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Ho'oponopono: The Hawaiian Practice for Peace and Forgiveness l S1E063
Episode 6323rd April 2024 • A Call For LOVE • Linda Orsini
00:00:00 00:21:59

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Have you ever heard of the healing practice of Ho'oponopono—a powerful Hawaiian method for finding peace within yourself?

Embrace the steps: Apologizing with 'I am sorry', seeking forgiveness with 'Please forgive me', expressing gratitude with 'Thank you', and sharing love with 'I love you'.

This simple yet profound ritual can help dissolve the walls of healing, reconciliation, forgiveness, and disconnection, bringing you back to a place of unity and compassion.

Allow this episode to carry you forward, bridging your internal landscapes to the collective consciousness. Stay present, open, and remember—every tool for transformation starts within.

Linda's website: Global Wellness Education

Thank You song by Carrie Grossman

FREE 💛 Soothe Your Tender Heart Meditation

https://www.globalwellnesseducation.com/heartmeditation

About Linda:

Have you ever battled overwhelming anxiety, fear, self-limiting beliefs, soul fatigue or stress? It can leave you feeling so lonely and helpless. We’ve all been taught how to be courageous when we face physical threats but when it comes to matters of the heart and soul we are often left to learn, "the hard way."

As a school teacher for over 30+ years, struggling with these very issues, my doctor suggested anti-anxiety medication but that didn't resonate with me so I sought the healing arts. I expanding my teaching skills and became a yoga, meditation, mindfulness, reiki and sound healer to step into my power and own my impact. 

A Call for Love will teach you how to find the courage to hold space for your fears and tears. To learn how to love and respect yourself and others more deeply.  

My mission is to guide you on your journey. I believe we can help transform the world around us by choosing love. If you don’t love yourself, how can you love anyone else? Join a call for love. 

Website - Global Wellness Education

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Transcripts

Linda Orsini:

Are you someone on a spiritual journey, seeking to deepen your connection with your higher self? If you're eager to release fear, overcome self limiting beliefs and find relief from emotional stress and anxiety, then there is a call for love. And I'm your host, Linda Orsini, guiding you on your journey to awaken your inner healer by getting unstuck from old patterns, through mindset, movement and meditation. Let's begin.

Linda Orsini:

How are you today, I've had a great day. And for me, a great day means connection, I have had so many really deep and meaningful connections today. And so now I get to connect here with you, the listener, and the viewer on YouTube. So thank you for joining in to a call for love. I really appreciate you taking your time. You know, for me, my biggest commodity of value is my time, I take my time as a very precious gift. And so that you're spending your time with me here today. I am so so grateful. Thank you. Now if you're a new listener, welcome to a call for love. And if you are a frequent listener, thank you for joining in, I really appreciate it. And today, I want to begin with a story. Actually, it's not really a story. It's something that happened to me. So as I record this, it is a Thursday. And for my Thursday routine, I like to go to a yoga class. And then I guide meditation, it's become real decadent, for me this the schedule that I have on Thursday mornings. And so after my yoga class, led by marine, the owner of Aida, one of the studios I work at, it's a really fantastic class, I guide meditation. And so I had a feeling that today for meditation, I would guide everyone in a practice that is so dear to my heart, you may have heard of it before, and if not, is Ho'oponopono, right Ho'oponopono is kind of a mouthful, but it is such a spectacular practice. And I thought that when I was going to guide everyone in this meditation, that it would just simply, you know, be a meditation. And this does not happen, I have to share this because there will be people who have were in my meditation class that will be listening to this. But I actually had to turn off I have many candles lit, some are natural, and some are battery operated. And I actually had to turn the battery candle that was right in front of me off because tears were streaming down my face. Just I wasn't sobbing like, you know, with hiccups and, and shortness of breath, that just tears water were coming out of both my eyes profusely. And I just felt so overwhelmed by this practice. And that's how strong Hone upon upon it is. And what it is, it is a Hawaiian practice for forgiveness and reconciliation. And it's about restoring harmony to oneself in our relationships. And really, when you think of it, there's really no one out there. Everything comes from us. So today's practice was a very personal practice. I had felt a lot of anxiety. This week, one day in particular, I woke up with it, the weather was rainy, and I don't know I had a lot of anxiety. And so I thought this Ho'oponopono it practice would be to myself. And so I shared this with the class that I was leading. And you know, that's a beautiful part of being a guide is that you can cater to actually what's going on in your life, which is often a thread in other people's lives because maybe it's the stars the time of the year the weather, but usually, it's no coincidence that what I'm going through is what others may be going through as well. And so for this practice her opponent Ponal I decided that we would offer it to ourselves, because as you know, we are our hardest critic. We are so hard on ourselves and It begins with us. And the reason why I chose it in the realm of anxiety was because I know that when I'm experiencing anxiety, which I am prone to, and I shared that with Monica Angela toes in Episode 62, that I am disconnected, right? I'm feeling separate. I'm worrying and anxiety, small worries built up so that there's many of them and can become overwhelming. And it's usually about the future. So I was just feeling anxious, so anxious that I couldn't settle the other day. And I realized that when I am in that place, it's I'm feeling disconnected. I'm feeling disconnected from source. You could call it anything you want, you could call it spirit, you could call it the divine, you could call it the universe. But I was feeling very separate, very alone, very fearful, very scared, because that's just the way it was, I just woke up with it. In any case, I decided that this whole Ho'oponopono practice was going to be offered to ourselves and to the people I was guiding. And so today, I would like to share with you not the meditation, but the dimensions the aspects of her Ho'oponopono because it is so beautiful. And there is a song I went with my girlfriend to the Shivananda, ashram, and Bahamas. And there was this beautiful soul, Harry Grossman, and she sings the song, thank you, you can find it on YouTube, Spotify, all your channels. And it is just so so heartfelt. I will put a link in the show notes that you can use this as a song to really open your heart. But in any case, this whole oponopono is really based in finding harmony within yourself, especially with your relationships, through prayer, dialogue and forgiveness, right, it's addressing all the spaces inside of us, that may not feel whole, that may require some forgiveness, or some softness, or some loving kindness. And it creates a sense of inner peace. You know, it is so important to realize when you're in these states, I know that I take my practices really seriously because I can notice and feel really big emotions. I'm feeling really sensitive. I think since the solar eclipse, I've been feeling this big wave of emotions, I feel like out of nowhere, I feel very sensitive, or I laugh really hard. Or, you know, I feel anxious and maybe feeling grounded, is not so much present for me at this time. But that's okay, because I got a lot of tools in my toolbox. And I have a big heart full of gratitude for everything that I do have, especially with all that's going on in the world. But everything stems from us, right? It comes from us. Everything is a mirror, it's a reflection of what's going on. And so for this practice, I decided that we would offer it to ourselves. Now, there's four phrases to Ho'oponopono. And if you know these phrases, great still listen, because there will be a new word or new phrase that I say that you may hear in a different way that lands so new and bright to you that it creates a new perspective. Alright, so bear with me. There are four phrases, right? The first phrase is, I'm sorry, right, step one, I am sorry.

Linda Orsini:

Now you can say this to somebody else. But today in this practice, we're going to offer it to ourselves and not really offering it to ourselves, as I said in the meditation class that I lead today, offering it to source offering it to universe because when you are separate, when you are feeling alone, when you're feeling isolated, and when you are inside your own little mind and own little world, it creates that separation, where you forget who you really are, and who you really are is part of a bigger picture. We all share this planet earth, the same energy And we are all energy, this collective consciousness. So I decided that we would say sorry, to spirit or source for forgetting who we actually are, which is very whole, and complete, and a source of love and kindness for ourselves and all creatures. So we were going to say I'm sorry. And I love this quote from Dr. Wayne Dyer. I say this. And it just reaches my heart so profoundly, if I knew who walked beside me every step of the way, I would never experience fear or doubt again, he said these words more or less. And it's so true. If we knew who walked beside us, every step that we take, we would not feel fear or stress again, we would not feel alone. So to feel that, I felt like it would be such a beautiful intention to say sorry to source for forgetting who we really are, and bring us back to the present. So step one is I'm sorry, you could say this to yourself. You could say this to spirit, you could say it to source the universe. Or you can say it to somebody who you have heard the first words. I am sorry, right? As a school teacher, you know, I'd hear some people say, well say you're sorry. But if you don't meet it, it doesn't mean anything. It has to come from your heart. And it's really great to notice how that feels how that lands in your heart. I am sorry, right? Very important words. Step two, is actually asking for forgiveness. So it's, please forgive me. And don't worry about who or how it means or how it sounds to other people. You have to really mean it from yourself. Please forgive me, please forgive me, because I'm just human. I'm just living this human experience. I'm going to make mistakes. I do the best that I can. But guess what? I'm going to mess up. So please forgive me. Please forgive me. Right? Can we offer that please forgive me? Right. I didn't know what I was doing. I maybe I wasn't working for my best self. I forgot who I was. Please forgive me. And step three is gratitude. So of course, we cannot know how other people are going to take it. But if we offer it sincerely, we have done the offering. And then we say in gratitude, thank you. Thank you doesn't really matter who or what you're thanking for. It's just the intention that you say, thank you. Thank you for listening to me. Thank you for holding me universe. Thank you, or to somebody who you have caused some pain or suffering to thank you. Thank you for even entertaining my apology. Thank you for being in my life. Thank you for this life that I am leading. Thank you. Gratitude, right, just a heart full of gratitude. And that is step three. Now step four, is? You guessed it. I love you. Right. I love you. You can say it to your body. You could say to the universe, you can say it to Spirit. God would ever name you gave it say I love you, even to the air that you breathe to the planet that we live on. I love you there is so what more powerful words have you ever heard than I love you? I'm sorry. Please forgive me. Thank you. I love you. So as I was saying this, and we were listening to the song, thank you by Carrie Grossman. All of a sudden, my eyes were streaming tears. And I was really choked up. I just felt such magnitude of, of energy. You know, as a school teacher, we would on Remembrance Day, we would all go into the gym, and they would play the horn for the minute of silence. And also then my eyes would tear, like just streaming tears. Sometimes. This might be embarrassing to say, but if I've gone to hockey game or we're at a sports game, and everyone stands up and sings their national anthem, it does the same for me. It's the power of community of power, the power of collective voice, it just really moves me. It brings me to just such a deep heart. also motion. And so I did experience this today sharing this meditation. It is not it doesn't have to be a meditation, it could be a prayer, it could be any time you say it, I like to use her upon upon when I am feeling as I said disconnected when I'm feeling anxious when I'm feeling angry. And that could be at myself or somebody else is really about a forgiveness, right? A reconciliation of bringing you from I'm ease into peace and tranquility. I don't know if you have ever practiced this. But it's the simple things that we forget, you know, there is a toolbox that we can use. And not every tool is going to fit in each moment. And that's the beautiful thing is that we can select what is going to resonate with us in the moment, in the circumstance, for me whole oponopono is an has been a great gift, you can incorporate it in a second. You could be in line somewhere and have a really negative thought about somebody. I'm sorry, please forgive me. Thank you, I love you. And you might say, I'm saying love you to a complete stranger, if there's someone who's lying, who's really ticked you off, and you have these really negative thoughts going on in your mind. But my mother always said, and I always like to bring in my mother. My mother always said to me that you don't have to like everybody, but you should love everybody, because they are. They're human, like they have this body they were born into this life. And they're, they're part of this human experience. That may be very hard and challenging. So that's up to your discretion. But really saying I love you is more of global acknowledgement than of course, a romantic acknowledgement, or even of an approval, right? When you can look at somebody beyond their physical body,

Linda Orsini:

beyond the actions that they produce, when you can look beyond that, and see in the core, all the stuff that's gotten in the way of their mindset and what comes out of their mouth. If you can look beyond that, and look at the core of the person, then we can possibly possibly open and soften because holding on to past grievances. It's dis dash is this ease. And that's what we don't want, right? It creates illness in our body. And it's like poison, right? What did they say when you're pointing at somebody, your index finger, which is the ego, there's three fingers pointing at you, so you're getting most of the negativity towards yourself. And the body holds on to that that's energy that the body holds on to and you do not want that. So sometimes you think you may be doing it for somebody else. And sometimes you're really actually doing it for yourself. But really, in essence, everything is a mirror to our perception of to who we are. I hope this practice resonates with you. Reach out to me, let me know, let me know if it's really challenging for you to do just soften, see if you can do one or two or three phrases and offer this into your life wholeheartedly. Right, you could be an individual practice that you do on your own, or I have been in circumstances where I have looked at somebody and I or a situation or expectation, especially if somebody has asked something from you that you really don't want to do and you find that you're feeling resentful or just really negative towards you can say this, you can say this in the moment. It doesn't even have to be to a person specifically, but to a feeling and emotion. If you're feeling anger, right? I'm sorry. I'm sorry for feeling this angry to yourself to the universe to the other person. Please forgive me please forgive me because I don't want I do not want to hold on to this Thank you, thank you for even entertaining it. And I love you. I love you for even being present for even having this life in order to experience it. So, always wishing you peace and joy. From my heart to yours. Namaste

Linda Orsini:

Thank you for listening. It would mean so much to me if you could share this episode with someone you feel could benefit from its message and subscribe to a call for love podcast. To receive new weekly episodes every Tuesday. Head over to global wellness education.com To learn more

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