Please be advised that all material on this blog is protected under copyright laws



December 14, 2012

And now we can say "Merry Christmas"

In the pressurised crescendo to the big day, it can be all too easy to forget what Christmas is really all about. As diverse as our populous is, so is the cause and celebration of Christmas Day for each us. And yet, despite in some cases extreme differences about what it means to each individual, if we but take a little time to see, there is still a point of commonality for all of us...

We were forced to do it. We had to brave a major shopping centre, a few days before Christmas to grab some last minute items. The sweat, the throngs of desperation, the madness, the accelerated mental fatigue, the tantrums, the social ineptitude birthing from utter self-centredness in the fight for retail survival... And the crowds would be there too.

Our schedules being our schedules (never dull) it had unfolded that the kids would need to come with me. Five kids, identical twin baby girls in tandem stroller, two tween daughters, one autistic and wheelchair dependant teenaged son, its never an easy journey Christmas crowds aside.
Amid reminders of, "Best behaviour, guys. Let's stick together. We're in the last few days now. You don't want to blow it and hit the naughty list in the last minute!" Their protests fell on my ears deafened by the pulsing ebb of impending throngs as the automatic doors drew back, sucking us inward...

Within forty meters of entry, my nine year old daughter cops a stroller running into her ankle from the side, with the hostile father pushing the stroller hissing at her, "Watch out!".
Shoving powered wheelchair into his path and halting his progress entirely, I caught his eye, "I believe you meant to say, "I'm sorry. Are you ok?"." The now crippled nine year old sitting on her brother's lap on the power-chair, we moved onward...

Entering the depths, I lead the troops into the belly of nonsensical purchasing: The market.
More would follow that first hostile stroller incident, subjecting us to complaints of "taking up the whole moving walkway with the wheelchair" (how inconvenient of us!), a fearless four year old slapping my eleven year old daughter for holding the last pink ball, minor tantrums from my gang when Mum refused to purchase another DSI so "we don't have to share" (where am I going wrong?) and Jack blatantly taking advantage of his disability to barge in, completely jumping the waiting queue, to speak to Santa with the announcement of "Santa, thank goodness! I've needed to talk to you..." And once again, as happens every single year, Santa looked at my kids, looked at me and said, "Are these all your kids?" (who else would work this hard, I ask you?!)

Eventually we made it to the back of a four-deep crowd queuing at the butcher. People were yelling across the counter with items of meat and money flowing back and forth in rapid succession. Chatting with the gang (the kids) as we waited our turn, it took me some time to realise the crowd was laterally shoving one another but not progressing, the atmosphere frazzled, feet were tapping impatiently.
At the counter was a gentle lady, somewhere around the eighty-year-old mark, leaning heavily on her walking frame and trying to be heard over the counter that towered well above her. 
She was trying to buy a piece of corned beef for Christmas Day.

Her frail but friendly voice called, "Could you please weigh that for me? Tell me how much it might be..." the piece the butcher held was not much larger than an apple . However upon weighing it was apparently far too expensive.
She asked, "Do you have a smaller piece?" 
The butcher procured a piece barely palm sized. But alas again, with a slow and sad glance in her purse, it was too costly...
"Could you cut it for me please?"...

My daughter Colby, all heart, grabbed desperately at my hand pleading, "Mum, we have to do something! Can we give her some money? Please!"
"How can we do it, Col, without making her uncomfortable?" All of us huddled, three of us rapidly whispering different theories of how we could help this lovely lady without embarrassing her. Jack, my son, however wasn't sharing and instead kept saying, "Give me the money, Mum. Give it to Jack!", grappling at my hand with his clammy, cerebral palsy grip.
The crowd was shuffling, impatient, blatantly rude...To keep Jack settled I handed him the $50 note that we were still busily plotting to drop in the lady's bag somehow.
The crowd's muttering started to become decorated with audible baubles of "Ouch!", "Oh, excuse me." and "Oh, sorry, mate." A perceptible shift that tells me my son is on the move. I looked up to see Jack guiding his wheelchair through the crowd, ramming whoever would thwart his path (something he never does!) bee-lining for this frail little lady.
"Can I help you?" a voice called. It was our turn at the counter.
I smiled, "Please! First of all, I'd like to..." I began using Jack's distraction to my advantage.

The sweet lady only noticed Jack once he was right beside her.
"Excuse me, " he said to her, and with that Jack smile and a huge amount of effort he raised his quadriplegic  affected arm grasping the $50 note, "This is yours."
"Oh no, it couldn't be..." she protested.
He interrupted, "No, it is yours. It is. Please take it."
She stared at him, then looked about the now silenced, watching crowd.
"Please." Jack said again, "It hurts to hold my arm like this."
She tentatively took the $50.
He smiled and cheerily called, "And now you say "Merry Christmas Jack!""
Her voice shaky, her hand trembling, she said, "Oh yes, yes. Merry Christmas, Jack." Then to the crowd, "Did...did someone drop this?" And the crowd all smiling, shaking their heads, murmuring utterings of "saw you drop it", "sure its yours".
I sidled over, grabbed the handle of my boy's chair and we quietly made our way through the gathering.
We were moving away when the butcher called over the counter to her,
"Here's your corned beef, ma'am.", handing her a large parcel of corned beef. As she again began to protest he went on, "No charge. Already paid for. Merry Christmas, Love!"

Well clear of the butcher's queue, safely camouflaged in the moving crowd, we turned to glance back. This lovely lady was softly crying, happy, the flow of her tears coursing the face of a life well lived. Several people from the once impatient and hostile crowd, strangers, taking time, warmly and gently comforting her.

We all looked upon the image from our distance and a quiet whisper came up from the wheelchair beside me as he looked on,
"And now you say "Merry Christmas"." 

November 24, 2012

“I am eternally, devastatingly romantic..."

“I am eternally, devastatingly romantic, 
and I thought people would see it because ‘romantic’ doesn’t mean ‘sugary.’ 
It’s dark and tormented — the furor of passion, 
the despair of an idealism that you can’t attain.”                                                                                                                               Catherine Breillat



October 14, 2012

I Am The Empowered Woman




The Empowered Woman, 
she moves through the world with a sense of confidence and grace.
Her once reckless spirit now tempered by wisdom.
Quietly, yet firmly, she speaks her truth without doubt or hesitation
and the life she leads is of her own creation.

She now understands what it means to live and let live.
How much to ask for herself and how much to give.
She has a strong, yet generous heart
and the inner beauty she emanates truly sets her apart.
Like the mythical Phoenix,
she has risen from the ashes and soared to a new plane of existence,
unfettered by the things that once posed such resistance.

Her senses now heightened, she sees everything so clearly.
She hears the wind rustling through the trees;
beckoning her to live the dreams she holds so dearly.
She feels the softness of her hands
and muses at the strength that they possess.
Her needs and desires she has learned to express.
She has tasted the bitter and savoured the sweet fruits of life,
overcome adversity and pushed past heartache and strife.

And the one thing she never understood,
she now knows to be true,
it all begins and ends with You.
              ༺༻                                              Sonny Carroll 

June 22, 2012

A Sacred Choral






Let our dance of dimensional chords immortal 
penetrate this presence,
a sensual intensity sculpted amid the colours of the sound

caressing the hold on the soul forever.

With his mystic immensity 

the gentility
and passion designing each note;
we transit every vascular flow
of this sacred language intangible.

Our love in this realm made possible
in tone and in rhythm,
abandoning fears and costumes,
giving priority to shared tenderness and passion.

Let us write our song, beloved,
as a romance never before heard,
lest cruel neglect
transpires to end our Love.


MHH 2012

June 3, 2012

Chronicles of the Party Van - 1


Impending autistic hysteria was about to break...
After exchanging our ruby red, intergalactic spaceship for a "loan car" today (as we await conversions on our new black gangsta spaceship), I received an emergency call from Jack's father saying he couldn't pick him up.
You don't play with an autistic kid's routine on a Friday. No. You certainly don't introduce "new".
I tore over the mountain, admittedly loving ripping through the manual gearbox of the paint peeling, rattling, random unidentifiably groaning, loan car, to get to J.
In my mind rattling off the variations I could use to convince Jack that this was fun and normal, not "different"...
I walked in, late, to his classroom.
He looked up and tears sprang to his eyes as he immediately started raking at his right arm (anxiety)
"Mum...but where is Dad? Dad is coming!"
Holding him, gently explaining, trying to settle him before all broke loose... then asking him, with all the enthusiastic tone I could muster, if he was ready for a "mad adventure" in a new car.
We headed out and at first glance, he gasped, more delighted than distressed,
"Mum! What is this?!"
I showed him the ramp, how the wheelchair loaded in, put him in, explaining all the way (his aides cracking up laughing at my explanations).
Locked in, ready to go, Jack was SO excited. I was surprised...a little confused...
I started the loan car and its random groan kicked up spectacularly.
Jack laughed loudly.
"What an great day, Mum! You did it! You did it Mum! You got us a real
Party Van!"
Autism: a walk in the consistently unexpected.
1

May 28, 2012

Being Crazy is Noisy

John wrote this brilliant article himself. And it's a great read :)
I also love his wife's comments after it :) M
Thanks to Fiona Permezel


Being Crazy is Noisy

May 21, 2012

She is Goddess

A goddess is a woman who emerges from deep within herself. 
She is a woman who has honestly explored her darkness and learned to celebrate her light. 
She is a woman who is able to fall in love with the magnificent possibilities within her. 
She is a woman who knows of the magic and mysterious places inside her, the sacred places that can nurture her soul and make her whole. 
She is a woman who radiates light. 
She is magnetic. 
She walks into a room and male and female alike feel her presence. 
She has power and softness at the same time. 
She has powerful sexual energy that's not dependent on physical looks. 
She has a body that she adores and it shows by the way she comfortably lives and moves in it. 
She cherishes beauty, light and love. 
She is a mother to all children. 
She flows with life in effortless grace. 
She can heal with a look or a touch of the hand. 
She is fiercely sensual and fearlessly erotic and engages in sex as her way to share with another in touching the divine. 
She is compassion and wisdom. 
She is seeker of Truth and cares deeply about something bigger than herself. 
She is a woman who knows that her purpose in life is to reach higher and rule with love. 
She is woman in love with love. 
She knows that joy is her destiny and embracing it and sharing it with others to heal wounds. 
She is a woman who has come to know that her partner is as tender, lost, and frightened as she has been at times. 
She has come to understand the scars of the boy in him and knows that together, love can be the relief, the healing of their wounds. 
She is a woman who can accept herself as she is. 
She can accept another as they are. 
She is able to forgive her mistakes and not feel threatened by another's even when attacked. 
She is a woman who can ask for help when she needs it or give help when asked. 
She respects boundaries, hers and another's. 

She is woman who takes responsibility for everything she creates in her life. 
She is a woman who is totally supportive and giving. 


She can see God in another's eyes. 
She can see God in her own. 
She can see God in every life situation. 


She is Goddess.










April 30, 2012

"Shards of the present Self"

Poetry is a medium  I adore, a language so unique in expression... 
This piece, written some time ago, recently called me home again in order to complete it...for now ;) 



"Shards of the present Self"


Cheated by the scourge of emotion
decisions tinged with the blood of
desperation

Needing to be wanted
needing to feel safe
believing the accumulative hype

"Write a list of exactly what you want..."

A glance,
a smile,
an exchange that claims in delight this might be "it"
Compromise begins.
The list cast aside under a reality of reason only real in the mind of the desperately seeking, desperately wanting, desperately needing...

Wondrous encounters,
blissful smiles,
a touch, thrilling
a kiss confirming...
The initial so ecstatically sugared it strengthens the grasp with an opiate toxicity.

Claim in place,
held before law
the initial has fatigued in falsified effort,
the genuine lack now plainly opaque.

Fighting, struggling to hold grasp,
blind to the truth
believing
believing...
as the abuse rallies;
the language fouler
the venom rising
the violence escalating

Taken,
The face is smothered 
The body demoralised 
Disrespected, disregarded, 
one more compromise, mere slave to the desperate need.

Used and Dishonoured.
Caged by vow
Used and Humiliated
Incarcerated by obligation
Used and Foolish

There is no love

Truth shatters the glass
all distortion abandoned...
Blame lies only in the fragmented shards of mirror.


MHH 2012






April 18, 2012

When You Thought I Wasn't Looking...

When You Thought I Wasn't Looking...
Our children are watching us 

and doing as we do, 
not as we say... 

When you thought I wasn't looking I saw you hang my
first painting on the refrigerator, and I immediately
wanted to paint another one.

When you thought I wasn't looking I saw you feed the
birds in winter, and I learned that it was good to be kind
to animals.

When you thought I wasn't looking I saw you make my
favorite cake for me, and I learned that the little
things can be the special things in life.

When you thought I wasn't looking I heard you say a
prayer, and I knew that there is a God I could always
talk to, and I learned to trust in Him.

When you thought I wasn't looking I saw you make a
meal and take it to a friend who was sick, and I
learned that we all have to help take care of each other.

When you thought I wasn't looking I saw you take care
of our house and everyone in it, and I learned we have
to take care of what we are given.

When you thought I wasn't looking I saw how you
handled your responsibilities, even when you didn't
feel good, and I learned that I would have to be
responsible when I grow up.

When you thought I wasn't looking I saw you hold
the door open for others and heard 'thank you' and
'you're welcome', and I learned respect for others.

When you thought I wasn't looking I saw tears come
from your eyes, and I learned that sometimes things
hurt, but it's all right to cry.

When you thought I wasn't looking I saw that you
cared, and I wanted to be everything that I could be..

When you thought I wasn't looking I learned most of
life's lessons that I need to know to be a good and
productive person when I grow up.

When you thought I wasn't looking I looked at you and
wanted to say, Thanks for all the things I saw when
you thought I wasn't looking.'

Little eyes see a lot...

Each of us (parent, grandparent, big brother, big sister, aunt, uncle, teacher, friend)
influences the life of a child.

How will you touch the life of someone today?
Just by sending this to someone else, you will probably make them at least think about their influence on others.
Live simply. Love generously. Care deeply. Speak kindly.






This image is taken from my own treatment room at the clinic. Note the incredible artwork, and the brilliant communication within it all,  that I am frequently gifted from the children I'm privileged to work with. Each piece carries a tale all its own :) MHH

(Shared with you through my friend, Jackie Loson Rago. Thanks Jackie! )

April 14, 2012

Be You...


Just a general observation but it seems to me far wiser to
Be who You are
Rather than trying to fit and portray someone you aren't.
Be who You are: because only you can do that!
No-one has ever been or could ever be you.
No-one else could ever be your own personal brand of "unique".
Only you can be You.
Be True to You
MHH

March 28, 2012

Too busy to "bless you"?

Running late, running fast, needed to grab a few groceries en route of my hastened journey...

Standing in line at the butchers/fish monger, I again watch the ladies behind the counter. I go out of my way to go to this butcher as the people that work there are so lovely. These ladies are such generous souls. Hard working, nothing special to look at, but warm and giving no matter how busy they are, how tired they seem...
The lady bedside me was ordering a portion of marinara mix,
"Does it have any salmon in it?"
"Not today it seems." the warm lady replied as she served.
The woman's face fell a little, then suddenly she went into a momentary facial contortion resulting in an enormous sneeze!
I smiled as I reached in my bag for a tissue,
"Bless you!"
She stared at me, astonished for a moment, then was taken by another sneeze.
I laughed, "I should have waited for the last one. Bless you again."

Her face then contorted into abrupt and brutal tears. As I reached for the entire package of tissues, the crowd about us silenced, she stuttered between gasping sobs,
"That's the... nicest... thing anyone... has said for...long time..."

I was running late, running fast, had no time to stop...so I took her arm and gently steered her to a cafe nearby, sitting her down. We ordered coffee and as we did, two of the ladies that had just been serving joined us. They had asked to take their break early in order to join us. More coffee was ordered, and another woman from the crowd asked if she might take a seat.

As we chatted, laughing, her tears drying upon her tired cheeks, a young guy delivered two bags to us both: our orders from the butcher. He said to her,
"We put lots of salmon in your marinara mix, ma'am."
New tears fell across her smiling face.

I explained to all that I was running late, people were waiting. Saying my goodbyes, I handed the waitress enough money to cover all of their coffees. Then off I ran, fast...in my departing ears the warm generous laughter of a table of strangers.

No matter how fast you're running, its never too urgent for a "bless you".




MHH2012






March 27, 2012

How does one describe the diversity...?


A few weeks ago I taught a course in facilitating healing through Quantum BioEnergetics International 
( www.qbihealing.com )
Sadly, a few weren't up to being professionally accredited just yet (as happens in real courses).

The reaction of one man's disappointment upon receipt of this news was several very long, foul, personally attacking emails to me specifically, including several curses upon my husband, all ending in "we've spent many lives together and we'll be together again" threads...

Just got news that a beautiful lady also attending, who had a profound session as I was demonstrating on her, after years of trying, fell pregnant only days later. In her words, "I'm positive this baby has finally come along as a result of the healing I received. Meeting Melissa has had a tremendous impact on me. Particularly seeing the deep integrity that drives her..."

How does one describe the diversity of the incredible people I'm privileged to meet, teach and serve? 

ps. I LOVE doing what I'm here to do :) MHH


March 25, 2012

Give

Every day, every single day, I help people.
I help them to heal themselves as never before.
I offer them a never-to-be-repeated moment in time, within an environment of balance in which to discover sanctuary in self.
And no, not because I'm extraordinarily gifted or "better" than anyone else.
Not because my gift in vibratory medicine is unprecedented and profound.
Not because I'm particularly "special".
Simply because they come to me,
uniquely me,
is their moment in healing uniquely their own.
My own heart knows an unfathomable gratitude that they choose to come to me as their healing conduit.

My true gift in healing is that I choose to
Give.
I live this gift in healing. It is not my "work" it is who I am. And so I
Give.
I do it believing people will come through gratitude to wisdom. To hold true in themselves that life is not about "give and take".

Its just about giving.

MHH2012

Creating your life


March 21, 2012

Create...


"You will not attract into your life what you "want",
                                                 You will attract into your life who you are."
Create :)


MHH 2012