
Unspoken: The Value Of Keeping Quiet by Rebbie Straubing
Why do we speak? To
communicate. Yes. Sometimes. To organize our thoughts. Yes. That happens
too.
But there is another
raging river of intention that pours out as our language that we might
not be as aware of. In fact, if you tune into this awareness and begin
tapping into its power, your whole life might transform right before
your eyes.
I’m going to share a
simple method of speaking (and not speaking) with you. This method can
tweak your life into greater joy and fulfillment. It’s so simple that
you may already do it naturally. The difference that I’d like to
introduce is that you do it consciously, frequently and joyfully.
Hot Potato
Imagine a long line of
people. Perhaps it includes all of humanity. And they are passing hot
potatoes down the line. Quickly. As fast as they can. They cannot bear
to hold these hot potatoes that are coming fast and furiously from the
person next to them. They can’t hold them for more than a split second
and so they pass them along with great urgency.
These potatoes are our
words. They are hot with feeling and we cannot bear them. We hear things
and we repeat them. We react to things and we speak them. We simply
cannot stay with the heat of our own experience.
This fast and furious flow
of language from our mouths has nothing to do with communication or
clarification of thoughts. It is a river of feeling unconsciously
gushing as our words because we cannot contain the pain of our
conflicting emotions.
Speaking is one way we
have found to get rid of the hot potato.
And so we talk. About
everything. A lot.
And while this is of value
in the sense that it offers us relief from the heat, it does not solve
the problem of the long line of potatoes coming our way. In fact, it
keeps us profoundly enmeshed with all the rest of the potato passers.
Sweet Potato
The name of the Heart
Chakra, Anahta, translates as “unstricken.” In terms of language, it
means “unspoken.” When you find the true tone that is humming in your
spiritual heart, it has no words. It is unspoken. And when you do bring
it forward as language, your words are always sweet. They come from
within and they soothe those who are fortunate enough to hear them. This
form of language is softer, slower and deeper than the hot potato style.
And because it is comfortable and soothing rather than hot and painful,
you stay there long enough to taste its delicious message.
Try this: This gets you
out of the hot potato lineup and brings your language into the sweet
smelling garden of the heart.
You can do this for one
hour or one day or one week. It is an exercise that rearranges your mind
and upgrades your vibration.
Make a list of the words
that are the most important, sacred or personally meaningful to you.
Words like God, love, peace, law of attraction, inner guidance, spirit,
soul, gratitude, appreciation, kindness etc. Your list will be personal
to you. I’m just giving you examples here.
For the next hour or day or week, we are going to play a game. Anytime
you find yourself about to say one of the words on your list, stop.
Don’t say it.
Instead, look to your
heart and find the feeling instead. Take a moment of connecting with
that sacred intention, that deep inner knowing that that word wants to
reflect.
By doing this, by not speaking, by not passing that potato, a funny
thing happens. Because you are tuning in to your unspoken knowing of
that reality, you communicate it more clearly – even by being quiet. And
the pain of the hot potato transforms into the sweet taste of inner
awareness.
After you play with this
for little while, you will be trained to touch into your heart whenever
you speak those words. The gushing river of unconscious chatter becomes
quiet so that you can sense who you truly are. Your inner awareness
deepens from this training and your ability to communicate about things
that matter to you soars.
© 2008 Rebbie
Straubing

Dr. Rebbie Straubing a
workshop leader, Abraham Coach and spiritual writer. Her free e-course,
“7 Secrets for Manifesting Your Heart’s Desire,” is available at
http://www.YOFA.net .
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