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Stop and smell the coffee — How to find beauty in each moment

Senee Seale The Princess Guide

Today is National Coffee Day — one of my favorite (nonofficial) holidays. If you’ve watched any of my videos, then you know I drink tea in them (Love Tea or Madam Butterfly Green Tea … my favorites). However, what you may not know is that I love coffee. I’ve been drinking it since I was a 2-year-old sitting in my high chair, dunking cookies in my Pa-Paw’s coffee while he taught me scriptures.

Now, you may be asking, “What does drinking coffee have to do with finding beauty in each moment?” Read on, and I’ll explain …

Stop and admire the flowers

I was taking a walk in my neighborhood one day this summer. I purposefully went without my phone so that I could focus on nature. What astonished and embarrassed me was that I realized on that walk that I have beautiful magnolia trees all over my neighborhood. I absolutely love these trees and the beautiful, fragrant flowers they produce. I’ve been a fan of them for decades.

What embarrassed and astonished me so much about this realization is that I’ve lived in the same neighborhood for four years, and this is the first time I’ve noticed them. I’m always talking to the big trees that surround my townhouse, but I couldn’t believe that I’ve been on autopilot for years and never noticed something that brings me so much joy.

While I was earning my psychology degree, I was encouraged multiple times to try mindfulness training. I’ll be honest … I was resistant. Living in the moment wasn’t a safe place for me during much of my life. So, I spent my time dreaming of how I wanted my life to be instead of paying attention to how it was. This isn’t a bad thing, actually. Scientific studies show that daydreaming is beneficial to the brain. It is also a vital part of manifesting. However, we have to balance that with being in the present moment.

Mindfulness is simply a practice of becoming aware of the here and now. What this practice does is helps quiet your thoughts, but more importantly, it brings you into today — this moment, the here and now which is all we really have. Mindfulness brings us into awareness and can program the brain to remember good things that are happening right now.

“I encourage you to begin a practice of being more mindful,” said Dr. Wayne Dyer in his 2014 PBS special. “This is, in fact, what I did to end my lifetime habit of being forgetful, particularly when it came to where I placed my car keys. These days when I swim, I experience my arms moving, my legs kicking, my shoulders stretching, the feel and taste of the salt water, my fingers cupped and moving the water, my breathing, my heart rate … all of it. Practicing mindfulness has taught me how to be in the moment and find myself as well as my keys.”

Sometimes in life, we push ourselves to do what is necessary to fulfill our commitments or just survive, and we completely rob ourselves of the beauty and joy in each moment. It’s often said that all we have is the present moment — it’s called the present because it is our gift. However, we are all probably guilty of missing that gift altogether because we’re so focused on doing what has to be done to get through life.

Wake up and smell the coffee

National Coffee Day (Sept. 29) and International Coffee Day (Oct. 1) are good reminders that we need to take time out to enjoy the moment and celebrate the little things. I drink coffee every morning. That’s usually my time to wake up, crown up and practice gratitude. I say every morning while enjoying my coffee, “I am crowned with favor. Favor surrounds me like a shield. Favor chases me down and overtakes me. I am blessed going in and blessed coming out. I am blessed in the city and blessed in the field. Everything I put my hand to succeeds. Goodness and mercy follow me all the days of my life.” I make myself pay attention to the taste and warmth of my coffee as I give thanks for it and all the blessings in my life and those blessings that I’m waiting on to come.

Drinking coffee also reminds me of my grandfather and happy times I’ve had with friends and loved ones in the past. I remember those times and people and feel those happy feelings and send love and gratitude to those people I’ve shared those times with. This is how you live in the moment — by being fully present, noticing all the details, feeling all the feelings and showing gratitude for everything … including the challenges and hard times.

There was a time many years ago when I was nervous about seeing an old boyfriend. A trusted person in my life suggested that I practice mindfulness during our coffee date. He told me to pay close attention to the sounds, smells and visual details of my surroundings. I did just want he suggested and ended up smiling the entire time. Even though it was one of the last times I saw this person, I will always remember the wonderful memory I have of that day because I was fully in the moment and experienced everything. That experience taught me to do this more often — even during difficult times. I’ve learned to immensely enjoy things I previously avoided like group exercise classes by practicing mindfulness. This coffee date was just the practice run to many new experiences that have truly been a gift.

So, on this day — and every day — I would encourage you to stop and smell the coffee … and roses and anything else in your environment. Pay close attention to the details, and take a mental snapshot of the moment so that you can go back and relive that beautiful gift any time you’re feeling less than happy.

Do you have a question about life that you want Senée to answer? Leave it in the comments or email it to PrincessGuide@BecomingPublishing.com.

Senée Seale is a book author, mental health professional and life guide passionate about helping people create positive changes in their lives. Are you ready to start attracting positive things into your life through practicing daily affirmations? Get your free copy of The Princes Guide to Gratitude Affirmations. If you’d like to book a personal session with Senée, she’s accepting new clients.

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Self Love Sunday: How to defeat fear in your life

I wrote about this topic recently, but here’s an expanded video for those who aren’t into reading. It also includes an exercise that I guide you through to help you put into practice everything I talk about here … So, stay tuned until the end. Please share this link with anyone you know who could benefit from learning how to conquer fear once and for all.

Do you have a question about life that you want Senée to answer? Leave it in the comments or email it to PrincessGuide@BecomingPublidhing.com. If you’d like to go deeper and learn more about healthy self-love, get a copy of Senée ‘s book The Princess Guide to Loving Yourself First.

Senée Seale is a book author, mental health professional and life guide passionate about helping people create positive changes in their lives. Are you ready to start attracting positive things into your life through practicing daily affirmations? Get your free copy of The Princes Guide to Gratitude Affirmations. If you’d like to book a personal session with Senée, she’s accepting new clients.

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How to be happy NOW

I’m going to warn you upfront that this is a longer post than usual. However, I would be remiss and doing you a disservice if I didn’t fully cover this topic.

Senee Seale The Princess Guide

Songs and movies have been written about being happy, but most of them don’t really tell you how to manifest it. Love and happiness go together like a horse and carriage, and being happy is one of the most loving things you can do for yourself.

Do you ever feel like you’re watching life pass you by? Like everyone around you is living in a different existence than you? I totally get it. I’ve been there. I understand exactly how you feel. I also know there’s a way to change those feelings to resonate on a higher, more hopeful level so that you can manifest the things you really want in life — including happiness.

In 2019 during my birthday month, I started working on a book about how to be happy. It was put on the backburner, though, when I started writing The Princess Guide to Gratitude and The Princess Guide to Loving Yourself First. This topic has been heavily on my mind recently. So, we’re talking about it today.

With the events of 2020 and 2021 sill causing many of us to reel every day, it can be hard to feel happy about our lives or what’s happening around us. However, we are in control of how we feel and what we think, and we can turn our frowns upside down.

I’ve written and talked about it for years … You are powerful enough to control your own mind, focus your thinking and manifest anything you really want, but it all starts in your head.

We have to be diligent and consistent about what we allow ourselves to ponder. Like a friend just recently told me, “Don’t let that info into your pretty head, queen!” We have to monitor what we allow ourselves to see and hear — that includes social media, TV, newscasts, podcasts, movies and music. It could also include sporting events. If it causes you to feel negative emotions of any kind, turn it off.

Now, don’t just take my word for it. Let me show you scientific proof of what I’m talking about and take you through an exercise to help you put what you’re about to learn into practice.

The science on social media

You have to remember that everything you see on social media is probably not what it appears. In 2016, I had coffee with a close friend from college over Easter weekend, and she told me she had given up social media for lent. She said she was feeling so low looking at how everyone else she knew having such a better life than her. My response was, “What are you talking about? You have such a beautiful family, marriage, home and life!” She said, “There’s always someone who has more than you.”

Studies have shown that the majority of people on Facebook are lying about their lives. I’ve noticed that the ones who post photos and declarations about how wonderful their life, love life, marriage, family, children, job, house/cars/possessions are, those are the very people that things are either not-so-good or they are about to be not-so-good. I believe most people want to show their best selves, but they are deceiving others and themselves in the process.

A report released around 2017 by the United Kingdom’s Royal Society for Public Health combined previously published research on the health impacts of social media with its own UK-wide survey of nearly 1,500 14- to 24-year-olds.

“Instagram easily makes girls and women feel as if their bodies aren’t good enough as people add filters and edit their pictures in order for them to look ‘perfect,’” one research participant said.

My best friend (who works in the entertainment industry) has said to me many times over the years, “Senée, don’t compare someone else’s sizzle reel to your raw footage.” Meaning — don’t look at people online showing themselves looking their best and appearing to be living their best lives and compare that to your lowest times in life. It really makes sense, if you think about it … You can’t compare a baby’s first steps to an Olympic gold medal track runner’s winning record. The two just aren’t comparable.

U.C. San Diego and Yale researchers conducted a two-year study of 5,208 adults monitoring their Facebook use and found that being social online is not the same as being social in real life … I know, that has been harder to do in the last couple of years with all the lockdowns we’ve endured, but the negative physical health results from social media use is worth paying attention to.

“Overall, our results showed that, while real-world social networks were positively associated with overall well-being, the use of Facebook was negatively associated with overall well-being,” the researchers wrote in a Harvard Business Review article. “These results were particularly strong for mental health; most measures of Facebook use in one year predicted a decrease in mental health in a later year.”

So, if we’re following the science, then we need to be spending time, in-person with loved ones and those who make us feel positively. Let’s face it … You can’t hug someone through a screen. Human touch is powerful and healing.

Studies show that human touch is healing and vital. I remember reading one study when I was earning my Psychology degree that showed babies who weren’t touched died.

You probably know that I only like concentrating on the words of Christ in the Bible. However, this research coincides with what Paul said in Hebrews 10:25, “Let us not give up the habit of meeting together, as some are doing. Instead, let us encourage one another all the more, since you see that the Day of the Lord is coming nearer.”

Defining happiness

Sometimes, we get so bogged down in our circumstances that we don’t even remember what it feels like to be happy nor can we define it. So, let’s take a look at what happiness and joy mean.

Merriam-Webster defines happiness as “the state of being happy; an experience that makes you happy.” Theopedia defines joy as, “a state of mind and an orientation of the heart. It is a settled state of contentment, confidence and hope.”

Find your happy place
Senee Seale The Princess Guide

There was a time in my life when I couldn’t remember what it felt like to be happy or even have fun. I was living in another state and preparing to come home to Dallas for a visit when a pastor told me that I needed to go and have fun. I looked at him with a blank stare and said, “I don’t even know how to do that anymore!” He suggested that I go to all the places that I loved going to in the past. I did just that … I went to one of my favorite coffee shops and enjoyed every moment of being in that place. I took in all the sights, sounds and smells. I drove through neighborhoods I used to live in and remembered the happy times, and I drove through neighborhoods I always wanted to live in and started dreaming of my fabulous future again. I stayed in the moment enjoying each second and went back to that state feeling happy.

“If you are happy, if you live each moment for everything it’s worth, then you are an intelligent person. Intelligent people do not have [nervous break downs] because they are in charge of themselves. They know how to choose happiness over depression because they know how to deal with the problems of their lives … Rather than measuring their intelligence on their ability to solve the problem, they measure it on their capacity for maintaining themselves as happy and worthy, whether the problem gets solved or not,” wrote Dr. Wayne Dyer in Your Erogenous Zones.

Change your thoughts

I know through observation and experience that changing your life starts with changing your perception by using gratitude. I wrote a whole book about because I know redirecting our thoughts onto positive things will change our feelings.

“A feeling is a physical reaction to a thought … You make yourself unhappy because of the thoughts that you have about the people or things you have in your life. Becoming a free and healthy person involves learning to think differently. Once you can change your thoughts, your new feelings will begin to emerge, and you will have taken the first step on the road to your personal freedom … Ask yourself if there is a sufficient payoff in being unhappy, down or hurt. Then, begin to examine, in depth, the kind of thoughts that are leading you to these debilitating feelings,” Dr. Dyer wrote.

I know from experience that it doesn’t feel like it in the moment, but we really do have control over our thoughts and inner world — even when our outer world is falling apart around us. It doesn’t happen immediately, but we can practice changing our thoughts to happier ones.

“Each thought is precious. We can learn to think in positive affirmations. Yes, it takes a bit of doing to gain control over our thoughts; however, the rewards are tremendous,” Louise Hay wrote on social media in 2015.

“The past has no power over us,” she continued. “Even problems have no power over us. Our power lies in the thoughts that we choose to think today. Remember, there are endless opportunities for good before us.”

Like I said, happiness is something I’ve been thinking about and started writing a book about two years ago. However, the events of 2020 have made me realize not only how important it is to be happy, but also how we have the power to be happy or not — in spite of the circumstances surrounding us. Happiness really is a state of mind, and it isn’t something that just happens when outside forces align just right. It’s something we can choose in any given moment.

Can being happy make you healthy?

Every day, new research is proving that our inner world affects our outer world — specifically, how our thoughts affect our health. I’m sure you’ve heard the stories of people who used laughter to raise their immune systems and reverse chronic illnesses. Since studying neuroscience while earning my Psychology degree, I’ve been increasingly interested in how our thoughts and the actual health of our brains influence not only our mental health, but also our physical health.

When I was working as a reporter for The Galveston County Daily News, I wrote a story about this. Let me share with you some of the things I wrote …

The prescription to lower your blood pressure may be as simple as this: Don’t worry. Be happy.

A study by University of Texas Medical Branch faculty members linked positive emotions to lower blood pressure. Dr. Glenn Ostir of UTMB said patients were asked questions about their happiness and optimism levels at the same time their blood pressure was taken. “Those who were happier seemed to have lower blood pressure. Positive emotions tend to be associated with a reduced risk of heart attack or stroke,” he told me.

While the study focused on 2,500 Mexican Americans 65 and older, Ostir told me he had no reason to believe this treatment wouldn’t work for other ethnic groups, as well. If you can control your emotional well-being and lower your blood pressure, the theory is you could prevent a heart attack or stroke. While Ostir stopped short of saying happy people don’t have heart attacks or strokes, he did tell me that positive emotions tend to be associated with a reduced risk of these diseases.  

The study also found that targeting the emotional health of older adults might be used as part of non-medication treatment. This could save people money on prescriptions.

How to become truly happy

I saw a meme on social media in 2015 which stated, “Happiness comes when we stop complaining about the troubles we have and say thanks to God for the troubles we don’t have.”

Is being happy really necessary? In a word, yes. Research shows that being happy has many positive health benefits, but I believe being happy not only brings peace to your inner world, but it also radiates to your outer world and expands to the people who are in that world.

Have you ever noticed yourself saying, “I’ll be happy when … happens?” We’ve all thought or said it, but delaying our happiness only creates more unhappiness. I thought I would be happy once I got married. What I found was that I had spent so many years practicing delaying my happiness that I didn’t know how to be happy once I got what I thought wanted.

T. Harv Eker has a sign on the wall of his office that states, “Practice Happiness Now!”

“Want happiness for others as much as you want it for yourself,” Dr. Dyer once wrote. He echoed Dr. David Hawkins’ idea that what you give away returns back to you. So, not only does the person you’re giving to benefit, but you also benefit.

So, how do you become truly happy? David Tuffley offered these suggestions in his eBook Being Happy: Part 1:

  • Experience things fully, vividly, selflessly. Self-Actualized people throw themselves wholeheartedly into the experiences that come their way — concentrating on it fully, allowing it to fully absorb them. [Just like I did on my happy trip down memory lane when I visited my hometown.]
  • Make the on-going choice between safety and risk. A Self-Actualizing person may still value comfort and security, but they know that personal growth is slow while they remain in their comfort-zone. They, therefore, take themselves out of their comfort zone as often as they can in order to create the right conditions for Self-Actualization.
  • Let your true self emerge. When in doubt, be honest. It may take some courage, but Self-Actualizing people look honestly at themselves and take responsibility for who they are and what happens to them. Self-delusion is the enemy of self-actualization.
  • Listen to your own tastes. The Self-Actualized person does not look for trouble, but when there is a conflict between what they inwardly know is right, and what everyone else is saying, a Self-Actualized person has the courage to disagree with the group and risk their disapproval or ostracism.
  • Use your intelligence. Self-Actualized people know that happiness comes from focusing fully on the task in front of them, and doing that task to the absolute best of their ability.
  • Make peak experiencing more likely. Self-Actualized people are honest — even brutally honest with themselves at every level of their lives. What they aim for is congruency between their inner and outer worlds.
  • Know thyself. Self-Actualized people ask themselves: “Who are you? What are you? What is good and what is bad for you? Where you are going? What is your mission?” Opening yourself up like this allows you to recognize your defenses. The challenge then is to find the courage to let them go.
Find your happy song

When I was working as a Behavioral Clinician, I had a 4-year-old client who went through a very traumatic event having witnessed the death of a younger sibling. She was also in the foster care system and was having frequent meltdowns and boughs of sadness.

During one of our sessions, I asked her if she had a “happy song” ― a song that made her feel happy when she heard it. She began singing this terribly sad song with a smile on her face. It was so sad I almost started crying. Then, I realized it was the theme song from the last Twilight movie. I quickly redirected her, grabbed my phone and turned on Pharrell’s song Happy.  She started singing and dancing all around the foster family’s living room. Her foster mother came in to see what was going on. When the song was over, I asked her if the next time she felt sad if she could start singing this song to help her feel happy again. She said yes, and her foster mother chimed in that she could play it for her on her phone.

This wasn’t a technique I learned. In fact, I was told her previous clinician was telling her to pretend she was squeezing an orange ―a stress-relieving technique that was endorsed by the literature we used at the agency I was working for ― which was not working, according to her foster mother. (That wouldn’t work on me either, especially if I were 4.)

It’s been my experience that when I’m stressed or feeling low, music always helps me. Sometimes, I just need a dance party break. The combination of upbeat music and moving my body seems to change my brain (and mood). In addition to dancing, I often have to sing myself happy.

A happy exercise

Joy/happiness is an emotion. Emotions are triggered in the brain “by images of objects or events that are actually happening at the moment or that, having happened in the past, are now being recalled,” explained Antonio Damasio in Self Comes to Mind, Connecting the Conscious Brain.

You can feel joy and deep happiness at any given moment by simply recalling happy moments in your life that triggered you to feel great joy.

So, let’s do an exercise. I want you to close your eyes, clear your mind of all thoughts and just focus on breathing. We’re going to take three deep breaths — breathe in for 5 seconds, hold for 6 seconds and out for 7 seconds.

Once you complete that, I want you to think back to a time in your life when you felt truly happy … A time when you smiled so big that your cheeks hurt and your heart was so full of joy that you thought it could burst into a Skittles rainbow. Do you have this memory? If not, daydream about a time like this that you want to have happen in the near future.

OK, now I want you to feel all the joy, happiness and love associated with this scene. Smile, laugh — whatever you’re feeling, let it show in your body. Feel these positive feelings all over your being. Hold this feeling for a few seconds.

Now, open your eyes. Are you feeling happy now? See, I’ve been telling you that you are so powerful that you can manifest anything you truly want. If you’re not feeling all the joy and happy feelings you would like to feel, keep practicing this exercise until you have mastered it.

Every time you are feeling hopeless, fearful, depressed — just completely out of sorts — I want you to do this exercise.

You are one of those shiny, happy people REM sang about, and you deserve to feel that joy at all times. Love yourself enough to practice giving yourself this gift of happiness on a regular basis.

Do you have a question about life that you want Senée to answer? Leave it in the comments or email it to PrincessGuide@BecomingPublishing.com.

Senée Seale is a book author, mental health professional and life guide passionate about helping people create positive changes in their lives. Are you ready to start attracting positive things into your life through practicing daily affirmations? Get your free copy of The Princes Guide to Gratitude Affirmations. If you’d like to book a personal session with Senée, she’s accepting new clients.

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How to defeat fear in your life

Now, more than ever, I’m seeing people being ruled by fear. You must understand that fear is the lowest energy there is. It not only overtakes a person and paralyzes them in the sense that it renders them incapable of making the best decisions for their lives, but it is also what negative entities feed on. You know the saying, “Misery loves company.” Well, haven’t you noticed that when people are operating in fear and negative thinking and speaking that it spreads like wild fire to everyone in their group?

I’m always talking about how when we neglect going to the kingdom within, we give our power away to outside forces and people — these people rarely have our best interests at heart and typically want to control and manipulate us. Whether it’s in a work relationship, love relationship, family relationship or even your health, you must take back your power.

The only way to overcome and defeat fear is through using the high energies of love, joy, hope, faith and peace. Anything or thought that doesn’t feel right to you, makes you nervous, anxious and unable to think properly or sleep is fear based. If you’re a person reading this, then you’re human and susceptible to experiencing fear. The good news is that you can overcome it by changing your thinking.

What is fear?

Merriam-Webster defines fear as, “an unpleasant, often strong emotion caused by anticipation or awareness of danger, an instance of this emotion, a state marked by this emotion; anxious concern; profound reverence and awe, especially toward God; reason for alarm.”

You may be surprised to hear that we weren’t born with fear. Extensive psychological research has been conducted on this topic for decades. Fear is a learned behavior, and like I always say, anything learned can be unlearned.

“A primary fact to know about fear is that it is removable … Enthusiasm with its immense mental and spiritual power can cancel out all fear,” wrote Norman Vincent Peale in Enthusiasm Makes the Difference.

Fear can help us get out of danger and even avoid negative situations. However, negative thinking is rarely productive and often leads to conditions like Anxiety Disorder and Panic Disorder. It’s my personal and professional opinion that fear is the basis of stress. We stress out over things because we’re afraid of the negative outcomes.

Dr. Wayne Dyer said it well in his book The Power of Intention, “There is no actual stress or anxiety in the world: it’s your thoughts that create these false beliefs … When we think stressfully, we create reactions in the body, valuable messages or signals requesting our attention.”

Scientific brain research by Joseph E. LeDoux out of New York University published in 2014 defined fear as, “… what happens when the sentient brain is aware that its personal well-being (physical, mental, social, cultural, existential) is challenged or may be at some point. What ties together all instances of fear is an awareness, based on the raw materials available, that danger is near or possible.”

What is fear good for?

Psychological research shows us that fear is both conscious and unconscious. The unconscious is more of an automatic reaction not usually even thought about until afterward You know, the flight, fight or freeze response the body has in stressful situations. However, it’s the conscious fear that we ruminate over — that fear that takes us to the darkest places thinking of all the terrible things that could go wrong — that’s the dangerous kind that we can control.

“Fear can be a big stopper for many of us: fear of fragility, fear of failure, fear of making a mistake, fear of what others might think, fear of success. We may second-guess our next action or word until we talk ourselves out of participating in life,” wrote Melody Beattie in The Language of Letting Go.

President Franklin D. Roosevelt famously said, “The only thing we have to fear is fear itself.” Think about that for a second … Living in fear, thinking negatively and allowing others outside ourselves to control us with threats of fear is a hell all its own. I’m human too, and I’ve had plenty of those negative thoughts myself. It’s legitimate and prudent to think about any negative consequences that could happen to you so that you can make an informed decision and an accurate plan. However, when we allow fear to overtake us to the point that we can’t feel love, hope, faith, joy and peace, we become paralyzed and unable to function in high energy — we become like an animal caught in a trap, and we have no way to stop those who are outside of us from controlling and abusing us. 

Christ talked about fear before his death in John 14:27, “Peace is what I leave with you; it is my own peace that I give you. I do not give it as the world does [and can take it away]. Do not be worried and upset; do not be afraid.” The Amplified Bible further explains, “Let My perfect peace calm you in every circumstance and give you courage and strength for every challenge.”

I typically only focus on the words of Christ, but Peter had some good advice in 1 Peter 3:13–14, “Who will harm you if you are eager to do what is good? But even if you should suffer for doing what is right, how happy you are! Do not be afraid of anyone, and do not worry.”

So, how do we actually stop worrying and operating in fear? We start by controlling our own minds.

The Fear Slayer

Buffy was the vampire slayer, and you can be your own fear slayer. You are so powerful! You can manifest any situation you choose in your life — good or bad. The choice is yours. I’m not saying it’s easy or instantaneous … It hasn’t been for me, but I have manifested a lot in my life, and you can, too. You start by taking control of your own mind and using the beautiful love in your heart to overcome the fear.

“It’s been said that thoughts are things, that they actually possess dynamic power … You can actually think yourself into or out of situations … Think positively, for example, and you set in motion positive forces which bring positive results to pass,” Peale wrote in The Power of Positive Thinking.

 We should always remember that fear is just another emotion, and emotions are meant to be observed, felt and released. “Feel the fear, then let it go,” advised Beattie in The Language of Letting Go.

Love is the most powerful energy of all. It is the only thing that can transmute fear. When we focus on love and the feeling of love, the fear is defeated.

In times of fear and stress, it’s helpful to think about things that make us feel good and happy — that could be a pleasant memory or a beautiful dream of the future. Whatever it may be, get a clear picture of it in your mind. Pay attention to all the details — the words, colors and textures of that picture. Most importantly, feel all the love and positive feelings you had or want to have and hold that for a few minutes. You can always go back to this place any time you begin to feel fear. You can even transmute or change your circumstances by taking the negative things you fear and daydream about how they could be changed into positive situations that make you feel love and joy.

You are powerful! Use that beautiful, brilliant mind of yours to manifest yourself out of fear and into a positive existence.

Do you have a question about life that you want Senée to answer? Leave it in the comments or email it to PrincessGuide@BecomingPublishing.com.

Senée Seale is a book author, mental health professional and life guide passionate about helping people create positive changes in their lives. Are you ready to start attracting positive things into your life through practicing daily affirmations? Get your free copy of The Princes Guide to Gratitude Affirmations. If you’d like to book a personal session with Senée, she’s accepting new clients.