
What Can We Let Go Of? (Productive Flourishing Pulse #496)

When we have let go enough to listen well, we can begin to ask the question: What is really important, right now? What new information do we need to pay attention to? Is an action required?
Timothy Butler • Getting Unstuck: A Guide to Discovering Your Next Career Path
What do I need to let go of right now? What do I need to release? What am I finished with? What is finished with me? What will happen when I let go? Am I afraid to let go? Why am I afraid? What's holding me back?
Janet Conner • Writing Down Your Soul: How to Activate and Listen to the Extraordinary Voice Within
Clutter is anything that is excess—for you. It’s whatever you have that doesn’t serve you, yet takes up space in your world. To let go of clutter, then, is not dearth (lack); it’s lightening up and opening up space for something new to happen. As self-evident as these ideas may be, many people experience a subtle (or not so subtle) resistance to le
... See moreVicki Robin, Joe Dominguez, Monique Tilford • Your Money or Your Life: 9 Steps to Transforming Your Relationship with Money and Achieving Financial Independence: Fully Revised and Updated for 2018
We are in free fall. Always. Attachment pushes us to grab ahold of something. Attachment is about seeking a place to hide in a world that offers us little solace. But of course, the bad news is that there is no foundation. We’re always falling. The good news is that there’s nothing to hold onto. As soon as we stop looking for something to grab, our
... See moreSeth Godin • The Practice
Letting go means to let be. It means to leave everything alone for a moment. In this letting be we are no longer fighting against or within ourselves, we are no longer struggling to get somewhere or to make something happen. Letting go means that even in the face of fear we choose to love, we choose to let go and let be. We choose to not interfere
... See moreAdyashanti • The Direct Way: Thirty Practices to Evoke Awakening
“What do I need to let go of this year to create space for what I really want?” James Clear