What Struggle Taught Me About Dignity – Power & Self-Respect By Lisa Marie – Blog Post #1454 – Elevating The Soul From The Field of Master Mind Experiences (MMEXP)

InformationπŸ—£ Telling the truthful tale from the field of Master Mind Awakening (MMAWAK) πŸ‘

 

From the network of: Joseph Mercado πŸ‘¨β€πŸ’»

Content Creator: Lisa MarieπŸ‘©

To: Friend πŸ‘€

Re: Learning from the Struggles πŸ€·β€β™€οΈ

Blog Post #1454 πŸ“Œ

Universal Principle: Law of Truth πŸ•Ά

Keyword Category: Master Mind Development πŸ™‡β€β™‚οΈ

Date and Time: Friday, January 16, 2025 at 2:22 p.m. ⏰️

 

Dear Friend,

Some of the experiences that shaped my strength the most were never chosen. They were lived.

Chronic illness taught me that the body is not an accessory to life.

It is the truth-teller.

Early neglect and confusion forced me to build inner authority from the inside out.

Addiction, homelessness, loss, and separation stripped away any illusion of stability and showed me who I am when comfort is gone.

The most defining chapter came when my autonomy was taken from me.

Being watched, controlled, isolated, and abused trains the nervous system to live on alert.

That kind of captivity leaves marks you cannot easily explain.

It also forges something unbreakable: freedom becomes non-negotiable.

I will not trade sovereignty for approval, proximity, or promises.

When I was fighting for survival, my body felt heavy and empty.

It was endurance without meaning.

I did not want to live. I simply kept living.

Now I fight for meaning, and the difference is visceral.

There is breath, space, and aliveness.

Even when things are hard, I am not fighting to stay here.

I am fighting to build what is true.

What life taught me is this: capacity is not the issue.

Discernment is.

Perseverance becomes self-betrayal when it is used to push through misalignment.

It becomes self-respect when it is rooted in purpose.

If I remove the struggle itself, what remains is the warrior in me.

Not someone looking for battles, but someone who knows what is worth standing for.

Self-honor comes first. Self honor is not to be seen as selfish.

It allows me to lead from coherence, which is a gift for everyone in my presence.

My life works when I fight for what is meaningful, and when I refuse to struggle for anything that requires me to abandon myself.

Take an honest look at your struggles.

Which ones are expanding your sense of meaning and aliveness, and which ones are simply producing tension and frustration?

This kind of inventory, done regularly, is how you recover energy that is being wasted on the wrong fights.

This is how you return your energy to what is actually worthy of it.

πŸ’― Surviving the Struggle πŸ’ͺ

Credit of photo given to: Lisa Marie

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