Right now, during this time of quarantine and isolation, we find it is a great time to get our ducks in a row. Soon all the closets will be organized, the garage cleaned, the garden ready for summer, the kids settled into their new learning routine. And then what? What happens when there is more quarantine time than household tasks?
Often we believe that if things were just different outside of us, we would be happy. It’s all out there somewhere and we just have to get there. Somewhere over the rainbow. But what’s happening all around us is really a reflection of what’s happening inside of us. If we are running away from a decision, from confronting fear, or examining a long-held story, then we can make ourselves so very busy elsewhere. Productive and stagnant all at the same time. Now, however, time seems to be what we have in abundance and you may be running out of things with which to busy yourself.
Perhaps it is time to go inside and surrender to that silence that keeps calling to you. Time to address the challenges and behaviors that create our reality. Time to confront fears, and maybe even make a plan for a better tomorrow.
Surrender to this gift of time. Go inside, reorganize, clean, weed. Then go back and plant new ideas, create new ways of showing up. Reclaim your life from the inside and see how much of life’s craziness calms itself on the outside.
Hypnotherapy is one of the most powerful tools I have encountered for discovering what is holding me back and how to move forward. It is like a powerful guided meditation that comes complete with discoveries and solutions crafted by the individual having the experience. If you would like to know more, please schedule a free 30 minute discovery call and see how hypnotherapy might be a good fit for you. Now is the time. Now you have the time.
Let’s get your (inside) ducks in a row.
PS Hypnotherapy works well through video conference calling. I have successfully provided remote services for several years. Clients report that it is effective and makes it easier to find time on their calendars.