Friday, April 14, 2017

Part 1:Superheroes, Being of Service and Self care


I feel like I should start to untangle the story of how I became a self-care coach for Healers.

My being-of-service comes honestly.
Before I was conscious of it, my grandmother was my original superhero.

She could do it all.

When she wasn’t making the world’s best everything as a baker in a federal bank’s cafeteria, she cooked rock-star level meals from scratch at home.

I dare you to make a better tea cake.

If it was Wednesday, she went to bible study.
Sometimes on Friday nights, she played cards with friends.
On Saturdays, she cleaned the house, went to the farmers’ market to prepare Sunday dinner for a small tribe. Depending on the Saturday, in the afternoon she went to choir practice.
Sundays, she talked to friends on the phone before Sunday School. She served in many church leadership roles. She helped in the kitchen during special church occasions.

It was like she never stopped moving.
My mom is the same way.

To see my grandmother sick and eventually pass away from cancer is a feeling without enough adequate words.
How do you describe the guilt of coming home to visit and struggling to recognize someone you’ve known your entire life because a disease took their fiery energy and personality?

For a long time I didn’t recognize what I felt was guilt.
It showed up as grief, anger, resentment, confusion, depression, hopelessness, addictive behaviors, a deep, deep desire to escape….

I Am fortunate I had people around to help me fall apart and not lose myself completely to the grief.

After my grandmother passed away I felt a strong sense to be of service, as she had. I saw it and still see it as a way to honor her memory and answer the Call to be a Healer as she had.

My journey to get to where I am now started out ugly.
I went through feeling exhausted, resentful, needy, and taking things personally, while I healed from addiction.

yay

I felt a strong sense of survivor’s remorse.
I’d lost friends to rejection, violence, chronic illness, social diseases, and severe mental breakdown (2 friends had to be institutionalized and one friend took her own life).
Yet here I was alive and healthy.
For a very long time I had no idea why I was either alive or healthy and that bothered the hell out of me. I’m amazed I survived and remember any of my twenties.
Survivor’s remorse felt like an odd kind of gratitude to where the sadness of the guilt outweighed the good of the gratitude.
Surviving and thriving messed with my head so much that, to make up for being alive, I felt like I had to help everyone I could.
Everyone.
I had advice on everything to make everyone’s lives better.
“Yeah, I’ll help you with that.”
“Sure, I can help with that project.”
“Yes, I’ll be able to come to that meeting.”
“Absolutely, I can do that for you.”
“No, I don’t need help. I can do it myself.”
“I can do this.”
“I can do that.”
“Yes.”
"Yeah."
"Mmhhm."
“Sure.”
“Okay.”
“No problem.”

In the back of my head I’d convinced myself I could help everyone because I remember my grandmother helping everyone.

2 major things happened.
1, I became resentful, and pissy because not a lot of people were listening to all this stellar advice I was giving them. (Pfft. The nerve.)
2, I never got to do a lot of things I wanted because I was busy helping everyone with their stuff and then I blamed them because I wasn’t doing what I wanted to do.

Newsflash: Neither of these are self-empowering.

What I didn’t realize until after I started to take better care of myself, say “no” more often, and start to pay attention to my relationship with addiction did I come to understand that when I made myself last I lost.

It shouldn’t be a surprise, but how often do we make ourselves last and then we do it again and again and again, until it becomes our habit; our addiction?

My rationale for acting this way weakened when I realized, while my grandmother was self reliant and did some things on her own, she had help on the things she didn’t do on her own.

Most importantly she ASKED for help.
A close second to this is she had no problem asking for help.
She took naps when she was tired.
She drank tea in the afternoon.
She watched soap operas when she got home from work (It was not a good idea to call when her “stories” were on.).

She enjoyed watching Tom Baker's Dr. Who. 20 million cool points!

She said and meant “no” when she said “no.”
She had no problem expressing herself and living her life with passion.
She connected strongly with Spirit and it kept her going during some potentially soul-crushing times.
She loved fiercely and adored babies and had some very old-school, rational advice on raising kids.

She is a powerful example of being of service and the balance between giving with receiving.

So I had to let go of the guilt of not being the same level of superhero as my grandmother.
She would have wanted me to be my own superhero.
She would have wanted me to be passionate about what lights me up, but also rest so that I could do the things I’m passionate about.
She would have wanted me to be brave and have faith in myself, and respect and be proud of myself as she was/is proud of me.

I must remember to embrace consistent self care and let go of what isn’t serving me and my Highest Good and to show up powerfully and honestly.

In the following blog posts, I’ll write more on why many of us struggle with consistent self care, habitually make ourselves last and suggests some ways to support our healing and growth.

To find out more about me and who I Am, visit my site mckinleycoaching.com.