I’ve had the pleasure and joy of reading a LOT of amazing spiritual books and memoirs in the past year. In fact, I’ve been meaning to put together a “recommended reading” page for a while now. Anyway, while browsing in a metaphysical and crystal shop here in Sedona a few weeks ago, I came across this trilogy of books, and after some initial hesitation but a strange attraction (where I kept picking the books up then putting them down), ended up purchasing them all:

Spiritual Enlightenment by Jed McKenna Spiritually Incorrect Enlightenment by Jed McKenna Spiritual Warfare by Jed McKenna

Over the past month, I’ve read all of the books (well, technically I am 3/4th of the way through the last but couldn’t resist posting about them now). To begin with, they are extremely radical and will possibly offend many serious spiritual seekers. But people who are frustrated, upset and/or can’t figure out why their lives don’t seem to be good despite all the spiritual things they do may find some hope here.

The disclaimer/forward in the first book made me laugh out loud – truly, I knew I was in the hands of a master upon reading it. I wasn’t disappointed with the rest of the book, or the subsequent ones.

Anyway, this guy takes nearly every spiritual belief (and religious, for that matter) and takes it all apart, with a lot of humor. He dissects gurus, the New Age movement, spirituality, Buddhism, Christianity, Hinduism and many other beliefs and religions. Although much of what he says goes against recent beliefs and ideas I’ve embraced over the past year, I had to grudgingly admit that he had/has a point about many things – many things I’ve noticed and ignored.

The books had a strange affect on me. I laughed out loud several times. But I had ‘ego reactions’ to the books, every time I read them. This same thing happens anytime I read books that discuss the true nature of the ego. For instance, The Secret Code of Revelation by Daniel Condron did the same to me, as did The Disappearance of the Universe by Gary Renard. Both of those books paint a very stark and true picture of the ego (and I also highly recommend both).

However, this trilogy of books also really expanded my mind. It really made me think and question things that I had already been secretly wondering about anyway. Often times while reading, I was sitting in the bathtub or in front of a fireplace, so perhaps I was more open and contemplative. I can’t say I wholeheartedly believe everything in the trilogy, but I have a feeling the author didn’t intend that for us anyway. It seems he really wants us to just open our eyes and see things honestly, even if it breaks our hearts to do so. It caused me to look really hard at myself and some of the ideas I’ve embraced and see them for what they really are.

The most important thing is that we are urged to find our own truth within. No spiritual teacher or guru needed. I believe this message was the main reason I was intuitively urged to read the books in the first place. After all, I just finished an intense (but amazing) year where I was part of an admittedly wonderful spiritual organization/school, but had literally lost myself in the process while placing my own higher power/higher Self in the teacher.

Anyway, I highly recommend these books… for anyone on a spiritual path who is unhappy, miserable, peeved, or just plain not in the place they think they should be. Also I would recommend it for anyone who thinks they understand what enlightenment actually is. ;) But for anyone who embraces a spiritual or religious path, be warned, you may be offended! And it may change the way you think! But you will definitely laugh.

Sometimes, despite your best of intentions and actions, you realize you have reached the end of the line with people in your life, for various reasons. Perhaps some of them are violently opposed to your spiritual growth and fear it threatens them or the relationship; perhaps they are the types that do everything in their power to bring you back down to their level; maybe they are so opposed to growth in their own lives that any time you gently point out something that might help them or the friendship continue in harmony, they vehemently oppose it and play a victim role.

Unfortunately, a long-time (8+ year) friendship that I have had has come to a final end, because the person has exhibited all of the above qualities. For a long time I tried to be gentle, caring, loving and firm. We had been growing apart for quite some time because we are moving in different directions in life. For instance, I am working hard to create much growth, harmony and peace in my life and am taking steps to leave dissension, self-pity and self-blame behind. I have been examining each thing I do in my life and seeing if it fits with the person I know I truly am inside (and am working to become), and discarding things that inhibit my growth into a humble, gentle, caring, loving and peace-filled individual. However, this friend is insistent on sitting around complaining about every little thing in life, not even realizing the potential he has to cause a positive movement. While that is fine for him if that is what he chooses, he will whine and complain incessantly during our phone conversations, dragging me down to his level of discontent, self righteousness and unhappiness. The past few times I’ve brought it up with him, he cruelly attacked my values and beliefs and actions, while at the same time act like a victim.

I blogged about our last argument here and made many mentions of the fact that I’m aware he is/was only mirroring behavior within me. I was under the mistaken impression however that I needed to keep that person in my life and only make the changes within myself. So, we became friends again for a time. However, it has become glaringly obvious that sometimes you have to let go people who mirror the worst inside of you for the very sake of sanity. How can I work on myself when the person continually exhibits and flaunts behavior that I myself am working to change within me?

So what happens when, as is true in the case with my now former friend, two friends are making different choices in life that is bringing them further and further apart? What happens when they cannot support each other because they are into different things? The only thing I see to do in this case is start a peaceful detachment process with one another. After all, things, people and places come and go in our physical realm. It doesn’t mean they aren’t still attached on a soul and energetic level. So, in the past week I started distancing myself with this friend, remaining friendly but detached. It was becoming increasingly obvious that we were moving in opposite directions.

When I gently informed this person I was taking a step back in the friendship for that very reason, he lashed out (once again) with heaps of abuse and attack dialogue. Again. Once again it sparked a huge fight filled with hateful accusations and blame coming from his end (NOT mine). While reading yet another angry email from him last night, it clicked… I do not deserve this.

I deserve friends who will bring out my best qualities, not my worst ones! I deserve someone who knows about my spiritual path and accepts my choices joyfully. Just as my friends deserve that from me!

And if you cannot be joyful about their life choices for whatever reason… it’s time to move on.

And that’s what I am doing – except permanently this time! I recall last year we’d had a similar falling out that lasted about two months, and during that time, I lost about 10 (much needed) pounds and a couple of my ailments disappeared – the ones related to self-pity and self-blame. However, it didn’t last, and I brought the friend back into my life. (Some of the ailments returned along with him!)

Sometimes, it’s just time to let go and move forward into the light of awareness and gratitude. I am grateful for this former friend and the times we had and I will always treasure the experience.


So I challenge you to look at your own lives… are you holding onto any ‘toxic’ friendships or relationships, out of fear or for any other reason? Even if you realize that they are simply mirroring behavior that you have within yourself, it doesn’t mean you are required to hold onto the relationship. Sometimes it’s nearly impossible to change while tethered to a person who wishes to remain in the behavior that you are trying to change within, and the best thing for both of you is to move on. After all, why hold onto something making both people (or just one) miserable? I myself was forced to concede that holding onto my own toxic friendship was simply enabling me to be abused time and time again. I was punishing myself. And for what? No more. :-)

Hello everyone, happy Friday! The past few days have been a mix of amazingly spiritual highs and horrible lows. However, the lows weren’t in vain, I have learned deeply from them, and that’s all that counts! I have been confronted with some of my own ego ‘delusions’ and judgments, but then also experienced two significant spiritual happenings, which I will share in a later post. I’ve been reminded that when we begin to grow spiritually, we are forced to face our own issues. And we are rigorously tested.

Here’s what happened. Prepare yourself, this is a long post! A dear friend and I got into a terrible argument. Two things brought on the argument: my friend’s negative vibes and thoughts, which he passed on to me over the weekend, and my own inability to be honest up front with him about it. We’d had similar problems in the past, and apparently this is something that needed to happen.

Before I get into what happened, I want to share up front that I believe – no, I know – that we all mirror each other. (I will be writing a full post on this at a later date). None of us are victims, except perhaps of our own behavior. Anything that bothers you about another person is something that you yourself do or have done and are not happy with. Period. We project our own shortcomings, expectations and behavior onto others. This is an amazingly powerful realization, and takes a while of applying to truly understand. I’ve been learning and applying this for many months and have reached an astounding level of clarity with it. It’s basically, ‘You spot it, you got it’. But on a deeper level.

So that said, here’s a basic sketch of the story that happened: A good male friend and I had gotten very close (spiritually) lately and even had a past-life crossing reading with a few weeks ago. I am further along on the metaphysical spiritual path because I’ve been studying metaphysics and meditating for many months now. So in a way, I was guiding and encouraging him. Anyway, him and I both are empaths and healers, and we are very sensitive to energy, especially from one another.

So, last Saturday night, he started to get really down and started questioning his spiritual beliefs. (Again). I was very vulnerable at the time because I had also been struggling last week with various things, most of which I didn’t share with him. You see, I am of the firm belief that if we are spiritually suffering, we should share it with someone who is qualified to handle the energy. To share your spiritual doubts or sufferings with someone newer on the path, can be in my opinion, detrimental to their growth. I usually speak to a therapist, strong spiritual friend or spiritual teacher when I’m really suffering. Mainly because I am not willing to pass my negative ‘burdens’ onto friends or family.

Continuing with the story… so, he unloaded his thoughts on me. I could tell he was really suffering, so I listened and encouraged him and reminded him of some of the miracles he’d already seen. But what I didn’t tell him is that his energy was being passed onto me. And that it was dark. There was NO way that I could have told him this on the phone when he was already suffering. So, I didn’t.

We hung up, and the next morning, I woke up in a pretty bad place. I was still carrying the energy he’d passed to me, along with the stuff I’d been carrying all week and hadn’t been able to release. I felt very sensitive, so I shut my phone off for the most part and didn’t talk to anyone for a couple of days. (I did make an exception and attended a metaphysical lecture on Sunday). By Monday, I was more calm and decided to go ahead and be honest with my friend about why I hadn’t talked to him in a couple of days.

Before contacting him, I processed the energy, spoke to a spiritual teacher and meditated on things so I was clear and focused. In doing so, I managed to finally understand what was going on. I saw that this situation had happened many, many times in the past with my buddy and I. We’d gotten in some terrible arguments over the past few years over this very same scenario. It would start with his negativity, which he’d unknowingly pass onto me, through constant complaints, etc. (By the way, I know he wasn’t doing this intentionally). Then I’d absorb it more and more, becoming more and more uncomfortable. I was too afraid to speak up about it.

And then I’d become more and more resentful, and finally one day, I’d release my pent up frustrations in the kindest way I knew how. It was and is extremely hard to say anything of a critical nature to this person – he immediately lashes out – so I would usually take to email, pouring out my heart. Every time, it started an argument, because he would deny, deny deny his negativity. Then, he’d add to the fight, bringing up all sorts of irrelevant things until everything was a hopeless mess.

We have both been at fault. And funnily enough, our past life crossing reading reflected this EXACT thing: that he needed to become aware of his influence over people, and I needed to learn to speak my mind to him.

So back to this story… I poured my heart out in an email. I know I was kind and loving in the email. However, it wasn’t taken that way… once again, he blew up. Completely. Immediately he began accusing me of things that I hadn’t even said. Within two or three exchanges of messages, the old patterns of him throwing in all sorts of irrelevant arguments and accusations started. This time I was very aware, and I continued to keep the subject on how we could try and fix the situation. I suggested that if he had certain dark doubts, he could share them with someone more equipped to handle them, until I was able to take it. However, he absolutely refused to see it that way and wanted to be able to unload his stuff on me whenever he wanted. Forget about whether I could handle it or not.

Anyway, for two days we traded emails, that got nastier and nastier on his part. I finally gave into my own ego and started arguing back.

I became aware on the second day that I was literally arguing with myself, my own ego. (And obviously his!) I had been told in a dream one of the nights prior that I was being spiritually tested. And boy, was I. I could see all of the qualities he was displaying in myself. And it wasn’t pretty, let me tell you. His refusal to listen to reason? Check. His wanting to complicate things until they were a huge mess? Check. Terribly painful self-pity and throwing guilt and blame? Check. I suddenly and very acutely became aware I was literally being confronted with my own ego, some things about myself that clearly, I am very unhappy with.

It was an extremely painful process, because there was nothing I could say to my friend to calm him down except one of two things: take full responsibility for something that was equally both of our faults, or refuse to argue any further. I chose the latter. I chose that option because if our friendship is to continue, we NEED to work out these issues that have plagued us for years. I am more than willing to work them out. But he wasn’t. It had to be his way.

Anyway, we formed an uneasy truce. He decided to completely give up on spirituality and go back to satisfying only his physical and ego demands (which doesn’t make sense to me, given how much he’d enjoyed the spiritual learnings). But I understand. I understand the limitations ego places on us. We become addicted to them. We revel in them, we live in them, not knowing there is another way.

I told my friend that I’m trying to devote my life to saying and thinking things only of the highest vibration. I have no interest in making fun of people, complaining (still working on this!) and partaking in some of the other activities he does on a regular basis. I told him that this is what I personally need and that I am only interested in raising my own vibrations at this point with the highest and most holistic thoughts and actions. (Again… still working on this). :) However, he took this to mean I was judging him and putting him in a box. I continually told him that no, I don’t expect this of him, but that this was what I need. He could not accept it.

There is not much that could be done when two friends come to a place where they are no longer matched in their values and goals in life. Since our uneasy truce was formed, I cannot talk to him about spiritual things, and he has taken to joyfully informing me about which unsavory activities he is participating in. Our friendship is pretty much at a standstill.

But, I AM NO VICTIM HERE. I APPARENTLY DREW THIS SITUATION TO ME BECAUSE I NEEDED TO LEARN FROM IT AND COME FACE-TO-FACE WITH MY OWN ISSUES. I do not blame him. So to make sure I’ve learned from this experience fully, I made a list of things that he was doing during our argument that were the most hurtful. Then I took an honest but compassionate look at myself to see how I was doing these very things to MYSELF. And yes, I could see each one. Self pity? Yes, it’s been something I’ve struggled with for most of my life but that I have begun to break away from. Negativity? Definitely. Inability to learn or see reason? Yes. I am given much advice by my spiritual teachers, and I tend to ignore much of it. Complicating things so they can’t be fixed? Yes, oh yes. The ego is extremely good at complicating things. Especially mine, since I like to believe I’m extremely intellectual. :)

The self-pity comes into play these days mainly through that I have refused to accept who I truly am – a spirit, a light soul who has a purpose for being here. I’ve come up with so many excuses not to accept this.

But not anymore. This painful episode – which kept me literally anxious, panicky and miserable for two straight days – was a huge learning experience. I only hope my friend learns from it as well. He will not listen to anything spiritual anymore, so I cannot share this with him. But that is OK. He is on his own path of learning. He will get there, I have no doubt. As will I. We are all works-in-progress.

The most important thing I’ve learned from this experience is that I need to become teachable again, and start really, really listening to my inner guidance and the teachers in my life. I will follow up with another post with some spiritual happenings and realizations that came about in the past couple of days.


To all persons reading this, I challenge you: Think back to your last argument with a loved one or friend. What exactly did they do or say that really bothered you? Be honest. Write it down. Then be even more honest, and think about how you may be doing that very same thing in your life. Maybe you are doing it to yourself. Maybe you are doing it to someone else. At first, it takes a while to really see how you are mirroring the behavior. But with practice, diligence and honesty, it will become apparent. The most amazing thing is that once you identify the behavior in yourself and start working on it, you will see the other person working on it, too. We don’t only mirror the ‘unpleasant’ stuff. Positive changes in yourself can and will be mirrored and reflected outwards, like the pond ripple effect. You’ll see. :)

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