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[J114]Journey From The Heart
by Admin, Adm

This dream, after my father died, helped me understand the shock and physical hurt I was going through. I had never experienced the loss of someone I loved and it hit me in the gut. It was as if a part of me had died. And it had. Especially the part of me who reserved things like ?dying? for other families, not mine.

I was alone in the uncharted territory of grief. I wasn't interested in watching television or reading a novel.

Interestingly, I enjoyed playing the piano, as unpracticed as I was. Usually I'd be too busy to sit down and play but now time didn't seem to matter. I remember calling a friend whose husband said she was kayaking and would be spending the night camping on an island. I wondered if I would ever get out there again, back into the world. It was as if I was suspended in an altered state of being.

I couldn't write about my father's death for a long time. To write about something gives me distance it keeps me in my head. As long as I didn't write about my father dying, there was no distance. It was still happening in me. Like in my dream, I needed to stay in my body to feel the loss in my flesh and blood ? my bones.

I soon began to receive and experience the incredible healing power of love. It came mysteriously it was an honest outpouring from the people who surrounded me, wrote letters and called. One expression of sympathy I will always remember came from my friend Diana who lost her mother to breast cancer when she was a teenager. Soon after we returned home from Dad's funeral there was a knock at the door. There, Diana stood holding the most beautiful bouquet of flowers: delphiniums, sunflowers and zinnias. She put her hand over her heart and said two words, ?My mother.? We didn't need to talk. I knew she was telling me about the love that lives on.

Another friend called.

Ann said ?I want to take you to lunch. I will never forget when my father died.?

It didn't matter that Ann was in her 80's or that she had lost two husbands after long 30-year marriages. It didn't matter how many years had passed since her dad had died. She knew how I was feeling and wanted to share this time with me.

During this time, my tears would come as easily as the memories of Dad. I believe tears are like holy water. They flow from the well of our hearts, where we hold our feelings. I stayed with my sadness. I shared it with others and received great comfort because they too have had sadness.

My mother said she gardened with her grief. Her yard was never more beautiful than the year my father died. This time of grieving, as it gradually left my body, gave me a new way of living it became my traveling companion as I lived more compassionately. I learned that our sadness ennobles us as humans. It means we have loved deeply. It is this love that will never die. I wrote about this in a poem the summer after my Dad died.

MY FATHER

I think I am letting him go.
It is not that my love is diminished
or that I miss him less.

It is only that the sun is up
and there is no milk
in the refrigerator
and the bunny got out
of the cage
and is eating my red geraniums.

I think I am letting him go.
But sometimes at night
before I go to sleep
I feel the tears
fill up my eyes
and run down my cheeks.

I do not think I will ever
let him go.
But he is gone.

When You Lose Someone You Love: A Personal Journey Through The Heart of Grief ? 2005 Susan Florence.

Susan Florence is author and illustrator of The Journeys Series, a collection of giftbooks to help us find meaning along the journey of our lives. Two titles, When You Lose Someone You Love and Your Journey will inspire and touch the heart of those who are grieving. Visit to order books and view her art.


Coming to see for yourself that nothing is preventing you from actually being who you are if you so wish, that this "you" of you is something within your capacity – on a daily and momentary basis – of finding and stopping at and as. That you can actually begin your journey of realizing the heart of "you" directly and immediately, once you understand that this "you" is not the movement of the familiarity of the movement of who you have always thought to be you, and that you are very capable of being the immediate freedom that "you" are and through this beingness learning all about the notyou-ness that you would otherwise get caught up in identifying yourself to be.

One of the biggest questions asked again and again is 'how does one live this within the rounds of daily living?'

Once you begin to see that this is not a mental exercise of knowing some words, or having some profoundly tricky and deep insights, and that this "you" of you is actually an energetic movement or flow that is always flowing through your eyes. That it is always with you wherever you may go and that you may find this "you" whenever you so choose to do so.

Then you will come to see that you can be "you" on a momentary basis, no matter the arising – anytime, anyplace and anywhere.

The most difficult stage of this part of prising yourself loose from the grips of being lost to this "you" of you that is always with you, is the beginning stages of when you begin to get a move to actually do something about no longer being imprisoned, the arena where you are learning to see that you are not who you thought you were.

If you really wish to make headway through and out of your familiar place of imprisonment then spending a month or two with one who is already deeply involved in this journey of heart and self discovery would be your greatest advantage.

Once you begin to be who "you" are – which cannot be according to who you think you are – then you are finished no matter what is going on. You are home no matter the continued motion of notyou-ness that will continue to arise.

Discernment will be a natural part of you 'not buying the water' of others who are obviously not living the clarity and fullness of who they are.

You will be standing freely as this "you" of you that you are, flowing freely with everything as it is danced from within this same one that is this "you".

You will also – without any contradiction whatsoever – continue to learn of more of the notyou-ness that you find yourself flowing through, awakening to an ever greater flowering of the inner-ness of this divine one that is "you".
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Both Admin & Elysha are contributors for EditorialToday. The above articles have been edited for relevancy and timeliness. All write-ups, reviews, tips and guides published by EditorialToday.com and its partners or affiliates are for informational purposes only. They should not be used for any legal or any other type of advice. We do not endorse any author, contributor, writer or article posted by our team.

Admin has sinced written about articles on various topics from Infidelity, Tax and Class Action. Susan Florence. Admin's top article generates over 368000 views. to your Favourites.

Elysha has sinced written about articles on various topics from Small Business, Meditation and Alternative Medicine. If you are interested in learning to no longer be lost in trying to be what is not true of you, try visiting Elysha’s website for more . Elysha's top article generates over 301000 views. to your Favourites.
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