Empowering Discussions

GLOwing with Love: Healing through helping others with Gloria Mengel

G-Lo's T-Hats, Gloria Mengel fundraiser, Tammy Mengel fundraiser
Gloria Mengel

I love to read about people who fight the odds to help themselves and still find time to help others. Two of those people are Tammy and Gloria Mengel. Gloria is a  beautiful 15 year old who has  been through the ringer the past 5 year. She was first diagnosed with a brain tumor in 2008 and has since suffered kidney failure, a stroke, vision loss, respiratory impairment, and hair loss. Tammy is her supportive mother who vigilantly works to protect her daughter.

At my age losing my hair wouldn’t be a big deal. However if I was 15 and losing my hair I would drown in tears of self pity and throw a tantrum of godly proportions. As far as I know, Gloria hasn’t done either! I don’t know anyone who wasn’t concerned about their looks as a teenager(and for me well into my twenties!).  Gloria has been wearing wigs and hats to hide her hair loss, but during warm months and indoors that extra padding can be very uncomfortable. Her loving mother Tammy has created a hat that is comfortable enough to wear when it is warm. They call it the “G-Lo’s T-Hat” and it’s made from a lightweight cotton material. It is handmade in 2 styles,the Chullo and the Beanie, and available in several colors. Gloria wants to donate hats to other children who are surviving cancer.  Tammy hopes to turn the hats into a business so she can continue to stay home with her daughter during this heart wrenching time.

gloria mengel fundraiser, tammy mengel fundraiser, has for cancer patients
G-Lo’s T-Hat

With your help Gloria and her family can create these hats and bring comfort to others while also bringing in much needed income. Check out the Help Glo Give Back project on IndieGoGo.com and take action. There are two ways to help, donate money or share her project with your family and friends.

Social Action

The Root of Societal Unrest – Complacency

After reading a post by one of my favorite bloggers I had to reblog it. If you only read one reblog today, make it Honie Briggs’. I completely agree with Honie that complacency not conspiracy is the root of our destructive nature. It amazes me at how we so easily agree to things that we know are wrong. I also agree that we need to stop arguing over rights established. How did we become a society that polices anything considered “different”? We “allow” people to marry, we “allow” people to take care of their own bodies, we “allow” our elected politicians to start wars. Where do we get off forcing our approval on others right to be happy and healthy? We have no right to sit back and continue allowing ourselves to ignore problems in the present. We have no right to be lazy and compliant because that is all we know. Humans have the ability to ask questions and find answers. We have a right to answers. Complacency is a nasty word. Let’s get rid of it…

Reblogged from Honie Briggs at http://honiebriggs.com/2013/06/27/social-reform-through-script-reform-easy-as-abc

Empowering Discussions

Book Review: Recipe for America by Jill Richardson

Author Jill Richardson, Recipe for America, the governments role in our food
Jill Richardson, RecipeForAmerica

If you are tired of obesity, not knowing what is in your food, and politics that make food unhealthy than read this book! Jill Richardson shares insights into some of our biggest agricultural problems and provides solutions we can implement today, not in 2050. “Recipe for America: Why Our Food System is Broken and What We Can Do to Fix It” is full of great information and at only 184 pages an easy read. RecipeForAmerica.org

The book starts off slow with a little too much tech-talk for my over-read brain, but halfway through the first chapter I was hooked as the tone became more relatable. She discusses sustainable agriculture, eating more locally grown food, the food we allow in our children’s schools, urban gardening, food safety measures, the health of farmers and agricultural workers, and finding the balance between regulating large agri-corps vs. small or family farms.

My favorite part of this book is how for every problem introduced she gives us simple, though not necessarily easy solutions to our broken system:

  • The food we allow in schools, including candy and other non-nutritional foods. How does this effect the way children eat?
  • The damaging impact large farms and animal warehouses have on OUR environment. What good is food if we can’t survive our environment?
  • The popularity of urban growing and how it connects often under served communities to their food. Have you considered joining a community garden in your area?

At the end of the book Jill highlights some very easy actions we can each take to stay involved and informed about what steps the government takes to protect us and puts our health at risk by bowing down to lobbyists and the agricultural industry. I challenge you to read this book and consider the way you eat, how you obtain food, and the impacts YOUR choices have on you and the world. Healthy people are empowered! Please leave a comment. Below are some questions to get you thinking.

What grosses you out about our food system?

What, if any, ways have you changed to a healthier diet?

How involved are you in the politics surrounding our food?

PS. If you enjoy this blog you may enjoy my published books. You can read, leave a comment, and purchase my books on Bookemon or  Amazon.

Empowering Discussions

Uncharted – My theme song for the past few years

Today I rented my fist violin and bought my first lesson book. In a few days I will take my first lesson. This was a dream, a fantasy, just another item on my bucket list. Now it is a reality. I made it happen. This post is about replacing “I can’t because…” with  “I can and I will“.

When I heard the song “Uncharted” by Sara Bareilles I was instantly hooked. It was a few years ago when I was sitting in my room contemplating this crazy idea that I could write a book. Not just any book, but one that would make a difference in the world.   This song was what I needed to hear. She told me I wasn’t alone, that other people were going forward without a map. So why wasn’t I? Fast forward 2 years and my contemplation has become my reality. My journey is still largely uncharted and it is scary, but I am more prepared than I ever though I could be. (I haven’t loved a song this much since “Unpretty” by TLC.)  Below are two of my favorite lines from this song.

1. “Stuck under the ceiling I made, I can’t help the feeling I’m going down

-Yes I am guilty of holding myself back out of fear and concern for other’s opinions. I have made my life hard by being insecure.

2. “I won’t go as a passenger no, waiting for the road to be laid, though I may be going down, I’ll take in flame over burning out

-Following the path that others want or that seems “normal” isn’t working and hasn’t for years. Now I’d rather fuel my passions than let them slowly snuff out. The road I was on meant spending my days bored at some job, staying with someone I didn’t love, and settling into a “safe” unsatisfying life. I put up a lazy half-hearted fight for it when it ended. From all I learned the past few years that sounds downright crazy to me now.

Life is meant to be spent on what truly feeds our passions! This involves working hard, getting smarter, growing, failing, and losing. I crave it. I want to get my hands dirty, to try so hard my feet ache, and get lost in the woods for days(with water, food and a tent). I want the journey that was promised to me in every adventurous book I read as a child, every sage quote that fills me with hope and conviction, and every role model that inspires me to chase after my dreams even if that means sacrificing safety and comfort.

The hardest parts of my life (other than death, loss, and violence) were all made by me. I have created so many problems for myself. Now most of my time is spent finding solutions. Some days I feel incapable, but then I remind myself that I must find my way and be true to my unique individual needs. Nobody can do this for me. I am in control. We are all capable of surviving, but when we are determined and insist on only the best that is when we THRIVE! I challenge you to go for your dreams.

I never thought my writing could be published in a book. Yet it happened.  My love of the violin was just fantasy until I stopped with excuses of why I could not and decided to find a way that I could. I thought that suffering from such frightening and immobilizing depression would break me before I reached the age of 40, but instead I learned to heal. While not every day is sunshine and rainbows, I am far from perfect, I have so much to learn, and I no longer spend my days rolled up on the floor crying. Now I can cry without feeling like it is the END. After all one of my favorite sayings is that “each ending is a new beginning”. Uncharted territory, here I come!

Read more lyrics: SARA BAREILLES – UNCHARTED LYRICS

You can watch the (silly) video on YouTube.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zlxB9zGH8GU

Another great song of Sara’s is “Brave”.  Share this with your favorite person who is starting a new journey. Let them know that life is up to them and you want them to be brave.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dyAfjUHlFSM

What Uncharted Journeys Have You Started?

How Are You Being Brave? 

PS. If you enjoy this blog you may enjoy my published books. You can read, leave a comment, and purchase my books on Bookemon or  Amazon. Thank you for reading. Leave a comment!

Empowering Discussions

Inspiring Blogger Award – Thank You Transcending Borders!

What a lovely surprise this morning to open up a notification that my blog is inspiring to another blogger. Transcending Borders Blog.Wordpress is about finding a healthy way to live through forgiveness, acceptance of others, self love, and wisdom. At least that’s how I would describe it. Like most blog awards this one requires each participant to follow a few rules which are posted below. Enjoy! The rules: 1-Display the Award logo on your blog. 2-Link back to the person who nominated you. 3-State 7 things about yourself. 4-Nominate 15 other bloggers for this award and link back to them. 5-Notify those bloggers of the nomination and the award requirements.

Seven things I am:

  1. Compassionate
  2. Imaginative
  3. Funny
  4. Outdoorsy
  5. Lovable
  6. Accepting of others
  7. Searching for wisdom

Fifteen inspiring blogs in no particular order as they are all great blogs to follow:

  1. Energy Medicine and Health
  2. Paula’s Pontifications
  3. Left at the Lights
  4. Kimberly Harding – Soul Healing Art
  5. Lateral Love Australia
  6. Self Love Warrior
  7. In the Beginning – Transplant
  8. Jane Claypool
  9. From a Whisper to a Roar
  10. Life Out of the Box
  11. Feminist Philosophers
  12. The Mean Girl Extinction Project
  13. Walking With The Alligators
  14. FierceBuddhist
  15. Spark: Igniting Global Change
Empowering Discussions

Can You Define Normal?

Normal is a word I previously used to describe other people. Basically that definition included being part of a well adjusted two parent family of one race, living in a nice house owning nice things, and traveling on real vacations. I  spent most of my life trying to fit in to this mold and expecting one day to make the right choices that would take me there. Only it never happened. Years went by and I saw the world for what it is, people, cultures, traditions, ideas, love, tragedy, experiences, and most important diversity.

GoChangeYourLifeGrowing up in a “unconventional” family should have made it obvious to me that normal is just a word someone made up. Yet I still craved this ideal life that many of my friends seemed to have and that were prevalent in every movie and TV show I consumed. And I consumed a LOT of media. In my late twenties I realized that this media I was supporting constantly made families like mine into a joke. We were the anomaly in a world where everyone else was the same. Or worse we were uneducated, uncultured examples. However in real life my family was anything but. Yes we lived on a tight budget(I still do thanks to my poor financial choices), but my mom was a college graduate who took us to museums and on camping trips. We traveled a lot and were exposed to many different cultures and ideas. We were encouraged to think for ourselves. Sadly I was so invested in what I saw in others and in fantasy that I couldn’t grasp how awesome my life was and is because we did not grow up “normal”. That’s not to say that my previous idea of normal is lacking, it’s just different. The more I open my mind and listen to the world the more I see that nobody is normal. This is because humans are complex individuals with unique DNA who relate to life based on our personal experiences, meaning we are all different to somebody.

Whether it was trying to fit in at school, deciding which side of my racial/cultural identities to be, or the right career path, I spent a lifetime wanting to be someone other than me. Life was awful, I bailed on my beliefs, aspirations, and truest passions.  I used to think it would be easier to be “normal” until I realized it took more work to fit to an unsustainable mold than to just accept myself. I wasn’t happy. At the age of 32 I started being me. Now I am happy. Now I know that normal is just a word I cannot even define. Hopefully I have as many or more years ahead of me to enjoy this freedom from normal

The following link is a blog post at Trascending Borders Blog that inspired todays post. Show a little love and visit their blog: http://transcendingbordersblog.wordpress.com/2013/06/14/be-you-an-original-which-you-already-are

How do you feel about the word normal?

What does normal mean to you?

PS. If you enjoy this blog you may enjoy my published books. You can read, leave a comment, and purchase my books on Bookemon or  Amazon.

Empowering Discussions

Who to Protest? When Big Business Doesn’t React Change the Attention to YOUR Government

I like the point about protesting the USDA and the FDA. If big business won’t listen than it is up to our political representatives to listen. After all our officials appoint former chem/agri-execs into offices like the EPA. It’s embarrassing!

“Maybe the next marches need to take place against agencies like the USDA and the FDA – those who have been charged with the responsibility of consumer safety and have blatantly sold out to Big Agri and the biotech industries.” http://www.fromthetrenchesworldreport.com/monsanto-concedes-defeat-in-the-face-of-europes-fierce-opposition-to-gmos/46071

I found this article via the New Health Paradigms Blog. There is a lot of empowering information there. Go check it out and see f you want to follow that blogger.

 

PS. If you enjoy this blog you may enjoy my published books. You can read, leave a comment, and purchase my books on Bookemon or  Amazon.

Empowering Discussions

Does DIY Therapy Work?

How will you find happiness when the world is so dark you can’t see, you are so sad you can’t smile, and fear immobilizes you?  What if you can’t afford to see a therapist for help? Where do you turn if you don’t want to join a church for “free” counseling? What if you don’t want to use drugs for balance?

For almost two decades I lived afraid, sad and hopeless. Yes there were good and even great moments, but those were short lived and once over I was back to misery again.  My life was so awful that most nights and many days I was curled up on the floor sobbing, begging the universe for a quick and easy death, feeling helpless, useless, and ugly. Most people never realized how depressed I was because I hid behind a big smile in public, but looking back my actions must have raised a few eyebrows. My depression started as a child who moved to a different school each year, was bullied and teased, and wasn’t taught how to solve problems. I felt helpless, useless, and ugly for way too long.

It took it’s toll. I couldn’t keep a job, became lazy and unmotivated, felt lost no matter what I did, and stopped caring. Hope and happiness was for other people. I believed all the cruelty from childhood bullies and mean girls. I convinced myself that I was worthless based on all my mistakes and cowardice. I shopped for things that would make me happy’ but never did. I gave up on my dreams.

ShineThere are plenty of stories about people who cured or deal with their depression by finding a god or religion to believe in.  I did not need to find a god or prophet to change my life. Then again I have never wanted or felt a need for religion or spirituality. I believe that only I am in control of how my life plays out. When I finally chose to make a positive difference, I looked within myself and read lots of books and blogs. I spent hours each day on different theories, ideas, and movements. I read stories of people who overcame tragedy and apathy. I took little pieces from everything and put them together to find inner peace. Our world is amazing and there is so much we can learn. Learning allowed me to grow. Learning was the first step.

The best wisdom I found in my search is so ridiculously simple. (I said simple, not easy.) Simple means uncomplicated and straightforward. Easy means you don’t need to put forth much effort. Simple can be momentous if you are open to learning. The simple truth I learned is this: our universe  ebbs and flows. Everything and everyone is continuously ebbing and flowing, therefore life is about riding those flows and surviving the ebbs. I looked at my life and all the ebbs I got through. Some were terrifying, some left scars, but I survived. “Look at YOUR LIFE and all that you have overcome” I screamed at myself. Make a list of everything you were scared of, but survived anyway. Write down the ones that you barely got through, the ones you wish you had solved differently. You are still here! You survived those ebbs. Write down HOW you survived and you will learn valuable tools

Right now is the time to let go of the past. Like quitting meat or smoking you have to cold turkey yourself from past tragedies. The past is never coming back. It doesn’t control you. The past shaped you, but it does not define you. Look at your moments of cowardice, your mistakes, those words you never should have said. Remember the people you hurt, the times you didn’t help someone, and the times you lost your temper.  Now write down what you learned from each experience. We make mistakes and that is OKAY!  I remind myself daily to move forward and pay attention to what does and doesn’t work. When I don’t pay attention, I repeat those mistakes, and suffer the consequences.

Death, loss. and mistakes have shaped me in a good way. I have learned that we are all fragile, we have no guarantee of living to 100, and we can choose to enjoy each day. Death is a part of the circle of life. You can’t lose if you never had and you can’t grow if you never fail.

A simple way to get through the ebbs and appreciate the flows is mindfulness. Whenever a moment arises where I can slow down and be still, I close my eyes, take a few deep breaths, and focus on my breath, the sounds of people and the city, waves breaking on shore,  or tweeting birds. I am mindful for at least 5 minutes. It’s amazing how easily this short “meditation” can revitalize me. At first I would get distracted by my to-do list or negative thoughts, but now I can be mindful and focus. This has been one of the greatest gifts because as I listen I am soothed to know that I am a part of this world. For better or worse there will always be a place I belong. Being aware of our surroundings is important because it reminds us that we are all connected to the world. Be mindful of your senses because touch, scent, sound, and vision are all interconnected. Follow your intuition.

Some people need drugs to change the chemicals in their brain so they can function. Thank goodness for that. You shouldn’t feel bad about taking chemical stabilizing drugs so that you can function. We are all born with different chemical balances so to those who say drugs don’t work. How do you know for sure what someone else needs? For a long time I thought maybe that I would need drugs someday or I would go completely crazy and hurt myself. Instead I was able to change my diet and get active so that my body felt good and my moods stabilized. Taking care of my health was the second step. It takes a long time to change habits. I decided to try my hardest and that involved becoming a vegetarian. As a lover of hamburgers and barbecue ribs, this was tough. Not eating meat is also very inconvenient if you are on a budget and the food choices in your area are all fast food joints. Even the salads have meat! I had to quit suddenly and not slowly go off meat. The first 3 months were the worst. Now 4 years later it is simply a part of me. Reducing the sugar in my diet has helped me from staying clear of that sugar high that is always accompanied by a sugar low. I feel stable when I eat well and move around.

We can be our worst enemy. If we believe the lies and cruelty of others than we are victims. If we change our thinking to what is really true we are survivors. Even if the people around us aren’t saying we need to be better, if you watch TV, listen to the radio or look through magazines you are inundated with messages that “You need this and that to be perfect and loved”. LIES!!!  YOU CAN LOVE YOURSELF JUST THE WAY YOU ARE, WITH YOUR FLAWS AND ASSETS.  Therapy can be very helpful because it is healthy to share our story, to vent and to have someone wiser guide us. But therapy is expensive. If you don’t have insurance or qualify for free services a therapist is not an option.  I researched therapy and learned about Solution Based Therapy. In traditional therapy you search for the root of a problem and spend years doing so.  If you know what the root is or at least are pretty sure than you can focus on fixing that broken part. Besides spending years focusing on that negativity won’t necessarily allow you to move forward and live for the future. It is too easy to stay in the past. The past is a memory. Change the way you think and you will see the world differently. Changing my thoughts and attitude was the third step.

To stop feeling helpless I changed my thinking. This was by far the hardest action to take. Seventeen years of thinking I was a victim was hard to change. My first two actions showed me that I already was changing my thinking. So I had to take that a step forward and apply it to not just outside appearance and helping others. I decided to love my inner self with all my flaws, mistakes, and regrets. I also changed how I though towards others. It’s one thing to judge someone on their actions, it’s another to PASS judgement on others. I realize that we all have our own paths to take and mine is no better than yours. I wasn’t being bullied anymore and the last time I was physically assaulted was a decade ago so removing the word victim from my thoughts and actions freed me. I took a leap and became certified to teach self defense. Now I am helping others feel like a survivor instead of a victim.

My pity part is over. Negativity may be a part of life, but I will not let it control my life. Sometimes pessimism is good. We cannot trust every person or every stray dog.  Being aware of all aspects of life keeps us alive. We have to be aware of our actions, aware of others, and follow our intuition, but we must also be careful not to let our judgement become so clouded that we are unsure and afraid.

These are the main actions I took in my DIY therapy. Once again these are simple actions, but not easy.

  • To stop feeling useless I wrote my first book encouraging girls to be strong and providing them with resources and information to help them do so. I also became certified to teach self defense. I continue to write more books, volunteer in my community, and teach self defense to women and girls. I feel very useful when I write and teach.
  • To end the feeling of being ugly I stopped consuming hours and hours of media that told me how I should look and that there was always something wrong with me. No more magazines and TV shows. I remind myself each day that I have only one body and my looks may not be perfect, but they are mine and I am beautiful. I look for and find examples of people who know that beauty COMES from inside, and is not about outside opinions.

This post is not to tell anyone that their choice towards recovery is wrong. I don’t know what YOU need. You are a unique individual with your own issues who must find solutions that work for you. This is a voice for those who want to change their life without a finding a god, paying for expensive therapy, or using drugs. Some of what I shared may help, some may not. Ultimately change is up to you.

Remember this when commenting: RESPECT yourself enough to allow others to be who they are. ACCEPT that others believe differently than you. TOLERATE those differences. Judging someone or their beliefs is as lame as judging them for their weight, skin color, gender, or who they love.  We all see and live based on INDIVIDUAL RELEVANCE. Not everyone will like what you write so just deal with that fact.  Comments are moderated so if you get crazy with your comment  it won’t be published even if it has good points. There is no place for judgement or name calling here. Peace.

PS. If you enjoy this blog you may enjoy my published books. You can read, leave a comment, and purchase my books on Bookemon or  Amazon.

Empowering Discussions

You will Never Be Pretty! Because Pretty is Obsolete.

I spent years calling myself ugly. As a gangly, uneven toothed, frizzy haired, flat chested, acne sprouting teenager all I wanted was to be pretty and I fully believed the mean girls and the media that told me I was ugly. I spent all my money on clothes, makeup, and fashion magazines that made me feel worse not better. Every time I heard the whole “inner beauty” line I reeled in disgust. I kept that belief long after my acne cleared, my curves came in and I learned how to calm my hair. My teeth are still uneven, but that’s not my concern.

I Define BeautifulI don’t like the saying “real beauty is on the inside”. It’s misleading. We should be explaining to our daughters and nieces that real beauty COMES from the inside because beauty is something WE decide based on our own ideas. I recently heard a spoken word poet on her experience with “pretty”. Her mom gave her plastic surgery as a gift to fix her crooked nose and constantly told her that it was okay because they would MAKE her pretty. The message she wants to tell her own daughter is that you will be pretty smart, pretty talented, pretty awesome, but never just plain pretty.  Listen to Katie Makkai’s rant about beauty on Upworthy,  http://www.upworthy.com/this-womans-beef-with-prettiness-will-leave-you-speechless?g=2

Beauty has become this disgusting obsession that means so little to me now. I don’t care about being pretty anymore. It is the most freeing decision of all that I made so far. I want to continue to be successful, I want to keep learning until the day I expire, I want to be healthy, but I don’t want to be pretty. I want the goals of girls to be about intelligence and inner growth and knowledge, not attraction to others. There are women who look like the current version of beauty who think they are ugly. That alone should prove how demeaning it is for women to concern themselves with outer beauty. Now boys and men also feel ugly and crave this boringly conformed idea of who is handsome. Stop the madness!  Start a revolution.

This was written in response to Voice4 Society blog, http://voice4society.wordpress.com/2013/06/04/dear-god-can-you-make-me-beautiful

Want more proof that beauty is not necessary for success and happiness? Lizzie Valasquez is one of the most beautiful women in the world, but some angry unhealthy people call her the ugliest. http://thelasttradition.blogspot.com/2012/09/worlds-ugliest-woman-lizzie-velasquez.html

What do I love about not wanting to be pretty? I have more time to do things I love. I have more money to spend on things that are important to me. I only need  a few minutes in the bathroom to get ready each morning. I can focus my thoughts and energy on inner growth and philosophical reflection. Other people’s concerns don’t bother me. My mental health has improved.

So let’s keep talking and blogging about it until beauty becomes the least important part of us.

Do you think you are beautiful? Do you care?