Joffre shows us self-love with sass, swagger, and a big laugh. In this podcast episode: how leaning into the dark night of the soul can bring a new lens on reality, finishing up the Matrix of Love, Joffre’s story of how she had done everything to have a good life and rock bottom at age 29, and shifting from mental masturbation and the mind doing double lifting to heart healing.
Joffre discusses beginning again, healing before it hits you in the face, using positive vs negative imagination, and emotions as a navigational system. There is already a part of you that knows it is one with the divine and we leave clues for ourselves. She talks about how challenging people and situations around cancer brought her to more self-love. And when you don’t take up the practice of loving all the parts of you, the orphaned parts may shout to wake you up!
Joffre is a Spiritual/Personal Growth Author, Motivational Speaker, and Common Sense Advocate who was compelled to write her first book, HOW LEARNING TO SAY GOODBYE TAUGHT ME HOW TO LIVE/2015, on spiritual growth because of the profound experiences of seeing her best friend battle breast cancer. Joffre began her career as a theatre actress and producer, having spent most of her adult life in New York City, where she acted and produced several Off-Broadway productions.
An avid student of spiritual literature and techniques since the early 1980s, Joffre taught herself filmmaking and formed Sweet Moon Pictures Production Company back in the 1990s. She wrote, produced, and directed two independent films with spiritual themes or overtones: Out of the Blue (1995) and Best Wishes (2002; winner of the “Spirit of the West Award”). Before moving back to Texas to care for her dying mother, she worked as a senior producer and director for a media broadcast Production Company in New York City for over fifteen years. Her newest book, THE HEART OF THE MATTER (A Workbook and Guide to Finding Your Way Back to Self-love) 2017, was born out of the work she did within to heal her wounds and beliefs of the past and move successfully and fully into self-love. Joffre’s passion — now through her book, talks, and videos — is to help everyone wake up, take the journey of self-discovery, and empower themselves through self-love.
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Joffre shows us self-love with sass, swagger, and a big laugh. In this podcast episode: how leaning into the dark night of the soul can bring a new lens on reality, finishing up the Matrix of Love, Joffre’s story of how she had done everything to have a good life and rock bottom at age 29, and shifting from mental masturbation and the mind doing double lifting to heart healing.
Joffre discusses beginning again, healing before it hits you in the face, using positive vs negative imagination, and emotions as a navigational system. There is already a part of you that knows it is one with the divine and we leave clues for ourselves. She talks about how challenging people and situations around cancer brought her to more self-love. And when you don’t take up the practice of loving all the parts of you, the orphaned parts may shout to wake you up!
Joffre is a Spiritual/Personal Growth Author, Motivational Speaker, and Common Sense Advocate who was compelled to write her first book, HOW LEARNING TO SAY GOODBYE TAUGHT ME HOW TO LIVE/2015, on spiritual growth because of the profound experiences of seeing her best friend battle breast cancer. Joffre began her career as a theatre actress and producer, having spent most of her adult life in New York City, where she acted and produced several Off-Broadway productions.
An avid student of spiritual literature and techniques since the early 1980s, Joffre taught herself filmmaking and formed Sweet Moon Pictures Production Company back in the 1990s. She wrote, produced, and directed two independent films with spiritual themes or overtones: Out of the Blue (1995) and Best Wishes (2002; winner of the “Spirit of the West Award”). Before moving back to Texas to care for her dying mother, she worked as a senior producer and director for a media broadcast Production Company in New York City for over fifteen years. Her newest book, THE HEART OF THE MATTER (A Workbook and Guide to Finding Your Way Back to Self-love) 2017, was born out of the work she did within to heal her wounds and beliefs of the past and move successfully and fully into self-love. Joffre’s passion — now through her book, talks, and videos — is to help everyone wake up, take the journey of self-discovery, and empower themselves through self-love.
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Show Notes
00:00 Intro
01:00 Opening
02:43 Conversation Start
03:05 Joffre’s Next Book (Update of Heart of the Matter)
04:31 Quote About Inner Orphans
07:52 Heal Before It Hits You in the Face
09:27 Story About One of Joffre’s First Dark Night That Woke Her Up
11:52 Something Not Quite Right With Me
14:01 Don’t Forget the Heart, It’s Holding All the Pain — Being Embodied is Important — Affirmations Only Do So Much Without Healing
15:07 Shelving Everything and Everything is Our Fault When Young
16:45 Introducing Yourself to Your Own Tools (Positive Imagination, Because We Are Already Really Good at Negative Imagination)
20:03 Definition of Self Love
20:03 A Definition of What Self Love Means
21:49 There is a Great Treasure With the Orphans
24:01 You May Not Know What is Needed, but It Gets Easier
28:27 You Need Your Books, but Everything Is Within!
29:18 What Challenges or Struggles Have You Had Lately?
35:02 Separating Relational and Spiritual Learning From Each Other / Understanding the Hurt of People That Are Hurting You
37:59 Life is Here to Teach Us Something — Even When It’s About Jealousy and Bullying
38:22 What’s the Title of Joffre’s Current Life Chapter?
40:20 The Refreshing Space of Making New Choices
47:12 Writing Wasn’t the Plan But Life Has a Way
49:19 We Are Leaving Clues for Ourselves
50:13 Don’t Look Too Far Ahead, It’s Gonna Change Anyway.
52:37 Dreams About Water Bottle and Little Foxes / Working With Dreams
57:38 What Role Do You Play in Your Group of Friends?
58:41 “You Got to Play, People!” ~ Joffre Mcclung
59:57 What Kind of Roles Did You Play as an Actress in the Past and What Would You Play. Now?
01:02:06 Check Out Joffre’s Books or Classes
01:02:25 Where You People Find Joffre?
01:02:40 Gratitude
01:03:13 Outro / Where to Find Joffre and Her Experiential
01:03:45 Check Out Other Interviews and Episodes on The Embody Podcast
01:03:55 The Embody Newsletter to Stay Informed About Retreats, Workshops, and New Episodes
01:04:10 Where Can You Begin Again?

This episode is with special guest Joffre McClung, who is the author of two self-love and healing books.
Candice Wu 0:06
In this episode, we talked about our inner orphans, how to use our emotions as a navigational system to connect with our higher self to heal and to love ourselves. What is self-love and how to play?
Candice Wu 0:22
Hello and welcome. You’re listening to the Embody Podcast, a show about remembering and embodying your true nature, inner wisdom, embodied healing and self-love.
Candice Wu 0:36
My name is Candice Wu, and I’m a holistic healing facilitator, intuitive coach, and artist sharing my personal journey of vulnerability, offering meditations and guided healing support and having co-creative conversations with healers and wellness practitioners from all over the world.
Candice Wu 1:01
Welcome back, everyone. It’s great to have you today and to welcome the special guest Joffre McClung.
Candice Wu 1:07
She used to be an actress, and she is the author of a couple of healing self-love books. One is called, The Heart of the Matter. And the other is called How Learning to Say Goodbye Taught Me How to Live.
Candice Wu 1:19
It was really fun to talk to her in this episode, where she talks about her experiences with people in her life that have had cancer, and how people in her life have mirrored her need for self-love, or showed her different parts of herself that she needed to learn in herself or to heal up in herself.
Candice Wu 1:39
She began her career as a theater actress and producer, having spent most of her adult life in New York City, where she acted and produced several Off-Broadway productions. And she was an avid student of spiritual literature and techniques since the early 80s. Because, she wanted to learn and grow herself.
Candice Wu 1:58
She taught herself filmmaking and formed, Sweet Moon Pictures production company in the 1990s. And then wrote, produced, and directed two independent films with spiritual themes and overtones. Those are called, Out of the Blue and Best Wishes.
Candice Wu 2:13
Before moving back to Texas to care for her dying mother, she worked as a senior producer and director for a media broadcast production company in New York City for over 15 years.
Candice Wu 2:23
You’ll hear in this episode about how her life took many different turns. And she landed here in her passion through writing books, talks, and creating videos to support people in loving themselves and taking the journey to empower themselves. So without further ado, here is Joffre.
Candice Wu 2:46
Okay, welcome, Joffre.
Joffre McClung 2:48
Hey!
Candice Wu 2:49
Hey, it’s so good to have you.
Joffre McClung 2:51
It’s great to be with you.
Candice Wu 2:53
I’m pumped to talk about all things, self-love.
Joffre McClung 2:58
Well, I can certainly talk about self-love for hours, so we’re in good shape.
Candice Wu 3:02
Yes. So you’ve written a couple of books. It sounds like you’re also on another, about self-love, and really digging into how to do that.
Joffre McClung 3:14
Oh, certainly. I’m actually redoing the second book, doing a new edition, so to speak, putting myself a bit more into the book.
Candice Wu 3:23
Oh, that’s fabulous.
Joffre McClung 3:25
So it’s kind of a new edition, a new book kind of?
Candice Wu 3:29
And is that for the Heart of the Matter?
Joffre McClung 3:31
Yes, it is. Which is, you know, a workbook and guide. And it gives you the meditations and the questions, ask yourself, of course, we have some dialogue in it. And I talked about different people I’ve helped along the way. But I kind of kept myself sort of generally out of it, except meditation-wise. I would say what I did in meditation. But now I’m going to go back, I’m going to put myself back intuitive of what happened in my life, why I started something, what triggered me, just, you know, give them my story. So they understand that I, too, came from a place of lack of self-love. So it’s sort of a new book. And yet, it’s really a new edition.
Candice Wu 4:06
Yeah, and I really love that, because that’s what I feel from you that you went on this journey for yourself. And that’s what these pieces, these books are pieces of the product of that, but that you really have gone through it. And it’s in your bones, it’s in your blood. Is that right?
Joffre McClung 4:24
Oh, you got that completely, perfectly!
Joffre McClung 4:27
It’s in my blood, it’s in my bones. It’s in my soul, for sure.
Candice Wu 4:30
Yeah! Well, tell me more.
Candice Wu 4:32
But first, I want to read this little piece of what you’ve written on your website about the Heart of the Matter, and maybe it’s in your book as well, I’m wondering if that connects up with what you’re saying about how you’re bringing more pieces of yourself, your story.
Candice Wu 4:46
So here’s the quote, “We’re meant to be whole. And that means healing and integrating those orphaned parts of ourselves. Believe it or not, every wound holds a forgotten gem just waiting to be rediscovered. And wounds are not only filled with unhealed pain, but also shrouds your ability to dream and create, to feel joy and excitement, to have faith and trust, to live with passion and compassion, and most importantly, to love and receive, to receive love.”
Candice Wu 5:17
I just, every part of my being agrees with that.
Joffre McClung 5:21
Oh, I’m so glad! Because it agrees with me too. Speaking from my experience —
Candice Wu 5:27
Yeah.
Joffre McClung 5:28
It, really, it came — I almost wrote that without me knowing I wrote it, to be honest with you. Sometimes I’ll sit down to write something. And it’ll just start to flow. And that is sort of one of those things that flowed out of me, because that’s what I was going through, the healing my inner orphans.
Joffre McClung 5:44
Because we all have different parts of ourselves that we’ve forgotten or shoved aside, or refused to look at, frankly, that we’re still carrying along with us in our adulthood, that are making decisions for us that we’re unaware of.
Joffre McClung 5:56
So I was in the midst of doing that, cleaning up, I would say finishing my orphan work. And when I was writing the book, I was thinking about my orphan and how I really wanted people to have the courage to look at their own orphan. And that when I wrote that, I was sort of looking back at what I had done. And realizing those orphans, the power, and the gifts, those orphans hold of ours, we go for a dream, but you’re going for a dream with maybe 15% of yourself, because the rest is shoved away kept safe with your orphan that you don’t want to, you know, deal with or your disowned. So that really came from my own experience, I have to say.
Candice Wu 6:31
That’s it. So I resonate with that. And, as you were saying that I was just thinking about the orphan parts of ourselves that are still acting. It’s like they insist on being seen. They insist on it. And our deeper self knows that we need that part. As you’re saying we have only “x” percentage of ourselves moving forward. And all these parts we’re trying to shove away that are being orphaned or disown. But there’s a deeper part of us that wants to bring it forward.
Joffre McClung 7:04
And they definitely speak up.
Candice Wu 7:06
Yeah. So tell me about that.
Joffre McClung 7:09
They want to be heard. They really, you can shut them down. You can ignore them for years, people ignore them for years, although they’re still making decisions from that place.
Candice Wu 7:17
For a long time.
Joffre McClung 7:18
Oh, yeah, for many lifetimes, but they ignore them. But the thing is that they are going to start to shout because they want to be heard. They want to be part of the whole, and you keep disowning them making them separate of the whole. So they’re going to shout, and they’re going to get louder, and louder, until you do something about it, either through drink or drugs, or you’re going to heal them, frankly, you have a choice. I, of course, decided to heal them.
Candice Wu 7:43
Yeah. And you know, it’s such an interesting thing, because they get louder and louder. And as I started to realize that, let me know how you experienced this. As I started to realize, wow, wait, I’ve hit rock bottom here. And that’s when I learned that or started to look at that, or out I had to get to this place, this pain, in this big way, to actually look at that thing that I knew was there.
Candice Wu 8:07
And so it’s like, I’m learning. Okay, why don’t I just do that before it gets to be like a catastrophe?
Joffre McClung 8:13
Because we have to learn that way in the beginning. I think every one of us who’s on this journey, just started with a dark night of the soul kind of feeling whether it’s a big one or a little one, is because something went wrong in our lives. And it didn’t work anymore, and something hurt us. And so it makes us stop. And then we look at what we’ve been shoving down.
Joffre McClung 8:30
So I don’t think you’re wrong in that. I think as we get wiser, hopefully, we look at things before they hit us in the face, and yell at us and stop us, you know, in our tracks. But I think that’s typical. That’s kind of how human beings, we feel like we can ignore it because it won’t bother us until it shouting. And then as we get hopefully, as we grow, we get wiser. And then we start to do the homework before it’s in our face.
Joffre McClung 8:55
You know, I’m there where I do it before it’s in my face doesn’t mean I’ll get a whisper. But I’ll get a little whisper. But I follow that whisper now. I don’t want it to get loud.
Candice Wu 9:04
I’m right with you. And at the same time there, my experience of the loudness if it gets to that point, feels different. Like, I don’t resist it as much. I understand it a little better. I can be with myself through it and have compassion that, that happened or what had built up for me to get to that place.
Candice Wu 9:27
But yeah, I would love to hear Joffre about one of those dark nights of the soul for you or some orphaned part of you that you’ve looked at.
Joffre McClung 9:38
Oh, I have so many I could talk about. It’s like which one do I pick?
Joffre McClung 9:43
Well, the first dark night of the soul probably is the most important dark night of the soul because this woke me up, that I needed changing and I needed to look at reality slightly differently.
Joffre McClung 9:53
And that dark night tends to happen later in life, for me it happened around 29. And that’s when I left a relationship with an ex I had and he was a wonderful man, but I left it because I knew it wasn’t right for me after nine years.
Joffre McClung 10:05
And I went dark, because suddenly I was back in my studio apartment, back in Manhattan in New York and living back in my studio after I left a beautiful brownstone, lived a lovely life with him. I was back in my little brownstone, doing my schlocky work, still doing audition work, but doing you know, schlocky work to pay the bills.
Joffre McClung 10:23
And I had a dark night because I thought this isn’t what I thought my life would be like when I was turning 30. And I suddenly realized, everything I believed was true, that I followed the rules, I went to acting school, I did my auditions, I fell in love. I did everything you’re supposed to do to have a good life. And here I was with my life falling apart, that really hit me over the head.
Joffre McClung 10:46
And then I started reading everything, every personal growth book I could read, every metaphysical book I could read, in fact, back then, this is how old I am. Back then, the metaphysical books and the spiritual books were in the occult section.
Joffre McClung 11:00
I’m not kidding, it was in the mid-early 80s, mid–80s. Really, they didn’t have a spiritual group or new age group, or whatever they call it now. Now, they just call it spiritual.
Joffre McClung 11:09
They didn’t have that. They had a kind of come in a put together within the occult groups, you had the witches over here, and then you had a few spiritual books over here.
Joffre McClung 11:17
So, I started reading spiritual books and that’s when I started to understand that we create our own reality with what we believe. That opened me up. Because I knew how I was living was no longer working. And I realized I was carrying beliefs. And then I began to do some of the work. So that was my first dark night of the soul was really, in, I’d say 29 years old, almost 30, where everything was falling apart, it woke me up to the fact that we actually do create our own reality through what we believe. And I obviously had a whole lot of negative beliefs that were ruling my life at that time.
Candice Wu 11:51
Yeah, what did you see in yourself at that time, as far as the beliefs that it sounds like they played out in your life in that way, and brought you to that place of seeing there?
Joffre McClung 12:02
Well, I had shoved them down, in all honesty.
Joffre McClung 12:06
I was doing my auditioning in New York, I was doing producing Off-Broadway plays also being in them, as well as producing them. I begin to make a few little short films. So I was, you know, doing what I loved, but not to the extent that I wanted to do it.
Joffre McClung 12:19
And that dark night, I realized underneath all the, I guess, you’d call it “bravado”, although I wasn’t particularly loud about it. But saying, “Yes, I can get this job, I’ll book this job, I’ll get this commercial, I’ll get this, you know, acting job.”
Joffre McClung 12:34
Underneath that was a feeling that I will never get that. Because underneath that, was a feeling of lack of self-love, that had come from childhood, things in my early childhood that I had made a decision that something was not quite right with me, so to speak.
Joffre McClung 12:48
Because I had certain family members who were extremely jealous and angry at me. And I took the blame for it. So I shoved all that down. But that was still ruling my life. Even though I was having the bravado saying, “I’m going to this audition, I’m going to book and -” but underneath with that feeling that I can’t have what I want. There’s something not quite right with me because I obviously piss people off and make them jealous and angry at me. So there was that level.
Joffre McClung 13:17
And there was also a level underneath that, a negative belief that I can’t have what I want. Because if I do have what I want, it’s going to make someone jealous of me and angry at me and hurt me.
Joffre McClung 13:27
So there were layers —
Candice Wu 13:28
That’s dangerous.
Joffre McClung 13:29
Oh, yeah, it was dangerous to have what I want. So there were layers. And I didn’t know all that even in the beginning. When I first started reading the books, it was just sort of opening my mind to the beliefs and how we create our own reality. That work came a bit later. But that was, I was well aware that, that was in there. I was trying to heal it in different ways. Not quite doing a great job at it. But I was well aware that, that stuff was in there. And I wanted it out of my head, frankly. And then I realized it was also in my heart. And that heart needed to be healed.
Candice Wu 14:01
Absolutely, can’t forget about the heart, because it’s holding all that pain.
Joffre McClung 14:05
Oh, definitely holds that pain. You can do all the affirmations you want. You can do all the techniques you want. But if you’re not healing the wound that’s in the heart, I think I call it in the book, “mental masturbation”, because you’re really kind of playing with your mind, which is important. You want to change your mind. But if you’re not healing, the heart is carrying the wound. You’re double lifting, so to speak.
Candice Wu 14:28
Yeah.
Joffre McClung 14:28
And you really need to go to the root of the heart, get your heart in sync, then your mind can follow. I know that’s kind of sounds weird to people. But that’s how it worked for me in all honesty.
Candice Wu 14:38
That’s what this whole entire show is about, being embodied.
Candice Wu 14:42
Being in your body and feeling through what’s here and healing those wounds. And I like what you said about double lifting, because we’re often, I think it’s a couple of things, you know, so many of us have learned to use our mind to get through something and survive something, because feeling it was too dangerous or hard or scary at the time or overwhelming.
Joffre McClung 15:06
Well, or we were too young.
Candice Wu 15:07
Yeah.
Joffre McClung 15:08
We didn’t know what to do with what we were feeling. So we kept shoving it down, or, I call it shelving it. I just shelve it. Deal with it later. And you know, you realize the years have gone by and you’ve been shelving everything.
Candice Wu 15:19
And then you’re so good at it.
Joffre McClung 15:21
Very good at it.
Joffre McClung 15:23
And actually, it does serve a purpose. Because there are times you do need to shelve something that you need when you get home. I can work, I can shelve something. And then when I get home, I can go to meditation and look at it and heal it.
Joffre McClung 15:33
So I mean, in that sense, it’s a good thing. But when we’re little, we shelved it because we don’t know what to do with it. And we also, when we’re younger, we take everything is our fault. Everything is our fault, doesn’t matter what it is, even though mentally I may have known this person is angry and jealous. And that’s them, not me. In my heart, I still believed it was me. Because there are negative beliefs that get built around what you keep experiencing.
Joffre McClung 15:59
So another negative belief it came out of that was some, you know, something was wrong with me, because otherwise, I wouldn’t have this person in my family that was so angry at me. You see how that negative belief gets played out, even though it had nothing to do with me. In all honesty, it was her issue, not mine. But I obviously agreed to play with it when it came down here.
Joffre McClung 16:19
Obviously, it needed to teach me what self-trust and self-love. So I’m grateful to this energy I was brought into. I don’t ever want to do it again, frankly. I hope I’ve learned the lesson. But I’m grateful for their lesson and the Nemesis and for what she taught me. Because it did guide me to find myself loving. I’m very firm in it now. It took me a while. But I’m very firm in it now.
Candice Wu 16:43
Yeah, I can hear that.
Candice Wu 16:45
So when you teach people through the meditations and other practices, how to heal the wound of their hearts. What do you offer? What do you suggest?
Joffre McClung 17:00
The way I started is I introduced them to their tools first, because I want them to know they can do this for themselves. I’m going to introduce them to the things, but they’re going to have to do the heavy lifting themselves. They’re going to have to go within and look within themselves.
Joffre McClung 17:13
So I introduced them to their tools, their imagination, because you’re going to use your imagination to dialogue with those inner orphans. I can’t tell you how many times I dealt dialogue with my inner orphan and learn something through that dialoguing.
Candice Wu 17:26
Oh, I did it this morning.
Joffre McClung 17:28
Exactly. You see, you obviously know what you’re doing. But you know, lot of people don’t use their imagination, except for worry. They’re good at thinking the worst-case scenario for work, for money or the relationship.
Candice Wu 17:40
Good point.
Candice Wu 17:41
You see people often using their imagination for worry, in a worrying way.
Joffre McClung 17:45
Yeah. As adults.
Joffre McClung 17:47
To daydream out the window, see if we used it well, when we were young, and then we grow up and we use it wrongly. We start using it for worrying.
Candice Wu 17:56
I see that. Worrying and creating the worst possible scenarios.
Joffre McClung 18:01
And what will I do if that does happen? That’s what we spend our imagination on.
Joffre McClung 18:06
So I introduced them to their imagination. I introduced them to their safe space, I let them use your imagination to meet their higher selves, to create this loving space, to add images to, kind of wake that part of their brain up again.
Joffre McClung 18:19
So they realize, “Oh, I do have an imagination and it can be loving to me, it doesn’t have to be the worst-case scenario.”
Joffre McClung 18:25
So I introduced them to their imagination, to their higher self, which is just the part of you that still knows it’s one with the divine and carries with it all the knowledge and power of that love, which we all have.
Joffre McClung 18:39
Some people call it their innate one. Some people call it their intuition. I don’t really care the name you call it, we all have one. But it’s the one that sees 360 degrees around, sees the forest and the trees at the same time. It’s your wise one, so to speak. And you can tune into that part of yourself in meditation, which I know you do. I have no doubt, to aid you in your journey. So I introduced them to that.
Joffre McClung 19:04
And then I introduced them to their third tool, their emotions. People are so afraid of emotions. And the thing is your emotions are part of your navigational system to move through this world. But we shove so many emotions away because we’re afraid of anger, or rage, or hurt, or fear, whatever it might be that we don’t get the lessons from those emotions.
Joffre McClung 19:26
Those emotions try to talk to us and tell us something. So I introduce them to their emotions, that can take some time, sometimes, depending.
Joffre McClung 19:34
Men take longer than women, interestingly enough, they’re fine with anger. But getting to the hurt underneath the anger takes them a little bit, you know, longer time. Women are a little more adaptive going to the hurt underneath the anger.
Joffre McClung 19:46
So I introduced them to their tools, that takes a little time. And then we go into talking about what self-love is. Because we can talk about self-love. But until you define it for somebody, it just sounds sort of “whoo, whoo ish,” so to speak.
Joffre McClung 20:01
I want self-love the way I define self-love, for me. And I help them get it is that it’s the part of you that knows in your heart, because I’ve got to include the heart, that you are lovable, loving, and loved.
Joffre McClung 20:17
And then we go and we break that down further. What does lovable mean? It means you’re worthy of love, you exist — therefore, in the universe’s eyes, you are worthy of love, doesn’t matter if another person ever gives it to you, you know you are worthy of love.
Joffre McClung 20:34
Loving means that you know you are given a loving heart that is your natural state of being. You have a naturally loving heart. And how you express that loving heart is more than good enough. And loved simply means that you matter and are valued by the universe, not for what you do, not for what you will do, but because you are you. You don’t have to earn it, you don’t have to prove it. You don’t have to do anything. You simply are loved because you exist. And you are — you matter.
Joffre McClung 21:14
So we go through that and then we get to the orphans. What you and I have talked about. Because, as you well know, the orphans are key, because they will shout you down.
Candice Wu 21:27
And for good reason. You know, there’s that, as you said, this whole load of energy that’s waiting for you there and all the goodness that is like a treasure box waiting to be discovered within what we’ve closed down. But at the same time, there’s pain, there’s fear, and other emotions that are harder.
Joffre McClung 21:49
Oh, yeah. And the thing is, there is great treasure with the orphan because they hold so much of your dream, so much of your joy, so much of your power. You need it back, frankly, we’re supposed to be all that we can be. And if you’re keeping parts of yourself away, you can’t be all that you can be.
Joffre McClung 22:04
So then, I introduce them to their orphans. And each person is different. Certain orphans take longer to bring out. I had several. Now they’re all sort of the same. But I saw different images for different when I was working on different beliefs from that orphan.
Joffre McClung 22:19
Someone be hiding in a cave. The first one I met was hiding in a cave, unwashed, dirty, matted, filthy, did not want anything to do with me. Did not want to look at me. Didn’t want anything to do with me.
Joffre McClung 22:31
So it took time just to gain trust from that orphan. Then I would — after I worked with that one for a bit, I met another version of the orphan and this one was shouting me out. It called me into the woods and it shouted me down. It yelled at me, shouted at me, screamed at me, had a tantrum. It’s the one I needed to have a tantrum. Yeah.
Candice Wu 22:50
Yeah.
Joffre McClung 22:51
So I let it have a tantrum. And I listened. And I said, “That’s just horrible. I’m so sorry.” And I just listened.
Joffre McClung 22:57
So you meet your orphan. And you listen in the beginning. Sometimes if they won’t talk to you to say I’m here, going to sit here and be with you, you may do that several times. And then they may start to say something to you, or do something, or have an image for you, whatever. However your brain works, people, images, some people it’s words, you’ll know when it’s real.
Joffre McClung 23:18
And then you’ll begin to listen to them and say I want to hear what you have to say. And they’ll start to tell you, either shouting at you or one which has crawled into my lap, just crawled in my lap and boohooed. So I just held it, let it boohoo, because it needed to boohoo and be loved.
Joffre McClung 23:34
Another one needed to have a tantrum, another one needed to ignore me. So you deal with each orphan and really come from the same place. But you deal with each orphan as they need to be dealt with. It’s their time. And it teaches you how to have compassion for the different parts of yourself. Because you’re learning how to have compassion for yourself. Does that make any sense?
Candice Wu 23:56
Oh, completely? Yeah, that’s what I’m practicing almost every day at this point. You know, what I find is that there are ways that these parts of me want a certain kind of loving or acknowledgment, and being with, that usually is just what I didn’t get before. And the hardest part about that is that it sometimes, I didn’t know what was needed. But as the ball got rolling with some support from other people, my healer, many healers along the way, it just started to get easier and easier. And now, it’s like second nature. But how did you find that place for you? How did you know what was needed? How did you know how to give it to yourself?
Joffre McClung 24:46
Well, like you, I had a lot of teachers and healers and helpers along the way that would show up and give me information. So I mean, I certainly didn’t do this on my own. A lot of helpers and healers and a lot of books also. And I sort of put it all together. Because I would do one thing and it wouldn’t get me that far — or would get me so far. And then it would stop. And then I would get information from someone else. And I would add that to it. So I sort of did layers.
Joffre McClung 25:10
And then I began to say, “You know what, I can do this.” I know — because being an actor helped a lot. Because I am able to dialogue a lot easier than people who aren’t used to dialoguing. Because I would practice line. So obviously practicing lines, it’s like talking to your orphan.
Candice Wu 25:25
Yeah.
Joffre McClung 25:26
So in that sense, it came a little easier if you’re in the performing arts and somebody who’s not. And there are times I didn’t know the answer either. And those are good times. Meaning, that means you’re going to leap when you get it. When they’re tough, and you can’t seem to get the answer, and you keep hitting the same wall, that’s a good sign that you’re getting ready to leap, or you wouldn’t be hitting that wall to begin with.
Joffre McClung 25:47
That’s the way I started to see it happen. When I’d hit that wall, and I kept going back to, let’s say, a particular orphan and kept getting sort of semi answers, but not the full answer, and not knowing what I needed to give them in return to bring them back to wholeness, it would be so frustrating. And so I go deeper with them. And I would listen a little deeper, and then I would find a new level. And eventually, I began to get hit of what it was they were needing for me. And it was my higher self who really helped me the most.
Joffre McClung 26:16
“I am key. I’m working with my higher self.” Like I said, I had a healer, I had people that channel that I worked with. And a lot of good guides and teachers. But really it was my higher self.
Joffre McClung 26:28
In the meditation, I always have everyone bring their higher self into the meditation, when we’re working with anything, frankly. But definitely when you’re working with your orphan, so that you feel like they’re holding your hand as you’re holding your orphan’s hand.
Joffre McClung 26:42
So as you’re talking to your orphan, your higher self can be talking to you. So my higher self would be the one because I would be boohooing with my orphan over whatever they need to do that because you’re feeling what they’re boohooing, you’re feeling it as well. So I would feel that and then when they were done, I would turn my higher self booing in her arms. And then I would get information from her —
Candice Wu 27:04
Beautiful.
Joffre McClung 27:04
That I had not gotten earlier. So really, it was the higher self-work that really came from a channel that I had worked with, who said you’ve got a higher self that’s dying to work with you, keep working with her.
Joffre McClung 27:15
So I kept working with my higher self. And I got that really strong. And so when I started this orphan work, she was right there with me.
Joffre McClung 27:22
Some nights, I turned her and said, “I don’t know what to say to them. Because I believe everything they’re saying.”
Joffre McClung 27:27
I would literally, I feel their pain, that what they felt when they were young. And I say, “I’m sorry, but I believe what they’re saying,”
Candice Wu 27:33
Right! I’m right there. This is me right now.
Joffre McClung 27:37
It was horrible, they didn’t deserve that, I can’t help them.
Joffre McClung 27:41
And I would turn to her, what do I say? And she would give me one sentence, one word, whatever it was, was enough to calm me down. And I’d be able to offer that word to the orphan and calm them down, and then I could start the work again.
Candice Wu 27:53
Beautiful.
Joffre McClung 27:54
So that’s the best example.
Joffre McClung 27:55
So higher self, I think, is key in doing any inner work, whether it’s self-love work or creation work, because I use her for creation work as well. But your higher self is key. And again, it comes from images or words it doesn’t, it’s not going to be big dialogues. My higher self doesn’t give me a huge, you know, paragraphs of wording. But she gives me an image or a word or a look or something that says it all.
Candice Wu 28:19
Beautiful.
Joffre McClung 28:20
And I can roll with that. So really, a higher self, I’d have to say was my biggest helper, and also my teachers.
Candice Wu 28:27
What a lovely reminder.
Joffre McClung 28:28
Yeah.
Candice Wu 28:28
It’s such a good reminder of everything is within. And I do experience that.
Joffre McClung 28:34
It really is. And you need your teachers and you need your books, and your seminars and your lectures or whatever it is, because we need to be around other people who are doing what we’re doing. So that’s a good thing. And you’re always going to have the help you need. But just like you said, “Everything you really do need is already inside of you. And part of the journey is figuring out that you can find it inside of you.” And sometimes it’s frustrating. Sometimes it’s tough. But that’s okay. Because you start to trust that you’re going to find it and you do. And like you said, “It does get easier and easier.” at least I found that way too.
Candice Wu 29:07
Yeah, I have to. And sometimes it’s gone up and down. But then, at some point, it started to get like more smooth sailing in a way. But I’m wondering, Joffre, what frustrations or challenges or struggles have you had lately?
Joffre McClung 29:26
Well, lately, I would say the biggest struggle is I have a family member who has liver cancer. So outwardly, I’m dealing with cancer again, which I dealt with eight years of everybody around me dying.
Joffre McClung 29:39
I’m not saying that to be funny, but it was true. My mother got cancer, my best friend, like my soul sister, got cancer, my aunt and uncle died. It’s like that, eight years was literally everybody dying around me. And of course, my job in New York City all kind of left and I moved to Texas, and then I had a three-year break, and in those three years, I wrote the two books.
Joffre McClung 29:58
And I thought, “Okay, this is a new path. This is not a path I had planned on, frankly. I always thought I’d be more performing. But this is still creative. Writing is creative.”
Joffre McClung 30:08
So I thought, “Okay, this is a good thing.”
Joffre McClung 30:10
And then all of a sudden, in January, I got the word that a family member had liver cancer. And I — that sort of took me by surprise. I thought I was kind of done with the “C” word so to speak.
Joffre McClung 30:23
Outwardly, that sort of threw me but in a weird way. Because this person is also the person who mirrored for me, my need for self-love, through her jealousy and anger is sort of in a weird way, I don’t know how to say this, except to say, it’s also a bit liberating.
Joffre McClung 30:41
I know that sounds odd to people. But when that person leaves the planet, because I will at some point, leave the planet. I truly will be free. I’m free now in all honesty, but I will literally truly be free from all ties, so to speak.
Joffre McClung 31:02
So really we’ll begin a new life for me. So, I’m sort of going back and forth kind of struggling with it. And yet owning that that’s what I’m feeling, so I shouldn’t disown, that’s what I’m feeling.
Candice Wu 31:12
It’s what you’re feeling.
Joffre McClung 31:14
So that’s what I’m feeling Candice.
Candice Wu 31:16
Yeah, thank you for sharing that. And do you mind me asking if that person is currently still mirroring that need?
Joffre McClung 31:26
Oh, yeah, she did that recently.
Candice Wu 31:27
Right. Like in the same way as before she did.
Joffre McClung 31:30
She has not healed a thing, to be honest. I don’t think this lifetime. I think she had her opportunities when she was younger, but it’s not going to happen. She mirrored it a couple of weeks back out of the blue, the jealous rage came at me, sort of caught me a little off guard because I wasn’t expecting it. And when I hung up, I said this kind of got on me.
Joffre McClung 31:51
So I did a quick meditation and reminded myself who this person is. Because it was so shocking. She had not done that in quite a while. Because when my mother was ill, I would not have it. Because my mother also received some of the jealousy.
Joffre McClung 32:07
So it sort of caught me off guard. So I did a quick meditation, got it off me and reminded myself who this was. And that what she said does not mean it’s true. Because anybody who deals with people who are angry or jealous, they tend to bring in other people to their conversation.
Joffre McClung 32:24
Well, I’m not just the one saying it, everybody saying it. That tends to be how they work. They like to add people to their blame of you.
Candice Wu 32:33
To back it up.
Joffre McClung 32:34
Exactly. And it’s you know, you can see that out in politics. Now, we get into politics. But you see how people bring that up? Well, they said, you know, people say, when I hear that, I think “aha” you’re saying it, no one else is saying that. You’re saying it.
Candice Wu 32:46
Right. It’s easy to fall in that trap. But you’re saying you know better?
Joffre McClung 32:50
Yeah, I do but it caught me off guard and for a moment, — oh, my God, people are saying this about me. And then I thought, first of all, these people, I don’t know them, so who cares.
Joffre McClung 33:00
And then I thought, wait a minute, I know how this energy, this bully energy works. They always bring in other people to back them up, even though they’re actually lying.
Joffre McClung 33:10
So I had to remind myself of that fact. And so I was able to forgive it. And then I said, “You know what, she’s not going to get it this life.”
Joffre McClung 33:18
I got the lesson I needed from her. So I blessed her in that sense. But her energy still has it. She still has that angry energy. We’re still talking. I’m still friendly with her. I’m going to go see her next week. I do love her. In that sense. I do not perfectly want to be around her very much. But I do love her. And I do wish her well. And I have put out my order for my next life. She’s on her own in her next life.
Joffre McClung 33:47
She’s gonna have to work on jealousy again, and I’m not working on jealousy again.
Candice Wu 33:50
Right. Like, you don’t want to be paired again, is that what you’re saying?
Joffre McClung 33:54
No, exactly. I don’t mind if we passed in the hall or something’s fine. But as far as being family members, I think I’ll skip it the next slide until she gets this jealousy thing over with.
Candice Wu 34:04
Put your order in. Yeah.
Joffre McClung 34:06
Because I’m done with it. I got my list. And I’ve learned it and I don’t need it now.
Candice Wu 34:12
Sounds like you’ve had a lifetime of learning that.
Joffre McClung 34:15
Yeah, it was intense, I have to say.
Joffre McClung 34:16
We all have something within our families, or in our childhood or friends, or teachers or something, that if you came here to wake up, you’re going to have something that happens to you.
Candice Wu 34:17
Absolutely.
Joffre McClung 34:21
Something that’s not so pretty, that’s going to get you and bring you down so that you can build yourself back up, in some form or fashion. Mine happened to be from sort of that anger, jealousy, bully energy, other people, it’s something else. Mine happened to be that, and I learned my lesson. But —
Candice Wu 34:44
Yeah.
Joffre McClung 34:44
So that’s sort of what I’m dealing with now, that it’s okay to kind of be okay, that it’s — I’m going to be free from it.
Candice Wu 34:52
Wow.
Joffre McClung 34:53
And still, bless her, you know, and still wish her well. But I will be free from it fairly shortly, I would presume.
Candice Wu 35:01
Yeah. No, I think you’re touching on something about how you can see the reality of your life, like how you can see the experiences that are happening to, there’s a relational component, there’s the care that you have for her, there’s also the other feelings that you may have.
Candice Wu 35:19
And there’s this other level of what it means to you, and what this person has represented for you and shown you. And they don’t always sound relational, like that portion doesn’t always sound relational, as you’re saying, like, it’s a little bit hard to say this, but this is, I’ll be free of —
Joffre McClung 35:39
Well, yeah —
Candice Wu 35:39
Makes complete sense on that level.
Joffre McClung 35:41
Well, it’s true. And the thing is, what’s funny is the reason I can sort of see her separate from me, you know, I can see and bless her for what she taught me is because again, in one meditation I went into, I did a meditation to understand how this person is in so much pain. Because somebody who comes from a bully or jealous or angry place, is carrying a lot of pain, even though we may not want them around us and they’ve heard us horribly, we have to intellectually know they’ve got a lot of pain to act that way.
Joffre McClung 36:09
So I went into meditation so I could better understand where she’s coming from. So I could find forgiveness for her.
Joffre McClung 36:16
I was, you know, finishing up that little matrix for myself. And I went to meditation, and I saw her as a five-year-old and what she must have felt, and how she felt so unseen and heard, unlovable. And I got to the fact she felt so unloved. And once I felt that, I was able to understand why she was so full of anger and jealousy. So I was able to forgive her for how she behaved towards me. I still don’t want it around me, I still have my boundaries. But I can understand her pain that she’s carrying.
Joffre McClung 36:49
And also that, I agreed to do this because I needed to learn to take my power back from bullies, and jealousy, and angry people. Because obviously, that was the thing I needed to work on. So there’s sort of layers in there.
Joffre McClung 37:01
But I mean, when you can go into meditation and figure out what that person, why they’re being so hateful to you and understand what kind of pain they have, it does gives you some release.
Joffre McClung 37:11
And then to realize when they do that, because I do believe in many lifetimes — I know other people may not, but I happen to — that I realized she’s going to have another chance to get it, and that’s fine, because I told her and thanked her for showing me what I needed to get. And I did a whole thing on that, thanking her.
Joffre McClung 37:27
I didn’t do it to her face, because that she would not take it well. But I thanked her for showing me what I needed to learn about self-love and that I got it. So even though she may not have succeeded at jealousy and bullying, she did succeed in teaching me what I needed to learn. So she did do that well. So I did a whole thank you meditation on that. And thank her.
Candice Wu 37:48
She gave you such a beautiful opportunity. And painful one, but beautiful.
Joffre McClung 37:53
Painful. It was ugly, to be honest with you. I don’t wish it on anybody.
Candice Wu 37:58
Yeah. And at the same time, it sounds worth it. Would you say?
Joffre McClung 38:02
Well, again, if we look at life, he’s here to teach us something, and we’re here to learn and grow, then you got to figure out there’s something here that’s good. It’s got to be something good in this bullying and jealousy, anger. So I dealt with that. And I learned self-love. So it was a good thing.
Candice Wu 38:15
Yeah.
Joffre McClung 38:16
I don’t wish it on anyone. But again, that’s how we learn, isn’t it? Down here.
Candice Wu 38:20
Yeah. So I’m curious, as a writer, and as an actress as well, what’s the title of the current chapter of your life?
Joffre McClung 38:31
That’s a good question. What’s the title of this chapter of my life?
Joffre McClung 38:37
“Begin again.”
Joffre McClung 38:40
I just got that Begin Again. Because I feel like this is a brand new life. I’ve let go of my old life. It was a good life. I did it. I did it well, but I’ve let it go, who I was, what I wanted to do, sort of the dreams of youth and Middle Ages sort of let that go. And said, “Okay, what’s this again? I’ve done my healing. I’ve done my orphan work, what is I want to do?” And now I’m doing all this spiritual writing.
Joffre McClung 39:06
So it’s sort of begin again, and it’s sort of a brand new life with new fulfilling ideas, new dreams, new hopes, kind of like starting over again, frankly. I actually have one affirmation, I do is: “I’m now in the best years of my life, and all my remaining years are my best years.” So I sort of feel like this is my new beginning. Beginning again. Yeah. I would say definitely that.
Candice Wu 39:31
That’s really exciting.
Joffre McClung 39:32
Because we do get many chances to begin again, frankly. I mean, that, anybody thinks that when you’re in your 20s, you think you’re going to live one kind of life certain time, certain kind of framing, by 30, I have this. By 40, I have this. By 50, I have this.
Joffre McClung 39:45
Well, I’ve got news for you, if you’re going to live a full life, you might as well throw that away. Because it’s not going to live up to that. It’s going to go to the right, to the left, up and down. It’s going to go all over the place as it should. And hopefully — I’m on my third life, frankly.
Joffre McClung 39:59
They call it third act, but really to third law. I have my 20s and 30s. I hit my 30s and 40s. And I had my 50s and 60s to look at.
Joffre McClung 40:07
So it’s like, we know, okay, I’m doing a whole new life. I may have another one after this. I don’t know. Can’t look forward —
Joffre McClung 40:15
Right now, I’ve got my third act going, so to speak.
Candice Wu 40:18
Yeah. You know, I so relate to that. And I feel those words to begin again, and the refreshing space of not knowing and being so, it sounds like so joyful in that. So open about what’s coming. And it took me so long to get here. And I still come across these. They’re just fewer now and less big, I think. But the expectations, I didn’t realize were there, and then I bump up against it. I’m like, “Wait, what is that? What is that big disappointment?” or, “What is that I’m fighting for? But do I really want that anymore? Is that a past part of me?”
Candice Wu 40:58
Like lately, I’ve been wondering, do I really want children? Or, was that just something of the past, you know, my 16-year-old self that decided I wanted two kids? And what part of me still wants that? Do I really want to get married? All these things.
Joffre McClung 41:14
Oh, that’s good, you’re in a good place. That’s a good place you’re in.
Joffre McClung 41:17
Because those are the questions? No, I mean that seriously. I know. —
Joffre McClung 41:22
But that’s a good thing. Because you know, as women we’re raised for, even when we’re little and younger, we’re raised with certain things, putting our heads. We’re supposed to get married, supposed to have children, supposed to have this by 40s, supposed to have this by 50s. All these ideas — and I think it’s a good thing to stop and ask yourself: do I really want that?
Joffre McClung 41:38
I kind of knew weirdly enough that when I was younger, I remember announcing to my parents when I was in high school that I was never going to get married, and I had no intention get married. And if I did get married, I would never take their names.
Joffre McClung 41:50
For some reason that —
Candice Wu 41:51
A declaration.
Joffre McClung 41:52
I would not take their damn names, is what I shouted when I was in high school.
Joffre McClung 41:56
And what’s interesting enough is, I didn’t get married. Now, I did live with someone for nine years and had a loving relationship and then I moved on. But I kind of knew that in high school. Although, I still thought in my head, “Oh, I probably will get married. I’ll probably have kids, I’ll probably do what I’m supposed to do.”
Joffre McClung 42:12
But the truth of the matter is, I kind of knew I wasn’t going to live my life the way my mother had lived her life. Something in me told me I was going to do it slightly differently. And boy, did I do it differently.
Candice Wu 42:22
Sounds like it. Yeah.
Joffre McClung 42:24
That’s a good thing to ask yourself. Do you want children? Maybe do you want to adopt children? Maybe you want to foster kids?
Candice Wu 42:30
Right.
Joffre McClung 42:30
Maybe you want to have children that you’re helping therapeutically? Yeah, who knows?
Candice Wu 42:36
Someone asked me, do I want to be a grandmother?
Candice Wu 42:38
And I was like, “Yes.” And then I was like, “Wow, I really have a dilemma here.”
Candice Wu 42:44
Well, I’m not sure if I want kids, but I want to be a grandmother.
Joffre McClung 42:47
But you can be a grandmother to children without having to have kids, you can find a way. You may find through your therapeutic, you may find a group of kids that need some help. You may find kids who —
Candice Wu 42:59
This is so true.
Joffre McClung 43:00
Again, you want to be a grandparent without having to actually raise children, the universe can find a way. That, I do believe. So I think you do want children, you may not want to give birth to children.
Candice Wu 43:10
No, I do. I want that part. I have a really special place for birthing and for mothers and babies. And I think it’s the — and I used to be an art teacher and do a lot of therapy with kids and families, and so I think I just kind of got, “childrened” out. A part of me has. You know, just kind of burned out on that. But the years of like to the, I don’t know, 20 — not sure about.
Candice Wu 43:41
And you know, I have so many friends right now with young babies. And so I get the joy of going in and not leaving.
Joffre McClung 43:52
There’s nothing good about leaving the children once you’ve loved them and played with them, they’re really lovely about not having to go through that, and not having to go through teenage years.
Candice Wu 44:00
Yeah.
Joffre McClung 44:00
Here are some good things. I actually, again, it’s the thing about your beliefs like I know I’ve done children, many lifetimes. So it was like this lifetime, I took a break.
Joffre McClung 44:08
I knew I needed to do my inner work. Somehow, I didn’t know that but I knew it, even if that sounds odd. I thought it was all going to be about acting. But now I look, it’s all about what I’m doing now, my whole life has been filled to this moment, although I love acting. And I still love acting. But, and I’m actually using it when I teach classes in a weird way. I’m contorted in being a performer. So in a weird way, it all comes together.
Joffre McClung 44:30
But I think, what you said about leaving, having children and being able to leave them is not a bad thing, to be honest with you. But also you might be changing who you are, who you were when you’re 20 and who you are in your 30s is different, and who you’re in your 40s is different.
Joffre McClung 44:47
And your dreams do change. Like you were saying something about beginning again. That, that was a good phrase, but — and I look and I realized, when you’ve done your homework and you’ve healed, really healed your past, and healed your orphans, and you’re coming from rooted self-love, you do get a new life and your dreams do change.
Candice Wu 45:06
Yeah.
Joffre McClung 45:06
And so you may have new dreams that you may not have even considered. Now that you’ve been healing things and moving and more into your power, you may, those dreams may be completely different. And you’re going to leave room for that, going to leave room for it to be different.
Candice Wu 45:19
That’s absolutely what I’ve experienced in my life.
Candice Wu 45:23
And someone had asked me recently, like, when did you get involved with horses? And their perception was, I’ve been with horses forever. And I think that is true on some level. But in this lifetime, I only started being with horses one year ago, and that surprise this person a great deal. Because I’ve been really in it now. And that was the gem coming out of that moment was, we can change our life at any moment. We can shift something so big. And I do feel like, that is a big shift. Shifting my life to be around horses and be with them, it’s continuing to unfold.
Candice Wu 46:02
But I would have never known that 5 years ago, 10 years ago, especially, you know, when I was, I don’t know, 15, 20 years old, deciding, trying to decide what my life would be like. But I’ve definitely found what you’re saying, as well, that each step of healing, it’s more opening, and then more comes in. Things I didn’t even know would be ever involved in my life. So that’s really cool. You have that too.
Joffre McClung 46:30
Oh, yeah. And you don’t know — that’s part of growing older and getting wiser. And not just because I say older. And I have to be careful because I know older people who have no wisdom. So I’ve got to be careful with that.
Joffre McClung 46:40
There are people who get older who leave the planet and not learned anything. But if you stay awake and as you get older, you begin to realize that life does bring you new things when you’re ready for it and you’ve done the work for it.
Joffre McClung 46:52
You were ready for the horses. And what’s funny is you probably had many lifetimes with horses.
Candice Wu 46:57
I feel that, yeah. It’s coming back.
Joffre McClung 46:59
Probably had a deep connection with horses. And so you did whatever you needed to do, to be open now to receive those horses that you didn’t even dream of when you were 15 or 16. Or, when you were 20. That’s what the universe — Like I didn’t dream of writing books. I thought I’d be on Broadway doing my thing, and maybe doing some film work and living my life. And then my life took a 180-degree turn, and I had to do something to pull myself out of that second dark night which was when everybody was dying around me. And I decided, all right, what I’m going through and I wrote the first book which was helping my friend deal with Stage IV Breast cancer, that was a 180-degree turn. And I wrote that kind of angrily to be honest with you.
Candice Wu 47:45
Emotions as navigation. There you go.
Joffre McClung 47:47
Oh, Lord have mercy! I was like, “Higher self, you want me to write about what I’m going through?”
Joffre McClung 47:51
Oh my Lord! I just want to get back to what I was doing. And I thought, well, I’ll do it. It’ll get her quiet on my back.
Candice Wu 47:57
Get this out of the way, go back to what I was going to do.
Joffre McClung 48:00
I’ll write this darn book and I’ll now wake my inner self up. And I wrote the book and that kind of got my creative juices going.
Candice Wu 48:10
Yeah.
Joffre McClung 48:11
And then when I looked at it a few months later, I thought, Okay, well, I put the word out there that I’m spiritual. Everybody, you know, I had two groups, those who knew I was spiritual and those who knew me in my career. I kind of kept them separate. And I thought, well, the words out there now, they now know —
Candice Wu 48:12
You’re out.
Joffre McClung 48:15
That I’m a spiritual person.
Candice Wu 48:17
Yeah.
Joffre McClung 48:18
About, spiritual closet, so to speak. Now, when I looked at the first book, I thought, you know what, I gotta really say, how I got to self-love.
Joffre McClung 48:35
The first book talks about when we’re in self-love, but we don’t tell people how to get to self-love. So I wrote the second book. But all this is to the point. I didn’t plan on that. This was not part of my plan. And yet, when I look back at my life, I realized, of course, it was part of my plan.
Joffre McClung 48:50
In fact, I wrote a movie with my best friend who the first book was about, and we wrote a book together in the movie.
Candice Wu 48:56
How funny.
Joffre McClung 48:58
And she always wanted to be a teacher. She was a channel and she spiritually did all the spiritual stuff together. And we were also actors together. And she wanted to be this. She wanted to do what I’m doing. Now she passed on, and I can hear her laughing going, “Yeah, I want to do what you’re doing. You’re supposed to be doing what you’re doing.”
Candice Wu 49:15
This is like I’m already out.
Joffre McClung 49:17
Yeah, I’ll do that in the next life. And I thought how weird that I did a 180-degree turn. And I’m actually doing my best friend that I put in a movie, 10 years before I knew it. So the universe is funky.
Candice Wu 49:30
Well, we are funky, right?
Candice Wu 49:32
We like to leave ourselves clues and then forget about them, or like ignore them. And then we find them later. Like, wow, right!
Joffre McClung 49:39
It’s just weird. When I wrote that in this book, The second book, and I thought, “Man that first short film I made. Oh my god. I really did it.”
Candice Wu 49:51
Yeah.
Joffre McClung 49:51
And that was just a film about you know, making creating dreams. You know, it was a little film about creating dreams.
Joffre McClung 49:56
But the universe, you may have horses now, who knows what you’re going to have in five years.
Candice Wu 50:01
I have no clue.
Candice Wu 50:03
No clue, but I have some ideas. But then, what I know is that keeps changing so much that I just don’t put too much to them, except for the ones that are like right now, and coming up.
Joffre McClung 50:13
Living in the present. I told a friend recently, he was getting off the charted, so to speak, because he was thinking, “Oh, I’m getting older, what’s going to happen when I’m old, and I only have a place till -?”
Joffre McClung 50:22
He went way down the pike. And what he didn’t have and how horrible it can be when he’s old and didn’t have any money.
Joffre McClung 50:28
I said, “First of all, you got to stop going that far down the pike.”
Joffre McClung 50:31
There’s nothing you can do that far down the pike, you’re just putting something in your head, and getting yourself all excited about it. I said, “I’ve learned now that my life keeps taking these weird angles.”
Joffre McClung 50:41
I look about maybe three months ahead. And that’s about as far as I look, just to kind of know: this is where I’m going, this is kind of what I want to create. And I don’t look much further, because it keeps me calmer. I don’t sit there and think about what am I going to be doing five years from now? Because I don’t know. I really don’t know.
Candice Wu 50:58
Yeah, I am right where you are actually, that’s exactly where I am. And it’s funny because my dad has started to realize that about me and he is the planner. And that’s where my planner, the —
Joffre McClung 51:12
I’ve got a planner.
Candice Wu 51:13
Yeah, he plans everything. And once it’s all planned out, it comes from this, like, the desire for security and stability comes from him. And lately, he’s realized, “Yeah, I don’t plan more than about two months ahead anymore.” And he’s like, “Oh, okay. Yeah, yeah. Right. That is… that’s you.”
Joffre McClung 51:32
Well, that’s good news that he gets that.
Candice Wu 51:35
He gets it.
Joffre McClung 51:35
A lot of people would say, “No, you need to be planning now.”
Candice Wu 51:41
That’s what he used to say. And he’s like, “Are you sure? You know? Like, that’s not? I don’t think that’s gonna be okay.”
Candice Wu 51:46
“No, Dad, it’s okay.”
Joffre McClung 51:49
Say you taught him to see — you actually teaching him something. That’s the cool thing. —
Candice Wu 51:54
He’s seeing something different. Yeah.
Joffre McClung 51:56
Yeah. I mean saying that, “Hey, my way may work for me. But you know what, it doesn’t have to work for everyone.” So you’ve taught him something.
Candice Wu 52:02
Thank goodness!
Joffre McClung 52:02
That’s kind of cool.
Candice Wu 52:03
I mean, that’s — Yeah, that’s so intertwined with my lesson with him, because one of my lessons with him was to be in myself and trust myself and not allow his idea to be mine.
Joffre McClung 52:21
Got you!
Candice Wu 52:22
It, which was like, I experienced it as more imposed on me, in the past, out of his own care and fear.
Joffre McClung 52:29
Always out of love. I mean —
Candice Wu 52:30
Right, always, but so we’ve both come a long way.
Joffre McClung 52:35
Well, that’s pretty exciting.
Candice Wu 52:36
Yeah.
Candice Wu 52:38
So I’m going to switch gears. I recently had this dream that I lost this beloved water bottle.
Joffre McClung 52:49
Wow, okay. And you love this water bottle.
Candice Wu 52:51
On an airplane — I loved it so much. I just, I loved it so much. And I was devastated in the dream. And when I got home, after my flight, my mom said, “You know, you’re just probably better off without it. Just let it go. You’re better off without it.”
Candice Wu 53:09
And here I am in this dream, kind of like obsessing over how am I going to find the next water bottle, the better — Like, “No, this won’t do and that won’t do. I wanted that one.”
Candice Wu 53:19
And she’s like, “You’re probably better off.”
Candice Wu 53:22
And so that’s been sticking with me and I’m experiencing — getting rain.
Candice Wu 53:27
Yeah.
Joffre McClung 53:28
I love dreamwork. I love to dream.
Candice Wu 53:29
I was wondering, that’s leading to my question. I’m wondering, what have you dreamed lately that, in your night dreams?
Joffre McClung 53:37
Well, you know that your mother in that dream was your higher self most likely, you do know that?
Candice Wu 53:42
Yes. And it is my mother too. It’s both.
Joffre McClung 53:45
My mother — Yeah, exactly. My higher self when she first appeared to me, and she appeared at — looking like a beautiful version of my mother. Sort of in a half-dream state that I was doing. And then she sort of shifted out where I don’t have to see her anymore, just feel her. But yeah, that’s definitely your mother, except for your higher self saying you don’t need what you think you need. You’ve outgrown it, is what she’s really telling you.
Candice Wu 54:00
That’s right. It’s time to let go.
Joffre McClung 54:08
I used to do so much dream work. When I was started — I’ve always done dream work. Even when I was younger, I’d have dreams over and over again. And then when I started the spiritual work, I’d have really mega dreams. I call them epic dreams, one symbol after another symbol, after another symbol.
Joffre McClung 54:23
And I worked with them, you know, worked with them immensely. And all of a sudden, when my mother passed, my dream stopped. And I thought what is happening here? I’ve never not remembered my dreams. And they just stopped. And I was like, “Okay, this isn’t good.”
Joffre McClung 54:40
Because I mean, I had dreams where I had guides talk to me, my higher self talk to me. I would go to other planets. I would see symbols. I would talk to my — you know. I did a lot of homework in my dreams and my dreams just stopped.
Joffre McClung 54:51
And I remember dealing with a channel that I worked with, and she goes, “Well, you don’t need your dreams right now.”
Joffre McClung 54:58
You’re grieving, number one, and you’re doing your homework. I was doing, finishing up my homework on my orphans. I was grieving so I use the energy from my orphan work. And they went away for a while. And that was really scary for somebody — I don’t channel. I don’t do visions. I don’t see entities. I don’t do any of that stuff, but I did dreams. And I could really help people with their dreams.
Joffre McClung 55:18
So when I didn’t have my dreams, that was kind of scary. Well, I’m happy to say my dreams, they sort of come back not to the extent that they were for years. But now when they come back, there’s just a quick message. And then they drift off. Just a quick message.
Joffre McClung 55:34
I had one recently that was so cute. I was calling a kitty in. And kitties being that feminine energy, calling a kitty in, and with a kitty, was a little fox, like a baby fox. A red-faced little fox, red and white-faced, almost like a cartoon looking fox. And it was there saying hello to me. And it was so cute. And I said, “Well, all right, I guess you can come in too,” so I let it come in the house. And that was the end of the dream.
Joffre McClung 55:59
I was saying there’s so short now that used to be epic. And I thought, what in the world was that message?
Joffre McClung 56:05
So what’s this fox — other than I love animals, obviously. But I thought interesting. I thought well, the feminine is healthy. I’m letting — you know, taking care of the feminine energy. And I thought a fox is sort of like a — sort of, got that feminine energy. But it’s also got a wise energy to it. It’s got a smart energy to it. It’s got smart, wise, they — that negative is sly, but when you take the negative off and put the wise, smart, I thought okay, I must be — I’ve been asking to have my teacher awaken a bit more. Since I’m doing this, let’s awaken my inner teacher a bit more.
Joffre McClung 56:41
So I took that as a message that my inner teacher is awakening. That’s how I took the fox. I don’t know if that’s true or not. But that’s how I took it.
Candice Wu 56:48
Thank you for sharing your dream. And I also hear that begin again right here. And that this fox baby is with the kitty, which is so spiritual. And it’s this new birthing, new energy coming in. To begin again.
Joffre McClung 57:07
You’re totally right. That’s why it was a child fox. Not an old fox, but a newborn, ready to go little fox. And I thought, “Well, all right. You’re so cute, I will let you in the house. Which I’m grateful for now.
Joffre McClung 57:21
I used to have dreams when the image will scare me. I used to have a lot of snake dreams. And I was afraid of snakes. I didn’t like it. But I understood that information the snake was giving me and then eventually I began to hold the snakes in the dream, which I was really grateful for. So I was happy it was a fox and not a snake.
Candice Wu 57:38
Oh, and I have one more question for you. I love that. This is a different one. In your group of friends or in your friendships, what role do you play?
Joffre McClung 57:50
I would say caretaker/almost a little bit mentor in a weird way.
Joffre McClung 57:58
I’ve always been a caretaker, cancer and at nature. So I do take care of people, I like to put the dip up, put the chips, and put the drinks, you know. I take care of people to make sure they have what they need.
Joffre McClung 58:10
But I would say I’m also somebody, when somebody is in deep trouble, I tend to be the one they call. That’s why I say mentor. I don’t know the right word. Mature mentors the right word. But, when they’re in trauma and they have drama or trauma. I tend to be the one they call. So whatever that energy is, I tend to be that one because I stay calm.
Joffre McClung 58:33
I think having been raised around a bully. I’ve learned to stay calm in the midst of a lot of drama around me.
Candice Wu 58:39
Yeah.
Joffre McClung 58:40
So I can stay calm and help them so I’m hoping I help people. And also I’m pretty fun. I do remind people the most important energy is play.
Candice Wu 58:46
Yeah.
Joffre McClung 58:47
Big on play.
Candice Wu 58:47
I hear that in you.
Joffre McClung 58:49
Play is so important. I cannot tell you. If you can’t play, you need to look at why you can’t play because you need to add play to your life, people. It’s important.
Candice Wu 58:58
You need to have play in your life, people.
Joffre McClung 59:00
You do. You don’t have life for no reason but to play.
Candice Wu 59:04
How are you playing now?
Joffre McClung 59:06
I swim in the pool that we have in the backyard. I swim and I play in the pool. I play with animals, the kitties, I did actually have a fox a year ago. I talk the fox, I talked to the birds, to the squirrels, to the little possums, little raccoons. I dance, I put music on and dance — I love to dance so I dance.
Joffre McClung 59:29
I just like to play in it when my friends will put on music and dance and laugh. I just like to have a good time. I like to play such a euphoric energy and such a creative energy. And it’s the energy of how we create our realities, when we’re in a place of joy. So I’m trying to move them more into play. And so I can create from that place of joy versus creating to keep the pain away. I don’t need to do that anymore.
Candice Wu 59:52
Yeah. Right.
Joffre McClung 59:54
I need to play and create with joy.
Candice Wu 59:57
Now, I have one last question for you. And it connects with play and it connects with roles.
Candice Wu 1:00:03
As an actress, what roles did you play in the past, typically? And what would you do now? Or, what would you be interested in now?
Joffre McClung 1:00:13
In the past, I tended to play probably firm women, strong women. I was taller than most of the women in my class. My voice can go deeper so I play strong, firm women, which I was very comfortable with. I’m very good. You know — I like that a lot.
Joffre McClung 1:00:28
I would say now, I would add a bit more. I wouldn’t say humor but a bit more. Like, what’s the word? The word’s right there. I can’t find it. But it’s a bit more sass to it than I used to be allowed to have. Because I was always the firm one, the strong one. I always say a bit more sass. A bit more irreverent than I used to play, because I was, like I said, always the strong one, the firm one, domineering kind of woman, career woman usually cast as strong. That’s a bit sassier. I play a bit more sass, bit more fun, or irreverent.
Candice Wu 1:01:08
Yeah.
Joffre McClung 1:01:09
A bit more rebelish because that’s really what my spirit is even though out with —
Candice Wu 1:01:15
I can hear it in you.
Candice Wu 1:01:16
You definitely have “strong firm woman” in you. But this rebel, fire, sass, and fun like, it’s like busting out of you.
Joffre McClung 1:01:27
Oh good.
Candice Wu 1:01:28
Just in case you weren’t sure —
Joffre McClung 1:01:34
So I would say definitely, a rebellious, sassy kind of woman.
Candice Wu 1:01:37
A bit of swagger.
Joffre McClung 1:01:39
Oh, big swagger.
Candice Wu 1:01:40
A big swagger?
Candice Wu 1:01:42
A kind swagger, but a swagger.
Candice Wu 1:01:44
Yeah. A loving one.
Joffre McClung 1:01:47
You got it. A loving swagger.
Candice Wu 1:01:50
We’ve claimed it now loving swagger —
Joffre McClung 1:01:53
Swagger with a big laugh. Yes, that’s what I would —
Candice Wu 1:01:57
That’ll be your description on the podcast episode.
Joffre McClung 1:02:01
Okay, there you go.
Candice Wu 1:02:04
Well, thank you so much, Joffre! This is lovely. Is there anything else you want to share before we go?
Joffre McClung 1:02:10
Just if you’re interested in any of my books or if you happen to be in the Dallas Fort Worth area, I’m doing some classes. You can check it out on my website. Other than that, just keep doing your inner work. It makes a big difference, people.
Candice Wu 1:02:23
Absolutely. Thank you so much. And where can people find you Joffre?
Joffre McClung 1:02:28
You can find me at joffremclung.com. You can also just type in, itsallaboutselflove.com and it’ll take you right to my website.
Candice Wu 1:02:40
Wonderful!
Joffre McClung 1:02:42
Thank you so much for having me! You are such a doll, I thoroughly enjoyed talking to you.
Candice Wu 1:02:46
Oh my gosh, I enjoyed this so much. And you are so much fun. And you provide so much wisdom. Thank you so much, Joffre. And all of the links that you shared, everything you’re sharing here will also include on the show notes. The episode is at CandiceWu.com/joffre. So all of that’s there for you. So you don’t have to go digging around as well. And I’m just so grateful you were here today. Thank you.
Joffre McClung 1:03:11
Thank you and have a great day!
Candice Wu 1:03:14
I hope you are just as energized as I am through this conversation, through learning about Joffre, her life and what she’s teaching. So many of the themes and ideas she’s talking about are the themes of the Embody Podcast.
Candice Wu 1:03:29
So if you’re interested in more, check her out at itsallaboutselflove.com and be sure to check out her experiential that’s coming out later this week. She’s going to offer a meditation and healing experience to support you in loving yourself.
Candice Wu 1:03:45
Be sure to check out more interviews other healing experiences, learning about embodiment and self-love on the Embody Podcast at CandiceWu.com/podcast.
Candice Wu 1:03:56
And you can stay informed about my workshops, retreats, experiences with horses and other podcast episodes through my newsletter, which goes out every two weeks. You can sign up at CandiceWu.com/embody.
Candice Wu 1:04:11
So just going off of the episode today, I leave you with the thoughts about where can you begin again in your life, or where is the new beginning and opening that’s already happening now.
Candice Wu 1:04:26
Thanks so much for joining us today and see you next time on the Embody Podcast.
Embracing Your Orphaned Self by Joffre McClung — EP81a
Joffre guides you in a giant hug to your orphaned self — any part of you that you’ve forgotten about, abandoned, or hidden. You’ll connect with your higher and divine loving self to support you in being in a safe space while entering the cave of your orphaned self to heal any wounds, and restore wholeness, love, and worthiness.
Candice Wu 0:00
When you don’t take up the practice of loving all the parts of you, the orphaned parts of you, the parts that are hidden, tucked away or abandoned, may shout to wake you up. Fortunately, here, Joffre McClung shows us how to love our orphan self.
She guides you in a giant hug to your orphan self. You’ll connect with your higher and divine loving self to support you in being in a safe place while entering the cave of your orphaned self to heal any wounds, restore wholeness, love, and worthiness.
Hello, and welcome. You’re listening to the Embody Podcast, a show about remembering and embodying your true nature, inner wisdom, Embodied Healing, and self-love.
My name is Candice Wu, and I’m a holistic healing facilitator, intuitive coach, and artist sharing my personal journey of vulnerability, offering meditations and guided healing support and having co-creative conversations with healers and wellness practitioners from all over the world.
Full Podcast
You’ll find a full podcast with Joffre McClung, a spiritual personal growth author, motivational speaker and common sense advocate in her episode at CandiceWu.com/joffre.
In that episode, she shows us self-love with sass, swagger, and a big laugh. She talks about her story of how she had done everything to have a good life and hit rock bottom at age 29. And about how you can embrace your nemesis to love yourself more deeply. So without further ado, here’s Joffre, with her experience of embracing your orphaned self.
Let’s Begin With Joffre
Joffre McClung 2:00
I’m going to be taking you on a meditation to your safe loving space.
We’re going to invite in your higher self and then we’re going to meet your orphaned one, the forgotten one, the one you may have shunned.
Close your eyes and let’s take three deep long breaths with long exhale out.
You continue taking long deep breaths, relaxing your body and clearing your mind of all thoughts.
And then I’m going to be counting you down some steps and when we reach level 10, you’ll be in your safe, loving space. One. Two. Three. Four. Five. Six.
Relax every muscle in your body.
Seven. Eight. Going deeper.
Nine. Ten.
Safe Space
Now I want you to look around and see your safe space around you. Perhaps its nature or perhaps it’s a building or a temple. Wherever it is, it is your safe space where you can do anything. Be anything. Express anything with harm to none.
If you’re outdoors, are there trees? Is it the mountains or beach? Or even a cave, wherever you need it to be, it is your safe space.
If it’s the building, is it soft, smooth, or is it rough? Are there windows?
Notice what’s around your safe space. Perhaps there’s a bridge nearby or perhaps a waterfall. Perhaps a larger river making wonderful sounds near you.
What’s under your feet? Is it grass? Or perhaps it’s stone, or brick, or gravel.
What sort of light is in your safe space? Or light coming through the tops of the trees bouncing around on the ground. Perhaps there’s moonlight. Perhaps it’s bright sunshine. Perhaps there’s candles if you’re in a building, wherever you are, it’s your safe space where no harm can come to you and only loving nurturing.
Add Loving Images
Now I want you to start adding loving images to the safe space. Images that invoke a feeling of loving your heart.
If you’re outdoors, perhaps it’s a tree that branches reach down and embrace you in a giant hug. Letting you know that you’re cared for and that you are mattered.
Perhaps it’s letting light coming through the trees dancing around you. Perhaps it’s flowers popping up around your feet, lifting you gently off the ground. Perhaps you lay down on the ground and you feel it rising lower like a pregnant mother’s belly, letting you know that you’re cared for and that you’re safe.
Whatever image it is, allow it to give you a feeling of love.
Perhaps it’s a pet that licks your face or purrs against your legs.
Perhaps it’s wild animals rolling around or lying across you, gently loving you, caring for you.
Perhaps it’s light coming through the windows in your building, dancing around you. Gold, white, pink, blue, silver lights dancing all around you, letting you know that you’re cared for and you’re seen.
Make this your safe, loving space. Perhaps it’s angels. Whatever you need to feel loved and cared for, is coming into your safe space now.
Golden Orb and Divine Love
And then I want you to look off into the distance, and I want you to see a golden orb moving towards you.
It’s beautiful, golden orb and it’s getting closer and closer, and you’re actually feeling a bit excited by seeing this golden orb, knowing it’s a gift for you, that it’s for you.
And then all of a sudden, the golden orb is in front of you, as large as you are.
Now I want you to reach your hand into that golden orb and I want you to take another hand inside that orb.
I want you to gently pull that hand outward and out of the orb steps your higher self this divine part of yourself that has all the knowledge and power of the Divine Love.
This higher self that has your back, that love’s you unconditionally, just the way you are.
Perhaps you see a being in front of you or perhaps you just get a feeling of this higher self. Perhaps it’s a gentle breeze across your cheek, that when it touches your cheek, you feel love, even for just a second.
Perhaps it’s a pair of eyes that look deep into your eyes twinkling with delight and joy to be looking into your eyes.
Perhaps you feel a gentle hand on your back. Perhaps you feel arms wrapped around you giving you a warm, deep, loving hug.
However you need this higher self to present itself to you, allow them to do it in a manner that’s appropriate for you, that feels loving and safe to you.
And then I want you to allow these higher self to take your hand and to gently start to nudge you down the left path of your safe, loving space.
Now it’s a path that perhaps you’ve never gone down before or perhaps you have gone down this path, but your higher self is taking you down this path that is still part of your loving space but to a different area.
So follow your higher self down this path and notice what’s under your feet, perhaps it’s changed, perhaps it’s stones now or brick, or gravel.
Your higher self looks at you, gently squeezes your hand, letting you know, you’re going to be safe wherever they take you.
And you trust this, you keep following your higher self and you climb to the top of the hill.
Entering the Cave
And when you reach the top of the hill, you look down the other side of the hill and you notice the cave entrance.
And again, your higher self squeezes your hand letting you know you can do this, they have your back and that you will be safe and cared for. For this cave is where your orphan is living and it’s time to meet this orphan. This one that you have forgotten, or perhaps shunned, or perhaps safely put away so we will not be hurt anymore.
So your higher self leads you down the hill towards the entrance to this cave. And now you find yourself at the entrance of the cave.
Now I want you to take a moment and I want you to listen to what’s coming out at the cave.
Are there any sounds? Perhaps there’s crying coming out of the cave. Perhaps there’s shouting and screaming. Maybe there’s a gentle whimpering coming out of the cave. Or, perhaps there’s no sound at all there’s just an emptiness.
And now your higher self will guide you into the cave to meet the appropriate orphan that’s been waiting to meet you, that needs to meet you, that needs to be heard, to be listened to, being allowed to tell their story, share their pain, so that you can bring them back to wholeness through compassionate understanding, and love.
And there are many rooms in this cave and you notice all the different rooms. But your higher self has one particular room they’re taking you to.
Find Your Orphan
So you follow your higher self to this room. Now as you enter the room, maybe slightly dark, but you can still see around the room. And I want you to look around the room and find your orphan.
Perhaps it’s dirty and filthy and uncared for living in the cave, crawled into a corner staring at you. Perhaps it has its back to you. Refusing to notice you. Refusing to acknowledge you. Perhaps it’s standing in the middle of the room shouting at you. Having a tantrum, full of anger and rage at you. Perhaps it’s huddled in a little corner in a fetal position unable to move.
However you need to see this orphan, allow it to be the way it needs to be.
This is the first line of compassion, understanding you’re going to practice with this orphan is allowing it to be the way it needs to be.
So I want you to take a moment and introduce yourself to this orphan in a gentle, caring way.
Let it know that you are its future self and that you’ve lived. And that now you’re here to help it live. And to let go of the past and to be made whole again.
Let it know that it no longer needs to be in charge, that it now has you and your higher self
Let it know you’re sorry that you have forgotten it or shunned it, or tucked it away to be safe, that you just didn’t know better and that now you do.
Perhaps you can gently touch your orphan or perhaps you can’t. Perhaps an orphan runs and crawls into your lap. Perhaps the orphan refuses to look at you.
Whatever way the orphan needs to be, allow it to be and keep letting it know that you love it and you care for it, and you will be back as many times as you need to allow it to tell its story, to gain trust in you, to share its pain with you. So that you can help it to be made whole again and that you will be back.
Thank Your Orphaned and Higher Self
Thank it for allowing you to visit it and be with it. And again apologize for not having cared for before now, to offer some love to this orphan. And then allow your higher self to offer love to this orphan in the manner it needs to receive its love.
Perhaps it runs to your higher self and allows it to be hugged. Or, perhaps your higher self puts a globe around the orphan to let it know it’s protected and safe from harm. Perhaps your higher self, put angels all around it, to let it know it’s cared for and nurtured.
Allow your higher self to offer love to this orphan now.
Thank your higher self for its love. And once again, thank your orphan for allowing it to visit Remind it you will be back. And it’s safe until you return because it has been the love of your higher self.
To take your higher self’s hand, allow your higher self to help you leave the cave now, knowing your orphan is safe and cared for until you return.
So the higher self leads you back to your safe loving space now.
Receive Love
Now it’s time to allow your higher self to offer love to you in the manner that you need to receive a lot.
Perhaps it is a gentle hug or perhaps it’s a hand upon your heart, allowing your higher self to take the pain you may have picked up from your orphan out of your heart.
In whatever manner you need it, allow your higher self to offer you some love and nurturing now.
And then thank your higher self for their love and let them know you’ll be back to be with them again. So they can teach you what love should be like and what love should feel like that’s perfect for you.
And then thank yourself. Take a moment and thank yourself for taking the time to go with it and to do this work.
By being self-appreciative and having self-gratitude, helps you grow in your sense of self-love.
Transitioning
Now I’m going to be counting you out of your safe loving space, but know that you’re coming out of it with a lot more than what you came into it with and that stuff, that good stuff that the higher self put into you through their love, will be with you throughout the day.
Ten. Nine, Eight, Seven. Six. Five. Four. Three. Two. One.
Slowly open your eyes and know you began your orphan work and you will find your way back to self-love.
Have a joyful day.
Closing
Candice Wu 21:24
As you slowly make your way back to your space here today, the present moment, I hope you enjoyed this experiential with Joffre and be sure to check out her full episode at CandiceWu.com/joffre.
And feel free to connect with other healing experientials, guided meditations, and tools for self-love at CandiceWu.com/podcast.
See you next time on the Embody Podcast.
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I have an upcoming Constellations Healing Workshops in Chicago.
Whether related to abundance, money, love, dis-ease/health, relationships, career, etc., our struggles connect with our early unconscious and unspoken ways of belonging and flow of love. This connection with our lineage is carried through our bodies: the cells, viscera, the heart, energy, dis-ease, our fluidity, and freedom. Where those before us didn’t get to integrate a loss or trauma or where there was an imbalance in relationship, the flow of love is disrupted as a placeholder for where there is energy, love, and strength waiting to open and flow forward towards us.
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Join me for Restore the Flow of Love — Chicago, Illinois — July 21, 2019 and for future and other workshops look here.
Contact Details
Joffre McClung
Show Notes
- 00:00 Intro
- 01:00 Opening
- 02:43 Conversation Start
- 03:05 Joffre’s Next Book (Update of Heart of the Matter)
- 04:31 Quote About Inner Orphans
- 07:52 Heal Before It Hits You in the Face
- 09:27 Story About One of Joffre’s First Dark Night That Woke Her Up
- 11:52 Something Not Quite Right With Me
- 14:01 Don’t Forget the Heart, It’s Holding All the Pain — Being Embodied is Important — Affirmations Only Do So Much Without Healing
- 15:07 Shelving Everything and Everything is Our Fault When Young
- 16:45 Introducing Yourself to Your Own Tools (Positive Imagination, Because We Are Already Really Good at Negative Imagination)
- 20:03 Definition of Self Love
- 20:03 A Definition of What Self Love Means
- 21:49 There is a Great Treasure With the Orphans
- 24:01 You May Not Know What is Needed, but It Gets Easier
- 28:27 You Need Your Books, but Everything Is Within!
- 29:18 What Challenges or Struggles Have You Had Lately?
- 35:02 Separating Relational and Spiritual Learning From Each Other / Understanding the Hurt of People That Are Hurting You
- 37:59 Life is Here to Teach Us Something — Even When It’s About Jealousy and Bullying
- 38:22 What’s the Title of Joffre’s Current Life Chapter?
- 40:20 The Refreshing Space of Making New Choices
- 47:12 Writing Wasn’t the Plan But Life Has a Way
- 49:19 We Are Leaving Clues for Ourselves
- 50:13 Don’t Look Too Far Ahead, It’s Gonna Change Anyway.
- 52:37 Dreams About Water Bottle and Little Foxes / Working With Dreams
- 57:38 What Role Do You Play in Your Group of Friends?
- 58:41 “You Got to Play, People!” ~ Joffre Mcclung
- 59:57 What Kind of Roles Did You Play as an Actress in the Past and What Would You Play. Now?
- 01:02:06 Check Out Joffre’s Books or Classes
- 01:02:25 Where You People Find Joffre?
- 01:02:40 Gratitude
- 01:03:13 Outro / Where to Find Joffre and Her Experiential
- 01:03:45 Check Out Other Interviews and Episodes on The Embody Podcast
- 01:03:55 The Embody Newsletter to Stay Informed About Retreats, Workshops, and New Episodes
- 01:04:10 Where Can You Begin Again?
Intro Music by Nick Werber
Featured Photo by Larm Rmah on Unsplash
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