Spiral Up is Here!!!

Chloe has finished her Spiral Up! book. She is presenting her new modality book at the RPA’s annual virtual meeting on Saturday, February 22, at 5:15pm (EST). I had a sneak preview of this manuscript and it is amazing. This book is for students, practitioners and the general public. This may be the book that puts RR on the map!

This book has been years in the making and Chloe is very pleased with the end result. Please go to: http://www.rpamember.org/rpastore.htm to register for the annual conference and Chloe’s presentation. All you need is your computer and internet connection to participate and feel the wonderful energy of the resonance repatterning community. “See you there!”

Ardis

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Man and beast: a healing bond..

We read daily about the post traumatic stress that veterans of recent wars are experiencing. A correlation to that is escalating suicide rate among vets. Many people are finding support in therapy and with medications yet the impact of their PTSD has wide spread affects on their families and communities. I read a hopeful article recently by Scott Raven a columnist for the Arizona Republic newspaper.

He highlighted the work being done by ‘Soldier’s Best Friend’ a local based group that matches service and therapeutic companion dogs with military vets who have brain injuries or PTSD. I was very touched by the story of one vet named Justin. He was caught in an ambush in Iraq that lasted for minutes but felt like hours. The lingering affects of that and many other military experiences left him feeling that he never knew when the bad guys might turn and fire on him. His war zone experience taught him to be ever-vigilant because his survival depends on his ability to anticipate danger and react quickly. He came home in that state and had been unable to shake his hyper-vigilance. Not even when he and his wife went out for dinner or at the playground with his children. In this heightened state of anxiety and fear, rife with flashbacks, his body would shut down and refuse to function.

His wife broached the idea of a service dog with him. He was willing to try anything to get his life back. They met with the director of ‘Soldiers Best Friend’. He went through an extensive interview and stressed that he would feel safest with a large dog; one sturdy enough to keep him safe. The search began. A year previously she had met a pit-bull mix who was incredibly emaciated and had just given birth to pups. Though starving and dehydrated she was attentive and affectionate. Now she was ready to be placed with a family. The director really loved her energy and passion for life. She instinctively felt this was the right partner for Justin.

Initially Justin was disappointed, when he first saw Roxie, the dog that he hoped might save his life. He thought she would be bigger and sturdier. Able to stand her ground when his demons came. This dog was rather small. But the former soldier knew he was wrong just days later, when the not-big-enough, too friendly dog, curled up at his feet in a place where he knew the demons waited and the demons stayed away.

They completed service dog training in half the time it usually takes. He can now take Roxie with him everywhere, even places where pets are not allowed; passenger jets, restaurants, stores and hotels. Wherever Justin goes Roxie is with him. He is better now. “There is no doubt we rescued one another. She’s and integral part of me. I can’t imagine life without her”.

Such an elegant solution to such a painful condition. I hope this will inspire more vets to reach out for “Pet help”. There are so many abandoned lonely dogs looking for their life purpose and we certainly have a large population of returning vets who need a forever companion. Seems like a match made in heaven.

Ardis

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A Happy Valentines Day Repatterning (& Happy Valentines Day)

Love is this highest of frequencies no matter what package it comes in.    Whether your situation is like Charlie Brown, pining for that elusive red-haired girl or celebrating with someone special (or no one at all), open to receive love’s vibration in the air today.

Set your intention for love then check your Spiral Up Tools book for a modality.  Top it off with this positive action and Karaoke this:

Know, that no matter what … you are loved!

With love and light

Carolyn

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13 Hours….

???????

I can do a lot in 13 hours. I can read some good books, do a Downton Abbey marathon viewing, clean up a tremendous amount of clutter, do my income taxes and actually file them! 13 hours is a good beginning for a new exercise regiment, to change an old pattern.

I had a recent experience that lasted 13 hours. It was long. Interminable. A true test of my ability to trust and update an old memory imprint. I drove to New Mexico with my dog Brody. We stopped in Albuquerque to visit a dear friend. He also had a dog and the two of them played well together. As we were getting ready to go out for dinner he asked me if I wanted to put Brody inside. His dog liked to be outside in the enclosed backyard. My initial feeling was to ask him to bring both dogs inside yet didn’t want to upset his dogs routine. He reassured me that the yard was secure. I was slightly uncomfortable but didn’t want to appear to be an overprotective “mom” so we left for dinner with both dogs playing outside.

Three hours later we returned to find Brody gone. His dog was there. My dog’s sweater was on the back patio but he was nowhere to be found. I went into panic mode. We searched the neighborhood for hours. He was not there. I couldn’t call animal control until morning so I tried to calm myself down enough to rest. The next morning I made the necessary phone calls. Brody had a microchip through Home Again. They were wonderful and had his flyer circulated to 1,000 recipients within one hour. We continued to search on foot and by car. My friend kept affirming that Brody was safe. He was sure that someone had picked him up. I worried about him being out in the cold, alone and frightened. He encouraged me to trust that someone would help Brody. That was a hard one for me. The previous Christmas our beloved dog of 16 years went missing while visiting a friends home. Several people saw him and could have saved him yet they didn’t. We found his remains a couple months later. My memory imprint said that if a dog goes missing no-one will help and I will never see him again.

10 hours later Home Again called to tell me they had a man on the line who had found Brody! I was ecstatic. He found him on the median of I-25, which is a very busy highway in New Mexico about 2 miles from my friends home. He spotted him on his way home from work. He pulled into the passing lane and since there was no shoulder he put on his emergency lights and stopped his truck. He tried to get Brody to come but he was very frightened and tried to bite him. Finally he opened the truck door and encouraged him to jump in and he did. Fortunately for me Brody loves cars and trucks!

He drove 30 miles to his rural home where he raises Australian sheep dogs. Brody played with his large pack and then after dinner went to sleep in a crate with his new mates. He said Brody was fine and that he would meet me at a truck stop in town in 3 hours. I offered to pick him up but he didn’t want to give me any information about where he was and insisted that we meet at the truck stop. I then called Home Again to update them. I asked why he would call them rather than me since my number was on the tag with his name. Their number was on a separate tag and both of them were on his collar. They said that people often feel more comfortable contacting a third party since they have no way of knowing about the character of the owner.

Those 3 hours were less stressful than the previous 10 had been. I was no longer sick to my stomach or flashing on dire scenarios of what might be happening to my sweet little dog. But I was puzzled by his reticence. Until I met him…

His truck pulled up. We went over to him as he called Brody out of the truck. Brody stood right next to him and looked up as I walked to him. I was crying, my friend was crying and the guy who saved Brody was smiling. I picked Brody up, leashed him and he leaned over to this sweet man and kissed his cheek. He was either saying thanks for bringing me home or it was fun lets do it again! I put him in my car and went back to find out more details.

It seems that he had seen a dog that looked like Brody a couple of months back wandering in the mountains while he was hiking. He took him to the local shelter. When he saw Brody he thought it was the same dog abandoned again until he got a closer look. He is a dog lover. He wondered what kind of responsible pet owner would allow a little dog to be so near a busy highway. He wanted to be reassured that I was a good person. I had my projections as well. I was suspicious of him. Why wouldn’t he let us come to him? What was he hiding? Was he playing me to get a reward? I told my friend that I felt like my little one had been kidnapped and I was going to pay randsome! Oh what the mind is capable of!

This young man gave me a miracle. He put himself in harms way to save a little dog. I will be forever grateful. It was a wonderful opportunity to update my memory imprint. People are good. People are trustworthy. If they see a dog in danger they will do the right thing. I also realized, in that moment when Brody was licking this young man’s face, that if I had not found Brody he would have been happy with him. In that moment I released all my old assumptions about the fate of a lost dog. Ahhh…that feels so much better!

P.S. For those wondering how he got out of a secure yard with 6 ft. walls all around when he is under 2 ft. tall ? Here are the working theories: he jumped on the back of the larger dog and used it as his personal trampoline or a large bird spotted the red sweater and swooped down to pick him up & Brody wiggled out but on the wrong side of the road or he is HOUDINI!

Ardis

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Cocoa; hidden powers….

In this cold winter time it is nice to cozy up with a warm cup of cocoa. We love the creamy sweetness and it does warm us from the inside out. A new Harvard University study found that drinking two cups of cocoa a day for 30 days significantly improved memory in older adults. The research team says that cocoa drinking boosted blood flow to the brain particularly in those whose flow was impaired.

This is great news to share with anyone who is challenged by loss of memory. But I think we need to be Pro-active and start now so we won’t have impaired blood flow to our brain. Two cups of cocoa a day? I’m in….

Ardis

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