Old Wiring...
 

There’s an open wall in my house where you can see all the messy old wiring.

Before the wall was opened, it looked like a nice wall. With matching paint. The power turned on and off like it was supposed to.

But inside the wall, is this disorganization, with power going into old breakers but not enough new breakers to send power to new places.

And it made me realize—sometimes we need to take down our walls and investigate where our energy is going. See if maybe we need to add some new breakers to the old breaker box in order for our energy to flow to new places.

Maybe there’s some old breakers inside that box that we don’t need to waste our energy with anymore.

Because our energy matters.

And by taking a look at our wiring, we get to decide for ourselves where we’d like our energy to flow. And where we’d like to stop giving our power away.

-JLK

 
Jessica Kane
Criticism...
 

Criticism can crush inspiration and block our natural inclination to try out new things. So if you grew up with constant criticism, your life may have become centered on ways to avoid it. Maybe you wait to do nearly everything until you’re by yourself or you wait until you feel ready to do whatever it is “perfectly enough” so that there’s no room for criticism.

But the sad thing about this is that you may never feel ready enough to do anything “perfectly.” And by wasting so much time waiting to be ready, you may miss out on the truth: that there really isn’t any such thing as perfection. That the richness of life often occurs by just winging it—by trying stuff out and exploring that natural instinct we have to invent and create and manifest.

Other people will always have their opinions. But they’ll be seeing through their lens, not yours. When you trust your lens, you allow what’s beautiful to you to emerge.

-JLK

 
Jessica Kane
Strange symptoms...
 

Sending a prayer for total health and relief to everyone who isn’t feeling well…

If you have strange symptoms that come and go randomly, it can be a real let down. You might be tempted to get mad at yourself: “What stupid thing did I do that this happened again?!” Or, you might get mad at your environment: “Is something in my living space making me sick again?” Or you might get mad at the people in your life: “Why must they always stress me out?!” It’s easy to get preoccupied with the why. So much so, that it could be making you feel even more sick.

So, whatever it is, in my opinion, the best medicine to take first, before even beginning to solve the problem of how to feel better, is love.

Give yourself love. And receive it. Offer your environment love. And watch your environment receive it. Be available to notice where love is trickling in from all directions and be present to receive it.

With love, there is openness and warmth. And with love, you may find yourself feeling a lot less stressed out, which may help you relax and feel a little better. And tomorrow, you can check in with yourself with love, see how you feel, and reach out for some extra support so that you can continue healing even more.

-JLK

 
Jessica Kane
Emerging from toxic cycles...
 

If you’re someone who’s emerging from toxic cycles, maybe you’ve noticed that it takes a lot of effort to shift lanes into a new way of being.

I think one reason it’s difficult to switch lanes is because in any given situation, especially difficult ones, we may be so used to feeling helpless or disappointed, that we clump every difficult experience we’ve ever had into one big experience, that tells us: “Life is always blowing me off course, why bother to think things could be any different?”

In these moments it may feel impossible to change—like we’d have to physically pick up our vehicle and move it to another place, without even knowing what that place is. And we just give up because our vehicles are just too damn heavy and we’re already exhausted. Better to just stay put and cope in ways that are already familiar and predictable.

But the thing is, in all these stuck moments, what we’ve forgotten is that we actually do have control of the proverbial steering wheel. We can actually get to another place without so much effort. We just need to know how.

Instead of feeling stuck where we are and feeling resigned and sad and mad, we can focus our attention on values that are meaningful to us. With just this subtle shift, we can begin to steer our vehicle, our attention, towards a path that’s already available, right here, that we simply hadn’t noticed or trusted before.

And this new path is literally paved with choices and self talk that are aligned with these values instead of aligned with our history.

It may take some time to feel comfortable with believing that our self-appointed values are more real than our collection of disappointments, but from what I’ve noticed, we humans are such great adapters. We’ve adapted to the idea that we are stuck—so much so that we believe it’s real—so I believe we can adapt to the idea that we are free.

Here are some self talk statements that help me steer my vehicle to a different lane:

I can be a contribution here.

I can reach out for support.

I can self soothe.

I can allow myself to follow through with this idea that brings me joy.

I can allow myself to invest in these things that are life-affirming instead of trying to fix all this broken stuff that’s never really worked anyway.

There is space for me in this world to be who I am.

My body is a punishment-free zone.

I have skills that make a difference.

It’s my purpose to be fulfilled.

-JLK

 
Jessica Kane
Toxicity...
 

You can study toxicity. Understand what it’s made of. Figure out the ways it’s impacted you. Have the realization that toxicity is grown from the soil of toxicity. You can even have compassion for every victim of toxicity. But what you don’t have to do is show up for more toxicity.

And what you also don’t have to offer up, are reasons why.

You can stick to your values of kindness and calm while also opting out of any get togethers that are toxic to you. You can opt out any way you choose, without needing to share the real reasons why.

To me, this is one way you can change the future—for not only yourself, but for those you are also protecting from these environments that are not a match for who you’ve become.

-JLK

 
Jessica Kane
Being diminished...
 

After my mother passed unexpectedly, I heard her voice loud and clear in my heart, as if she urgently needed to share things with me.

I remember feeling so raw, needing to share what I heard from her with anyone who would listen.

Looking back, I see that sharing, as opposed to keeping things to myself (like I usually did) was helping me feel so much less alone in my grief.

In fact, I found it very healing—both hearing her voice and sharing what I heard.

Then, a well-intentioned relative called. She said, “I’m very concerned. You say you’ve been hearing your mother’s voice telling you specific things. You do realize hearing voices runs in your family, don’t you?”

I was shocked, and then felt all the healing and peace I’d been cultivating drain from my being.

And then I felt angry. “I appreciate your concern,” I said. “But I never said I thought for sure it was my mother. I was just open to the possibility that it could be.”

“Well,” she said. “It’s just not normal to hear voices. I’m concerned. I’m just telling you my thoughts.”

At that moment, I realized why so many people prefer to keep their least “normal” thoughts to themselves. It’s safer that way.

Bc there I was—not reaching out for help, not suffering with voices in my head. Instead, I was experiencing something new, something spiritually profound—still acknowledging it could be my imagination, but open to the possibility that there could be a place beyond this place, where the spirit can still communicate with loved ones—and yet, this person felt it was her duty, not to validate my experience, but to let me know I might be having a mental health crisis.

It was hard for someone like me, who was wired for approval, not to take her concern to heart. And I felt anxious, wondering if she was right—if maybe there was something wrong with me.

But then I remembered: I grew up around people who held onto their ideas of “normalcy” as if it were their religion.

I had been pathologized my entire life for being different. I had people “concerned” about me, again and again, in the midst of some of my most deeply profound and beautiful moments.

So I reminded myself what was true for me: that I actually felt ok—that there was nothing wrong with me at all. I was raw, grieving, and trying to be open.

And I also reminded myself what was also true: that this person wasn’t purposely trying to ruin my profound moment. In her mind, she might have been trying to be helpful and caring in the only way she knew how—by trying to steer me back into the fold of precious normalcy.

And I think that’s what a lot of people protect: their experience of normalcy. Bc that’s what’s safe to them. And they offer their standards of normalcy and safety to those they feel might be straying too far, not to hurt them, but to save them.

But without getting into someone else’s world to understand where they’re coming from, you can’t save anyone. You can only attempt to indoctrinate them into what you believe is real. And the consequence of this is that the person may begin to doubt themselves and lose what’s real for them.

My poor mother—she actually did hear voices that were horrible and scary to her, and her own family banished her with their oppressive diagnoses instead of cherishing the parts of her that were beautiful, funny and brilliant, and letting her know that all that other confusing stuff didn’t detract from who she was. It was just stuff that needed to be sorted out, reframed, and given lots of compassion and support.

Every time my mother took the bus to wherever I was after she’d lost her job and her home, my grandmother would call me and say, “Get rid of her. She’s sick, and there’s nothing you or anyone else without a prescription pad can do.”

This was the person who raised my unique mother.

Thank goodness my mother was strong enough to burn so many bridges that led to so many toxic places. Because in her own space, without all those toxic voices being re-internalized again and again, she began to heal.

I have learned that people who keep themselves safe from realities other than their own, often have a smaller aperture of awareness. And though they don’t mean to do harm, the choices they make from their smaller field of vision can sometimes be very, very harmful.

Their need to protect themselves not only keeps them from developing a deeper relationship with who they are underneath their behavior, it keeps them from developing deeper, more meaningful relationships with others.

After this experience, I made a choice to shift away from needing other people’s agreement and to instead establish new boundaries. Boundaries that honored what was sacred to me through my own perspective, instead of feeling I owed any allegiances to the perspective of others.

Thankfully, I still hear my dear mother’s voice, along with the voice of wisdom from my heart that I already heard before my mother even passed.

And though I’m open to hearing and valuing and even internalizing the voices of other people’s perspectives, I wouldn’t trade my own for anything.

So if you’re reading this, and you’ve been pathologized for being different and for sharing your differences, fear not. Who you are is a gift.

What’s sacred to you won’t be understood by everyone. But instead of laboring, and trying so hard to be understood by people who truly aren’t in a position to understand you, spend that energy on just being you. On making sure your words represent what’s most meaningful and beautiful and funny to you. So that the people who are in a position to understand you, will hear you, and they’ll be able to find you and connect with you.

-JLK

 
Jessica Kane
Panic...
 

To me, panic is noticing a sensation or a reaction and zooming in on it without knowing what it is and then finding evidence that it’s a symptom of your demise. That’s about to come. Immediately. Or close to immediately. And you’re not ready to go. But you don’t want anyone to know you’re in this predicament. But you need help. But you don’t have access to your people-pleasing skills. So you don’t know who to trust. Bc who would want to help the ‘raw’ you? With no mask on? So you wind up in the ER. Where you know people get paid to help others. And you explain that you’re usually together but at the moment you’ve fallen apart. And that you might actually be dying this time. And you pray secretly to anyone who might be listening, that if you survive this moment, you’ll never again let fear rule your life. That you’ll allow your compassion and love to rise to the surface instead of doubting it’s real. And you’ll offer that compassion and love to all the parts of you that are hurting. Including your most raw self. That really never needed a mask. Just a safe space to share herself and be accepted and cared for and loved.

-JLK

 
Jessica Kane
Colonoscopy...
 

I missed a couple days of posting bc I had my first colonoscopy. That wasn’t very fun lol. Not at all. The Demerol wasn’t so bad at first, but it gave me really weird not-good dreams. But I’m glad I did it, as strange an experience as it all was. My grandfather died from colon cancer and I’m pretty sure my mother might have had it too. So I figured I’d better take advantage of the testing and find out. I was very grateful for Facebook and finding so much info about other people’s experiences and advice with the prep and what to expect. My test came back normal. And today, I’m just trying to relax and hoping my midsection feels back to normal soon. So I’ll be back to posting tomorrow.

 
Jessica Kane
What's wrong with me...
 

For so many years, I wondered what was wrong with me. Maybe I’m not eating for my blood type. Maybe I’m allergic to my laundry detergent. Maybe there’s mold in the basement or a parasite in my brain. Maybe I should be on a raw foods diet.

.

And I’m not saying these concerns are invalid. They are valid. But what I didn’t realize was the urgency my body had to heal unresolved trauma. That I was running from myself, finding every hard task I could think of to muscle through to fill my days, just to avoid being still and feeling the syrupy sickness of all that agony and uncertainty coming to the surface.

.

But that old trauma will find its way out, like any splinter that shouldn’t be there. It might come out ringing in your ears or tightening up your hips or giving you migraines or hoarsing up your voice.

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Whatever way that old trauma can find to emerge, it will find its way out. And we eventually have to let it out and soothe those old wounds, so we can finally begin to heal from the inside out and get some damn relief. And guess what—we are worth our own time and effort. We deserve peace.

-JLK

 
Jessica Kane
When I’m judging myself harshly...
 

To me, healing is noticing when I’m judging myself harshly or talking down to myself, or punishing myself for making a mistake or not doing what I promised myself I would, and interrupting this old routine with self-kindness, by checking in with myself to see which needs of mine aren’t being met, to see what sadness I have that never got a hug, to see what insecurities I have that never got any reassurance, and then giving myself some love. Love for all of who I am. No strings attached.

We don’t need to offer ourselves the abuse or the “tough love” or the depreciation we received as kids or even as adults. We can reinvent ways to support ourselves so that we feel secure, understood, motivated and fulfilled, one act of self-kindness at a time.

-JLK

 
Jessica Kane
Hypervigilance can be a trauma response...
 

If anyone reading this has ever felt embarrassed to have this style of coping, I thought to share a very old conversation I had with my mother…

Conversation With My Mother:

Me: I’m not sure what I should do.

My Mother: About what?

Me: Well, Chris is going out of town for work and pregnant women aren’t supposed to handle kitty litter…

My Mother: Well, Jessica, I think the only reasonable solution is for you to purchase a hazmat suit.

Me: Wow! Now, that’s a wonderful idea!

My Mother: You can’t be serious.

Me: Weren’t you serious?

My Mother: No. I was not serious. I was being sarcastic.

Me: Well, I actually think you’re on to something. With a hazmat suit, I’ll have nothing to worry about!

My mother: Oh my god.

Me: What? Call it irrational if you want, but if it gives me something less to worry about, I say it’s worth it!

My Mother: If you say so, dear.

So yes, I actually purchased an inexpensive hazmat suit from Home Depot which I indeed wore to empty the kitty litter. And I hysterically laughed the entire time all by myself walking out to the garbage bins bc I knew I officially fit the description of an insane person but I didn’t care bc my baby meant everything to me and I was still dealing with unhealed trauma and needed to do everything in my power not to hurt him.

-JLK

 
Jessica Kane