Are You On Strike?

Are you passing on love or are you passing on pain? Heal your pain and pass on love.

I am reading a book that describes a woman who is having trouble keeping all of her life’s responsibilities on track. She is performing all of her roles and duties, lacklusterly, at best. She is coming apart at the seams, but doesn’t quite understand why. She forgets important meetings, she snaps at her kids, and she doesn’t get enough sleep. The author describes the woman as “unintentionally going on strike.

I thought that wording was so interesting. If we take the time to examine the clues of our own lives, and our own bodies, we may find that we have gone on our own “unintentional strikes”, in protest of how we are going about living our own daily lives.

When workers go on strike, they are saying bravely and forcefully that they are no longer willing to work in the same conditions. They are loudly bringing attention to inequities and unfairnesses that have made their current working conditions intolerable to them. The striking workers are making demands for changes, in order for the workplace to run safely and smoothly again.

Are you on an “unintentional strike”? Are you feeling strained with all of your duties at home and at work and even at leisure? Are there things that you don’t say no to, in fear of disappointing someone, or making someone angry (at the expense of your own exhaustion)? Are you forgetting important details, failing at multi-tasking, feeling grumpy all of the time, being short with others and resorting to passive aggressive behavior? Do you have a lot of unexplained aches and pains in your body? Do you feel lethargic and unmotivated? These could all be signs of an “unintentional strike.” This could be the deepest part of your intuitive heart and soul, holding up picket signs, telling you that something must give. Something(s) has got to go.

I was getting cash out from the ATM yesterday when my husband called. I took the call, but as I was driving away, into rush hour traffic, I started panicking because I couldn’t find my debit card. I was trying to drive, talk to my husband, and locate my ATM card all at the same time. I was distracted and panicky. I wasn’t driving safely, I was half-listening to my husband, and I couldn’t locate the card. I finally told my husband that I would have to call him back. I pulled over. I parked the car and I quickly located my debit card that had fallen between the seat and the console. When I called my husband back, I said, “I’m sorry. I’m not as good at multi-tasking as I used to be.” He said, “Multi-tasking usually just leads to nothing getting done especially well.” I agreed.

Why has “multi-tasking” become the norm? Why do we take pride in being “able” to do 18,000 things at once? Why are anxiety and depression become more and more commonplace? And why can’t we see that we bring a lot of this on to ourselves? How much of what we do, on any given day, is vitally important to our overall health and well-being? Over 2000 years ago, Socrates said, “The unexamined life is not worth living.” This quote is often used in a philosophical or a spiritual sense, but isn’t it really quite a practical tool to use? When we examine our own lives, we can figure out what is working, and what isn’t. Our bodies are great navigation tools. What feels good in our life, and what doesn’t? Who feels good in our life, and who doesn’t?

We are our own life’s managers. Our own life is really the only life which we have any kind of control about, in the long term. Are you having an “unintentional strike” against your life manager? A good manager knows how important it is to have a healthy, robust, excited, and appreciated workforce. How is your life manager doing? Are there any rumblings that need to be addressed?

40 Overwhelmed Quotes About Being Burned Out To Help Cheer You Up |  YourTango

Throwback Thursday (past popular posts, from the blog):

St. Nick

Image result for warrior movie quotes

I wanted to write about my favorite character in the TV series The Mandalorian, but a person named Corey Plante says it better than I ever could. He says this:

Everybody loves Baby Yoda on The Mandalorian, and the bounty hunter protagonist is undeniably very cool, but the best and most under-appreciated character on the Disney+ show is definitely the Ugnaught named Kuiil who appears in the first two episodes to toss some no-nonsense shade around like a hilarious, crotchety old Boomer that you actually want to hang out with.

Imagine being able to instantly end any conversation you wanted by uttering three simple words: “I have spoken.” Feeling trapped in an awkward conversation at a party? “I have spoken.” Walk away. Exhausted by family meals during the holidays? “I have spoken.” Leave the room. If you assertively end a conversation early, nobody can argue with what you said. What if we all ended every conversation this way?

For the pig-like alien Kuiil, who speaks directly and without hesitation, this is how he ends every conversation. He comes across as deeply rational and admirable, even if many people might mistake him for a bit of a jerk.”

Kuill is based on Nick Nolte. Despite being a short, pig-nosed alien, the likeness Kuill has to Nick Nolte is uncanny and of course, he speaks in Nick Nolte’s voice. Nick Nolte is a very talented actor, now aged 78, who has certainly gone through some wild rides in his life. Who can’t conjure that image of him, in that greatly parodied mugshot of a very disheveled Nick Nolte, having been arrested for drunk driving some time in the early 2000s? When I googled Nick Nolte in conjunction with redemption, a movie called Warrior kept coming up, where the above meme came from. I have not watched Warrior. Apparently, the movie is about a recovering alcoholic, who is hired to manage his estranged son, who is a wrestler in the MMA.

Why am I writing about Star Wars, and Nick Nolte and MMA extreme fighting, on Christmas Eve? Are you concerned that I have finally lost it? No. I’m okay. I am just thinking a lot about redemption. We are coming close to the end of the year, and to the end of a decade. We have an amazing fresh start available to all of us, on the brink of a whole new decade, a whole new year, a whole new day. My beliefs are that Christmas is a lot about redemption, and that very hope that is available to all of us. I don’t expect you to share my beliefs. As the beginning quote by Socrates states, we must find our own truths and to truly believe these truths, they must come from inside the deepest cores of our own knowing and understanding, not from anyone or anything outside of us. Still, no matter what your beliefs are, I hope that you can find that tiny manger within yourself, and find that healthy, beautiful, innocent, yet so, so, so powerful infant of light, inside that manger, always there for you and always available to you. I hope that you can find some quiet time to yourself for reflection and gratitude and getting your vibration back to a calm, harmonic, and peaceful tranquility, and I hope that you and I, experience that stillness, that pure Love, throughout the holiday season and into the new year, and throughout the new decade.

Merry Christmas Eve, my friends!! I hope that this juncture in the holiday season, this beginning of the ending of the year 2019, the near end of the decade known as the 2010s, has you in a relatively peaceful place – a place of acceptance, a place of less resistance, a place of hope and a place of healing. A place of wholeness. A place of redemption. As always, know how grateful I am for your presence in my life. I am so grateful for your time, your feedback, your talents, your inspiration and your support. I hold you in my heart always.

I have spoken.