Overcoming Obstacles and Living Dreams
This past three months has been a whirlwind for me. I've
managed to leave the place I called home for five years, quitting my job in the
process. I also visited Frida Kahlo’s house and achieved my Kripalu Yoga
Teacher 200 hour certification. Which brings me to the present moment, sitting
in an apartment in Isla Mujeres, Mexico, looking out at paints, beads,
canvases, fabrics, oil pastels, Sharpies, drawing pencils, and lots of silk
thread. How did I get here?
| New Creative Space |
Well, like most people traveling long distances, I arrived
on a plane. This particular plane trip, however, brought some insight that I
had not previously had the presence or quietness of mind to receive. The
insight came when I opened my backpack to dig out my “plane read” for the trip.
I've been reading a book by Bill Bryson called Mother Tongue, and was
really looking forward to finishing it. I was sure that was the book I had put
in my bag. The book that was waiting for me, however, was The Alchemist.
I have read this book more times than I can remember, and I always have a copy
with me. In fact, I read it at the beginning of June after leaving behind my
life in the Marshall Islands. At many points in my life I have taken in the ups
and downs of Santiago’s (the main character), journey as a gentle reminder that
the treasure I seek is always within reach. So, when I saw that it was the book
I had for this trip, my initial reaction was, this again? But I jumped in, since it was what I had, starting with
Coehlo’s Ten Years On introduction,
which I usually skip. Imagine my surprise to find that, despite having written
the introduction in 2002, Coehlo was speaking directly to me. That’s
right, he must have had a premonition that in 2013, at a pivotal moment, I
would need to read just the words he was writing, detailing the four obstacles
to achieving a dream.
The first obstacle Coehlo points out is that we begin to
bury our dreams as children. Eventually our dreams become so deeply buried that
we have trouble hearing them call us at all. I have spent the better part of 10
years working and only giving attention to my dreams of being an artist/yoga
teacher/world traveler in my “free time”. I prided myself on being an artist
with a job; I could pay my bills. Art happened in spurts, yoga teaching
happened after l finished work, and traveling happened during breaks. When work
wore me out, these things didn't happen. In this way, I managed to live what I
felt like was a pretty full life, but there was something missing.
This brings me to Coehlo’s second obstacle, love. He says, “We
know what we want to do, but are afraid of hurting those around us by
abandoning everything in order to pursue our dream.” I have loved the arts since
I was a child, but I didn't know how to be an artist and make money. All I knew
about artists was that they struggled. I didn't want to struggle, and I knew I
needed money to survive. But when you love something it is a part of you, and
the impulse to be with that something is always knocking, pushing, screaming,
and saying come back come back come back.
When I said goodbye to my parents this last time, I felt my heart tear, but I
knew I had to go to be with the thing I love. I need time and space that being
with my parents couldn't afford me. I felt the same way when I left behind the
people I love in the Marshall Islands, but I had to go for the same reasons.
The thing I love was calling me back.
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| Love, mixed media on muslin |
Now running into the arms of the thing I love, I know that
Coehlo’s third obstacle is waiting in the wings. That obstacle is fear of the
defeats on the path. In my world, I
am a jet-setting artist yogini healer Amazon ready to fully express every
aspect of my being. In the real world,
I am an unemployed 30-something black woman with a lot of debt tipping the
scales in my favor by running to Mexico to optimize what little savings I have.
I am already a failure. Add to that the fact that I don’t know if the world
even wants my art or how I will get to the world, the defeat just keeps piling
up. And I am terrified. Terrified that I've made a mistake. Terrified that I
won’t be able to provide for my needs. And terrified that I will just end up
being another disappointment to the people who care about me. But, as Coehlo
says, “The secret of life, though, is to fall seven times and to get up eight
times.” Anything worth having is worth fighting for. I would add that the old
adage, Believe in yourself, is
another secret to life. I believe
that I am a jet-setting artist yogini healer Amazon. And furthermore, I know
that the people I love believe it, too. I can’t thank those people enough for
being my angels. I have carried them around in my heart as my sword and shield
in this time of change, and will continue to do so with every step. How could I
not overcome obstacles with the strength of my angels radiating from my heart?
![]() |
| esperanza en el corazon, acrylic on canvas |
Coehlo’s fourth obstacle is by far the hardest one to face.
It is the fear of realizing the
dream.
What happens if I
win?
Coehlo quotes Oscar Wilde saying, “Each man kills the thing
he loves.” I know that I have been guilty of this over and over again. I have
asked for, prayed for, shook my fists at the sky for, and the moment it arrived I have hid and pushed it away because it was easier/more
familiar to stay where I was. I am an expert at building walls while craving
light and love. It is not easy to embrace our truth because it means we have to
embrace the divine light that wants to radiate from us. I rarely have a
problem seeing this light in others, but shining my own is frightening. Will
people resent me? Will I be too exposed? But here I am, sitting in this
apartment in Isla Mujeres, Mexico, looking out at paints, beads, canvases,
fabrics, oil pastels, Sharpies, drawing pencils, and lots of silk thread. I am
here because I can no longer ignore myself. I can no longer push down the me that wants to rise up.
| Pieces of Angels |
I often contemplate the question, “What would I do if money
was not an issue?” My answer has always been in the ballpark of make art, do
yoga, and travel. The fine folks at immigration here in Mexico have granted me
up to 180 days to do just that. I have enough money to pay my rent for that
time and keep food on the table. I have no idea what is waiting for me on the
other side of this journey, but I am heartened by Coehlo’s closing words, “…if
you believe yourself worthy of the thing you fought so hard to get, then you
become an instrument of God, you help the Soul of the World, and you understand
why you are here.”
I’m ready.


And so I paid for that half-marathon in the Czech Republic, June 2014. Cause all I want to do is travel the world, running, eating good food and writing about it.
ReplyDeleteThanks, from Paulo Coehlo to you to me. Thank you.
"Listen, kid, we're all in it together." Harry Tuttle by Robert DeNiro in Brazil
ReplyDeleteSending you lot's of love my dear Ray of Sunshine! xo st
Thank you for posting this and being so transparent Ray. You've been a natural healer & artist since the first day I met you, and I consider myself blessed beyond words to have received some of that healing light. Your post is timely for me...I woke up this morning slap EXHAUSTED from three weeks now of school, and that voice telling me that the house isn't clean enough or I'm not giving the kids everything they need...it's a lie, I know it is. Sometimes it feels like a fight to continue the artists' path, but then I'm reminded...nope, it's just letting go. I sure love ya girl! - Margaret
ReplyDelete