During Mercury retrograde (that astrological event that happens 3 x per year) —and especially when it rubs against Uranus—we feel the paradox of tech: it empowers our work and relationships, and it can destabilize them in a heartbeat. Frozen screens, lost files, misfiring emails, and video call chaos are invitations to set boundaries, slow down, and choose consciousness over reactivity. The goal isn’t to fear retrogrades; it’s to outsmart the meltdowns with practical rituals and a sense of humor.
Start with intention. In energy work, intention organizes outcomes; what we focus on grows. Imagine your systems “Teflon-protected,” then translate that energy into basics: commit to caring for your setup, learning a little more each week, and staying vigilant. Empowerment here is practical—small habits that keep destabilization at bay.
Practical habits make the difference: • Don’t ignore update prompts—schedule them at day’s end so you’re never caught mid-meeting. • If you click a link and your intuition pings “suspicious,” pause and investigate; change passwords and run a quick security scan. • Clean up files weekly, run backups, and book a quarterly tune‑up with your tech support. • Review credit card statements for unused subscriptions and cancel them—free your money and your mental bandwidth. • Read critical emails twice, then once more aloud before pressing send. Retrogrades love rushed messages; you don’t have to feed them.
When things go sideways on a video call, breathe. Name what’s happening, offer a quick plan (“I’m switching audio; give me 30 seconds”), and keep your humor. Establish a backup: a dial‑in number, a co‑host who can screen‑share, or a pre‑sent slide deck so the room stays anchored.
I remember my colleague Jennifer Johnson, tentative about technology, hosting one of her first World Peace Hologram repatterning sessions as a YouTube live stream. She did everything right—or so she thought—and began her monologue using Hearing Repatterning to tune the group for world peace. Unfortunately, she forgot to unmute. It took 20 minutes for participants to sleuth her number and reach her husband to get the audio back on. The irony wasn’t lost on the viewer who sent multiple LOL messages. The lesson: build a ritual pre‑flight checklist—audio, video, screen share, links, backups—and laugh when retrograde reminds you you’re human.
To protect family well‑being during these cycles, set “digital sabbath” windows where devices live in another room, create household norms for respectful texting and response times, and agree on a bedtime tech cut‑off that honors nervous systems. Uranus may jolt the system; your boundaries give it somewhere safe to land.
The act of creating art and the journey of healing emotional insecurity may, at a glance, appear to belong to different spheres of human experience—one grounded in the external world of form and color, the other in the unseen landscapes of the heart and mind.
Yet, upon closer inspection, I have noticed remarkable similarities in the principles that guide both endeavors. The artist’s studio and the sanctuary of self-reflection are not so far apart. Through years of painting alongside my personal exploration of emotional wounds, I have found that these two paths share similar principles. This article explores the primal forces that parallel the creative process with the inner work of healing insecurity, offering insights for artists and seekers alike.
The Courage to Begin
Every blank canvas is an invitation to vulnerability. The first stroke is a leap into the unknown, much like confronting the roots of insecurity. Both artistic creation and emotional healing demand a willingness to start, despite uncertainty, fear of judgment, or the possibility of failure.
To be an artist is to embrace not knowing—to trust that meaning will emerge from the act of doing. Healing, too, asks us to begin without a guarantee of outcome, to step into our pain with the hope that understanding and transformation will follow. In both endeavors, stagnation is often the greatest enemy, and movement—however tentative—is the doorway to growth.
Embracing Imperfection
Artists soon learn that perfection is an illusion. A painting gains life through its unexpected textures, its happy accidents, and the marks that were once considered mistakes. Similarly, healing emotional insecurity requires letting go of the myth of flawlessness, both in ourselves and in our process.
Self-acceptance blooms in the soil of imperfection. The brush that trembles, the line that wavers, the feeling that overwhelms—all become part of a sacred whole. When I allow myself the grace to fail on the canvas, I practice the same compassion that soothes my inner critic. In both art and healing, progress is measured not by flawlessness, but by the richness of experience and the authenticity of the journey.
Patience and Perseverance
Great works of art are rarely born in a single sitting. They emerge layer by layer, each addition a conversation with what has come before. The process of healing emotional insecurity is similarly incremental; old patterns rarely dissolve overnight.
There are days when the colors muddy and nothing looks right. There are moments in healing when old insecurities resurface and progress seems to vanish. Yet if we persist—if we return, again and again, to the work—transformation takes root. The artist’s patience, the healer’s perseverance: both are acts of faith in something yet unseen.
The Dance Between Control and Surrender
Creating art is a delicate balance between intention and letting go. There is a vision, surely, but also the wisdom to allow the piece to evolve beyond what was imagined. In the same way, healing emotional insecurity involves both conscious effort and a willingness to surrender—trusting the deeper currents of the psyche to guide us where logic cannot.
I have learned, both with brush in hand and heart open, that holding too tightly stifles growth. Real beauty and healing often arise in the spaces where I relinquish control and listen for what wants to emerge. Allowing the process to unfold, rather than forcing an outcome, is a principle that nourishes both artist and seeker.
Witnessing and Expression
Art is, at its core, a form of witnessing—the artist observes the world, internalizes it, and returns it transformed. Similarly, healing emotional insecurity is facilitated by the act of witnessing our own pain without judgment. Expression is the bridge between the inner and outer world.
Journaling, music, movement, or painting: all are ways to give voice to what is within. When I create, I am both observing and being observed—a duality that mirrors the healing process. The more honestly I express myself, the more space I create for understanding and acceptance, both from myself and from others.
Community and Connection
Though art can be a solitary pursuit, it thrives in community. Feedback, support, and shared inspiration enrich the artist’s journey. Healing, too, accelerates in the presence of empathetic witnesses—therapists, friends, or loved ones who listen and encourage.
Both artists and those healing from insecurity benefit from connection. When I share my work or my truth, I make myself vulnerable, yet I also invite resonance. I have found that the courage to reveal my inner world—on canvas or in conversation—diminishes shame and fosters belonging.
Reframing Failure
In both art and healing, what appears as failure is often a doorway to something deeper. The piece that doesn’t work out, the relapse into old insecurity, the frustration with progress—these, too, are part of the process.
I have learned to reframe these moments, to see them as information rather than judgment. What isn’t working can guide me toward what might. Each setback becomes a lesson, each imperfection a stepping stone. This mindset shift is transformative, allowing both the artist and the healer to approach challenges with curiosity rather than self-reproach.
Discovering Identity
Art is a journey of self-discovery. Each creation reveals something about its maker. As I paint, I discover not only what I can do, but who I am. Healing emotional insecurity is, at its heart, a reclaiming of identity—a gentle unveiling of the self obscured by doubt and fear.
Both processes ask: Who am I, beyond the roles or expectations imposed by others? What do I truly feel, believe, desire? In seeking answers, I have found that authenticity in art fosters authenticity in life, and vice versa.
Celebrating Progress
Both the artist and the person healing must learn to celebrate small victories: a breakthrough in technique, a moment of self-compassion, the courage to share a piece or speak a vulnerable truth. Progress is not always linear or dramatic, but it deserves recognition.
I make time to look back at early sketches, to notice the distance I’ve traveled. In healing, I reflect on moments when I responded differently or felt more secure. Acknowledging growth sustains motivation and reinforces the possibility of continued transformation.
Conclusion: The Art of Becoming Whole
The parallels between being an artist and healing emotional insecurity are woven through every stage of the journey. Both require courage, patience, acceptance, community, and a willingness to embrace the unknown. Both are acts of creation—one of external form, the other of internal wholeness.
In honoring these shared principles, I have come to see my art and my healing not as separate paths, but as reflections of the same longing: to know myself, to express my truth, and to become whole. Whether with brush or with breath, with color or with compassion, I continue the work—one mark, one moment, at a time.
If you, too, walk these twin paths, may you find solace in their harmony and strength in their shared wisdom. The masterpiece of your life, like any work of art, is created through steady hands, an open heart, and a willingness to begin anew.
Spring is whispering its secrets of new beginnings, and I’m excited to share how you can tap into this magical energy! In Traditional Chinese Medicine, spring embodies the Wood Element – nature’s master of growth, vision, and transformation.
Think of how a tiny seed knows exactly when to sprout and which way to grow. That same wisdom lives in you! The Wood Element energy of spring gives us natural gifts of: • Clear vision and direction • Enhanced decision-making • Perfect timing • The power to dream bigger • Natural planning abilities
Want to experience this transformative energy firsthand? Here’s a simple but powerful practice: Plant some seeds! You don’t need to be a gardening expert – just grab a packet of your favorite flower seeds and follow the instructions. As you tend to your tiny garden daily, you’ll connect with the Wood Element’s gifts of anticipation, potential, hope, and focus.
Watch how this simple act of nurturing new life shifts your perspective and helps you see your own path forward with fresh optimism. What dreams are you ready to plant this spring?
Ready to amplify your spring energy and transform those dreams into reality? Visit my website [Light Travels – Store] to explore coaching options that will help you harness this powerful seasonal energy.
I love the turning of the calendar and this very first day of the new year especially brings me optimism. Energetically we are in the season of winter (in the northern hemisphere) owned by the element of WATER. Water element asks us to reflect, remain calm, be still… think about things. Our reflections can take us to the depths of our awareness, face new insights about our life with courage, cleanse us of all guilt and inspire us with clever new actions to take. Think of snowy blizzard like days, the calm of a lake frozen over, or Niagara Falls covered in ice and feel the awesome power of Water Elements stillness within.
Its a great time to reflect!
Here are some questions – some reflective and others fun… I like to share with you to help with any New Years Resolution setting you are doing. Keep good notes because I will launch my first PHD event this year (TBA) using these questions.
LIFE REFLECTION QUESTIONS THAT FEED OUR STAGES OF CONSCIOUS AWARENESS – From my Life Repatterning Course – “Clearing the Seven Levels of Growth Towards Wholeness” there are questions that focus on each of the levels. Taking time to reflect on these types of questions helps us to integrate the new things we have learned about life and living and create a new way of being in the world. It is a new way of being that is lighter, happier, more free, generous and abundant.
There are no right or wrong answers here. Focus the one or two questions you are most drawn to think about or the whole list as you wish! Spend time daydreaming about your answers and then make some key points for yourself.
Magenta Level – Magical Thinking Stage If you could do anything and get away with it, what would you do?
Red Level – Empowerment Stage We all have our unique gifts and talents that we could consider our personal super power. What is yours and how will you use it to make a difference in 2025?
Amber Level Belonging Stage What group affiliations do you need to let go of because they no longer serve your purpose?
What new groups will you join this year that would help you learn new things or support your goals? Perhaps you need new friends?
Orange Level Achievement Stage What achievements has gone unacknowledged that you are most proud of?
Green Level Idealism Stage What current event in 2024 most broke your heart?
Turquoise Level Stage of Wholeness If evolution picked your best quality or trait to improve humanity and embedded this trait in the next generation what would that be?
“When you resonate with your positive statements you tend to then experience them in your life. Watch what you wish for!“