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Archive for December, 2010

As a facilitator with Quest for Life, I feel most privileged to welcome people as they arrive on their first day of a program. As we sit down together for the first time, there is often a real buzz in the room and the apprehension is tangible.

Naturally, some people feel quite anxious about arriving and about what they might be expected to share.  Some people feel understandably vulnerable coming into a group of strangers. Some people tell me they haven’t even shared with their loved ones what feels to them unspeakable and really scary to say out loud…

I often wonder how many people who would love to come and experience both the gorgeous facility at Bundanoon and Petrea’s beautiful teachings but never make it because they fear being in a big group of new people?

Last time I was on a program, I was inspired once more by the safety that is put in place on every program with what we call ‘The Four Guidelines’ and I thought I would share them with you so that you can rest assured that these are in place at all times.

1.    Confidentiality

Your story is honoured and names and stories stay here. It is a small world and it is vital that our confidentiality is held and respected.

2.    Listening 100%

One person speaking at a time. When someone else is talking, let your story wait and listen 100%. When it is your turn to speak, others will listen to you 100%. This is a rare treat in our busy, busy world.

3.    Not Judging or Criticising

It is ok for us all to have differences. We feel freer to speak when we feel accepted and not judged.

4.    Staying with your feelings

All feelings are welcome at Quest for Life. We encourage you to feel whatever you are feeling and seek appropriate support if your feelings become uncomfortable or overwhelming. That’s why we have such a great support team that includes a professional counsellor.

People often tell me that these guidelines, which are referred to throughout each program to ensure they are remembered and adhered to, help them to open up gently and safely. They create a very safe environment in which to heal and learn.

With the guidelines in place, people can leave the week renewed, more peaceful and feel safe in the knowledge that their stories will be cherished and cared for by the people with whom they shared their valuable week at Quest for Life…

I hope this reassures you if you have been reticent to come due to fear of the group setting. We really take seriously making the program a safe place for all…

Love and rainbows to all

Margie Braunstein

Margie Braunstein

Margie is a somatic psychotherapist and counsellor providing psychotherapy services to the people of the Central Coast and Sydney.  Margie lives on the beautiful Central Coast with her husband, two children, two dogs and a cat.

Over the last 12 years, Margie has also been engaged in the design, delivery and marketing of transformational learning programs. During this time she has regularly facilitated personal development programs for up to 50 people on weekend workshops, week-long intensives and advanced programs of 3-4 months.

Margie has a Graduate Certificate in Adult Education from UTS, Diploma in Psychotherapy from the Australian College of Contemporary Somatic Psychotherapy and qualifications in somatic therapy, executive coaching and relationship counselling.

Margie has a passion for personal development and regards people with respect, empathy and compassion in the belief that while we all do the best we can, a little bit more kindness and care can lead to even greater peace and joy in life.

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Robert L May

A man named Robert L. May, depressed and brokenhearted, stared out his drafty apartment window into the chilling December night.

His 4-year-old daughter Barbara sat on his lap quietly sobbing.

Bobs wife, Evelyn, was dying of cancer.

Little Barbara couldn’t understand why her mummy could never come home. Barbara looked up into her dad’s eyes and asked, “Why isn’t Mummy just like
everybody else’s Mummy?”

Bob’s jaw tightened and his eyes welled with tears.

Her question brought waves of grief, but also of anger. It had been the story of Bob’s life. Life always had to be different for Bob. Small when he was a kid, Bob was often bullied by other boys.

He was too little at the time to compete in sports. He was often called names he’d rather not remember. From childhood, Bob was different and never seemed
to fit in.

Bob did complete college, married his loving wife and was grateful to get his job as a copywriter at Montgomery Ward during the Great Depression. Then he was blessed with his little girl. But it was all short-lived. Evelyn’s bout with cancer stripped them of all their savings and now Bob and his daughter were forced to live in a two-room apartment in the Chicago slums. Evelyn died just days before Christmas in 1938.

Bob struggled to give hope to his child, for whom he couldn’t even afford to buy a Christmas gift. But if he couldn’t buy a gift, he was determined a make one – a
storybook!

Bob had created an animal character in his own mind and told the animal’s story to little Barbara to give her comfort and hope.

Again and again, Bob told the story, embellishing it more with each telling. Who was the character? What was the story all about?

The story Bob May created was his own autobiography in fable form. The character he created was a misfit outcast like he was.

The name of the character? A little reindeer named Rudolph, with a big shiny nose.

Bob finished the book just in time to give it to his little girl on Christmas Day.

But the story doesn’t end there.

The general manager of Montgomery Ward caught wind of the little storybook and offered Bob May a nominal fee to purchase the rights to print the book. Wards went on to print, “Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer” and distribute it to children visiting Santa Claus in their stores.

By 1946, Wards had printed and distributed more than six million copies of Rudolph.

That same year, a major publisher wanted to purchase the rights from Wards to print an updated version of the book.

In an unprecedented gesture of kindness, the CEO of Wards returned all rights back to Bob May.

The book became a best seller.

Many toy and marketing deals followed and Bob May, now remarried with a growing family, became wealthy from the story he created to comfort his grieving daughter.

But the story doesn’t end there either.

Bob’s brother-in-law, Johnny Marks, made a song adaptation to Rudolph.

Though the song was turned down by such popular vocalists as Bing Crosby and Dinah Shore , it was recorded by the singing cowboy, Gene Autry.

“Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer” was released in 1949 and became a phenomenal success, selling more records than any other Christmas song, with the
exception of “White Christmas.”

The gift of love that Bob May created for his daughter so long ago kept on returning back to bless him again and again. And Bob May learned the lesson, just like his dear friend Rudolph, that being different isn’t so bad. In fact, being different can be a blessing.

* MERRY CHRISTMAS 2010*

We wish you and your loved ones a peace-filled Christmas.

The Quest for Life Team

 

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OPENING

Summer is a time for happiness and rejoicing.  Colourful flowers open in the warmth of the sun and there is a sense of relaxation and ease.

In Meditation, the simple act of opening up, of turning towards experience, rather than backing away, begins to bring a new depth of acceptance and understanding.  Gradually, we can transform our lives from being closed-in and fearful to being open and generous.  The change happens spontaneously – it is like a flower with widely open petals turning towards the radiance of the sun.

“The Meditation year – a seasonal guide to contemplation, relaxation, and visualization”   Jane Hope

As the Meditate for Life course is coming to an end, I found myself leafing through this little book, which is a gem.

To be reminded of the joy of Summer here in Australia, such as time at the beach, time in the garden, picnics, outdoor dining, swimming, tennis, wearing lighter clothing and all the other joys we experience in this land of sunshine is wonderful.

May we all enjoy the Christmas season and move into 2011 with an open heart and an inner peace.

Alexia Miall

Alexia Miall

Alexia’s career began in banking and then moved via advertising to a major career change in 1980 to Adult and Transformational Education.  She has been privileged to share this incredible journey with 1000’s of like minded souls through her extensive experience as a facilitator, trainer, life coach, therapist, and mentor.  She managed her own training company in Victoria during the 1990’s, and during this time was the Course Leader for a training program from which the Banksia Environmental Foundation formed.

Alexia has acquired further education in Adult Education in Training; Somatic Psychotherapy; Life Coaching; Conflict Resolution; plus Accreditation in many behavioral and culture change models. She is an Associate of EcoSTEPS, a niche Sustainability consultancy, which supports her love of the natural environment.

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One of the focuses of Attitudinal Healing is to let go of the blocks that interfere with experiencing ourselves as love and giving that love away.

The following is a suggestion from Jerry Jampolsky and his partner Dianne from the attitudinalhealing.org website.

“We have experienced that the main blocks to love are generally our judgments of ourselves and others, our attachments to guilt and blame, our control issues, the interpretations we make on others and ourselves, and our belief that we are only bodies doomed to die and that’s the end of it. These are strong manifestations of the ego’s system that keep us from experiencing love and inner peace.

Another manifestation of the ego system is that we get caught up in our “to do list” and achieving, and feel guilty when we have not completed our impossible list. We seem to make our “to do list” more important than “being.” Would you be willing for just a week to wake up in the morning and focus on what we call our “to be list?” This would mean that you could wake up every day and say to yourself”.

Today I recognize that my “Being” is:

•    Unconditionally Loving
•    Compassionate
•    Peaceful
•    Gentle
•    Generous
•    Honest
•    Trustworthy
•    Kindhearted
•    Mindful
•    Open Minded
•    The Light of the World

That all may sound a bit “oomie goomie” but give it a go for a week and feel how it is to be in your body at the end of the week.

Wendie Batho

Wendie Batho

Wendie has co-facilitated residential programs with Petrea for more than sixteen years. Prior to that Wendie spent over 25 years as a teacher, school principal and was involved in educational leadership and facilitation of school executive groups.

Ten years of this time was spent in PNG where she taught and worked for the government. Wendie has been travelling since the early sixties and is especially attracted to Asian cultures. She holds degrees in Anthropology, Education, Sociology, Theology and Political Science. Her current passions are her grandchildren, travel biographies, exploring Asia, 4×4 driving, reading everything she can get her hands on, and watching movies on the big screen at home.


 

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I learned from a very young age about giving to others at Christmas. Mum and Dad still remind me that they would put me in a pouch on their front when I was a baby and go and feed homeless people on Christmas day. In later years, as a teenager, we used to go with Mum on Christmas morning to St Vincent’s Hospital. She would massage the feet of the AIDS patients and I would take my basket filled with candy canes and little messages and distribute them through the ward. There were Christmases when we distributed hampers and for many years up to 100 or more people would come to our home on Christmas evening for an orphans, waifs and stray Christmas Party. 

Supporting others is a wonderful gift to give to children as they grow up, and one which will have a profound and lasting impact on their character and their values. I feel incredibly blessed for these experiences as they are a constant reminder to think about others who are not as fortunate as I am at this time of year. I read this story today and thought I would share it with you. Merry Christmas!

A Christmas Story

It’s just a small, white envelope stuck among the branches of our Christmas tree. No name, no identification, no inscription. It has peeked through the branches of our tree for the past 10 years or so.

What will your white envelope contain?

It all began because my husband Mike hated Christmas—oh, not the true meaning of Christmas, but the commercial aspects of it-overspending…the frantic running around at the last minute to get a tie for Uncle Harry and the dusting powder for Grandma—the gifts given in desperation because you couldn’t think of anything else.

Knowing he felt this way, I decided one year to bypass the usual shirts, sweaters, ties and so forth. I reached for something special just for Mike. The inspiration came in an unusual way.

Our son Kevin, who was 12 that year, was wrestling at the junior level at the school he attended; and shortly before Christmas, there was a non-league match against a team sponsored by an inner-city church, mostly black.

These youngsters, dressed in sneakers so ragged that shoestrings seemed to be the only thing holding them together, presented a sharp contrast to our boys in their spiffy blue and gold uniforms and sparkling new wrestling shoes.

As the match began, I was alarmed to see that the other team was wrestling without headgear, a kind of light helmet designed to protect a wrestler’s ears.

It was a luxury the ragtag team obviously could not afford. Well, we ended up walloping them. We took every weight class. And as each of their boys got up from the mat, he swaggered around in his tatters with false bravado, a kind of street pride that couldn’t acknowledge defeat.

Mike, seated beside me, shook his head sadly, “I wish just one of them could have won,” he said. “They have a lot of potential, but losing like this could take the heart right out of them.”

Mike loved kids-all kids-and he knew them, having coached little league football, baseball and lacrosse. That’s when the idea for his present came.

That afternoon, I went to a local sporting goods store and bought an assortment of wrestling headgear and shoes and sent them anonymously to the inner-city church.

On Christmas Eve, I placed the envelope on the tree, the note inside telling Mike what I had done and that this was his gift from me.

His smile was the brightest thing about Christmas that year and in succeeding years.

For each Christmas, I followed the tradition—one year sending a group of mentally handicapped youngsters to a hockey game, another year a check to a pair of elderly brothers whose home had burned to the ground the week before Christmas, and on and on.

The envelope became the highlight of our Christmas. It was always the last thing opened on Christmas morning and our children, ignoring their new toys, would stand with wide-eyed anticipation as their dad lifted the envelope from the tree to reveal it’s contents.

As the children grew, the toys gave way to more practical presents, but the envelope never lost its allure. The story doesn’t end there.

You see, we lost Mike last year due to dreaded cancer. When Christmas rolled around, I was still so wrapped in grief that I barely got the tree up. But Christmas Eve found me placing an envelope on the tree, and in the morning, it was joined by three more. Each of our children, unbeknownst to the others, had placed an envelope on the tree for their dad.

The tradition has grown and someday will expand even further with our grandchildren standing around the tree with wide-eyed anticipation watching as their fathers take down the envelope. Mike’s spirit, like the Christmas spirit, will always be with us.

May we all remember each other, and the Real reason for the season, and His true spirit this year and always.

This year you could buy a tree (www.forestoflife.com.au/quest) or purchase a gift from www.passitforwardgifts.com.au and select a charity to receive a donation. These are two ways to support the work of the Quest for Life Foundation, however there are many ways you can contribute to others, whilst still giving a gift to a loved one.

What do you do at Christmas that makes a difference to others? Share your ideas here.

 

Kate vanderVoort

Kate vanderVoort

Kate is currently overseeing the development and implementation of the new strategic plan for Quest for Life including developing programs for other organisations, online services, community outreach and facilitator team development.

Kate completed a Bachelor of Social Work and has more than 15 years experience in working in health, cancer and youth related charities and service providers. She has also studied yoga, meditation and a variety of training, presentation and coaching modalities. She facilitated with the Quest for Life Foundation in 1999 – 2000 and has since worked with Quest for Life in business development and fundraising roles. With more than 12 years experience in leadership and program development roles in the youth sector, Kate has a passion for creating a world in which young people wish to belong, be a part of and contribute to.

Kate has a consulting business – 3 Degrees of Connection (www.3doc.com.au) – and connects people, passions and projects through strategy and social media marketing. She lives in Sydney with her pet rabbit Heff……….and feels blessed to be Petrea King’s daughter.

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After dropping a few kilos, cleaning out the wardrobe and the office with a sense of curiosity I made myself a daily challenge and adopted  Piero Ferrucci’s  quote

“Eliminate something superfluous from your life.
Break a habit.
Do something that makes you feel insecure.”

Thinking I had it pretty well sorted, after all life is pretty uncluttered these days my intention was to refine, refine, refine!

In breaking a habit it soon became obvious that there were some habits I needed to adopt ‘eekkk’ some of which I’m totally loving like super foods and raw chocolates to die for and yes a tad more exercise and a dash of discipline was needed.

So I start everyday with an element of curiosity: ‘What will I either add into my day or eliminate’ and in the process I’ve transformed some old thought patterns, hoisted a few reactions, created some boundaries, eliminated even more wardrobe clutter and detoxed my inbox and as always when you put your focus on something you start to see things you hadn’t previously noticed.

In my adventure I woke one morning to find a bottle of Jose Cuervo Margarita mix sitting on the kitchen bench. What does that have to do with anything? you may ask.

Well its like this

I looked at the bottle and wondered ‘Why do we still have that?’ After all in the last 5 years we have; merged two full households into one, given more than a house full of furniture, nick nacks and appliances away, moved to an even smaller apartment, given even more furniture and household items away, decked out my daughters apartment with even more excess from our garage and cupboards and of all those things I’ve given away here sits this quarter of a bottle of Margarita mix taking up space in our tiny kitchen!

I mean, does Gino (my partner) even like Margarita’s?

How did it manage to survive? After all I’m a dedicated and self confessed minimalist!

So like many things in life it turns out the bottle of Jose Cuervo did have a purpose and it had nothing to do with Margarita’s but a symbol that triggered my curiosity to ask:

What else is quietly taking up space, lurking in the corners of my mind,  thoughts, emotions, friendships, life that I have not even noticed.

What else slips by that I am habitually eating, drinking, buying or carrying from one situation to the next, even wrapping and packing it (sometimes in excuses) to make sure it arrives safely without asking ‘Where did it come from?, Do I still need it?, Whats its purpose?.’ Do I even like doing this or is it just habit?

So my question to you is ‘What’s Your Bottle of Jose Cuervo? What’s cluttering the corners of your mind, emotions and day that’s habitually taking up space in the precious moments that are your life?

The curiosity continues!

Michelle Richmond

Michelle Richmond

Michelle Richmond is a renowned Innovator, Visionary and Facilitator  in Life Transformation. Her previous role as the C.E.O. of the Asher Institute of Integrative Medicine Foundation has seen Michelle working and studying with leading edge Doctors and Physicians from around the globe as she mentored 1000’s of people in sustainable wellness. An experience that embedded the importance of interconnecting the spirit, heart, mind and body both personally and professionally to maximize health and success in all areas of life.

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A Father Dead

I cannot speak to my children about their father -
He is lost to them and to me.
There is an empty space where a father should be.
There is an empty space where a husband should be.
There is a sea of grief between me and my children
And I cannot speak of their father.
Perhaps they think that I have forgotten him
After all these years.
It is just that I cannot speak of him
Because of all these tears.

Marjorie Pizer

Grief is a strange beast that we learn to live with. We don’t get ‘over it’ as if it were a surmountable obstacle. We can become more comfortable with our discomfort but there is no finite time for grief as there is no finite time for love. Grief is often a private affair that others cannot share or perhaps even understand. Grief can spring out of drawers and cupboards, off shelves, from photographs, wafts to our nostrils upon a perfume, is precipitated by music, clutches at our heart, hollows out our insides and plummets us to the depths. It is indeed a strange beast to know and understand, to embrace, digest and assimilate.

Anniversaries, birthdays, special occasions and Christmas evoke powerful reminders of grief. We grieve again at the birth of a child, a marriage, a celebration when we mourn the absence of a loved-one no longer physically present in our lives; that that person is not there to celebrate, commiserate, acknowledge, share or witness the event.

Many people don’t understand the sheer physicality of grief. The chemical consequences of our emotions can create a powerful visceral reaction. Our heart can indeed feel like it’s breaking and many people describe a sense of feeling ‘amputated’ – as if a part of them has been severed.

Another little known or understood aspect of this is that it is not uncommon for people to have the physical symptoms that their departed loved-one experienced during an illness or trauma. Respiratory illnesses, headaches or migraines, aching bones or physical pain in the same body area that our loved-one experienced their discomfort is often the cause of people having all sorts of tests to find a diagnosis or gain relief. It is always worthy of deeper exploration when a physical symptom is present to see whether an anniversary, birthday or other special occasion may be contributing to the experience.

A client of mine experienced a migraine on the 13th day of every month that would last for several incapacitating days. It transpired that her husbands’ cerebral haemorrhage that precipitated his death several weeks later occurred on the same date. Once she was cognizant of this fact she was able to build in a series of rituals and practices that enabled her to more consciously acknowledge the date. These included having a warm bath for several nights before the 13th, going for a walk on their favourite bush track, scheduling a massage, lighting a candle by his photo and playing some shared special music. These simple additions to her life enabled her to give expression to her memories and feelings in a more conscious way – and her migraines stopped.

There is no right way to grieve and members of a family will often react very differently. Some people want solitude while other people won’t want to be alone. Some people want to talk about a loved-one while others may find the conversation too difficult. Some people become oversensitive to everything while others are oblivious to all but their own thoughts and feelings.

Christmas can evoke powerful memories of past family gatherings regardless of whether they were happy or difficult occasions. Many families struggle to relate happily to one another at Christmas-time and this can compound our grief in unexpected ways. Being prepared for this is really important rather than just hoping that things will be ok. Getting caught ‘off guard’ compounds our feelings of grief so setting aside time to consider how we might traverse these days more consciously can assist us to be as comfortable with our discomfort as possible.

The first Christmas after a loved-one dies is often traumatic as the empty space that person filled in our lives simply gapes at us. However, it is very common for the second, third or subsequent Christmases to be difficult or devastating as we fully comprehend the consequences of our lost love.

One of the most helpful sessions in our grief program (called Healing Loss) involves people identifying the behaviours, the environments and the things that they do or have in their lives that give them a strong sense of connection with themselves. Participants in our programs list things like being in nature, fresh flowers, listening to or making music, a good talk to a real friend, warm baths, massage, support groups or counseling, prayer, meditation, rituals, dancing, singing, perfumes, candle light, aromatherapy, bushwalking, the company of pets, small children, friends or family, visiting special places that are meaningful, keeping a journal, having a good cry, painting, hobbies, craftwork, exercise, yoga or being in the garden. Increasing the number of these activities – or the ones that we find individually useful – around Christmas or other potentially challenging days can be very helpful in minimizing distress.

This is often quite difficult with the busyness of Christmas however making some of these activities a priority in the lead up to this time can be very helpful. Scheduling in some time for ourselves so that we can express sadness, disbelief, anger or frustration can be more effective than it coming out in less helpful reactive language or behaviours. Making time for tears or for sadness gives us greater capacity to respond to other people rather than simply react unskillfully.

Setting aside time for reflection so that we honour the relationship we have lost or writing to the person can be helpful. Visiting the cemetery or a favourite shared place in the lead up to Christmas or doing something that you both enjoyed previously can assist people with their feelings of grief while for others creating a new way of experiencing Christmas might be appropriate, perhaps changing the food we traditionally eat or the venue. Opening Christmas gifts at a different time or changing our usual routine can create a new way of experiencing this time together. Keeping a candle lit by a photo of our loved-one or creating a special decoration or flower arrangement in their memory can help us acknowledge their continuing presence in our life even though they are physically absent.

The key is to set aside time to acknowledge our feelings of grief and to consciously choose how we will spend this time together rather than just hoping that we ‘get through it’.

Young children experience grief in powerful ways too. It is often thought that young children have little concept of death but this certainly hasn’t been my experience. It is crucial to provide a child with strategies and rituals that help them to assimilate the reality of loss as well as instilling the possibility of a continuing loving relationship with someone no longer physically present in their life.

Wrapping young children up in a rainbow and connecting up from heart to heart before they go to sleep can be an immensely helpful ritual for children. The child can then send a rainbow from their heart to the loved one who has passed on or, perhaps to a tree or garden if one has been created in memory of the person or to their photograph if a child has one by their bed. The ritual involves telling the child that you’re going to wrap them up in a rainbow and connect up your hearts via a rainbow. You then run your hand from the top of the child’s head to the tips of their toes asking them to imagine you’re wrapping them up in a cloud of red, the colour of strawberries, fire engines and tomatoes. You ask the child if they can see the colour and of course, children always can. You continue with each of the seven colours of the rainbow all the while running your hand gently from the top of their head to the tips of their toes. Then place your hand upon their heart and ask them to imagine a really bright rainbow that starts in their heart and that comes across to your heart – while you move your hand to your heart.

The little prayer I used with my children when I started wrapping them up in rainbows before they went to sleep when they were aged four and seven went like this:

I wrap you in a rainbow of light to care for you all through the night. Your guardian angel watches from above and showers you with her great love.

A child can then send a rainbow from their heart to other family members as well as to the person who has passed on. This simple ritual generally stops nightmares and separation anxiety and is very helpful as a way for children to remain connected to the people they love. The full Rainbow Ritual can be freely downloaded from the resource page at http://www.questforlife.com.au and has also been written into a children’s book called You, Me & the Rainbow which is available at the Quest online shop. There are also beautiful little rainbow ribbons available with a heart on each end. Children love to have these as a visual reminder of the loving connection they have with the person who has passed on and often like to have them tied to their bed head.

Young children also enjoy making a Christmas decoration that is especially in memory of their loved one who has passed on. This can be hung upon the Christmas tree of displayed on the mantelpiece or on the Christmas table.

Many people berate themselves for having a good time or for laughing and enjoying themselves when they are grieving. This too is very normal and understandable. Some people think they must be in denial or they feel guilty or mortified that they can find pleasure in anything after the dreadful pain of loss. Having fun or enjoying each other’s company is not a sign that we miss a loved-one any the less.

Traditionally, Christmas is a time of happiness, shared times, excitement, reunion and love. Even at the best of times, this can be an enormous and unrealistic pressure on individuals and families and for those who are grieving, Christmas can feel full of potential pain. For some people it will feel like all the world is having a wonderful time with their loved ones and the grieving person is starkly reminded of their alone-ness and the loss of their loved-one. Feeling the pressure of having to be happy, jovial or even pleased to see people, can feel insurmountable and only accentuates the pain of loss.

By honouring our unique way of embracing grief and removing the pressure of other people’s – and our own – expectations of how we should grieve, we can create a healing pathway for ourselves. There is no healthy way around grief. Just as the potter knows that the pot is made strong by the furnace of heat, we must traverse the depths of griefs’ valleys if we are to discover compassion for ourselves and for all people that likewise suffer.

Petrea King

Petrea King

N.D., D.R.M., D.B.M., Dip Cl. Hyp., I.Y.T.A.

Petrea King is a well-known author, inspirational speaker, counsellor and workshop leader. She has practiced many forms of meditation since the age of seventeen and she is also qualified as a naturopath, herbalist, hypnotherapist, yoga and meditation teacher.

In 1983 Petrea was diagnosed with acute myeloid leukaemia and was not expected to live.  Meditation and the integration of past traumatic experiences became paramount in her recovery, much of which was spent in a monastery near Assisi in Italy.

Since then, Petrea has counselled individually or through residential programs more than 60,000 people living with life-challenging illnesses, grief, loss, trauma and tragedy. Petrea sees crisis as a catalyst for spiritual growth and understanding and as an opportunity for healing and peace.

Petrea has received the Advance Australia Award and the Centenary Medal for her contribution to the community. She has been nominated for Australian of the Year in each year since 2004.


 

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Jerry & Dianne Jampolsky

Many years ago Petrea was invited by Dr Gerry Jampolsky to join him in California to work at his Attitudinal Healing Center in Sausalito. At that time, Petrea was working with a nine year old boy called Charlie who was nearing the end of his life through cancer. Charlie had given Petrea ‘permission’ to go so that she could ‘ask Jerry your questions about working with children who were dying.’ Friends had donated her airfare and accommodation and all was set for her departure.

On her way to the airport Petrea visited Charlie. She meditated beside him as he slept and, in quietness, realised that she was going to America to ask Jerry the questions that Charlie had the answers to. Three hours before her flight was due to leave Petrea cancelled her trip. Whilst going to the US and working with Gerry was a far more exciting adventure, Petrea knew that to journey with illness, anguish and Charlie’s impending death would break her open to understandings in ways that the experience of the trip could not.

Petrea did finally get to the centre in Sausalito and studied the Principals of Attitudinal Healing in their groups, trainings and programs. She also studied facilitation and counselling there. Gerry and his partner Diane Cirincione became dear friends and, many years later they traveled to Bundanoon to officiate at the Opening of the Quest for Life Centre in 1999.

Gerry is a child and adult psychiatrist, a graduate of Stanford Medical School and he founded the first Attitudinal Healing Centre in 1975. There are now independent Attitudinal Healing Centres in more than 30 countries.

“The Centres provide services for people to support one another to overcome the conflict, fear, and feelings of isolation that can accompany a life crisis and encourages a choice for peace of mind.”

Some of Gerry’s books include:

Forgiveness – The Greatest Healer of All
Love is Letting Go of Fear
Good Bye to Guilt – Releasing Fear through Forgiveness
Teach only Love: The Seven Principles of Attitudinal Healing
Love is the Answer
Simple Thoughts that can Change Your Life
Out of Darkness and into the Light: A Journey of Inner Healing

Here is a quote from Gerry’s 1979 edition of Love is Letting Go of Fear:

“Although we want to experience peace, most of us are still seeking something else that we never find. We are still trying to control and predict and therefore we feel isolated, disconnected, separate, alone, fragmented, unloved and unlovable. We never seem to get enough of what we think we want and our satisfactions are highly transitory. Even with those people who are close to us we often have love hate relationships……. Many of us are finding that, even after obtaining all the things we thought we wanted in terms of job, home, family, money, there is still an emptiness inside…… Throughout the world there is a growing recognition of the need to feel fulfillment within rather than to rely on the external symbols of success”.

It seems to me that not much has changed since Gerry’s early book. The world will definitely change and it is up to us whether or not we change and how we change to manage our lives in a more fulfilling way. Easier said than done! But what else is there to do between now and death but release everything that doesn’t work for us and find a better way. And that is sometimes a daily task!

Is that how it is for you?

Wendie Batho

Wendie Batho

Wendie has co-facilitated residential programs with Petrea for more than sixteen years. Prior to that Wendie spent over 25 years as a teacher, school principal and was involved in educational leadership and facilitation of school executive groups.

Ten years of this time was spent in PNG where she taught and worked for the government. Wendie has been travelling since the early sixties and is especially attracted to Asian cultures. She holds degrees in Anthropology, Education, Sociology, Theology and Political Science. Her current passions are her grandchildren, travel biographies, exploring Asia, 4×4 driving, reading everything she can get her hands on, and watching movies on the big screen at home.


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CONTEMPLATING MIND

Look upon the body as unreal;

An image in a mirror; the reflection of the moon in water.

Contemplate the mind as formless, yet bright and pure.

Not a single thought arising,

Empty, yet perceptive; still, yet illuminating.

Complete like the Great Emptiness; containing all that is wonderful.

 

Neither going out nor coming in, without appearance or characteristics.

Countless skillful means arise out of one mind.

Independent of material existence, which is ever an obstruction.

Do not cling to deluded thoughts, these give birth to illusion.

 

Attentively contemplate this mind; empty, devoid of all objects.

If emotions should suddendly arise, you will fall into confusion.

In a critical moment bring back the light, powerfully illuminating.

Clouds disperse, the sky is clear.

The sun shines brilliantly.

 

If nothing arises within the mind, nothing will manifest without.

That which has characteristics, is not original reality.

If you can see a thought as it arises, this awareness will at once destroy it.

Whatever state of mind should come, sweep it away and put it down.

Both good and evil states can be transformed by mind.

Sacred and profane appear, in accordance with thoughts.

 

Reciting mantras or contemplating mind,

Are merely herbs for polishing a mirror.

When the dust is removed, they are also wiped away.

Great extensive spiritual powers are all complete within the mind.

The Pure Land or the heavens can be travelled to at will.

 

You need not to seek the real, mind originally is Buddha.

The familiar becomes remote, the strange seems familiar.

Day and night, everything is wonderful.

Nothing you encounter confuses you.

These are the essentials of mind.

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Shared by Michelle Richmond

Michelle Richmond

Michelle Richmond is a renowned Innovator, Visionary and Facilitator  in Life Transformation. Her previous role as the C.E.O. of the Asher Institute of Integrative Medicine Foundation has seen Michelle working and studying with leading edge Doctors and Physicians from around the globe as she mentored 1000’s of people in sustainable wellness. An experience that embedded the importance of interconnecting the spirit, heart, mind and body both personally and professionally to maximize health and success in all areas of life.

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