Tuesday, February 26, 2019

Your Sole to Your Soul


What the heck do feet have to do with spirituality?

I would say, a whole lot. 

Your feet are your connector to the earth and nervous system. They offer you the support to go in the directions you need for your higher good. As many reflexologists and acupuncturists know, your feet hold the nerve endings to all of your functioning systems in your body. 


If we are not rooted in the earth, it is impossible for us to grow spiritually and energetically.  The feet (and the whole body for that matter) ground us in the here and now. They allow us to feel what is the right direction for us at this time and stage of our lives. Without that connection, we can become easily influenced by other people’s perspectives, agendas or energies.  We can fall into anxiety, become scattered or make bad choices if we aren’t truly in our bodies, feeling out what direction is really the best for us. Our bodies and the earth want us to be well, fulfilled and balanced. When we listen to them and make choices from that place of grounded connection, we can feel more at peace with who we are and our place in the world.

Right now, the half way point between winter and spring, the earth is starting to wake up from hibernation. So are our bodies. Our feet symbolize the awakening of this foundation in our lives. By rubbing the with oils, or giving them foot soaks, getting a pedicure or going for light walks, we are opening up the energy channels that have been causing stagnation in our lives.

I’ve had times when I am rubbing my feet while meditating and I got some pretty amazing insights and ideas. 

Caring for your feet can be one of the simplest ways to pamper yourself and bring you back into your body so you are grounded, at peace and can manage your life. Caring for your soles is caring for your soul.

Saturday, February 16, 2019

Is Your Wounded Inner Child Acting Out?


Every person on this planet has within them a wounded inner child. It is next to impossible not to have one. What I mean by the wounded inner child, is that part within us that felt helpless and dependent on our parents when we were small. Inevitably, we wouldn’t have gotten our needs met – whether it’s from a parent who made us cry to sleep by ourselves because they were too tired, or something worse like touch deprivation or physical abuse.  Everyone has some scar of abandonment, shame or neglect imbedded into their psyches – the level of intensity and trauma is based on the scale of how a person was treated consistently.  


The wounded inner child is the part of us that acts out, sulks, rages, and becomes overly emotional or reactive to our adult situations.  This is the area that most therapists try to address tenderly in their sessions.  It is necessary to feel and process the wound out in order to gain inner strength. Often, though, we have no idea where to even begin to address the issues.

From a spiritual perspective, I believe we are all here to grow in giving and receive loving presence, first towards ourselves and then towards others. We incarnated as souls full of love, peace and harmony, born into a world of chaos and violence. As little beings, we had to face our families which were full of subtle and overt rejections, making us believe that our needs don’t matter and we are fundamentally flawed or unlovable.

Our spiritual job here on Earth is to make our ways back home to ourselves as beings of love and peace, and to share that with others. Unfortunately, many of us have severe wounds from growing up that have made us forget our true, divine nature. We treat ourselves poorly and then treat others poorly. This is how intergenerational trauma happens and extends itself in warped and unexplainable ways.

For example, a grandfather may have been an alcoholic and toxified the house with anger and abuse. The son looks to the father and says “I will never be like you” and becomes perfect in all areas of his life – except he walks around with the wound of bitterness and seething anger. Then his son internalizes it, believing he is a bad kid and ends up taking drugs and dropping out to prove that it is true. On the cycle goes.

When we do the inner work of facing our inner child, we are taking great leaps of courage to face our souls and discover how many illusions of feeling small we have been living under. When we dig in and see the false beliefs and perspectives we have been carrying about ourselves, the world and other people, then we are effectively liberating ourselves from an endless cycle of suffering. We can then open up to a new reality and really experience life in a fuller and more enriching way.

For example, I knew a woman who had severe trauma in her childhood. Her parents were abusive in the worst ways. Her traumas were deep and huge. Because she hadn’t unpacked her pain and stuff, she kept attracting men who would abuse her and deny they did it, making her the crazy one. She then became suspicious of everyone – of course because that’s the way of protecting herself from getting hurt again. Her world was a terrifying place to live. The sad part, though, is she pushed away and blocked out people who wanted to help her and support her. She ended up in a life of loneliness and isolation.  She hadn’t grown up emotionally because the traumas were so deep and she really didn’t seek or get the help to face that lonely little girl inside of her. Her life would have been very different if she had done the inner healing to break out of the illusion that everyone is a monster working against her. Many would say she has mental health issues, she needs psychiatric help, etc.  That may be the case as a short term solution, but they aren’t helping her with getting to the bottom of the problem – deep down she believed that she deserved this treatment and she was a bad person because these things kept happening to her. When the truth is that she just had to learn to set healthy boundaries and to love and care for herself first. It is not her job to be a servant to her parents or to others in life.  It is so unfortunate that many therapists don’t help their clients find that inner void of loneliness, fear and feeling unlovable. They will listen, advise and help release emotions. But they won’t face the very obvious and simple question: “what did you believe about yourself because of this?”. To me, this questions is the foundation to help the client self-empower and break out of the prison of their own suffering and unhealthy relationship patterns. Once a person realizes they don’t deserve to be mistreated, then they can naturally create healthy boundaries, be assertive, and sense their own self-worth.

Many people have become mistrusting of therapy because they feel like it is going to cost them a lot of money and they have no idea what it is they need to work on.  I have gone to therapy myself and I would say that a true therapist is one who understands the importance of trauma processing, inner child work and is not afraid of emotions.  Therapists who can’t or won’t go there are just dealing with the superficial and you will waste your money. That said, even with a great therapist, it is important to do the self-empowerment work that coaches and transformation facilitators offer. Otherwise you can wallow in your past pain without moving forward.

When you get into the heart of the issue and really uproot what is going on from a perspective of being loved or not, it is actually quite easy to see the solutions that are needed.  Asking a few simple questions can do wonders for awakening us from under the spell of confusion and inner child wounds. One of the questions I like to ask someone struggling with relationships is: “What do you need to feel loved?”  Sitting with that question can bring up remarkable insights and aha’s for someone.

When I was asked that question, I responded: “I need to be believed.” That was a shocking response for me – I had no idea that because of a childhood wound of not being believed about abuse, I had felt unloved. The truth is that the adults had their own issues going on with denial and they didn’t have any emotional availability to take my fear and anger seriously. They just saw me as a cute kid who was upset.  Even though my truth was my truth, I took in the way the adults around me responded as deep emotional abandonment, believing that no one in the world will ever hear me or get me – I am all alone with the pain. To this day, if there are people around me who don’t believe or validate me emotionally, I detach from them quickly. Yes, there may be deeper emotions I need to process with a therapist around this, but the simple awareness that I have a fundamental need of being believed and validated, has helped me understand how much I have created my whole world from that wound. Who I chose as friends, enemies and causes I took on, came from that place of the wounded inner child. If I could have just simply validated myself and just believed in my truth, I may not have had to spend a ton of energy feeling lonely, abandoned or betrayed.   

I invite you to really examine your inner child’s wounds and needs whenever you notice yourself over-reacting or under-reacting to something. As the Adult Children of Alcoholics and Dysfunctional Families program says: “We need to take a blameless inventory of ourselves and our parents. We can become our own loving parent”.

Monday, February 11, 2019

What is Love?


As someone who is technically in the “business of love” where I’ve helped over 1,500 people with their personal lives and emotional recovery, I’m honestly still figuring it out.

Here is what I have learned about love from relating with clients, tuning into Higher Love, and going through my own personal journey:

1)      It makes you feel good and puts a smile on your face
2)      It risks being honest in a genuinely concerned way for everyone involved
3)      It is full of respect and dignity for self and others
4)      It considers the needs of others
5)      It detaches when there is abuse or mistreatment
6)      It can be quiet or loud, depending on what is required
7)      It brings out the noblest traits in a person
8)      It offers emotional support, encouragement or validation
9)      It watches out for the vulnerable beings
10)   It cares about fairness, connection and good vibes


I will always say that loving, respecting, knowing and honouring oneself is where the work first begins. When we truly can stand in our truth and stay balanced in who we are, then we can genuinely love others and the community around us. We respond to what is really needed, not necessarily what we think is needed to any relationship or situation.

Love never asks us to put ourselves in harm’s way or to stay in something dangerous, abusive or exploitative.

What does love mean to you?

Tuesday, February 5, 2019

Reclaiming Kindness in the Time of Bullies

In the last couple of years, it seems that the bullies have come out of the closet. Between the politics in the States and the change of government in Ontario, there has been an agenda to dominate the natural world and overtake anything that supports human dignity and well-being.

For anyone who has suffered from bullying – in the workplace, online at school, in a family, with friends or in the world-at-large—it can be a really rough time right now to feel safe and confident. You may want to hide under the covers, hoping it will all go away. Though that is a good solution to self-soothe until you re-gain strength, it’s really not the answer to an enjoyable life.




I myself have had bullying in so many forms – and I’m happy to share my stories with you when we meet.I intimately get how debilitating or overwhelming the experience can be. A mix of emotions of anger, sadness, disempowerment, wanting to give up come flooding in. And the worst is when you can’t even recognize yourself.

It’s only recently with a counsellor that I had a transformative moment as I recognized, named and released the confusion I had with how I was treated by men in my life who intimidated me and tried to psychologically dominate me. There was that little piece in me that really believed that I had done something so bad to deserve such rage and attack. After the session, I realized how it was really sick dudes who wanted to pick on women and children. I also realized that it wasn’t my fault I couldn’t protect myself from these abusive people. I had lost trust in my kind and trusting nature believe it was at fault for putting me in harm’s way.

The light bulb went off where I reclaimed this innocent and kind part of myself – my kindness is my strength not the thing that will get me killed. I just have to discern who I give my kindness to and if they are deserving of it.

I know I’m not the only one suffering in the world with this. There are tons of kind guys and sensitive women out there who genuinely care and struggle to feel confident and clear in the world, especially right now with everything going on.

It’s why I have created the “Naturally Confident Programs” for the kind, sensitive types.  It will help you clear out any inner beliefs and past experiences that keep you feeling and playing small so you can make a loving impact in the world and get your needs met.

To explore this further, just book a Free “Get to the Heart of the Problem” Breakthrough Sessionwith me. You may also want to join my private facebook group: “Kind Hearts CanChange the World”.

Support is what we need right now…