“Courage has no guarantees, or certain
outcomes.
It
is a risk taken on an unknown path.
Courage
brings about change. Growth is dependent on courage.
I
procrastinate out of fear of failure. Have I enough courage to examine that fear?”
–
For Today
This week, prompted by the above
quotation in a support group, the Spiritual Adventuress had an opportunity to
write about courage and the fears she is encountering at her growing edge –
body, relationship, writing. Beginning sentences with “I’m afraid I won’t know
how…” or “I’m afraid I won’t be successful at…” revealed the path of growth,
reminding her of where she needed to go, reminding her what spiritual teachers
told her a long time ago.
“Where don’t you want to go? Go there.
What don’t you want to do? Do that.” By
asking those questions, Val Jon Faris, co-facilitator of The Mastery, an
in-depth, personal growth seminar, was shining light on the path which would
require courage and bring about change. The last place I wanted to go was to
sit next to Val Jon, so I did. The last thing I wanted to do was to ask for
help, so I did. For me, feeling as helpless, powerless and out of control as I
did in my family of origin was to be avoided at all cost, so I asked Val Jon
and Cynthia if they would help me through the workshop process. Going where I
didn’t want to go, and doing what I didn’t want to do, transformed my life. Now,
twenty-two years later, whenever I face a difficult decision, I still ask
myself those questions. The answers show me what to do next.
At the completion of The Mastery,
participants were invited to choose a word to guide them, a word they would be
and become. “Truth,” I said, soon adding “with compassion.” Two years later, I
changed it to “Courage.” Cynthia said, “I think that will really serve you,
Terranda.” It was a huge understatement. Courage accompanied me through my
son’s life-threatening illness. It moved me from California
to New Mexico
where I had no friends, no family, no job, no place to live – but where I
discovered my writing group and teachers. It joined me on a spiritual
pilgrimage to Peru
where it helped make decisions about participation in a shamanic journey.
Courage is still my word. Now, I am calling on
courage to help me surrender in areas where I want to grow. To surrender, as in
give up, old ideas, thoughts, beliefs and behaviors that are comfortable
friends, life-long companions who cannot accompany me to the Promised Land, the
unknown terrain of fulfilled dreams ahead. Like Moses, they have brought me
this far, but they cannot take me where I want to go. To do that I must rely on
an obsolete meaning of courage: “The heart, as the source of emotion,” in
addition to the traditional meanings of courage: having the confidence to act
in accordance with one’s beliefs; the quality of mind or spirit that enables a
person to face difficulty, danger, pain. The French word coeur, or heart, is the root word of courage, the terrain of
intuition and feeling. The Mastery gave me access to my feelings, my emotions.
Before then, I lived in my head. It took more than ten years to integrate what
I learned so I could not only identify what I was feeling, in the moment, but
also express it.
At aquacise today, I experienced
Mastery’s precious gift. A friend asked about my recent trip to California .
I told her about the magical experience my son Grant and I had seeing thousands
and thousands of dolphins on a whale watching trip for his birthday. Migrating
humpback whales breached, rolled over, showing us their pectoral fins, their tails.
They swam under our boat, literally five feet away. I told her how happy I was
to meet Grant’s girlfriend of six months, to learn they are enjoying each
other. Tears came when I shared my concerns that his past treatment for
melanoma might keep someone from taking the risk of being in relationship with
him, loving him, marrying him, having children with him because of the possibility of
losing him. She immediately hugged me. "What’s the matter? What’s wrong?”
two other women asked, swimming over. Hearing the story, they both hugged me
too. “Thank you for sharing that,” said one. Courage, the heart as source of
emotion, gives me access to my feelings in the moment, connecting me
authentically with others in relationship. I know courage will take me the rest
of the way, guiding me through the unknown. Courage will help me surrender.
Courage will manifest my dreams.