Tuesday, January 4, 2011

Feeling Safe In A Shifting World

As we step into this powerful year of change, 2011, we are being asked to go to the depths of our being to ferret out all that stands in the way of our brilliant and shining true selves. Because 2011 is the end that prepares us for the new beginning in 2012, we are being asked to let go of old belief systems that we have held personally for our entire lives, and collectively for thousands of years. I know that many of you are aware of this and are making great headway. I know I am. But when we let go of the old, even the old that has been our greatest enemy, there is still a twinge of fear, like the rug is being pulled out from under us. The old ways kept us believing we were safe, though of course we weren't. Our true safety comes from our connection to love, and nothing more or less. And when I say love you know that I am talking about the Great Love that generates and powers the universe - or is the universe. But that Great Love is a little difficult to cuddle up with.

Personally, I have never in my life felt safe. I was sexually molested by my father from infancy. My mother, who lost her mother to scarlet fever when she was five years old and was then sent into foster care, lost her boyfriend in a car accident at 21, and lost her first child at three years old, when she was 25, never felt safe. Her fear that I would die kept me from feeling safe with her as well. Her pain of loss and her fear of not ever being safe translated into incredible anger which she focused on me. I had no grandmothers or aunts or older sisters, or anyone in my childhood who created a safe place for me. I have managed to connect with the Divine throughout my life, which has been my saving grace. I started going to church by my own choice and walking the six blocks all alone when I was four years old. But as much as God or Goddess or the Divine Universe is perfect love, it is not a place to snuggle.

My connection to this divinity in the universe and within myself has been what has protected me, supported me and fueled my work throughout my life, and I would have it no other way. But on New Years Day, 2011, I received a miracle. A miracle that is so sweet that the taste of it is salty like tears of joy.

As I was doing my morning meditation, my mother's mother, who has been dead since 1920, appeared to me, not as a vision so much as her actual self coming through the veils from the other side. I am quite sure that Einstein is correct and that time is simultaneous. So, with that in mind, it was like we were simply connecting without the veil of linear time separating us. ... And then she spoke to me. She said, "I'm so glad to see you my granddaughter. I have wanted to be with your for a very long time."

Having said that she cuddled me on her lap, and I felt like I was a little girl again, being held in the arms of my loving grandma. We laughed and talked together for a long time. Her name is Nellie McCarthy, and she was born in New York City in Harlem, which was the Irish ghetto at the time she was born in the 1880s. She was one of those strong Irish women who worked and remained single long into her twenties, because she didn't want to marry a man who would drink up her hard-earned money and then treat her badly. When she was 29 or 30 years old she had enough money to take a vacation. She was daring and bold, and took a train, all alone, from New York to California. And it was in a little town in northern California that she met my grandfather at a party that she was invited to by strangers. Ah hah. Here was where I got my daring, my courage. My Grandfather was a Scotsman, strong, solid and dependable, and very handsome. Nellie McCarthy went home to New York, packed her bags and moved to California to become Mrs. Francis Murch. Together they homesteaded 20,000 acres in Siskiyou County, the home of Mt. Shasta, the coldest wildest part of California, and began a family.

I remember my mother telling me how much her mother missed the opera. She and her father went to the opera together in New York and sat in the five cent seats at the very top of the highest balcony. She brought a wind-up Victrola with her to her wild new home and played her opera recordings. My mother remembered her love for Enrico Caruso, the Italian tenor. My mother also recalled that the pioneer life was very hard on her and that she often longed for her city home.

Now, on the first day of 2011, Nellie McCarthy was holding me in her ample lap, telling me that I would always be safe. She told the little girl, Barbara, who had been shunned by the mean girls at school, that she was wonderful and that she didn't have to worry about what those mean girls did, because her grandma loved her. That was, I realized, all I ever needed. Just a grandma. A loving, caring grandma, and now, by a miracle of time, I had her here in my bedroom. And she told me she was here for good. No more feeling unsafe, I had a grandma to give me the succor and safety that I never had before.

It felt and continues to feel remarkably real and absolutely lovely. You who have or have had loving grandmothers can understand what this feeling of being loved by a grandma is. It's like nothing else. There is a strength that is at once gentle and powerful, encompassing me in its sheath of unconditional and unencumbered love.

As we snuggled together many things that I had wondered about all my life became startling clear. I was born into a rather bland middle class Republican family in Sacramento, California. But from the time I was eight years old, when I discovered there was a New York City, I longed to go there and even announced to my parents that there had been a mistake, and we should be living in New York. They just smiled at me indulgently, but I knew they were shaking their heads about their very weird child. When my mother was angry with me, which was often, she would say, "All I prayed for was a normal child and I got you!" Luckily for her my brother came along, who was relatively normal. But even though she didn't get me, she eventually bought me a subscription to the New Yorker Magazine.

I was crazy for the New York theatre and read up on all the new shows opening on Broadway. I had a map of Manhattan on my bedroom wall. Yes, I was a teeny bit precocious, which my mother was at the same time proud and ashamed about. Now, as I sat with my Grandma, who longed to be back in New York while homesteading in the bitter cold wilderness, I realized that I held her yearning in my cellular consciousness. Wow! One puzzle solved. And all the rest of my New York stuff throughout my life started to fall into place. For instance people from New York always think I am a New Yorker. I always figured it was because I look or seem kind of Jewish, but no, it is because I am my Grandma's granddaughter. I am a New Yorker in my hereditary soul. Three times I have moved to NYC, and three times the city has spit me out and sent me back to the west. Just a couple of years ago I was apartment hunting on Craigslist in Manhattan, when circumstances moved me to New Mexico instead. A far cry from NYC. Then this morning I remembered being in New York in 1982 with my boyfriend, a lifelong resident of Manhattan. We were in the Village when suddenly I began to cry and couldn't stop. I thought it was because I never fulfilled my dream of being an actress on Broadway, (I did make it to Off-Broadway in 1970, but never Broadway) but the crying came from a deeper place, a greater loss. And now I know it was my Grandma crying through me for her lost home.

As I write this my grandma is sitting across from me knitting, and listening to me tell our story to you. And she is smiling a smile of love and pride that warms my heart. I just want to thank the universe for being so magnificent to allow my grandma to come to me through the layers of time and teach me what it's like to really truly feel loved and safe. Now, I can do anything in this unsafe, changing world. I can feel the love of the great universe now more powerfully than ever before, because it is being expressed through the human heart of a real person, my grandma.

9 comments:

  1. Dear Barbara,

    From what comes to me during sessions for my clients, ancestors and guides from across the veil, it is clear to me that time is a circle, all happening at once, so to speak.

    Thanks for opening your heart in truth and honesty and sharing your experience and wisdom. Sending much love,
    Patricia

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  2. I thank you so much for sharing your amazing and beautiful story.

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  3. JAN 7 2011 EAST HAMPTON NEW YORK

    It’s Friday night, end of the first week back to work from Christmas vacation. I’ll eat salad and check my email. Maybe some broker will send me a listing of THE house and finally, I’ll have a real home. No…nothing! Wait a minute. Something’s coming in, but where? Not the gmail account – ok, check the old account. Nope, just job search listings. Except, wait! Barbara’s Newsletter came in. Great! I’ll read that. I need to call her anyway. Give her my new contact info. Wow, a blog! How youthful, media savvy. I’m reading. “I have never in my life felt safe.” This is my Barbara, the Barbara I’ve known for over 30 years? She was sexually molested by her father from infancy?! Why didn’t I know this? Did she tell me and I missed it? Where was I? Under a rock? This beautiful, fearless, “daring and bold”, long-time-knowing friend of mine has been mistreated and feels unsafe and unsupported? How can this be? I always thought she was the secure one. The one that opens up to the man and commits to the man. The one that conceives the baby and has the baby. The one that honors her art and writes a script or a book or a play or sings her heart out off broadway or follows her heart and makes a living off her art instead of copping to an office job. My friend Barbara who goes at life with great courage and aplomb. She was really feeling unsafe all this time? Why didn’t I hug her and tell her she was loved and safe and absolutely fabulous, why didn’t I….? I’m not grandma, Barb, but I love you too. You are my wonderful goddess-sister who inspires me to be all that I can be in this life. And I am so lucky and honored and safe.

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  4. Wow! Elissa. What else can I say? I've missed being connected with you, my dear sister.

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  5. We are always connected, maybe just not in the physical. That's the strength of our connection. It goes beyond...to where grandma is...the unified field...the mind of God. We all feel and understand this differently. Your unsafe alone-ness ended with the energy of who you really are coming together in the image of a person. You ARE all that grandma is and more. She is You. Daring, Bold, and unequivocally Fabulous. Come visit New York. Your "connection" is here.

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  6. What a beautiful post! I have just shared in on FB. And oddly enough it echoes a major "aha" realization I recently had about my own childhood. I just finished writing about it on my blog when a friend directed me here. I feel a lovely connection with you just from this one post. My own post is at: lindalubin@blogspot.com.

    I read your book, "Money is Love" years ago - it is absolutely wonderful. It made such a deep impression on me that I built a workshop around it and recommended it to everyone I knew. I've never read anything that so elegantly explains our spiritual history with money.

    Thank you for all you do!

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  7. Just beautiful, Barbara. You are a gifted writer.

    Love you!

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  8. Thank you for your lovely words, Linda. I am so happy that I have touched your heart.

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  9. Greetings from Brooklyn. Interesting story. I like the part about the visitation from your grandmother and your comment about time being simultaneous. It's a reminder of what all of us are able to experience when we have an open mind and a desire for an experience like this.

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