Hi friend,
Thanks for joining us! This week we're really excited to share with you a collaboration. For a very long time I've known I was meant to share this creative, soulful work. We're combining the intuitive downloads and video, with Clark's ability to beautifully express messages in written word. We truly hope it helps bring you clarity and peace, and look forward to sharing more creative projects with you!
~ Wendy
Thanks for joining us! This week we're really excited to share with you a collaboration. For a very long time I've known I was meant to share this creative, soulful work. We're combining the intuitive downloads and video, with Clark's ability to beautifully express messages in written word. We truly hope it helps bring you clarity and peace, and look forward to sharing more creative projects with you!
~ Wendy
Patience is a virtue. You hear that sometimes as a bit of wisdom, but at no time has the truth behind that statement become more apparent for us than during this Covid-19 pandemic. We find ourselves, after a lingering winter- and the sun finally shining and the birds chirping- told that the best thing for the well-being of all is to stay home, travel as little as possible, and to stay 6 feet from everyone except those you live with. The order goes against some of our deepest personal springtime wishes and urges to renew, reinvigorate, get out, gather and celebrate. But the order at its base is wise, moral in the interest of humankind and simply necessary to avoid a virus that would devastate us in so many ways. Our personal, egotistical desires find themselves at odds with our moral compass and the wisdom that asks us- or, rather, implores us-to be patient adding that there will be a time for all the things we're used to doing-but that time is not now and any semblance of normalcy will only be delayed if we don't listen. Washington, it seems, has seen so many of its good citizens take the order to heart in the interest of everyone and at the expense of the self. We want to thank everyone for their patience- we thank you all over the country- from New York to the Northwest--and everyone on Earth who has done or is doing the same.
I think there is a gift in all this difficulty and suffering. Patience, and the necessity to be patient, is a gift. And the patience demanded of us now is rigorous. It is a brand of patience that asks us to show love by not showing up-by staying apart. It is that irony-of showing love by not doing and by often sacrificing traditional loving practices for necessary ones that is perhaps the most difficult thing to endure for those who have avoided serious illness. When patience overriding ego yields good as it so recognizably does now we recognize the possibility of bringing patience into other aspects of life in a society that so often shuns or even insults patience. We believe this challenging time will inspire positive growth and change, both in the individual and society. This tower moment is generating a new beginning, one that has a lot of potential for beautiful, soul-aligned changes.
~ Clark & Wendy
I think there is a gift in all this difficulty and suffering. Patience, and the necessity to be patient, is a gift. And the patience demanded of us now is rigorous. It is a brand of patience that asks us to show love by not showing up-by staying apart. It is that irony-of showing love by not doing and by often sacrificing traditional loving practices for necessary ones that is perhaps the most difficult thing to endure for those who have avoided serious illness. When patience overriding ego yields good as it so recognizably does now we recognize the possibility of bringing patience into other aspects of life in a society that so often shuns or even insults patience. We believe this challenging time will inspire positive growth and change, both in the individual and society. This tower moment is generating a new beginning, one that has a lot of potential for beautiful, soul-aligned changes.
~ Clark & Wendy
Warm Wishes,
Wendy and Clark
Wendy and Clark