Reconstruction From The Inner To Outer

Shared my insight on why no one will have the answers we seek, in ways we do and embody.

_

There's no "one size fits all" in how to do and be in life. We've adapted these concepts that to be successful, we "have" and "should" do it in a particular way or else we fail in life. We, humans, do this thing when we don't know what to do, we tend to look around at what everyone else is doing, to create formality and a sense of comfort. So it doesn't feel like we're missing out on anything.

It's like when we're in that space of discomfort of the unknown we want to escape it. We want to hide from it. We want to avoid it at all costs. It's not something we intentionally do, again we've adapted certain concepts and programming that teach us that being in the unknown means unsafety. The funny thing about this concept is the future has always been in the unknown, it's something that's not set in stone; meaning each day we have an opportunity to create what we desire from our inner to our external world.

Many of us have been so distracted and focused on coping and surviving that we haven't had the opportunity to connect to ourselves. In ways that strip the parts of us that no longer align and never aligned to our authenticity; the parts we absorbed and embodied so the world will accept and loves us in ways we're desiring and meet our needs. Creating a blueprint that tells us being ourselves is not good enough, instead, we must create a mask that pleases the world, rather than pleasing our hearts.

That's why we move the way we do. That's why we choose self-abandonment over our hearts' truths. That's why we feel guilty for standing up for what's in alignment with our hearts. That's why it's so challenging to listen to our inner calling, intuition and truths because we've been taught, from generation to generation, that it's wrong to do so. Even worst we get exiled from our community. Being alienated in a world where it's all about connections and coming together i.e. embodiment/integration.

I believe we're moving towards newer times. That many of us are tired and awakening to the concept that we're in systems that were created to keep us slaved in spaces that do not align with our heart's truth. Spaces that drain us and dim our light down, serve a purpose as a distraction disconnecting us from what we're called to create in this lifetime. Disconnected from living our unique energy signature which is what we embody when we live our hearts' truths i.e. authenticity.

Come to an understanding that no one, let me repeat it in caps NO ONE, in this world is not going to have the same experiences, nor will the process for it will be the same. I believe this is the key concept that assists us in being compassionate and kind to ourselves (and others). We tend to be hard on ourselves because of the expectations we've put on ourselves and absorbed since birth. Coming to understanding and peace that no one is supposed to have the same life as us. No one is believed to have the same experiences.

Truth be told if we were all having the same experiences that would defeat the purpose of Earth. The main reason, why we evolve in the ways we do is through each other. When we trigger one another, when we judge, hate, love, admire, connect, disconnect and our overall interactions! We influence and impact each other in ways that assist us in our evolution when we're choosing to receive it, through our differences and similarity.

We are complex beings that reflect the complexity and multi-dimensional realities we live in. These complexity, similarities, and differences are what make up the reason why we could be standing next to someone and have a completely different reality. Example: Person X, lives in fear and judges themselves heavily whereas Person V, they're living in the present and accept mistakes as lessons.

At the end of the day no other consciousness is experiencing this life for us, but our own. No one gets to experience our inner world the way we do unless we welcome others through vulnerability; sharing our experiences with them. As there's just no blueprint in our external world that'll guide us to create the life that aligns with our hearts' truths; it's within us. It's a matter of building that muscle of self-trust and stripping everything that we were made to believe made us who we are when in reality, it was all a fucking illusion.

Now, ready to be awakened to the power and light that's always lived within. The power and light that’ll guide us to creating experiences aligned with our hearts' truth, committing to the evolution of our consciousness and creating why we came here in the first place.

Remember our life is not supposed to make sense, especially if we're following our heart's truths. Now, it's going to look like madness to anyone who doesn't have access to its methods.

Take what resonates, like always

Remember, to be kinder, less critical

Hear Us Out Because Nobody Asked

*** Be mindful reading this piece the topic is about sexual violence.
Hotlines can found at the end of the post for extra support.



Hearing and seeing all the injustice coming forth in the mainstream media can be triggering old wounds that we might not have acknowledged in the past. We believed that we were ‘over it’ because it isn’t replaying in our minds anymore. 

Taken by Merichel Sanchez at the March For Justice in Melbourne (March 2021)

Taken by Merichel Sanchez at the March For Justice in Melbourne (March 2021)

The illusions coming out to the light on what has been happening under the roof of the Parliament House is because women are standing in their power. I don’t know if many people know how much strength and courage it takes to stand up and speak up about sexual violence. It’s not a split-second decision we make as survivours. 

Before speaking up we go into a process of contemplating. We contemplate whether it’s the right thing to do or if anyone will believe us? Questioning our worth, value and our credibility; going back into the questioning whether people will believe us or not? 

It doesn’t matter how long ago the experience has occurred for us, it doesn’t change the fact we deserve justice and healing of it. We deserve to no longer carry the internalized shame and burden because of it. The weight of carrying something that we didn’t ask for nor do we deserve. This weight is not ours to carry in the first place. - 


I’ve been contemplating on which angle I should go with this piece. I kept going back and forth with the healing aspect of it and the system we live in. Two possible way of going about it, although it didn’t sit right with me. 

I want to highlight and give light to how hard it is to stand up and speak up. Putting our hands up and saying ‘hey, that happened to me too’, is scary and all these thoughts of being judged or shame pops up. Where we create assumptions and predictions on how others will react to us if we openly say ‘I was sexually assaulted/abused. - 

Healing this part of our past can be challenging and uncomfortable, it’s not easy to face something we have been running away from all these years. It’s difficult for survivors to speak up, especially if it occurred years ago. One thought that comes up is ‘shouldn’t (we) be over it by now? It happened so long ago.” - This is just one example of how we internalised shame as survivors.

I can openly say I am a survivor of sexual abuse. That my past hasn’t been all love and light. - I didn’t experience a traditional upbringing where I was able to explore my body or sexuality during my adolescence, or through the phases of ‘innocent flirting’ when dating my first boyfriend. - I had a distorted view of what love, sex and romantic relationships looked like. 

The person I am today isn’t because of what happened in my past, it’s because I overcame it. I went on the path of healing and faced what I was running away from all these years. I know it’s not easy or comfortable to face this aspect of our past, as survivors.

I can sincerely say that I've had my battles with going forth with life and I was put in a position to give up my future. Those aspects of my experiences (corny as it might sound) create this knowing that if I can get through that shit and still see the light at the end of the tunnel, I can get through anything. 

This type of mentality is what we receive when we don’t make our abuse the key focus of how strong we are. Because that didn’t make us strong, it broke us. What makes us strong is constantly getting up and pushing through our day even though it’s easier to give up and fall victim to our past. 

I’m not perfect, I’ve fallen victim to my past before going on the path of healing. I was receptive to escaping through anything I could use. Whether it was drugs, people, activities, I was more open to escaping rather than facing my demons and shadows.

That’s why I know it’s not easy to face this part of our self. It comes with its challenges and hurdles, to face such impactful experiences; an experience we didn’t ask for nor deserve. 

That’s the thing though, NOBODY ASKED. 

Taken by Merichel Sanchez at the March For Justice in Melbourne (March 2021)

Taken by Merichel Sanchez at the March For Justice in Melbourne (March 2021)

Nobody asked us for consent, we didn’t ask to be violated, we didn’t ask for this horrendous act to be played on us. NOBODY asked and that’s the issue. Consent can not be found in any sexual violence, because nobody asked. - 


When we have survivours coming forth and sharing their stories. A story they’ve held onto, a story that’s created internalised shame and self-hatred, we shut the fuck up and listen. It’s uncommon for people to make this shit up. 

So when we have people around us being open and vulnerable about their own experiences, be mindful of how hard it is to say it out loud in front of a group of people, let alone the entire fucking county. 

Just Be Kinder, Less Critical.




A list of hotlines if you are struggling and need to speak to someone in Australia: 

1800RESPECT (National Hotline): 1800 737 732

Sexual Assault Crisis Line (VIC): 1800 806 282

Lifeline (24-Hour Crisis Line): 131114

Sexual Assault Counselling Australia: 1800 211 028

LGBTQ+ Violence Services: 1800 497 212 



A SIGN

Seeking therapy is not a sign of weakness but rather a sign of bettering ourselves.

unsplash-image--_tdBGOxZzc.jpg

We live in a society that has conditioned us to think that vulnerability and seeking help is a sign of weakness. When in a reality having to put our hands up and say we are not doing well and need help, takes courage. 


Seeking therapy is NOT A SIGN of weakness. It’s A SIGN of improvement. 

Therapy is a space to let out what is occurring within us. It’s a space to learn tools, strategies and receive insight that will assist us in our day to day life; bettering our relationship with ourselves and others.

Therapy is NOT a sign of weakness or the idea of being broken. 

Therapy is a way of bettering ourselves.

A way of becoming familiar with what is occurring in our mind. How to stop and reconstruct our self-limiting beliefs and negative thinking patterns, also reconstruct those narratives we tell ourselves that is base on a lack mentality. 

To seek therapy is a courageous thing in our society when it shouldn’t be. 

Seeking help and bettering ourselves should be normalized.


There is nothing wrong or selfish to want to be a better person towards ourselves and others. 
There is nothing wrong with wanting to get to know ourselves and let go of our insecurities, hurt and pain. 

The tools we learn and use on ourselves are the same tools we teach our children and those to come in our bloodline/life. 
The same strategies and foundation we are building for ourselves are the same foundation we are bringing to our future children/bloodline. 

To seek professional help does not only affect and benefit us, it benefits those who are still to come. 

By bettering ourselves (our mind, body and soul) we are creating and setting a solid and secure foundation for ourselves and those who are still to come.

EVERYTHING in life creates a butterfly effect.

unsplash-image-ukzHlkoz1IE.jpg

It’s never easy or comfortable to take the first steps into seeking help, although that discomfort turns into courage once we’ve taken the steps towards the action we fear the most. 

To seek help is a sign of strength and courage. 

To be aware that we need it and we no longer have the desire to live a life in conflict with ourselves, is A SIGN that it’s time. 

Fighting with ourselves is tiring and so exhausting. Having to go into battle with ourselves every day is a war that nobody can see although it takes such a heavy toll on us and those around us. 


To seek help is not a weakness but rather a sign of improvement. 

A sign of bettering our life.

A sign of bettering our self.

A sign of bettering the relationship we have with others. 

To seek professional help is a sign of courage and strength. 

It’s a sign of desiring to live a life aligned to who we truly are outside of our pain, insecurities and hate. --- 

Be Kinder, Less Critical

An Internal Suicide

There is this odd feeling within me about being an immigrant. I don't feel as I belong to either of the countries that I have the privileged in experiencing (the Philippines and Australia).

It's clear with the features and skin colour I have that I am not Australian; although hearing me speak and the slangs I use you'd think I was born here. The funny thing is some people who I've known for the entire time I've lived here, they don't know I'm born in another country. From the top of my head, I have at least 5 experiences where someone has assumed I was born here and when I correct them, they have this wide-eyed shock expression splattered all over their face.

It's not like they are to blame for a misunderstanding that reflects what is going on in my inner world. Growing up, I've carried this internalisation of shame and rejection about my own culture. It's one aspect of myself that I’ve learnt to deny and ignore over the years.

I’ve experienced racisms and microaggression growing up; the thing is it's this unconscious behaviours and beliefs that we have about a particular culture. The stereotypes that films and TV shows portray a certain culture, which creates this idea of it being a reality, when in fact it's far from it. It creates a huge impact on our society and how we view other cultures. When we carry and project out stereotypes and prejudices towards others it creates shame and rejection, whether we are aware of it or not.

Being an immigrant, whether it was the tiniest comment a person made, even if they didn't mean harm, it still had that stain of shame that is underlying racist. As time went on these incidents would happen frequently to the point that instead of feeling embarrassed, I'd laugh it off. It became a habit to absorb rather than calling it out for what it truly was; which is racism.

Even my name was something I didn't embrace. Throughout school, it was mispronounced and I never corrected them. It wasn't because I was lazy, it was the sheer fact of shame I held about my name. Everyone else's name was so easy to pronounce, and mine was the odd one out. That was something I rejected about myself. Any teenager wants to fit in and they don't want to be the odd bird out. So we do what we got to do to fit in.

Although as I move forward to becoming an adult and stepping into the path of self-love, I realised that the shame and rejection I held about myself was something that put me out of an alignment of who I truly was. I didn't embrace being the odd bird out and my uniqueness, which got me to play small and blend in with the crowd.

I laugh and grief for those times I lost being someone who I wasn't, those experiences taught me that being someone else or wearing a mask does not last long. They eventually fall off and then we are required to put on a different mask, which puts us in this cycle of facades and illusions until we burnout and makes a conscious decision that we no longer have the desire to wear a mask.

This lifestyle was so detriment to my mental health and self-esteem. It's what internalisation of shame and rejection does; especially if we hold this towards our culture and aspects of ourselves that we had zero control over choosing. Being born in another country isn't something to be ashamed of.

Shame and rejection are poison and the ingredients for regrets. Living a life that isn't aligned with who we are is the by-product of shame and rejection. When we reject and shame aspects of our authentic self we are separating our self from that particular thing, in this context our own culture. When we reject our own culture, we reject a huge chunk of our identity.

Our culture is something that we don't have to hold dearly, although creating shame and rejection round that, is also denying aspects of our self that have created and made us who we are today. It's not all rainbows and sunshine although; all of our experiences have contributed to who we are today, which includes our culture. – It's never easy, having to adapt to a new country although having to let our self grieve for the life we had and being grateful for the new beginning we have embarked in, is key. Having both of those simultaneously happen within us is normal.

It's okay to feel that odd feeling of not knowing where we belong or which culture we resonate with the most and it is also okay, to sit between two cultures. We aren't obligated to pick just one if we have had the privilege to live in more than one country. Having that experience is a blessing and not everyone gets that experience or chance too.

As we continue to become familiar with our own culture and find our bearing on where we belong and who we are; which (mind you) is constantly changing and evolving as we grow and age.

It is okay and normal for immigrants to embrace and sit with that odd feeling of not knowing which culture we resonate with the most.

Don't feel guilty for not knowing or having the conclusions just yet, for now, we can indulge in both of them at ones freely.

Be Kinder, Less Critical

narcissism and codependency


( DISCLAIMER: I am not a professional expert of narcissism or codependency. I am speaking from my own personal experiences and the ways I have overcome my own traits of narcissism and codependency. )

Art Created by Iuliastration

Art Created by Iuliastration





Those who have a high level of narcissism and codependency traits will usually match up. As the person who has narcissism is seeking a partner who can validate and willing to go along with the illusion they have created. Whereas the co-dependent person will go along because they are seeking acceptance and love. They will tend to abandon parts of themself to feel those certain levels of security. They create this overtaking or over giving dynamic. 

The most common trait both of these types of personality have are they are both deeply insecure and wounded. They either need others or external validation for their worthiness and a sense of acceptance. Rather than seeking it within them and finding it from within. As they live under the illusions and conditioning that their worth and a sense of acceptance are something that can be found outside of themself.

People who are secure within themself, do not need to go out and seek their worth from external things and others. They have a sense of security because they are grounded with who they are and they have cultivated self-love. - 




There is a difference between narcissism and narcissistic. People who suffer from narcissistic personality disorder lack guilt and it's harder for them to recover from that type of personality. Whereas someone who has a high level of narcissism, they usually adopt this from their upbringing. Where the children's material and physical needs were met although their emotional and mental needs were neglected or abandoned. Where the parents would only validate and accept them if they got external achievements such as metals or awards and never acknowledging the internal achievements such as over mental illness. 

This creates conditioning that their worth and sense of acceptance is tied to material and physical possession as well as external achievements. Where this type of conditioning will be followed throughout their lives which then gets passed down throughout generations. That is an example of an intergenerational cycle many of us are on. This also gets the former adult to seek outside of themselves which always puts them in a runner chaser dynamic. Where they feel the need to constantly achieve more than they should because they have attached their self-worth and love to material and external. Which is a sign of a heightened Ego. 

- Someone can have a certain level of narcissism traits, although might not necessarily be diagnosed with a narcissistic personality disorder. 




Codependency is abandoning parts of ourself and seeking out acceptance, love and validation from others. There are many traits that are linked with being codependent, such as people-pleasing, lack of boundaries, low level of esteem or worth and a hard time saying no. 

People who have a level of co-dependency will abandon parts of themselves to be liked or accepted. They fear of being alone which the reason why many of us tend to stay with people who we know are not compatible with us, not just romantically but also friendship wise. It also gets us in positions where we might be at risk because we have trouble of saying no and have a lack of knowledge and practise of putting up boundaries which get easily manipulated and harmed. 

For each individual, it'll be different. Everyone does through different situations in their upbringing. Most of the root cause is from experiencing lack of boundaries as a child or not having set an example of people around us who have a secure sense of self or worth. 

This isn't a time to blame our upbring or our parents. As an adult, we are responsible for our healing and how we cope with our emotions. It does suck when we are not given the right tools to overcome these hurdles. - Although we can choose with our free will to either repressed it or we can reparent ourself. Our parents didn't know any better. If we observe our family dynamics we will see a pattern which has most likely have been past down as parental teaching throughout the bloodline. - This is an opportunity to break cycles within our own bloodlines, so we do not further past it down to our future kins. 
(Deeper depths of the concept of Breaking Generational Cycle: Link)



Both narcissism and codependency are deep-rooted from a lack of security with their self-esteem and worth. - The difference is with a narcissistic person, they can hold up a persona that they are deeply secure and confident although within themself that person is completely the opposite. There are also different types of narcissistic. Not all narcissistic people are confident and want the spotlight on them. Those types of narcissism are very easily spotted in a sense. - There are types where people with a certain level of narcissism will play the victim role. Where they are deeply rooted in the victim mentality and feel as everyone and everything is out to get them. So then they pursue and act out vindictive behaviours and are able to justify them because of the mindset they have. 
Many narcissistic people feel like a victim, although someone will play this role to get what they want in life or a partner that will play and continue their illusions. Again narcissism comes in a spectrum, it will not be the same for everyone. It's about being aware of the signs and red flags. 





That is why it is most likely for someone to be paired up when they have a certain level of co-dependency with someone who also has a level of narcissism. - With the use of spirituality, religion or their past shouldn't bypass the abuse and toxicity people go through in these types of dynamics. When people use their past as a way to bypass their current behaviour that is a form of manipulation and gaslighting. - Nobody has a choice of whatever circumstance had happened in the past. The current partner we do have in the present also did not create those circumstances.

When we have unhealed wounds that are not tended to. We move from a place of those unhealed wounds, whether we realise it or not. - When we become toxic and abusive to those who just want to love us. We can not use our past as our bypassing. - This context is different for each individual. It's using your decrement and common sense to alter this information for each individual reader. 

It's different if both partners are on the same page and actively changing and heading towards growth and evolution of their own individual soul.

With romantic relationships, love and a spark are not enough. Compatibility has to be taken into account too. Not just with each person's interests, hobbies and like. It also comes with their goals, future, values and morals.  - Sometimes we seem like we fit with people because of the spark they ignite within us, although when we look deeply we realise that it was only that spark we had in common. We then decide to embark on our own not because they are not worthy but we seek more than just a spark. 

 
We tackle and heal our narcissism and codependency by loving ourself. Where we begin to break out of our whole foundation that is attached to the conditioning of narcissism and codependency. Any type of conditioning or beliefs that narrated that our worth and sense of self is attached to others needed to be reconstructed. This is where we have to unpack why we believe we do not deserve unconditional love and find the root cause it. Which is usually attached in our childhood. 

A reminder that our childhood is where we build and create the first foundation that we bring out to the world. When we create one base on an unstable and unsteady foundation, to begin with, it's not going to last long or we will mirror that same instability. It's like using a table with three and a half legs. Learning to love ourself comes with inner work, patience and time. The harsh truth is that many of us want inner peace, contentment and a secure sense of self, although not many of us are willing to do the inner work. Which requires the level of security we are looking for from within. - 

It's a process that takes us out of our comfort zone. To a place that we might not even be aware of or even know to exist. - Love that has attachments is not true love. We have to accept people for the way they are without trying to change them. It is not our job nor do we have the right to change others for liking. - 

To truly love someone is to accept them for exactly who they are and even then we get to decide to either stay by their side or love them the distance. - Sometimes we have to choose to love ourself in order to feel unconditional love and that is okay.  


__________________________



PROFESSIONAL EXPERTS - Links to their social media: 

Dr. Ramani - YouTube  
Sarah Kamoto - Instagram
Megan Dorthy - Instagram
Hailey Magee - Instagram

Art Created by Iuliastration

Art Created by Iuliastration



BE KINDER, LESS CRITICAL

HUMAN TRAFFICKING


TRIGGER WARNING

(Topic: Human Trafficking, Social Conditioning, Pedophilia, Sexual Abuse.)




Human trafficking is the REAL PANDEMIC that has been occurring right under our noses and our home country. The human trafficking industry is the modern slave trade that is occurring. It's disheartening to know and hear that these types of evil and vile acts happen. That there are millions of children and adults who are being used as slaves, sold and treated like they are items. - 

This industry has a lot of traction and billions of dollars being poured into it. Countries like the Philippines, Thailand, Yemen, Syria and Venezuela where the condition of availability for work and high rate paying jobs are very limited. These countries are just an example of poverty that is occurring in some countries. Poverty is a social issue that is one of the main cause of human trafficking. People in these countries have very limited access to opportunities that remove them from poverty. Where they get manipulated and persuaded into working in brothers and other dangerous conditions. Where they act from a survival mode and instinct. 

Living in the condition of poverty many get trapped into doing things they don't want to do. Although due to the lack of money, material abundance and opportunities they pursue working in these industries such as sex workers. - 

Many recruit agencies that work for the brothers will manipulate and persuade children to work in these places. It's like a chain reaction, where they use one slightly older child to get closer to other children. It's manipulation tactic they use. They sell this narrative that it'll be amazing and they'll get loads of money with barely doing anything. Having someone who pushes past the children's boundaries will eventually breakthrough. As many children are left unsupervised because their parents are at work and busy trying to make ends meet. Childhood is the time where we learn about boundaries and certain tools to avoid being manipulated and used, although there are circumstances where we can not learn those tools and one of those circumstances is poverty.  


We have to shift our mindset and perception when trying to educate ourself about human trafficking. There is a reason why certain countries have higher rates than others. When we observe we’ll notice that countries that have a higher rate of poverty will most likely have a high rate of human trafficking. These countries are left undetected, with a high rate of corruption with the authority figures misusing their power and have low coverage in regards to the mainstream media. It's left unattended and continues this cycle of stealing and using humans as slaves. 

We all have a free will and can choose what we pour our energy towards. We can choose to turn a blind eye and ignore. Or we can choose to educate ourself and learn ways of contributing to spreading awareness and light to this horrific industry. 

For people who have trouble comprehending or even believing that people in power, celebrities and government agencies could do such evil acts to random children and people. To put it in perspective, some people do these evil and vile acts to their kin, under there own homes. It's daunting and confronting coming to terms with this information. There is no denying that sexual violence is not an issue. Which it is. It isn't an individual issue, it is a social issue. 


The issue today with social media and certain contents people produce is they very desensitized and over-sexualized. Sexualizing contents are exposed to children everywhere they look through film, television, popular music, advertisement, print media and the internet. Once we open our eyes to see through all these programing we begin to see how certain creators try to plan message within young peoples mind about over sexualising themselves. Example of this is in the popular show Riverdale. Let's not forget the charters within this shows are in high school. There is plenty of scenes where they over sexualise these characters. - It's not about banning all these types of content. It's about being selective on what we consume and what we present to young children. 

Many people who have a certain power and status within our society ie. celebrities, people in government agencies, social media influencers etc. these types of people have a certain power attached to them. With that power comes with influence. They might not be consciously aware of it or even care about it although they have that attachment to them. With those type of power comes responsibility. Everyone has their free will on how they should create and produce their artist endeavours and ways of making money. 

There is nothing wrong in expressing ourself through our body and being proud of our sexuality although we have to think about the influence it has with younger generations. We fill in and desensitize them the harm and violence. Creating this mindset of an adult in a child. When they can be easy manipulated by adults to act in sexual manners. This is the type of influence that social media influencers, popular music, movies and TV show that has on children. It's disturbing, it is an act of grooming children to be me compliant and normalized sexual act in such a young age. When reality it isn't normal to have this much sexualisation over children. - 


This is one way of controlling and manipulating the mass population into the agenda of normalising pedophilia. There was a TED talk by Mirjam Heine (a medical student) who spoke about pedophilia being a sexual orientation that was "unchangeable". Which rubbish, pedophilia is NOT A SEXUAL ORIENTATION. It is a mental disorder. Anyone who is sexually attracted to a minor is an indication that there is something mentally wrong with them. It is the wiring of their brain. There is no justification for being attracted and sexualising young children. - 


Pornography is very accessible nowadays. Where we can get any type of porn with a few taps on our devices. Many believe that it’s ‘empowering’ for people to work as porn stars. Although what we do not see is behind the scene of these takes and the deep-rooted reason why many people go in this industry. Which actually lead back to trauma. Here is a video of someone’s experience in the porn industry; ‘Growing up in the Porn Industry’

The porn industry is tied in with human trafficking. This industry contributed to normalising sexual violence such as rape within sexual intimacy, creating harmful and objectifying contents are not realistic. There have been cases where missing children were found on the website PornHub. Their abuse was filmed and put up on the internet. There are many cases where people had to continue with their healing with the knowledge that their abuse is on the internet for the world to find. Here is a link of Jessa’s story found on the Instagram account Fight the New Drug.

The industry of human trafficking alone makes 99 billion dollars. 

IMG-7989.JPG


This industry is the real pandemic that has been occurring for so many years. That occurs in so many ways. Not just through porn or kidnapping. Traffickers target people who are vulnerable, experiencing homelessness or coming from broken homes. They use violence, fear, illusions, threats and many manipulation tactics to groom their victims. This pandemic does not only target a skin race or skin colour. This targets everyone, as long as the traffickers make a profit off it. This a vile and sickening industry that is occurring every day. It’s heartbreaking to know this information. It’s also alarming to know that it is not being broadcast on mainstream media as much as the covid updates. 


This writing piece is to shine a light into the shadows within our society and how we have been conditioned. When we do not address the elephant in the room it is not going to go away because it is ignored. 

There are ways we can help and contribute to ending human trafficking. By educating and being aware it is occurring we are taking the first steps. When we stop turning a blind eye we can use our voice and speak up for those who can not. Some organisations deal with and tackle human trafficking. Where they organise rescue missions and have put in support for the survivors healing recovery.  

It's uncomfortable having to come to terms with human trafficking and children being exploited for sex and work labourers. The wildest thing is it's not just children, some young adults go through these horrific conditioned. Some who have been exposed to this from the day they were born. To try to comprehend what they have gone through and are going through is something that is just pure evil. Many have stared the devil in the eyes. These devils are victims and survivors abusers. - So when I tell you Hell is real and it's here right on Earth. Trust and believe many have been through hell and back. - 

With this shadow comes a light too, as we can experience Hell we can also experience Heaven. As Heaven is the opposite polarity of Hell. - Everyone’s Hell will look different for everyone, so will Heaven. We do not need to die to experience both. When our psychical body stops working our consciousness and soul do not dissipate, it lives on. - Each and one of us deserve healing and to have our voice heard.


We have a voice for a reason and we can choose how to use it. We can put it to use for those who are silent and do not know how to use their own. When we begin to use our voice for those who do not know they have their own or the power to do so, we are stepping into our greatness. We are stepping into helping the innocent and the collective. Being the example for those around us and the younger generation to use their voice when injustice occurs.  


SOCIAL MEDIA ACCOUNTS TO FOLLOW:

@FIGHTTHENEWDRUG

@KATEJOSEEN

@DESTINY_RESCUE

@OURRESCUE



BE KINDER, LESS CRITICAL

Overcoming our OWN stigmas, bias and prejudices


IMG_6472.JPG

Mental illness is misunderstood and miscommunicated. Each and one of us have experienced a level of Anxiety or Depression. Those two illnesses that many are being exposed to right now, especially during COVID lockdowns. Although there are plenty of other illnesses that many people go through such as Bi-polar, Schizophrenia, Psychosis, Borderline Personality Disorder, eating disorders and many more. In the DSM-5 (Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders) there is nearly 300 mental illness listed in that book. Majority of people are not aware of this and are not exposed to it. Although, there are others who are exposed to mental illness every day either experiencing it or someone around them is. 


Mental illness carries so many stigmas, bias and prejudices. It also carries a weight of lack of education of the reality of mental illness. Not just with the signs and symptoms but what it does to our body, mind and soul. Our brain is the engine to the entire body system. Our brain is the backbone of our wellbeing. When our brain begins to malfunction and not get a certain level of chemicals that are needed to function in our day to day lives. We begin to get sick, just like any other illnesses we go through in our body. Any muscles we strain and hurt we have to go to the doctors and get it looked at which then requires caring and healing for. That is exactly the same as for our brain. Where mental illness is operating, the difference is its completely inside our mind. There are no visible wounds that show we are suffering from it. Unless we open up about it and even then it's daunting opening up about. 


We are conditioned and live in a society that creates and benefits from our mental illness. Where we were assigned gender roles before we were out of the womb. Where were taught that emotions were either feminine or masculine and negative or positive? Where being praised for being strong which looked like constantly smiling and being dominate. Where vulnerability was taught as a weakness and a lack of self-control. - When in reality vulnerability is one of the best and useful way to connect with someone in a deeper level. A level that most of us crave for. A level that makes us feel seen, heard and understood. Vulnerability is seen as something not to be proud of and somehow shamed. When in reality vulnerability take courage and bravery to be able to share ourself in such a way we were never taught. Which we've internalised as shameful and judge towards ourselves and others who is open to being vulnerable.  Vulnerability takes guts and bravery to show our authentic self in a world that benefits from fakery and facade. 


Being diagnosed with a mental illness is something not hide or be ashamed of. It's something to acknowledge that we are ill, which is exactly what mental illness is. A sickness/illness that is occurring within our brain. The part that helps us function and operates our entire body system. Without our brain, we become vegetables. 


I believe the first step in stepping over stigmas and prejudice is being able to open and embrace mental illness. We can not remove the stigmas if we are not able to speak about the main topic. Acknowledging our illness for exactly what it is which is an illness. An illness that we can heal and recover from. It's not a permanent state, our brain is so complex and amazing that we can rewire our connections within it. Creating a better wiring pattern that will heal our mindset and change the way we move in life. It's a journey that requires effort and work although it's such a rewarding work to do. As we begin to heal and discover ourself outside of our illness. 

Mental illness will not look the same for everyone. It will have different shapes, shades and sizes for anyone who’s experiencing it. This does not mean we don’t deserve healing because we’ve told ourself ‘oh it’s not that bad it could be worse’. This type of narrative dismisses and we actually gaslight ourself into thinking we do not need healing. When we do this to ourself, we denial parts of our reality and ourself. We create this shame and judgement within ourself which we then projected onto others and our external environment. 

Having to acknowledge that we are not doing okay and our emotions and feelings feel heavy, can be the first stepping stone to letting go of the narrative we tell ourself. Permitting ourself to feel what we are feeling without dismissing and gaslighting ourself. 


Mental illness is not a justification for acting poorly or toxic. Our illness does not define us. When we begin to heal, accountability comes within that process. When we begin to accept ourself and our actions whether out of pure intention or from a place of hurt. We can’t deny others realities of how they’ve experienced the interaction they’ve had with us. 

This isn’t a time where we welcome more shame and judgement. It’s just about holding ourself accountable that when we are hurting we tend to want to hurt others too. For whatever reason it might be, it doesn't justify that our behaviours were toxic and had poorly affected others around us. - That saying 'Hurt People, Hurt, People' is very true. We tend to have a desire to hurt others just the way they've hurt us. Which is linked to the narrative we have told ourself. That nobody knows or will understand how we feel, so instead of expressing it. We have to show them through our actions on how they've made us feel. 

This also links back to stigmas and prejudices we have adapted and currently programmed within our society today. Which is that victim mentality, where we give our power away by blaming instead of taking accountability of healing ourself. Nobody is the world had a choice of what family and environment we were born. That is something nobody in the world had control over. As children, we are vulnerable and in a sense powerless. Although the beauty in being in our adulthood, we can take and stand in our power. Not just by taking accountability for our actions, also taking accountability for our past. Finding the blessing within them our experiences. Although a disclaimer; before we can find the blessing within our traumas and experiences we have to heal the emotional aspects of it. The pain, the wounds, the scars that are attached to our traumas and experiences; we have to attend to them before we can see the blessing within the storm. 


The stigmas, bias and prejudices that many of us experience is the global pandemic. In the context of mental health, the judgement and shame someone experiences because of an illness they can't help or have control over is detrimental. Stigmas, bias and prejudices are not personal issues, it is a social issue. That is happening on a global scale. We have to begin working on our own stigmas, bias, and prejudices to be able to tackle it as a collective. We all have to be on the same page on tacking an issue that many of us are exposed and affected by on the daily. 


____

Where do judgment and shame come from?


Judgment and shame are something we have all experienced in some shape or form. Either from others or ourself. Those two aspects are not normal emotions. They are just chemical reactions that we get when we receive information that doesn't support our Ego's narratives. They also come from how we have been conditioned during our upbringing and from our interpersonal relationships throughout our life. 

When we experience these being projected to us during our childhood we internalise it. We begin to create narratives and blueprints that ties to judgement and shame. As children, we want to be seen, heard and understood by our loves ones around us. When that isn't reciprocated we internalised these behaviours they acted towards us. Either by pushing away our own needs, shaming and judging our work etc. there are many other examples and experiences that each individual have gone through that is tied with their own internalised shame and judgement.


The main cause of judgement and shame is hurt and pain that many experienced as children. Those same hurt and pain have been buried underneath all the social conditioning, the family and friends dynamics, the education system, the work lifestyles etc. Many will not be aware that we carry those weight till this day through the judgement and shame we project onto others. Because in some aspects of our life we have experience judgement and shame but instead of pulling ourself back and creating a healthy inner dialogue to process those projections. We internalised it and push it away deep within ourself. Pretending that it didn't hurt and that we were not affected by it. Although if we were honest with ourself we will come to terms that we were hurt and it did affect us. 

It doesn't matter what ingredients we have for our hurt, pain or trauma it doesn't change the fact it's still pain, hurt or trauma. 


The social conditioning made us believe that we have to compare every aspect of ourself to others. Maybe not to feel good but to be able to relate in some way or form. Although, when we begin to try to 'one-up' others in the context of pain or even beauty it becomes toxic. That behaviour of wanting to be better than others is toxic and creates such unpleasant energy to be around. - We should never compare our pain, trauma, beauty and life with others. It's unhealthy and creates more internalised shame and judgement, which then we project. It's this continues cycle we go on and we have to break them to stop experiencing them. We have to be able to break those cycles within ourselves first and become aware of the narratives that we have been re-telling ourself. 

It begins with questioning the conscious and the unconscious narratives we are holding on to. - Was it from our conditioning or was it something we created because of an experience that was out of our control? Did it keep us safe at some point in time? Does it still align with who we are today in the present moment? 


It is being able to reflect and unpack our life without having to create more judgement and shame. This can be done on our own, although we might not feel confident or even know how to do it. So it's best if we go to a professional who is trained in looking into mental health issues. 

I'd like to emphasise that seeking professional help in regards to anything is not something to judge or be ashamed of. There is nothing wrong with wanting to heal and know more about ourself and the illness we suffer from. Being open to professional help doesn't just benefit us, it also benefits our love ones. It can be daunting to seek professional help when it's something we are not used to or some cultural conditioning, although it's a way of stepping into healing. Just because we seek professional help does not mean we will continue it for the rest of our life. It's about having a safe space to unpack and reflect on ourself and our experiences, without judgement, shame or bias. A professional worker's job is not to judge or discriminate against us. Their job is to create a safe space and give us unbiased and professional viewpoint on what we are disclosing. 

Our trauma stays in our nervous system until we are consciously aware they are there and ready to be healed. Majority of people are not aware of this. They are not aware they are following till this day a blueprint and programming that they made from a place of wound and pain. It's just bringing these hidden blueprints into our awareness. It's not easy to accept these concepts although there is this saying my therapist told me which was "you have to go through it before you can overcome it." In the context of our emotions, we have to be able to feel them, sit with them and befriend them to be able to let them go. We can not let go of something we have repressed and denied for many years.


From personal experience of trauma and mental health healing, I had these narratives of "why am I not over it yet" or “it happened years ago, I got the help then”. I use to punish, judge, shame myself for feeling the way I did. It was because I lacked knowledge about mental illness and trauma. I also didn’t understand my own emotions and I was afraid to dive in them. It was because those emotions, feelings and inner wounds were created from my traumas which still lingered around my nervous system. - Which operates our emotional responses. That's why when we feel triggered we lose it because of all the build-up emotions, and feelings we have repressed and still holding on to unconsciously. Which then ties back around to having to heal ourself and being open to professional help. Which then links us back to our prejudices and stigmas on seeking professional help with mental illness or even acknowledging we are mentally unwell. 


Everything links and ties back to one another. That’s why it’s important to just focus on one thing, which is our own mental health. When we heal ourself, we also heal the aspects of our own stigmas, bias and prejudices. We also break the cycles of the narratives, blueprints and programming we have adapted and have been following. We also lead by example to those around us and to others who have the desire to heal. We also step into our power and our true authentic self, as we are not living through our past lenses. We’ve learnt to live through the present as the past no longer holds power over us. 


We are moving to a new way of living. When we witness all the chaos and illusions being revealed on a global scale. We can see how much trauma, pain and hurt hold such a deep wound within our society. It’s not just within ourself and our bloodline. It’s a global pandemic. A pandemic that each and one us holds pain and hurt that is screaming and being projected to be acknowledged and healed. - We can not heal globally by focusing all our energy externally. We have to begin within ourselves and heal those parts within us. Which then links and ties with society through a global and collective scale. 
As Within, So Without. 


BE KINDER, LESS CRITICAL

thumbnail_Untitled-Artwork.jpg