Category: Mindset

  • Learning to Die Well

    Embracing Endings, Change, and the Sacred Art of Becoming

    How Humans Relate to Death

    Most of us have been taught to fear death long before we ever face it. Not just the death of the body, but the quieter kinds too. The death of who we used to be, the version of Life we have imagined, the relationships that no longer fit. And yet, instead of honoring these endings, we cling. We call it loyalty, responsibility, stability.. but really, its fear.

    We don’t fear death because it ends something, we fear death because it asks us to surrender control.

    Somewhere along the way, we made death the enemy. We turned it into something cold and tragic instead of sacred and transformative. We built a world that celebrates birth, success, and new beginnings, but rarely teaches us how to sit inside an ending with reverence. We hide death in hospital rooms, behind closed doors, in unspoken conversations and silent grief. The same way we avoid physical death, we avoid change. We avoid the kind of choices that would require a part of us to die. The job we’ve outgrown, the relationship that no longer feels like home.

    Whether we invite it in or not, death is already present in our lives. In every season. In every leaf. In every breath, where we are asked to exhale before we can inhale again.

    “There is no ending… Only change of form. Change of illusion.” – The Law of One, Ra.

    What if death isn’t something that happens at the end of life? What if it’s happening every time we choose honesty over pretending, truth over comfort, spirit over ego?

    This is why we fear it. Because some part of us knows. Every time we choose to grow, something must be left behind. And were not just grieving what were losing, were grieving who we were inside it.

    Death Isn’t Just the Final Breath

    Death is not a moment. It’s a pattern. A rhythm. A law that life is built up on.

    We’ve been conditioned to see death only as the closing of physical life, something far away, something that happens to other people, sometime later. But if we slow down and actually look. death is happening all the time, everywhere, and within us.

    There’s the death of childhood selves we’ll never meet again. The death of beliefs we no longer cling to. The death of relationships that ended quietly long before they were spoken about.

    Every time we say, “I can’t be this person anymore,” some part of us dies. And every time we breathe into a new truth, a rebirth begins. Without death we cannot have rebirth.

    Nature has always understood this. Trees don’t cling to leaves that have turned brittle. Flowers don’t apologize for wilting when their season is complete. The tide doesn’t negotiate with the sand. It withdraws, so it may return again.

    But humans? We hold. We delay the funeral of our past selves. We’d rather stay inside a familiar suffering than step into the unknown of an unlived life.

    Not because we don’t know how to change. But because no one ever taught us how to let things die.

    And yet, the version of you reading this is proof that you have already died many times, silently, courageously, without a ceremony. You are here because someone you used to be is no longer.

    Maybe death isn’t a single moment at the end. Maybe it is the sacred space between who we were and who we are becoming.

    Why Humans Resist Change

    If death is woven into every part of life, why do we resist it so fiercely?

    Because on some level – conscious or not – change feels like dying. Not the kind that stops a heartbeat, but the kind that dissolves identity.

    We aren’t only afraid of losing what we have, were afraid of losing who we are.

    The ego is built to protect us, to preserve what is known. It whispers, “Stay here. At least you know the rules. At least here you know who you are.” Even when “here” is painful. Even when “here” is a life lived on mute.

    So instead of ending things, we linger. We stay in jobs that drain the color from our days. We hold on to relationships that feel like shrinking. We keep wearing versions of ourselves that no longer fit.

    Not because it’s right, because it’s known.

    Resistance is not protection, it’s a cage made of our own fear.

    We tell ourselves were staying safe, but what we’re really doing is slowly abandoning the life that is trying to be born through us.

    This is why death, real, symbolic, internal, is sacred. Not because it’s easy. Not because it doesn’t hurt. But because it frees us to live without being half-alive.

    Grief is not the enemy of transformation. Avoidance is.

    Death as a Sacred Portal

    If we could see death the way the soul sees it, we would no longer call it an ending. We would call it a doorway.

    From the lens of the Law of One, nothing truly dies. Energy cannot be destroyed – only transformed. Life moves in spirals, not straight lines. We shift form, identity, body, and vibration. But at the core, we remain.

    Physical death is only one expression of this truth.

    “The catalyst of experience is designed to offer the death of that which is no longer needed. In surrendering, the entity steps into a more light-filled configuration of being.” -Ra

    This is death as alchemy. And when we allow these inner-deaths to happen consciously, when we meet them instead of resisting, something shifts.

    Death becomes holy. Grief becomes a teacher. Endings become thresholds.

    Hermetic teachings echo the same truth: “Nothing rests; everything moves; everything vibrates.” – The Kybalion

    Meaning: stagnation is the illusion. Movement is the reality. Death is movement. Change is movement.

    To fear death, in any form, is to fear our own becoming.

    The Art of Dying Before You Die

    Across ancient traditions, mystics and seekers were taught one thing before all else: Learn how to Die while you’re still alive.

    Not physically. But to let the false self – the ego, the stories, the attachments – dissolve before the final breath ever comes.

    Because those who have learned to die well…are the ones who truly learn how to live.

    This wisdom echoes through centuries:

    “Die before you die. There is no chance after.” – Rumi

    To Die before you die is:

    • Letting the performance fall away.
    • Letting the old self go without needing to hate it first.
    • Grieving what once was while choosing what now wants to be born.

    It doesn’t always come with ceremonies. Sometimes it looks like:

    • Finally telling the truth.
    • Leaving the life you built when you didn’t know yourself yet.
    • No longer abandoning yourself to be loved.

    It’s not glamorous. It’s not always peaceful. It often feels like heartbreak, emptiness, or standing in a field with no map.

    The Celts understood this, too. To them, death was not a punishment. It was a passage.

    “Every falling leaf returns to the soil to feed the roots of what will bloom.”

    So what if we, too, practiced endings with reverence? What if we learned to sit at the bedside of our old selves, not with shame, but with gratitude?

    The art of dying before you die is not morbid, it’s not bleak. It is the most courageous devotion to life.

    To release.

    To trust.

    To begin again.

    Rituals and Practices for Sacred Endings

    If death and rebirth are part of being human, then we need to learn not just how to survive them, but how to honor them.

    Ritual doesn’t have to be dramatic or mystical. It is simply a way of saying, “Something has ended. Something new is beginning. I choose to witness it.” It gives the soul a language the mind can understand.

    Here are gentle ways to practice dying, and beginning, with intention:

    • Name what is dying. Bring it into the truth. Whisper it, write it, cry it.
    • Write an obituary for your old self. Write about who you were, what they carried, how they kept you safe. Then release them. You can burn it, bury it, rip it up.
    • Fire- The Alchemy of Release. Write down the beliefs, narratives, or habits you are ready to let go of. Burn them in a fire safe bowl or bonfire. As the smoke rises, choose to breathe deeper instead of holding on.
    • Earth Ritual-Burial and Becoming. Bury something that symbolizes your old self. A letter, a piece of jewelry, a dried flower from a past chapter. Let the soil transform it, like leaves to roots.
    • Breath as a Practice of Dying and Rebirth. Every exhale is a tiny death. Every inhale is a rebirth. Try this: Breathe in – I receive life. Breathe out – I let go of what is gone. This is the smallest, simplest ritual and the most constant one.
    • Grieve Without Rushing to “Move on.” Let grief exist without stuffing it into productivity or timelines. Grief is proof that something mattered. Let it wash over you like a tide, not to drown you, but to make space for something new.

    Ritual doesn’t force change. It simply says: I’m willing. I’m listening. i’m not running from the end anymore.

    Living Fully Only Comes After You’ve Died a Little

    There is a strange kind of freedom that only comes after something has died.

    Not the freedom of running away, but the freedom of no longer pretending. Of no longer forcing yourself into a life, a role, a version of you that your soul quietly outgrew.

    When you allow part of yourself to die – a role, a story, an expectation – you make space for something wilder, truer, softer to take root.

    This is the part of death we don’t talk about: the aliveness that follows.

    Because when you’ve sat with endings, when you’ve been brave enough to let go of the version of you that was built for survival, you love differently. You choose differently. You stop wasting time on half-hearted living.

    When you no longer fear the loss of a life you don’t belong to anymore, that’s when you start belonging to yourself.

    Suddenly:

    • You say “no” without guilt.
    • You say “yes” without fear.
    • You love people because you want to, not because you’re afraid to lose them.
    • You live with a steady kind of courage, because you’ve already met death in small ways and survived.

    We only begin to live fully when we stop living life safely.

    Because death – in all its forms – is not here to take life from us. It’s here to give it back.

  • Empower Your Mind: The Power of Affirmations

    Sometimes the Mind Forgets What the Soul Knows

    That’s really all affirmations are, simple reminders of truth.When life gets heavy, when old patterns show up, when fear tries to run the show- affirmations help you remember.

    They aren’t about forcing yourself to believe something fake. They’re about bringing your mind back into alignment with what’s already true underneath all of the noise.

    Why Affirmations Work

    Your mind is constantly recording what it hears, even if you’re not aware of it. The more a thought repeats, the more your brain wires itself around it. That’s how patterns get built- both helpful ones, and unhelpful ones.

    Affirmations are a way of consciously choosing what you’re repeating. You’re offering your mind new material, thoughts that are rooted in your power, not your fear.

    The brain doesn’t care whether a thought is empowering or disempowering. It just builds around whatever it’s given. Affirmations give you a way to hand your mind something empowering to build around.

    How to Use Affirmations

    • Say them out loud — hearing your own voice speak truth is powerful.
    • Write them down — let your hand move the energy onto paper.
    • Put them where you’ll see them daily — mirrors, phone backgrounds, sticky notes.
    • Use them when doubt shows up — that’s when they’re most needed.
    • Breathe them in like little prayers — not rushed, but felt.

    And most importantly:

    Consistency > Perfection.

    You don’t have to “feel it” every time. You don’t have to get it “right.”You just have to keep giving your mind new material to work with.

    And before you know it, you’re faced with a situation that once would have brought you to your knees, but now, you’re fully equipped to handle any emotion that comes your way.

    I remember the first time I noticeably changed the direction of my thinking, ironically after spilling an entire gallon of milk on the kitchen floor (don’t cry over spilled milk) I decided to laugh at the situation instead of let it alter the course of my day and mindset. I felt empowered and gained so much confidence in myself at that moment.

    It takes twenty one days to form a habit. If you choose to change any habit, I encourage you to start here. Because once you can change your mindset, you can change anything.

    A Few to Work With

    Here are some simple ones to try:

    I am enough — right now, exactly as I am.

    I am safe.

    I am worthy of joy.

    I am becoming who I came here to be.

    I am supported in every moment.

    Final Reminder

    You’re not making something true.

    You’re reminding yourself what’s been true all along.

    Here are a few of my favorite Affirmation tools I use daily:

  • Transforming Scarcity Mindset into Abundance

    One Thought at a Time

    Lately, I’ve found myself revisiting the same lesson again and again. How deeply I have been conditioned to expect the worst, to brace for struggle, to subconsciously believe that I have to earn my right to be okay.

    It doesn’t always scream at me.

    I’ll be halfway through the day and realize I’ve been running on autopilot- not entirely present, just going through the motions. I’ll think of a list of things I have to take care of, and instead of starting a task, I shut down.

    That’s the voice of lack too. For a long time, I didn’t recognize it. I thought that was just how I was wired.

    But the more I peel back the layers, the more I see that this is a freeze response, one I learned early on.

    From moments when I felt unsupported, when asking for help I didn’t feel safe, when emotions were too big for the room I was in. So my system coped by going quiet. By checking out.And even now, as an adult trying to rewire it all, my body sometimes still thinks it has to protect me that way.

    But I’m learning to meet those moments with compassion, not judgment.

    To say: You don’t have to disappear to be safe. You don’t have to be invisible to be loved. You’re allowed to take up space, even in stillness.

    And when I can remember that — even for a breath — I start to come back online.

    Not in a big, dramatic way. But in small, sacred ways that remind me:

    Abundance isn’t something I chase. It’s something I allow.

    The Power of “Catching It”

    It happens in fleeting moments. I’ll catch myself mid-thought, mid-worry, and pause. I don’t always feel better right away, but that pause is sacred. That’s when I reach for my reminders:

    “Everything always works out for me.”

    “I am supported. I am safe. I am provided for.”

    “I don’t have to hold it all. I can be held.”

    These words aren’t about pretending. They’re about remembering — if even for a breath — that abundance is already within me. Sometimes that’s all it takes to feel a soft shift, a glimmer of peace, like my nervous system just unclenched a little.

    And to me, that glimmer is everything.

    Rooting Down to Rise Up

    As I do this work, I’ve been drawn to my root chakra more than ever. It makes sense, the root is all about safety, trust, and the right to exist in peace. For most of my life, that’s felt like something I had to prove or earn. But I’m realizing now… I don’t.

    Balancing this energy isn’t about being perfect. It’s about presence.

    I’m learning to feel into my body more. Noticing where the tension lives, slowing down my breath, stepping barefoot into the grass when I can. These small acts help rewire the story that I’m alone or unsupported.

    Because I’m not. And neither are you.

    I’m Not “Fixing” Myself — I’m Loving Myself

    Maybe that’s the biggest shift of all.

    For so long, I thought healing meant removing the fear. That if I still had doubt, or stress, or scarcity pop up, I must not be doing it right.

    But now I see that healing isn’t about elimination.

    It’s about relationship. With myself. With my thoughts. With the parts of me that still get scared sometimes.

    I’m not trying to force myself into fake positivity. I’m not slapping affirmations over wounds I haven’t acknowledged.

    I’m learning to listen — gently. To notice when my inner child is afraid and offer her safety, not shame.

    To slow down just enough to whisper:

    “I see you. You’re allowed to feel this. And you’re still safe. You’re still loved.”

    Lack still visits me sometimes, but I don’t build a home for it anymore.

    I don’t feed it. I don’t let it drive.

    Instead, I light a candle for truth. I breathe deeper. I come back to presence. I affirm again, not to fix myself, but to love myself back into remembrance.

    And honestly? That’s the most abundant thing I’ve ever done.

    For You, If You’re Walking This Too

    If you’re doing this work, rewiring your beliefs, learning to trust the unknown, remembering that you’re worthy just by being alive — I want you to know something:

    You’re doing beautifully. Even if it feels messy.

    Even if you have to remind yourself a hundred times a day.

    Even if abundance feels far away.

    It’s closer than you think.

    It lives in the breath you’re taking right now.

    It lives in your willingness to keep showing up.

    A Few of My Favorite Daily Reminders:

    • Everything always works out for me.
    • I am safe to rest.
    • I am always supported and provided for.
    • I am rooted. I am rising.
    • I am already enough.
    • I trust the unfolding.