On this episode of The Karen Kenney Show, I share a story about the New England ritual of changing out our seasonal clothes.
When I did this recently, I found a few items that inspired me to stop waiting for the right time or special occasion to wear them.
I also discuss how this is tied to my recent deeper reflections on my own mortality, and how I want to spend the time I have left on the planet.
I encourage my listeners to consider how now is the time to take action on your passions, your purpose, and those projects that you might keep delaying!
I also emphasize the importance of telling people we love them, not putting things off and why we should just “Wear the damn socks!”
KEY POINTS:
• Wear Them Now
• Contemplate Your Mortality
• Theoretical Knowledge
• Express Your Love
• Don’t Wait for the Perfect Time
• Live with Intention
• The Nest - Group Mentoring Program
BIO:
Karen Kenney is a certified Spiritual Mentor, Writer, Integrative Change Worker, Coach and Hypnotist. She’s known for her dynamic storytelling, her sense of humor, her Boston accent, and her no-BS, down-to-earth approach to Spirituality and transformational work.
KK is a wicked curious human being, a life-long learner, and has been an entrepreneur for over 20 years! She’s also a yoga teacher of 24+ years, a Certified Gateless Writing Instructor, and an author, speaker, retreat leader, and the host of The Karen Kenney Show podcast.
She coaches both the conscious + unconscious mind using practical Neuroscience, Subconscious Reprogramming, Integrative Hypnosis/Change Work, and Spiritual Mentorship. These tools help clients to regulate their nervous systems, remove blocks, rewrite stories, rewire beliefs, and reimagine what’s possible in their lives and business!
Karen encourages people to deepen their connection to Self, Source and Spirit in down-to-earth and actionable ways and wants them to have their own lived experience with spirituality and to not just “take her word for it”.
She helps people to shift their minds from fear to Love - using compassion, storytelling and humor. Her work is effective, efficient, memorable, and fun!
KK’s been a student of A Course in Miracles for close to 30 years, has been vegan for over 20 years, and believes that a little kindness can make a big difference.
KK WEBSITE: www.karenkenney.com
Hey, welcome to the Karen Kenney show. So if you're new here, thank you so much for tuning in. If you're an old familiar friend, if you are a loyal
listener, oh my God, thank you so much. This is episodes of The like 288, first of all, eight. Favorite number 88 right up there, one of my favorite numbers of all time. Of
course, it's just eight two times. So this episode, I have so many, I have so many podcast episode ideas floating around in my head right now, but this is the one that
just really landed for me on Sunday. I just knew I wanted to talk about this. I'm not sure what I'm going to call it yet, because I could call it a bunch of different things,
but I'm just going to dive into this suck up. But first, I just wanted to make sure to say thank you so much for spending a little bit of time with me. Because I know time is
such a precious, precious resource, and it's one that we don't get back, so the fact that you're choosing to hang out with me for a little bit really means a lot to me. Okay,
first and foremost, little story time, little storytelling time, and then maybe apply this personal story to something more universal and some spiritual principles.
Okay, so you know how in New England, and if you're a West Coast kid, this might not be a thing for you so much, but here in New England, I just remember my whole life at
some point, like you switch over your clothes, right? So all of a sudden, like you pull out your sweaters, you pull out your sweatshirt, you pull out your heavier
jackets, though, the boots, the mittens, the winter coats, all that shit, and then you put the summer stuff away, right? So there's this ritual that a lot of New England kids
have gone through, like their whole life. So our house is not I mean, it's cute, it's just not wicked big. It's not wicked small either. But there's not a lot of like closet
space, and I only have so many freaking Bureau drawers. You know what I mean, that's only so much room in the dresser. So I do have some stuff stored under the bed. And
there's this thing that I do, if you know me, this is not going to surprise you, but there's this thing that I do, that if I really like something, I will ultimately,
and usually get it in multiple colors. So if there's a t shirt that I like, I'll get it in the pink one and the blue one, the green one like, whatever, right? So this happens a
lot with hoodies, things like that. If there's something that I like, like even Levi's, if there's like, Levi jeans or chucks or whatever, if I like it, and
there's like, multiple colors of it, I'll get it, and then sometimes I'll get back ups of the color I really like, Okay, now I'm not talking these are not wicked expensive
things, like a tag it, T shirts, like, five bucks, eight bucks, whatever. And then I'll kind of take that thing and then, like, I'll put it away, and I'll sometimes stash it
under the bed so that I have it. That's the other thing, right? Is that when you have like animals and stuff like that, it's like anything can spill on you, get on you at any
time. So particularly if look at devil a man hands, if somebody out there can relate to what I'm saying, right? So this is just something that I do. So there's a couple of
things. There's these socks that I really liked, and I basically have, like my workout socks, and then I have like my work socks. So like, if I'm going out into the world,
right, like, there's my workout socks, is my work socks. And then I also usually have a pair of socks. This is going to sound crazy, but it's the truth. Just being transparent,
I have a pair of socks that I save for just like, when I'm doing Yad work and mowing the lawn and shit like that, because those usually get, like, filthy no matter how many
times you wash them, they still look dingy and like gray or whatever. Okay, I also have clothes that I keep just for painting. This is all too much information, but here's my
point. So the other day I have this bag, and it's like, so about every like, few months, I go through all my clothes, and I'm like, Yeah, is this? Is it time to retire this
sucker? I haven't worn this thing in like, five years. Like, even though there's a sentimental value, somebody else can use it more than me, you know what I mean. So I've
had this bag in my closet. You know what it's like at that level where it's not full enough to, like, quite drop it off, but like, you're sick of seeing it in your
closet. So I was like, Okay, it's time. I don't care. I'm just going to bring it to the donation drop box. And then I was like, Okay, well, before I do that, I'm going to
go through the stuff under the bed and go through my drawers and whatever. Okay, couple of things. So I don't always, even though I know better, I do not always wash
my whites, just as whites, I sometimes will throw, like, some of my lighter colored things in with my jeans and with my dark clothes. Now look, you sometimes pay the
price for that. Okay, so I have one on right now. I'll just show you. I have these, like, little cute, like pale pink, pale pink bras that I like. I have em in black. I have em
in, like, what's that called, nude or tan or whatever. And I have them in this baby pink, which I really like. And then I also have these socks that I told you about. There's a
reason why I'm telling you this. Okay, so one of these bras, like has been thrown in with my doc jeans or my sweeties jeans enough times that it's now like a dingy,
kind of bluish. Gray color. And every time I put on that bra, it does not spark joy, okay, like, I put it on, and even though it's not quote, unquote dirty or even that
old, I put it on and I'm like, putting this on makes me feel it. I don't even know how to explain it, like, I put it on, and the only words I can think of is, it just makes
me feel like, lumpy and frumpy, like, it's just like in a little grumpy. I was like, I don't like this, right? But I'm like, I'm not gonna throw it out. It's not that old.
Like, learned your lesson, wash wash your whites with your whites, and you learned your lesson, type of a thing. But the other day, something just happened. And I know
what happened. What happened is a couple of things. Is I heard and saw about the untimely death of several people, nobody that I was wicked close to, but people that
I at least knew of had met whatever. And so that was like kind of floating around in my consciousness, right? And I said to my sweetie, just this morning, I woke up this
morning and I said to him, I am deeply contemplating my own mortality these days, like I'm really thinking a lot about the fact that, like, whatever time I have left
on earth, and how I want to spend that time. So I've been kind of contemplating that. Okay, so I sat going through my drawers, and I sat like I pull out the bins from under
the bed, and I'm going through my drawers, and I find this t shirt, and I only wear this t shirt on special, like occasions, kind of meaning like I reserve it for once
in a while. Number one, because it's white and me in a white t shirt does not end well. Number two, these T shirts were designed, and I'm going to show it to you in a minute,
and those of you who are listening and not watching. I will describe what it is by my friend Ollie Oliver Spencer, who I went to college with, to Boston University with. And
Ollie, you know, had his own journey, his own situation with cancer. And ultimately, he, you know, he lost his life. He lost his life to the disease. So he fought. I don't
even like to use that word, he fought. He lived bravely. Right up to the very end, he lived bravely and compassionately. And it was literally kind of like watching somebody
go through, in its own way, a metamorphosis. His Spirit got brighter. It was, it was, of course, heartbreaking to lose a friend, and at the same time, there were moments that
were so spectacular and miraculous and beautiful. But one of the things that happened is these T shirts were made. And Ollie tells this great story about how he
never liked to be mushy. He used to never like to like, really say he loved people like, or I love you to his friends and stuff like that. And then as he got sick, he
started saying it all the time, almost he said in his own words, kind of like almost embarrassingly, so, like he would do it awkwardly, to the point where people be
like, Oh my god. So the t shirt that I'm wearing today, when I was going through my drawers to decide what I was keeping, what I was giving away, is I pulled out my Ollie
shirt, and this one says, Let someone it says, tell someone you love them today. It's got this, like pink rainbow, and it says, tell someone you love them today. And I've
really been thinking about this as well. So I've got this combination of these recent deaths coming up into my consciousness, all the shit that's kind of just going on in the
world politically, right? All this stuff that's just kind of like happening, all the chaos, all the ongoing upheaval, all this stuff is happening in the collective
consciousness, and then these deaths are, like, right in my face. And now I'm like, figuring out, like, what am I keeping? What am I getting rid of? And as I'm thinking
about all this stuff, and I pull out the t shirt because I wanted to wear it. Tell someone you love them today. Please do that. Please do that. Could be a human, it could
be an animal, it could be a friend, it could be a parent, it could be somebody who's already passed on, but you just say a little prayer up to them, whatever it is, but
vocalize your love today. Vocalize your love today, so important. And so I pull out these bins from out underneath the bed, and I look and I see these socks that I've just been
waiting to wear, and I see this second pink bra, which could replace the dingy, Lumpy, frumpy one that I that does not spark joy. And I'm looking at these socks, and I'm
looking at this bra, and there's like this battle going on in my head, like you have plenty of other socks right now. Yeah, they look a little dingy because you washed them
with your blues. And not like they're not blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, and literally, all of a sudden, and this is what happens to me. I talk about it like spiritual team on
the job, right? So some people have different gifts, whether they say they're Clair, Audient, right, clairvoyant, they see things they for me, it's almost just like
more, like words appear in my head,
like word impressions, is what I call them. But this time, it was like a voice, and this is what I heard as I'm sitting there, going, should I throw out those socks? Should I,
like, donate. Those socks. But should I save these socks? Should I like, and wait? And literally, this is what I hear in my head, wear the damn socks. And I know right away
it's like, wear the fucking socks, meaning the new white ones, meaning like, why are you saving these things. Like, are you sitting here really pretending that you have
all the time in the world? Like, what are you saving these things for? And it made me think about people who, I think it was Joan Didion, the great Joan Didion, who kind of
had, like, either this rule of this habit where she always ate off of fine china, and she was saying, like, what? Like, I every day like, like, every day is worth the fine
china. And I started thinking about this, and I'm like, Yes, we never know when the last exhale is coming. I talk about this a lot. This might even be like my fourth
podcast where I bring this up. We never know when the last exhale is coming. We know time is guaranteed to us. Not everybody you know, gets the privilege of growing older. So all
these things that we're saving and we're setting aside, and we're waiting for the right moment, or whatever the fuck wear the damn socks. Tell somebody you love them
today. And I know what I did. I threw out, I got rid of that old, dingy pink bra, and I'm sporting, as you can see, I keep pulling my shirt to the side. I'm sporting the new,
cute pink one, because I'm like, What am I saving them for? There's no guarantee that I might not leave my house tonight and, like, trip down the stairs and knock myself out
and that's it. I choke on a piece of tofu, like, whatever, right? We don't know. Car Accidents happen. Hot attacks happen. As a kid with a mother who was killed when I was
12, I know that the unexpected and you never think it's going to happen to you, happens all the time. So what are we waiting for? Why are we saving our words of
encouragement? Why are we saving the pretty dress? Why are we saving the good china? Why are we saving the trip? Why are we waiting to learn piano, or to write the book, or to
say I'm sorry, or to do the thing that is like you feel called that has been like your purpose. Why are we waiting to do these things? Like, now's the time to wear the
thing, say the thing, learn the thing, go to the place, right? Like, end the relationship, do something new, quit the job, stop the job, whatever it is, because
no time is guaranteed. So if there's something that you've been waiting to wear for the special occasion, or the whatever, whatever, whatever, what if this is your
special occasion? What if your everyday life is your special occasion. What if the time is now? What if this is the only time we have? We never know when we like I said, you
get on a plane, you get in your car, you walk down the stairs, whatever. We never know what's going to happen. Why are we reserving these things? And this is like I'm
talking to myself, hello, first and foremost, I am not finger wagging at anybody. This is just me sharing a personal story to universally like out to the
collective consciousness, to think about this like, what are we waiting for? What are we waiting for? Because if we're waiting around right for the right time, the perfect
time, it almost never comes. Sometimes we just have to leap right and have a leap of faith and trust, trust that things are going to work out. Sometimes we have to be the one
who's who says, I'm sorry first, or I love you first, or I forgive you first, or whatever. I'm talking about some physical articles. But these physical articles have
got me really thinking about all the little ways that I kind of put things aside and assume, we assume that we're going to have plenty of time. We make the assumption that
we have more time than we do. And I don't want to do that anymore. So right? The people you want to see, the places you want to go, the things you want to say, right? I
say every day this prayer adapted from A Course in Miracles that says, have me go where you would have me go. Have me do what you would have me do, have me say, what you
would have me say, and to whom. Please use me. Please use me. Please use me. Well, I can tell you what one of the things they wanted me to do is to wear the damn socks,
put the socks in the bra, in the drawer for wearing, and get rid of the stuff that when you go to put it on it always just makes you feel a little flat or uninspired. And that's
what it is. It made me feel uninspired. It made me just feel dull. And I'm like, look with whatever time I have left. I don't want to do it dully. I want to do it with with
enthusiasm. I want to do it with curiosity and creativity and as my best self. And you know what I deserve? And these aren't even fancy things. These are socks and a bra. You
know what I'm saying. They're not fancy. But I'm thinking to myself, I deserve those. Do you know what I mean? Like my hard work earned the pennies that allowed me to buy
those things. Why am I keeping them in a box under my bed? Yeah. So I don't know what your version of the socks is, or the bra is or whatever, but I hope you hear this if
it's meant for you. I hope it lands for you. I hope it inspires you. I hope you tell someone you love them today. I hope you make it a priority. And I'm gonna talk about this
in a slightly different way, like there's like, so many offshoots of this idea and this concept, but I would always love to hear from you. So every once in a while, you
guys leave me messages on YouTube, or you shoot me an email. You let me know you shared this with a friend. You have no idea how much it means to me, you guys, because
sometimes I just feel like I'm peeing into the Grand Canyon. Is obviously I'm like, I'm pissing into the Grand Canyon. I have no idea if this thing is filling up, if it's
landing for people, if it's making a difference. So those of you who let me know it means so much to me, and those of you who have used the tip jar, thank you so much.
Your kindness and generosity also means the world to me. So you guys, you know what I always talk about, right? If you want to do some spiritual mentoring, reach out to me,
Karen at Karen kenney.com can always go to my website, Karen kenney.com and see all the things that I'm up to. How to join the nest, my group mentoring, my spiritual mentoring
group program, can work with me one to one. You can have a hot to hot day, right? There's all these things, but just thank you for this time together. Right now, I
appreciate you. I'm going to tell each of you, I know I haven't met you in person, but if you're the kind of person who listens to this show and you keep coming back, I pretty
much already know that I love you. So thank you so much. I'm going to tell you that I love you today, and I really appreciate you, and just go out there and wherever you go,
may you leave yourself and the people and the animals and the planet and the environment right all the people that you come across. May you leave them better than
how you found them wherever you go. May you and your presence and your love be a blessing. Bye. You.
Here are some great episodes to start with.