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VRATA >>

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I’m studying yoga, and the very first day of our 10 week course, we discussed ”vrata.” Vrata is Sanskrit for vow. This word comes up often in our online studies, as well as the implications of vrata throughout yogic history. We learned that vrata connects inner intentions with outer actions, which is the essence of momentum in life and yoga. Vrata seals an intention and makes it real by speaking it into existence. There is sound value to vrata. I double underlined that phrase in my notes. Sound value. You become what you articulate because vrata gives us direction and empowers us. It has karmic weight, and therefore, has consequences.

A few nights ago, I played a song I hadn’t heard in a long time: “True Companion” by Marc Cohn. His lyrics eloquently describe his vow of companionship, and the melody is equally as beautiful as the meaningful words. The lyrics particularly struck me, but not because they are flowery. It was because they are clearly articulated. He outlines his life-through-death plan with his companion, and airily sings it into existence, giving it sound value, direction, and weight.

The word vow in and of itself has depth. It does not simply imply compliance, but rather a willful, yearning to comply. A promise that means something when you keep it, just like my blog states in a pretty pink banner. Promises are to be kept, but not by begging, coercion or ultimatum. A vow has a sacred connotation. It symbolizes the ultimate commitment to oneself, or to something that has immense meaning and value. But a vow is only meaningful if the desire to keep the promise far exceeds the notion or temptation to dissolve or ignore it.

A vow is risky. It holds more weight than a resolution or a goal. Didn’t stick with your New Year’s Resolution? Fine. Just make a new one next week and try again. Not with a vow. Vows either lead to growth and higher consciousness, or to devastation and failure. Of course the potential growth or failure can ripple into numerous beneficial or detrimental outcomes. It is the ripple that renders a vow risky. Perhaps the ripple is small, and affects only one. Or perhaps it continues well beyond the devolution of the promise, and continues far beyond the act of failure. The detrimental rippling is especially difficult if you are an empath.

Empaths don’t “do,” they “feel.” And they never stop yearning for potential growth, because with growth comes deep feelings. Feelings are like a drug. The deeper the connection, the deeper the feeling, and the empath is fed. Conversely, lack of connection and depth starve an empath. It is a living hell. Starved of emotion or of an outlet to share these feelings with takes training and practice to be able to cope. And just like any loss or withdrawal from a drug, it is debilitating. The biggest drug is of all is hope. Hope is a gift and a curse, just like being an empath is. The gifts of being an empath are the immense capacity to feel, the ability to foster intense emotions and connections simply by watching body language or by touching someone, or even just by reading or hearing something. Each instance is connected to a strong emotion that lasts far beyond than that moment in time. I not only feel the words, but carry them with me. I don’t just feel my emotions, I feel the entirety of emotions from anyone within my radar. I feel emotion connected to the lines on your face when I stare at you, to the feeling of your skin when I touch you, or to the words I read. They all hold weight. The hope drug keeps the possibility of deep connection alive and feeds me.

Thus, the curse is exactly the same. There is no off-switch. You can’t “just get over it” or forget what you heard or saw because they are connected to a strong emotion. It’s a losing battle to even try. Therefore, the gift of a vow is potential nirvana. It is real as soon as it’s spoken because you immediately bind the promise with strong emotions. Consequently, the curse of a dissolved or disrespected vow is the hollowness that will never leave you, because you can’t turn off your innate ability to feel. Strong emotions don’t dissolve just because a promise did. And that’s scary as hell.

A vow is not just a thing to do. It is an appellation of intense emotions and yearnings of the heart and mind. The vow bundles these into a neat package, just like my pretty pink banner. It’s so enticing and alluring, why wouldn’t I commit to a vow again in life? I see the potential I have, and I honor my promises. So I am conflicted. I love and hate the notion of a promise with depth and intensity. I am afraid to try and be left in the dust, loyal to my vow and starved of an outlet. So what is the solution? Make a vow to myself, and keep it. The gift of hope tells me that someday that vow will lead to a gift of light-hearted ease, coupled with heavy intense emotions—both good and bad. I don’t fear those when they live concentrically, I crave them.

So last night, I wrote a vow. It’s a promise to me and my daughters. It’s not as melodic as Marc Cohn’s, but equally as clear and heartfelt. It is direction packaged with intention, and even a little hope. As I wrote it, I thought about the fact that this vow may be the only weighty vow I make again in this life, which is a bit daunting. Nonetheless, I will keep this promise to us and come out ahead of my fears. A vrata has sound value, and is grounded by the weight of truth. Truth is clear, directional, and empowering. I vow to connect my inner intentions and outer actions, which I am speaking into existence.

GROWING INTO ME >>

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My years are marked by wrinkles and responsibilities. They are 14 and 12. 

My skin folds when I forget to tighten my belly before I look at it. Gravity is not friendly in your 40’s. But my belly is. It gave me two children.

My hands are cracked from dishes and shoveling in arctic temps. My rings no longer fit because my knuckles have gotten bigger. But my hands hold smaller, softer, clingy fingers well—which, by the way, like to try on all of my rings while I sit and watch. 

My hair is expensive. I’m blonde-ish, which hides my gray that I pretend not to have. The silver flashes gently frame my face, like a crown of accomplishment. That crown is invaluable as my accomplishments sleep upstairs in peace.

My jokes and sarcasm have been sidelined in lieu of quiet joy, unimportant and inconsequential to most who know me. Unless you know me.

My presence is less influenced by where I need to be and more influenced by where I find meaning. Being the center of attention is increasingly less appealing, and inversely proportionate to being centered.

As my body shape shifts, so too does my soul. My body grows differently, begging for my mind and soul to stay ahead. So I silence my body and ease my mind a bit more each year so that my soul has room to grow. And it grows louder. It must grow to keep up with the hearts (42, 14 and 12, respectively). So I sit in my body as quietly as I’m capable of in any given moment, and I listen to the hearts. If my body is too loud, I can’t hear the beats, and I’m lost. My mind becomes flat and one-dimensional. And my soul leaks and slowly deflates until I grow quiet enough to repair them both. Then I can hear the distinct beats again.

As I grow into quietness, I feel more at ease and less combative with the universe. 40 is a tipping point.  It’s not a bad place, but you have to let go of the noise in order to connect the beats to your soul. Actually, 40 is the place to be—but only when you’re ready. And when you’re ready, you’ll know, because you’ll hear all the beats. I’m growing. I’m going. My soul is flowing for the beats and me.

2/6/19