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Practical Spirituality + Empowered Living
The holidays are upon us and ’tis the season for family “stuff”! And besides the usual messages of gratitude and celebration, I thought I’d share a bit about what I’ve learned about energy and how it moves through families.
One thing I see is that there’s a “family healer” in most families. What is this?
These are not necessarily the people who become doctors or who obviously take care of everybody. In fact, family healers are usually too busy (energetically) to assist in these ways.
These people earn their money. They earn the care they often demand.
They express what the others don’t. They feel the rage or the grief or the longing.
Because if you think about it, healing is not about making things perfect. It’s not always pretty. It’s about returning to wholeness.
For truly, whatever we deny or disown will run the show in our lives. In families, old lies and betrayals and secrets and shame affect generations to come. Almost every family has this “stuff”.
Often, it got buried years ago. It probably started with people we’ve never met. When I work with a client who’s really stuck, I frequently find the cause in unconscious ancestral patterns.
It may also be current. One or more members of the family stuff their feelings or deny their greatness, and another one expresses those feelings or becomes successful in a way the other did not. Then the other one hates their guts. For instance, a child will naturally express his parents’ unexpressed stuff, triggering the parents to no end!
Families, in general, keep improving. And so family healers become what those who came before them wanted to become– if only they were ready, if only the world were ready. This can be both exciting and challenging.
I think this is one reason why grandparents love grandchildren so. They can appreciate their grandchildren’s freedom from limitations without the conflicting emotions they might have with their own children. And because ancestral healing goes deep, it can take generations to unwind.
I’ve had many conversations with my grandfather about this. He passed away in 2005, and while he took care of the family financially, he was very controlling.
I rebelled against this as a kid, and blew through the money as an adult. Looking back, I might have made some different choices.
I spent my 20’s cultivating my spirituality and creativity. I remember talking to my grandfather after I recorded my first CD and was touring coffeeshops around the southwest. I can still hear his reply to this day: “That’s nice, Ann, but are you making money?”
At that time, making enough money to support myself seemed unfathomable. Looking back, I’m so grateful that I had that time for creativity, and I’m not sure that “getting a job” was the right answer– given where I was at at the time. Still, I’ve certainly had some judgement and guilt about it.
Over the last few years, I’ve asked my grandfather for forgiveness several times. And each time, I was surprised by his answer: “I wouldn’t have wanted anything better for you.” I literally see him beaming with pride.
I’ve heard stories of how controlling his mother was. She moved with him from the east coast to LA when he went to college, if that gives you any idea. I’m sure he wanted to get away from that controlling energy, yet he didn’t know how.
He loved LA. I’m sure he loved the creative, individualistic energy here. Years ago, not thinking about healing my lineage, I moved here.
And I was the one, more than anyone in the family, who chose to live that free-spirited creative life. It might have looked great on the outside, but honestly, my 20’s weren’t always easy.
It took me a long time to learn how to stop feeling everyone’s stuff as my own. It was much easier after a decade or so of focused spiritual studies had strengthened me to the point where I could start a business and have a relationship.
Even after that, I still became the “family healer” in my first marriage. His sister, who had been “it”, died a month after we were married when her heart transplant failed to take. As the years went on, I’d sometimes get their Mom’s physical symptoms. Through these experiences, I’ve become fascinated with the connections between energy and our bodies, and I’ve learned a lot about holistic health.
Once, a business coach had me reflect on my greatest success story. She said it didn’t need to be a client, just a time where I used my super powers and it changed someone’s life in a powerful way.
My greatest success was my Dad. Into my 20’s, he would still as get drunk and obnoxious as he did when I was young. While I didn’t live with him, we still visited and spoke with one another, and the energy was tough.
I spent most of my year in “psychic school” clearing my Dad’s energy out of my space. It was huge for me in finding my way in life, but looking back it was even huger for him.
Around the end of that year, he called me when he was drunk. I set a boundary and told him I wouldn’t be able to talk with him in that state. And I hung up.
Weeks later, my Mom called to tell me he had quit drinking cold turkey. I am sure the combination of setting that boundary plus a year of releasing his energy was a major factor.
As we come upon the holidays, I invite you to look at where you heal your family in healthy or unhealthy ways, consciously or unconsciously. Since I did it unconsciously for so long and have worked with many clients in similar positions, I can see the pros and cons of doing so.
I hope this was helpful! As always, feel free to leave a comment below, and reach out if you’d like to explore your family “stuff” more in depth. Happy Thanksgiving!