Wednesday, August 10, 2016

A Moment of Colorful Meditation: One Little Boat~One Perfect Day

One Little Boat, 
One Perfect Day
A day of perfection as told to me by Rebecca Fowler


There we were~
Just one little boat
Floating in a serene blue green sea
Two of us idly lounging on our wee boat
Happily fishing for hours
No Worries 



We gazed at the beautiful sky above
and into the watery depths below,
Listening to the chorus of whales
spouting WHOOSHing sounds
all around us




Their gentle breathing sounds became
the ocean soundscape filling the salt air



Then with a flip of a tail they dove into the depths,
Fins silently sliding back into the ocean

Harmoniously connecting the journey 
above the sea with the depths of 
the watery world below


We caught a beautiful little black cod


And also a ling cod 


But we said hello and let them go back to the sea 

Whooshing them well on their journey… 

No worries 


A perfect ending for a perfect day

This illustrated book is of course dedicated to Rebecca, my muse, for allowing me to peek into her personal moment of colorful meditation and share it with you. 

Sign Up for Free E-mail updates

For more than 35 years, Susan Meyerott has been helping people lighten up and step over invisible barriers to change one step at a time. She speaks to your heart, puts you at ease, and makes changing easier than ever before.

Do you know someone who could benefit from uplifting messages? Please share Lightarted Living with them. If you or someone you love is interested in learning more about closing the gap between where you are now and where you want to be, join the FREE Lightarted Living mailing list. 

Monday, August 8, 2016

Always Build a Nest in the Eye of the Storm~A Story




~Traveling on her life adventure, 
with change and uncertainty 
as her constant companions~




~And life swirling around her 
like a hurricane~




~Often feeling like a fish
swimming upstream ~




~She retreats into her inner sanctuary 
and learns how to build a nest
In the eye of the storm~


~Using her strength and wisdom
She creates a soft cushion 
on which to rest when weary
and an openness 
to think and hope~




~Slowly, slowly she begins 
to rebuild her life after the storm~
Each time rediscovering 
the strength
 and resiliency inside her~

~Soon she finds contentment, 
happiness and tranquility 
are hers once again and~




~She Lives Happily Ever After~
knowing she has what it takes 
to deal with whatever life
 throws at her because she is 
one smart and strong woman!

Dedicated to 'Moey' for requesting this story be drawn.


Sign Up for Free E-mail updates


Susan J Meyerott loves helping people become more fully themselves, particularly those working through anxiety, life and career transitions, relationships, and self-esteem. She provides a nonjudgmental, growth-oriented environment for you to become the person you’re meant to be—while appreciating the richness of who you already are. Learn more at Lightarted Living Blog

Saturday, August 6, 2016

Starting Over: Regaining Your Love of Life



Starting Over in Life

If you've been struggling to regain your balance and sense of happiness after being knocked around by illness, loss, or sadness open your doors to happiness by following these 3 time-tested keys to regain your momentum.


 1. Take the First Step 

Not much has changed in the thousands of years humans have been facing and recovering from the hardships of life. As Lao Tzu stated so long ago, 'a journey of a thousand miles must begin with a single step'. 

We fuel our inner strength and sense of resiliency by taking action and walking through doors. But sometimes when faced with 'a journey of a thousand miles' we can be overwhelmed with the daunting task of where to begin. What is the first step? Which door to open first?

The good news is any first step will do. Your hope, resiliency, and personal strength will grow stronger with every step you take. It doesn't matter what the first step is. As you experience yourself being pro-active and physically taking action, your ability to cope and hope will improve. So start with a single step--any step-- and then take another.


2. Take Small Steps

An old Chinese Proverb says, 'The man who moved a mountain is the one who started taking away the small stones'. When you're in total overwhelm mode, start 'taking away the small stones'--one small step, then another. 


3. Build a Nest in the Eye of the Storm

Anthropologist, Margaret Mead, traveled on her life adventure, with change and uncertainty as her constant companions. Her grandmother, a major influence in Margaret's life, sent her on her journey with the sage advice to 'Always build a nest in the eye of the storm'.

This grandmotherly wisdom has had a strong influence in my own life. Whenever major life events cause upheaval in my life, my mind returns to this saying, and I think how important it is to apply to get things moving and balanced again. 

One thing I know--when you're in the middle of a crisis, the hardest thing to do is to take care of yourself. You can forget to nourish your body, push your body to the limits with lack of sleep, and remain in a constant state of emotional overload. But if you focus on 'building a nest in the eye of the storm', you will begin to create a cushion to rest and a space for thinking.

What does it mean to build a nest in the eye of the storm? When life is swirling around you like a hurricane--you find a way to create a home-base of comfort--or nest--from which you can rebuild your daily existence.


How to Get Your Natural Rhythms Back in Place

  • Start with the basics to nourish your body and rest your nerves. Your body likes a regular rhythm that includes regular heart beats, breaths, sleep patterns, eating times, moving times, and rest time. 
  • Eat regular, well-balanced nourishing meals.
  • Pace yourself--put a time limit on dealing with your difficulties--and take regular rest breaks.
  • Go to bed early.
  • Choose to have daily contact with uplifting, supportive people who can listen and encourage you in your strength.
  • If you're caring for others, take care of yourself first, so you have the strength and endurance to continue to help others.


Create Safety and Security

We all do our best thinking and acting when we do it from a place of feeling safe and secure. So create your nest--no matter what storm is brewing. It may not be easy, but it is essential.



 Sign Up for Free E-mail Updates

Susan J Meyerott loves helping people become more fully themselves, particularly those working through anxiety, life and career transitions, relationships, and self-esteem issues. She provides a nonjudgmental, growth-oriented environment for you to become the person you’re meant to be—while appreciating the richness of who you already are. Learn more at Lightarted Living Blog

Friday, August 5, 2016

Beyond Grief: Loved Ones Shining Down on Us



Perhaps they are not stars,

But rather openings in heaven 




Where the love of our lost ones

Pour through and shines down upon us

Letting us know they are happy

I AM HAPPY







REACH OUT  IN LOVE














ALL IS WELL



Sign Up for Free E-mail updates


For more than 35 years, Susan Meyerott has been helping people lighten up and step over invisible barriers to change one step at a time. She speaks to your heart, puts you at ease, and makes changing easier than ever before.


Do you know someone who could benefit from uplifting messages? Please share Lightarted Living with them. If you or someone you love is interested in learning more about closing the gap between where you are now and where you want to be, join the FREE Lightarted Living mailing list. 

Wednesday, August 3, 2016

Scatter Joy and Happiness

~Sending you HAPPY little thoughts~
One Laugh banishes a thousand worries 

Scatter Joy and Happiness

“If you are too busy to laugh, you are too busy.”  Proverb

“It was only a sunny smile, and little it cost in the giving, but like morning light it scattered the night and made the day worth living.”  F. Scott Fitzgerald

“Life will bring you pain all by itself.  Your responsibility is to create joy.” Milton Erickson

When you are joyous, look deep into your heart and you shall find it is only that which has given you sorrow that is giving you joy. 
When you are sorrowful look again in your heart, and you shall see in truth that you are weeping for that which has been your delight.”  Kahlil Gibran

“Happiness is something that comes into our lives through doors we don’t even remember leaving open.” Robert Brault

“Follow your bliss and don’t be afraid, and doors will open where you didn’t know they were going to be.”  Joseph Campbell

“A quiet secluded life in the country, with the possibility of being useful to people to whom it is easy to do good, and who are not accustomed to have it done to them; then work which one hopes may be of some use; then rest, nature, books, music, love for one’s neighbor — such is my idea of happiness.” Leo Tolstoy

“The grass is always greener where you water it.”  Unknown

“Let us be grateful to the people who make us happy; they are the charming gardeners who make our souls blossom.”  Marcel Proust

Grow happiness under your paws

“The foolish man seeks happiness in the distance,
 the wise grows it under his feet.” 
James Oppenheim

Sign Up for Free E-mail updates

For more than 35 years, Susan Meyerott has been helping people lighten up and step over invisible barriers to change one step at a time. She speaks to your heart, puts you at ease, and makes changing easier than ever before.

Do you know someone who could benefit from uplifting messages? Please share Lightarted Living with them. If you or someone you love is interested in learning more about closing the gap between where you are now and where you want to be, join the FREE Lightarted Living mailing list. 

Thursday, July 21, 2016

Embrace Your Share of Happiness: Recapture the Idle Days of Summer


Plenty of people miss their share of happiness, not because they never found it, but because they didn't stop to enjoy it.   William Feather

Remember those Care-free Days of Childhood?

Amid the haste of daily life, do you long for a return to days gone past? Why not take the time NOW to renew your spirit, recapture the idle days of summer, and find time to re-live the care-free days of childhood.

Chose Peace and Contentment

You are where you are today because of the choices you made in the past. Where you end up tomorrow will be the result of the choices you make for yourself today. Choose to relax into the present moment and find your sense of peace and contentment.


Rekindle Your Innocence

  • Use quiet moments to reflect on life's possibilities instead of life's limitations. 
  • Reach out to others in support and friendship instead of focusing on things that are disappointing. 
  • Wake up each morning with a full heart and a deep love for ALL.




Row, row, row your boat,
Gently down the stream,
Merrily, merrily, merrily, merrily,
Life is but a dream.
Nursery Rhyme 


Sign Up for Free E-mail updates

For more than 35 years, Susan Meyerott has been helping people lighten up and step over invisible barriers to change one step at a time. She speaks to your heart, puts you at ease, and makes changing easier than ever before.

If you're interested in learning more about closing the gap between where you are now and where you want to be, sign up for free e-mail subscription.

Thursday, July 14, 2016

Will Life Crush Your Spirit or Make You Stronger?




Will Life Crush Your Spirit or Make You Stronger?

What awful soul-crushing experiences have you had in your life? Have you allowed them to become defining moments for lessons learned that propelled you forward or have you allowed them to defeat you?  

When you examine your life, what defining positive or negative moments or periods in your life have shaped your future and attitude?

How are you feeling about your life and possibilities today? 

No one gets through life unscathed. We all experience our own unpleasantness in life that challenges our belief in life and ourselves.

These crucial challenges become defining moments for us--ones that put us face-to-face with ourselves--forcing us to choose how we're going to handle life going forward.

Are we going to allow life to crush our spirit or make us stronger? Will we choose to become bitter and hardened or wise and strengthened by our experiences?


1984 Lessons Learned Revisited

Thirty two years ago I returned to Los Angeles for the first time a year after dealing with an unfair and unwarranted political battle in the workplace in which I took center stage. This trip back to the center of unpleasantness was a defining moment for me that still shapes my life today.

Recently I came across the 16 lessons learned below, deep in my work archives. I wrote them upon returning from 'the scene of the crime'. When I walked back into the thick of things--and interacted directly with people involved in the political battle--it had a healing effect on me that resulted in the removal of the mental hold the experience had on me that was still lingering.

Putting pen to paper I identified the crucial lessons I learned from an experience that had once had the potential to crush my soul--and then let it go.

Although I haven't read these lessons learned in 32 years, I can clearly see the impact of my consciously articulating the lessons on my life today.

I made a conscious choice at that time to sidestep the negative remains of the battle and chose to be propelled forward in life--strengthened, not hardened or weakened, and choosing compassion over bitterness.  

This was one of many defining life moments that led me to be strengthen by my life rather than defeated by it. And this is still my 'Meyerott Manifesto' in play today.

Don't let life defeat or crush you. Accept we all deal with potentially soul-crushing blows that we must decide how to deal with. Know you have the strength to handle what life throws your way.  


 16 Lessons Learned at 32 still Apply at 64

Time heals all. Keep your motives pure, be yourself and trust the important people will have faith in you--even after a political battle.

Be Kind. You do not need to be mean to the people who wrong you. It is a way of life for them. They will be their own undoing.

Reach out, reach out, reach out! It is by your small daily reaching out--by being consistent with people--that they will trust you and support you.

Care deeply and honestly about others.  Rejoice in their achievements and victories; cry in their pain; share life.

Trust yourself and know yourself. Plod toward your goals. Be patient.

Be choosy about people. Commit to building a warm, supportive and joyful environment based in friendship whether at work or play. Find other honest, committed caring people to relate with.

Cut your losses. Some people will never like you, trust you or be kind to you. It is within them, not you.

Empty yourself of territorial issues, control, and the need for power. Focus on how you may help others. Be unassuming.

Believe in other people. Build them up. Focus on how you can work well together.

Be involved in people's lives. Help others make better choices by asking the right questions and by really caring. 

Believe in the power of positive behavior. When people have difficulty with you, ignore their incorrect perception of you and talk to the part of them that likes you. Work through other people. Believe in the power of positive feedback, positive gossip, and consistent positive behavior.

Be true to yourself and others.

Most people want to like others. They are embarrassed when they're put in a battle between two people. If they must perform actions, such as work, that forces them closer to the other person, they will begin to change their attitude toward you unless you force them to deal with you consciously and make them consciously accountable. Let them know you see their behavior. 

Relationships based in friendship.  True friends will go beyond gossip and backbiting to discover the truth. True friends will stand up for you when they know you have integrity. True friends will have the courage to stand by you as you would for them.

Forgive your adversaries. As hard as it is, focus on forgiving your enemies. Pray for them; wish them well; do not gloat in their misfortune.

Choose to be wise rather than small and petty. Model the type of behavior you would like to see in others.

Be authentic and honest. Relate to people honestly and ask them to deal with you honestly.




Choose to allow life to make you stronger. Choose to become wise and strengthened by your experiences.

Sign Up for Free E-mail updates

For more than 35 years, Susan Meyerott has been helping people lighten up and step over invisible barriers to change one step at a time. She speaks to your heart, puts you at ease, and makes changing easier than ever before.

If you're interested in learning more about closing the gap between where you are now and where you want to be, sign up for free e-mail subscription.

Friday, July 8, 2016

Stop Striving for Perfection: Why Good Enough is Better


 'Obstacles are those frightful things you see when you take your eyes off your true purpose and strive for perfection instead.' Lightarted Sue

Perfection is in the Eye of the Beholder--but who's looking anyway?

Why do we choose to waste time striving for perfection? What is it that drives us to obsess over creating the illusion we have everything perfectly handled all the time without a hair out of place and no sweat on our brow--when we know it feels anything but perfect and satisfying in the end? 

Do we think people will think better of us if we look, think, or act perfectly? Do we think people will feel more comfortable in our home or office without a thing out of place--so we run ourselves ragged attending to every last detail before anticipating a military-like inspection by our invited guests?  

Admit it: Your struggle for perfection is annoying for you and everyone around you. Your obsession to perfect every last detail leads you to spend 90% of your time attempting to perfect the last 10% while driving everyone around you nuts. 

The final result? Perfectly pissed off co-workers, friends and family who are too afraid to step into your environment and mess anything up. And in the end you're never happy with the final results no matter how hard you work at it--leaving you frazzled and fixated on the cobweb you missed the minute someone enters your space.

A desire to be perfect arises from a self-conscious focus. To lighten your load, and to improve your relationships, switch your focus to outside yourself--by keeping your attention on the comfort of your guests, audience, and co-workers instead of yourself.




Stop It! Good Enough is Better

Why not give up your struggle for perfection for something more satisfying and productive? 

At the core of our drive to perfection is a desire to be accepted and loved. Yet our perfectionist tendencies push people away while our imperfections make us more accessible to others. 

Striving for 'good enough' can help you decrease your self-focus, intensity and anxiety leaving you more energy to focus your attention on making others comfortable. When you take the focus off your own perfect performance and place it on others comfort you'll discover you can relax and enjoy relating to others even if the light is shining on a few cobwebs. 


'Others see our work for what it is; we see our work for what it isn't.'

Imperfections Improve Your Like-ability Factor

When you replace perfectionism with a 'good enough' frame of mind it allows you to embrace your imperfections as the valuable assets that they are. It is your imperfections that increase your value to others, raising your like-ability factor as the very essence of your humanness shines through. 
'I never make the same mistake twice. I make it like five or six times, you know, just to be sure.' I love to laugh on Facebook.



An Oriental rug's Value is in its Imperfections--And so is yours

Ask any oriental rug dealer and you'll discover--a rug's value is found in its imperfections. Machine made rugs are perfect; but handmade rugs have imperfections. Oriental rug collectors look for those imperfections to prove the value of the rug.

Why not begin to think of yourself as a 'rug in progress'? You're not a cookie-cutter human who is stamped out to look and be perfect. Learn to value your imperfections, keep your focus on the comfort of others and strive for good enough.

Knowledge is learning something every day. Wisdom is letting go of something every day.  Zen Proverb

Sign Up for Free E-mail updates

For more than 35 years, Susan Meyerott has been helping people lighten up and step over invisible barriers to change one step at a time. She speaks to your heart, puts you at ease, and makes changing easier than ever before.

If you're interested in learning more about closing the gap between where you are now and where you want to be, sign up for free e-mail subscription.