FreeSpiritCentre FreeSpiritCentre
Newsletter
Username Password New user?
Add to Favorites | Make The Free Spirit Centre your homepage Shop With Us | My Shopping Cart | My Orders
Numerology Readings

New Special

 

Enjoy a 10 minutes or
50% off the regular price



Ask Joseph a question


Read Joseph's bio and articles

 

Current poll
What is stopping you from pursuing the life you are meant to live?
 
Events
August 2008
S M T W T F S
     12
3456789
10111213141516
17181920212223
24252627282930
31      
View our events
Add your event
Read Articles About
'Numerology: The Blueprint of Your Soul' Column
Ask Karinna about Love, Sex and Intimacy
Ask Kimmie
Ask Rochelle
Feng Shui
Healing & Spiritual Healing
Insights
Inspiration
Letting Go Column
Life Improvement
Miscellaneous
Parenting & Social Issues
Personal Growth
Relationships
Sexuality
Spiritual Life
Tools for Life
Wisdom & Insight
Yoga
Advertising
Discover the Secrets of Being Unstoppable
Sponsor of the month
Discover the Secrets of Being Unstoppable
Books of the Month
Sponsor
Hay House, Inc.
SPIRITUAL LIFE
Millionaire In Training 7-month Mentorship Program
Tami Brady
Introduction to Spiritual Life
By Tami Brady

Like most individuals on this planet, I have spent a good deal of time fantasizing about the life I would have if only I could choose. I would be more confident. I would be more adventurous. I would get more education and get a better paying job. I would choose satisfying and complimentary relationships. I would feel like I had a valid place in this world.

As much time as I spent fantasizing, however, I probably spent even more time wallowing in the misery of my real life and making excuses about why I couldn?t accomplish these things. I began to assume that every day would be the same as the last. I even started to believe that dreams were for kids and for irresponsible people that intended to bounce from one failure to the next.

Then, one day I had an epiphany. At the time, I was a housewife raising three small children. Though I have the amazing ability to stretch a dime into a dollar, money was always extremely tight. My life centered around taking care of my children and finding ways to stretch the budget just to pay for the necessities of life.

I really loved being with my kids. I felt it was an important job and was willing to sacrifice to do what I felt was the right thing for my kids. But I had a good number of aspirations that didn?t involve cleaning up messes, rereading stories for the hundredth time, or playing with bugs in the park. I wanted to be able to pay the bills each month. I wanted to become more confident and able to be part of an adult world. I wanted the freedom and ability to drive my children to various places. I wanted to see and learn a little bit about the world. I wanted to go to university and get my archaeology degree. In short, I wanted to be Tami, the person, and not just Mommy or Mrs. Brady.

For several years, I stewed about my quandary. I had always said I was going to go to university but frankly no one believed I actually would. The most vocal members of my family questioned why I would even want to go to university, especially to take archaeology. Archaeology was a job for single men. The only mothers who would dare train for such a job were simply trying to run away from their responsibilities. I had no intention of abandoning my family and so I eventually decided to give up on my dream.

My brother came to visit one day. We were both venting about our lives and talking about our bleak futures. I told him that I had finally given up on my hope of becoming an archaeologist. He asked me why I had to give up on this dream. I remember him saying ?why not?. Rather irritated at my single brother?s grasp of the seemingly obvious, I explained the situation to him: my responsibilities, my lack of finances, my confidence issues, my lack of an adventurous nature, etc.

Over the next few weeks, for some reason, I just kept replaying that conversation in my head. I kept hearing ?why not?. Yes, I could list a whole book of reasons why I couldn?t become an archaeologist. Strangely, however, these reasons seemed more like excuses.

I started wondering what I would tell my children if they were in my place. Surely, I wouldn?t tell them to settle and be miserable. I started questioning why I was so willing to run away from a challenge. Finally, I realized that if I didn?t at least try to reach my goals, I was going to regret my decision for the rest of my life.

Within six months of that epiphany, I started taking university classes. I researched and found student funding. I volunteered and then got a part time job at the local museum on weekends so that my husband could watch the kids while I was working. I practiced my driving skills and learned how to take public transit. I pushed myself to interact with other students and resisted my natural urge to run away from the large crowded campus. I scheduled my classes around my children?s school schedule, even taking a few late night classes, so that my children would not require daycare and would never come home to an empty house.

Seven years later, I graduated with an undergraduate honours degree in Archaeology and graduate degrees in Archaeology and Heritage, awarded with distinction. I now run my own archaeological consulting company out of my basement. This allows me the freedom to choose my projects so that I don?t have to stay away from my family for long periods of time. It also allows me the option to take on non-archaeological projects such as the writing of this book without the loss of income associated with working part time. Moreover, I found that as I reached towards my goals (sometimes succeeding and sometimes failing in my attempts) that in moving through or around these obstacles and challenges, I became happier in my life and more confident that I could achieve other ambitions that I had. My husband says I also became a lot nicer to be around.

In this way, the phrase ?why not? changed my life. I hope that by reading this column, you can also start to ask yourself ?why not?. Perhaps, you too can change your life.


No comments have been added yet. Be the first one to post!


You must be registered and logged in to be able to post comments for this article.



Rss feed for articles of the week.
Home | About Us | Advertise | Events | Newsletters | Business Card | Books & CD'S | Link To Us | Submit an Article | Site Map | Contact Us | Disclaimer | Authors | Shop with us | Related Sites | Awards | Donation | Affiliates | Register | Login | Help Wanted | Press Release | Partnership