Episodes
Saturday Jun 01, 2024
Love Holds Us: Finding Strength in Surrender
Saturday Jun 01, 2024
Saturday Jun 01, 2024
Welcome to the Unfathomable Podcast with Elizabeth Welles. In this episode, we delve into the profound themes of love, loss, spirit, and sorrow. Elizabeth explores the struggles many face—whether it's foreclosure, caring for a sick loved one, or grappling with overwhelming debt—and discusses the powerful act of surrendering when our backs are against the wall.
Join us as we navigate the complexities of human existence, from the freedom and relief found in surrender to the terror of the unknown. Through it all, we find that love is the constant that holds us together, offering support and grace in the most unexpected ways.
Elizabeth shares personal reflections and universal truths about the love that surrounds us, even in moments of distress and uncertainty. Discover the peace that comes from knowing that love binds us to each other and to the world around us.
Tune in for a heartfelt conversation that reminds us of the importance of helping and loving one another, and the transformative power of surrendering to the unfathomable.
Monday Jan 08, 2024
This Is How You Help Me: Exploring the Intersection of Writing and Grief
Monday Jan 08, 2024
Monday Jan 08, 2024
Episode #7 On the Pathless Path Series
This is How You Help Me
After a three-year hiatus, we're back! In this brief episode, we peek into the profound impact of writing as a tool for catharsis, healing, and creativity. We share a piece that beautifully intertwines these aspects when navigating the complexity of grief. Additionally, the often-heard sentiment, "They are in your heart," is explored to understand how this, sometimes, impacts the grieving person.
For more insights into Elizabeth's work, writings, art, and upcoming events, be sure to visit her website at www.elizabethwelles.com.
To catch this podcast episode and access the show notes, head over to: https://elizabethwelles.com/podcast/
Sunday Apr 04, 2021
Grief, Isolation and Covid-19
Sunday Apr 04, 2021
Sunday Apr 04, 2021
Two years and then three years into grief, what happens when isolated all over again because of Covid-19. How is grief received at this time? Find out in this episode.
Tuesday Aug 04, 2020
The Pathless Path: On God & Grief
Tuesday Aug 04, 2020
Tuesday Aug 04, 2020
Podcast Episode #5
On God & Grief
Why using God to give comfort to a grieving person is not always the best thing to do — unless you know, deeply, the trajectory of their faith, and grief.
Sign up for Elizabeth's newsletter to get notified of when her next podcast will be available and to receive word of her courses, and her live webinars and workshops. www.ElizabethWelles.com
For poems or art shared in this podcast, please contact Elizabeth Welles on her Contact Page.
Be An Empty Vessel
by Elizabeth Welles
A wife asked her husband, “What do I do for my friend when I visit her? She grieves her mother much.”
The husband asked the mother, “What does my wife do for your daughter?”
The departed Mother’s Soul answered,
“There is nothing for your wife to do. Just go there and be with my daughter and love her.”
When you see grieving friends, leave behind your brandishing swords of earthly wisdom:
“All things are for your growth,” or “hope for a better day.”
Leave behind your healing ways.
Advice-giving, fix-it tools with your desire to relieve suffering.
Even the greatest of healers say foolish things.
Be silent before your grieving people,
Words are useless here.
You know little of the mysteries of death and the sacrament of sorrow.
Instead bow before grieving loved ones,
Be an empty vessel in their presence,
And you will have given everything to them
In Love.
Friday Jun 26, 2020
The Pathless Path: Language, Grief, Culture & "Radical Acceptance"
Friday Jun 26, 2020
Friday Jun 26, 2020
Podcast Episode #4 of the On the Pathless Path Series
Highlights:
"Sometimes after loss we hear things differently...
People want us to have moved on, gotten better, gotten over it, but when you have lost the person who is your soul there is no moving on except with them. You never move on from them. There is no getting better, because you were never sick. You are grieving...
What happens is we start to feel more isolated and lonely...
We don’t want our grief managed or to be put under a microscope.
Grief as path.
It’s the resistance to difficult emotion that presents the difficulty. We live in a culture that wants us to be happy like we are going to meet happiness on the other side of grief. We live in a culture that is swept into excessive positivity..."
For information on Elizabeth Welles’ art, words and images, please visit www.elizabethwelles.com
You can also listen to this podcast and see the episode notes for this episode at: https://elizabethwelles.com/podcast/
Friday Jun 05, 2020
Our Collective Grief
Friday Jun 05, 2020
Friday Jun 05, 2020
This is about our collective grief, humanity's grief.
Written and recorded after the murder of George Floyd.
www.ElizabethWelles.com/podcast
Friday Jun 05, 2020
On the Pathless Path Love Holds Us
Friday Jun 05, 2020
Friday Jun 05, 2020
Podcast Episode Two
(Originally recorded May 2019)
Highlights from Podcast Episode Two:
“The form changed … but the relationship continues on and expands and can even deepen…
“You have always been on the pathless path. There is no path from here to here, from there to here, from here to there, from here to here. How can there be when we are always here. There is no path for you. Only to realize that from here to here is already here.”
“Create spaciousness for them by a presence, by a sacred space … be with someone in their grief and suffering.”
“When your loved one leaves physically, you feel alone. When you say to someone I don’t want to be here, they get scared … they think what does she mean? Is she going to lie down and go to sleep? Is she going to take her own life? No. That’s not what it means.”
“Yeah, sometimes you don’t want to be here and it’s a part of grief and it’s a part that needs to be spoken to and given voice. It’s better to give it voice than to keep it tucked in one’s own heart.”
“I don’t move on from. I don’t move on from my mother or father or best friends, who have all passed. I move on with … we move on with our loved ones.”
For information on Elizabeth Welles’ art, words and images, please visit www.elizabethwelles.com
Love Holds Me
By Elizabeth Welles
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8TG4HQKvheY
Download the PDF "Love Holds Me"
Print it out and laminate it, and put it where you can see it to remind yourself that love holds you.
https://elizabethwelles.com/loveholdsme/
You can also listen to this podcast and see the episode notes for this episode at: https://elizabethwelles.com/podcast/
Tuesday May 26, 2020
The Pathless Path: Secondary Losses & Finding Ancestors
Tuesday May 26, 2020
Tuesday May 26, 2020
Episode #3 Notes & Highlights
For artwork and poems shared in this podcast, please contact Elizabeth Welles on her
Contact Page.
How do you start to feel tethered again?
Learn about how ancestors sometimes come to help!
A Little Bit About Secondary Loss:
Secondary loss zaps your concentration, your energy, and your motivation to want to do
anything at all. Secondary loss includes the dreams you previously had for yourself or your loved one. Your entire life’s perspective may change. It may all go poof into thin air and you may not know who you are anymore.
Fear, anxiety and terror may suddenly creep into your day or explode full on into your
life minute by minute upon awakening. So that you feel alone on an island or on a boat adrift out to sea.
You can’t push someone into better or to move through grief into some other mythical happy side of it because there’s no other side to get to, it’s a part of life. Validation is huge.
Tears of grief are often mixed with tears of love.
There is no letting go, there is only a letting be (artwork available)
I am a Feather (artwork available)
Can You Trust That Everything Is All Right? https://youtu.be/1adP7V674ew
You can also listen to this podcast and see the episode notes for this episode at: https://elizabethwelles.com/podcast/
Thursday Mar 19, 2020
The Pathless Path: On Sorrow and Safety and Doves
Thursday Mar 19, 2020
Thursday Mar 19, 2020
Podcast Episode One
(Originally recorded April 2019)
Highlights from Podcast Episode One:
“When we can’t be true to what is in ourselves and safely reveal ourselves to one another, then we are split into two or into a thousand pieces more. When grief is not shared or witnessed or seen, it breaks
the human heart more…
“Give sorrow words, the grief that does not speak whispers the o’er fraught heart and bids it break” ~ William Shakespeare.
“Sometimes I think the collective grievers of this world weep for the unshed tears of others who do not know how to be with grief. We weep for their losses that remain ungrieved, pushed aside, disenfranchised in this world. And what a world it is…
“And often the tears are not pure grief. They are mixed with love and some strange joy that I don’t even understand but other people have said they sense in me when I cry so deeply.”
Companioning Philosophy
Dr. Wolfelt’s 11 Tenets of Caring for the Bereaved
by Alan D. Wolfelt, Ph.D.
www.centerforloss.com
1. Companioning is about being present to another person’s pain; it is not about taking away the pain.
2. Companioning is about going to the wilderness of the soul with another human being; it is not about thinking you are responsible for finding the way out.
3. Companioning is about honoring the spirit; it is not about focusing on the intellect.
4. Companioning is about listening with the heart; it is not about analyzing with the head.
5. Companioning is about bearing witness to the struggles of others; it is not about judging or directing these struggles.
6. Companioning is about walking alongside; it is not about leading or being led.
7. Companioning means discovering the gifts of sacred silence; it does not mean filling up every moment with words.
8. Companioning the bereaved is about being still; it is not about frantic movement forward.
9. Companioning is about respecting disorder and confusion; it is not about imposing order and logic.
10. Companioning is about learning from others; it is not about teaching them.
11. Companioning is about curiosity; it is not about expertise.
You can also listen to this podcast and see the episode notes for this episode at: https://elizabethwelles.com/podcast/