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Two Years Later

My feet on a mossy bridge, by Grace KerinaI started creating this website within days of being laid off from a job I loved, in May of 2008. I’d been thinking of the website for a while and suddenly, unexpectedly, I had lots of free time to bring it to life, as I processed the lay-off and considered what to do next for income.

I’d never built a website before. The many days and weeks of floundering around as I researched, experimented, made mistakes, and crept forward occupied me and gave me a mission that filled the void where my job had been.

Over time, as the website went live and I shifted my focus to writing posts and e-books, I began to make contact with people who I connected with easily. They became my new colleagues.

Slowly, very slowly – often too slowly – the connections I made and the multitude of experiments I conducted using the website as a base began to steer my course. The website took on the role of mirror and path, showing me myself and showing me the way forward.

Bit by bit, I learned how to focus who I am and what I want for myself into services and products others value enough to pay for. Since the lay-off, I’ve been unwilling to put all my eggs in one basket again, preferring an income composed of lots of diverse sources, which feels more stable and within my control. This has taken longer to create, for me, than simply finding another job, and has had its rough patches – long ones, sometimes.

My reflection in a puddle, by Grace KerinaOver the past two years, I’ve done more than revive my income. I’ve come home, thanks to following the trail of Highly Sensitive Power. The spreadsheet where I track my income shows 16 different sources of income now. My colleagues have become my friends. And my path unwinds before me more clearly than ever.

Thank you for helping me. Your presence alone gave me fuel when I was stuck and stranded and needed power. Your emails and comments, the phone conversations we’ve had, the look in your eyes when we’ve met, and the connections we’ve made helped me see myself and love myself. I adore you.

What’s next? My current growth spurt has me grappling (for the first time in two years) with issues like having to choose between things I love because there’s only so much time in a day. If I love everything I’m doing, how do I choose which ones not to do, in order to sleep and stay balanced? Well, I’m figuring that out, in a floundering + learning sort of way.

In the process, I may not post articles here as often or as regularly as I have been, but I am still here, still curious, still creating, and still adoring you. Stay tuned.

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If you or someone you know is interested is writing a guest post for Highly Sensitive Power, or if you consider yourself successfully sensitive, I invite you to check out the guidelines below and send me your creation, which I’ll consider for publication on Highly Sensitive Power. See the About page for my email address.

Guest Posts – About 400 words on the topic of Highly Sensitive Power (the website’s tagline, “empowering sensitivity through curiosity, creativity, and community” and the many posts in the blog give you an idea of the broad scope of interpretation possible); not previously published anywhere else. Feel free to run possible topics by me before you write.

Successfully Sensitive – Answer the following questions, in this order: In what way are you most successfully sensitive? What or who has inspired you to embrace your sensitivity? What are your eternal fascinations? What quest currently captivates you? What is your favourite kind of support to give? Aim for succinct answers to the questions, rather than long ones. Include a 100-word-max bio (including a link or two to you, if you want) and a photo.

Related reading: Successfully Sensitive | Samantha Reynolds, Avoid the Rush – Finish Last

Photos by Grace

4 Comments

  1. Denise wrote:

    Grace, I truly relate to your words. building a website is such an exercise in self discovery – so glad you have been there with me this past year. As we find our way through these challenging times, (cosmic and earthly) the things that matter seem to surface just in time – like friends and teachers like you Grace.

    Wednesday, May 5, 2010 at 8:27 am | Permalink
  2. Your comment made me heave a great, prolonged sigh, Denise. Thanks for understanding. I feel the same way — as long as I can link arms with great people (like you), I can weather a lot and be more at peace.

    Wednesday, May 5, 2010 at 11:43 am | Permalink
  3. jo wrote:

    I’ve read this a few times now and each time, a tear comes to my eye. That such greatness has been born, nutured and grown in just two years is beyond amazing: this IS the work you were meant to be doing and it is no exaggeration for me to say my life would be less without you and this blog in it.

    Friday, May 7, 2010 at 8:54 am | Permalink
  4. Thank you, Jo. This website and blog have helped me immensely, too.

    My husband is full of translations of German sayings (the most alarming of which, I’ll take this aside to tell you, is what one says in German when you have a “gut feeling” about something: “I feel it in the urine.” Well, learn a culture’s languagle, learn a culture). One of his saying is “Do what you cannot not do.” That’s the way this project has felt — I couldn’t NOT do it.

    And I’m not done yet — just taking a breather while I sort some other things out. Thanks for checking in.

    Monday, May 17, 2010 at 2:52 pm | Permalink