"Every act of creation is first an act of destruction."
Pablo Picasso
Artwork by Jackson Pollack
OAK PARK and Evanston, ILlinois | 708-289-3899 | nancy@lyricalhealing.com
“Every pain, addiction, anguish, longing, depression, anger or fear is an orphaned part of us seeking joy, some disowned shadow wanting to return to the light and home of ourselves.”
Jacob Nordby | Art by Kathe Kollwitz
We all have these feelings. Let us honor them.
I can help you to feel those feelings, and honor them, just because they are part of you...
Noirmaste -- the dark in me honors the dark in you.
And I can help you "feel it to heal it" when that's appropriate.
"Every act of creation is first an act of destruction."
Pablo Picasso
Artwork by Jackson Pollack
"When nothing is sure, everything is possible."
Margaret Drabble
Photograph https://www.mysticmamma.com/there-are-many-paths-to-awaren…
Let’s not deny the confusion or fear… and also see the possibilities…
“All shall be well, and all shall be well, and all manner of thing shall be well.” ~ Julian of Norwich
Remember --
Our hands caress and express... (they do more than transport germs). Your lungs draw in prana (they do more than breed coronavirus). Your nose discerns wisely and stands guard. Your shoulders mobilize your arms. Your neck connects. Antibodies fight invaders, with the help of heat (fever). And every part of you and every process in your body promotes life, and strives to conserve YOU!
Photograph of Anadamyi Ma, Indian saint
No mortal, or fairy either, can tell where Fairyland begins and where it ends."
George McDonald, in Phantastes
Art by William Blake
...and who can tell where the Sacred begins and where it ends?.... Can we see the Transcendent? Is it "in" our souls? In our hearts? If it's in our hearts is the Transcendent pumped through our veins? If so, is it in our muscles, skin, and organs?
Lyrical Healing sessions are based on the understanding that WE (including our bodies and our emotions) are of The Transcendent.
"I wish I could show you,
when you are lonely or in darkness,
the astonishing light of your own being." ~ Hafiz
Photograph by Gregory Colbert
May your life be free from suffering
May your heart be open
May you know ease and joy in your body
May you share your gifts with the world
May you know your true self in this lifetime
Thai Buddhist blessing
Art by Henri Matisse
The shadows in this shell delineate its lovely curves,
just as your shadowy parts enhance your radiance.
EMDR, in effect, brings light to the dark places in our psyches.
CranioSacral therapy involves "listening" to, and honoring, our pain and discomfort (and also our ease). We created the dark place(s) in an attempt to protect ourselves or others. We have needed the dark. Let's honor that. And also honor the comfort... and joy ;-)
"Be conscious of this unconscious prayer (of your breath),
For she is the most holy place of pilgrimage.
She wishes for you to enter this temple,
Where each breath is adoration
Of the infinite for the incarnate form."
Shiva Rea,
from Radiance Sutras by Lorin Roche
Art by Mark Rothko
The maiden has a menagerie. An emu, a camel, two dogs, a mink, and a noisy but cute skunk. On her walks she takes along the emu, the camel (sometimes she rides on its back), the mink (on a leash), and the dogs. She leaves the skunk behind. She walks every day, enjoying the animals’ company. The dogs skamper, smiling, and wag their tails, the camel carries her belongings with a professorial air, the mink slinks silkily, and the emu rests often.
The skunk, with every missed walk, becomes more and more noisy and bothersome. She bites the camel’s (and the girl’s) legs when they come home, squeaks angrily, and of course sprays her nasty noxious spray. Every day the bites get meaner, the noises get louder, and the smell gets smellier.
The maiden contemplates giving the skunk away. It’s cute, but, of course smelly and annoying. One day, while the maiden is on her walk, a boy walks by her home and notices the skunk. He sits by her cage and admires her. The two gaze at each other for a long time. The skunk quiets down. The boy relaxes.
When the maiden comes home, she sees the boy and the skunk gazing at each other. She is surprised. The boy notices her and smiles. “Is this your skunk?” he asks. “Yes, why?,” she asks, wondering. “She’s a beauty!,” he says. She looks at him quizzically. “She hasn’t sprayed you or squealed at you, or tried to bite you?” she says. “No! Why, does she do those things to you?” “All the time,” she replies. He invites her to sit with him and look into the skunk’s eyes. As the maiden looks into the skunk’s eyes, the skunk gazes back at her. The maiden sits quietly. She looks intently. She sees yearning, spunkiness, softness, longing. They gaze into each other’s eyes for a long time.
The next day, the maiden takes the skunk with her on her walk. The skunk glances up at her gratefully every few minutes. She walks obediently by her side. Sometimes the skunk notices a snake or a scorpion a few feet ahead and warns the maiden by brushing her tail against the maiden’s leg. The skunk never sprays, squeals, or bites again. Well, maybe a squeal now and then….