“Whether through birds in snow, or geese honking in the dark, or through the brilliant wet leaf that hits your face the moment you are questioning your worth, the quiet teachers are everywhere. When we think we are in charge, their lessons dissolve as accidents or coincidence. But when we’re brave enough to listen, the glass that breaks across the room is offering us direction that can only be heard in the roots of how we feel and think.”- Mark Nepo

Uncertainty is part of life. Part of the human condition is to be aware of and struggle with uncertainty, yet few people inherently know how to live with it in a graceful way. Left to its own devices, and in the absence of a culture that teaches us how to create footholds that help us anchor into life in healthy ways, the mind will choose the path of least resistance in the face of uncertainty, which most often means hooking into misguided ways to try to control: obsessions, compulsions, rumination, worry. These are the mind’s way of creating a stop-gap in a world that never stops changing, the ego’s tactics for trying to keep us safe. At the core of every intrusive thought is the need for certainty, which the ego tries to achieve by sending out the sentries of the mind to scan the horizon for danger. “Am I with the right partner?” “Do I have a terminal illness?” “What if I lose my job?”

If you’ve struggled with intrusive thoughts you know that they don’t actually offer comfort, reassurance, or certainty. You’ve likely suffered through a variety of thought-stories that have vied for your attention over the years, and just when you answer one in a satisfactory way, another one pops up in its place. You know this isn’t an effective tactic to try to find a foothold in uncertainty, but you’ve never been taught a better way.

There is a better way. There’s a way that allows you to unfold more often into grace and flow than the stagnation that occurs when you become entrenched in the world of intrusive thoughts or lured into the unsettling field of hooking into the fear of loss.

Let me say a bit more about the word grace. Like “prayer” and “ritual”, the word grace has been co-opted by religion, so when people hear these words they often evoke a religious connotation. While religion certainly is one place where we practice prayer, rituals, and becoming graceful, religion doesn’t own the copyright on these words and these experiences. I know that many people who follow my work have their own religious practices, and I know that many more not only do not subscribe to religion but, because of their earlier experiences, are opposed to it. If we’re going to access the power of these places to help us flow more with uncertainty, it’s important that we take these words out of their strictly religious connotation.

Grace simply means that we’re flowing with life instead of resisting it. When we say, “She handled the death of her husband with so much grace,” we don’t mean that she didn’t cry or rail against the universe in rage or fall into a healthy depression. We mean that she rose to meet the utter heartbreak of the moment instead of running from it through an addiction. We mean that she grieved fully, expressed her anger responsibly, and allowed herself to  lie in bed when she needed to cocoon away. Meeting life with grace means that we meet it on life’s terms. When it comes to uncertainty, it means that we find healthy ways to flow along this ever-changing river of life without becoming stuck or stagnating in the eddies of intrusive thoughts or allowing ourselves to become lost in the magnetic fields of the story-spheres, like health anxiety or career anxiety, that pull for our attention. And when we do get stuck, as we inevitably will, the path of grace means that we reach out for help and to our practices so that we become un-stuck.

What does it mean to find grace through uncertainty? If uncertainty is a part of life and it’s very presence causes anxiety, what does it mean to flow with it instead of becoming stuck behind the defenses against it? To answer these questions, let’s review what you’ve learned on this site about the link between sensitivity and anxiety.

At the core of every human being is our beautiful, sensitive heart. If this sensitivity isn’t honored in the early years – if you were shamed or judged by being told either overtly or covertly that you were “too much”, “too dramatic”, “too sensitive” – your innate sensitivity shut down, sealed over, and morphed into anxiety. If, however, you were able to retain connection to your sensitive nature in any way, the sensitivity was channeled into creativity and spirituality. On one level, anxiety is sensitivity gone awry. When we can repair the damage done to our sensitive hearts, several layers of anxiety fall away.

Likewise, uncertainty is part of life. We don’t know what will happen from one day to the next. We’re not offered iron-clad guarantees that a marriage will work out, that kids will remain healthy, that buying this house is a wise move. Because loss and death exist, humans are aware of a fundamental uncertainty, and if we’re not offered effective ways to manage it, it morphs into scanning, obsessions, worry, and compulsions. The mind knows that there’s something “off”, something that is outside of its control, so it desperately tries to find something it can “fix”, something it thinks it can control. On one level, obsessions and scanning are uncertainty gone awry.

Sensitivity and uncertainty aren’t the problem; it’s how we respond to these non-negotiable aspects of being human that determines whether or not we tumble into a stuck place or flow with more grace through life. And the hidden beauty – which those of who you have done your inner work around relationship anxiety already know – is that once you embrace the core reality – the sensitivity or the uncertainty – your life grows and expands in untold ways. Just as sensitivity isn’t just something to “get over” but is the doorway to self-love, so uncertainty is the doorway to grace. When we learn the practices that allow us to flow with uncertainty, we find grace on the other side: a life of more ease, more spaciousness, more equanimity, more joy.

This is what I will be teaching in my new course, Grace Through Uncertainty: A 30-day course to become more comfortable with the fear of loss by falling in love with life. This seeds for this course were planted two years ago when I encountered my own brush with death (I share the full story in the course), and it’s been evolving and growing ever since. Not a day passes that I don’t hear questions about uncertainty in some form from my clients, my kids, myself, and my friends. This course is the response. It will begin on Saturday, September 29th, 2018, and I very much look forward to seeing you there.

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19 Comments

  1. This was a great read as I have been preparing my heart to marry my partner. We will be getting married in 2 weeks and he is also deploying so I have been dealing with an array of feelings but I am grateful for your work sheryl. I am still pushing on with love ❤.

    Reply
    • I’m glad it was helpful, Kayleen, and what an enormous time with multiple transitions. Remember to take time to grieve.

      Reply
  2. Hi.
    I have been dealing with obsessive thoughts around my feelings for my partner ever since the two minutes into my relationship and the next month with mark the first anniversary of our relationship. and with so much doubts and so much sadness I feel like and still uncertain about my feelings towards him.

    Reply
  3. I have been with my partner for almost an year. it was filled with despair, anxiety self doubt and obssessions which very much to say very debilitating. and it has come to the point that I cannot think anything else. sometimes it just goes off when my brain get something else to latch onto. it has been like this since the beginning although anxiety started 2 months later.

    Reply
  4. Hi Sheryl,
    I was wondering how this course is different from or an addition to the Break Free or Trust Yourself course, in terms of different tools for instance. Would you share a little more about that?
    Thank you in advance!

    Reply
    • Good question. It’s a completely different course with no overlap with my other courses. Where Trust Yourself focuses specifically on tools that reverse our focus from externalized Self to internally-referenced self and Break Free focuses completely on relationship anxiety, this course focuses on information and tools that allow you to flow more effortlessly with life’s uncertainties. Through the exercises, visualizations and meditations that are designed to help you orient toward gratitude, strengthen your inner column, let go of worry on a daily or even hourly basis, and tap into higher mind, by the end of the 30 days you’ll have a practice that is both do-able and meaningful that will help you reduce fear and connect to a deep sense of trust. When we’re tapped into this place, our perspective completely shifts and we’re able to negotiation life with more grace (flow).

      Reply
  5. Hi, I have a young parent who starts chemo tomorrow for stage four cancer with a poor prognosis. Do you think this class could help me even though I’m staring death in the face every day? Or should I wait until a time when no one is sick and when my death fears won’t be realized anytime soon. Thank you.

    Reply
    • I’m so, so sorry for what you’re going through. Yes, I do think it will be immensely helpful as long as you have some time to put into the material. Sending blessings.

      Reply
  6. Please help, I’m freaking out, I feel like I’m going insane. I had a couple of clear days, that is I still felt a bit numb, but I was able to detatch from the intrusive thoughts and respond to them well. Your blog has been of immense help to me, one of the things that kept me going was loving someone’s essence because something beyond feelings knew I loved his essence. And yet today he was being himself and I suddenly felt like I didn’t like him. I don’t understand where the feeling came from, and I was very disappointed in myself when I immediately latched onto the thought “what if I never liked him or his essence?” It won’t let me rest, naming it as an intrusive thought somehow doesn’t seem to make it better and even though I know I used to love spending time with him (we spent every hour we could together), the thought won’t let me go. Please help. I know this is a “fix me” type of comment, I just want to know that I can trust the clear moments I had, that it really is just me, that this will also pass and I’ll be able to return to that clear eyed state..

    Reply
    • I’m so sorry you’re struggling. Do you have the Break Free From Relationship Anxiety course? If no, I highly recommend it as that’s the place to find tools and support to continue to help you move through your anxiety.

      Reply
      • I can’t afford it at the moment.
        Can I trust the clear moments?

        Reply
  7. Hi Sheryl,

    I bought this course and I’m looking forward to it… I’m wondering if this course will assist me in going through a metaphorical/psychological death? Also, regarding that… do you think intention is important when undergoing change? As in you can assist yourself with your intention by which way you would like to change when going through a psychological death? As in you have a choice in which path you choose and how to move forward and feel better about your chosen path?

    Reply
    • It will absolutely help you go through a psychological death.

      Reply
  8. today my partner forgot my bday ,he called me at 4pm to say bday wish yeh its still my bday , I told him that I dissapointed, he responded that he didnt feel need to say sorry because of it and he’s more angry than me, he said I blame him a lot and make him such a terrible person
    I’d really want to understand about my relationship cycle

    Reply
  9. I’m just so excited for this course! This is exactly what I’ve needed.

    Reply
    • I look forward to seeing you there, Linda ;).

      Reply
  10. I’m finding uncertainty to be a hook that’s showing itself in many ways! At present I’m worrying about my boyfriend being some sort of crafty liar and it’s hooking onto everything regarding me and him. I find I cannot stop worrying about this – and am now doubting everything my boyfriend says. It’s because I am actually worried he has lied and so I am finding this shaping our relationship right now. I really do want to just trust him but I’m finding it dififcult. How can I grace through this uncertainty? I can’t find anyone on here who shares the same fears as me.

    Reply
    • Also just to add – my boyfriend does joke a lot. But I find this triggering as I’ll worry he’s lying or something. It’s giving me very little hope for our relationship – I’d rather worry about his hair being messy or something than this! This feels too concrete and raw.

      Reply

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