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Inspiration for Personal & Planetary Transformation
4.21.2018
Hope Springs Eternal
 
Greetings to my spirit circles!
 
What a hard time we have been having.On so many levels. It is hard to stay hopeful when you are worried to death. It requires determined attention and an exquisite combination of focus, concentration and surrender. It is an exercise of discipline, a test of faith, a karmic obligation.

During a recent ceremony of deep cleansing and release, I passed a set of Guatemalan worry dolls around the circle to help us relinquish the nagging apprehensions and insidious anxieties that sap our strength and resolve. All those sneaky, nasty, niggly worries that worm their way into our brains and take up our good time.

Worry dolls are wonderful. There is nothing you can't tell them. Absolutely nothing shocks them, they've heard it all before. And whatever it is that troubles you, they take care of it. Get rid of it. Swallow it. Spirit it away. It is their job, and they are professionals. What a tremendous relief it is to hand over your distress to someone else to deal with.

As the participants took the tiny figures into the palms of their hands, they would allow the flood gates of their heart to open, and let loose a stream of sadness, stress, panic, guilt, worst-case scenarios and catastrophic fears.
 
When the dolls reached Anita, a woman in her late sixties, she calmly declared, "I don't worry. I hope."
 

Brilliant! I felt decades of self-conscious, conscientious pollyannaism vindicated by the transparent truth of that one simple statement. Talk about positive reinforcement.
There are those who say that hope is futile, a waste of time, of precious energy. They contend that hope is completely unrealistic. Simply wishful thinking, they insist. And I say, "Yes. It is, and thank goodness!"

Studies show that optimistic people consistently out-perform those who consider themselves to be more realistic, because they place fewer restrictions on themselves. If you don't know that something is impossible, you are more likely able to be able to do it. Things are only impossible until they aren't! "I think I can. I think I can. I think I can."

While we often have little or no control over the situations that affect us, we do have control over our own perceptions of them. We do have the very real and extremely potent power of perspective. And we definitely possess the crucial and vitally influential choice of how we will deal with whatever comes our way. How we will handle ourselves.
In a wide range of happiness studies conducted lately, including several with major lottery winners, it was clearly demonstrated that professional, educational or financial success are not predictors of contentment. Nor are gender, age, race, religion, health or ethnic background.
 
The key common factors across the board that seem to determine satisfaction, peace of mind, and yes, happiness, are: optimism, self-confidence, self-control, connection to community and living with a sense of spirituality. And, I might add, the desire to be so.

Take me, for instance. I was the most miserable of children. Painfully shy, sadly confused and badly emotionally bruised; constantly abused by great chilly blasts of debilitating negativity. All I ever wanted was to be happy. When an adult would ask me what I wanted to be when I grew up, I would - in my imagination where I dared - answer, "Happy."

I hung hand-lettered and illustrated affirmations (before I knew there was a word for such things) all over my room: I WANT TO BE HAPPY. I WILL BE HAPPY. And then, when I was eighteen years old and living away from home for the first time, it suddenly, incredibly, indelibly occurred to me one marvelous morning that I could be anybody I wanted to be. I could be a happy person! And so, ever since then I have been!

Happiness is fleeting (as is pain). The trick is to court it, to recognize it - even in camouflage - to acknowledge its presence when and where we least expect it, to celebrate each second of the healing heart and soul of it, and to rejoice in our own exhilarating ability to create it for ourselves and others at any given moment, in any circumstance.

"If you are happy and you know it, clap your hands!"

With best blessings for a joyful, hopeful spring,
xxMD signature
 
The Dawn of Hope
 
Hope and despair are not opposites. They are cut from the very same cloth, made from the very same material, shaped from the very same circumstances. Every life finds itself forced to choose one from the other, one day at a time, one circumstance after another. The sunflower, that plant which in shadow turns its head relentlessly toward the sun, is the patron saint of those in despair. When darkness descends on the soul, it is time, like the sunflower, to go looking for whatever good thing in life there is that can bring us comfort. Then we need music and hobbies and friends and fun and new thought.
 
Despair colors the way we look at things, makes us suspicious of the future, makes us negative about the present. Most of all, despair leads us to ignore the very possibilities that could save us, or worse, leads us to hurt as we have been hurt ourselves.
 
Hope, on the other hand, takes life on its own terms, knows that whatever happens
God/ess lives in it, and expects that, whatever its twists and turns, it will ultimately yield its good to those who live it consciously, to those who live it to the hilt.

When tragedy strikes, when trouble comes, when life disappoints us, we stand at the crossroads between hope and despair, torn and hurting. Despair cements us in the present. Hope sends us dancing around dark corners trusting in a tomorrow we cannot see because of the multiple paths of life which we cannot forget.
 
Scarred by Struggle, Transformed by Hope by Joan ChittisterLife is not one road. It is many roads, the walking of which provides the raw material out of which we find hope in the midst of despair. Every dimension of the process of struggle is a call to draw from a well of new understandings. It is in these understandings that hope dwells. It is that wisdom that carries us beyond the dark night of struggle to the dawn of new wisdom and new strength.

     -from Scarred by Struggle,Transformed by Hope by Joan Chittister


Hope!
 
i am feeling a most urgent obligation
not to mention suggest or even imagine
any but the most positive possibilities
but only project willful wishful thinking. 
the world is still turning
so there must be a chance for peace.
© Donna Henes

 Hope poster
 
hope poster

This image is available for purchase.
 
As a silk screened poster, signed and numbered.  
18" x 24"
$60   
 
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(price includes paypal fee and shipping & handling)
 
 
And also as postcards.  
12 post cards    
$25  
 
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(price includes shipping & handling)
 

Hope Restored

I f life has been getting you down and you are feeling frightened or worried or blocked or beset or beleaguered, help is at hand. Contact me for a reading, a counseling session or a private ritual to help you put yourself back on tract for a hopeful new beginning. Contact me at [email protected] for an appointment.   
 
   
Hopeful Home
 
"The way an architect and a builder understand a house, Donna Henes understands a home. She can minister to a dwelling like a chaplain, tap its inner workings like a good therapist, and polish its energy to a spotless shine. I know: she's done it for mine. And in this enchanting book, you get to access the prowess of  'Mama Donna' in your home, even if oceans separate you from her legendary Brooklyn digs. What she knows -- and what she senses -- inhabit these pages so accessibly, it's as if this shaman of spaces is whispering in your ear."
- Victoria Moran, author of Creating a Charmed Life and Shelter for the Spirit



Release date: May 16, 2018
 
Pre-order here:
 
  



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