LANDSCAPE OF MOTHERS
  • Home
  • My Philosophy
  • The Book
  • Mentoring Services
    • Meeting You Where You Are
    • Rooted Mothering
    • Day Retreat
  • Resources
  • Blog

What do i want?

5/20/2022

0 Comments

 
It looks so simple. Four short words, I understand them all, and yet, it feels so familiar to be uncertain in the face of this question.

To want is powerful. So it behooves us to know what we want.

Wants are impulses. They can be momentary, frivolous, wants can morph into longing, and they can be a compass to our life purpose. They can also be driven by the teachings of our society, parents, religion, and education, such that what others want us to do overrides our connection with what we want.

Impulses are signals from the nervous system and can originate from one of three places: the internal guidance system (also known as our intuition, following our hearts, or body wisdom), instinct (a somatic response to a stimulus), or learned patterns of avoidance (moving away from something we’ve been taught is dangerous - also known as internalized systems).

Internal guidance system impulses are the ones we are often looking to follow when we are searching for our own way. They are the pull to do the thing from our congruence, and from befriending our will. They are the things that are “correct” for us, even if they’re difficult or require us to travel through the unknown.

Instincts are a somatic response to a stimulus. They bypass the conscious brain and create an impulse to pick up our foot when we step on legos, or to swerve when the car in front of us suddenly stops.

Learned patterns of avoidance are internalized responses to stimuli based on “how the world works.” This can be wildly different for different folks, but gets at our internalized (but learned) rules about what we are “allowed” to be like. This is where we can say “I followed my heart” but really mean “I operated according to the rules that said I shouldn’t disappoint someone else.” The bottom line is that learned patterns of avoidance are not always wrong, but they can be.

The learned patterns of avoidance that are incorrect undermine our ability to trust our internal guidance system because the impulses it creates can often feel similar. One of our tasks in deepening our self-understanding and finding our congruence is to learn to tell one from the other.

This is an experiential task. One that we do through paying attention, through befriending ourselves, through learning how to recognize our congruence (or lack thereof). It is something we spend our whole lives doing.
​

​The Mothers that help me when I'm looking for my congruence, to know what I want, are Wind Mother, Island Mother, and Mountain Mother. The three of them provide the skills and hold me in the tasks of unhooking from those learned responses, noticing what is arising in me, and befriending my own will. They are available to you too, should you want to call on them.

0 Comments



Leave a Reply.

    Author: Jill Clifton

    Hi, I'm Jill, creator of Landscape of Mothers. I'm here to talk about breaking family patterns of harm so that we can parent our children in ways that support them becoming fully themselves. I'm happy to have you here!

    Archives

    May 2025
    April 2025
    January 2025
    July 2024
    June 2024
    May 2024
    April 2024
    March 2024
    July 2023
    May 2022
    August 2021
    April 2021
    March 2021
    January 2021
    September 2020
    November 2019
    October 2019
    September 2019
    September 2018

    Categories

    All
    Archetypes
    Body Based Practice
    Congruence
    Cultivating The Mother
    Forest Mother
    Innate Pace
    Landscape Of Mothers
    Mother Journey
    Natural World Parenting
    Nature Practice
    Ocean Mother
    Parenting Practice
    Spiritual Practice
    Sun And Moon Mother
    The Desert Mother
    Wholeness
    Wind Mother

    RSS Feed

Proudly powered by Weebly
  • Home
  • My Philosophy
  • The Book
  • Mentoring Services
    • Meeting You Where You Are
    • Rooted Mothering
    • Day Retreat
  • Resources
  • Blog