Issue Two - October 2007
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What's New!

The new date for the full day retreat at Mount Carmel Spiritual Center is November 3, 2007. You can visit www.carmelniagara.com to register.

Check the following out as a wonderful way to stay connected to our beautiful earth - Sunlight Map http://www.die.net/earth/

There is one place left in the next coaching circle in Niagara-on-the-Lake that begins on Tuesday, October 16th at 7 p.m. for six consecutive weeks. Just to note, once we form as a circle we sometimes decide as a group to miss one week that’s particularly busy for everyone so there is some flexibility. Visit www.coachingcircles.ca to register.

In the near future, I will be offering tele-circles based on the Claim Your Life as Your Own process and will keep you posted when the first pilot series will be available for you to register.

Please pass on to others who are on this path…

Hi!

Welcome again to my monthly newsletter publication that is designed to give you information and insights to support you in claiming your life as your own.

Please click on the Subscribe link so this complimentary newsletter will automatically arrive in your inbox for the next three months. This will give you the opportunity to get a good taste of what it offers you. If you haven’t unsubscribed, your subscription will then be renewed automatically. Feel free to unsubscribe if at any time you find this newsletter isn’t of value to you.

The Gift Of Loving Yourself First

Many loving, naturally-giving people experience an imbalance in their flow of giving and receiving. They give easily; it’s receiving from others that is challenging. Unlike those who have difficulty considering others, this message is addressed to those who disregard considering themselves!

Disregard for self can be rooted in such beliefs as: “It’s selfish for me to be my number one priority.” Or “I’m not worthy of receiving what I need and desire”, “I’m not good enough” or “I’m not important enough”. Others might believe that “To be a good person, I must sacrifice my own needs”. I’ve also heard, “I’m a woman/man; I’m supposed to take care of others and be the nurturer”. Do any of these thoughts ring true for you? And what’s the real truth?

Although the following is a strong statement, pay attention to how its truth might resonate with you. When we don’t love ourselves, we are unable to truly love another. Another way of saying this is how loving we feel toward others is connected to how loving we are of ourselves.

What I have seen is that when we give from a depleted place within ourselves, which is often the case when we don’t truly receive, strings can be attached to our generosity. At times, we may actually be giving to others as an indirect way to get our own needs met instead of coming from a purely selfless place. We may need to feel important and valued. Because we’re not valuing ourselves, others in our world and our life as a whole may be reflecting that back to us in subtle and not so subtle ways.

Here are some clues to help identify if this describes you:

  • Do you strongly react when your needs are ignored even though you realize that you didn’t clearly ask for what you want?
  • Do you sometimes wonder in those moments of self-honesty - when is it going to be my turn?
  • Are there times that you feel overwhelmed from giving?
  • Does your body sometimes shout either through a tight jaw or a tense gut that you’ve had enough?
  • Do you often feel hurt or defensive with the people who love you?
  • How much pressure is there on those who love you to show you that you are indeed loved?
  • Do the important people in your life need to reassure you of their love on an almost day-to-day basis because you can forget?

It’s all about receiving, and it has to begin with us. I think back to my experience of being in a counseling group years ago when there was much emphasis on giving one another ‘strokes’, units of recognition. In this case, the recognition was very focused on the positive. Even though I received so much loving feedback, I realized that I wasn’t able to receive it. What I found myself doing was dismissing their words because I didn’t really believe them, or I compared what someone else received as a way to take away from my own feedback. I noticed that I started to grow even more dependent on others love, giving them the power to define me. And, of course, as is natural to the human way, sometimes I was wonderful to them; and sometimes I wasn’t because I didn’t please or say the right thing. What I experienced is how easy it is to get into the habit of looking to others to get one’s needs met. What I now know for sure is that it’s a trap that can take us away from ourselves. THE essential ingredient to deeply receiving is to be self-loving.

I have learned that when I don’t feel loving, loved or connected to others, I need to stop and give myself some loving attention. It’s a barometer for me. With the help of my observer, that internal part of me that is able to come from objectivity, I recognize the cues. I then know that I need to sit with myself and reconnect to my own heart’s openness and love…toward myself. It makes all the difference. I breathe deeply, I feel grounded, I see through the eyes of love.

One way to address looking to others for love and needing the reassurance that you are loved is to stand in front of a mirror. Tell yourself while you look deeply into your eyes: “I love you. I’ll always be here for you. You can feel safe and secure as I am at your side.” Check inside of you and talk in a way that you notice the impact of your words at a body level. You relax. You feel grounded. Your heart opens. Then you know that you’re deeply receiving the energy of love that you’re giving to yourself. Begin your day with this ritual. Notice the impact on how you relate to others throughout the day.

You may have read about the above technique before…and haven’t done it. Notice your resistance. I’m reminding you that it’s time…right now…to put this simple and powerful technique into practice.

It is so much easier to make changes in your life when you’re solidly there for yourself and have a strong internal support system. We look in the wrong places for love…out there, and it’s so much an inside job. Begin with your relationship with you. Fall in love with yourself. Take the time to identify your strengths and place your loving focus there. You are worthy of this.

From this loving place, start to notice your impact. You will know how well you are doing in the arena of loving yourself first by what’s reflected back to you in the eyes, words and behaviors of others.

Please pass this message onto others who might benefit.

In the spirit of being complete and not finished,


905-468-3849


Jeannie is deeply committed to sparking the hearts of people to experience an inner confidence - that sense of wholeness, aliveness, and serenity that comes from deeply knowing yourself, fully accepting the lightness and darkness of being human, and living freely by standing in your own truth.

In her coaching practice, Jeannie leads groups and works one-on-one with an international clientele. She has also been interviewed by national magazines like Homemaker’s, has been published in Esteem Magazine, and is a contributing author of “101 Great Ways to Improve Your Life” along with such luminaries as Byron Katie, Mark Victor Hansen, and Ken Blanchard. To find out more about Jeannie, please visit her websites, www.innerconfidencecoaching.com and www.coachingcircles.ca

© Copyright 2007 Jeannie Campanelli. All Rights Reserved.