A Transformative 24-hours

We can all agree that these last 3 months we have been through some S*&%. I mean, we have BEEN. THROUGH. IT. And if your experience has been similar to mine, you’re riding the waves of unknown - some days you’re a wreck, other days you’re a positive Patty with nothing but the very best outlook on life. Some days you’re neither and you’re just, well, there. You’re showing up (trying to) and working through each day one second at a time.

When everything “hit” I did what many of us do: obsessively watched the news, nonstop scrolling on social media, consuming anything and everything I could get my hands on. Which by now, I should know better. This brought me to a really icky, icky place. That’s the best word to describe it. I just felt icky. Discouraged, negative, sad, scared, complete loss of control. I felt NOTHING like myself. That’s when the first social-media cleanse came in. I banned myself from social, the news, and frankly, any discussions with anyone about the dreaded COVID-19. I re-centered myself around gratitude, positive affirmations, prayer and meditation and I finally started to feel like myself again. We got in a routine, my husband and I. Wake up. Walk. Work. Lunch. Walk. Work. Walk. Workout. Dinner. Binge a show. Bed. It worked. We were in a groove. Starting to really flourish in our new at-home life. Things seemed less scary, we started seeing our family again (because how backwards is it that we felt/let people tell us we couldn’t see our FAMILY. Think what you will, but family IS ESSENTIAL) and started feeling like everything was going to be okay.

Then, erupted by the killing of a black man by a white police officer, came the protests. Both peaceful and not. The riots. The looting. The violence. The fires. The disaster. The heartbreak. The FEAR. Our sister cities, under a microscope across the nation. It felt like we were watching a movie, happening in our backyard. I’m not prepared to talk more about this. In many ways, I feel like I’m still processing, trying to make sense, understand. And right now, I’m not equipped to discuss this further. This did, however, throw us all for another loop. I went from finally achieving a place of peace and comfort (so I thought) to being completely uprooted. As things escalated, we opted to take a few night break from our home in Saint Paul. We headed to the burbs to find some solace at my parents house. It was just what we needed - a little time and a little space from seeing, hearing, witnessing things unfold. This is when the second social-media cleanse happened. I deleted all my accounts. I stopped reading the news. I completely detached myself from everything external.

Following our little stay-cation in the burbs, we went to visit my sister in Wisconsin. Spent the weekend with family decorating the nursery in her home, preparing to welcome our Niece in July. It was another needed break. In many ways, it was incredibly helpful. Nothing makes you feel more at peace than being on the farm in small-town Wisconsin. There’s something there, something they’re doing right that we (I) need to take note of. Any way, I was mostly at peace, but still just off. I was tired. I mean SO, SO, tired. After nights of restless sleep and days of constant worry, I was not fully functioning as my best self. I was, however, able to let go of some of that and relax, enjoy my family and enjoy my time away.

I returned home, to our torn apart kitchen (oh yeah, we’ve decided to completely renovate our kitchen during all this, because, why not?) a house I hadn’t cleaned for weeks and just a really eerie feeling in my home. All day Sunday I was off. Yes, you’re seeing a theme here. I was tired, kinda crabby, couldn’t focus. Having bouts of difficulty breathing. So I cleaned, and cleaned, and cleaned. I did laundry, I cooked, I pulled weeds, I washed the walls in our living room. Let me say that again, I WASHED THE WALLS IN OUR LIVING ROOM. I was grasping for anything to keep me busy. Then, the evening came. The stillness. The quiet. And it hit me. The anxiety. I’ve never had anxiety. Never. These last 3 months I am a constant ball of anxiousness. And Sunday night it REALLY hit me. A full-blown anxiety attack. I couldn’t breathe. My body didn’t feel like my body. I was dizzy, sick, SCARED. SO FREAKING SCARED. I was pacing because I couldn’t sit. I was sitting because I couldn’t stand. I had a complete loss of control of my body and my mind.

Never having anxiety, never experiencing this, I didn’t know what to do. I didn’t have the tools in my toolkit to deal with what was happening to me. So, I did the only thing I knew would save me. I called my mom.

Let’s just pause and thank the Lord for moms. Especially my mom. Mom, I love you. (& Dad) ——there’s a joke here that none of you will get. But my family will. So O’Hearn’s, that one is for you.

Okay, so, I called mom. I imagine it was difficult to understand what I was saying through my tears and heavy breathing. But she heard what she needed to. “Mom, I don’t know what’s happening to me.” Like always, she was calm. She was calm and she simultaneously sprang into action. She told me to go outside. Take some deep breaths and in a few minutes she’d send me some tools. She sent me some meditations. I listened to all 3. Poorly. But I tried. I sat and listened, I walked and listened. I did the deep breath in, and out. In and out. My husband and I went for a walk and sat outside until nearly 10pm, when I started to feel “normal” again. I read the affirmations she sent me repeatedly before bed, and by the Grace of God (& Mom + Dad’s support that night) I slept.

The following morning I woke up. Went outside and grounded myself. (If you haven’t done grounding, I encourage you to add it to your morning routine. You literally stick your feet into the grass, and you take some time to feel the earth beneath you and root yourself in it.) Followed by a morning meditation, a walk, breakfast + off I ran into my work day. Mid-morning I felt the (now familiar) quickening of my heart and shortness of breath. The fear of having another anxiety attack like the one not even 24-hours prior caused me to spiral and nearly sent me into another one. This time, I had tools ready to handle it. Although, I still didn’t know WHY it was happening to me. I spent the day listening to mediation music in the background as I worked. Reading and watching videos on manifestation. I worked out in the evening, I made dinner, Chris and I went for a walk…but I still felt off. I still had an eerie feeling and I didn’t want to be in our home. I wasn’t comfortable. I had this longing to be at home, my home, with my parents. And when I say longing, I mean LONGING. My heart was hurting and all it wanted and all it needed was to escape my current state and go HOME to my mom and dad. Then, it happened. Not the “it” you’re thinking - not another anxiety attack - but IT. The “A-HA” moment of WHY I have been feeling the way I’ve been feeling. Why it sent me into an anxiety attack.

It ends where this post started. We can all agree that these last 3 months we have been through some S*&%. I mean, we have BEEN. THROUGH. IT. And although I felt like I was handling it well. And although I felt like I had gotten to a good place. I really hadn’t and haven’t. The 3 months of COVID-19 BS followed by the heartbreak and disaster in our cities completely knocked me on my ass. I haven’t felt in control of my life for 3 months. And for someone who NEEDS to have control, you can imagine how much this has affected me. It’s important to note that although I haven’t felt in control, part of it is because I haven’t TAKEN control. I have been putting a band-aid on my feelings, allowing myself to be driven by fear, and have not DONE THE WORK to make myself feel whole. So came my realization. This loss of control, this displacement of myself, this feeling of not being comfortable in my home and longing to be with my parents: They’re my protection. My comfort. My safety. I’ve been longing for home because I’m longing for normal. I’m longing to be in a space and place where everything melts away and I feel and know and trust that I’m going to be OKAY. For me, that’s at mom + dads. For you, that might look different. But I think in a lot of ways lately, we’re all searching for normal, comfort, safety.

This realization came with relief. SO much relief. And tears. SO MANY TEARS. I felt like a burden had been lifted off my shoulders. And frankly, I felt damn proud of myself and the transformation I had gone through from 24-hours prior. I figured it out. I found the root cause. I know now, why I’m feeling this way. I know now, why I reacted the way I did. And now, it’s time to put in the work. Now I rebuild. Now I reconnect. Now I re-center. It took 3 months to completely dismantle me. It very well could take that long to rebuild me. But I have the tools. I have my people. Most importantly, I have myself. I can do this, I will do this. I will be okay. WE will be okay.

The power of manifestation, meditation, prayer, mental + physical exercise are my building blocks. And day by day, I will build myself back up. I’ll link some resources below that I’m using to help myself, in case they will be helpful to you.

I hope my experience helps you. I hope my story helps you with your story. I hope I don’t have any typos (hard to tell through the tears.)

Sending so much love to you all.

xo,

Molly

Headspace

Gabby Bernstein (many free resources on her site), Also reading her book: Super Attractor

My Affirmations Page on Pinterest - Universe

Daily Gratitude Journal

POPSUGAR Fitness

Why I'm Donating My Birthday

Every week, 38 children pass away from cancer. Thirty eight kids. That's hard to fathom. Hard to imagine. Hard to comprehend. 

I was introduced to this unfathomable statistic 3 years ago while working with my client Children's Cancer Research Fund at my {now previous} job. CCRF supports the brightest doctors whose groundbreaking research is leading to better treatments and cures for childhood cancer. The company I worked for partnered with CCRF to provide video and event production services for their signature gala each year. I was lucky that through my work, I was able to be a tiny, tiny piece of that. 

Now, it's easy to rally around a cause when you're personally affected. I am not. It's easy to rally around a cause when a member of your family or your friends have been affected. Mine have not. For me, my rallying comes from knowing the people inside the walls of CCRF who have dedicated their lives to raising awareness, raising funds and to finding a cure for childhood cancer. These people, who I now consider dear friends, have changed my life. The stories I've heard, the patients I've seen, & the very people who work day in and day out to change this statistic have changed my life.

As I was thinking about my birthday this year and have been approached by family and friends with questions of what I wanted and what I wanted to do to celebrate, nothing came to mind. {Partially because for those of you who know me, you know if I want something, I go and get it. I don't wait for birthday's or holidays to come around - why wait!} My normal response to this would be "let's go to dinner" or "let's grab coffee" but this year, I want to do something different.

So, I'm donating my birthday. How does it work?? Simple. For my friends, family {or hopefully even strangers who come across this post}: please take whatever you would give to me for my birthday whether that be dinner, coffee, a gift and put those dollars towards funding research to find a cure for childhood cancer. I'm tearing up as I write this post and remembering some of the chilling words from patient and family stories we told for CCRF - together, we really can make a difference. We CAN find a cure. So skip my birthday coffee. Skip my birthday gift - and help me in whatever capacity you're able to, to fund & find a cure.

With my birthday on June 18th, I'm starting this TODAY and giving us all a chance {and a big window} to donate. My goal is at least $500 --- let's blow that out of the water.

It feels good to do good, so let's all do some together today. My friends at CCRF, the patients, their families and I, THANK YOU. 

XO, 

Molly 

Please donate directly on my FB post. The link is here

{Photos with my CCRF family from Dawn of a Dream, CCRF's signature gala, over the years below}

A Cozy Weekend at The Charmant Hotel

About a month ago, my husband and I took a little drive to spend our anniversary weekend at the impossibly charming The Charmant Hotel. Nestled on the river in La Crosse, Wisconsin, The Charmant is the perfect romantic weekend getaway. {For my Minneapolis readers, The Charmant is the sister hotel to our very own Hewing Hotel!}

The Charmant is a renovated candy factory built in 1898 - architectural details have been restored and refreshed. It holds the charm of 1898 with the subtle modernization of 2018. Upon checking in, you're welcomed with complimentary chocolates, of course! We visited this candy counter many, many times. 

Winter was the perfect time to visit The Charmant. While La Crosse boasts beautiful landscapes and outdoor activities, we opted to cozy up inside and enjoy the ultimate relaxation. I break down my favorite parts of the hotel below:

1. The Parlour // When you walk into the hotel, to your right is The Parlour. Offering coffee by day and spirits by night, this room is one you don't want to miss. We spent much of our time during the weekend sitting on the couch next to the wood-burning fireplace reading, playing games & enjoying each others company. 

2. The Restaurant // We dined in the restaurant Friday evening for dinner and Sunday morning for breakfast. Both meals were unbelievable! The restaurant serves rustic French cuisine with options that consist of cafe-inspired classics. We were not disappointed by either of the meals we had. 

3. The Rooms // Like any good millennial, I'm a sucker for a brick wall and quirky, minimalist decor. Each room at The Charmant is unique in it's own way - we stayed in a Classic Salle King. I booked our stay late and would have loved to stay in one of the suites, but it turned out, we didn't even need that. The room was spacious, comfortable & similar to the rest of the hotel....cozy. 

If you're looking for that perfect winter weekend getaway, The Charmant is it. My husband and I returned home to The Twin Cities feeling relaxed, refreshed & fulfilled from a low-key weekend with so much intentional time spent together. We talked, dreamed, laughed, were transported to another time in this beautiful hotel. A MUST DO in our book! 

 

XO, 

Molly 

 

Source: http://www.thecharmanthotel.com/

Our First Year of Marriage // Lessons Learned

December 10, 2016 I married the sweetest soul my heart has ever known. It was a *perfect* winter day. A balmy 14 degrees with the most beautiful, light snow falling softly from the sky as we exited the church following our ceremony. The kind of light snow that doesn't ruin your hair when it lands on it (& as a bride wearing her hair down on her wedding day, this is very important.) There isn't much more you can ask for in a winter wedding...snow!

As I sit here writing this post, I'm thinking back on that day and those beautiful memories that will last a lifetime. The stolen, knowing glances with my groom. Our closest family and friends standing next to us, supporting us. Our dream day that came to life. Only 365 days into our marriage, I don't pretend to know everything - but here are some humbling, valuable lessons we've learned thus far.

1. Marriage isn't hard. (Stay with me on this one) You get asked this question a lot during your first year of marriage - "how are things going? is it hard?" I don't typically go into depth about this when people ask, so I'll share it here. Marriage isn't hard - life is hard. Work. Maintaining relationships and friendships. Upkeep on a home. Committing to your workouts. Making time for yourself to decompress. Finding moments for passion projects. Managing finances. Those things are hard. Those things take up space in your schedule and in your mind. These things can be stressors in our day-to-day life that can in turn, put stress on marriage. I think many people get these confused, thinking the challenge is with your partner and with your marriage, but if we stop to look at what the source of those stressors are, we can get some clarity as to what the real challenge is. 

2. It's not a competition. I'm competitive. My husband is competitive. He's very good at reminding me that we are not in competition with each other. Who took out the trash last time, cleaned the bathroom, cooked dinner, who did more around the house...that doesn't matter. If I'm being real, which I hope to always be on this platform, this is challenging for me. My husband hands down does more than me. Yet I'm somehow always finding ways to make it known when I feel I've done more. I'm still working on this. Thanks for your patience, C. 

3. Time spent together doesn't necessarily mean quality time. I'm kind of cheating on this one, because I realized this soon after we moved in together (about 4 months before our wedding) but it still holds true today. Things change when you move in together. You're used to driving to see each other, making more plans since you're not living in the same space. When you move in with each other, you're together...All.The.Time. However, sitting next to each other on the couch watching TV is not quality time. Me reading in the corner and my husband working in the other is not quality time. We learned quickly that we had to be more intentional about our time. Despite being together more, we had to make it a point to still have those times to connect, talk to each other, keep doing the things we loved to do before we lived in the same space and were so much more easily accessible to each other. 

4. It's okay to take space.  My husband and I both really need and value time spent alone. We both recharge from taking this space. It's not uncommon to have an evening in our house where he heads downstairs and I stay upstairs. For some people this may not be 'normal' but for us, it's necessary. I'm a firm believer in doing the things that fuel your soul, that help you be the best person you can, that help you feel whole. For us, that's time to ourselves. To reflect on our day. To read or write. Or to just simply BE. By honoring the space we both need for ourselves, we're able to be a better partner for each other. 

5. Maintaining other relationships. I often tell people that marriage is the best because you have a built-in best friend. There's nothing better than waking up and your person being right there. Ready to take on the day with you - coffee, a run, adventures in the city. It's so easy to fall into this routine where your time spent is only with each other. Relationships are important to both of us and this year we've really learned that prioritizing that time with friends, siblings, parents, outside of the time we spend just the two of us is crucial. Meaningful connection outside of the two of us is something we believe helps us maintain a strong foundation in our marriage.

A few more:

  • Individual goal setting is just as important as joint goal setting.
  • You have to choose each other, every day.
  • Share and divide responsibilities.
  • Some days you're not going to be a good spouse, and that's okay. 
  • Calmer heads prevail (This is for me...I'm working on it. My Irish flares up too often).
  • You're on the same team. 

{There's so much to share, I may have to do another post at a later date. Would you guys be interested in that?}

Marriage is by far the most substantial thing I've done in life to date, but as one of my older sisters has joked, there is definitely a learning curve. We've learned a lot in these 365 days. We've grown, we've cried, we've laughed and most importantly we've LOVED.

I can't wait to spend the rest of my life learning alongside you, Christopher. I love you. 

"There was nothing worth sharing like the love that let us share our name."

XO, 

Molly 

 

 

Gratitude

grat·i·tude

noun

  1. the quality of being thankful; readiness to show appreciation for and to return kindness.

I can hardly believe that Thanksgiving is already here. I love this season - a season of thankfulness, gratitude, love. My husband pokes fun at me because I'm THAT person that makes our family go around the table and share what we're thankful for. Every. Single. Thanksgiving. If you're dining with our family, you better come ready to share your gratitude. The sharing time never goes without a few laughs, tears (usually from me) & undeniable joy. 

Gratitude is a staple practice for our family. Starting with my sweet Mom. Last year she gifted my sisters and I our very first 'Gratitude Journals' with specific instructions: each day, write down three things you're grateful for. No matter what kind of day you had, take the time, write down your gratitude. You will always feel better afterwards.

We all know, Mom is always right. But she really hit the nail on the head with this one. She consistently encourages and teaches us to practice gratitude all year, instead of just on Thanksgiving. With that in mind, I want to share some of the things that I've listed throughout the year. Looking back at my lists, some of these things seem so small, insignificant, funny even. That's the beauty in gratitude though. Who says what you can and can't be grateful for? 

I'm Grateful For:

- My sweet husband // We're coming up on 1 year of marriage and my goodness that is CRAZY! { I have a fun post coming up on our first year of marriage - stay tuned! }

- Family // My parents and sisters, who are all truly my best friends. Not everyone has the type of family dynamic as ours. This is a blessing!

- Girlfriends // My people. All who I've been linked to for most of my life and/or most of my adult life. I'm incredibly grateful I've found my people - you hold on tight to that. 

- Our new pup, Wrigley // He has taught me so many humbling lessons. He's still teaching me many more. 

- Coffee // However trivial this may be, it's real. 

- The cold // This is a weird one - but I really am thankful for the cold. It brings people together. It's intimate, it forces more quality time spent connecting over {Irish} coffees, meals, etc. Time spent with loved ones watching the snow fall, sitting by the fire. I love the cold for this reason.

- Sunrises // I found a quote earlier this year: 'sunsets taught me that sometimes beauty only lasts for a few moments - but sunrises showed me that all it takes is patience to experience it all over again.' Wow, did that every change my perspective. 

- My clients // I love working in the business of people. I'm incredibly humbled to work in a career that continuously introduces me to new people that I get to build relationships and even friendships with. How cool is that?

- Books // To constantly have an opportunity to get lost in another world or learn a new lesson... this is never something I take for granted. 

- Small acts of kindness // Snail mail. Flowers on a friends doorstep. Thinking of you texts. 

- Writing // It's freeing. Therapeutic. Humbling to share my voice. 

I obviously didn't share my year's worth of gratitude - but these are some highlights. I encourage everyone to start a gratitude journal. You'll be amazed at how easy it is to find even just ONE thing you're grateful for. Even on the worst days. I'm continuously working on my gratitude & look forward to a life spent practicing it. 

Have a very happy and blessed Thanksgiving. 

XO, 

Molly 

 

 

Nearly 365 days later...

You would be baffled if I told you the number of times I sat down to "create my blog" given that we are nearly at a year later and I am just now hitting PUBLISH. Blogging has always been one of those "that would be fun" ideas I've had. I love to write, I definitely need a creative outlet, I like having ownership of something that's wholeheartedly mine. So why not, right? It sounded like a good idea until I actually sat down to work on it. There was always something more important - cleaning the house, catching up with friends, finishing that book, color-coordinating my closet (yes, this is more important). But eventually, I ran out of excuses...and here we are. 

I'm incredibly grateful for my family and friends who have heard me talk about this infamous blog for the past year without seeing ANY progress or promise that I would actually follow through.

{Side note: this is how you know you have found your people in life. Their questions about my blog were always matched with: "Oh yeah! I'm getting there! Building the site and it's going really well! I'll have something SOON." Only to never have gained any ground. Yet, these people consistently supported the idea and cheered me on. Thank you, you know who you are.} <----- I sound like I'm accepting an Academy Award. 

Anyway, I figured a good first post would be to explain the idea behind this blog & its name. 'The Pretty Now' is a testament to myself. It's my personal pursuit of a pretty mind, heart, body & soul. It's consciously working every day to have kinder thoughts, kinder words, kinder actions, purposeful connections with friends and strangers alike. A commitment to strengthening my body, my mind & pursuing only the things that enrich my soul. 

I'll be using this space to share my NOW. What's in my heart. What's in the oven. What's in my shopping cart. My latest revelations during yoga (& believe me, there are A LOT of them). Lessons learned in marriage. It truly is a space for me. I always said I didn't care if my mom was the only one who read it, as long as I can write and create, I'll be happy. 

So: thanks, Mom, for reading. I love you. 

& if there's anyone else reading along - Hello & Thank you! I hope to connect with you in some way through a post now or in the future. 

XO, 

Molly 

{PS: Bear with me as I work out the kinks of managing a website, Tech is NOT my friend.}