Thursday, February 21, 2008

Personal Authenticity

I often encourage people to "follow the path of the heart". In fact I have that on my message manager announcement. But some don't know what the phrase really means. It means personal authenticity and integrity. It means allowing yourself the courage to do what you know to be right for yourself, no matter what our friends, family and society thinks. This of course does not mean that we can just do whatever the heck we like to anyone and not care about the ripple effects. But it does mean to be true to ourselves.

How do we know if we aren't being true to ourselves? Well, does it feel right and good? Or does it create turmoil in your gut? Are you coming from a place of compassion in your heart both for yourself and for everyone else who is affected? Or are you guilting or shaming yourself or anyone else? Are you trapped inside sentiment or nostalgia (the way things should have/would have/could have been, or the way things always were)? Or are you done shoulding on yourself?

Every decision we make in our lives gives us both limitations and liberties. We have to choose
which sets of limitations and liberties will go together and then we have to come to terms with which combination we can live with, and what we cannot live without. All very easy when it comes to buying groceries. But not so easy when it comes to living authentically in our personal lives. And the rotter is that no one can make the decisions for us. We have to meditate, contemplate and decide all on our own and let the chips fall where they may. And we all need to be responsible (the ability to respond) enough to make the decisions, because to not decide does not let us off the hook. It only delays our freedom.

Blessed Be

Trent
www.deerhornshamanic.com

2 comments:

Krymson said...

There are times when our head gets in the way of what our hearts and bodies know to to be authentic and true. Through this wonderful process called evolution we have become left brain dominant and through the society that we live in, disconnected from our right brain which kept us connected to our hearts and bodies. To "follow the path of the heart" is in fact meant to bring us out of that survival act of left brain programming, strip it away, and rebuild our right brain connection to our authentic selves. Can we just image our full potential when our minds, hearts and bodies are finally brought to that magnificent, symbiotic divine state?

Peace,
Krymson

Trent Deerhorn said...

Hi Krymson,

Indeed we can!

Blessed Be

Trent