The Importance of Telling Our Stories: 4 Great Gifts

A couple of weeks ago, I went to the Humanitas Prize luncheon in Los Angeles, whose motto is “Changing the world one story at a time.”  The Humanitas Prize is given to writers in television and film for “affirming the dignity of the human person, exploring the meaning of life, enlightening the use of human freedom, and revealing to each person our common humanity.” Frank Desiderio, who is in Epiphany and was the original champion of this project, used to run Humanitas and got me involved as preliminary judge reading and judging submitted scripts for them years ago.

This year, I arrived at the event just as it started, and as I settled in, I looked over and noticed David Hudgins and Vin di Bona at a table sitting by each other. Both are part of the Epiphany project – David is in the book, Vin is on the site. I remembered being stunned when both had agreed to let me film them, knowing how busy people who produce and write television are and being moved by their generosity. When I read the luncheon itinerary, I discovered both men were trustees of the organization. I had no idea that they were involved and no idea that they’d be here, much less sitting next to one another. Funny how life works, isn’t it? Friday Night Lights, the Emmy-winning television show David worked on and one of my all-time favorite shows (which ended this season), was up for an award.

I was just invited to do a vlog for a new website and after attending this celebration of story-telling, I was inspired to talk about why it’s important to share our stories, specifically our epiphany stories. The importance lies in the gaining and sharing of several invaluable gifts. Here is the short version explanation of those gifts:

1.) Wisdom – Our epiphanies contain some of our greatest wisdom and most of them become building blocks for our lives. Imparting and receiving wisdom and knowledge are some of the most important aspects of our growth as human beings.

2.) Insight – Many times our epiphanies come to us in very personal, intimate ways. When you ask someone about their epiphanies and when you share these stories with someone, you will gain insight into them, and many times yourself, in new and deeper ways.

3.) Intimacy – Sharing stories like this of personal, hard-won wisdom and insight can develop a level of intimacy and compassion that had not been experienced with that person before.

4.) Healing / Inspiration / Encouragement – The elements of wisdom, insight and intimacy can result in healing, inspiration, encouragement, and more – for both the teller and the listener. You never know how what you do or say will affect or help another human being and deepen our life experiences. By discussing and sharing your epiphany stories, many people and I have discovered that we can and are affecting one another in numerous positive and powerful ways.

As G.W. Bailey says, “When one life changes, many lives change.” As Andrea Buchanan says, “If you can tell your story, you will heal yourself and you’ll help other people do the same.” And as Humanitas believes, you can “change the world one story at a time.” But please don’t just take my word for it – start with asking your family members about their greatest epiphanies and thinking about your own and see what happens. Share them with us if you feel so inclined.

Here are some videos of the people of Epiphany from this article for inspiration. Enjoy. (And in case you were wondering, yes, Friday Night Lights did win the Humanitas award. Yay!)

[youtube]4efqcGuDaTg[/youtube]

[youtube]VIGHoAD196s[/youtube]

[youtube]ICWVF02PNg8[/youtube]

[youtube]RZ5nJ9c89mY[/youtube]

 

Posted in Advice, Aha moments, Epiphany Channel Project Related, Epiphany Stories, Insights, Pop Culture, The Book - Epiphany | Comments Off on The Importance of Telling Our Stories: 4 Great Gifts

Epiphany: Recognizing Our False Voices vs. the Truth

“Recognize the false voices from what is truth.
There are always going to be people who say you can’t 
or you are crazy for trying – 

but a lot of great things come out of the crazy ideas in life.”

– Pam Low

I have been working on my PhD in Clinical Psychology for what seems like forever. When reading part of your book, I was reminded of how many times I was told I couldn’t do something or I wasn’t smart enough and to be content with where I was in life. In fact, before he died, my father told my sister and me that we were crazy for wanting to get our doctorates. He told us, “The other side of the family are the doctors, we are farmers,” and there was no purpose he could see in our getting more education. Well, if I am part of the “farmer” side of the family, all I can say is that I will starve because I do not do well with plants. It is amazing though when I am struggling with a difficult case or trying to find a dissertation committee, that voice – his voice – comes back to me.

My epiphany is recognizing the false voices from what is truth. There are always going to be people who say you can’t or you are crazy for trying – but, you know, a lot of great things come out of the crazy ideas in life.

-Pam Low, Georgetown, TX

 

Posted in Advice, Aha moments, Epiphany Channel Project Related, Epiphany Stories, Insights | Comments Off on Epiphany: Recognizing Our False Voices vs. the Truth

Epiphany of Personal Responsibility: Codependent No More!

“It is your responsibility to put yourself in a situation 
to get the things you need.” 

-Gary Zukav

I have had a few life-changing aha moments in my life…like the time I was reading “Codependent No More” and discovered I was a walking, codependent cliché with daddy issues. Very upsetting to realize you are not as special as you think you are.

But the big one came, not as divinely as I would have anticipated, but still clearly orchestrated by a higher power, the cosmos, what have you. At the time, I was separated from my alcoholic and drug-addicted husband. I was only 26…a very naive and codependent 26. I was pretty convinced I was a victim of the entire experience, especially since I had been beating my head against the wall of his addiction and his family’s massive dysfunction for years. The martyr is absolved, right?

I happened to be traveling in a different time zone and wanted to catch this episode of Oprah with Gary Zukav, author of “Seat of the Soul.” I wasn’t a huge Gary fan per se, but the trailer had resonated with me in an unusual way. I thought I had correctly calculated the time change, and I had. But had not changed my watch. Brilliant. So when I discovered I had missed it, I was extremely disappointed. I decided to go work out in the hotel gym. I walked in and saw Oprah on the gym TV, minus the sound. WHAT?!! I raced up to my room and turned on the TV. (It turns out, Oprah was on at a different time in this time zone…a stroke of “luck.”)

Here comes the epiphany part: the split second the TV came on, Gary Zukav said,
“It is your responsibility to put yourself in a situation to get the things you need.”

I may as well have been hit in the head with a two by four. It took me ten minutes to pick my jaw up off the floor.

I had preached for so long about personal responsibility, but until that moment, I hadn’t understood what that really meant. I genuinely thought it was the job of my drug-addicted husband (and any other idiot I’d dated) to give me what I needed, and. I had been determined to bleed it out of them when all I ever had to do was walk away. The personal responsibility I was advocating was theirs, not my own. No wonder I had been disappointed my whole life. I finally grasped my role in the whole dysfunctional cycle, and suddenly felt so empowered! What a relief to know I could actually influence the outcome of my life.

It seems I was destined to hear that simple, and somewhat obvious, piece of wisdom from Gary Zukav that day, regardless of time zones. I understand, too, that I was open to it as I was genuinely seeking meaningful change at the time. And although there were no major bells or whistles in that moment, my life has been infinitely more fulfilling because of that simple message.

– Susan McCoy, Austin, Texas

 

Posted in Aha moments, Epiphany Stories, Insights | Comments Off on Epiphany of Personal Responsibility: Codependent No More!

Epiphany L.A. Event with Amazing Contributors in Attendance

My last book signing for a while is happening tomorrow in Venice, CA at the beautiful Mystic Journey Bookstore. Epiphany Interviewees from the book that will be there talking about epiphanies with us are:

Andrea Buchanan: “If you can tell your story, you will heal yourself and you’ll help others so the same.” (Her link has video too.)
Andrea’s epiphany led to her emotional healing and to a career as an author of the wonderful books, Note to Self and Live and Let Love.

Wendi Cooper: “Celebrate every day.”
Wendi’s miraculous epiphany was key to her triumph over cancer.

Orian Williams: “You can manifest your destiny when you stop waiting and start creating.” Orian’s entertaining and incredible stories of serendipity and taking action led to his career as an award-winning film producer.

With a possible appearance by Judith Orloff: “Nobody is really alone. We’re never alone. Each of us is always connected to Spirit and through Spirit to each other.”
Judith’s epiphany brought about by her mother telling her a family secret on her deathbed is one of the greatest examples of how important it is to tell our stories, especially our epiphany stories!

If you are in Los Angeles and can join us, I can guarantee that the conversation will be fun, interesting and rich with lots of information and insights. Look forward to seeing you!

Epiphany!

True Stories of Sudden Insight to Inspire, Encourage, and Transform

Book Signing, Discussion & Q&A
Tuesday, July 26th  ~ 7-9pm
Mystic Journey Bookstore
1319 Abbot Kinney Blvd.
Venice, CA 90291
310-319-7070
www.mysticjourneybookstore.com

Posted in Epiphany Channel Project Related, Epiphany Stories, The Book - Epiphany | Comments Off on Epiphany L.A. Event with Amazing Contributors in Attendance

Writing Epiphany: Tips on Writers Block, Keeping the Faith, & Having Epiphanies from Epiphanies

I have an book signing and Q&A at the Mystic Journey Bookstore in Venice, CA this Tuesday, July 26 from 7-9pm, and some of my amazing interviewees from the book will also be joining me: Andrea Buchanan, Wendi Cooper, Orian Williams and Judith Orloff. (More on that later.) The interview below is the book store’s interview with me about the writing of Epiphany.

· What inspired you to write this book?

Well, shockingly, I had an epiphany! Seriously, I did have an epiphany but that was more of the spark of the idea for the project. It was really other people’s epiphanies that inspired me to pursue this project. At the time that I had my epiphany, I didn’t say to myself, “I just had an epiphany!” It was several weeks later that I woke up and realized my life was so completely different that I asked myself, “How did I get here?” My mind began flashing back like a movie and it stopped at this instant that changed everything for me. In my case, this instant revelation revealed a fear that was so deeply buried in me that I was in complete denial about it and not only was this fear revealed, it was released. It actually felt like it snapped from my body and I felt instantly lighter. After this revelation, I was able to start taking action in my life to change it – I had been stuck for years and had been unable to leave a very unhappy marriage. (You can read the whole story in the intro to the book, which is online on Amazon and on EpiphanyChannel.com if you don’t have the book.) I was so amazed that this one instant had changed me so much and I remember thinking, “I had an epiphany. That’s what they’re talking about when they talk about having an epiphany.” It was so intriguing to me that one moment, one instant, could have such an impact, that I started asking people if they’d ever experienced these life-changing moments. The stories were so fascinating and people were so interesting when they would tell the stories that I started filming their answers on sets as I was working as a filmmaker and actress. Then what really became interesting to me was that I would find myself thinking of these stories later and I was utilizing the wisdom from them in my life and it was really helping me. Then a company wanted to develop the project as a reality show and so I was developing and writing a treatment and began doing interviews on the phone and writing the stories and realized they were just as powerful in the written format as the filmed format, just in different ways, and one thing led to another and I was writing a book for Random House!

· You have some pretty big names in this book, Maya Angelou, Dr. Oz, Deepak Chopra, to name a few. This is your first book, how did you get them to contribute?

Everyone I interview is asked the same question: What is your greatest epiphany in life? Through the project, I have discovered that our greatest epiphanies contain some of our greatest wisdom. When you share your epiphany stories, you are sharing some of your greatest wisdom with others and that is a generous act – especially since these stories tend to be very personal in nature. Everyone, all of us, are so busy these days – from homemakers to Dr. Oz – so to take the time to share their stories with me, especially a first-time author (and many of the people gave me interviews before I even had a book deal – including Dr. Oz), was very, very generous of them. I say that every person in the book is an example of someone acting out of pure generosity. No one got paid anything to share their story. Many times you will find the most successful people that are doing amazing things out in the world are some of the most generous. The adage “the more you give, the more you get,” seems to be very true. Some of the people, like Dr. Oz, Deepak Chopra and Dr. Roizen, I knew through work, some were friends of mine, some I met through friends and some I met randomly, and many people, like Maya Angelou, Craig Newmark and Ali MacGraw, I cold-called. Because every single one of these people is generous, they gave me interviews.

Also, I found 4 things to be constants for every life-changing epiphany:

1.) Listening
2.) Belief
3.) Taking Action
4.) Serendipity

I have to say all of these factors were constantly happening while I was putting together this project – so much so that I now consider the project to be my greatest epiphany in life. The serendipity I experienced writing this book was incredible, especially when it came to getting my interviews!

· Did you find the writing of this book to be easy? Difficult? How so?

Easy? Sometimes, sometimes not. It was a lot of work so it wasn’t easy in that sense, but most of the time it was extremely rewarding and fun. I had the privilege to deal with such amazing material in these stories and learned so much about different areas of life, not to mention I was always being taken on an emotional journey with each story. I loved the work so that made even the difficult times very rewarding – I was literally growing and changing because of all the stories, inspiration, information and hope people were sharing with me. And thank God for my editors! That made it so much easier to know that once I did the best I could in assimilating it, someone else would take a look and give me perspective and make great changes and cuts. Overall, I really, really loved the process.

· Did you ever get writer’s block? If so, how did you overcome it?

YES! The most difficult part of this book for me was writing the introduction. I wrote it last and had TERRIBLE writers block when it came time to do it. I turned it in at the very last minute. I literally couldn’t write anything for at least 2 weeks and every day I would stress about it as my deadline loomed ever closer. To overcome it, I just had to finally sit down at my desk and just write whatever came to my mind. I basically wrote stream of consciousness and didn’t edit anything at all that was coming out of my mind through my fingers onto the computer keyboard and onto that page. When I had to go back and edit it, and as time went on, I settled in and could write more coherently. I turned in 17 pages I think at first, and my editor got it down to 10 pages…see, great editors are key! Before I finally sat down though and wrote that stream of consciousness, I did speak with friends and people who help me with healing my life and psyche, and we worked on what was blocking me and on clearing it. For me, it was primarily about fear. Fear of actually finishing, fear of actually moving into another chapter of my own life, fear of not being good enough and on and on … once again, fear was blocking me and making me stuck in my life. (Remember my original epiphany?) At least now when I get blocked, I know that I will get through it … but it’s definitely not fun.

· Did you ever feel discouraged during the writing process? What did you do to push forward?

I was the most discouraged while I was writing the book proposal for my agent to submit to publishers. I had no idea what I was doing and it was SO much work because I was also editing the filmed interviews and creating and launching EpiphanyChannel.com and I had no idea if anyone else would care about it or not. My agent and I believed in it but there were no guarantees…there never are, especially in the arts. At that point, I had spent a year of my life investing my time and money developing it. I remember one day just freaking out thinking, “What have I done? What if no one cares and I’ve spent all this time and money and I’m so tired, etc.” I was transcribing all the interviews I’d done myself at that point (for the book, I hired a transcriptionist) and then was writing them for the proposal. And I remember I was working on Christopher Lee’s story, a missionary that I had randomly filmed in a van traveling in Africa, and his story is this miraculous story and for him it was all about faith…at the end of his interview he says,

“It was solely by faith, not by sight. It wasn’t about my seeing or knowing anything. But my faith opened me to the message. My epiphany is that faith truly does produce fruit. I had faith and I acted on it and it produced fruit. It’s like my faith was a plant and this grew my roots deep and supplied me with a lot more strength in my life.”

I just started crying and realized I had lost faith and that all these people I had interviewed had such faith in their own lives and in their epiphanies and look what had happened for all of them – and many of them had to face much heavier, difficult challenges than hopefully I’ll ever have to face…And now they had faith in me. They had shared their stories with me and were allowing me to carry them into the world. In that moment, their stories gave me strength to keep going. It was an epiphany of sorts for me. They renewed my faith in the project and in myself. I realized that even if I didn’t get a book deal or no one cared, I had gained so much from the project myself already – I had learned and healed so much because of it – that no matter what happened, it had all been worth it. The lesson for me was that you have to really do your projects for yourself first so even if no one else finds value in it, if you do and are a better person for it, then every minute, every dime you put into it, is worth it and you’ll be glad you did it no matter what. That’s how I approach all my projects now, otherwise, in the scary, discouraging times, it might prove too difficult to keep going and I find projects uninspiring if I’m only doing it with the hopes of others liking it and paying me for it. So I found my faith again, and kept going and the rest is history…

· How has the whole experience in creating this book changed your life?

In so many ways. I divide the book into categories of epiphanies just for the ease of the reader and for some sort of organization but the truth is that most, if not all, of these epiphanies could go into several or all of these categories, which are defined at the beginning of each section of the book:

New Directions
Awakenings
Healings
Miracles
Comings of Age
Callings

I call this project my greatest epiphany in life now because it has been all of these things for me. People always ask me about which story or stories mean the most to me and I can’t really answer that because literally every single one of these stories has helped me and impacted my life in some way, and I couldn’t even fit all the ones that have done that for me in the book! I am a much different person since I started this project…much more calm, much more at peace, happier, wiser, much more ‘grown up’ in many ways, I did a ton of healing through it, not to mention I have a whole new career as a writer! But I would say the one of the greatest changes in me is that I have realized how important it is to believe in yourself and in Life in general, how important self-compassion and self-love are and what those are exactly. As many of the people I interviewed talk about, when you truly love yourself and have compassion for yourself, you are able to truly love others and have true and deep compassion for others. This has been a huge shift for me to understand this. It may take some of us practice and work to do that (ie: yours truly) but there are tools to help us develop these aspects of ourselves, and this project and these stories have been an important tool for me to do that and have helped me find other tools to help me cultivate these aspects of life. That’s one of the reasons I put everyone’s links in the book and on EpiphanyChannel.com – I hope it can act as a place of resource for people too.

· Any plans for another book? If so, can you say what the next book will be about?

Yes! I hope to do another Epiphany book and eventually have a series of them. That has always been my vision and plan for Epiphany and I practically have the next one ready to go with the interviews I’ve already done and the ones that are coming in on the site. I also have a novel I’m working on that is sort of Bridget Jones’ Diary meets Eat Pray Love – I call it “a fictional memoir…sort of” which is a whole other ball of wax with tons of writers block involved but if I ever get it done, it should be loads of fun…I hope…

 

 


Posted in Advice, Epiphany Channel Project Related, Epiphany Stories, Insights, The Book - Epiphany | Comments Off on Writing Epiphany: Tips on Writers Block, Keeping the Faith, & Having Epiphanies from Epiphanies