A Survivor’s Journey

Melissa Beasley joins us today with a powerful message – she sees you!

 She walks us through how to use your Inner Sanctuary to come back to yourself.

Can we talk????

Because I see you.

​I see you struggling to make your life work when everything seems to be working against you. I see you working on yourself, healing your childhood traumas, growing as a person, and still not being able to break out of the cycle you find yourself in. I see you reaching out for your old rock solid truths that used to hold you steady…and finding that they’re not there anymore. The things about the world, yourself and God that you KNEW to be true…aren’t. 

You feel like you’re adrift in the open sea; looking to the stars to navigate you back home only to realize that you are in a different hemisphere and these stars are foreign to you.

​You feel lost.

 

How did you end up here???

To answer that I need to tell you first about what I call your Inner Sanctuary.

Your Inner Sanctuary is the sacred space inside you where your person-hood resides; it houses your beliefs about yourself, your family, the world, and higher powers. It is a place where you can retreat when life gets hard, when you are confused about a major choice, afraid of the future, or overwhelmed with life and need a safe place to rest.

If this is a new concept to you, here is a quick meditation to help you tune into your Inner Sanctuary. 

  • Find a quiet place with no distractions and sit comfortably or lie down. 
  • Close your eyes and take a deep breath. Try to imagine your breath reaching all the way into the bottom of your lungs, and then fully exhale that breath.
  • On your second breath bring your mind’s eye to your heart
  • Imagine a room there. Imagine that this is a safe and sacred space. It’s a home inside your spirit that is 100% yours. 
  • You might see a cozy fire place, or a big soft cushy couch. 
  • The walls, paint, furniture, and pictures are all symbols of your beliefs. They represent what you believe about God, society, other people, money, work, family etc.
  • Maybe you have a special chair or meeting place for the Divine to come in and visit with you.
  • When you’re in this space you are safe and free from the opinions and thoughts of the world outside you. The noise of your day slips away and you are left with peace and quiet.
  • This space is your altar. It is the sacred space inside you where you can go and meet with God, or find peace and stillness.
  • When you’re ready take another deep breath and bring your awareness back to the room and open your eyes.

In most cases, our sanctuary was first formed by the influential people in our lives. These are our parents, teachers, relatives, pastors, and even our siblings and friends. As we grew we were supposed to add our own personality to it. We tear down pieces that no longer fit us and rebuild them to fit our experience and personality. This can happen over and over as we meet new people and are exposed to new ideas.

But what if you were never allowed to do that?

What if you were told that your inner sanctuary had to stay exactly how it was designed, and that to make changes was wrong. You might have believed that you would lose your family and your friends if you changed it. You might have been told that you would upset God if you changed it. So as you grew you had to live with an Inner Sanctuary that represented, housed, and protected you less and less.

At some point you began to meet new people and be exposed to new ideas. No matter how hard you tried you could not make those new ideas fit with the beliefs that you held inside you. Every time you asked a question, allowed a doubt to have a voice, and expanded your view, a piece of that sanctuary would crumble. Because you had never been allowed to replace those crumbling pieces with views and beliefs of your own, you were left with a weathered and crumbling inner sanctuary that could no longer protect you from the elements of the world.

How might this show up in your everyday life?

  • You have a hard time making decisions for yourself, especially important decisions.
  • You feel like life is one catastrophe after another
  • You feel anxious and depressed most of the time
  • You have few passions of your own, preferring to support the desires of others
  • You find yourself in destructive relationships with romantic partners, friends and family members who constantly take from you and rarely support and feed into you

Then it happens. You wake up.

You realize that you are no longer willing to live life in a crumbling spiritual structure. Who cares if it’s wrong to build your own? The people who forbid you from thinking and believing for yourself would have you living with a dilapidated and damaged spirit, so they clearly don’t have your spiritual, physical and emotional health in mind.

You decide it’s no longer worth it to trust them and as terrifying as it is you step away from the people who first formed your beliefs, worldview, and sense of self. You leave the relationship, you set boundaries around your family, you say goodbye to those friends, you leave that toxic church, and set out in search of truth.

It’s a brave step, one of the bravest things a human being can do. And it’s just the beginning of the journey.

So what now? How do you rebuild?

How do you get from this place of pain, with your spirit living in an Inner Sanctuary that is crumbling and open to the threats of the world, to a place safety, stability and joy?

You will go through 6 stages during this process. I’m going to give you stages 1 and 2 here, then we will work through the remaining stages during the next several articles.

Stage one: Crisis Management and Triage

Put out the fires and deal with the life threatening stuff.

Once you realize that your world is spinning and that your old ways of being in the world are no longer going to support you, then it’s time to take stock of the crisis and start putting out fires. This is usually a very practical stage because being in this place is having major real life consequences. Your finances are out of control, your relationships are terrible, and you have major health issues. So right now it’s about taking stock of the worst fires and addressing them. Create some hard boundaries around your life and your time. Separate from that toxic relationship. Remove yourself from the environments that are hurting you. This process is usually not glamorous or delicate. It can feel harsh and intense, but it’s necessary

***For survivors this can be a difficult and dangerous transition. It is important to be working with counselors, therapists and advocates to help you make the best choices during this stage***

The next step is triage. What damages are the most pressing? Is it your health or finances? Or is it your emotional/mental health? Start taking steps to repair these areas. The goal is to get to a point of survival. A point where you are no longer sinking and being buffeted by storms.

I want to reiterate that this stage is not glamorous or efficient. You will not be using perfect long term fixes, and the solutions you find will likely be solutions that will work really well in the short term, and then need to be replaced with long term solutions later.

Consider the illustration of your Inner Sanctuary. If it has holes in the roof and walls, missing doors, and trees that are about to fall onto the house, and a storm is coming, then you are not going to take the time to call a contractor and get a whole new roof right now. You are going to patch the holes, chop down the tree, and do what ever you have to do to create safety in the moment.

This is the duct tape phase of recovery. Be okay with that. Be willing to do whatever works to get yourself safely to step 2.

What does this look like practically?

It could mean finding a job that supports you, even if it’s not ideal.

If you can’t pay all your bills right now, then look at the bills you have, rate them in order of importance (house and car being at the top) and decide which ones can wait for payment.

I know this sucks, and if you CAN pay them all, then obviously do. Just know that there were months during my own recovery where I had to decide that a few credit cards would just not have to be paid because I needed to buy food. It felt crummy, I hated it, but I survived it and was able to repair that damage. This is not something that should be done lightly, and I suggest getting advice from a financial expert if you can, but I need you to hear me say that if you find yourself having to make these types of decisions it is not the end of the world and you will be okay in the end.

Find a way to make extra money outside your job

  • What can you sell?
  • Can you do some online temp work?
  • Use your car to advertise for a business?
  • Drive for Uber?

Accept any help offered that doesn’t put you back into a toxic dynamic. This is not a time for pride and shame. We have been conditioned to think that leaning on others is failure or makes us a burden. I have felt that, too and I know how strong it is. Consider this permission from me to accept help when it’s given with out any shame at all. Let that friend watch your kids, receive that help with your car or utility payment. View every single offer of help as a rung on a ladder and grasp those rungs and use them to climb out of the hole you are in.

Stage 2: Survival

Survival means having enough money to pay basic bills each month. It means being able to manage every day life. You can finally breathe and you are no longer constantly fighting to stay alive. This is an important place to reach, and it’s a good place to stop and rest for a minute. But…

Don’t stop at survival!!

Being in a state of survival is sooooo much better than being in crisis, and it’s easy to get comfortable there. The problem with that is that you are constantly one or two setbacks away from slipping back into crisis mode.

You will find that you are constantly under stress to keep working and striving because if you slow down then you’ll fall behind. This stress is so much more manageable than the stress of being in crisis, or of being in a toxic situation, that you hardly notice it, but don’t let that deceive you.

This is a stage where something like a job loss, you or your child having a medical emergency or your car breaking down can land you right back in crisis mode. So while it is good to take time to rest and breathe when you reach this point, it is also vital that you don’t stop here.

Unfortunately, this is where many survivors do get stuck. Why is that?

Remember earlier when I said the tools you were using to get you out of crisis mode and into survival were temporary? The tools you used to get yourself to safety will not work to get you past this point. Duct tape and tarp will only keep you safe from the elements for so long. It’s time to start working on those long term solutions.

I have a four step process that teaches those long term solutions and allows you to rebuild your Inner Sanctuary so that it is resilient against the changes that life brings. It will keep you strong, centered, safe and full of joy and love of life as you grow and move forward. Stay tuned to this blog because I will be talking about those steps one at a time over the coming months.

If this resonated with you and you don’t want to wait for the next installments to come out, or if you know you need guidance as you walk through these steps, then reach out to me and we will set up a time for you to talk with me one and one about how I can support you.

Melissa is a natural skin care formulator, the founder of Love-Essential Skin Care, and the mother of two amazing boys.

After a toxic marriage led to a devastating divorce she and her boys moved in with her parents and she started the process of rebuilding.  She started making skincare in her parents’ kitchen as a way to support herself and her boys, and Love-Essential Skin Care was born. 

She still manufactures products for Love-Essential Skin Care, and creates custom product lines for spas and salons, but now she has a bigger mission. She uses the skills she learned while rebuilding her own life to help other women rebuild after abuse and divorce have torn them down. It is her dream to see women become completely free from the burdens of their trauma and create a life of vitality and joy.

7 Rules You Must Follow When Building New Habits

Today the amazing Melissa Beasley shares her journey of momprenuership and passes along the tips she’s learned along the way.

Dear reader,

My business coach often says that entrepreneurship is the graduate school of personal growth. Building a business tends to bring you face to face with some of your deepest fears, insecurities, and limitations. Looking them in the face can be overwhelming at best, and debilitating at its worst. For my sweet mamas, add the fact that motherhood is a catalyst that brings out any and all flaws and fears that you might be able to avoid in business growth and you have a recipe for potential disaster. Yet, momprenuers seem to be on the rise because moms (and women in general) are amazing creatures of strength, fortitude, grace and magic. If you’re on this path let me start by telling you that you have my utmost respect and admiration. I know from personal experience how grueling this journey is and anyone who even attempts it deserves a giant, shining, gold star.
Now, dear one, I want to warn you of one of the biggest pitfalls you might face on this path and I’m going to do it through a story about gardening.

Imagine for a minute that you have inherited a beautiful country cottage that sits on sprawling gardens. Gardening is a passion of yours and you can’t wait to get in there and cultivate the grounds to bring out the best in nature’s beauty. As you drive along the winding country road you’re already thinking through what kinds of plants you want to buy as you wonder what kind of soil you’ll see. You get excited imagining what kinds of plants are already there waiting for you. You round the corner and your heart sinks and a sense of shock stops your thoughts with the screech of a halted record. The grounds have apparently been abandoned and neglected for what looks like decades. Everything is completely overgrown with vines, weeds and grass. You’re not even sure where the gardens end the yard begins.

You take a deep breath, approach a section of garden and gingerly start poking through the thick overgrowth. You feel a thrill of excitement as you notice some beautiful roses and irises still growing strong despite the suffocating weeds. You also groan as you look through the many vines growing over the garden; you know from experience how pernicious some of these species are and they’ve had ages to establish deep roots. Clearing them out is not going to be easy. The reality of the work ahead of you sinks in; this is going to take a long time.

This is a perfect analogy for what happens again and again as people begin a personal growth journey. You have limiting beliefs, traumas, fears and insecurities that have been silently growing and suffocating your dreams and strengths for years, maybe even decades. Then you started a business, or had children, or sought help changing some unhealthy habits and were brought face to face with those weeds. That moment of realization is often earth shattering. “You mean I have all this muck just sitting inside me holding me back and making me miserable!?!? Oh hell no, that’s going away right now!” So you start furiously tearing at weeds only to exhaust yourself after making a small amount of progress, which leaves you feeling discouraged and hopeless.

But there is a better solution. When you come face to face with a giant mess and are tempted to go to war against it, stop, take a deep breath, and follow these rules.

1. Realize this is not a new mess

This mess has been here for a long time. It didn’t suddenly show up right when you saw it. When you first glimpse your mess a part of you will think “Eww, gross!! Get it out now!!!” But calm down, it’s been there a while and it hasn’t killed you yet. Yes it’s gross, of course you want it to go away, but you can’t clear it all right this second and trying will only hurt you more.

2. This mess took time to make and it will take time to clean up

This ties in with rule #1 and serves as another reminder that you can’t clear all of this out right away. The longer those vines have been growing, the longer they will take to clear out. The sooner you can be okay with allowing part of the mess to still be there as you clear other parts of it out, the less stressful this process will be.

3. You have to get to the roots, but not right away

I know, I know, you’re thinking I’m crazy because everyone knows that you should go straight for the roots of a problem right? Well, not always. Take our weeds and vines for example. When you have a thick overgrowth of vines you often can’t even get to the roots; you’ll have to do some trimming back first. Sometimes when you’re doing personal growth and emotional healing you first have to chip away at the surface symptoms and heal those before you can even see the root issues. So if you’ve been working on it for a couple of years and it still hasn’t healed, don’t be discouraged. You are still doing good work, and you’ll get to the root when you’re ready. However, if you stop after trimming back the surface symptoms, those problems will keep growing back again and again. So, be okay with trimming back the surface issues at first, but don’t give up until you’ve gotten those roots out.

4. Make a plan

You can’t just tear out weeds at random and hope to have any lasting effect. Figure out what the most critical place to start is. What issue is choking the most life out of you right now? What is having the biggest negative impact on your life? Write down the top two that come to mind and start working on those.

You can also find areas that are simple fixes and clear them out to give yourself some breathing room. Are there items on your to-do list that you can accomplish in 10-30min and they would be done for good? Make a list of those things and start crossing them off. It will give you some emotional breathing room so you can have more energy to focus on the big issues.

As other issues come to mind write them down and then leave them. Tell yourself that those items will be addressed after you have handled what’s on your list right now. You’re not ignoring them, you are simply choosing where to focus your energy. I like to keep post-it note pads around the house and when something comes to mind to distract me I write it down and stick it to the wall. At the end of the day I collect all my post-it notes and transfer them onto my master list. Knowing that things aren’t slipping through the cracks is a huge relief for my overthinking brain.

Follow the plan. Don’t give up. It can be tempting to start a task, then tell yourself you should pick a different one instead because that one will work faster. This is not a fast process. The best way trough this process is to make a plan and stick to that plan.

5. Sometimes clearing one issue causes others to clear up as well

Be encouraged by the fact that clearing up one issue often has a positive impact on other areas of your life. Don’t be surprised to find that working on one or two issues actually resolves a set of minor issues that you never even realized were related to it.

6. Remember the roses inside the weeds

As you free them from the tangle of vines you’ll be able to start cultivating them so they can grow and shine as they were intended. Your strengths have been suffocated by fears and limiting beliefs, and as you free them you’ll be given the chance to grow and improve those strengths so you can bring your gifts into the world.

7. Get help

I can’t stress this enough. You don’t want to go through this process alone. You want an expert who has walked this path and understand the struggles that you are going to face. You want someone who knows the obstacles and knows how to overcome them so you can decrease how long this process takes. Helping people like you navigate your tangled mess is a passion of mine. I love watching the tangled darkness clear away as you begin to shine a light on your strengths and breathe new life into your dreams.

Let me walk this path with you, contact me at Melissa@loveessentialskincare.com to set up an appointment today.

Melissa is a natural skin care formulator, the founder of Love-Essential Skin Care, and the mother of two amazing boys.

To learn more about Melissa and her work, please visit her website HERE.