TrueLife - Eileen Forrestal - The Courage to Shine

Episode Date: November 11, 2024

One on One Video Call W/George https://tidycal.com/georgepmonty/60-minute-meetingSupport the show:https://www.paypal.me/Truelifepodcast?locale.x=en_US🚨🚨Curious about the future of psych...edelics? Imagine if Alan Watts started a secret society with Ram Dass and Hunter S. Thompson… now open the door. Use Promocode TRUELIFE for Get 25% off monthly or 30% off the annual plan For the first yearhttps://www.district216.com/🎙️🎙️Eileen ForrestalAloha, everyone! Today, we’re stepping into a conversation about courage, transformation, and the power of living fully expressed. Our guest, Eileen Forrestal, is here to ask us questions that may feel uncomfortable yet are utterly essential: Are you truly living a life you love?Eileen’s journey from a life in medicine as an anesthesiologist to one of vibrant self-expression is profound. For years, she helped people drift into sleep, but now her mission is about waking people up—awakening us to our potential, our dreams, and the passions we so often bury under fear and routine. Eileen’s personal story, shared in her memoir The Courage to Shine, is one of breaking free from the constraints of fear and silence, finding her voice, and empowering others to do the same.Through her coaching, speaking, and her inspiring Get Up and Go Diaries, Eileen is helping thousands of people worldwide step out of the shadows and into a life that is purpose-driven, authentic, and alive with possibility. With wisdom forged in her own journey, she invites us to confront what’s holding us back, so we can finally blossom into who we’re meant to be.So, if you’re ready to ignite the courage within, to live not just a life of contentment but one that lights you up—welcome. Eileen Forrestal is here to guide us on this journey, where embracing the risk of change can reveal a life beyond our wildest dreams.https://eileenforrestal.com/ One on One Video call W/George https://tidycal.com/georgepmonty/60-minute-meetingSupport the show:https://www.paypal.me/Truelifepodcast?locale.x=en_USCheck out our YouTube:https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLPzfOaFtA1hF8UhnuvOQnTgKcIYPI9Ni9&si=Jgg9ATGwzhzdmjkg

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Starting point is 00:00:01 Darkness struck, a gut-punched theft, Sun ripped away, her health bereft. I roar at the void. This ain't just fate, a cosmic scam I spit my hate. The games rigged tight, shadows deal, blood on their hands, I'll never kneel. Yet in the rage, a crack ignites, occulted sparks cut through the nights. The scars my key, hermetic and stark. To see, to rise, I hunt in the dark, fumbling, fear, Fearist through ruins maze lights my war cry born from the blaze.
Starting point is 00:00:40 The poem is Angels with Rifles. The track, I Am Sorrow, I Am Lust by Codex Seraphini. Check out the entire song at the end of the cast. Ladies and gentlemen, welcome back to the True Life podcast. I hope everybody is having a beautiful day. I hope the sun is shining. I hope the birds are singing, hope the wind is at your back. I have a great show for you today.
Starting point is 00:01:20 And let me just go ahead and jump right in here and introduce all of you to Eileen, for us all. We're going to step into a conversation about courage, transformation, and the power of living fully expressed. Our guest, Eileen, is here to ask us questions that may feel uncomfortable, yet are utterly essential. Are you truly living a life you love? That's a big question we're going to get into. Aline's journey from a life in medicine as an anesthesiologist to one of them vibran self-expression is profound. For years, she helped people drift into sleep, but now her mission is about waking people up, awakening us to our potential, our dreams, and the passions we so often bury under fear and routine.
Starting point is 00:02:01 Eileen's personal story shared in her memoir, The Courage to Shine, is one of breaking free from the constraints of fear and silence, finding her voice and empowering others to do the same. Through her coaching, speaking, and her inspiring Get Up and Go Diaries, Eileen is helping thousands of people worldwide step out of the shadows and into a life that is purpose-driven, authentic and alive with possibility. With wisdom forged in her own journey, she invites us to confront what's holding us back so we can finally blossom into who.
Starting point is 00:02:31 Elaine, thank you so much for being here with me today. How's your day going? Day is going great so far. Beautiful autumn day here. Northwest of Ireland. That's it. Dry leaves, which is lovely. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:02:48 Isn't it interesting that here we are in the seasons of change and there's so much change happening and you have this message of change that's inspiring people on some levels. How did you, maybe you could fill us in a little bit of a backstory about how you found your voice and how you came to embrace uncertainty and change. Well, I think you've given quite a concise, intro there just at the beginning.
Starting point is 00:03:14 I think you've almost said everything. And it did take me writing a book to join the dot step backwards. You know, I kind of find that, you know, sometimes you have to do that to get a good perspective on your life. You start from where you are and you look back, you think, how did I get here? Right.
Starting point is 00:03:31 And noticed really what were the, you know, turning points, tipping points, you know, what were the sort of the little steps along the way. So, yeah, you know, you know, where do you start, like day one? But I suppose really what you're maybe asking was just the kind of the journey really of self-expression. You know, I kind of, I didn't use my voice very much when I was a child. I tried to use it, but I had a stammer.
Starting point is 00:04:00 You call it a stutter. I had a stammer. And I thought the best way to not let people know about that was to say nothing. And if you didn't say anything, people thought you were normal. So I spent a lot of time looking like I was normal. But you know, you kind of realize it's a very kind of a limited life because you don't get to say what it is you want to say no matter where. And obviously, you know, I would speak when I was relaxed
Starting point is 00:04:26 and, you know, when it was kind of easy and there was people around me that I knew, but that was a very tiny comfort zone. And then anything outside of that, I'm really, you know, silence was the only option. So it took something to break out of that, definitely. and say, well, wait a minute, there's nobody going to extract the words from my throat. They took out my tonsils, but there's no one coming to get my words. And at some point, kind of say, well, if it needs to be said and I really want to say it, well, nobody else is going to say it.
Starting point is 00:04:54 So give it a go. So here I am. Yeah, it's interesting to think about how many of us, myself included, and I know so many people that live, a life that we think we're supposed to live instead of living a life that's meaningful to us. And that only comes when you find the courage to embrace yourself and embrace your voice and stand up for what you believe in. But it seems kind of, for me, I've found it difficult because the culture has all these
Starting point is 00:05:28 preconceived notions of what we're supposed to be. It has these preconceived package ideas of what success are, of what relationships are. But that isn't really the case. That kind of seems to be a facade on something. some level. And it's hard to find yourself in these preconceived ideas and speak out. At least for me, did you find it, did you find yourself influenced by these other people's ideas and other people's voices and this constant messaging around you? Well, there was certainly that. And there was a way to fit into that, you know. So other people did other things. Like other people didn't do what I did.
Starting point is 00:06:01 So even though we were in a, you know, a same society, then other people seemed to, you know, there was actors and singers and those all sorts. But on the path that I was on, I was going to think, well, how did I kind of wind up on this one? So, yes, I conformed, I suppose, really, to what I felt was going to keep me kind of comfortable and safe and not be exposed. So, you know, other people obviously chose differently. But I think, you know, certainly, me, my family encouraged me to speak and why didn't I speak up and I'm saying no. I can't. And, you know, yes, I was clever.
Starting point is 00:06:41 You know, I could pass exams and somebody had told me the longest course in college was medicine. And I thought, well, I can hide in college for like seven years. That would be handy. Now, nobody told me to go to college and hide there. I just thought that would be a good thing to do. And, you know, I kind of found anesthesia, which was kind of a very nice job for, you know, a quiet person like me. And all of my patients being asleep. for the most part.
Starting point is 00:07:07 And I suppose, but just when I looked at other people and looked at other expressions in life, and I thought there's something missing over here with me. Like, I'm not having as much fun as I could be having. So I did actually, I was invited to an entrepreneur retreat once upon a time. And I wasn't an entrepreneur. I was a doctor.
Starting point is 00:07:26 I said, I'm not an entrepreneur. But anyway, somebody had been noticing that I'd been working away on the diaries, just quietly kind of behind the scenes. and creating these books. And they said, did I want them, you know, global? And I thought, that'd be great, you know, global. So anyway, you know, I took myself off to Bali for a month.
Starting point is 00:07:48 And I got kind of to play there as a kind of a different kind of a person than an atheist. So, you know, the whole world of kind of entrepreneurship and speaking and, you know, Facebook live. and all of these other things to expand the brand. And I thought, well, this is actually me. This is a way more mean. So I retired out of medicine. And this is kind of what I'm at now. So I just kind of felt.
Starting point is 00:08:20 And then I, you know, I really got into what I was doing with the diaries was all around the power of words. And I thought, you know, so instead of putting people to sleep with drugs, I thought, well, what about waking people up with words? Because it's always a conversation that kind of wakes you up. It's a conversation with somebody that encourages you or the conversation with someone that inspires you. And it's like, oh gosh, you know, it's just like conversations, but somebody can see something and it can change your life. So I'm all for those kind of conversations. Yeah, it's wonderfully said. It seems to me change comes from one or two ways, whether it's inspiration or desperation.
Starting point is 00:08:57 And I think most people find themselves in front of both of those animals at some point in time. Can you speak to that idea? Like I'm sure that there was when you spoke about stammering or when you spoke about hiding in college. That sounds like desperation to me on some level. Exactly. I think possibly inspiration possibly comes from a level of desperation. Because, yes, you know, it becomes, certainly as you get older
Starting point is 00:09:25 and you realize that, well, you know, things aren't necessarily. You kind of do all the right things, you know, in terms of, you know, society, you're doing all the right things, and you think you're kind of on this path, which should be leading somewhere. And then you can think, well, actually, I'm not there yet. Like, when am I going to be there? And it's like, I'm still not there. And so at that point, maybe not that it's desperation, but it does assume a certain kind of a resignation. And then somebody comes along and says something. And that's kind of inspiring. I think, oh, whereas had I not been quite so desperate, I might not have heard that little voice that said, why don't you try this?
Starting point is 00:10:00 so not you know because you can sit out you can sit out you know it's like it's not a problem you know life was fine i was quiet it was fine you know i am technically you know successful i had all of the trappings of success but all i really kind of what when really somebody said it what i got was missing was my voice like my actual what i felt was like oh you know stuff that i wanted to say and and i just didn't get around to say it because i was just too scared to kind of you know open my mouth and say something. So I'd answer very briefly, very fast. I could speak really quickly.
Starting point is 00:10:36 And just to get the words out really fast. And whether you got them or not, that was like, neither here or there. But so, yeah, inspiration, I think, can come from a little bit of desperation. When you're desperate, maybe you're looking for inspiration. That's what I say. Yeah, that's well said.
Starting point is 00:10:51 I'm curious if we look back to the life of an anesthesiologist, it must be it must be on some level odd and fascinating to be putting people to sleep on some level because I would imagine
Starting point is 00:11:09 the people you're seeing even though the relationship you may have with them might be a short-lived like you are talking with someone in a really vulnerable state like what is that relationship like between an anesthesiologist
Starting point is 00:11:20 and the person they're working with? Oh it's quite extraordinary really I suppose the first thing you realize is trust. That, you know, somebody is trusting, you know, themselves, their mother, their child, their partner. You know, they're trusting you to take care of them. So it's a huge responsibility. So I do get there's a big privilege in actually having that job. And I did love it.
Starting point is 00:11:49 And, you know, I just, and then there was that sense of, kind of, Like the miracle of it, it's like, you know, I had certain drugs. And of course I had all my exams. I knew exactly how to, you know, I knew exactly what happened. But really, I used to say, really? Like, really? What's actually like, how do I do this? How do these drugs do this?
Starting point is 00:12:10 So, you know, we know more now maybe about, you know, about the brain now. But, you know, my textbook, as I say, exam passing and then the actual, you know, witnessing is, you know, this drifting off to sleep and drifting back. And sometimes, you know, after three hours asleep, the person waking up would continue the conversation that they had as they were drifting off sleep, as if the three hours had never happened. And in that three hours, something life-changing could potentially have happened. So it was a very, it was a great career. I loved it, very interesting, a privilege. And you get to interact with all, you know, from premature babies, pre-babies, you know, pre-born babies, you know, from the labor ward, you know, all the, you know, all the, you know,
Starting point is 00:12:54 way up to, you know, to, you know, intensive care and, you know, elderly in theater and, you know, having their hip replaced and having new cataracts or something. So it's always really that lovely sense that you're really, really more making it in some people's lives. Amazing. Thank you for that. There's no doubt in my mind that you have made a big change in people's lives. In that particular exchange, I'm hearing the ideas of trust and awareness. And it seems to me, like, you know, Like those could be the catalyst for profound change, whether it's a life-changing operation or whether it's getting the courage to shine on some level. Like maybe we could just, we could stop and talk about awareness for a little bit because
Starting point is 00:13:36 you are clearly an expert in awareness and fading into consciousness, fading out of consciousness, becoming a better version of yourself, maybe slipping back into a version of yourself. It feels like a tie. But can you give me your thoughts on awareness? Well, you know, there's obviously the practical awareness, you know. We're all aware. you know, we're aware of our surroundings. We're aware that we're awake.
Starting point is 00:14:01 We're not aware of when we're asleep. But, yeah, so there's kind of a general awareness. But sometimes we're not really fully aware, maybe of, you know, maybe things that we say to people or how other people maybe are impacted around us. Or we're not necessarily aware of things outside of ourselves. You know, if there is a distance, we can sort of separate ourselves. And, yeah, maybe we're not aware. always aware, somebody said to me, the last person to see you walking into a room is you.
Starting point is 00:14:31 So we're also always maybe not aware of how, you know, something might alter in a room when we walk in, you know, you might notice if there's like silence or there's, oh, hello, she's arrived. But in general, you know, we might not be aware of how, you know, how, as I say, it's very clear when people are asleep or awake, like in my job, awareness, you know, on a lot. awareness or conscious or unconscious. And yeah, but perhaps in our day-to-day lives, we're not fully aware, really, because we're not, we're just maybe not, we're just a little bit more preoccupied of what was on in our own heads.
Starting point is 00:15:07 And maybe we're not even aware of how much was on in there that doesn't really, that doesn't really impact our outer lives. But yes, I think awareness is a very interesting concept. Yeah. It's, I've heard it said that, you know, there's like that part of your brain that's like the reticular activating system. And when you notice something new, if you get a new car, pretty soon you see that new car everywhere. If you buy a new sweater, pretty soon you realize everyone, a couple people have that sweater on in some stuff.
Starting point is 00:15:33 And I'm curious, is it the same? Do you feel like it's that same sort of awakening to awareness that allowed you to see your life differently? Like once you began to see yourself in this new light, did you always begin to see yourself that way? Was there an awareness there of like, hey, this is kind of who I am? Once you went to Bali and you were like, this is who I am. Like, were you more aware of that, who you were. when you figured it out. Does that kind of make sense? Yeah, maybe there's a kind of a recognition somewhere, you know, that, you know, somewhere along the line when your brain was kind of, you know,
Starting point is 00:16:04 developing, it was sort of, it was going on a certain track, maybe. And then maybe it went off track. And then you're kind of aware that you're sort of off track, but you're not quite sure. And then maybe when you get back on track, it's like, oh, this feels more. This feels more like it. This feels more like maybe, you know, I don't know whether that's your genetic or your inheritance or your legacy from, you know, earlier generations or whatever. Is it built into your DNA? Who knows? And then we thwarted ourselves, you know, and, you know, sometimes I have a, you know, I get a little bit, you know, a challenge to the education system, which I think, you know, is a little bit more academically programming us than maybe could be just, you know, fostering what's maybe a little bit
Starting point is 00:16:46 more, for the self-expression in ourselves. So I just feel that sometimes, our schooling system kind of puts you on a certain track. And then you either succeed in that system or you don't succeed in that system, which case people feel they're failed in that. And then they feel that. Whereas, you know, there's so many other expressions in life. And we've seen the one that's rewarded, seems to be the one that comes through an academic program,
Starting point is 00:17:11 which is not actually true, but sometimes on the, it kind of looks in the academic world anyway. But then you see all the successes that people have when they're fully expressed and they're fully doing what they're really, really great at, what they love to do, they love their life, they love their business, they love their work. And then they seem to be, you know, really what I would call successful as opposed to sometimes you can be successful as society might see it, but not experience that whole, you know, whatever the experience of really being successful is in life.
Starting point is 00:17:44 Yeah, it's a great point. But it does take courage, you know, and I think a big thing. pitfall that myself and other people I know fall into is, you know, there's a lot of questions that come up when you want to be your authentic self, when you want to succeed at something that you love doing. Like, what if you're responsible for other people? What if you hold yourself accountable to the expectations of others? Like, there's these big questions that we really have to do some soul searching on to allow ourselves to find that courage to be successful. Can you speak to some of those ideas? What were some of the obstacles you had to overcome in order to find the courage
Starting point is 00:18:23 to do it? What was that like? Well, I think you sort of go back to fundamentals, you know, fundamentally, like what does it really kind of mean to be successful? You know, you know, we'll say, you know, when I, when I look back, what I really wasn't successful at, I felt was just, you know, interacting with people. Like, I was successful at reading. I was successful at passing exams. I was successful to do one of those things. But I wasn't successful at like being popular. You know, I felt I didn't really have, you know, that many friends because, you know, and really, so even when you're when you're small, there's kind of fundamentals. You just want to belong. You just want people to like you. And it's maybe not that hard. But then when you start hiding that
Starting point is 00:19:09 and pretending that you don't care whether people like you or not or you don't care that, you know, then maybe that's some of the pretense. Whereas when you're authentically saying, what if I really, you know, I really, you know, can we be friends? Or just, I think maybe it's more simple than we make out. And certainly it takes courage to say that. You know, like I do say it in the book. A lot of my anger was directed at my mother. And, you know, it kind of, you know, she would seem to be coaxing me, you know,
Starting point is 00:19:40 to like speak properly and slow down and relax and be calm. And all of those things where I'd be like completely the opposite. it maybe like, can't, and we'd have these like really frustrating kind of arguments or whatever interactions. And then to kind of go back really and return and sort of say, look, I'm really sorry. I was so mean and horrible. You know, I wasn't mean and horrible. But when you're 13 and you're 14 and you're 15, you're frustrated and you think it's all your other's fault somewhere. So sometimes it takes courage to go back and say, look, you know, I played my part. You know, I didn't. I didn't slow down.
Starting point is 00:20:19 I didn't relax. I didn't do all the things you advised me to do, which, you know, perhaps I could have done a little more patience. Probably not. Probably not. Like, sometimes I think it's all necessary. Like all of those,
Starting point is 00:20:38 it's necessary, right? Like, you have to go through that. Every bit of it. Yeah. Every step. Yeah. Like, that's part of the journey. Like, you have to get upset.
Starting point is 00:20:49 And usually our parents take the brunt of it. And they had their role in it too. I mean, it's difficult to go through life and become actualized and find the courage to do what you want to do. Because there's a million reasons not to. There's a million reasons to not do what you love. There's a million reasons to hide behind ideas like safety or security or all of these things. And the truth is, maybe your ideas of success that you've given yourself are, unrealistic expectations.
Starting point is 00:21:20 Maybe this idea of success you have for yourself is unattainable. So you've just been chasing this, you just been chasing your tail. It's tricky. It's tricky to figure out, you know, and that's where the courage comes in. Like you might fail, whatever that word kind of means. If we're on now, what is, is it possible to fail? Is failure just practice? Or when I say failure, what do you think of?
Starting point is 00:21:43 Well, it's a word, you know. We learned words in school, you know, failing was failing. exams. That's the first time you learn the word. That's the first time I heard a word fail. And it was about failing an exam. And you know, you don't really get the concept of failing in life or failing, you know, maybe you fail to, you know, I don't know, maybe if I don't know, fell off your bicycle or you failed to get, you know, whatever it was. I don't know, there was different things, but it assumes a kind of a more significance as you go through life. And then you regard yourself, oh, am I a failure? You know, what does that mean?
Starting point is 00:22:17 Am I a failure? I said, well, I'm not a failure at this. I'm a failure at that. I'm a failure to, you know, I'm not very good in the kitchen. I'm not a great cook. I could cook up drug combinations of drugs for a really tasty anesthetic, but I'm not very good for a dinner party. But so, you know, what I consider myself a failure at that?
Starting point is 00:22:36 Not really. Somebody else is much better at it. They enjoy doing it. If I really want to do it, I'm sure I could get good at it, you know? So, yeah, I'm not sure where our notions of failure come from. but I do think that I think exploring yourself exploring that the journey that you make yourself
Starting point is 00:22:54 talking about awareness or that courage it is to actually you know just sit down and say look at I am I where I want to be like really and where am I really and how did I get here and if I keep going the way I'm going where am I going so that just sit down
Starting point is 00:23:09 that takes a bit of courage to actually go and do that that's why I say writing a writing a memoir and joining the dots backwards is a very therapeutic exercise. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Did you, how was that process for you?
Starting point is 00:23:24 Was it, did you feel as if something was writing through you or, you know, some people have different ways to express the way they write, but what, what is yours? No, it was, again, I never thought I was going to write a book. Never occurred to me to write a book. But, you know, every so often I would, you know, say a little bit about myself or about my life or where I was and then somebody said, oh, you should write a book. I thought, really? He said, oh, that might help somebody. I said, really? Okay. I suppose my whole life has been about helping in some level. So it did take me 13 years to write it, believe it or not. It never really meant to see the light of day,
Starting point is 00:24:08 you know, but I said, look at it. I said I would do it. I promised this person I would write this book. and I suppose I just, when I started it, it was kind of all over the shop. And then I said to somebody that I was writing it and they said, you know, did I want some help? They happened to be a book writing person. I said, oh, yes, please. So somebody took it and sort of said, well, what are you trying to say? And what's your message? And what's all the thing?
Starting point is 00:24:34 So you go through the process of it. So that was like the first iteration. And then, you know, maybe somebody else would say, and then you can't think, oh, that's kind of interesting. I should do that. So I was always trying to turn it around to see would it actually benefit. a reader. Like, it's all very well writing it from a writer's point of view, but I never even really considered myself a writer. And it was just somebody who was just writing this story of my life because somebody thought it would be a good idea. And so here I am. So yes, it kind of
Starting point is 00:24:59 came through time and time. And anyway, apparently it's got, it's getting some good feedback. So I'm pleased that somebody somewhere might be getting some value from reading it. It's a struggle. It's a struggle. It's not, just, no, I didn't feel it was channeled. And I go This was easy. No, this wasn't easy. This took a lot of, and it takes more than one person. I think you do need somebody,
Starting point is 00:25:21 a coach or a mentor or some other writing person who can cast a cold eye. Produce a better product. Yeah. Yeah, I agree. I think that that's probably true in most aspects of life. You know, it's more life with our view. but if you have someone writing next to you or a team of people that will be honest with you,
Starting point is 00:25:49 you can get a way better perspective of what's on the road or coming down the road or what you just ran over on some level. Yeah. Yeah. It's like life. You know, it's always going to be in a dialogue with somebody, you know, give your perspective. Yeah. You can have your own view, which can be very, you know, very, very sensible as far as you're concerned. And then somebody else can hear it and said, really?
Starting point is 00:26:13 Is that really what you think? Like really? Have you, have you thought a bit more about that? Yeah. It makes me thankful for all the people that want to argue with me. Because how else would you know what you know unless you had someone to challenge your point? Right? It would be so boring if we all thought the same thing.
Starting point is 00:26:32 It would just be like, yep, this is it. It's kind of funny to think about. Yeah. And in a good robust conversation with somebody, you hear yourself saying stuff that you wouldn't otherwise. You know, so you do need to be kind of willing to have those kind of robust conversations where you can find out, again, it's your own expression, that your own self-expression, that you're willing. And that takes courage sometimes. Sometimes you might not be popular because you can say something that maybe, you know, you said, God, did I say that? And then somebody else, did you say that?
Starting point is 00:27:01 I think, oh, yes, I said that. And oh, yes, you said that. So now you have to kind of own the fact that you said it. Why do I say that? Well, actually, I believe that. So that's kind of my view and that's kind of what I see. and then somebody else can see it differently. And I think, well, actually, that's just because you're standing over there and I'm standing over here.
Starting point is 00:27:17 And from where I'm looking at it, that's how it looks. And from where you're looking at it, that's how it looks. So, you know, there you go. So is the world. There's nine billion of us, nearly. Yeah, children are the best for that. Like, sometimes you're like, oh, my gosh, that's what I sound like. That's me.
Starting point is 00:27:33 I sound like that. Whoa, I better curve this thing right here, you know, on some level. it. And it's a great way to establish patterns. Like, you can really begin to see your patterns of thought in the language you use if you're willing to take an honest look at it. And I'm sure that must have happened in the writing process for you. Well, yes, it's really interesting. Sometimes I might be writing something. And, you know, I think it's all very, you know, very kind of new and fresh. I'm writing this and I've writing this. And then actually, you know, I might find, you know, a blog or something that I wrote maybe two years ago. And it's the same.
Starting point is 00:28:09 I think, oh, it's like, oh, it's not that much different. So, yeah, you could kind of, you know, I think really, we don't really veer so much from ourselves. You know, we have our patterns, like you said, we have our thought patterns, and we have different kind of conversations or thoughts we've had over time. But they kind of become pretty much kind of who we are.
Starting point is 00:28:29 And then, you know, they can come out. And we think, here's me thinking, oh, it's brand new. And it's like, oh, no, it's not. I wrote about this before. That's a blog I did like three years ago. that's why Google we have our cyber footprint we'll never be forgotten
Starting point is 00:28:46 yeah once upon a time people would forget yeah it's interesting though like the the role of the storyteller you know we can look back
Starting point is 00:29:00 to the oral traditions of like the Greek tragedies or you know all these different myths that come to us from all different parts of the world and so much of our story is intertwined into those stories on some level. If you were to look at your story as a mythology, what would it be
Starting point is 00:29:17 most closely aligned to, you think? That's a really hard question. I have absolutely no idea. It is a tough one. We're storytellers here in Ireland, you know. We just tell stories, you know, and I don't know, I suppose stories are just various things that happened. You know, we probably didn't, I don't know, look for messages in stories. It was just how somebody illustrated a point. So if you have a point, maybe there'll be a story about it. But now we have the story and now we're trying to find, we're looking at it from the other way around because I suppose storytelling has become so, you know, we're now kind of, we're now kind of analyzing, I suppose, a little bit more, you know, how important the story is. But, you know, when we were reading,
Starting point is 00:30:04 I mean, I was reading stories from the Bible once upon a time. And, you know, they were just kind of, There were little stories that tried to illustrate a small point, as in maybe humanize a point and make it relevant to a person. But then you could have stories about pets and new stories about birds and new stories, the trees and all sorts of things. So it's hard to know where stories fit in. As for my own story, I have no idea where it would get into any kind of pattern from it's office or whatever.
Starting point is 00:30:30 Somebody sometime might say it in a hundred years' time. It's the story about that. Yeah. I'll have to waste of the ending. Yeah, exactly. Exactly. Inspiring, I would imagine, is probably something that comes to mind. And I think that's the one thing that we can all hope for is that we live a life that on some level could inspire others or better than you could give a tool to somebody else. Maybe in all of our stories, I like to think this. I think that in all of our stories, there's a lesson for someone else to learn if they're willing to take the time to listen or read the story that you put out there. And if you think about it from that angle, I think that kind of way of looking at your life as a story, looking at yourself as the main character and a novel, is kind of a good way to see yourself through life because that gives you the options to be like, okay, I'm the hero in this story or I'm the protagonist in this story. Or, you know, however you want to put yourself into that story, you can begin to live your life in a more artful way, I think, in a third person or in a story-like setting.
Starting point is 00:31:34 Is there a particular way that like when you look at your life, do you see yourself as a character in a novel or, you know, how do you, what's your, what's your philosophy on life when it comes to living a life worth living? Oh, well, I'm definitely a character in a novel, except it's not a novel. It's a memoir. Yeah, right? It could just as easily be a novel. You know, it could just as easily be, but it's actually all true. But yes, oh, look, I used to always fantasize if I was going to give myself an ideal career when I was little, I mean, Shirley Temple was my, you know, she was my kind of. guru and I wanted to be in every movie that she was in because she had like multiple lives and I wanted to be in all of them and then I thought oh being an actress that'd be a great way to live like all these multiple great lives and there were all stories I mean there were stories that somebody
Starting point is 00:32:18 wrote but then somebody actor comes along and they get you know they get to play this character so yeah you know I think we're all we all have that we all have that capacity and I suppose you get in a book as well you kind of you write your own story there's nobody else coming along I'm not reading somebody else's script. I promise you, it's my script. Yeah. So I get to be the author. And as I say, I get to be the author and director and the actor in the story of my life. So I suppose really if everybody, you know, I think I really alluded to that in the, you know, in the book. It's like we all have that. Somebody said once with the hand, the chisel and the stone. And, you know, it's, we are. We're kind of, you know, we're kind of, you know, we're kind of, you know, we're
Starting point is 00:33:04 carving our own David masterpiece out of a lump of concrete. Nobody else is doing it for us. Okay, we've, you know, we've emerged into planet Earth in human form and we've got a lot of capacities. But yeah, I think, you know, we can, we can create ourselves as we wish, you know, there are people doing all sorts of things in all sorts of places, all walks of life. And any one of them is probably open to us if we see it and think, God, if it's possible for that human being, maybe it's possibly for this human being. And then it takes, then it takes like courage.
Starting point is 00:33:38 I'm not going to go and, you know, live in Papua New Guinea or somewhere. But I could. Yeah. If I really wanted to do, I'm sure I could. And, you know, people have done extraordinary things. And you just, and there are the stories is looking, gosh, you know, look what they did.
Starting point is 00:33:53 And whether it's a novel or not, because even a novel, some person has written it. So it was in their imagination anyway. And, you know, somebody will come along and maybe, you know, Tom Cruise, or somebody would play the actor in the movie. So it all gets kind of, it can be all, yes, I think we're all, we're all capable of being great actors and great movies if we write a great script.
Starting point is 00:34:16 Yeah. Yeah, I do too. And I, you know, I come back to this idea of courage and having the ability to believe in yourself, to translate your vision into reality. I get to talk to lots of people, and I know that you do some consulting on the side. I'm wondering, have you ever, it seems to me a big stumbling block to courage is sometimes like shame and guilt. Have you ever had to work with someone or maybe in your life you have come up against these two guardians of despair of shame and guilt? What's your thoughts about shame and guilt and how do you move past it?
Starting point is 00:34:51 Well, look, I think it's part of the human condition as well, you know, and maybe not even human. You know, I have a Cocker Spaniel. She often looks very guilty. It's like we do know when we have something to be guilty about, you know. Right. But I think as as we as we grow up, if we look at the source of some of the guilt, then and really be a little bit disfashioned about it and look back and say, well, look, it was appropriate. Like I was very ashamed of having a stammer. And then I was very guilty about blaming my mother.
Starting point is 00:35:28 You know, and but when I kind of look back at it, and think, well, wait a minute, you know, okay, I was, you know, I was seven or eight, you know, they were all, you know, mucking me. It was okay to be ashamed of that. But I'm not ashamed now that I had a stammer then. It kind of made me into who I am now. So I have to kind of really be grateful, I suppose, in a way, because I wouldn't have this kind of life now if I hadn't had that life then. And the same with my, with my mother, had I not kind of really kind of reconciled and sort of look, you know, gosh, you know, I, you know, I really was guilty of that. I really need to apologize for that.
Starting point is 00:36:03 That was something that I, you know, not like it's a crime or anything, but really it wasn't something that I would admire about myself. So to go back and acknowledge that and sort of say, look, I'm guilty at that, I'm sorry, you know, and I won't do it again. And then move on. So I think there is that sense of really locating the source of shame and guilt and then bringing yourself into the present time and saying, look, you know, this is, you know, it's, it's, it's, it's, not necessarily appropriate to be ashamed now or guilty now of something that happened in the past. So you do have to come to terms with it on a certain level. But anyway, that's my experience.
Starting point is 00:36:45 So, you know, it's, yes, I mean, people do deal with, deal with that. And there are ways of, as they coming to terms with your view of yourself and giving yourself permission to forgive. I think forgiveness is the source of everything, every freedom in life. And at some point, we have to forgive ourselves for misdemeanors in an earlier years. Yeah, that's, thank you. That's well said. I think that, and that takes courage, too.
Starting point is 00:37:18 It takes courage to get to a spot where you realize that you can forgive yourself. because sometimes that those particular forces become fuel to drive us forward. And we've reached back and used them as fuel for so long. We don't want to let go of them. Like, this is the reason. I can always turn back to that. Yeah. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:37:38 But it's kind of, I think, with one of Nelson Mandela's quotes, you know. Like if I didn't forgive my jailers from leaving prison, I would forever be their prisoner. So we do want freedom in life. We do need to, I don't say, let go of some of those. earlier resentments or earlier regrets and then just, you know, forgive it all. You know, we might as well. Yeah. We'll be a long time dead.
Starting point is 00:38:04 We might as well do it while we're alive. Yeah. That's, it's well said. I, you know, when I, sometimes I feel as if when I, when I get to talk to you and I get to see so many people who have lived a life where they're coming out and telling their story about things they've done well. things they could have done better, but shining a light, like on the way you're able to shine a light on your stammer and speak so freely about shame and guilt and change and courage,
Starting point is 00:38:34 I feel like hopefully we're getting to a point where we're seeing this new right of passage, where we're seeing people that have lived a full life begin passing down their wisdom to the next generation so they can use it. Is that something that you feel your book is doing? And if so, like, how can we get more people to do that? Well, as I say, when the pupil is ready, the teacher appears. So we can teach a lot and you can share a lot, but, you know, the pupil has to be ready. And I'm not sure young people are particularly interested in what grey-haired people have to say or write.
Starting point is 00:39:11 You never know. But I suppose my work with the with the diaries and journals, I have a particularly fondness for the young persons. and it's, you know, there are lots of kind of sayings that have been said over the years and they kind of seep in, sort of by osmosis, but it's not so much telling people anything. It's like having people be either ready or open to listening. And like you said, unless there's some level of desperation, maybe the inspiration is falls on deaf ears. So you do have to maybe wait for the time to write.
Starting point is 00:39:49 It's all about timing in life. but everybody is you know if you're just kind of on the lookout for things that might contribute to your life that's what I say sometimes we resist contribution we kind of say no we don't want that no we don't want that no we don't want that and I think well maybe maybe it could be interesting or maybe it could maybe it could be a benefit just kind of when the pupil is ready yeah I like that saying What about intention? You know, when we think about what we intend to do, like when you look back at the book or maybe even something from your life,
Starting point is 00:40:30 what role does intention play in finding a better way for yourself? Well, intention is pretty important. We're not always aware of our intentions. I think I'll go back to awareness. You know, we might have, you know, we might have, you know, Anyway, we're just not always aware of our intentions. Our intentions may be subconscious or they may be conscious. So certainly, you know, bringing attention and intention, you know, I think there's a saying about that.
Starting point is 00:41:05 But it does, you know, it allows us certainly to be focused and really hope that, you know, your intention is fulfilled, you know. And then a lot of the times we're upset in life when what we've intended, you know, didn't happen or, you know, we sported in some way. And then we think, well, you know, were we really intentional about it? Like really? Did we do everything? Like, really were we intentional? Or were we sort of intentional? We really intended to do it.
Starting point is 00:41:30 But, you know, not really. Something else got in the way. So, yes, you know, intention is very important. Of course, as I say, are we always aware of our intentions? I certainly wasn't aware of my intention to, like, write a book. I didn't even really have an intention to write a book. I just wrote a book. But now I have an intention.
Starting point is 00:41:50 that people maybe hear a bit more about it and perhaps read it. And my intention would be that they would get some value from it, yes. But that's up to the reason. Yeah. Did you have a, when I do the podcast or when I talk to a lot of other people, sometimes people mention that you should be aware of your audience when you're writing something or when you're going to put out a message, it's imperative to understand your audience. But that seems in contrast with when the people are ready, when the people is ready,
Starting point is 00:42:17 the teacher will show up. Like, that seems sort of like a paradox there. opinion is that the message gets out to the people that need it, that want to listen, that are there, they're going to find it. But if you write for a specific audience, sometimes it feels like you're losing authenticity because you're trying to do it in a performative way when you look for a certain type of audience. What are your thoughts on, on like that particular sort of paradox? Yeah, I agree with that. Look, people write false sorts of different reasons. They write different kinds of books for different reasons and for
Starting point is 00:42:49 different audiences. Right. Again, I'm probably back to self-expression like I wrote a book really for not for myself I mean I've not considered I wrote it for myself but I I wrote it because number one somebody asked me to and said it would be a good idea I have to go back to that otherwise it would never have a curtain and then number two then it is about self-expression and it really is saying what it is that you want to say and the way that you say it and you know with with with with serendipity it would fall into the hands or the ears of somebody who will get the value that you want to give.
Starting point is 00:43:26 You know, we can't change the world, you know, but you can change maybe one person at a time, one reader. It could just be one sentence in the book. You never know, but at least it's your self-expression. You've written it down. It's authentic to you. Whereas when you're trying to be very, you know, focused on who you want to influence, well, that's really hard because, you know, the world is a big place.
Starting point is 00:43:47 So like you said, I think the person who needs to hear is will hear. it. And really, that's just, yeah, we can certainly help to maybe put it out there and reach more people. I suppose now, today's world, it is very noisy out there. And I'm sure there are wonderful books out there. And if I could read them, they'd like, make a huge difference for me, but I may never even know about them. So, you know, how much effort does one person make? You know, We get as I said, not everybody. So I'm just, you know, it's look or it's, it's serendipity or whatever it is that, that has it fall into the hands or the ears of the person that you really get benefit from.
Starting point is 00:44:35 We just enjoy it. You don't even need to get benefits. Yeah, I like that. It's sometimes when we create these ideas of writing for an audience or, I guess on some level, it's, it's necessary. to set the stage for the life you want to live. Like you have to set up these ideas in your mind or move out on the path. And here we go. We got our first question coming in,
Starting point is 00:45:01 I mean, coming in from New Jersey here. This is from Clint. He says, if you had to confront the truth that you may have lived parts of your life just to please others to avoid discomfort, how would you begin to reclaim it as yours? Well,
Starting point is 00:45:18 that was good to admit it first. I think all that is. know, did I, right? And then, okay, so, you know, well, I'm still here. Do I want to do anything about it or not? So, you know, you could always, like, tomorrow's a new day, you know, I've known, you know, people who decided to go live in another country, you know, and they've done that. Like, people have decided to, like, get married, get divorced, have a baby. I mean, people make decisions. It takes courage to make decisions, and it takes courage to change the pattern of a lifetime.
Starting point is 00:45:53 But, you know, people do it. Like, and as long as you're alive, you can do these things. Now, whether you're willing to do them or not, it's entirely. That's another matter. But for most of us, we can. And I love the saying that says,
Starting point is 00:46:06 you know, we're free to choose. We're just not free from the consequences of our choice. So our choices have consequences, but we're still free to choose. So, you know, if we have, you know, If there's some frustration or some upset or something that you want to change or something to do differently, now's a good time. Because no matter when you're going to do it, it's going to be now. It just happens to be now now.
Starting point is 00:46:35 No. Yes, there's no time like the present. What time? What better time? Yeah. I'd say the best time to plant a tree was 20 years ago. The next best time is now. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:46:51 Yeah. It blows my mind. So in your book, you talk about waking up to our own potential. What does that look like for you? Is there a version of you you've been avoiding waking up to because you fear who you'll need to become? No. I can't say. I was going to answer that question.
Starting point is 00:47:17 I'm actually, I'm putting the finishing touches to my next book, which is called Embrace the Edge. Life is bigger when you say yes. So I just felt myself saying yes to very unusual things recently. And I'm actually really just enjoying opportunities that are opening up that I never would have expected. You know, I ended up like last month delivering, you know, leadership training in Uganda to women in university. And it was like, I never knew that with somebody who was going to ask me if I would do that. And I kind of thought, well, okay. So it's like, I don't know, you know, the next opportunity.
Starting point is 00:48:02 There's very little that I say, not that I say no to every. I mean, I don't say no to. I don't say yes to everything. There are things that I say no to. But in things in terms that are going to be like interesting in life or something new that I could learn. And that could be really interesting. That could be exciting.
Starting point is 00:48:17 That could be an adventure. How could I make that work? What would I have to do to make that work? because that's something I really want to do. And so, yeah, I kind of, no, that doesn't really seem to me anything. I'm quite happy to kind of observe, see where I'm going to be in like, you know,
Starting point is 00:48:34 three years, five years. I know there's goals and all the kind of thing. I don't really have, you know, particularly set goals like I have to do X, Y, and Z. But I'm, you never know what invitation is going to come up. That's going to say, it's going to be new. And I think, oh, I'd like to be free to accept that one, you know, and do that.
Starting point is 00:48:52 So that's, that's it's a way. me. I have the luxury of being retired, let's face it. But even declaring myself as a writer, if that was kind of a challenge, I never really said I was a writer before. And then I've got to say, actually, no, I'm a writer. Because I've written a book. I'm actually a writer. So that's given me a whole other here. I end up being on podcasts. Yeah. About a book that I would never have done. Had I not written a book. So, you know, life just unfolds if you let it in these ways. if you kind of stay true to really what it is that you really like to do. That's great advice.
Starting point is 00:49:28 And it brings up this idea of sometimes people can really get stuck or weighed down with the idea of uncertainty. Like this, I don't know what's going to happen. What if I do that? What is that? And then you get stuck there sometimes. But you've alluded to saying yes to things that are interesting to sort of be an antidote. Maybe you could talk a little bit more about your relationship with uncertainty and how people may work through.
Starting point is 00:49:50 that if they find themselves getting stuck? Well, look, the world is uncertain. It just is uncertain. I mean, there's nothing certain about it. There's nothing certain. Okay, the sun will come up tomorrow, we hope, and it will go down in the evening, and that's about it. But really, you know, we think that there's certainty,
Starting point is 00:50:09 and then we've become very accustomed to thinking that we can predict with certainty what's going to happen. Now, we can predict with a certain degree of certainty, what's going to happen if we keep doing. the same thing that we're going to do. So we predict what's uncertain. I could predict with certainty that I could walk, you know, from here to the shop. You know, I could walk a different way. I could decide to go to a different shop. I could take an uncertain route. I could take a whole new route and be, you know, it's like I could go to a different shop. And I would be very uncertain as to whether, you know,
Starting point is 00:50:42 I could find what I wanted in there. So I think, you know, I think, as I say, we could give ourselves a little bit more freedom around uncertainty and be not threatened by it and be a little bit more curious about it. And that might make, you know, this passage through life a little, you know, it's not certain. None of it is. I don't think it's certain. I mean, certain things are certain. But as they say, the one thing that's certain in life is it's uncertain. I feel like there should be a series of great events just as likely is there maybe, a series of bad events, but yet we put so much focus on the poor events that could happen. Like, why can't these great things happen?
Starting point is 00:51:30 Just as much of these bad things can happen. If you focus on those great happy accidents that happen, like if you take a different path to the shop, who knows what kind of beautiful things you can see? Who knows what lies before you if you're willing to take a chance and take that different route, right? Yeah. And it's, that's where the courage is, do you know? Yes.
Starting point is 00:51:53 If you're afraid something is going to happen, you're going to stop yourself because you're afraid it's going to happen. You're afraid the worst thing is going to happen. What's the worst that can happen? Like, really? So that's the fear. That's when it takes a bit of courage just to kind of, well, let me see what's going to happen. Let's see what's on that new route. I wonder what, you know, somebody else could, you know, it's like I think we can live a little bit more in uncertainty and wonder. We might have a little more, you know. And stuff happens. I've been around the medical world for a long time. I know stuff happens. And I know, you know, accidents happen, disease happens, you know, illness. It happens. We have to just deal with it when it happens. But until then, we can, you know, live with a little bit more confidence, I think. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:52:44 Yeah. I wish that we, on some level, I was talking to a friend of mine the other day. And this is sort of an epistemological question, but he's like, George, it's the fear of death that causes everybody. Everyone's just afraid to die. And that's why we have all these problems out here, George. I know it's kind of a big sort of a question out there. But do we in the Western world have a problem like fearing death, you think? Is that what leads to so many people, maybe not living a life that's meaningful or fulfilling?
Starting point is 00:53:18 I don't know. I, you know, I don't know. I personally don't have a fear of death. Right. You know, I would have a greater fear of, well, you know, that's saying, you know, died at 30, buried at 90. No, I don't. There's aspects of us that die, and that's the problem. So I think it's like it's the aspects of our own, you know, self-expression, our own joy.
Starting point is 00:53:47 If that dies, then that's more to be fears than actual, you know, bodily. death. I mean, that's when we're gone. Talk about awareness. I mean, there's, we're gone, right? We might leave upset in people afterwards, but we're not here to be upset. But the fact that we can live kind of upset because we're afraid of taking chances or we're afraid of, you know, uncertainty, then something else dies. And that's, that's kind of sad, you know, because maybe we kill it off ourselves and really don't do that. Yeah, the amputation of the human spirit on some level. You can see it, you can see it sometimes.
Starting point is 00:54:32 And you can see it other people killing off in other people as well. You know, people, you know, they kind of, and we know, younger people or children. You see that kind of resentful streak, you know. So I say try not to do that. encourage people try to blow on the embers of that internal fire to make them see how beautiful they are what's possible what's around that corner
Starting point is 00:54:59 I don't know let's go figure it out exactly yeah take all that childhood innocence and all that childhood exploration before somebody said oh you shouldn't do that yeah yeah I I feel like there's a force out there that's here's an interesting question that I ask to people sometimes I'm curious to get your opinion
Starting point is 00:55:18 sometimes in life we feel like something is pushing us and sometimes we feel like something is pulling us. Do you feel that like, does that happen to you or is, do you feel more pulled than pushed or any thoughts on that? I don't really. I don't feel neither pulled nor pushed. I, you know, I think we're always, we're always kind of looking, no, we're not looking ahead. We're sort of looking ahead a little bit because we're, you know, designed that way with eyes that look out. So we are for looking ahead. But then we're always kind of, in a little bit pulled back by things that we think we know or things that have happened in the past and the music fears, you know. So even though we're programmed, you know, to look out and listen
Starting point is 00:56:00 outward, our little brains have kind of connected and sort of trapped a little bit. So I think, I think as Rumi says, be pulled by what you love, not driven by what you fear. So even to notice that or be aware of that, like you allow yourself to be pulled a little bit by your vision or your, you know, kind of wonder for the future and maybe not so much driven by things that you fear and let that go a little bit and lighten up a little bit and see, could we, could we look, you know, look out and think and, you know, all these things, I've vision boards. I'm a big fan of those and just romanticizing and think what could be, what could be, what could be. Yeah. I don't know if anybody said it more beautiful than the Sufi poets. Like, they really had a way with words that
Starting point is 00:56:51 makes you feel, wow, this is amazing and beautiful. Who are, obviously, that they inspired you? Who are some of your other inspirations that sometimes you turn to? Well, over years of compiling the diaries, you know, I would be, but I really, you know, interesting people, I mean, they think like Helen Keller, Helen Keller, was blindness and dumb, you know, she was an amazing person, so I would quote her, you know, someone like Nelson Mandela, you know, Gandhi, yeah, Rumi, some of the philosophers,
Starting point is 00:57:25 Einstein, Aristotle, Camus. I go, I find, you know, it's like, if I find the sentence that I think is a sentence that will inspire or empower or encourage somebody, it's the sentence that I like. You know, because I do say in the book, I locked myself into a life with my own sentence. My sentence was, you can shoot me, you can jail me, but you cannot make me speak.
Starting point is 00:57:48 that's not a good life sentence. Better to get another empowering sentence or a sentence that will actually, you know, light you up. So we can all choose our sentences. I've written a whole book. There's thousands of sentences. Yeah, I love it. Aline, we have charged through an hour and it felt like two minutes. You know, I've always find that to be an amazing mark of a comment.
Starting point is 00:58:18 conversation. And I feel like we just kind of scratched the surface of it. But before I land the plane here, where can people find you? What do you have coming up at what are you excited about? Well, they can find me. My book, The Courage to Shine, is on Amazon. My website is Eileenforester.com. My brace the edge should be out, hopefully, next spring. And I have a new set of cards, Deccable, on Deccable called PocketPont. pearls, my pearls of wisdom and pocket power. So yeah, that's where you can find me. So my website or Amazon. So ladies and gentlemen, hang on briefly afterwards, Elaine, I still want to talk you for just a moment, but to everybody within the sound of my voice, please go down to the show
Starting point is 00:59:08 notes, check out the website, check out the new book, Courage to shine, be ready for the new book coming out. And reach out to Dr. Eileen. If our conversation resonated with you, She's an incredible individual with a lot of life experience and she's here to help. So do yourself a favor and reach out if you feel compelled to. And to everybody who spent some time spending out hanging out this today, thank you so much for your time. That's all we got. Aloha.

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