Posts Tagged ‘support’

Owning Commerce: Let’s Change the World, Shall We?

Saturday, March 13th, 2010

Hi, Pinkies! Dana here. Owning Pink has become a force in the world. Can you feel it? Not only can we feel it, we can measure it and we’ve been growing at over 400% a quarter since Lissa started her blog almost a year ago.

As Lissa has intimated, the Owning Pink site is going to change in the next month or so. Pretty soon we’re going to have more blog posts, more opporutnity for everyone to participate and more opportunities for Pinkies to share their stories of wellness, self-discovery and getting their Mojo back. No matter what your path, you’ll have a home here at Owning Pink.

Garnering Support
To grow and continue to provide this safe space for everyone, we need to reach out to get some sponsors for the site. But in true Owning PInk fashion, we don’t want to just bombard ourselves with ads and logos, we want to do things differently. I mean, we’re being authentic here.  Why accept sponsors who don’t make the same commitment?

We’re going to reach out to some of our favorite “pink” companies and invite them to hep us change the world- to join us authentically, contribute to our knowledge, share their causes with us, and shine a light on the good work they’re doing in the world. And if their products and services are good, we’re going to recommend them to each other (and if they’re not, we’re going to tell each other that too!).

Whom to approach?
So here’s where we need your help. Tell us which companies you think are Pink! Which ones have great products that contribute to your health and wellness? Which ones are good corporate citizens of the world? Which ones treat you like a human being instead of a statistic? These are the companies we want to invite to help us Own Pink as we grow. Let us know which of these companies already recognized for corporate citizenship you would like to see here. Also, you can leave your suggestions in the comments below and if you know anyone at the company we can call, email me at dana [at] owningpink.com.

Woman are the greatest economic force in the world. Let’s own the power of our wallets and reward the companies we like doing business with and ask them to support us.

Love, light, and growing growing growing,

Dana

Living In Love: A Thanksgiving Blessing

Thursday, November 26th, 2009

thanksgiving-table

Happy Thanksgiving, beloved Pinkies. Today, I celebrate the holiday with the whole Rankin crew in Columbus, Ohio, at my baby brother’s house. The Rankin family- my mother, brother, sister, cousin, aunt, uncle and all their spouses and chidren- has not been gathered in its entirety since I lost Dad nearly four years ago. And before that, when we lost my young cousin Corry.  Weddings, births, and other happy occasions failed to pull us away from our daily lives. We have shared way too many endings and not nearly enough beginnings. This time, we commit to gathering out of the shear joy of being alive and being together, a process that includes looking back and honoring the joy we still experience because of those we lost.

Holidays can be hard times.  I can’t help getting teary when I remember how Dad would sit on his lounge chair, sniffing the air on Thanksgiving, cooing, “Mmmm….that smells GOOD.”  Dad would be fiddling with his latest gadget while the women peeled potatoes and simmered soup.  My cousin Corry would bring out the cello he crafted by hand to serenade us with a one-man symphony.  I remember with fondness the memory of Nana Kay, showing me the solid gold globe she wore around her neck, with jewels marking the places she and Papa Vic served as missionaries. I can still see Dad, Papa Vic, Nana Kay, and Dad’s brother Larry sitting in a circle, playing four part harmony on recorders.  Thanksgivings would start with a poem my grandfather wrote, often about us grandkids. Then my grandfather and uncle, both Methodist ministers, would bless our food before we circled the table, each of us expressing our gratitude for turkey, Trudy salad, and the paella Nana Kay only made for special occasions.  After feasting, we would walk around the lake, splintering off so that the kids could chase ducks and geese, while the grown-ups talked about the meaning of life.

Now, these are only memories, and we still mourn all we have lost.  We no longer celebrate in Florida, where I grew up.  Nobody makes paella and the cello concertos have been replaced by duets my sister and her son Zay play on the piano.  Instead of being surrounded by the treasures my grandparents, aunt, and uncle collected on their world travels, we are surrounded by the new art my brother just made, the Lego masterpieces my nephew creates with my brother, and the photographs my sister-in-law shoots. We drink herbal tea from a tiny Japanese pot and sip slowly, while catching up on all that we’ve missed.  Very little has stayed the same, and with this realization comes a bit of sadness. Sometimes I long for certainty, for the assurances that at least some detail of my life will remain steadfast, serving as an anchor to ground the ship of my life.  I long for repetition, guarantees, and promises that there will be no more change, no more disruption, no more painful endings.  I know that the only thing certain is life is change and that any sense of certainty is merely an illusion. I am coming to terms with the fact that we can’t control our lives, and that we must simply surrender them to God, trusting that change- even painful change- is merely a part of the path we’re meant to travel to become the people we’re supposed to become.

When I realize that change is inevitable, I realize, thinking about it now, that I can hang my hat on one family truth, one anchor that roots me in place and serves as the backdrop for everything else that happens in my life. It is- very simply- love.  I can guarantee that, no matter how much I screw up or how much of an absentee family member I may be, every single person at this family table will welcome me with open arms- no matter what. I know every person here knows that this love is reciprocated, that I would anything for anyone here. Together, we weave this tapestry of love like a woven basket that creates the vessel where I can always go to recharge.  From within this vessel of love and safety, I receive love, tend my wounds, gather strength, and open my heart to offer love to my family, my friends, my patients, and all you Pinkies.

Although you may not be part of the Rankin family, this basket of love is here for anyone who needs it. Interwoven in the fibers of this basket are healers and those in need of healing. I envision this basket as being so big that one person lying in it would be dwarfed by the enormity of it. It’s like a world-sized bowl of love, where anyone can climb in the center to cry and curl into a fetal position. You can also do a jig, spin in circles, and throw your arms up to heaven. When you do so, I see this bright beam of light shining down from the Universe, filling you with light and love from the Heavens. It’s almost as if, by gathering together in the name of love, we create a satellite that helps us channel the gifts from the Universe, aiming them like a laser beam at whoever needs to receive.  Because we all weave our own love, gifts, and strength into this vessel, where it is blessed, this basket of love is big enough for all of us.

Today, on this Thanksgiving day, I invite you to weave your way into the basket or climb into the center of it if you wish.  Just like my family holds me, safe and unchanging, we will hold you. If you’re wanting to give back, help us hold someone else in need. Open your heart as big as you possibly can and let love flow.  If you’re home with your family, offer the same to them.  Imagine a beam of light radiating out from your heart, connecting directly to beams of light shining out of their hearts. Put aside grievances, let go of expectations, and meet each other heart to heart, from a place of gratitude.  If you find it hard to do this, pray for guidance, pray for love.

In the spirit of Thanksgiving, we invited you Pinkies to go around the circle with us at Owning Pink Central to help us express our gratitude. We at Owning Pink didn’t need to do much soul-searching this year to come up with things for which we are grateful. It’s right here – it’s all of you. This year, we found each other. Within the space of just a few months, a group of friends has amassed who offer one another unconditional love, deep connection, and profound support. We’ve found a home in which we can be ourselves, and to which we can bring everything we have – our fears, our pain, our imperfections, and our joy. We know we’ll be greeted at the door with love. We know someone will have words of wisdom for us. We know that we will be held and heard.

And the coolest part? YOU’VE done this Pinkies! You’ve brought this community to vibrant, pulsing life. This Thanksgiving we celebrate the community we have built together, the golden vessel of love we have co-created. As we gather around the Pink Thanksgiving table, we’ve invited each of you to offer a blessing before we dig into our dreams and the rest of our mojo-filled lives.

Here’s what you Pinkies had to say.

Dearest Universe, thank you for blessing my life with so many enlightened souls. Thank you for providing me with clarity during times of extreme fog and true faith in midst of chaos. – Megan

I am thankful for every gift, blessing or piece of “bad luck” that has come my way all because it has gotten me to where I am today, comfortable in my own skin. – Donna

I am thankful for my spiritual connection to the Creator! – Jennifer

I am grateful that my eyes have finally opened to the beauty and miracles in my life, and the understanding that there’s no need to look any further than the here and now. – Joy

I’m grateful for inspiration… and the energy to follow it – Suzanne

Being able to offer Watsu to my community, state and world! My life is blessed as I “go to my office”: a warm saline pool where I float people and receive as much as I give. -Watsunami Keo

i am grateful for this beautiful planet, and our chance to make a better job of looking after it. – jane

I am brimming with gratitude for the bravery, strength and love pinkies show each other and the world as they refuse to shrink from the truths living within them, sharing them unabashedly in conversations that form a virtual circle of compassion ringing the world. – Dana

I’m thankful for the love, wisdom, and talents of friends and family; for new ways of learning and connecting; and for the opportunities that each day brings. – Cathy

I am most grateful for the way in which The Universe has stepped into my life in such a profound way, opened my eyes to see what IS instead of what isn’t, and offered me opportunities to share my experiences with the world.  It has been the most humbling, fulfilling, exciting, and sometimes scare journey of my life … but most of all it has brought me more JOY than I could have ever imagined possible.  God can dream dreams far bigger than we could ever have dreamt for ourselves.  The biggest lesson I have learned from it all is to never to under estimate the power we each have within us if we choose to acknowledge it, accept it, and use it to make the world a better place. – Kim

I am grateful for the love that surrounds me in my family, friends, and my clients who I am so honored to work with – I am grateful for the desire to make a difference that so many of us feel and our willingness to get moving and do what is ours to do. – Karen

I am most grateful for the healing I have experience in my lifetime, my children and family, and my clients. – Rio

As you can see, Pinkies, the breadth of our lives, our experiences, and our gratitudes is vast. But we are all tied together … one Pinkie after the next, hand-in-hand and heart-in-heart, forming a strong, safe, bridge of dreams.

We bow in thanks to JABA and the Universe for blessing us with each bright, shining soul in this community, each healer, each vulnerable, vibrant goddess, each beautiful, generous, Pink spark of a person.

Enjoy the day, nurture yourself, own your wholeness, and remember that we love you.

Blessings and love,

Lissa & Joy

Mojo Monday Exercise: Ask For Help When You Need It

Monday, October 26th, 2009

helpinghand

Lean on me, when you’re not strong
And I’ll be your friend
I’ll help you carry on
For it won’t be long
‘Til I’m gonna need
Somebody to lean on

- “Lean on Me,” Music & Lyrics by Bill Withers

Happy Mojo Monday Pinkies! It’s Joy. I’m writing this week’s Mojo Monday post because Lissa asked me to. As you know, she is in the throes of writing a book, running Owning Pink, acting as a mentor and coach to those seeking her wisdom, practicing holistic gynecology at CLEAR Center of Health, getting ready for two solo art exhibitions, and staying connected with her family. Lissa has realized that she cannot keep all these balls in the air alone … so she’s begun to ask for help.

Of course the Pink Posse has rallied around Lissa, doing everything we can to share some of the load so that this exceptional community continues to thrive, while she continues to grow in ways that she needs to in order to be of service in the world. Her requests for help – few and quiet though they still are – are met with joy, action, and even gratitude. Why wouldn’t they be?

And yet so many of us are hesitant to ask for what we need. Sure, when we are clear with the Universe it often gives us what we want; however, often we forget that “the Universe” is not the intangible ether, but includes everything around us – even people. So often miracles in our lives are delivered by way of the gesture of another. In a way, then, isn’t making a request of someone else the same as making a request of the Universe? Why would we hesitate?

But we do. I think the subconscious driver of my own inability to ask is a fear of putting someone out, or being a burden. Asking would also make me more seen in the world, which, if you read about my intuitive reading with Caroline, has never been my strong suit. Energetically I prefer to remain hidden. But that’s just me – there are a jillion reasons why we don’t ask: pride; self-reliance; feelings of failure for not being able to do something alone; alienation from others; fear of rejection; and so on.

Think about a time someone came to you with a sincere plea for help – a friend seeking help with a move; a neighbor who asks you to watch her kids because the babysitter cancelled last minute; a desperate stranger needing to borrow your cell phone to call for a ride. Put yourself back in that place … what was the feeling you had upon hearing the request? I’d be surprised if you said “exasperation,” “annoyance,” or “resentment.” Why? Because doing things for others is a reflection of our essential being – the part of us that is pure loving kindness. It feels right to help because helping comes from the highest part of ourselves. When you ask for something, you are actually giving someone the opportunity to own Who They Really Are, as well as strengthening the connection between you on both a physical and spiritual level.

So Pinkies, on this Mojo Monday, let’s take the Pink Doctor of Mojo’s example and start sharing our loads with the people in our lives. It might go a little something like this:

  1. Look at your to-do list for today, this week, this year. If you don’t have a to-do list, write out a list of things you hope to accomplish. It can be as specific as painting your toenails and buying cat food, or as general as a bucket list for your whole life.
  2. Note the items on your list for which you might seek support or help. Sure, technically you could paint your bedroom alone, but inviting your sister to help would cut the time in half and be a lot more fun. Maybe a to-do item is booking an airport shuttle. Why not ask a friend for a ride instead? Perhaps you need to buy a ladder so that you can change the bulb in the hallway light, but doesn’t your neighbor have a ladder you could borrow?
  3. Now ask. I know, this is the scary part, at least for me. All that yada yada about it being fine and cool and welcome is one thing, but then there’s the act of actually voicing your request. If you get stuck, think back to a request you received, and how happy you felt to oblige. And remember, asking for help does not mean you are weak or have failed. On the contrary, you are actually acknowledging the highest and most holy part of the person you are asking.
  4. Be willing to help. Suspend your suspicions, fears, and misnomers about kindness to strangers. Open your mind to homeless people asking for change. Use your intuition before automatically dismissing the person on the side of the road waving down help. Don’t let horror stories override what you know to be true about people. See if opening your mind doesn’t also open the channels of give and take.  More help may even come your way.

So Pinkies, what’s on your list? Any ideas about how your load might be shared? Sure, maybe things aren’t overwhelming, but sharing your load is just like sharing anything else … it just feels better.

I just might have a problem that you’d understand,

Joy

Lissa’s note:

Thank you, Joy, for helping when I need it!  And Pinkies, I do encourage you to recognize that we can’t be Superpeople. You may be able to do it all in a lifetime, but you have to take turns giving something up on a day to day basis.  You simply can’t do it all every day.

On that note, I’ve asked Megan Harner, our Lovemuffin Extraordinaire, to help me out on Twitter. With over 22,000 followers, I just can’t quite keep up with responding personally to every Pinkie, something I’ve tried hard to do. I want you all to know that you are heard, honored and acknowledged.  So while I will be reading every tweet, Megan will be tweeting for me from time to time. When it’s her, she’ll use (mh) at the end, so you can tell if it’s her or me.  Thank you for understanding. I feel fully supported by all of you and am so grateful for all your love as I navigate this new path.

I encourage you to follow Joy’s advice, Pinkies. When people ask me how I am able to accomplish what I do, I say, “I have good helpers.” My husband, Joy, Megan, the Mojo Mentors, my mother, and our team of Owning Pink volunteers are all instrumental in keeping my life running. Deep bow to you all. I love you!

Gratefully receiving help,

Lissa