tropical depression, not even named, but caused the lake levels to rise considerably, and caused mudslides and road closures all around the area.

This photo was taken from the same place, with a zoom lens, showing the old boat dock room in the upper center.

This is from a similar angle, but taken from the land. The boat dock roof can be seen in the left-center background. The foreground is property from a local hotel. The fence is now engulfed by the lake, and a few of the hotel’s rooms are almost flooded.

A close up of the old boat dock roof, taken the next day on Oct 13, 2011. I love how the Mayan man is floating around in his canoe. I am not sure if he is fishing or searching for the tall grass that the people here use to make straw mats.

Yet another view of the same area, taken on Oct 13, 2011. All of this foreground used to be landscaped beautifully, with grass, flowers, trees, etc… Most of what you see was part of the small hotel by the lake.

Another view of the same general area, taken three days later on Oct 16, 2011. As you can see, the lake has risen another foot or two.

And another one, taken another three days after that, on Oct 19, 2011. The waters just keep rising. That roof is getting very close to the water.

This one was taken just a few days ago, showing the same general area. In the interim, we have gone through a dry season where the water dropped several feet, and now we have gone through the first part of a new rainy season, where the waters have climbed back to where they were, and now even higher. That roof is very close to the water, and we still have a couple of months worth of rainy season to go.

This next group of photos focuses on the little hotel by the boat dock. This first one was taken on Oct 13, 2011, and shows what the hotel fence (and first building on left) looked like as the water encroached on their property.

This is a close up photo, taken on the same day, looking over the fence into the hotel property. That building with the large window used to be a very nice hotel room. The area where I am standing used to be a nice garden.

This hotel is the “Posada Schumann”. I stayed here (further up) a couple of times during my first Summer in San Marcos.

This is taken on the lake side of the Hotel’s fence — the fence that is now under water. If you look closely, you can see several large boards floating between the fence and what used to be a little grass-roofed picnic area for the Hotel.

Just a couple of days ago (photo taken Oct 13, 2011) these boards were part of a raised pathway that allowed people to walk to homes a little further down the shoreline. Now, it is impossible to walk here …

The hotel room three days later (Oct 16, 2011). The water just keeps rising…

This is the boat dock on Oct 16, 2011. As you can see, water is splashing over the dock. When the winds are up, the dock is unusable. Right now, you can walk on it with bare feet (or with shoes if you don’t mind getting wet).

This is the same dock featured in the third photo from the top — that photo was taken on July 2, 2011, just three months earlier.

And the same hotel room as seen on Oct 19, 2011. It is almost flooding through the windows.

A few days after that last photo was taken on Oct 19, 2011, the windows were removed from the hotel room, and the hole was filled up with rocks and concrete.

This photo shows how the area looks now, on Aug 2, 2012. The concrete/rock wall on the right is the old hotel room, now completely flooded, with the windows removed and filled in. The hotel has turned that room into a base for an upstairs deck.

The room on the left, still having the window in place, is now beginning to get flooded as well.

This photo is on the dock, taken Oct 12, 2011, four days before the water was rippling over the top of it in (as was shown in a previous photo, three above this one).

This shows the narrow path that leads from down down to the lake and the boat dock. During a good rainstorm, this path becomes a river.

The hotel from previous photos is on the left. The lake is right at the bottom of this path, perhaps 100 feet away.

This is a view from the boat dock, looking to the right (west). This photo was taken in the middle of the early rains from the tropical depression. This whole area used to be beautifully landscapped hotel and private property. The woman who owns and runs the pyramids has a little home right behind the tall bamboo fence in the middle. Her home is in danger of flooding.

Another view of the dock on Oct 13, 2011 … just before the water covered it. This one shows a beautiful view of the San Pedro volcano off in the distance.

Another view from the dock on Oct 13, 2011. The San Pedro volcano rises to the right. It is difficult to see on this thumbnail image. The volcanoes Toliman and Atitlan are hidden in the clouds straight ahead.

The town of Santiago lies on the far side of the lake, between these volcanoes. You can barely see the town if you look closely below a nestling of little fluffy clouds .

The yoga retreat center where I often go to assist Keith with chocolate ceremonies, is up in a bay to the right, behind the San Pedro volcano — not in view from this angle.

Standing on the dock (Oct 13, 2011) looking back at the Posada Schuman. The fence is the same one that I showed in earlier photos, and the room on the right is the one that later has the window removed and a patio on top.

With the lake levels continuously rising, access to the dock was difficult. They had to build temporary ramps to cover the path that leads down to the dock so that you could keep your feet dry when accessing the dock.

As you can see from this photo, taken Oct 16, 2011, they were having a hard time keeping up with the water…

This is the dock on Oct 16, 2011. As you can see the end part is totally under water … and if you look closely, you can see that there is a dock on top of the dock. When the first one went under water, they placed boards on top of boards, trying to keep up …

Another view of the dock on the same day. It is hard to see because it is so flush with water level. The beautiful San Pedro volcano towers behind in the clouds.

By Oct 16, 2011, the hotel had built a new temporary path by their fence, giving local residents access to the homes further up the shoreline.

As you can see, it was a very makeshift path, using old tree trunks and tree branches to support flimsy wooden planks.

Another close up view of the dock on Oct 16, 2012.

Me and my bare feet, standing on the dock. My red toenails lasted from when I left Utah until sometime in December. Hmmm, maybe it is time to paint them again …

More makeshift attempts to provide access to the dock when walking down the narrow path that leads from town.

This was taken Oct 16, 2011 … and, as you can see, there was no way to get from here to there without getting wet.

This is another piece of property, right above the dock. I definitely would not want to build here now…

This is the boat dock three days later, on Oct 19, 2011. It is now completely underwater. I did not take any boats this week, so I do not know how people got on and off the boats. I can only assume that they got quite wet …

A view from the dock area, looking back up the path that leads into town. This is the reverse view of an earlier photo … taken Oct 19, 2011.

This is a present-day view (taken Aug 2, 2011), looking right (west) from the new boat dock. The San Pedro volcano is in the background on the left. The home of the woman who runs the pyramids is now clearly visible, just to the right of the huge trees in the center. The water is getting ever closer to her home.

This is a present-day view (Aug 2, 2011) of the new boat dock. This new dock was built this last winter, during the dry season. When it was built, it was quite a bit higher above water level than it is now. If the rains continue, it will likely be underwater by October. I guess we will just have to wait and see.

The San Pedro volcano towers in the clouds off to the right. If you look closely, someone is loading a bicycle onto the boat at the end of the dock.

These boats run during the day, every 20 to 30 minutes, between San Pedro which is off to the right at the right side of the volcano, and between Panajachel which is at the other end of the lake off to the left. On a normal day, it is about a 45 minute boat ride to Panajachel … but the ride can be done in 20 minutes if the boat does not need to stop very much. These boats are like buses. They stop at any dock where someone needs to get on or off…

Present day (Aug 2, 2011) view from the new dock, looking back toward town. The Posada Schumann (hotel) is on the right (and on the left too). The man at the far end of the dock is about to walk up the narrow pathway that leads toward town…

Another view from the new dock (Aug 2, 2011), looking to the right along the shoreline. If you look closely, you can see the owner of the Pyramid’s house (large pyramid-like green roof) and the stilts below it that are now in the water.

I love the little sign  for Hotel Aaculaax nailed to the tree in the left foreground. All of this area used to be dry land. (The Hotel Aaculaax (pronounced Ahh-coo-law-sh) is one of the nicer, but pricier hotels in town)

A little waiting area and sign forest at the end of the boat dock.

A view of the main bridge that runs through town, taken Oct 12, 2011 during the flash flood runoff from the tropical depression that came through the area. This is the same bridge that was completely covered by rocks during Tropical Storm Agatha when I was here in late May, 2010.

Looking upriver from the same bridge, during the same storm. If you listen closely, you can hear rocks thumping and rolling down with the wild currents.

View a little further upstream of the next bridge — a very small bridge. The white PVC pipe across the middle (over the river) is someone’s water supply. That is how things are done here. You cannot tell from the photo, but it is raining quite hard right now.

A closeup of the same bridge in the previous photo.

Standing on that second bridge, looking further up stream. If you look closely, you can see water splashing down on the left. If you view the full photo, you can see how the road to the left of the wall is now a shallow river too, and the runoff from that road is rushing down into the canal at the left edge of this bridge.

This is taken on the road by the river. There are several inches of water running down this road, turning it into a small river of its own. This runoff comes from other areas of the upper valley that do not direclty feed into the river further up.

Me, standing in the middle of the river on the road. There are only a couple of inches of water flowing right here.

I giggle everytime I wear these rubber boots, because women here do NOT wear boots. The young Mayan girls frequently laugh and point at me when they see me wearing these boots during a heavy rainstorm.

 

A group of local people standing on the third and final bridge, watching the flash flooding river as it rumbles below them.

This is the entrance to one of many such little trails that lead to homes nestled all over the river valley above this third bridge.

Much of the water forming the little river on the road is coming from trails like this — trails that have become little rivers of their own.

This is a view from that same upper (third) bridge, taken a while later as the rains temporarily stopped and the clouds slightly lifted. You can get a glimpse of the beautiful mountains above San Marcos.

That little river in the street caused its own minor damage. This is the same street that was covered by a few inches of water. The runoff got down in some cracks and undermined the base of this large gutter, washing away the ground soil, causing the entire gutter to collapse.

This is a photo from a local online newspaper — showing the aftermath of this large storm. This is a mudslide that covered the main Inter-America highway, somewhere between Panajachel and Guatemala City.

This is another photo from that same online newspaper, on the same Inter-America highway, showing one place where two lanes of traffic (where a bridge used to be) simply caved in and disappeared. I would not have wanted to be driving here at the time.

Trip To The Mountains

 On October 24, 2011, I took a trip with my dear friend Isaias, and three other young men who were on Keith’s porch. Isaias is training to be a Mayan Sacerdote (Priest) — but in English, we might refer to that as a Mayan Shaman.

At this point, he is just a few weeks into his training. Several of us are going to the home of his beautiful teacher to participate in a fire ceremony with him.

After riding in chicken buses, we soon find ourselves on little open-air pickup transports for the final leg of our journey (locations kept secret for privacy).

Me, sitting in the back of the pickup truck, with some pine trees in the background.

Me and one of the young men who went with us.

My friend Isaias and his beautiful young wife.

Another of the young men who went with us, sitting in the back of the pickup.

A typical view of the road as we make our way up the canyon to a remote village.

Two young boys walking along the road.

Passing through some “Maize” fields. “Maize” is the name for the tall variety of corn that the people of Mexico and Central America grind for making tortillas and tamales etc… This corn is a major part of their diet.

Nearing the town, where the road is a little better…

More maize fields.

Arriving in the remote mountain village. I did not take any photos during the ceremony, or afterward.

In fact, I did not take any more photos until Easter, 2012 …

Easter In San Marcos

The Catholic people of Guatemala are quite diligent and devoted in the way they celebrate Easter. In Antigua are world-famous Easter parades that take place througout the week leading up to Easter, but such parades take place all over Guatemala, even in the tiniest of villages. San Marcos La Laguna is no different.

In this photo, a couple of woman are preparing supplies for making what the local people call “alfombras” — which literally translated means “carpets”. They use plant materials (sawdust, flowers, fruits, etc…) to create beautiful designs on the street. The parade then passes over these alfombras.

In the background on the left is the corner of the basketball court at the center of town. My apartment is less than 100 feet below this location, just down the path that leads toward the lake.

 

One of the alfombras being constructed, right at the center of town by the basketball court.

Another view of an alfombra being created.  The little tienda (store) at the upper right is right on the corner of the path that leads down to my apartment and the lake. I buy water in this little store once (and sometimes twice) per week — costing about $2.00 US for a five gallon bottle of purified water.

Another view from a different angle. The local Catholic church is just ahead and to the right, below the rock wall. The wooden fence at the top left is the side of another store where I sometimes by cheese, or even a Snickers candybar.

If you follow this road as it bends this way and that, you will end up at Keith’s home in about ten minutes (standard walking speed).

More progress on the same alfombra. To put the view in perspective, the large green beams on the right are the corner of the basketball court. The little store (upper left center) is where I buy water, and the path that leads to my apartment begins just before the blue sign in the trees above and beyond the alfombra (right where the woman with the large bundle on her head is beginning to walk).

Another slightly different view from the same perspective.

The Catholic church in early evening as the faithful prepare to worship. Notice the elaborate decorations hanging on the wooden beams in front of the main entrance (under the huge tree, just right of the church).

Another alfombra being created just up the street, in front of a small store where I occasionally buy ice cream.

The same new alfrombra from the opposite view. The basketball court is at the top right, and the little store where I buy water is at the far right edge of the top right corner.

I admire how the local people get things done with the money they have.

This row of large rocks on the road is blocking traffic on the west end of town (not that there is a lot of traffic). Behind me is the center of town where the alfombras are being built, and where the parade will begin. Just to the right at the center, where the yellow curbs have a gap, is a small (and I mean small and narrow) road that bypasses the center of town). Just up this small road to the right is the restaurant where I always go for my favorite burger and fries.

Looking inside the Catholic church as the parade begins. The parade actually starts inside the church. In the Friday night parade (in honor of Christ being taken down from the cross) the men carry a casket in their shoulders with a lifesize model of their dead Savior inside the glass-sided casket.

I believe that the statue with the gold hair-dress-like costume at the back, top-right, is Mother Mary, who is caried by women.

Several young men preparing to march at the beginning of this Friday-night parade, two days before the actual Easter.

Men, carrying the casket of Christ on their shoulders. All of the smoke is from incense burners

Another view of the casket of Christ … this one with less light and glare.

 

And another closeup of the same.

The women carrying Mother Mary on their shoulders.

The first alfombra at night, with candles. Up until this point, many people had continued to add finishing touches — more beautiful flowers, watermellon slices, etc…

The same alfombra, just before the parade walks over it.

Night view of the second large alfombra, just up the street. People are scurrying to finish it before the parade arrives.

Another view of the second alfombra at night.

A group of young Mayan boys rushing to add finishing touches before the parade arrives.

A Favorite Photo

And last, but not least, for this photo posting … I wanted to add one of my favorite photos ever of Keith’s magical porch.

This was taken after a private ceremony that Keith and I facitated with a tour group called “Running Buffalo Journeys”.

I love the colors and lighting on the porch in this photo. Keith is the tall man, standing on the right, having his right arm wrapped around Aaron who is the leader of the tour group.

Angela is seated on the left, with the blue shawl. This was her first ever ceremony with Keith. Of course, you can see me seated on the right in the purple sweater.

Keith is standing in front of the kitchen door to his small house. The bathroom door is straight ahead at the end of the porch. The porch is half concrete (on the right) and half gravel covered by straw mats and throw-rugs (on the left).

And of course you can see Keith’s healer cat, Squeaky, resting on a green chair at the left.

You can see that the porch is quite small. it is hard to believe that one day in March, 2011 we had 35 people squeezed in here. Keith has plans this fall (2012) where he wants to extend this porch about ten feet further out to the left, and it will be about fifteen feet in the other direction. Only time will tell …

A Photo Wrap Up

This is the end of photos for today. In the very near future I will be posting 340 photos taken during my friend Pyper’s visit in late April. Between Pyper and myself, we took photos from all over Guatemala, showing a variety of scenery, roads, views of San Marcos, Panajachel, San Juan, San Pedro, and the market at Xela. I will probably need at least three photo posts to get all that in. Then, after that I will be posting another set of photos showing Isaias’s graduation. I can’t wait to get to it all.

Copyright © 2012 by Brenda Larsen, All Rights Reserved

A Shocking Suicidal Saga

August 4th, 2012

At just after 4:00 a.m. on Saturday morning, a loud rattling noise disturbs my peace. Someone downstairs is shaking the door of a local business – a business that occupies the space just below my apartment. Intuitions tell me it is someone trying to break in. Quickly, I open my window and shine a light down onto the sidewalk below – but my window is just around the corner so I see nothing. Immediately, all sounds go quiet. I can only assume that whoever it was has now left.

With bold confidence, I open my front door and step out onto my patio in pajamas and bare feet, leaving the door wide open and unlocked. Seconds later, I am scampering down my steps with my flashlight, walking all around my building in the dark.

“What was I thinking,” I giggle as I return to my apartment and walk through my wide open door. “If there really were burglars still hiding downstairs, I left myself vulnerable and wide open to assault and attack.”

Feeling no fear at all, I return to bed, meditating as to, “Why did I create this scenario of someone trying to break in downstairs?”

Intuitions quickly draw a metaphorical parallel of how the egos, opinions, judgments, and misunderstandings of others used to attack me, robbing and draining me of my power … and that I had needed to keep my walls high to protect myself from such “energy burglars.” Now, after an amazing ceremony yesterday, my instinctive behavior shows that I feel safe in being completely vulnerable, literally and metaphorically walking out onto the street in the middle of the night, barefoot, in my pajamas, and with the door to my valuables left wide open.

“Yup, that feels right,” I ponder as if peacefully drift back to sleep.

Basking In The Glow

Shortly after 7:00 a.m. on this final day of June 2012, I again hop out of bed. I am giggly and filled with peaceful energy. On a whim, I pull a single tarot card, and smile when it is the “Hangman” card – one of my favorites – a card showing a man hanging upside down on the gallows, but he is not suffering, he is peaceful and smiling, glowing with light.

“It really is an upside down world,” I ponder the profound meaning this card brings to me. “And the truth really is an undoing of the reality we have been taught … seeing everything through the glowing light an upside down perspective.”

To my delight, I then open my email and find a “Wisdom of Oneness #50” quote. The words profoundly back up my lesson from yesterday – a lesson teaching me to trust my own experience – to trust the inner guidance that resonates within.

“It matters less what you may or may not have read, or heard, or been taught as to what is the correct way to proceed on the spiritual path, than what your own experience has shown you to be so.”

“I am doing the best I have ever done,” I ponder present-moment feelings. “I had a beautiful meditation this morning, lasting nearly two hours, basking in continued magical energy from last night.”

As the delightful energy tickles my soul, I clearly know that I am in the infancy off this new experience … and I trust that this too shall pass … that more ups and downs of growth will certainly follow. But right now, I love where I am at.

A Pain-Burdened Child

As I further meditate, I soon begin to get in touch with that “nail-in-my-heart” pain – the same pain I was feeling yesterday – a pain that has repeatedly held a metaphorical meaning of my betrayal energy. Soon, the pain is again quite prominent.

At first, I attempt to move it out of me, and then, as I ponder that it might be related to ego, I try to get firm and heavy-handed with the pain. After neither approach works, I choose a third option – choosing to get to know the pain more intimately – as I had done yesterday – choosing to put myself in its shoes.

Over time, I begin to feel the pain in deep emotional ways. The pain is an angry child, hurt, betrayed, profoundly frustrated at having felt rejected, ignored, made-wrong, and fixed when he was not even broken.

“Wow, I was NOT broken as a child,” I ponder with clarity.

As I continue, I clearly feel my inner child’s pain at having been slammed for being an empath, for feeling the pain of others, often feeling slammed for whatever I did, feeling as if I could not do anything right.

“This victim child in me wants to be in a tantrum … to be pouting,” I ponder the clarity of what I feel. “He wants to be angry, wants to push people away, and he wants to be heard, understood, validated, respected, and allowed to express himself. He wants an apology, and will not allow anyone to help until he feels understood by mother, God, and anyone else who offers assistance.”

As I continue this meditation, I clearly understand why this pain-burdened child has repeatedly manifested stage-play reenactments on Keith’s magical porch, desperately causing me to re-experience every drop of this unhealed pain so that I will explore and learn to love myself – eventually taking me to the profound growth of yesterday.

A Work in Process

Not wanting to ignore or further repress this layer of emotion, I begin using the “reverse psychology” approach – imagining this inner child as literally throwing a tantrum, speaking angry words as he pouts.

Twice during this process, I sink into deep waves of emotional release, feeling intense anger, sadness, frustration, and betrayal. The release involves a great deal of intense dry heaving that seems to originate from the throat region – a metaphor that tells me I am now working with the child’s agonizing inability to express his truth.

“Wow, I am getting really close,” I begin to ponder as I feel inner resistance start to swell. “I want to share love with little Bobby, but I feel him pushing me away with deep resentment.”

Recognizing that I am at an impasse, I meditatively invite my Higher Self to get involved, asking that my Higher Energies work with this wounded child. I feel energies shifting and releasing, but intuitions also tell me that this is actually an ongoing “work in process.”

A Perfect Setup

Shortly before noon, I follow guidance and stroll out to Keith’s home with my USB memory stick. He has offered to share a few video files with me, and right now feels like the perfect time to see if he is available for such an endeavor.

Keith welcomes me with eagerness, briefly interrupting his work to copy files for me. The vibe is high, filled with positive and happy energy. But at one moment, when I mention my morning process, Keith only smiles, not responding or providing any hoped-for feedback. A few minutes later, I suddenly experience a deep rush of energy flowing through me. I am not sure if it is emotion or what – but it is strong and overwhelming, quite similar to what I felt earlier in the week when I experienced a river of emotional sewage flowing through me while learning to remain nonattached.

“Well, I need to go check on the workers now,” Keith unexpectedly speaks as I am about to ask about this river of energy that is suddenly overwhelming me.

Keith quickly excuses himself, and I begin to walk away feeling somewhat puzzled by my swirling emotions. Rather than listening to inner voices that are suddenly demanding that I need to feel rejected and abandoned, I smile and realize that everything is perfect – that I need to work with this energy on my own. It is the perfect setup for my God drama – another scenario to test me, to give me an opportunity for a new choice.

As I walk home, I meditate with every step.

“This is that inner child’s pouting energy wanting to create problems again,” I ponder. “I want to let this emotion run through me without attaching to it, without identifying with it.”

A Glee Marathon

As I later sit in my living room, I clearly recognize that I am experiencing very familiar emotions from the past – emotions of feeling deeply alone while in the presence of someone else. As my roommate Sufi scurries around my apartment, such childhood (and adult) feelings rage through me.

“If I was totally alone I would be profoundly happy,” I consider the absurdity of it all. “I know that what I am again experiencing is childhood emotion from a reality in the past … but it feels extremely real.”

With the childhood emotional rivers running so intensely, I surrender to an inner voice that whispers, “Just spend the rest of the day watching more episodes of Glee.”

As strange as they seem, I have learned to pay attention to such “hunches.” Invariably, the experience turns out to be a part of my process. It seems as if I am deep in the throws of exploring and experiencing another river of childhood and teenage emotions as they surface and flow out of me. Watching more videos feels like the perfect way to connect more with such emotions.

I have been on a marathon of sorts lately – a marathon of watching the first two entire seasons of the television series “Glee” and I am in the middle of season three. As fate would have it, my long day ends with episode fourteen of this season.

I could never have foreseen what was about to happen next.

The Setup

As episode fourteen unfolds, the general storyline is as follows. A young high school football player (David) is deeply struggling. He is gay, but remains tightly sequestered in the closet, feeling terrified of the thought that his classmates might learn his shameful secret. In season two, David had bullied and harassed another gay student from the glee club – doing so until that other young man eventually figured out David’s secret.

Now, in season three, David is in a new school, desperately trying to keep his personal horror to himself while simultaneously attempting to figure himself out in other ways.

As I watch this part of the video, I deeply relate. I am not gay, but being transgendered and trying to hide that fact carries almost identical emotions. I too was ashamed of who I was, desperately denying it to myself and to others. While struggling to figure myself out, I did things that, in retrospect were quite reckless and stupid – but I did them from a place of genuine struggle in my heart. It was the only way I could figure myself out while hiding in a culture that was not ready for someone like me.

Suddenly, one of David’s football teammates observes David in a restaurant, engaged in animated conversation with the gay glee-club boy from his former school. The football teammate puts two-and-two together, and figures out that David is gay too.

The next day, as David walks into the football locker room, the word “faggot” is written in large letters across the front of his locker. All of his teammates are standing around with huge taunting grins on their faces, waiting to find pleasure in David’s horrified and humiliated reaction.

Unexpected, Overwhelming Emotions

The story takes a very painful twist. After a week of ridicule by former friends at school, harassment on the internet, and of being told by his mother that he could be “fixed”, David is distraught, having given up on life, terrified to go on, knowing that life as he knows it is over.

It is at this point of the video that I begin to get unusually emotional. At various points in my life, I have been exposed to suicidal situations – having experienced such suicidal feelings myself, having been around others who threatened suicide, and having been exposed to stories of those who actually did kill themselves. In all cases, while emotions were strong, I had never lost myself in the agony.

The camera shows David in his bedroom, crying as he lays out a nice suit of clothes. Then he grabs a belt in his hands, and glances up at the rafters above him. By now, I am bawling in excruciating emotion, as I know what is happening. I thank the scriptwriters for omitting footage of the actual suicide attempt. But even more agonizing are the emotions I feel as I observe David’s father, sobbing in terror as he holds his son’s seeming-lifeless body, all dressed up in his nice clothes. Luckily, David fails in his attempt, and after a long stay in the hospital, he finds healing, and a new start.

As I watch the scene showing David’s father, sobbing while holding his son, I completely lose all composure, melting into a blubbering mess of excruciating, overwhelming, agonizing pain. Such intense unbearable pain makes no sense. Such heart-crushing distress seems extremely out of context with the healing through which I have already passed.

“Where is this profound and unexpected emotion coming from?” I ponder with confusion as the emotions overwhelm me.

Unfelt Agonizing Pain

Suddenly, I realize that what I am feeling is my OWN “never-before-expressed” emotion – emotion from age sixteen and seventeen – emotion that I never permitted myself to even feel. At that time in my life, I was drowning in hopelessness and futility, but I felt compelled to present the external image of a “happy, young, righteous-and-religious boy,” an Eagle Scout, a brilliant student, a hard worker, etc…

And at that age, other than a few clues that my parents were aware of, absolutely no one knew of my gender struggles. I could not allow myself to feel or express such emotion. If I had, I would have been exposed, found out, and further subjected to relentless ridicule. As a result, the emotional side of my heart became a rigid repressed stone box. I did not allow myself to feel or express any emotion in a way that someone else might witness it. Doing so was akin to my worst nightmare.

Naïve Curiosity

But the story goes deeper than that. The following story is one that, until now, I have only shared with perhaps three or four people. To this day, these events continue to be a source of deep inner humiliation and shame. Perhaps the only way to eliminate that shame is to share it with the world. Maybe no one will read these subsequent words … or if they do, they will see through personal judgment and connect with the innocent heart of a naïve and frightened sixteen-year-old boy.

If shaky memory serves me, I was a junior in high school, being one of the nerdy, less-popular boys. I competed that year on the high school wrestling team. It was one of my ways of trying to fit in – a way to appear macho so that no one, including me, would suspect my shame. For the most part, such masquerading was successful, and I managed to hide out, under the radar of my classmates.

But one day, as I walked through the gymnasium while taking a shortcut to the small wing of the building where my locker was, I passed by the back door of the girl’s locker room.

At the time, I was struggling with intense curiosity about girls’ bodies. Being the youngest child in a sexually repressed culture, I had no exposure to girls’ bodies, other than knowing that a crazy and strange obsession existed inside me – an obsession of wishing – with all my heart – that I actually was one of those forbidden girls. This insane-and-unasked-for obsession made no sense to me. I felt dirty and evil, knowing that I would surely go to hell if I did not somehow cure myself. My curiosity was not sexual – it was innocent, genuine, childlike body-curiosity.

As I walked by that locker room door, deeply repressed parts of me began formulating other plans.

A Horrendous Discovery

Within a few weeks, that naïve, curious, wishful part-of-me became so obsessed and consumed, that I seemed to have no other conscious choice. A very determined part of me was going to stop at nothing to discover what girls’ bodies were like.

I brought a camera one day and hung around until the school was nearly empty. With shame and trepidation beating wildly in my heart, I walk carefully to the back door of that girl’s locker room, taking great care to be sure that no one sees me. The back door is propped open, and a short flight of steps descends downward, ending at a metal divider that blocks the view for passers-by. But if I venture down four or five steps, the bottom few steps have a clear and unobstructed view through a gap below the divider. I dare not put my face down there for fear of being seen, but very carefully and quietly, I place my camera on the bottom step, aim it into the locker room, and snap the shutter button … once … twice … three times.

“Hey?” I suddenly hear a startled gasp as the lone girl inside suddenly hears the camera clicks.

In utter terror, I grab my camera, run away before anyone sees me, hurry to my locker to hide the evidence, and reach inside to grab my schoolbooks.

“Oh no,” I cringe and gasp with horror. “I left my books at the top of those locker room steps.”

Paralyzing Terror

To make a long story short, I swallow my pride, feeling quite desperate, and sneak quietly back to the girl’s locker room. I breathe a sigh of relief when my schoolbooks are still there. I quickly grab them and follow an instinctive hunch to take another shortcut to freedom, quickly walking up some stairs and proceeding through a large hall above the locker room.

Terror suddenly paralyzes me when, as I walk through that hall, an unhappy girl approaches from the other side. This popular cheerleader angrily calls out my name, stops me in my tracks, and proceeds to search my pockets for that horrible camera – a camera that is safely hidden in my locker.

But the palpable, pale-white, terror-filled look on my face gives me away. I cannot keep a secret.

To make a long story short, on the very next day I find myself sitting with my parents in the principal’s office. I have never had a more awkward moment with my parents … but for some reason we do not, and never do, speak about the events of that day. As I plead for leniency, the high school principal honors my history as a good student who has never been in trouble, agreeing not to suspend me, and not to add any commentary to my school records.

I have dodged a huge bullet at the academic level, but am just beginning to eat humiliating crap at the social level.

On the very next day, as I walk through the cafeteria, a popular football player approaches me, calls out my name and jeeringly asks, “Hey, have you taken any good photos lately?”

A Hidden Death Wish

I thought I had committed social suicide after that age-twelve swimming pool incident – the one I recently wrote about in “Sordid Social Secrets” – but that was child’s play compared to what is happening now. This time, people really are talking and gossiping at school. For months, I completely avoid the school cafeteria and all other common hangout areas of the school, hoping that the harassment will eventually end. I go to class, ignore the gossip, and do my best to isolate myself from the social horror.

I have no idea how far the gossip spreads, but I no longer trust anyone, hanging out only with other unpopular nerds who are kind enough to still speak to me. I continue to wrestle on the Varsity Wrestling team during my senior year, and I even participate in an honor role club, but for the most part, I have destroyed all hope of ever being normal. I have no actual friends … only acquaintances.

I hate myself … I loathe myself … I am humiliated … I feel a profound sense of futility and hopelessness … I am the social pariah of the century … and I clearly believe that my life is over. I want to hide from God and parents … I cannot let anyone know what is really going on with me … I am doomed … there is no hope … and I JUST WANT TO DIE.

But I have a happy image to uphold. At church, everyone believes I am still this perfect young man. I must act proper, righteous, and present an appearance of perfection.

In this cloud of perfection, I am not allowed to explore my pain or to feel my emotion in any way. If I were to do so, too many questions would be asked. I bury every last drop of that pain under layers of white fluffy masks for my family and religious community to see.

Suicidal Agony

And now, back to the story of Saturday night, June 30, 2012.

I sob while watching young David numbly prepare to commit suicide. Then, the agonizing sobs skyrocket as I later observe David’s father panicking and sobbing with horror while holding his son’s limp body.

I never fully understood it until now, but that teenage boy who was me – that lost and transgendered sixteen year old – that younger me who had also been horribly harassed at school – really did want to die – and I mean really, really, really wanted to die. But in my religious beliefs, suicide was the worst possible sin. I could not allow myself to go there.

(Even now, as I write about this experience in early August 2012, I uncontrollably sink into yet another layer of profound emotion. This emotion runs deep, and it seems that writing and integrating has opened yet another layer of unfelt, unreleased emotional pain. Now, after about ten minutes, the emotion is settling. Perhaps I can resume my writing.)

In agonizing clarity, I begin to remember the suicidal emotions of my sixteen-year-old self. I push the “pause button” on the episode of Glee and spend much of the next hour, allowing myself to finally feel and experience that forbidden emotion, losing myself in the most intense, deep, gut-wrenching, dry-heaving, sobbing emotional release that I have ever before experienced.

“Ouch,” I ponder through the horrifying emotion, “this suicide thing is real, overwhelming, and intense. How could I have forgotten this? It feels like it happened yesterday!”

Finally, as the emotion fades, I find the courage to push the play button, watching the remainder of Glee, season three, episode fourteen. Several times during the final part of the episode, I again burst into additional rounds of emotional release. When it is all over, being a glutton for punishment – being determined to feel this emotion to the core – I watch the episode again, once more going through additional rounds of intense release.

Pandora’s Box

Saturday night, as I later go to sleep, I am almost in shock as the emotions continue to flow. I clearly recognize them as being very real emotions from a past reality – and I do my best not to identify with or attach to them – but these emotions are intense and overwhelming.

The emotions are so real and intense that, if I did not know any better, I would actually believe that I want to kill myself – today – in this present reality.

Early Sunday morning, July 1, 2012, I wake up at 2:00 a.m. with feelings of intense social futility drowning my life force. I want to isolate and ask my roommate Sufi to move out. I absolutely hate myself and I loathe the spiritual path I am following. Overwhelming suicidal feelings are pulsing through my veins.

“This is just an unhealed teenage reality that is flowing through me,” I repeatedly reassure myself.

But this reality is literally ‘running the show’ right now. The lid to Pandora’s Box has been removed, and those dastardly emotions have been released. All hell seems to be breaking loose.

An Unstoppable, Frightening Reality

These unfelt and unhealed emotions are in full-fledged self-defense mode, trying to take me down with them. Right now, those emotions are winning. I struggle through the remainder of the night with little to no sleep.

Finally, as I begin to feel some energy at around 8:00 a.m., I crawl out to my computer to take a few notes. As I do so, additional rounds of sobbing, self-hatred, futility, and hopelessness viciously consume me.

Only a tiny thread of observer stands between me and an absolutely knowing – a knowing that impending self-destruction is inevitable – that there is no point in proceeding with my journey in San Marcos – that life, as I know, it is over.

“It is time to pull up my roots – to bail and run,” I ponder the overwhelming feelings. “Right now I really am that distraught sixteen-year-old-me. I do not want to live. I want to just give up.”

What is frightening is that the emotion simply will not stop. It is an entire reality – an extremely convincing reality – a reality that has me feeling paranoid and projecting a feeling of rejection and abandonment onto everyone and everything, everywhere around me.

A Paranoia Projecting Pariah

Finally, at 10:18 a.m., having fought the overwhelming feelings to a point of utter hopelessness, I follow inner guidance and walk out to Keith’s home.

“I know you are busy preparing to leave,” I apologize to Keith for bothering him, “but I’m having a really hard time, and I wondered if you might have any time later today to talk …”

“Come in and sit while I work on my computer,” Keith quickly interrupts me.

“I just want to make sure I am not scamming myself or something,” I blurt out after quickly explaining what is happening to me.

“I get that you are doing the same thing you always do,” Keith tells me.

Immediately, the hopeless teenage-pariah-loser in me hopelessly replays what happened yesterday – making it real. I imagine Catherine slamming me about how I always just cry and lose myself while looping in silly emotions that are not taking me anywhere, blah, blah, blah …

“You are going through another layer,” Keith finishes his thought.

“Oh,” I ponder quietly. “Keith is simply agreeing that I am going through another deeper layer of emotion.”

I deeply appreciate Keith’s loving vote of confidence.

God Drama Projections

But as I sit in silence while Keith continues to work on his computer, I feel quite stupid and out of place. I know Keith invited me in to meditate while he holds space for me … while he keeps working on his computer. But we are not speaking at all, and I feel like I am an unwanted guest that is invading his space. Again, my teenage social-paranoia starts to take over.

I sit meditating for perhaps thirty minutes while desperately attempting to balance myself. Finally, I do feel a small amount of light energy – of slightly comforting energy. Nonetheless, I remain deeply unstable.

It seems that I am projecting teenage emotions of God-drama rejection all over Keith, and I totally feel as if I am just wasting my time – that Keith is not really interested in helping me today. Finally, feeling a tiny bit more stable – I stand up and walk toward Keith’s kitchen door.

“Thank you for your help,” I tell Keith as I start to walk away.

“You should stay longer,” Keith quickly interrupts in a firm tone. “I don’t think you are done yet.”

Love Equals A Covert Attack

In my present state of suicidal struggle, I am shocked that Keith even cares. I did not feel wanted, and had set myself up for rejection. Keith’s firm guidance to stay clearly puts my teenage projections into context.

Again, I sit and meditate – doing so in complete silence – still having no interaction with Keith.

Gradually, I begin to imagine being my sixteen-year-old teenage self – visualizing myself in every agonizing scene of that terrifying lifetime stage. First, I realize that my mother would have been about the same age as I am now.

“Wow, that really puts the age difference between my mother and I into profound perspective,” I ponder in shock.

One by one, I feel myself in every scene of those frightening high-school times. In each scenario, I feel emotions of intense paranoia, painful projection, horrifying rejection, agonizing terror, and a desire to isolate and push everyone away. I could not share my feelings with another living soul – and the very presence of any loving adult, friend, or family member – the very presence of any love at all – was a dire threat.

“If I let someone love me, then they would get close enough to see the absolute freak that I am,” I ponder how that young boy felt. “The realization is eye opening. No wonder I have pushed away love of any kind. I saw it as an invasive threat – one that would expose my sins, causing further rejection and humiliation. I believed that my very survival depended on blocking out all invasions of outside love – love that I absolutely knew would be a covert attack on my shameful privacy.”

Even now, sitting and meditating in Keith’s kitchen, deep suicidal feelings rage through me in convincing fashion.

Painful And Believable

“How are you doing?” Keith finally asks after more than an hour of complete silence.

As I try to share details of my meditation, another wave of emotion surges for release. Speaking between the sobs, I share the whole story with Keith – discussing details of all the suicidal feelings that were repressed and never felt.

Again, Keith returns to his computer and I return to mediation.

“This is happening to show you how many deep and painful layers of emotion that you still have inside of you,” Keith briefly interrupts the silence. “You have to go into them and feel them in order to release them. You were never allowed by others – and you never allowed yourself – to feel those emotions in your youth. They were just repressed and suppressed. You must feel them now in order to release them.”

As Keith returns to his computer, I finally give myself permission to feel more deeply, quickly sinking into more tearful sobs. A minute later, I begin to punch my fists into a nearby cushion. I am desperate to get this repressed emotion out of me. It is poison. I do not want it in me any longer.

Sobs quickly become agonizing dry heaves mixed with coughing and a sensation of choking. Eventually, as the emotion subsides, I sit feeling numb – still experiencing the utter futility of this teenage reality as if it were real in the present day. I absolutely know that my life today is over. It is painful and so believable.

From Darkness Into Light

“Keith,” I finally interrupt the silence. “I am terrified right now. I once suppressed this emotion, covered it over, and built a life on top of it. Now that I am processing into it, I am in so much pain that I am terrified that I will get forever lost in it … that I will lose my life. I cannot function. I am projecting this nightmare onto present-day reality. It does not make any sense, but it is real … and I am paranoid … and it is frightening me.”

Keith listens intently, but then returns to his computer, without further engaging my process.

I sit in this meditation for a very long time. Finally, I feel a glimpse of hope that maybe I can connect to that fleeting light and love. I begin to invite Higher Energies to assist me, to love me, and to hold me.

After perhaps fifteen minutes of focusing on the light, I suddenly realize that the emotions have literally lifted.

I almost have an external giggle (not quite) as I ponder the amazing difference. I no longer feel any of the hopelessness or suicidal feelings … not even a tiny drop of them.

I am literally in shock at how one emotional reality from the past can, in one moment, be so overwhelming and all consuming – and then in the next moment it can just be gone, having no power or influence whatsoever.

For six months I have been playing with allowing past emotional realities to run through me – and once or twice have even transmuted them in profound ways without having to feel them until the bitter end. But what happened today is the most profound reality shift that I can possibly imagine. I was so deep in the suicidal reality that all hope was literally lost – and then in a period of perhaps fifteen minutes that entire reality simply transmuted and vanished.

It is a profound experience – one that I will never forget.

Blown Away And Grinning

I sit in this beautiful space of light and peace for at least another hour while Keith continues to work on his computer.

I feel shocked by the amazing transformation. Exhaustion consumes my body, and a headache buzzes in my third eye chakra, while my crown fills with loving energy. As far as my physical body goes, I am a nonfunctional blob right now – but in my emotional body, I am dancing in the clouds, delighted at how the overwhelming “filters of doom” have simply vanished.

Finally, at around 2:00 p.m., after nearly four hours of meditation, I stand up.

“I think I am done,” I tell Keith with a huge grin on my face. “Thank you so much. I am blown away by the transformation … and all you did was occasionally listen, offer brief feedback, and hold a powerful space for me.”

After going out for a burger and fries to celebrate with my inner children, I spend the remainder of the day either napping, or finishing off the final seven episodes of season three of Glee. My body is still drained, but I have not felt this good in a very long time.

Lessons Learned

Late Sunday evening, as I prepare for bed, I take a couple of hours to reflect on one of the most profound experiences of my life. My heart swells with gratitude. I am actually smiling on the inside. I cannot describe how much lighter I feel.

Prior to last night, I had no idea that emotional regressions could consist of entire projected realities – and that they could have such an incredible and overwhelming pull.

“Keith played it beautifully today,” I ponder. “He invited me into his home as a sign of respect and honor – but he did not validate or enable me in a disempowering way. He kindly acknowledged that I was processing another layer, gave me permission to go there, and held space for me. Through it all, he did not push, pull, or do anything for me. He simply trusted that I knew what to do and held space for me.”

When all is said and done, I learned several lessons. First, I have a new respect for the power of repressed emotions, and why it is important to go into them before they can be released. Higher energies can only transmute them after I go into them, and after I learn all of the reasons as to why I put them there in the first place.

Second, I clearly recognize that each of us is on our own schedule, engaging in our own unique journey. The only thing I need do is follow my own process while allowing others to be uniquely where they are. I would not wish what I have gone through in the last twenty-four hours onto anyone – but wow, am I ever grateful that I went through it myself (at least I am now that it is over).

Finally, I gained more profound understanding of my personal version of the God drama. What I experienced today was real. I wanted nothing to do with any source of love – earthly or divine. All love was a threat, something that would attempt to fix and expose me, something that I felt an imperative to reject. At that stage of my life, blocking out love was literally a form of self-survival – and those protective shields were never lowered. That would have left me far too vulnerable.

And after feeling so suicidal and so betrayed by life, no wonder the God-drama demand for an apology remains so elusive and powerful.

Intense Respect

“Are these horrifying feelings gone forever?” I ask myself.

I do not know. Only time will tell. I do know that they are gone for now, and yes, it feels wonderful and amazing to feel the inner transformation – the profound difference between now and earlier this morning.

I have a newfound hope for life and a giggle in my heart. For once, I even feel a glimmering sense of budding joy and new possibilities in my life.

I am no longer fighting my process. Last night I surrendered to an insanity that I feared would swallow me. And today, I somehow came out different. That old reality literally dissolved, as if by magic – and it was magic – divine magic.

Last night, I experienced a very real “dark night of the soul” … one that, in all aspects, literally took me to the core of that original suicidal reality from forty years earlier.

I have an intense respect for the awesome power of emotional realities – an undeniable respect at how a reality from the past (or from another past-life) can flow with such realism, and then transmute in a heartbeat with the assistance of light, love, self-love and surrender.

Just like that ceremony on Friday, I deeply trust my inner knowing telling me that I need to go through every one of these layers – agonizing tears and all. They are my teachers, my saviors, and my healers.

Giggling Possibilities

As I write about this beautiful experience, now five weeks later, I feel guided to share a few quick updates.

In all these weeks, I have never once lost that amazing sense of wonder for what happened – for how two realities can be so real, and how one can shift to the other in a matter of minutes. Except for a few processing days between then and now, I have never let go of that newfound feeling of giggling hope. Even when writing today, as I burst into a new layer of emotion – it was just that and only that – a new layer of emotion. I never lost that sense of hope and trust.

This profound experience has given me deep confidence in sharing this wisdom with others. Since that day, I have been guided into many opportunities to assist several friends through similar emotional-reality transitions, and the results have been mind boggling for all involved. I love my life … and I love the lessons that these agonizing experiences have brought me.

In mid July, shortly before Keith finally drove his little truck north, through Mexico, and on to Texas, I had the opportunity to question him about that day. When I again shared with him how blown away I was by the amazing shift that took place – and how all he had to do for me was to hold space for me, Keith paused and then responded.

“Brenda,” Keith grinned back at me. “I may not have been working with you in this dimension, but you need to realize that I work in many different dimensions.”

Keith never did explain what he meant, but shivers went up my spine when he spoke those words. I can only giggle at the possibilities.

Copyright © 2012 by Brenda Larsen, All Rights Reserved

Trusting Inner Knowing

August 3rd, 2012

This is one of “those” days. It is an extremely powerful day, but highly emotional, and very difficult to portray in writing. In fact, yesterday, I tried to write but just could not do it as more unhealed emotions surfaced to nibble on me.

There were so many harsh words – words of perceived attack coming from people I love. I have a strong desire not to offend anyone, but I must take the risk of writing. I must do so because it was by acknowledging those perceived attacks without giving away any of my power, and instead finding that power within, that led to one of my most profound experiences on the porch … ever.

Generational Differences

I begin Friday, June 29, 2012, just like any other day. I am up shortly after 6:00 a.m., checking emails, Facebook, and my blog. Just a minute after 7:00 a.m., a strong jolt shakes my apartment. The little earthquake begins quite forcefully, and then gradually fades over about twenty seconds.

“It looks like my world is going to be shaken up today, yet again,” I giggle in nervous anticipation.

As I spend a little time reading “Oneness,” received and transcribed by Rasha, I find great peace in reading much of chapter twenty-five, a chapter that discusses the vibrational differences between various generations. This quote – the third paragraph on page 240 – especially jumps out at me:

“The beings now incarnating into your reality are, themselves, representations of an interim stage in the evolution of the being who will, ultimately, populate your world. Their perceptions seem clearer, at times, than your conditioning permits yours to be. And they are puzzled as to why the older generations seem to struggle with their lives, when they do not appear to manifest so much conflict in theirs. These beings have incarnated at vibrational levels that are in harmony with the conditions now prevalent in your world, whereas, you incarnated at vibrational levels from which your reality has ascended.”

In these words I find great comfort wih a tiny bit of validation as to why I comparatively struggle so much with my deep childhood conditioning, while many in the thirty-something crowd (who of course had difficult challenges of their own) do not seem to have a clue as to the challenges of the journeys of some in older generations.

I have often felt deeply judged and even condemned by some of the magical souls in the younger generations who pass through San Marcos. They seem to throw stones and judge me for having so much density … so many inner blockages that prevent me from connecting to higher energies as easily as they do. Further reading in this chapter helps me drop my judgments and resentments, recognizing that we all come into this world at specific times for specific reasons … that we each have our own unique journey.

As I read this chapter, I have no idea what is about to transpire. Oh, the wonderful synchronicities of being in the flow, LOL!

Talking About Confrontation

Prior to writing about the ceremony, I also need to review a little about my history of working with Keith. I have learned to profoundly trust Keith, even when his behavior seems to go off the deep-end of odd and inappropriate. Without fail, he always has a guided reason for the way he interacts with me in my process. Sometimes, he is quite aware as to that reason, acting from conscious guidance, and other times he is simply following the flow himself. But in every situation, he is always playing the other end of my script in my own little healing holodeck.

There are times when Keith has been confrontational, playing harsh parental authority roles, and then there are times when he is real and genuine, profoundly validating the depth of my process. I clearly see that both approaches have served me greatly. Some of my most profound growth has resulted from those confrontational, in-my-face times.

But I have never taken kindly to others doing the same with me. It strikes me as being deeply inappropriate – under normal circumstances where trust is not established – to intentionally push someone’s buttons, to confront them harshly in a form of tough love. In my humble, heartfelt opinion, such tough-love approaches do more harm than good, and unless deeply guided by higher energies, I will never employ such tactics in my own healing practice.

One time, when Keith had played an extremely painful script for me, I challenged him on what at the time had deeply devastated me.

“Brenda,” Keith had responded. “From your perspective it should not matter what my motivation is for behaving in a certain way. If I am being a dense jerk asshole, or if I am playing a role for you in a divinely inspired way – regardless, from your perspective it is the same. Your job is to go inside and to work on your own triggers. If I am being a dense jerk asshole, then my job is to go inside and heal that inside me.”

From Peace To Panic

I arrive at Keith’s porch shortly before noon. Nostalgia continues to fill my soul as I ponder that this will be Keith’s final chocolate ceremony in San Marcos before he begins his travels to the United States.

Sixteen people gather on the porch, several of them new. Many of those, however, stay only a short while.

During the “Glow Meditation,” I experience a nice energy as I focus on finding my inner smile, on bringing in light, and on being present … with no judgment for a few behaviors and situations that are already somewhat distracting. I am quite proud of myself for remaining peaceful and completely unattached to anything on the outside.

But as I begin to return to a recent metaphor – one of imagining myself in the back seat of a moving car while trying to relax – I begin to feel a great deal of churning rebellion and anxiety in my solar plexus. It is almost at panic-attack levels.

When the meditation ends, Keith asks if anyone wants help. I wait for about five minutes, not wanting to dominate the ceremony, but no one speaks up. Finally, Keith glances my way, makes eye contact, and acknowledges with his eyes that he can tell I am deeply hurting in my solar plexus.

Reverse Psychology … And Doubts

“I am dealing with a near-panic attack in my solar plexus,” I explain my process to Keith. “This is actually quite powerful, because I am ignoring the panic, simply observing it while bringing in love.”

“I trust that love is the answer,” I continue sharing, “and I am envisioning that “Beast” needing “Belle’s love, and vice-versa … just working the metaphors.”

“Make the resistance stronger,” Keith encourages. “Do the opposite of trying to soothe it … strengthen it instead.”

Seeing the wisdom in Keith’s reverse-psychology approach to “know myself,” I begin to clench all of my muscles while focusing on inner energies. Keith quickly moves on to work with others.

I sit with this approach for a while, but nothing seems to be changing or shifting in any way. Slight hunches make me start to wonder if the pains in my solar plexus might perhaps be a form of ego scamming … of a very clever ego masquerading as density, attempting to derail my process.

“Is this part of me lying and creating a problem out of nothing?” I ponder curiously.

“This is just a belief,” I remind myself as I again think about the power of post-hypnotic suggestions. “Maybe it really is ego trying to sabotage me.”

God Drama Confrontation

“How are you doing, Brenda?” Keith finally turns back to check in with me.

After filling Keith in on my journey, I discuss my doubts and my inability to connect with Higher Energies.

“I am in a space where I do not fully trust what I am doing.” I innocently share frustration from my heart.

“Brenda, this is the game you are playing with God,” Keith begins to confront me with harsh emphasis. “You don’t want to open this.”

“But I DO want to open up,” I protest. “It is the subconscious inner beliefs and densities that are stopping me, keeping me from moving forward.”

Immediately, as I speak these words, I recognize what Keith is doing, and why he is doing it. I have been so deep in my process lately, that I have forgotten earlier lessons – having again slipped into a place of not owning my God drama games. Keith is intentionally, with a harsh and exaggerated tone of importance, reaming this fact home for me.

“Quit referring to that ‘other-part-of-you’ as being to blame,” Keith lovingly scolds me. “You need to own that it is YOU who is playing this game.”

“Now repeat after me,” Keith continues his firm onslaught. “I don’t want to open. I just want to stay stuck in this pain.”

“I don’t want to open.” I repeat with emotion. “I just want to stay stuck in this pain. I don’t want to open, I just want to stay stuck in this pain … I don’t want to open, I just want to stay stuck in this pain…”

As I repeat this, and other phrases, I feel quite humiliated, knowing that the rest of the porch is watching on – assuming that they all must think I am an absolute loser to have Keith being so firm with me.

By now, I am clearly remembering the last time that Keith guided me into deeply owning my God drama. It was an extremely painful ceremony, a deeply emotional journey of learning that I really AM the one playing these games with Deity.

A Blindsiding Attack

Suddenly, a very magical young friend jumps into the mix, in a harsh and attacking voice, slamming me in her own way. I will call her Catherine.

“I have seen you in your power,” Catherine reams me, “but now you are just wallowing in your densities, as if you want to loop in your processing forever. I have never seen you when you are not processing. You never seem to be happy. Blah, blah, blah …”

To my shock and chagrin, when I attempt to defend myself and ask Catherine to stop, Keith jumps in and backs her up, telling me she is right, that I should listen to her. I feel deeply criticized and harshly judged – being slammed by someone in a way that I perceive shows absolutely no compassion or understanding – none whatsoever.

“The only time this friend ever sees me is when I am on the porch,” I silently ponder in self-defense. “Yes, I am always processing when she sees me … but I am doing that for a reason. I have an inner mandate that passionately demands this. She never sees me happy, because she never hangs out with me when I am happy.”

“And it is NOT true that she has seen me in my power,” I ponder rebelliously. “She has seen me at times when I have been gifted with profound GLIMPSES of that power … and she has seen me at other times when I am faking-it-till I make it, running on blind intuition … but I have never consistently been able to own my power. That is precisely why I am determined to keep doing all of this inner processing.”

“How dare she do this,” my inner pain is triggered. “She has no right to attack me like this.”

Poignant Memories

Suddenly, I remember two similar ceremonies. The first was a small private ceremony held on May 19, 2012 – one I wrote about in “Deity Drama Depths, Part 4.” In that ceremony, I had been discussing my God drama struggles with Keith … and then Angela suddenly jumped in to share confrontational feedback. In an attempt to defend myself, Keith had also taken the opposite side, agreeing with Angela, causing me to feel devastated and attacked. I had learned a profound lesson that day – one teaching me how defending myself, trying to be right, is giving away my power, serving no one.

The second ceremony took place just two weeks ago on June 15, 2012 – one I wrote about in “Owning The Game.” In that ceremony, Keith had harshly humiliated me in front of the group, doing almost the same identical thing he is doing today.

In both of those ceremonies, profound healing had resulted – but the healing only came when I stopped looking outside for answers – when I instead turned inward and connected to Source for guidance and direction.

Considering Possibilities

“I am deep in the throws of my God drama,” I ponder in humiliation. “I know that I am extremely close to major growth and breakthroughs.”

I believe that Keith is acting from a place of consciously playing a role for me, intentionally being somewhat of a hard-ass because that is what I need right now in this difficult God-drama moment. I know Keith has my best interest at heart, and that no damage will result in our friendship.

However, I believe that Catherine is acting from a place of judgment and tough love, invalidating me and criticizing the beautiful process I am in – not understanding my journey at all. Instead, I feel as if she has no compassion, insisting that if she can do it, then so can I – and that I need to “get over it” and quit being an absolute wallowing-in-my-pain forever-processing loser.

Immediately, I flash back to the passages I read in “Oneness” this morning – a quote that helps me understand that Catherine (being from a younger generation) just cannot understand where I am at in my own process, and that this is part of her journey, not something I need to judge her for or concern myself with in any way.

Then, I remember how Keith has frequently taught me about not needing to be right, and that if someone is being a dense jerk asshole with me (as I believe Catherine is doing today) – that my job is not to analyze their motive, but is instead to take the trigger inside and find out why it hurts so much. For all I know, Catherine is acting under profound and divine guidance, sharing words that are being channeled through her for my own good, just as Keith seems to be doing.

An Opportunity For A Different Choice

As I listen to the words of Keith and Catherine, I clearly see that what I am hearing does not mesh with the truth of my own heart.

With this clue, and the understanding of many profound experiences in the past (two of which I just mentioned), I begin to clearly recognize this whole situation as being a beautifully scripted stage play – a magical episode of my personally scripted “Muppet Show.”

Right now, both Keith and Catherine are my leading actors, playing their roles, reading their divine scripts, trying to get me react in this way or that. It suddenly does not matter to me in the least if they are aware of what they are doing, or if they are doing it in a completely unconscious manner. What they are doing for me is profound. What they are doing is giving me a clear example of my biggest nightmares, and giving me an opportunity to make a different choice. I have the a choice to respond in a different way – to respond with love – to not need to be right – to respond while being in the personal power that comes from a connection to Source rather than from the power of ego defense and attack.

Finding My Power

Almost immediately, I remember a dear friend Sue who always used to tell me that when someone attacks me verbally, that the easiest way to respond is to simply say, “You might be right … I will take that into consideration.” In this way, the person attacking me feels heard and acknowledged, and I am free to listen to or ignore their feedback, to use what might apply, and to put the rest on the shelf. In this approach, there is no need for defense of any kind – no need to drain my power in an attempt to prove myself right.

“Thank you for your feedback,” I tell Catherine and Keith, “You might be right. I will take it into consideration.”

“I know my process is perfect,” I silently ponder with a giggle. “My heart is genuine and pure. I am following an amazing flow of synchronous inner guidance that continues to astound me on an almost-daily basis. I have courageously slogged through layer after layer of debilitating emotional blockages, each tediously taking me one step closer to my goal.”

“And I also know that the advice being thrust upon me is valid,” I ponder with clarity. “I absolutely do not want to spend the rest of my life processing and struggling with emotional densities. And I clearly own that Keith is correct that I continue to deny ownership of my God drama.”

“But none of that invalidates what I am doing,” I giggle in silence. “None of that makes me wrong. I AM engaged in a profoundly guided process. Everything I have done in my processing has been guided and inspired in the flow of my own being. Yes, I am doing things more slowly than others, but it is a profound educational process – one that is giving me a beautiful inner license to have the compassion and ability to help others – the same compassion that is not being demonstrated today.”

“As painful as it is,” I continue silently pondering, “I will choose and honor my process, thank you. It is unique for me. It is perfect. It is guided, it is inspired, and it is synchronous … and I absolutely know it is precisely what I need to be doing … in the way that I need to be doing it.”

“This is the perfect opportunity to find self-love, self-acceptance, and compassion for myself,” a smile forms on my face. “This is my chance to stop giving my power away to the opinions of others, and to find my direct link to Source … my personal connection that I can and DO trust implicitly. I would not be here today, were it not for this profound and personal connection that has repeatedly guided me on this journey of self-discovery.”

No Velcro Here

Catherine continues to make frequent challenging statements to me. Each time she does, I listen politely, maintaining a loving stance. When she is done, I again respond, “Thank you for your feedback … You might be right … I will take it into consideration.”

“I am clearly seeing this whole situation as a powerful stage play to show me how I have always given away my power to those who told me I was not doing it right,” I confidently share with Keith and Catherine. “I will no longer give my power to those who gossiped about me all over town – to those who criticize me for crying – and to those who judge my process as taking too long. I know that I am exactly where I need to be, doing precisely what I need to be doing.”

Keith validates that I am learning a lot from my process, but then agrees with Catherine, stating that I am looping forever.

“Thank you for your feedback,” I share with Keith, “I will take that into consideration. But to me, my process is perfect. I have always done the best I know how, with pure intentions, and I am deeply committed to what I am doing.”

I am proud of myself because, while I am responding and expressing my knowing, I am not attacking or defending in any way. Several times, I thank Catherine for her continued feedback – and she continues to send a lot of harsh words in my direction. Soon, I stop responding altogether, simply ignoring words that do not stick to me. It seems that I am finally letting go of my side of this disempowering Velcro.

Choosing Sweet Over Angry

Suddenly, another dear friend launches into a five-minute speech, telling me nonstop what is wrong with my process, why I am stuck, and what I need to change and shift. As her speech continues, I politely listen while letting most of her words simply bounce off the spot where the Velcro used to be. My friend’s words feel as if they are very disempowering and judgmental, but I take no offense because I know her motivations are genuine.

“Thank you for your feedback,” I respond when she is done, speaking in a very loving tone and energy. “You might be right.”

“Brenda,” Keith grins and speaks with glowing praise. “You have just shifted into a powerful place.

This same friend again adds more fixing feedback, and I again simply thank her.

Catherine then jumps back into the mix, reaming me some more. She seems deeply annoyed that her comments are not sticking to me – irritated that I do not seem to be taking things personally, or emotionally.

“Brenda, I would rather hear you get angry and scream than just being all sweet,” Catherine confronts me again.

“Thank you for your feedback,” I respond with a grin. “You might be right.”

Lightning Bolts

By now, I have noted with fascination that my hands are beginning to vibrate with powerful lightening energy. It begins gradually, and continues to increase every time that I lovingly respond with “you might be right” and “thank you for your feedback.”

After a few minutes, the vibrations in my hands are beyond my wildest experience – stronger than I have ever felt them – much stronger than I felt that first time in late 2010 right here on Keith’s porch.

“Keith,” I share with a giggle, “the energy in my hands is amazing. Can you feel it too?”

Keith acknowledges with a smile and remains a quiet observer while a couple of others continue their subtle attacks – continuing their attempts to pull me into debates about my personal truth.

“Use the energy to help heal yourself,” Keith eventually encourages me, referring to the lightning bolts in my hands.

Soon, I aim my fingertips at my heart and abdomen. The energy in the fingertips is intense – but I do not feel a lot leaving my hands and going into my belly or heart. I trust my process, however, surrendering control, not judging anything, and simply expressing a silent intent for Higher Self to help me in ways that I cannot direct with rational mind.

Please Disengage

Catherine looks on with a frown. I perceive that she and my other friend are unimpressed by what I am experiencing.

But I do not care. My crown is now also profoundly buzzing with energy, and I feel a beautiful connection with Higher Energies throughout my body. I totally trust the sense of self-knowing peacefully confirming that the power I feel in my body is real and magical. I need no validation from anyone else.

Even Keith continues to badger me a little bit, testing me to see how I will respond. Finally, when Catherine will simply not stop prodding me with uninvited feedback, I put my loving foot down.

“I really appreciate your feedback,” I smile at Catherine and speak with love, “but will you please disengage now. Your words are not helping me in the least.”

“OK then,” Keith interrupts my process, “Time to move on.”

I perceive Keith’s tone of voice as implying that I am not cooperating, and somehow being bad. I just grin inside. No matter what I perceive from others, I am in my divine power, and I feel deeply connected. I trust that I am in a stage play – and I giggle inside at how, for the first time in my life, I trust my own guidance more than that of anyone else – even more than guidance from Keith.

Trusting Inner Knowing

A few minutes later, Keith turns around and encourages me to use some of my lightning energy to help a friend to my left. I place my left hand above her heart for about five minutes.

“Can you give Brenda some feedback,” Keith asks this friend, who is one of those who has been engaging me in ongoing badgering.

“I can’t feel hardly any energy at all,” my friend shares feedback to me.

I smile inside. I know that this friend is deeply sensitive to energies, and normally I would be quite confused that she cannot feel what I am feeling. But I also somehow know that this is part of the stage play – that this is another opportunity to trust inner knowing more than I trust the feedback of another – even someone so sensitive.

“The lack of confirming feedback does not phase me at all,” I silently ponder. “I absolutely know that my hands have more energy vibrating in them right now than ever before. I do not need her validation to confirm what I feel. I feel the energy inside my hands, but do not feel it flowing out. I know that this is all part of learning to trust myself.”

Soon, I pull my left hand back and place both of my hands on my own abdomen, remaining in this process until the end of the ceremony. I play with this energy for a very long time.

When I express my intention to connect with my Higher Self, scattered pains form and gather at that nail-in-my-heart spot at the center of my heart chakra – the center of my betrayal energy. The present sensations are very painful.

Reality Creation Gratitude

Meanwhile, I observe others. I watch as another woman works with a young man. I perceive that she is pushing him, trying to take him to places that she thinks he needs to go to in order to find an inner connection that she thinks he needs to find.

Then as Keith works with my friend to the left, he glances at me and pauses.

“How are you doing, Brenda?” Keith asks with a huge glowing grin on his face.

“I am deeply grateful for your role-playing,” I respond with a giggle. “It has been profound in helping me to find my inner power and connection to Source.”

“And that nail in your heart spot?” Keith asks, already seeming to know what I am working on.

“Yeah, I’m working on it with Higher Self,” I respond with confidence.

Reality Creation Debate

“You don’t really believe that?” the friend on my left confronts Keith when she heard me thanking him for role-playing with me. “It really concerns me when Brenda says that the world is role-playing for her, because it sounds like someone on an LSD trip who thinks the whole world revolves around them.”

“No, I wasn’t role-playing,” Keith tells my friend.

I am surprised by Keith’s words, because I clearly know he was playing a profound script for me. I can only assume that maybe he was not doing so with conscious intent.

But I also recognize that Keith is working with someone that relates to a different version of the truth, and that he is trying to remain in a neutral space where she can listen to him. My friend immediately tries to engage Keith in validating her opinion that “Brenda is in ego for saying that she creates her reality on the porch and that Keith and others were role-playing, etc…”

Keith skillfully backs off, diverts her questions, and never fully answers any of them, acknowledging that sometimes he is very direct, and sometimes he gets “intuitive knowing” about someone, but clearly knows that they are not able or ready to hear it. I glow with giggling inner knowing as I realize that Keith is doing exactly this with my friend – that he is trying to work with her from her viewpoint, in a way that she can hear.

My fried seems very frustrated with Keith, and soon walks down into the garden.

I Just Know

I glow on the inside, exuding a huge external grin, as I continue to observe the porch. For the first time ever, I am clearly seeing things from a higher perspective – things that would have devastated me a few months ago. Things that once would have shattered my confidence now bring giggles and peaceful vibrations to my soul. I watch as Keith works with each person where they are at, not needing to be right, holding back and speaking to each person with individual and uniquely-tailored guidance – tailored to what they are able to hear.

I giggle inside when Keith soon speaks quietly to the woman on the porch who is verbally trying to coax a young man to go deeper into his process – the same woman I had been observing earlier. While sitting in front of me, Keith gently calls over to this woman, telling her that he is trying to help her learn “not to talk so much and to instead guide someone inside to find their own answers.”

The young woman quickly glances up, acknowledging that she heard something, but I clearly perceive that she did not internalize the message. This is much the same thing that Catherine was doing to me earlier – trying to push me to where she thought I needed to go. I am still unsure of Catherine’s motives, but I no longer care in the least. The result was profound.

The way Keith gives his feedback to this young woman – doing so in a way that I clearly hear – tells me that his message is also an indirect acknowledgment that Catherine had done the same to me earlier, but that he had allowed it because it served me. I do not need Keith or anyone to validate my knowing … I just somehow know this, and I find delight in not needing any outside confirmation. This woman, while deeply magical and gifted, has not yet learned how to honor someone else’s unique process by “following them” rather than “guiding them.”

Pain Ponderings

Soon, I focus more meditation onto that painful energy now collecting at the nail-in-my-heart spot.

“What I have been projecting onto Keith, and other porch friends, is really what I am painfully feeling at this nail-in-my-heart spot,” I suddenly realize as I ponder the observations.

“This pain represents my “mother-energy” … my hatred for “fixing energy” … my energy of self-perpetuated beating myself up,” I ponder with new insights.

Intuitions guide me that the core of the sharp pains that I feel at this nail-in-my-heart spot has to do with those agonizing and convincing voices of negativity – the “I will be forever stuck, forever looping, being a social loser, giving my power away, everyone victimizing me, everyone betraying me, blah blah blah” beliefs.

“This pain forms the dense images on my inner film,” intuitions fill me with clarity. “It represents the energy that projects all of this ongoing, dysfunctional negativity onto my external mirror of reality – onto my stage play. This film image is big, round, at the center, and very real!”

A New And Unexplored Place

Soon, I place all meditative focus on connecting with that energetic pain … on actually being that pain … on feeling the anger, victimization, and betrayal. My progress is slow, but I clearly recognize that I am finally starting to OWN this part of me – honoring its realness, and honoring how it is a primary influence in my God drama projections. I see it … I believe it … and I am now starting to directly feel its pain and transmute it … doing so consciously rather than from behind the subconscious blinders.

Then I begin to visualize myself at the bottom of an un-climbable wall of glass. I imagine myself vibrating with the Higher Energies that now permeate me like lightning, floating with angelic metaphors and my Higher Self as they begin to carry me over the obstacle that I cannot pass using rational mind. Next, I imagine myself levitating into my room filled with my circle of divine friends.

I do not know what is really happening in my process, and I do not really concern myself with that knowing. All I do know is that I am immersing myself in experiential energetic metaphors, and that I am glowing with beautiful energy, confidence, and peace.

A sense of inner knowing soon tells me that I have passed over that wall of glass … that I am in a new and unexplored place.

Guided To Be Tough

I continue to smile and giggle inside as that powerful lightning energy keeps on vibrating inside, especially in my hands and crown. Gradually, over the next thirty minutes or so, the energy begins to fade.

To my delight, in the middle of this energetic-basking, Keith turns back to me with a grin, holds out two huge “thumbs up,” and we begin to chat.

“I know that you do not consider yourself to have been role-playing,” I speak with confidence, “but I know that you were beautifully playing the other end of my script, being the tough-guy that I needed you to be in order to take me to going into my own power.”

“Yeah, I was playing your script and following guidance that told me that I needed to be tough today,” Keith readily acknowledges.

“Is it OK if I scream?” I hear my friend call out from down in the garden – the same friend who had earlier referred to my “reality creation” statements as being an LSD-like ego trip.”

I profoundly sense this dear friend’s frustration as she listens in to my conversation with Keith.

A New Aliveness

Keith and I banter for the next forty-five minutes.

“Welcome, to who you are,” Keith deeply congratulates me.

“What dimension am I in?” I joke with Keith.

By now, the lightning bolt energy in my hands has mostly stopped, but I continue to feel a powerful energy connection from my crown flowing down both to my hands and to my heart, and even a little bit flowing down out my feet.

“There is an ‘aliveness’ in your hands that was not there before,” Keith points out with confidence.

“Where am I and what have you done with the Brenda I once knew?” I again joke with Keith. “What dimension did you say I am in?”

Bursts Of Laughter

“Brenda,” Keith soon guides me. “Connect with Bobby and Sharon and see what mood they are in.”

“My inner children are laughing and giggling … partying,” I soon respond.

“Yeah,” Keith validates, “they want you to party with them.”

Several times during our ongoing bantering, Keith reaches over and starts to tickle the side of my ribs. Each time he does so, I burst into laughter. I have a huge smile on my face, and have not felt this giggly and playful in a very long time. I even smile at Paul, acknowledging him with my hands held over my heart.

“Welcome to who you really are,” Keith tells me later as we walk into town together.

A group of us are getting together at a local restaurant. Normally, I would go straight home to take notes about an amazing day … but knowing that Keith is soon leaving, I take advantage of one last shared-conversation-over-dinner opportunity.

A Perfect Ending

As I later prepare for bed, shortly after 9:30 p.m., a beautiful meditative energy continues to flow through me. When I close my eyes, I almost feel as if I am floating in the clouds.

Right before turning off my computer, I find a new email quote from “Oneness” by Rasha. This one is quite timely, inspiring me greatly. Following are the words of “A Moment Of Oneness #69”:

“Dissecting oneself out of one’s life conditioning is a painstaking process that can be expected to take months or even years to complete. Do not fault yourself if you realize you are still responding to familiar signals. Recognition of the patterns and themes is a major part of this work and must precede extracting oneself from their grasp. Finding the common threads woven amongst your life issues is merely the beginning of the process. You should not expect to be able to simply walk away from a lifetime of living theater and not be compelled to speak the lines you know by heart.”

I literally love how this quote discusses our lifetime as being a “living theater” – and how the process of “know thyself” is merely the beginning of the process. I take great comfort in a sense of inner knowing that right now, my process is perfect, that I am right where I need to be, even if the process is taking years. I fill with self-love as I acknowledge that, for me, walking away from my living theater has indeed been long and painful – but I giggle when I realize I am no longer quite so compelled to speak the same defensive and disempowering lines that I once knew by heart.

Deep humble gratitude swells in my heart as I realize that, at least for today, I rewrote the script. I no longer spoke the old lines of my stage-play. Instead, I disengaged from the trauma, thanked people for their well-intentioned feedback, and quickly went inside to find the true source of my power – that being a profound sense of trusted inner knowing that while I may be looping and I may be slow – that I am courageously learning and doing the work, establishing an ever-deeper, direct connection to Source.

Magical Meditating

As I rest on my pillow, my head will not stop reviewing the events of the day, I now clearly see that Keith’s, Catherine’s, and my other friend’s comments, while unwelcome at the time, had all been a beautiful contribution to my process. In many ways, I believe they were divinely inspired to say what they said, and I carry no judgment for what I first perceived as the harshness of their delivery. I clearly see the stage-play-nature of how everything unfolded exactly as it needed to, in order for my inner shifts to occur.

And in spite of what cultural conditioning would have me believe, a profound sense of inner peace tells me that it was definitely not “ego power” that I took back today. In many ways, I had felt guilty in lovingly “defying” and ignoring the words of my friends, feeling as if honoring and trusting my own feelings over and above their strong magical opinions, was exactly that – ego.

But in this, I am quite clear. What I did today was just the opposite. I learned to trust and unflinchingly follow an inner guidance – an inner connection to Source – a connection that was “made-wrong” when I was a tiny child. And this inner guidance – this inner voice of knowing and intuition – is absolutely more important than any voice that may tell me otherwise.

What a perfect way to end the final chocolate ceremony of a long and arduous season. None of my time this year has been wasted by looping. It has been a perfect education … a perfect teacher of compassion, self-love, and love for others … of not needing to be right and allowing others to have their own truth … of more deeply understanding reality creation … of learning to reel in projections onto others … and of learning to own the crazy games I play with God. People can throw stones all the want, but I will trust my own inner guidance above all.

I know I am far from done, but the ride so far has been amazing.

Copyright © 2012 by Brenda Larsen, All Rights Reserved

An Unusual Trinity

August 1st, 2012

Shortly after midnight, a nice little earthquake shakes my bed. I giggle as I imagine myself as “Captain Brenda,” hiding with my starship, parked deep in a cave of a large asteroid. Suddenly the earth shakes as we all begin to realize that this is not a cave at all. We make a rapid escape, racing toward the cave entrance, with huge teeth closing down on the opening. Barely making it out in time, we look back and realize that we had been inside the throat of a huge space monster.

I continue to ponder about these magical Star Trek metaphors as I further connect to one of my favorite “A Course In Miracles” teachings – one reminding me that defending myself is actually an attack … that when I defend myself, I am in reality draining my own power resources. I love the added clarity. I have spent my entire life with my shields on full strength, draining a great deal of personal power in the name of safety and protection.

A Heavy Release

After a relaxed-but-unmotivated morning, I prepare for another afternoon of inner work. I continue to feel a lot of teenage emotion flow through me. These are emotions of self-hatred, social dysfunction, and utter hopelessness. I clearly realize that these emotions do not originate in the present – and that there is no real present-day reason for even feeling them – but they are so powerful that constant diligence is required not to buy into them. I begin to wonder if these emotions will ever go away.

It is shortly before noon on Wednesday, June 27, 2012, when I begin my stroll out to the home of my favorite Chocolate Shaman.

Shortly after chugging my yummy chocolate, I immediately begin meditating, even before Keith starts his introductions. As I focus on connecting to light and love, those teenage emotions begin to flow with increased intensity – emotions of social struggle, self-hatred, futility, and hopelessness. These emotions flow very deeply, taking me into more waves of tearful release.

During the “Glow Meditation,” several additional waves of deep emotions flow through me – intense waves of agitation. I quickly begin to breathe light into my heart, imagining myself as being the adult empath, assisting my inner teenager in releasing this emotion in a more facilitated way.

As the meditation is almost complete, Keith turns to a friend of mine and tells her that she is going to be releasing a lot of stuff from her abdomen today, most of which will go to Mother Earth. I giggle through my tears, intuitively recognizing that Keith is also talking to me.

Repeat Performance

When Keith begins a round of individual work, he unexpectedly begins with me.

“I am back in the same place I was on Monday,” I explain my journey, “I have another agitated energetic river of teenage emotional sewage flowing through me. I am attempting to remain nonattached, simply holding-space while observing. It is quite intense as I feel some of the emotions at a conscious level.”

“You are doing great,” Keith reassures me. “I have nothing to add. Just keep doing what you are doing.”

While Keith next works with a woman seated to my left, she begins to experience magical inner openings, and her eyes swell with tears of joy.

“I am such a loser,” more teenage emotions swarm me as I watch her open while I remain stuck.

“What is wrong with me,” the self-hatred rages. “When is it my turn to further open?”

I consciously allow myself to feel these teenage emotions, remaining the observer, recognizing that these emotions are from that past and that I must not identify with them.

God Drama Triggers

As Keith works with a young man who is deeply stuck, he guides him to an inner place of deeper energy connection, telling the young man that this will allow him to go deeper into his process.

“I need a deeper energy connection too,” I ponder.

Soon, I redouble my efforts to bring in more light, simultaneously continuing to be the adult empath for the river of putrid density that is flowing through me. As I bring in more light and love, I feel the density flow step up a notch, causing me to experience stronger density agitation, as well as increased higher energy in my head and neck.

As Keith works with another young woman, I again witness someone going through a magical opening process. Those teenage loser feelings quickly resume their taunts. God drama voices begin to rant and rage in the recesses of rational mind.

“Keith is giving everyone else such beautiful assistance, and they are all having such magical openings,” I ponder in frustration. “But all I got was “good job Brenda, keep it up.””

“What am I, chopped liver?” I ponder with self-hatred. “By myself, I am never going to open my magic …. and Keith (God drama projection) is just ignoring me.”

Shifting Energies

I actually find great comfort when one magical young woman begins to express her own stuckness. She too is trapped in unacknowledged fear and is unable to feel or embrace her magic, expressing doubts that she is just imagining things.

Such an external mirror helps to take me deeper into the self-realization that I am not alone in the “stuck-magic” department. I clearly see this young woman’s magical gifts – while easily ignoring my own. This understanding helps me focus more on self-love and self-acceptance for where I am in my own process – for the magical gifts that I have already opened.

Soon, Keith works with a young man who is also struggling with the same energy of stuckness. He is powerful, and ready to open, but has huge inner walls and great fear. I so resonate with this young man’s process. I am so stuck … and so tired of being in that hopeless state.

By now, that flowing river of teenage emotional sewage is calming down considerably, and the flow of my process seems to be increasingly guiding me into exploring stuckness and the related metaphors of those Star Trek shields that guard and protect the power center in my solar plexus.

Micromanaging Madness

Meanwhile, I have been simultaneously focusing a great deal of my attention of further attempting to relax my torso, paying close attention to my heart and abdomen. While doing so, the squeamy (squirming and screaming at a cellular level) sensations in my arms have been intense. I am clenching tightly, not only in my arms, but also throughout my torso.

While concentrating on surrender metaphors – imagining myself enjoying the ride, floating in a river raft, floating in the water itself, etc… – I finally settle on the metaphor that triggers the most inner anxiety and fear. I visualize myself as sitting in the back seat of a car, being driven at high speeds down a crowded road by someone that I do not fully trust. The feeling creates freaky anxiety, especially when I imagine a few real people behind the wheel – people who have triggered such fears in my lifetime.

Emotions of panic begin to consume me – feelings of helplessness and being totally out of control.

“I have never been able to sleep in a car,” I ponder repeated memories, “because even when I am not driving, I feel a desperate need to be alert and observing, just to make sure that we are safe.”

“For my entire life I have been uptight,” I review the fears. “I have a desperate need for safety, a fear of losing control and being at the mercy of others, and a need to micromanage my environment in order to maintain a sense of protection and security.”

Go For It

“All of this is a projection of my childhood conditioning, fixing attacks, and having my power drained,” I ponder. “Every nightmare of not feeling safe in any environment stems from that state of being on red-alert – of needing to have my shields at full strength.”

Throughout my life, from my earliest memories, I have been protecting myself from attack, attempting to manipulate my environment to maintain that safe-from-energetic-attack factor.

“Hidden inside of me is sheer terror at the thought of being out of control,” I now clearly understand. “Being vulnerable to random energies and behaviors is absolutely frightening.”

By the time that Keith finishes his first loop around the porch, I am sinking deep into this recognition, profoundly experiencing the body anxiousness of that terror – the terror of being in the metaphorical back seat of life – the nightmare of not being the driver, and of being forced to just sit in the back seat while blindly trusting.

“How are you doing?” Keith suddenly turns to me.

Somehow, Keith already knows exactly where I am at in my energetic state. He directs me to surrender to the emotions, even before I share any details of my journey.

“Brenda,” Keith encourages me, “you might be judged by some people for crying, but go for it … go down into these emotions. Rather than trying to fix them, go right through the emotions as deep as you can.”

Back Into The Box

With Keith’s encouragement, I begin to cry and sob … but I am still resistant at the rational mind level. Keith quickly brings up the topic of how my mother and childhood conditioning stuffed me into a protective and restrictive box.

“I am so angry at that “mother/conditioning” energy that stuffed me into a box,” I express feelings that I now know are at the root origin of my protective shields.

“Your mother is here trying to force you back into that box,” Keith explains with emphasis.

I clearly know that he is referring to my mother’s essence in a metaphorical way, and Keith’s unexpected words cause deep emotions of anger to swell.

“F@ck the box!” I spout off angrily. F@ck my mother! I am done with that agonizing conditioning box. It does not serve me. I refuse to give it my power anymore.”

For a while, I angrily punch a couple of pillows, hoping to trigger and release even deeper emotion – but the emotions are weak and lackluster. Something inside is holding me back, keeping me from going deeper.

“Brenda, your mother is right here, trying to pull you back into the box,” Keith again tries to trigger me to go deeper.

Again, I punch and sob, even lightly screaming with raised vocal tones, but I am stuck.

An Unexpected Ally

Soon, a new arrival shows up on the porch – a porch where only a few people yet remain. It is a dear friend, one that I will call Jeff – a young man who has been deeply struggling lately, and who has temporarily medicated his stuckness and depression using alcohol. He is a beautiful soul, with a powerful and genuine heart, and has never before come to a ceremony in such a dysfunctional state. I love and honor my friend, and would never betray his privacy – but sharing this part of the experience is necessary to explain my own process.

Bless Jeff’s magical heart, he speaks so lovingly and freely when his inhibitions have been relaxed.

“Brenda,” Jeff approaches with loving concern. “I am drunk, but I want to know if I can help you.”

“I would love your help,” I share with my friend.

“You are profoundly powerful,” Jeff shares his respect for me and my journey. “You are one of the most amazing and powerful people on the planet. I want you to know that I have your back, you have my deepest respect, and I want to help you to break out of this stuckness.”

Just hearing my dear friend’s loving-and-heartfelt support helps me to go into deeper sobs – gut-wrenching sobs, coughing, and dry heaving. It is exactly what I need to take me to the core of my resistant pain.

Punk Encouragement

A few minutes later, as this intense emotional release begins to relax, I feel myself breathing with effort, exhaling agonizing energy while gasping to bring in more light and love.

Angela soon joins to help, beginning to lightly pound on my back, assisting in the loosening of energy blockages that are now beginning to flow – doing so in a beautiful way. With Angela’s loving support, I quickly sink into another round of agonizing release.

Angela, Keith, and Jeff repeatedly encourage me to keep going … to go deeper … to go for it … to do what I need to do to get this emotional density out of me.

I do my best to surrender, giving it my all, crying and sobbing into the agonizing emotional pain – into that teenage anger, futility, and stuckness.

Soon, Jeff surprises me, in his uninhibited state, asking if he can sing some “punk music” for me. When I say yes, he sings for a few minutes, making up words and music as he goes – speaking words that encourage me to get out of the box, to let go of religious and societal conditioning, and to take my truth and shine it for the world to see.

I listen with an open heart, inhaling the deeply appreciated support and encouragement.

Get Angry At The Box

Jeff soon begins to discuss my transgendered status, openly and publicly. At first, I am a little shocked, but when I glance around the porch, I note that there is only one person who does not already know my story anyway … and I deeply appreciate Jeff’s loving support.

“I love transsexuals,” Jeff rambles in his uninhibited state. “Most of them are fake, but you are the most genuine and open person I know. I love your courage to be ‘trans’ in a religious culture and family, and that you were able to break out of that conditioning box.”

“Get angry at that box,” Jeff encourages me, “and be done with it once and for all.”

“I can let go of the box, but I love my family and I support them for being right where they are.” I defend my childhood religion. “That religion no longer serves me, but I love my family for being a part of it still.”

“Your mother is still here, trying to force you back into that box,” Keith again encourages me to break the power that the box has over me.

I engage in a few more swear words, more pillow punching, and weak emotional release, but my emotions are waning.

“Brenda, scream it out,” Angela encourages me, “Jeff and I will both scream with you.”

I do scream for a minute or two … and my friends join in … but I soon stop. I can tell it is helping, but feel as if I am being too dramatic.

“I can assure you that I feel a great deal of emotional stuff leaving you,” Angela shares her energy perceptions with confidence.

Heartwarming Feedback

“Brenda, can I touch you?” Jeff asks for permission to do a little energy work on me.

When I agree, Jeff places one hand on my heart and one on my back. I feel his beautiful unconditionally loving energy gently assisting, filling my heart with healing energy. Soon, Keith again mentions my mother’s essence that is trying to pull me back into the box.

“Thank you for the beautiful image of me allowing someone who is drunk to help pull me away from the box that my mother is trying to pull me back into,” I giggle to Jeff.

Repeatedly, Jeff encourages and expresses his support by saying things like “Brenda, I’ve got your back,” and “Brenda, you are so amazing.”

“When you get through all of your emotional densities and open up your magic, you are going to be such a profound healer,” Jeff then shares.

Quickly, Angela and Keith share their own similar feedback, with Keith again surprising me by telling me that it is an honor to have me here. Such pure loving support is deeply humbling. I clearly see that I am surrounded by masters – beautiful healers that I see as my mentors.

Squashing My Power

Finally, as my emotional release settles, Jeff backs away and Keith takes over.

“Brenda,” Keith guides me, “find where your mother’s energy is at in your body.”

“She is sitting on my solar plexus,” I finally tell Keith after a few minutes of deep meditation. “She is squashing my power, sitting on my solar plexus while also holding several hundred-pound weights, squishing me, controlling me, and manipulating me to keep me in line … in the box.”

“It is time to remove her energy,” Keith guides me, without saying how.

I focus in meditation, considering several metaphors, imagining what I might do. I get that this is not a process to be done with anger or force, but instead needs to be accomplished with love and gratitude.

“My mother has actually been serving me, doing what I asked her to do,” I ponder.

Soon, I attempt to connect with my mother’s Higher Self, explaining that her job is now complete, that she can release now … that our joint agreement has now been fulfilled. This seems to make no difference. Still feeling my mother’s energy sitting on me, I bring in more love and gratitude, filling my heart with light … but I still feel her weight squashing me.

“I can’t do it,” I express frustration to Keith as I share details of what I have tried.

I Want Her There

“Ask those weights to go,” Keith guides me.

Soon, I visualize those weights as disappearing and transmuting. As I do so, I feel some increased lightness. Others on the porch continue to hold space for me while I sit quietly in meditation.

“Keith,” I speak again ten minutes later. “I’m getting a strong headache in my third-eye chakra. It feels like my mother’s palm is pushing down there too. Does that make sense to you?”

“Yes, Brenda,” Keith responds, without adding further guidance.

“I’m now realizing that my mother has a very big presence,” I interject a few minutes later, meaning no disrespect to my mother. “She is not just squashing my solar plexus, but she is also sitting on my heart and lower chakras while holding her hand on my third-eye chakra, literally choking everything, squashing everything. I cannot breathe!”

“You’re getting much deeper insight now,” Keith encourages me to continue.

“If she is still sitting on you,” Keith eventually interrupts the silence, “that is because you want her there.”

“It is not her doing this to me,” I ponder Keith’s words. “It is me, not wanting her to get off me, not wanting her to stop squashing me.”

This takes me deeper into recognizing the God-drama tie-in.

A Hidden Victim Payoff

“I don’t want to let her energy go,” I ponder out loud, “because if I am free of that victimization and strangling pressure, then I will lose all hope of feeling love. Her strangling-type of conditional “sitting-on-my-heart-love” is all that I have ever known. If I give it up, I am losing all hope of love.”

“Congratulations for your insight,” Keith grins at me.

“If I let this smothering energy go,” I continue sharing, “I will be forced to face my frightening light shadow. I will have no more excuses, no more victimization to blame for why I cannot be in my power. This is actually quite frightening.

“Yes Brenda,” Keith again congratulates me.

“I am playing this game with God and my mother,” I ramble on. “I am pretending that she is the one squashing me … that God is victimizing me and not helping me … but in reality I refuse to let the blockage go because I get a payoff from being shut down and a victim.”

“The part of you that wants this mother energy to continue squashing you is more powerful than the conscious part of you that wants it to be gone,” Keith takes my payoff statement further.

Keith soon reinforces my deepening process by taking a few minutes to talk more about the God drama with the few people who yet remain on the porch.

Elusive Solutions

My work, and this ensuing discussion, triggers someone else to work on her own parent issues. Keith works with her a while as I just sit and integrate. Right now, I am enjoying more clarity on my God drama issues than ever before.

In silent meditation, I image myself tightly clinging to an extremely heavy pillow, lying on my back, with the weighted pillow suffocating and squashing me.

“I refuse to let this pillow go,” I silently scream out. “I want this pillow forever.”

When I later share this melodramatic exaggeration of a metaphor that shows exactly what I am doing in real life, Keith again congratulates my increasing depth and understanding of what I am doing.

When I ask Keith for guidance on how to proceed with healing this God drama craziness, he gently reminds me what I already know … telling me that “know thyself” is the first major step. Keith then adds that self-love and self-acceptance are key, along with recognizing that I cannot climb over that wall on my own rational-mind power.

“You need higher love to lift you over that five-meter wall of glass,” Keith reminds me. “But you are still playing that game of refusing to allow that help.”

“It is all about knowing myself, loving myself, and owning the game that I am playing,” I summarize the solution that continues to elude me.

“You are doing wonderful,” Keith encourages me. “You are seeing the game that you are playing … and you are owning it. If you are unable to go any further, now or ever, that is fine. You need to find self-love and self-acceptance for where you are right now … for being in a place where you are still stuck.”

An Unusual Trinity

I sit in beautiful meditation for about a half hour. In fact, there are only five of us left on the porch, and all of us rest in complete meditative silence. Keith is even resting on the ground, relaxing back with his head on a pillow.

As 5:30 p.m. arrives, we all begin to stir … except for Jeff that is. Jeff is fast asleep, and has been so for a while.

“Brenda,” Angela suddenly giggles loudly, “today you have been helped by the Father, the Daughter, and the Holy Drunk. What an unusual Holy Trinity (Keith, Angela, and Jeff).”

There is another round of bagging freshly ground chocolate tonight, and as usual, I have already committed to participate. But tonight, even though I am in a very magical space, I have a strong desire to do something different. I really want to go home, take notes, and further meditate before all of the magical memories have vanished.

“Take the night off, no problem,” Keith responds with a grin when I ask for feedback.

“But you got so mad at me that one time a few months back when I told you, for the very same reason, that I wasn’t coming back later to bag chocolate,” I smile back at Keith, being delighted but somewhat confused … and somewhat fishing for other feedback.

“Brenda, that was a role that I needed to play for you then,” Keith grins back at me. “Now go home, take notes, and integrate. We will be fine without you.”

“I love it,” I silently giggle. “Prior to now, Keith had never admitted that he was role playing that night. And I clearly recognize that my healing of that piece of my God drama depended on believing that he really had been mad at me.”

Honored, Humbled, And Afraid

After quickly cooking a plate of rice and beans while simultaneously taking notes, I begin to further meditate … searching for additional insights into my payoffs for remaining stuck … into why it is frightening to move more into the light. The meditation is peaceful, but lacking in additional insights. By 8:30 p.m., I retire to bed, feeling peaceful, but exhausted.

Suddenly, at shortly before 9:30 p.m., I hurry back to my computer to take notes regarding more of the amazing heartwarming feedback that Jeff, Angela, and Keith had shared with me this afternoon. I begin to sob as I record new thoughts – memories of how deeply honored and humbled I feel to have been so deeply supported by my dear friends today.

Yes, I am still stuck at the bottom of that wall of glass. But I am indeed following the courage of my heart. I want my mother’s energy off my chest, but I clearly own the fact that it is me keeping it there. I have fear-based payoffs … I am afraid of giving up failure and having the responsibility of standing in the light … afraid of both responsibility and of my inner divine power.

Post Hypnotic Suggestions

At 6:00 a.m. on Thursday morning, I begin browsing the internet and end up finding and watching a movie called “The Source Field Investigations” by David Wilcock. I found the video on his personal web site (www.divinecosmos.com) but it seems that the video is also available on YouTube.

The first thirty minutes of the video fascinate me as David discusses several examples of hypnosis that had inspired him in his younger years to further explore the metaphysical realm of subconscious beliefs. David shares one story of how a man, under hypnosis, was given a post hypnotic suggestion stating that after he wakes up he would not be able to see his daughter. Sure enough, when the man was brought out of his hypnotic trance, he could not see or hear his daughter anywhere, even though she was standing and giggling right in front of him. The part of the story that fascinates me, however, is when the hypnotist held a stopwatch to the back of the little girl and asked the man to read the time and the inscriptions on the watch. As the story goes (and I have no way to verify this), the man looked right through his daughter’s body and read the stopwatch perfectly.

In essence, since the man’s subconscious was programmed not to be able to see his daughter, he could see right through her as if she did not physically exist.

Again, I have no way to validate or denounce this story, but I have personally witnessed several hypnotist shows, and I have seen some amazing stage situations created by similar post-hypnotic suggestions.

The Power Of Belief

Suddenly, as I watch this video, I remember something Keith told me, almost two years ago when I had first asked if it was possible for me to do what he does.

“Brenda,” Keith had responded, “the only difference between you and me is that I know I can and you believe that you can’t.”

“Wow,” I ponder after finishing the video. “Is it really that simple? Does it really come down to a subconscious belief? Are all of my dysfunctional behaviors simply manifestations of programmed beliefs in my subconscious?”

“Is my inability to open my psychic and other magical abilities simply because I have conditioned childhood beliefs that tell me they are not real … that I cannot access them?”

“Is the ‘undoing process’ talked about in “A Course In Miracles” simply an undoing of conditioned beliefs … beliefs that are so deeply rooted that they still control my life?”

Of course, I deeply believe that the answer to all of these questions is a resounding “Yes.”

“But how do I undo such conditioning?” I ponder. “And why is it so hard?”

“I am doing that right now,” I respond to myself. “With each layer of emotional densities that I process, I am also healing conditioned beliefs and shifting dysfunctional core beliefs, learning to remember who I really am, learning to love myself, beginning to recognize my personal connections to Source.”

Unquestioned Beliefs

As I continue meditating, I clearly recognize that my stuckness and ego issues are both related to conditioned beliefs about good, bad, right, wrong, better, worse, … and of wanting to measure up on the good end of the list. It is these labels, and trying to find my place on the goodness scale, that creates “ego separation,” and the need to be different and better than others.

“And these labels – all of this judgment and separation – were programmed into me by God’s representatives,” I ponder. “All such teachings came from parents, church, and other cultural teachers who drop-by-drop filled me with irrefutable beliefs about needing to compare myself to other people and other beliefs so that I would not be judged as wrong or bad.”

“And all such programming is essentially equivalent to post-hypnotic suggestions, repeatedly fed into my subconscious mind.” I ponder with shock. “No wonder I see only ego and separation everywhere I look.”

As I dig deeper, I clearly see how all judgments, core issues, and even my God drama, originate from such hypnotic beliefs – beliefs that most of us never even question.

God Drama Fuel

Shortly before 11:00 a.m. I walk out to Keith’s home for my final private session of the season. But to my dismay, when I arrive, there are two women sitting on the porch, and Keith is just barely beginning to work with them in their own private session. (I do not understand it until later, but Keith has been delayed by unforeseeable circumstances all morning, and these two women were supposed to begin their own private session at 9:00 a.m..)

“I don’t know what to tell you,” Keith gives me an apologetic look. “My morning has just fallen apart.”

Immediately, I feel abandoned and rejected, assuming that Keith has either double booked me, or simply allowed someone to walk onto the porch without an appointment. Either way, my God drama rejection/abandonment complex has been triggered deeply.

“So, what do I do?” I ask, feeling hurt and stunned.

“Can you come back at 12:30?” Keith asks after checking his schedule.

“Isn’t so-and-so coming just after that?” I ask.

“She is not until 1:30 p.m.,” Keith responds.

I pause and do not respond for ten seconds. I know Keith will not be ready at 12:30 p.m. if he is just starting his current appointment now, and I do not want to be cut short at 1:30.

Memories are flooding my mind – memories of what happened just over a year ago when Keith was about to leave San Marcos in early April of 2011. I had scheduled a final appointment with him, and he had, at the last second, pressured me to allow Serg to join us. I was so hurt and angry at the time, lost in inner unexpressed anger. In the end, that session proved to be amazing and powerful, perfect for what I needed. But today, I want my two hours of one-on-one time with Keith. It will be my last chance for such a session in a very long time. Even with these memories racing through me, I remain peaceful, trusting that all is OK, even though I still have not responded to Keith.

“Unless you want to come this evening,” Keith suddenly volunteers.

“I could do that,” I respond with optimism, proud of myself for staying in my trust.

Another Emotional Reality

As I soon walk away with a 6:00 p.m. appointment in the books, I feel deeply frustrated, feeling renewed God-drama triggers telling me I am being abandoned, ignored, and that my needs are not as important as those of others, blah, blah, blah …

“I know all will work out perfectly, and that Keith would not do this if he were not guided,” I remind myself in repeated attempts at self-calming. “But I am angry and hurt that Keith would do this to me. What about ME? Do I not matter?”

As I walk slowly toward home, the inner debate is heated, both sides of the argument firmly standing their ground. Suddenly, I find a peaceful place.

“Of course,” I ponder with a clarity-giggle. “This is MY creation, and I set this up as a final lesson in nonattachment and going with the flow … maintaining my peace … not judging … not needing to be right or wrong … or good or bad.”

Even with peaceful clarity, however, the naysayers in my head continue to stir up dissent. It is only after honoring my inner children with a burger and fries – and after spending two-and-a-half hours in a beautiful Skype call with a friend – that I find peace.

Suddenly, in the middle of that Skype call, I realize what is happening. I have again triggered yet-another river of sewage – emotions of teenage struggle with feeling rejected and abandoned by God. The emotions I have been feeling are extremely out of proportion to actual events, reminding me in huge ways that I am running old putrid emotions through me, simply struggling not to attach or identify with them.

As soon as this realization clearly sinks in, I switch to observer mode, allowing the emotion to flow on autopilot, and enjoying the remainder of the conversation with my dear friend. It continues to boggle my mind how past emotional realities can be so convincing and overwhelming.

High-Heart Heaviness

After returning home from my phone call, I find peaceful clarity and beautiful energy as I meditate nonstop for one-and-a-half hours.

I do note, however, that my high-heart region feels deeply pressurized with a heavy dense energy. I am not sure if it is emotional density or perhaps something trying to open and expand … and I do not concern myself with it. Instead, I choose to trust my process, believing that such knowing will unfold.

Shortly before 6:00 p.m., I end this amazing meditation and walk out to Keith’s home for my final private session of the season.

“How are you doing?” Keith asks.

“I think I am running teenage abandonment, rejection, and God drama stuff through me again,” I respond after sharing details of my day. “Another layer has been triggered by the silly scheduling things from this morning.”

Keith quickly checks his own guidance and congratulates me, telling me that his own guidance backs me up one-hundred percent.

After several short conversations about a myriad of pertinent topics, including my deep insights into post-hypnotic suggestions, all of that former pressure in my high-heart region suddenly returns – feeling heavy and dense. Unlike a couple of hours ago, however, I am now feeling the deep emotions that go with the pressure, and intuitions tell me this wants to come out, NOW!

Releasing Betrayal

“It doesn’t make any sense to me,” I quickly explain to Keith,” but I suddenly feel like crying very deeply.”

“Quit listening to your mother telling you that you should not cry,” Keith lovingly scolds me. “Go into it. Allow your process.”

Within seconds, I am dry-heaving energy out of my throat in agonizing ways. A few coughs and tears also join in, but most of the emotion is released as if I am vomiting energy out of my throat. The emotion is intense and excruciating, lasting a few minutes. I note with fascination that I can literally feel the energies leaving my high-heart region, as well as from a thin line that runs vertically from my throat to my heart.

I literally feel as if the wind were knocked out of my gut … BUT the sensation is not in my belly, that “wind-knocked-out” sensation is in my entire upper chest.

“That emotion felt like intense anger mixed with sadness,” I share with Keith when the release subsides.

“What a perfect definition of how betrayal feels,” Keith responds.

Betrayal Breadcrumbs

When the tears dry up, Keith continues to support me as an empath, encouraging me to allow more emotions to flow out of me the easy way. Keith suggests that I try a few metaphors to help me get out of the way so that the emotions will flow more easily. After trying several things, I find that filling my own heart with love and imagining myself as an adult empath helping my inner teenager is the most helpful for now.

I do this quite peacefully for a while. I am fascinated as I observe the movement of the dense energies that remain. I feel the pains migrate from my high heart down into that “nail-in-my-heart” spot.

As I attempt to continue releasing more emotion, the pain in this “nail-in-my-heart” spot increases greatly.

“This pain is not density that needs to be released,” I soon share new intuitions with Keith. “Instead, I am reminded that this spot in my heart chakra is the center of my betrayal metaphor – of having been crucified in the name of God. This pain is an aspect of my own loyal energies, rebelling at my attempts to further open. It is the betrayed part of me that is making a valiant stand of resistance, attempting to keep me safe from further betrayal.”

“Keep following the breadcrumbs,” Keith encourages me, not supporting or denying my intuition.

To The Beginning

When I eventually invite this betrayal energy to join me in the inner conference room, I soon sense deep anger and lack of trust. As I attempt to further communicate, I feel increased resistance and lack of cooperation. Again, I revisit former thoughts that perhaps this really is density, or something else. About the only thing clear is that the energy I am connected to feels deeply betrayed … betrayed by ME.

“You are doing great,” Keith responds when I again ask for guidance. “Just keep doing what you are doing.”

I soon involve my Higher Self in the inner conference room, asking this part of me to work with Higher Self … hoping that perhaps this betrayed piece of me might trust something or someone other than me.

When this does not work either, I follow a new intuition that guides me back to childhood. I invite this betrayed aspect of myself to return with me to the beginning – to the time when the two of us jointly made the painful decision to shut down all of our magic.

Finally, I begin to feel energetic shifts and intuitions that tell me something is working – that energy is vibrating, softening, and starting to move.

Beauty And The Beast

After a while, an old metaphor of “Beauty and the Beast” suddenly returns to my intuitions. I found great peace in this metaphor just over a year ago when I first began working with inner masculine and feminine energies. The “Beast” represented my wounded, betrayed, and angry masculine self – an inner aspect still doing his job of protecting me – providing me with support, strength, and power – while I resented and judged him as evil. After all these years, even after the healing I did with Star Trek Metaphors, this masculine part of me continues to feel unlovable and forgotten … having spent five decades of being abused. He does not trust me, does not trust my love, and does not want to be abused, disrespected, or forced to ride in the back seat any longer.

In this meditation, I see myself as “Beauty” or “Belle.” I have been afraid of the “Beast” for most of my life, and during most of my healing journey I have blamed him for not cooperating, resenting his stubborn refusal to drop his protection and to allow some love to come through.

For a while, in silent meditation, I focus on finding my own ability to love that rejected Beast … repeatedly imagining visuals and storylines from the Walt Disney movie to flow through me. Gradually, relaxation and peace begin to fill me.

Magical Highs, Excruciating Emotions

“This nail-in-my-heart spot feels like the focal point or source of my body clenching,” I soon share with Keith. “This is the part of me that is trying to micromanage and control the rest of me to keep me safe … to raise the shields … to reject “mother” and other fixing energy as being an attack, etc…”

Again, Keith does not give me much validating feedback, other than to congratulate me for following breadcrumbs and for pealing back more layers of my process. On the one hand, I crave his deeper involvement in my metaphors, but on the other, I know I am learning to work by myself … that very soon I will be doing this completely by myself and he is showing me in a powerful way that I really do not need his help at all.

“You are doing really well,” Keith tells me as he takes a late evening break to feed his cat Squeaky. “I’m getting that it is time to end, and that you are done for the night.”

“I am going to miss having Keith around to help me,” I ponder as I walk home, “but I really need a break. These last nine months of nonstop inner work have been brutally intense.”

I really look forward to a break from the inner work. I am so deeply grateful for the profound healing – healing that has taken me to magical highs and unimaginable depths of excruciating emotional pain – pain that I would not wish on anyone – but healing that I would share with the world.

A Playground Of Growth

I love the insights I have obtained by pondering the similarities between post-hypnotic suggestions and the cultural/religious/societal beliefs that are hypnotically programmed into our minds from infancy. Both leave us seeing only what we are programmed to see, leaving us unable to see anything outside of our boxes.

These two days have been an intense playground of growth, beginning and ending with continued flows of teenage emotional garbage – emotions that are systematically coming up and out. Both days included Keith, and others, repeatedly encouraging me to “go for it” – to ignore the judgmental voices of others who do, and did, condemn me for carrying such a deep emotional load – and for needing to cry through so many repressed and suppressed layers of agonizing pain.

Today took me ever deeper into new clarity surrounding the inner betrayal energies that form the basis of my God drama – and the basis of my ongoing feud between inner masculine and feminine energies.

And yesterday … wow did I ever have a powerful journey, aided by a very unusual trinity of loving support – The father, the daughter, and the holy drunk. I will never forget that profound experience. I had no idea that my mother’s essence continued to smother and squish my heart and power centers with such force – but even more revealing is the fact that my mother is not doing it TO me. It is me that clings to the ongoing payoff – it is me that fears releasing the heaviness, lest I be forced to face the brilliance of that magical light.

As I ponder back to yesterday morning – to an earthquake that awakened me shortly after midnight, I can only giggle at all the fun “Star Trek” and “Beauty And The Beast” metaphors that intuitively bless my process.

Yes indeed, these have been an extremely magical and deeply excruciating nine months of inner work with Keith. I feel deeply nostalgic – and exhausted – as I ponder that tomorrow will be my final chocolate ceremony of the season – my final opportunity for deep growth with Keith’s assistance ….

Or Is It?

Copyright © 2012 by Brenda Larsen, All Rights Reserved