Life I Love You – All Is Groovy

Everything’s gonna be okay. Platitude or attitude? When I’m overwhelmed or upset it feels like a cliché. But when I get quiet; when I slow down and put into perspective whatever’s carousing with my emotions – it becomes a relaxed confidence.

Byron Katie developed a method that starts by asking “Is it true?” Then … can you be absolutely certain it’s true? This is what she calls “The Work.” She goes on to ask us to consider how we react when we believe this thought – and who would we be if we didn’t?

I’m bombarded every day with stories created for clicks and eyeballs. Some are entertaining, far too many are disturbing. Back in the 80’s Don Henley called out the compulsive hunger society has for “Dirty Laundry.” It benefits me to question this tendency.

If there’s no way to be 100% certain the ugly crap is true, why believe it? Especially if it just makes me mad, sad and unfriendly. When I look for the positive and delightful in people and the world at large – I’m optimistic, happier and more pleasant to be around.

Neville Goddard tells me to use my imagination to create the world I want to live in. If I focus on negative things that I have no control over, the evidence of that attention appears in my life. Instead, when I turn my energy to solutions and empowerment within my circle of influence, the world changes for the better.

Happy Dog

So slow down. Look for the upbeat stories. Give the benefit of doubt to the growly, confused neighbor. Cultivate feeling groovy – like Simon and Garfunkel suggest:


“Be not afraid of life. Believe that life is worth living, and your belief will help create the fact.”

– Henry James

Which Way Did They Go George? A New Direction

“Cat: Where are you going?
Alice: Which way should I go?
Cat: That depends on where you are going.
Alice: I don’t know.
Cat: Then it doesn’t matter which way you go.”
― Lewis Carroll, Alice in Wonderland


Knowing the direction to point myself gives me a peaceful easy feeling.

But sometimes I have no idea which way to go – I’m upside down and sideways. Do I conform to social convention; which way did he go George? Do I rely on my intuition and higher self? Or can I balance the best of both?

Hearing what experts and my circle of support have to say often inspires me. When their input and my intuition align, full speed ahead. But when that alignment is absent, it’s awkward and unnerving. This is when I slow down; don’t make the big moves. Self-correction is easier when I take baby steps.

Thich Nhat Hanh’s fourth and fifth practices to feed happiness helps me when my spiritual compass is off kilter.

The fourth practice is concentration. Stay in the present moment – away from obsession, past or future. Slow down and contemplate the moment; get in touch with the quiet voice within.

The fifth practice is insight. Mindfulness buds when I stay present, releasing tension. Concentrating on my breathing, or the beauty of the lake and the birds singing, makes room for insights.

These insights show remedies for my confusion; provide a roadmap that’s right for me. The route may be energizing and uplifting; or a gnarly, murky, dark alleyway. Either way, I keep moving. On the other side is peace, joy and happiness.


“The greatest thing in this world is not so much where we stand as in what direction we are moving.”

― Johann Wolfgang von Goethe