Find Your Purpose

Dear Ones,

How do you know what your purpose is? Drum roll...

It’s what your soul is calling to do.

How do you know the voice of your soul? It is the voice that speaks to you in a clear and steady way.

It’s not undecided. It’s not this or that... The soul is certain. It has a matter of fact kind of tone.

So drop into the certainty. Drop into what you know to be true in you... Follow that path of rose petals or of pebbles.

Because purpose and soul don’t care about the package. They don't judge the name of things, the labels, the shoulds or the things our old programming thinks are better to do --- They care about the essence at the core of the thing that you are pursing.

The question we can ask ourselves is, can you bring your purpose into it—can you squeeze the cloth of soul speak out of it? If you can, then it's probably worthwhile and part of your soul calling. 

Certainty comes when we allow it to. If we sit and let the pond of our mind settle. Beneath the ripples of right and wrong of better or of worse, is your truth. That's why mediation and mindfulness practices become so important -- So we can get under the static of our sometimes neurotic world...

Sit still enough, with your big feelings enough, with the mind and ego enough, that wants to fix and control and keep safe—because underneath that storm is your purpose. Is the sacred container of soul.

The jewel in the heart of the lotus is what you seek. So first, let things that aren’t it settle; evaporate. Be still. What you are searching for, give it a chance to find you, too.

When it does, you will be certain. Because certainty comes when we are grounded enough to receive that clarity.

Your soul surely is calling in purpose. So pick a wall to stare at, a star speckled sky to observe or simply peer out your window. Pause. Let your purpose meet you there.

I have both 3 & 1 month transformation packages now up on my website: 1 Month Deep Dive + 3 Month Sacred Expansion Mentorship

Believe in your right to purpose and expansion. That’s what will get you there to living it.

In kindness and courage,

Sarah

If you'd like to work together 1:1 head here to connect
www.sarahnorrad.com

Meditation to Open the Senses and Receive

Meditation to Open the Senses and Receive

Inspired by a Dharma talk by Mooji

 

This is an invitation to open up to the wisdom of your senses. Become aware that there is a whole world of teachings available to you right now just by opening, becoming present and receiving. As we learn to simply be, in our natural state, we receive the juice of renewal and of inspired grace. In this state of being all things reside.

 

·      Pause now and notice your breath. Do not work on changing anything, just become aware of your body. You may close your eyes or keep them open.

·      Just allow yourself to be – with no practice – with doing no thing.

·      Now, inhale deeply and on your exhale do a long “Om” to begin to get into the feeling of vibration and sound in the body.

·      Be aware of your physical body now.

·      Notice your senses --- Feel them open like flowers budding. Notice how they function naturally. Notice how you don’t have to force your senses to sense. You just arrive in present awareness and witness them.

·      Sink into the realization that you do not have to operate your senses. They work on their own…

·      What do your senses notice? Is there a sound you can hear? A fan? A car passing? Is there the smell of sunshine, of dust, of home? What is the quality of light; even with your eyes closed you can sense this. Is there a taste in your mouth? Can you notice the air touching the skin of your hands and face?

·      Open. Open with every cell. Open to this information that is being processed without you having to do any work at all.

·      Feel your cells receiving in presence. Feel the power of that…

·      Let your boundary of being get bigger. Let your presence and senses get so big they do not have a container.

·      Be with this being.

·      Remain as awareness itself with no need to chase thoughts or working anything out.

·      Rest inside of your being, inside of your senses.

·      Give up working hard for right now. You are not doing anything.

·      There is nothing to change, fix or manage --- Just awareness to sense as a natural function.

·      Notice your heartbeat now.

·      Come into your heart. Let your heart know there is nothing to grasp at, that there is nothing to wait for; there is just this being.

·      Receive the renewal of giving up the work – let the wisdom of your senses be and come to you instead.

·      Here you are not a work in progress, you are perfect and simply what is – an effortless being. There is nothing to construct or deconstruct.

·      When you are ready to end this meditation, know that you can bring this effortlessness into your life now. That you can rest with the blossoming and pure awareness of your senses --- with their natural ability to work on their own. From this place you can renew.

 

So much of life we feel like we need to change, to fix and to work hard on things --- This practice is to open to the huge transformation and support of the present moment. It is to remind us how to receive; that we can receive renewal and wisdom right here and now and all that is required is to drop our doing for a moment and be; as we be, we are the pure awareness of sense in our natural form. In this state, we are open to the abundance of life as it gifts to us our needs.

 

Copyright Sarah Norrad 2020

*These practices, writings and instructions were created by Sarah Norrad. All copyright laws, creative or otherwise, apply, are reserved & bound to Sarah Norrad. This practice is not meant to take the place of clinical, medical or other professional support.

 

 

Come Back to Wholeness

Dear Ones,

I know it's been a crazy time and we are all feeling the stress of it. Some of us are deeply affected by this pandemic and others are feeling it strongly because we are empaths to this collective trauma.

The note I wanted to send out today to my inner circle crew is about regulation; about coming back into wholeness and getting through this time connected to something bigger than just our minds...

For our fall from grace happened when we started to believe we were just the mind, or the body or that we were just a job, a partner, man or woman... a one thing. That our entirety was this pandemic too. 

Maybe we believed that we were “that” old failure. Maybe we feel this pandemic is our fault for not doing better, trying harder, being stronger supporters to the earth and to each other. 

But we are not just one of these things, failures or that blaming mind; wise ones say we are the space around all these things too.

And from this place of expansion, from the great container that holds it all, we are the consciousness instead that witnesses the mind body spirit; and this hugeness is where we create great things and healing.

It’s where the nectar of genius, of ingenuity and ones-ness lives—a naturally occurring collective consciousness that in it resides immense wisdoms. 

Soulprenuers, seekers, comrade humans here on planet earth, we can all connect to this greater source and perhaps it's so the time right now. Because it’s not yours. It’s not mine. It’s not theirs... We are all a part of this boundless container.

We are all holding it too. This is the return to wholeness.

Me and my; oh great illusion to keep us small and struggling... to keep us thinking we don’t have access to our medicine, to our healing, to our wholeness, to our thriving and to our creating. That we are separate from the solutions...

We are not. We have direct lines to it. In that essence, we are never doing any of this on our own. We are a greater whole.

The great traditions of the east, and many indigenous societies, teach and live this so much better than we do... but we are trying. Yes, we are.

Collective is being remembered. For many of us it was the individualist way that was initially taught.

If you are a creator, an entrepreneur a dreamer, you are connecting to this consciousness to form new things, offerings and inspirations all of the time. Societies that were sourced together, thrived with this.

Universal Oneness. The grace of such lay in remembering interconnectedness and allowing the insight and power of it to permeate our lives, our working, our medicine healing and our inter-doing.

Are we the space that holds the mind body spirit? Do you have access to inspiration, healing, creation & wholeness greater than just your mind? I do believe so. And from this place, as a collective, may we find the rebirth now, we so genuinely need.

From this great source, may we heal and rise.

In kindness and courage,
Sarah

If you'd like to work together 1:1 head here to connect
www.sarahnorrad.com

Strategies for Moving Through Now with Greater Peace

When we are faced with something that is out of our control that feels life threatening, or overwhelms us and our ability to cope, we can begin to experience a trauma response. Trauma has a Greek root meaning wound.

Wound. A wound is a place that is hurt.

I love words because they can help us understand our human experience. And right now hurt may feel prevalent as we process a huge shift in normalcy; some trauma may be too.

  • The thing that many of us know about trauma and “coping” is they create a continual heightened experience of distress in our systems, without coming back into regulation.

  • So right now, be extra forgiving and gentle with ourselves as we support a conscious process of coming back into ease, rest and our parasympathetic systems.

The stages of grief were written out as 5 emotions one experienced when faced with loss (many of us are experiencing loss now), denial, anger, bargaining, depression, and acceptance. This model was created by psychiatrist Elizabeth Kübler-Ross.

However, the thing that’s important to note, and that Elizabeth regretted not making more clear, is that the process of grief is non-linear.

One moment we can feel acceptance and the next denial; anger... this model is not perfect. Grieving can, and does, include other stages of emotions and deletes some depending on your unique process...

It’s important to think about this now, to support us in releasing stigma around our feelings & process—to support us to release stigma of our response to a pandemic—to support us to speak about this and find support inside and outwardly for regulation—to remember that our emotions and responses to this time can come in stages, often non-linear ones.

  1. Grounding, a self-care practice that supports regulation.

  2. Gently squeezing different parts of our bodies and stating, “this is the safe container of my body,” is a great practice. Essential oils of Palma Rosa and Lavender can be soothing.

  3. Camomile tea is a tonic for the nervous system.

  4. Try mini meditations throughout your day. Yoga can be used as a somatic practice to bring us back into our bodies.

Anything that aligns us into integration & ease are a good choice for right now.

Sending peace and love to all ❤️

In kindness and courage,

Sarah

PS *If you are having serious symptoms, please see your medical practitioner or call an emergency line. Our local is 911.

What's Underneath this Upheaval

In Chinese medicine, grief sits in the lungs.

I find it interesting that this virus affects the lungs too. I’ve noticed that in clients and in myself, this time now is bringing up a deep grief process and sadness.

Grief can be something we turn away from quickly in our culture; it is banished as we distract and medicate in a myriad of ways... However, grief is a pinnacle step in the healing process. It is needed so that we rise out of depression, anxiety and other stagnated problems. It is there so that we move into growth.

So what do we do with grief?

We feel it. We welcome it. We open our door to it and we say, “hello. Hi grief, what would you like to tell me?”

I bet it has some amazing things to say. Probably not what you thought it would either.

So when we avoid grief, we avoid healing + growth. When we turn away from sadness, we close the door to joy.

Oh virus, could you too be our teacher... as you point us to our lungs; our grieving. Ultimately leading us to our healing.

If I know anything from living through a chronic illness, it is that fighting against the teaching of something, prolongs it.

I also know that the outside label of something is usually the messenger for the medicine and teaching within.

This is how I see the world. If you see it differently, I celebrate that too. To me to make meaning of things, to unwrap the gift and the grief, helps to integrate them, to teach on them and to support clients moving through them and beyond...

Oh, sweet grief. What would you like to tell us? For in your arms is the medicine for our evolution.

Lungs. Dear lungs. What is your message? If loss could be our teacher, what would it want us to know; to remember?

This is a holistic approach to healing, to therapeutic work and a somatic and intuitive one to regaining wholeness; balance. Expansion.

If you want to talk more about this, you know where to find me to do this work (message, email, website). I’d be honoured to hold a sacred container for you there.

📷 @ravi.rane

Believe in Yourself

No,

I did not come here to tell you 

you were beautiful.

No,

I did not come here to tell you 

you were good or okay nor that you were perfectly fine.

I came here, rather, 

to ignite a fire in your belly, 

a flame in your chest and a light inside the darkest places in your soul.

If untouched, unchanged and unaltered is what you were expecting to find inside 

of these limbs of mine

you will be disappointed by the layers and colours and contours that they carry.

For I did not come here to make things easier.

I came here to challenge you in ways that would make you uncomfortable enough to grow.

No,

I did not come here to tell you 

you were beautiful.

I came here to teach you to love yourself enough so that you would believe that it is so.

©️ @sarah.norrad

Exhale.

And she exhaled.
Not because she wanted to.
Not because she was told to.
Not because there was really space to,
nor much time permitted for it also.

And she exhaled... because she had to.
Because she had free choice and the need to do so.

And as she exhaled she realized no one had given her permission to.
And as she began, she didn't know if it was absolutely okay, 
or alright to do so.

But she knew the out-breath carried peace with it and absence and a certain time afterwards to pause.

So she exhaled and she continued to.

She remembered again that this is how she created her own space.

She dropped the story that was spinning around her, of not enough time or too much or perhaps not enough energy or agility or strength and she said to all those dialogues,
'No.'
And instead to her own body,
She said, 'Yes.'

And she came back into it again.
Into the feeling of grounded earth beneath her toes and solid bones under her cocoa smelling flesh.
And she knew she could do it.
She knew she could handle all.

For the wisdom inside of her told her it was greater than any one voice outside.

And she exhaled.
She let go.
She paused.
And she said, 'Thank you.'
And she kissed her own hand and different parts of her sweet body, 
starting next at her wrist and heading up the length of her arm.

And she loosened those places that were tight.

And she exhaled.

Because she and her body knew, this was how to begin.

Sarah Norrad - Published in full version at Medium

How to Let Go and Move on Like a Buddha

There are certain things in life that will be harder to let go of than others.

There are also certain things on this human journey that may be entirely impossible to ever totally release.

Despite what we’ve so often been told—we can’t always simply get over people, places, or experiences we’ve encountered. Some will stick with us our entire lives, and they are meant to.

We are affected beings who move through life building relationships, jobs, roles, duties, and memories. If we are leaning into living a full life, we will have dozens of each of these things, and we will also lose them too.

There’s much talk and advice given about “just letting go.” This is sage guidance, but how do we do this when something massive and life altering occurs? It’s likely that most of us will have this experience at least once (or maybe, a few times) in life, when—for whatever reason—we feel like we need to begin all over again.

It’s happened to me on several occasions. It became such a defining feature in my world for a period that I tattooed a phoenix on my solar plexus as a reminder that we can always start over.

However, when these life-altering things hit, it sure doesn’t feel easy to begin again. What often happens is we believe that in order to move on or move forward, we must release the old entirely. This is untrue. I will say it again—there will be things that stick with us for our entire lives, and they are meant to.

I’m not just speaking about relationships with people—I also refer to the abuse and trauma we carry with us. Sadly, most of us have been through both of these in some way, and even more sadly, we’ve been told that we should “get over it, already.” (Or, we say this to ourselves, which is just as destructive.)

Sometimes, “getting over” something can be a way we choose to deny that something even occurred—which means we may become perplexed when a new loss triggers that old, original wound. We think to ourselves: “I should be past that.” Or: “It happened so long ago—why am I responding so strongly to this?” But, the body and our psyche carry these residual energies with them. Unfortunately, this means we might experience a reaction to certain experiences forever—as those who carry something like post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) will know.

However, just because there are things that we may never totally get over, it doesn’t mean we cannot continue on with our lives presently. One of the pinnacle teachings I have learned from Buddhism is that the first practice to finding peace in our lives is to accept what is and what was.

Tara Brach, a renowned Buddhist speaker, writer, and psychologist, published an insightful book about this called Radical Acceptance. In this book, she shares the challenging experiences she had with abuse and heartbreak and how they led her to the path of fully loving herself and all the things (including the past pain) that made up her life—rather than just rejecting what she’d experienced.

It is not our ability to “get over” or forget something that makes us stronger—it is actually acknowledging that these things create a beautiful, unique, and meaningful tapestry that make up who we are that makes us truly resilient.

As I spend more time dedicated to sitting on my meditation cushion, it becomes more clear what the art of “non-reacting” truly means. It means we pause, acknowledge, and open to the larger space of life—bigger than simply one experience or one loss. It also means that we develop compassion for old feelings as they arise, and we trust that we don’t need to do anything about them but simply allow them to be and pass through.

Non-reaction allows us to face our lives and continue. We become the observer of our experience, instead of the victim of it. Non-reaction means we are mindful enough to slow down, recognize, and give ourselves and it room to breathe.

So then, the process of living in a productive way and honoring our “humanness” simply means: pause, acknowledge, and open.

This might seem too basic to apply to something that feels life altering—but often, the best wisdom is simple.

The Buddha was a master at facing the most challenging circumstances in the most relaxed way.

So, if there is something we are struggling with right now—if the pain of past or current situations feels like we just can’t get over them—don’t cause more suffering by trying to force a complete release. Rather, like a Buddha: pause, acknowledge, and open. Give yourself (and it) room to be.

Remember, what we are doing with our lives is creating a beautiful tapestry—and tapestries require multiple layers to become complete.

Originally published at elephant journal - https://www.elephantjournal.com/2017/10/how-to-let-go-move-on-like-a-buddha/

Author: Sarah Norrad
Editor: Yoli Ramazzina

Embrace All Of It.

We are not young anymore,
but we are not yet old.
We are not shy anymore,
but we still have moments where we pause,
where life rushes towards us and we stutter,
for a split second,
we question whether we can do it,
this,
that,
and the other.
But,
we all have these,
secret moments of doubt,
even those of us who know how to live beyond fear.
For we are human,
and will remain,
each of us,
until we leave here,
our sweet earth.
But,
if we are not one thing,
nor are we the other,
we must then embrace the in-between.
And eventually,
the meantime becomes not a place anymore where we wobble,
but it solidifies,
as a rooted stance,
of presence instead.
If we forget about the labels of what or who,
as we discover we will die a handful of deaths,
while still living this one.
We begin to understand the inconstancy of existence.
That's what life is,
isn't it?
A continuum of experiencing,
different versions of ourself?
So,
I say,
dress up.
Get to know each and every one.
Perhaps,
we came here to do just that...
Perhaps we came here to understand,
the art,
and skill it takes,
to consciously transform. 
We are not young anymore,
but we are not yet old.
Let the meantime be no longer a place where we wobble,
but let it solidify as a rooted stance of presence instead. 

~ Sarah Norrad

Stay Open.

If the sky opens for a moment,
let it.
If the clouds move across your sky,
allow them.
Let the weather of life,
move you.
Let it affect,
even that uncertain place inside.
If the sky opens for a moment,
let it.
Allow the beauty of life to touch,
even the timid parts of you.
For in this vulnerability,
we meet our faith,
and we begin to learn trust,
here.
Trust,
in the goodness, 
and faith,
and the sacredness of all things.
If the sky opens for a moment,
let it.
Allow love,
to pour right in.