SoulCollage Inspiration

By Anne Marie Bennett

I Would Have Been a Good Mother

scwouldhavebeenEvery year around Mother’s Day, a part of me begins to grieve the fact that I chose not to have children.Ā  This was a personal choice and to this day I do not regret it. However, around this time of year, one or two of my inner voices simply feel sad.

At first, I fought the feeling, trying to rationalize it away.Ā  But then I learned to accept this sadness.Ā  It only lasts a day or two; it is part of my personal history and I believe it is meant to be honored, not shoved away.

Last year while flipping through magazines, seeking images for a workshop I was leading, I came across the image of mother and child that is on the right side of my card shown here.Ā  And as I gazed into her eyes that first time, I could almost hear her saying “You would have been a good mother.”Ā  My heart brightened at this message and I determined to make a card to honor this new voice inside of me.Ā  She feels like a champion somehow.Ā  I don’t know if she is Committee or Council, but it doesn’t matter. Her wisdom runs through my mind and heart and eases the difficult sadness I usually feel at this time of year:

Who are you?
I am the one who would have been a good mother and you know it.Ā  I am the one who is so good with children.Ā  I am the one who is comforting and kind and accepting of children.Ā  I am the one who knows how to take care of children.Ā  I am the one who loves children.

I am the one who is tired of all the inner voices who are telling you you would’ve been a bad mother.Ā  I am the one who knows this is hogwash.Ā  I am the one who knows I can be impatient and who has a quick temper BUT I am also the one who knows that that doesn’t mean I wouldn’t have been a good mother.Ā  I am the one who knows in my body-mind-soul that I would have been a good mother.

I am the one whose gifts for mothering in this lifetime have had to take other forms.Ā 

I am the one who didn’t have a great mother when I was young AND I am the one who now knows that that doesn’t mean I would’ve been a bad mother.

I am the one who is strong and soft, who is safe and vulnerable.Ā  I am the one who holds those I love with single-hearted focus.Ā  I am the one who is held by the feminine spirit of Mother God.

 

What gifts do you bring?
I am the one who gives you the KNOWING that you would’ve been a good mother.Ā  I am the one who gives you the confidence to say this out loud and often: “I would have been a good mother. I chose NOT to be a child-bearing mother in this lifetime and that is exactly as it should be.”
What do you want from me?I want you to stop beating yourself up for choosing to not have children.Ā  I want you to stop the Inner Naysayers who have been feeding you all kinds of LIES about why you aren’t a mother.Ā  I want you to believe with all your heart that you would’ve been a good mother.

You have all the qualities of a good mother- you are loving and generous and you know how to nurture.Ā  Just because you have shortcomings, doesn’t mean that you would have failed as a mother.Ā  I want you to OWN THIS!!!

Woman on Dock

scunknow051511This card came together magically but I was clueless as to its meaning. As I journaled with it, it spoke to me about real things going on in my life right now.

Also, halfway through journaling, I noticed that the woman looks an awful lot like Attorney Erin on the TV show Blue Bloods!Ā  And then the whole exercise morphed into a conversation with Erin which was very affirming for me.

I share this Neter and this journaling with you as encouragement for you to follow the journaling wherever it leads.Ā  Usually we ask “Who are you” and then “What do you have to give me” and then “What do you want from me”… but in this case, I just stayed with the image and with what was happening inside me as I worked with it.Ā  And I got exactly what I needed!

Who are you?

I am the one who is surrounded by blue water, blue dock, blue hills.Ā  I am the one who is standing tall, poised, calm, and serene. I am the one whose face is tilted up towards the Divine. I am the one who is breathing in the Divine.

I am the one who is standing near the very edge of this dock. If I take one step forward, I will be in the water, in the unknown. But I am not ready to take that next step. I am perfectly content to stand here, soaking in the light from Beyond. I am wide open to possibility, direction, guidance.

I am perfectly content right where I am. I will be just as perfectly content turning around and moving away from the edge as I would be to step off the edge or just stay where I am.

Me: You look an awful lot like Erin Regan from Blue Bloods.

And would it be so bad if I am Erin?

Me: Not at all. I just haven’t paid much attention to her on the show. I haven’t really identified with any of the characters except for Jaimie who is always so kind and good.

Yes, my little brother!Ā  I love him too.

Me: Tell me more about yourself, Erin.

I am the one who is smart and fiercely honest. I am the one who has integrity and who sees life as very black and white. It is hard for me to live in the gray areas.Ā  I am the one who is having a highly successful career AND am raising a happy healthy loving teenager daughter. I am the one who is a loving, devoted, loyal daughter, granddaughter, mother and sister. I am the one who is defined by my career AND by my family ties.

I am the one who is serious and intense. I take everything seriously. It is hard for me to have fun, to lighten up and let loose.

ME: Thank you! I can relate to most of your qualities. I also am very serious and intense. I am smart and focused on my career. It is also difficult for me to loosen up and let go and have fun.

Yes, and we are both beautiful!

ME: Ha!

I’m serious about that.

ME: Thank you. Seriously1Ā  So Erin, what are you poised on the edge of?

I am pausing to take a whole lot of breaths before I take my next step.Ā  The question for you is “What’s next?”

ME: Ah. I see.

And that is my GIFT to you- the ability, the desire to pause before stepping into the unknown. Perhaps the “unknown” for you is what happens after your 60th birthday in May.

ME: Yes! You feel like a symbol of exactly that.Ā  Thank you so much for spending time with me today.

My pleasure!

Remembering Seena Frost

Seena Frost, Creator of SoulCollageĀ®
Seena Frost, Creator of SoulCollageĀ®

Seena Frost was our beloved founder of and birth mother to the process that we call SoulCollageĀ®.Ā  On January 14, I read these words online, posted by Seena’s daughter:

Dear Seena, my mother and friend, merged peacefully into oneness with Spirit late last night at home with her family gathered around her.

The day before, we’d learned that Seena had been recently diagnosed with ALS and had gone into hospice care. So it was both a shock and a blessing to know that she had transitioned so easily and quickly. She was 83 years old.

I was fortunate to have met and worked with Seena several times since attending the Facilitator Training with her in 2005. She was a humble woman. Even with all her education and experience, she was continually amazed and surprised (and thoroughly delighted) when she heard about the many amazing things that Facilitators were doing with SoulCollageĀ® around the world.

She was also one of the most grounded people I’ve ever met. During our Facilitator Training, we spent a solid hour going around the circle and telling the group what our next steps were for our SoulCollageĀ® work in the world. At lunch afterwards, I was sitting at Seena’s table and I said, ā€œSo, Seena . . . what’s next for you?ā€ I was totally expecting her to say something about how many more Trainings she’d like to do, or name a couple of national associations she’d like to share SoulCollageĀ® with. But her response was, ā€œOh, I’m going to go home tomorrow and do some more gardening.ā€ Ah. First things first. Of course.

Another favorite memory I have of Seena is at one of our Facilitator Conferences where she dressed up as Miss Ann Thrope (misanthrope) and entertained us all with breathtaking laughter. She had a lovely sense of humor and was always encouraging us to take ourselves less seriously.

When I joined Seena in Maryland in 2007 and 2008 to assist her with the East Coast Facilitator Trainings, she met with me and Roberta, my sister Trainer-in-Training, the day afterwards to go over our insights and questions. I distinctly remember that she started each of those meetings by inviting each of us to draw one card randomly from our decks and to listen to what each Neter had to say about the Training experience we’d just been through. She taught me to stay grounded in my cards, and to allow their wisdom to permeate all aspects of my life.

In September of last year I emailed her to ask her if she would be able to read my book of SoulCollageĀ® essays, Through the Eyes of SoulCollageĀ®, and if she felt up to it, to give me a quote for the back cover. Even though she hadn’t been feeling well for months and her publisher had told me I might not get a response, she replied to me immediately and asked for a printed copy of the manuscript. In less than two weeks she had read most of the book and what she said about it was a loving endorsement. I feel so grateful to her for this, for taking the time and energy to endorse my book, even though she was ill.

In looking back, however, I think that the greatest gift Seena gave me (besides permission to make my cards my way) was the gift of community. Throughout my LBS (Life Before SoulCollageĀ®) I had been an intricate part of a couple of different communities (one church and several 12-Step groups) but those communities had been anchored in physical real-time. Our SoulCollageĀ® community is much broader and wider, encompassing many people we’ve never met and will never meet.

Kindred Spirit Barbara posted a lovely blog the other day, Crying for a Woman I’ve Never Met. Barbara was wondering how she could possibly feel such deep grief for someone she’d never encountered in physical real-time. Perhaps some of you can relate to this. But I ask you: Did you grieve when John Lennon died? John F. Kennedy? David Bowie? Debbie Ford?

I know I felt deep sadness of a heartwrenching kind when I heard the terrible news about Corey Monteith, who played Finn on Glee. When John Denver died in a tragic plane crash, I went into the bathroom at my workplace and sat on the floor, weeping, for 15 minutes. I had never met Corey or John, but my heart felt connected to them because of the precious gifts that they had given the world.

Seena renewed for us the story about Indra’s Net, and how we are all connected through this infinite net that covers the whole planet. And not only are we connected, but we each reflect each other’s light a thousand fold. So think about this for a moment. If this is true, and I believe it is, then we each go forward now, reflecting Seena’s light into the world at large. She has given us such a gift of wholeness, clarity, creativity, and deep trust in ourselves. Let us share that gift with as many as we can, for as long as we can. And Seena will live on in each of us.

Visit this page for a short yet inspiring video/slide show tribute to Seena’s life featuring many of her own cards.

Surrounded by Community

scbc2011-2 communityHave I ever shared with y’all how deeply grateful I am to be a part of this SoulCollage community?Ā  If not, I am sharing it now!Ā  Here is a card I made in 2011 when I faced cancer for the second time.Ā  It expressed for me then how held and supported and loved I felt by this particular community around the world.

Who are you?

I still draw it from time to time in my every-other-daily readings.Ā  Here is what this Neter said to me recently:

I am the one who is part of a community. I am the one who is held and loved by an unseen Community of Bright Ones and Angels, as well as an earthly community of spiritual seekers around the world.Ā 

I am the one who is a valuable piece of this community.

Anointed and Anointing

scunknown051502Here’s another card I made that made no clear sense to me until I journaled with it.

In this case, I found it helpful for each energy to speak to me separately, so here is what each said to me.

LEFT IMAGE:

I am the one who is being anointed. I am the one who is receiving the anointing. I am the one who is behind the net. I am the one whose eyes are closed.

RIGHT IMAGE:

I am the one who is under the orange parasol. I am the one who is intently looking at this flower in my hand. I am the one who holds the flower carefully because I know it is fragile. I am the one who is that young girl on the left, but now I am all grown up. I am the one who was anointed a long time ago. I am the one who now does the anointing with my hand.Ā  I am the one who uses my hands carefully, tenderly, reverently. I am the one who believes in the power of hand mudras.

I give you the wisdom of the hand mudras. I give you anointing for your head, and your body, and your spirit when you are weary. I give you blessing.

I want you to remember always that YOU are anointed and blessed, in many ways. I want you to know that your hands are powerful instruments of peace and blessing. I want you to allow yourself to continually be anointed.Ā  Be still and receive what you are continually being given.