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Wayfinding
Guest Blogger: Nancy Oelklaus

My husband and I just returned from two weeks in Europe–one week in Cyprus and one in Croatia. These destinations are off the beaten track for Americans; in fact, we saw only one other American family during the entire two weeks.
When we travel, we don’t go on tours. Instead, we get maps and books and decide, one day at a time, what we will do. I call this wayfinding–letting one thing naturally lead to the next, open for discovery. Our technology didn’t work well, so we were completely unplugged–no phone, no internet, little English language TV. A beautiful head-clearing. A wonderful re-connection with each other. Nothing to tie us to the everyday lives we live here in Austin.
Greek mythology has it that Aphrodite, goddess of love and beauty, was born from the Mediterranean sea crashing ashore near the place where we stayed. So I set an intention for the trip to become more open for love.
For two weeks I was set free from judgment. People I encountered were speaking other languages; I couldn’t understand what they were saying, so I didn’t judge whether or not I agreed. They were from different cultures, so I gave no thought to what they wore or how they looked. We were seeing wondrous, beautiful sights, and my heart was increasingly opening to the beauty, with each sight even more amazing than the last. Appreciation was my dominant emotion.
This is a gift of travel–seeing with new eyes. One of my teachers once said, “What you see is not what you’re looking at; it’s what you’re looking with. So let us look with eyes of love.”
It’s easier to look with eyes of love when I’m in a strange place. Now my intention is to be the me who was in Cyprus and Croatia when I’m in Austin in my everyday life.
About the Author
Nancy Oelklaus is a personal life coach based in Austin, Texas and the author of Journey From Head to Heart: Living and Working Authentically as well as Alphabet Meditations for Teachers and co-author of Rewriting Life Scripts, with Liliane Desjardins and Irene Watson.
Nancy Oelklaus leads Hye Road Retreats with horseman Lindy Segall. Learn more at www.HeadtoHeart.com.
Jay S. Levy on Helping the Homeless
Jay S. Levy is the author of Homeless Narratives & Pretreatment Pathways: From Words to Housing.
Patricia Wellingham-Jones interview
Patricia Wellingham-Jones from Richard Anderson on Vimeo.
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Video interview with our own Patricia Wellingham-Jones!
Trauma Resolution Center – A Model For Success In Resolving Trauma
Learn about the Teresa Descilo’s Trauma Resolution Center in Miami Florida and how they use Traumatic Incident Reduction
Lying
Guest Blogger: Linda Irene Silfies
The following blog post is excerpted from a story appearing in Recovering The Self: A Journal of Hope and Healing, Vol. IV, No. 1 (January 2012).
Lying is pervasive. There are many forms of lies—little white lies, fibs, tall tales, and bold-faced lies. Some lies are told to spare feelings; others because it is a game of cunning. And sometimes lies come in the form of not saying anything at all—avoiding. In the end, they are all the same. They are all deceitful; they are all dishonest; they all hurt.
He told lies because he could. It was a sport—a game he played; an art form he’d perfected—without regard for the other person, He could look you squarely in the eye without blinking and weave stories that could twist you first this way and then that, because you’d want to believe; but deep down, you’d know. And when you knew and questioned him further, he’d become violent—a scare tactic he used to avoid the truth. When you were afraid and backed down, he won. He always won.
Countless times, the telephone would ring, but no one was ever there when she answered. He, of course, had no idea who it was. When she changed to unlisted, the hang-up calls persisted.
“The only people who now have our number are those we have given it to. Who did you give our number to who would hang up when I answer?”
“Me? You’re crazy. Where do you get these crazy ideas? Do you lay awake at night to dream up this stuff?”
His eyes bulged; the veins in his neck exposed the beating of his heart. His nostrils flared like a bull ready to charge. Towering over her snorting and ranting, the rampage continued. Backing herself into a corner, she wondered if there’d be another hole in the wall made by the back of her head she’d have to cover with a picture. Instead, he displayed his power by thrashing around the house, slamming doors and objects before going off to his “den” like a bear in a cave during hibernation—coming out only to eat, and then acting as if nothing happened.
When you believed his lies, he’d call her gullible without admitting he’d lied. He resented her for being gullible—it was weakness to him. It was not gullibility—it was self-defense. Acting gullible stopped the wars and the violence—for another day. He had just told another of his concocted stories after being asked where he had been. He’d always said, “Know the answers to the questions you ask.” This time she did. She called where he said he’d be, but wasn’t; she confronted him. He did his usual accusatory dance. She tried something new—not getting caught up in his drama and not allowing him to put her on the defensive. He stood silent. Busying herself, she kept him in her peripheral vision in case she’d have to duck and cover. Finally, he couldn’t take it anymore, “Well, do you believe me?”
“Of course, you’re my husband. You wouldn’t lie to me,” she smiled.
He seemed lost; he stared at her for a moment, then turned and walked away, retreating to his cave, probably to ponder what had just happened, and how he’d lost control. It always made her wonder how a person, who professed to love her so much, could be so deceitful and so filled with contempt. Could he not see the pain his lies caused or the devastation swirling around him? Could he not see the hopelessness and despair? Did he not care?
More than 25 years they were together—since high school. She never told anyone the hell she was living. She covered for him, hiding her bruises, making excuses for the missed appointments and cancelled social engagements. In public, he was always self-controlled; always showed her the utmost attention; always a gentleman. Who would believe her?
He didn’t realize he was building walls instead of bridges. In the end, he’d built himself a house without doors. He couldn’t escape, but she was set free—free from the master deceiver, and free from his clutches. Free because she was on the outside of the house with no doors.
About the Author
Linda Silfies is an avid writer and blogger. She has a Paralegal Associate Degree, and is a former licensed massage therapist for the Olympic Games. She earned certification as a District Justice and currently is working toward her Bachelor of Arts degree in writing and linguistics. She was raised in Easton, Pennsylvania, and currently resides in Jacksonville, Florida.
2012 Editorial Calendar posted
Recovering The Self : A Journal of Hope and Healing is actively seeking submissions of previously unpublished material in the form of informative articles, poetry, artwork, short stories, memoir, film and book reviews, opinion, and commentary. Article lengths are suggested to be from 750 to 2,500 words although we do make exceptions when the situation demands it.
Subjects
We are tracking the following subject areas with respect to adults, children and elders in America and abroad:
- Personal growth,
- Relationships and family
- Trauma recovery
- Living with disabilities
- Proactive measures to improve health (lifestyle, diet, mind/body)
- Substance abuse recovery, co-dependence, and addiction
- Military veterans’ issues
- The struggle for cultural or gender identity, and
- Bereavement
Submission Details
Articles should be submitted in Microsoft Word 2003 format (or something equivalent) with as little formatting as possible. It is not necessary to write a query letter in advance. We do accept work that has appeared before on the web, but generally are not interested in reprinting work that is already published in print. You will receive an email acknowledgment within a few days that your item was received. Please direct all inquiries to editor@recoveringself.com
Rights Requested
RTS requests only First English Anthology Rights. That is, we want to be the first anthology to publish a submitted piece of work. We also reserve the right to reprint in a special “Best of Recovering The Self” anthology at an undetermined date. You retain all other rights to your work including the right to self-publish, submit to other journals, and so on. We ask that you abstain from having the article published in another anthology (journal or magazine) within three months of appearing in RTS, but this is not strictly required.
Editorial Deadlines
| Deadline | For Issue | Suggested Theme |
|---|---|---|
| Feb 15, 2012 | April 2012 (Vol. IV, No. 2) |
New Beginnings (“How I Started Over”) |
| May 15, 2012 | July 2012 (Vol. IV, No. 3) |
Aging & Elders |
| Aug 15, 2012 | October 2011 (Vol. IV, No. 4) |
Animals and Healing |
| Nov 15, 2012 |
January 2013 (Vol. V, No. 1) |
TBA |
In general, the submission deadline is 60 days prior to publication.








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