Courage

When it comes to healing on any level, the most important quality or virtue is courage.  In order not to re-live our personal, family, national or ethnic history we must have the courage to face our past.

Without courage, all other qualities we consider virtues, such as love, forgiveness, acceptance, tolerance, kindness, charity and understanding are only temporary states of being for none of them can exist in our world unless they are supported by courage.  Likewise, courage does not exist unless fear is present.

About JohnLPayne

John L. Payne is the author of 'The Healing of Individuals, Families and Nations', 'The Language of the Soul' and 'The Prsence of the Soul'. His books have gained endorsements by leading authors such as Debbie Ford and Iyanla Vanzant among others. www.johnlpayne.com

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Courage

"Being deeply loved by someone gives you strength,

while loving someone deeply gives you courage."

Lao Tzu

Kelly Salasin

I’ve been thinking a lot about courage lately, noticing where it thrives  in my life (and where it doesn’t.)  There’s a moment around my mother’s death that I’ve yet to embrace, and it has become more and more commanding of my attention.
Look at me,” it whispers.  “Time to let go.” But I’ve been too afraid.

I’ve never really thought of myself as a courageous person.  I’ve never jumped out of a plane or skied the trees.  I’d never be able to run a marathon and I never wanted to do any of these bold  things.
To my credit, I did backpack through Europe and even ventured a bit into Northern Ireland during the peak of the fighting there.  That was kind of brave– or stupid.   I gave birth to my last child at home, and walked to the ambulance rather than be carried out on the stretcher when my first delivery ended up at the hospital.  I even wanted to watch my own c-section, but that might make me more strange than courageous.

I could call myself bold. I speak up a lot.  I say things others don’t say.  I share things others would never share, and I put myself out there in a way that makes even me uncomfortable sometimes.   Like I’m doing right now.  Like I did the morning my mother died.

Do you know that kind of courage that bubbles up inside you, but isn’t of you?   That’s the kind I most demonstrate, I think.  After my grandfather died, I was able to stand up at his funeral and share all the things I loved about him– without falling apart until I slumped into my seat.

When my beloved great-grandmother Mildred lay dying in a hospital bed, I was able to reach under the covers and massage her beautiful ninety-year old legs, saving my sobs for the floor of ICU’s bathroom.

This kind of courage doesn’t climb mountains, but is born of loving.   I didn’t cry when my mother took her last breaths, I sang.  I wanted to welcome her into the light; I wanted her to have wings.

And I remained there with her when the undertaker arrived to remover her body and everyone fled into the kitchen and out the backdoor, and the last lingerers were chased away by hospice workers who said, “You don’t want to see this.

Who would?
Who would want to stay and see their beloved folded up like a cardboard box and put into a bag.  Who?

And yet I could not leave her.  She was my mother– still– and I had not been here with her in the months when she struggled to stay alive.  I had only come now, at the very end, after the baby was born. With him at my side, with God’s pure grace shining through his bluest eyes, I could do anything that was asked.  Even this.

I sat in the space that had been her dining room- where she had drank her morning, and afternoon, and evening coffees- black, no sugar;  read the paper, did the crossword;  listened to the scanner, checked her email;  caught the game, the weather, the latest deals on QVC.  I sat  in this place where each one of us had sat across from her– at the table- all of our lives.
Only now the place where the table stood was filled with air mattresses and I wasn’t talking to my mom, I was watching… as her old highschool classmate- turned funeral director- lifted her rigid body from the hospital bed.
Ben had visited my mom in the hospital when she was first diagnosed with stage-four cancer, just a three months ago.  “Not the kind of visitor I want to see right now,” my mother remarked wryly once he had left the room.
He seems like a nice guy, why not, Mom?” I asked, surprised at her uncharacteristic coolness.
He’s the undertaker, Kel,” she replied flatly.

How did he do it, I wonder?  How did Ben pick up “good-natured Bonnie” from his senior yearbook and zip her into a bag?

But he did.  That was his job.

And I did too.  I stayed there and attended my mother’s body.   When I couldn’t bear to look anymore,  I watched through my grandmother’s gilded mirror that Mom had frost pink and purple, as they worked to lift her from the bed where her workout equipment had stood just a season ago.  I waited and watched even though no one, no one, should see something like this.

I followed them out the front door as they carried my mother to the back of the undertaker’s wagon.  She’d always been the one in the front seat– driving one of the eight of us to school, to practice, to birthday parties or dances.

I stood there frozen on her porch- where she had smoked her cigarettes, and watched the cars go by, sitting on the furniture she picked up at the wicker store, next to the tomatoes she had planted that spring.   She never got to pick a one.

Suddenly I was drained of all the courage that had sustained me. It slipped from my shoulders and onto the floor.   I stood alone sobbing, my hands covering my face and gripping at my hair.

All my life, I’ve had to be more together than I wanted to be, and this moment was like none other.   I lacked the courage to reach out, to be held.  I lacked the ability to be noticed as needing.
I wish I could say that I’m ready to change, but I’m really not.  I take baby steps and those are hard enough.   That’s all the courage I have.

Today, I took out the folded check my mother had given me in the weeks before she died.   I had come to visit for the weekend, just after the baby was born, and when it came time to leave, she asked me to wait, whispering for someone to get her the checkbook.

And though by this time, she could hardly sit or lift water to her lips, she managed to covertly scribble our names and hers on a check to hand to me as we kissed goodbye– a gift to celebrate her grandson’s birth.

I could never bring myself to cash it, even to buy him something to remember her by.  I kept it folded in a bag of runes that were hers, and everyone once and awhile, took it out and looked at it to marvel at her determination and devotion, and at how her perfect Catholic school girl writing had gone bad.

It’s been almost five years since that time, and today I’m going to give that beautiful testimony of her love back to the bank (or to the compost pile since it’s too late for cashing).  I’m going to spend that love on something for our garden as we celebrate our first summer in our new house.  It will be something that makes me smile, remembering her.

Something that celebrates my tremendous courage in letting her go, one more time.

About kellysalasin

I am a lifetime educator/learner whose greatest gifts are my children, my husband, and my family. My deepest passion is writing. I am the proud mother of several blogs, and I am currently having a love affair with my memoir on the spiral dance of motherhood. I'm also honored to lead Kripalu YogaDance circles with music, movement & meditation. I live in the Green Mountains of Vermont where I take lots of walks on dirt roads and commune with water in the form of snow, ponds, streams and stillness. I so appreciate the "Intent Family" garden.

"A long slow color is green," (Faye Hollander)

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Courage

Without question, courage is essential to the work of entrepreneurs and change agents, and anyone Working for Good. The journey to creating something new and changing something old is not easy and continually calls for courage to face the unknown, the uncertain, the never-been-done before, the "how the heck are we going to make it through this passage" passages.

Here are some more reflections on Courage by my friend, colleague, and collaborator, Elad Levinson. And remember, it takes courage to ask for help!

Yours in Working for Good,

Jeff

“Courage is going from failure to failure without losing enthusiasm.” ~ Winston Churchill

Courage comes from the French word coeur, which means the heart. To have courage means to have heart.

What is the relationship between having heart and Working for Good? Without heart, work becomes meaningless. Heart infuses the act of working with life-blood, which animates and infuses us with vitality and intent. With heart, anything can become a heroic journey; without heart it is just going through the motions.

When does heart show up as a principle? Everywhere in the process of conceiving, connecting and collaborating to produce the big idea that is behind the product or service you want to bring to life.

  1. It takes heart to motivate us to do good – heart is what initiates us wanting to solve an environmental or social problem and to make a difference through our work.
  2. Courage – the strength of our heart – binds us to the task when the going gets rough and connects us with others with whom we share the journey.
  3. Courage is required to have the difficult conversations and to engage in authentic dialogue.
  4. Courage supplies the fuel for sustaining our effort when we are tired and dispirited. And courage is contagious. The heart-based power of others – can lift our heart and make us recall once again why are doing what we are doing.

Courage is the fuel for persistence and catalyst for decisiveness.

“You gain strength, courage, and confidence by every experience in which you really stop to look fear in the face. You must do the thing which you think you cannot do.” ~ Eleanor Roosevelt

LINKS:
Lovetta Conto and Akawelle: life emerging out of war.

About babajeff

Through my company, Cause Alliance Marketing, I produce and facilitate marketing based alliances that address social issues, while addressing the needs and objectives of program partners. I serve as Executive Director & Chief Activation Officer for FLOW, and organization founded by John Mackey, CEO of Whole Foods Market, and educational entrepreneur Michael Strong, dedicated to liberating the entrepreneurial spirit for good. Through FLOW,  I am co-producing Peace Through Commerce, Accelerating Women Entrepreneurs, and Conscious Capitalism programs.

I recently finished writing a book entitled Working for Good, to be published in fall 2009 by Sounds True.

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2 Responses to Courage

  1. Jay_Shanker June 1, 2009 at 9:56 pm #

    What a wonderful post !! True, courage is picking yourself up when you are down and soldiering on.

  2. Super frog June 1, 2009 at 11:44 pm #

    Business people need courage because they fear failure. Courage is the egos way of dealing with fear it comes from a strong desire or passion to achieve. Compassion comes from our desire to help others not from our need to overcome fear.

    Thanks Jeff,

    This is a good article..

Courage

Bridge near Glenorchy, New Zealand

Do we have the courage to surrender?
Sometimes when we let go, painful memories arise. We would rather not face those thoughts than acknowledge them. We believe that we are safe keeping our fears locked away in our subconscious. However, by not acknowledging them, they affect our lives in subtle and obvious ways. By allowing these unacknowledged memories to enter our awareness, their power is diminished.
We also fear the unknown. We are afraid of letting go of our deepest beliefs. We are afraid that we will be nothing without the comfort of the belief structures which tie us to various social groups. The opposite is true. When we surrender our stale belief systems, we become who we truly are.
There is nothing to fear. Our fears hold power over us only if we refuse to acknowledge them. Once we look at them, without judgment, their grip on us is released.
Let’s have the courage to see things as they are.

About philliprosen

I am an entertainment attorney living in Venice, CA. My primary passions are meditation, yoga, veganism and living a natural and harmonious life. I regularly travel to New Zealand and intend to split time between there and California. My wife, Mickie and I have two muskrat dogs, Cocoa and Dylan.

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Courage

Much courage is needed. Now and in the next moment. Ego is afraid to give up. Mind is afraid to loose its control. Personality is afraid to die. None of them now that when they truly surrender, allow themselves to give up, loose control, and die, what is revealed is God itself. In that space of God, there is everything that ego, mind or personality have ever desired. It’s the ultimate fulfillment. Ultimate ecstasy. Ultimate love. Yet, one can not get there through trying. One can not get there through searching. One can not ‘get’ there period. Because the very act of trying to get anywhere is avoiding the Divine Essence that is already here. Right Here.

The trying and searching are what keep one from dissolving into Oneness of Love.

So, much courage is needed. Once you are one with God, all is easy, but as long as ego is playing its game, much courage is needed to trust and give it all up.

www.breathoflove.org

 

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About SatGuru

Julia Mikk is a internationally renowned teacher, author, and breathworker. She has been qualified by One Sky International Life Skills and Healing Arts Institute, and Rebirthing Breathwork International. Her powerful approach to breathwork reflects her deep opening through the teachings of Gangaji, and trainings with many breathwork pioneers including the founder of Rebirthing, Leonard Orr. In her

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3 Responses to Courage

  1. Jay_Shanker June 1, 2009 at 9:56 pm #

    What a wonderful post !! True, courage is picking yourself up when you are down and soldiering on.

  2. Super frog June 1, 2009 at 11:44 pm #

    Business people need courage because they fear failure. Courage is the egos way of dealing with fear it comes from a strong desire or passion to achieve. Compassion comes from our desire to help others not from our need to overcome fear.

    Thanks Jeff,

    This is a good article..