Listening is Medicine

“Being heard is so close to being loved that for the average person they are almost indistinguishable.” - David Augsberger


Relationship is the heart of life and the centerpoint of being human. 


We are always relating to ourselves, the world around us, and the people we encounter.


When we get opportunities to be in conversation with people, these are our chances to be present, to connect, to be curious, to give the precious gift of attention. 


Sometimes this will be easy. When we are with people who are close to us, our dear friends, family, and community. There are those people who we trust and open ourselves to, the ones we laugh and cry with, the ones who hear us and hold us. We need those kinds of people in our lives. Even just one person like that is the balm for loneliness.


If we find ourselves without such a person the best path forward is to seek to be that kind of person for someone else. Find someone and listen to them with interest and attention, keep doing this. Relating is a practice and it flows toward love. If you feel adrift and alone and there is no one else to listen or to hear, close your eyes and breathe, and hear your own breath, feel your own heart, and notice the truth that every other person on earth is also breathing, and has a heart beating, and so many are feeling exactly what you are feeling, we are never really alone.


There will also be difficult people in our lives. We will have conflict. Those conflicts can take many forms, some will be small, some may be life altering. We may find ourselves in conflict with people close to us, or people we have never even met. We can be in conflict with individuals, with groups, with ourselves. Conflict is an inevitable part of relating. It calls for the same skill as relating with those we love. 

Presence and listening.


If we truly want to resolve the conflicts in our lives we need the other to do that. We do not resolve a conflict on our own. Even conflicts within ourselves are much more successfully worked through when we share them with someone else who is present and listening with openness and compassion. 


How do we listen to resolve conflict?


Both parties agree in advance to listen with presence and openness. The following are some things that could be included.


- Open to compassion. Try to imagine their view of things.

- Breathe. Breathing keeps us calm and centered.

- Commit to listening fully. Do not formulate your response while the other person is speaking.

- Reflect back what they have said to you and ask if that is what they said. 

- Ask open ended follow up questions that help you understand more about them. 

- Listen and explore for areas of common interest.


Some conflicts will be harder to resolve than others, and resolution doesn’t always mean that the relationship is mended, sometimes it means getting closure and letting go. 


Some conflicts can be resolved in one conversation and some will require many meetings over a period of time. 


No matter the form or intensity of the conflict, the most powerful skill we can grow to meet and release them is listening. Even in the most difficult conflicts, when we bring in listening, we bring in love.

Empowering Vision and Intention for the New Year

Another year is coming to a close and a fresh chapter of this blessed life is about to open.

It may seem trite or cliché to set intentions for the New Year, but consider that consciously creating the energy and enthusiasm for this beginning opens the door to possibility. Our inner world does affect how we show up in the outer world. Energy is everything and actively creating yours is a powerful thing.

Intention Meditation:


Sit or lie down (but stay awake), perhaps put some music on that connects you to your joyful heart. Begin by taking some centering breaths allowing all thoughts of past and future roll through and each breath makes more space to come home to the present moment.


Once you feel present, begin to allow a vision of your year ahead to flow through you in a way that feels natural for you. You might view it in a sequence or perhaps it will meander. Simply be completely open to everything and anything that comes to your awareness. Take as much time as needed to let everything that wants to be known and received to bubble up.

When you feel complete grab your journal and write it all down. 


Review what you have written and identify any themes. Identify what calls to you most intensely. What values are you called to step into to create the year of your vision?

Next create an intention statement in the affirmative, including the values you are centering.


I (insert your name) am ___________________.


Make this intention concise and clear. For example:


I (name) am caring for my body and health.

I (name) am creating connection and love in my life.


Finally create three action steps toward that intention. Make them simple and achievable.

If you are comfortable, feel free to include your intention in the comments below.

Living an Authentic and Inspired Life

There is and will only ever be one you. You are unique, inimitable, irreplaceable. Each of us arrives in this life with our given gifts, talents, passions. We move through life experiencing the world and we become ever more ourselves as we gather those experiences, the good, the bad, the sublime, the desperate, the joyful, and the heartbreaking.

We live, we grow, we have victories, we have failures. All of us will struggle and we all suffer, but we are capable of such beautiful things and sometimes the very best of us is born from difficulty. We can care and create and uplift each other in innumerable ways. The very best we can do for the world is to be fully and genuinely ourselves.

The inquiry we are all here to dive into is who are we called to be? What are we here to do and to love? What lights us up and sets us free?

I am here to do that work myself and with you.

Contact me to find out about coaching and my book Before You Go: A Death Doulas Guide to Living Your Best Life is available at www.beforeyougolegacy.com