by Christine Kane
I looked at my phone in horror.

“You want me to what?” I said into it.
“It’s time, Christine. You’ve been talking about that basement for weeks now. It’s time to deal with it.”
I had been working with my coach for months at this point. And even though I had reached certain levels of success in my career, I kept getting stuck in the same old ruts. I was about to record my fourth CD, and I was ready to move to a higher level.
Thom was doing what good coaches do: listening carefully, seeing clearly – and of course, pushing me to take conscious action.
So, he encouraged me to start small and completely clear out the junk in my basement. Thirty minutes a day. One section at a time. Building momentum as I went.
Each week, during our call, I’d report back on my progress.
Each week, I had a new reason why I simply could not let go of some clutter-y item.
“But I spent so much on it!” “I might need it someday!” “I could gain weight and need this again.” “I paid such a good price for it!”
To my credit, I did pretty well at letting go once Thom talked me through these old mindsets.
Then came the week I had to face one particularly significant section of the basement.
It was where I stored various pieces of furniture I had gotten at the Salvation Army and at local flea markets when I first began my songwriting career. A bookcase, a kitchen table, a dresser, and a few shelves. I no longer liked or used this furniture because my tastes totally changed. I had begun to cherish beauty and opulence in my surroundings. I wanted to fill my home only with items that I loved.
“So, Christine,” Thom asked. “Why don’t you want to let these things go?”
I was embarrassed. But I told him the truth. “Well, here’s the thing. If my music career doesn’t work out, I might need them one day. If I fail, and I don’t have any money, I might wish I had kept these things.”
Long pause.
“So, you’ll be on the street – but at least you’ll have that bookcase?”
I laughed.
Thom sighed. And what he said next has been a core lesson of creating my success and happiness.
He said that everything in our lives has energy. Everything has our thoughts and emotions embedded into it. Old furniture is no exception. In essence, what I was saying to the universe and to my subconscious, creative self was this:
I believe so deeply in my own failure that I’m holding onto physical things that represent that possibility. Every time I walk by these items in my basement, I will be reminded of my inevitable failure. Every moment I’m in my house, my subconscious will know that in the very foundation of my life (my basement), there are items that prove I don’t believe in my own success.
That week, I called Goodwill, and scheduled an appointment to have the old furniture taken away.
I’d love to report that I smiled and waved as the old clunky furniture was carried away. But the truth is I was terrified. I was letting go of my Plan B. I was saying to the Universe: “I thoroughly believe in my own success.”
I had never done that before in such a concrete way!
As I wrote earlier, I began recording my fourth CD as I was clearing out the basement. That CD went on to sell five times more than any of my other CD’s. It received rave reviews. Border’s Books featured it on a listening post that year, and named it the top CD of the year in my category.
Now, even though I know this success wasn’t ONLY about letting go of my old flea market furniture, I have become a firm believer that we each need to pay attention to the energy of the stuff that surrounds us. We need to pay attention to what we are telling our subconscious minds when we hold on.
Now you.
What are you holding onto? What thoughts and beliefs are you putting out into the Universe by clinging to it? Are you telling yourself you don’t believe in the inevitability of your own success and prosperity? Or that you don’t believe you can expand and create better things in your life?
Pick one thing – just one small thing – and let it go. Today!
Christine Kane is the Mentor to Women Who are Changing the World. She helps women uplevel their lives, their businesses and their success. Her weekly LiveCreative eZine goes out to over 12,000 subscribers. If you are ready to take your life and your world to the next level, you can sign up for a F.R.E.E. subscription at http://christinekane.com.
WANT TO SEE HUNDREDS MORE ARTICLES LIKE THIS ONE?
See Christine‘s blog at ChristineKane.com/blog.
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I really luv’d this post as it made me stop and reflect on the exact same question poised to Christine, why was she hanging on to those outdated items of hers, and how by keeping them (the clutter that surrounds us) it sent a subtle reminder of her expected failure ~ very helpful & fantastic way to think about it! Thanks!
Christine
Christine Casey recently posted..Failure is not an option
Hi Christine,
I know, me too. But sometimes it’s so hard to give away your safety net. It’s one thing to say, “I believe I will be successful.” It’s another to give away the furniture you might need if you downsize. I choose to have courage.
One Love,
Debbie
I can relate to this post so much. Lately I’ve been in the mind set that I need to get rid of things I don’t use or haven’t used in a long time. Unfortunately there are those few items that for some reason no matter how many times I clean out the closets still get put back even though I know they will never get used and they are just taking up space. It’s so hard to let go and step out of your comfort zone. But we all must have courage to throw away that unused piece of furniture or clothing or whatever it may be. Thanks for the friendly reminder.
Debbie, I’ve been a professional organizer for about 10 years and I can tell you that you are not alone; so many of my clients struggle with letting go. I have shared your beautiful words of inspiration with them and hope that they will see the light, just like you did, and go on to experience success by simply creating space for it! Your courageous steps have not gone unnoticed!
Hi Helen,
Thank you so much. It was such a relief to let go and realize that I was stepping through a gate of brand new possibilities. Helping others get organized must be such a blessing. Good for you.
One Love,
Debbie
Letting go is really the hardest part of our everyday life, be it of hurt feelings, anger, or in Debbie’s case, old furnitures! It really is hard to understand why most of us just can’t seem to just let go of the things we get use to but when we finally do it is actually very liberating! Letting go is being FREE of unnecessary baggages, and that is such a wonderful feeling! I say, LET GO and LIVE! ^__^
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