Unlimiting You: Step Out of Your Past and Into Your Purpose
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Unlimiting You - Randy Spelling
Author
Copyright © 2015 by Randall Spelling
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, distributed, or transmitted in any form or by any means, including photocopying, recording, or other electronic or mechanical methods, without the prior written permission of the publisher, except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical reviews and certain other noncommercial uses permitted by copyright law. For permission requests, write to the publisher at the address below.
In Flow Books
PO Box 24950
Los Angeles, CA 90024
Although the author and publisher have made every effort to ensure that the information in this book was correct at press time, the author and publisher do not assume and hereby disclaim any liability to any party for any loss, damage, or disruption caused by errors or omissions, whether such errors or omissions result from negligence, accident, or any other cause.
I have tried to recreate events, locales and conversations from my memories of them. In order to maintain their anonymity in some instances I have changed the names of individuals and places, I may have changed some identifying characteristics and details such as physical properties, occupations and places of residence.
Editing by Cara Highsmith, Highsmith Creative Services, www.highsmithcreative.com
Cover and Interior Design by Mitchell Shea, atdawndesigns.com
ISBN 978-09863781-02
Printed in the United States of America
First Edition 14 13 12 11 10 / 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2
Note 1, Emile Durkheim quote, located in Ch. 4 under Butterfly Effect
header - http://learn.bowdoin.edu/courses/sociology-211-fall-2010-cc/2010/10/durkheims-collective-consciousness/
Note 2, NSF stats, located in Ch. 6 - http://www.sentientdevelopments.com/2007/03/managing-your-50000-daily-thoughts.html
Note 3, Edgar Cayce A.R.E. , located in Ch. 10 - http://www.edgarcayce.org/are/spiritualGrowth.aspx?id=2078
To Leah, Sage, and Lotus: Thank you for the depth and joy you add to my life. Without your inspiration, support, and patience through this process, this book would not have been possible. I love you.
Acknowledgements
Leah, your patience and support have been vital. Thank you for growing with me, loving me, inspiring me, challenging me, and seeing me. I love you. Sage and Lotus, you light up my world; thank you for being you. Mom, thank you for all you have done for me throughout my life and for being my mother. I love you. I continue to enjoy watching your role as grandma. Tori, we will always be family and I thank you for being my sister. I love you, Dean, Liam, Stella, Hattie, and Finn. Dad, I love you and miss you. Thank you for checking in on me time to time. I feel I became closer to you now being an author. Thanks for everything you have taught me. Denise, thank you for your kindness of spirit and dedication as both parent and grandparent. My three brothers-in-law and their families, I love you guys. I couldn’t have entered into a better family! MA, thank you for your guidance, love, and light you continually share with us. You saw I had this book within and planted the seed, even though I thought you were nuts! My lovely and zany Aunt Kay, thank you for always being a part of my life since I was little. Auntie Laurie, the guru, thank you for staying with Leah and the girls while I went to Brazil; it was a life changing experience and I am so grateful to you.
Baba and Marjorie, dear ones, you are so special. I cherish our relationship. Baba, I did it. Now it’s your turn! Amelia, thank you for being so wonderful with us and the girls. We consider you part of the family now. Kathryn, thank you for being you and sharing with me that day on the couch, as well as months after. You will always hold a special place in my heart. Jordan, Andrew, Brian, Eric, Cortis, and Adam, thank you for long and meaningful friendships. We have come a long way, haven’t we? Lubosh, I couldn’t ask for a better friend and brother. Jeanne and Cliff, you were instrumental in the birth of this book. Thank you for going down this road with me. Cara, your patience and dedication is top class. Thank you for your editing skills and seeing this through until the end. I am looking forward to working on other projects with you. Mitch, you have a keen design eye. Thanks for bringing the cover and lay out of Unlimiting You to a physical manifestation.
Everyone who allowed me to share their story in this book—I am so appreciative for your courage, vulnerability, and willingness to share. My guides both physical and non-physical—thank you for your unyielding love, support, and guidance. You have always been there guiding the way, even when I had doubts. Thanks for agreeing to guide me through this mysterious human experience. To everyone else who has had a hand in this book and has been a part of my life in some way. May this reach as far as your inspiration has with me.
Introduction
If you are anything like me, you’ve had thoughts that limited you, such as, What is wrong with me? Why are others succeeding when I am struggling? Is my past going to keep me from accomplishing my goals? Am I not meant to live the life I truly want and be happy? This way of thinking may have colored the perception you have of yourself and the way you are living with messages that are keeping you from a deeply fulfilled life. The limitations we experience contribute to a life that feels overwhelming, mundane, unfair, or less than magical.
Even when choosing the title for this book—Unlimiting You—I had to challenge myself to get past a particular limitation. Late one night during the writing process, I took a break to meditate and the title came to me clear as day. I loved what it meant to me, but I was constricted by my thinking. "Unlimiting" isn't even a real word. Will this keep me from being taken seriously? A few days later, it hit me: I am writing a book on the various ways we limit ourselves and here I am allowing that very thing, both in language and in fear of what others will think, to impact the book I am writing. Unlimiting
is the process of moving through the barriers that keep you from living the most infinite life possible, so it is the most fitting term I can use.
My goal for this book is to change the way you perceive and take on limitations. No matter who you are, where you are from, what you do, or what your past has been, you can always grow out of where you are. In fact, we are always growing no matter what. The trouble is, most people do not recognize that fact and get stuck in a cycle of never fulfilling their potential.
It is time to see your future in a new light; incorporate all of your experiences to propel you forward and become who you want to be. Imagine your life as a giant game board. How are you playing your own game of life? Are you playing as if you’ve already lost, sitting on the sidelines waiting for your turn, or unable to get off the bench? Or are you playing as if each step is an integral part of your soul design? You can have fun embracing life as a mysteriously abundant game with unimaginable reward. Unlimiting You is an invitation to see your life in this way and play more freely so you can, in turn, feel more fulfilled and whole.
This process of embodying more of your unlimited self will require transforming the thoughts and beliefs that have been limiting you into friendly and supportive cheers that celebrate you. There is no room for comparing yourself or your journey to someone else. Listening to your internal guidance will become second nature, enabling you to eliminate doubt and amplify trust. Discovering your purpose will be a playful melody humming throughout your being without effort. This book will remind you to focus on what is important and distill life into its purest essence as if it were a movie you’d watch for entertainment. I finally began to see my life experiences as entertaining when I realized my journey wasn’t meant to be just a painful series of steps. Once I discovered ways to access all I’ve been given, I found the pieces I needed to make this life full of enjoyment and purpose.
Ironically, many of the pieces came together in the midst of a series of losses—one of the most profound being the death of my father, Aaron Spelling, who was renowned as the most prolific American film and television producer in history. He was extremely intelligent, magnetic, and warm. Being considerably older than my mother, when he attended my school events, kids in my elementary school class would ask me if that was my grandfather. Everyone at school seemed to know our family name and the degree of wealth we had. As a kid, none of that registered with me, nor did it matter. Wealth, no wealth, famous, not famous—my father was my father, and I loved him. He taught me how to be a gentleman, how to look out for people, how to write from the heart, and how to embrace the power of words. I also inherited his very corny sense of humor. My father had a true passion for entertaining people, so his stories were suspenseful, captivating, and colorful. It was only after he passed away that I began asking myself if some of the stories he told me were entirely true. He was a storyteller through and through, so it wouldn’t have been abnormal for him to take some liberties if it made for a better story. For example, when I was around eleven I asked about his gray hair, and he told me his hair had always been gray, even when he was a child. He said that kids would tease him and call him cotton
because of his hair color. He had great charisma and an ability to draw others into any world he created.
Even though I only got to spend time with him on weekends due to his rigorous work schedule, my father had a huge impact on my life. We were close as I was growing up, and I cherished the time we spent together. He was a brilliant and talented man, and it seemed as though he knew everything. I wanted to be like him, but he had set the bar so high in terms of success and wealth that it felt next to impossible to achieve anything that would measure up. I always wanted to please both of my parents, and this need to please definitely became a pattern in my life that has cropped up time and time again. As with most children, I really wanted my parents to validate me and to see
me. Entertainment was the family business, and my father, along with everyone else around us, expected me to follow suit. But, fitting into those big shoes meant being someone different from my true self. Between my father and, later on, a celebrity sister, it took me years to feel that I wasn’t just existing in someone else’s shadow.
I was twenty-two years old in 2001 when my father was diagnosed with throat cancer. My mom, sister, and I took turns taking him to the hospital for radiation treatment. Up to this point, he had seemed invincible and never appeared to age; yet, within months of the cancer treatments, I saw a dramatic change in him. He stopped going into work as much, became more and more confused, and rested all the time. As he grew weaker, so did his will to live. His passing was a progressive deterioration over several years.
During the last five years of his life, it was very hard for me to convey what I was going through. I remember wanting a mentor, a father, and a guide, but he was unable to be those things while going through the slow process of leaving this world. In some ways, our roles became reversed. I feel I missed out on the years between his cancer diagnosis and his passing because of the turmoil in my life at that time. I offered him what I could, but if I knew then what I know now, I would have been able to offer so much more in the way of presence and healing.
He passed away after suffering a stroke in 2006. He was tired. He was ready. Spiritually, I understood, but physically and emotionally I hurt, and there was no way to prepare for this.
I knew things would change once he was gone, and I knew it needed to happen, but I didn’t realize how big an impact his physical death would have on me. It was like the binding of the book had come off and the pages were flying around. Personal conflict, public drama, and media storms split my family apart for a while following his death. The grieving process became difficult for me because there was so much going on externally, not to mention I was in a fierce battle with drug and alcohol addiction. I swept too much under the rug, and it took a few years before I finally resolved all I had been feeling.
Seven weeks before my dad's passing, I was shooting a reality show I let my agent talk me into called Sons of Hollywood. The focus of the show was to profile three young guys living the Hollywood lifestyle. This was ironic because I had spent much of my life trying to avoid trading on my last name and this show was all about being a celebrity heir. Being a private person, I never wanted to do reality television because it seemed too invasive, but I was told it would be good for my career. I was so disconnected from my own truth at that time that I thought sharing myself with the rest of the world, flaws and all, might be my path. But right when the show started, my dad became very ill. His health had already been declining, but no one knew he had only weeks left instead of months or years. So, here I was, shooting a hyper-reality show, and my dad ended up dying halfway through filming. I spent the next two months trying to deal with the pain and keep it all together in the midst of being followed by cameras for the show and acting in another film.
When filming for the show wrapped, I was exhausted, run down, emotionally spent, and out of control with my drinking and drug use. I decided to book a trip with a friend to go to the quaint town of Ojai, California, in the Santa Ynez Mountains. I needed time to slow down, be quiet, and reflect.
My friend hung out by the pool and kept busy while I sat in the hotel room with a journal and wrote for hours. I poured out page upon page of anger, resentment, sadness, hopelessness, and confusion. I discovered a more spiritually connected, empowered self when I finished getting everything out. It felt good. Part of the reason I wrote was to get to this other part of me that had a deeper wisdom I wasn’t capable of accessing at that time.
I began to feel I was on the threshold of big change and I would either turn around and find a new direction or I would die. At that point, I didn’t know if stopping my drug use was possible, and I was scared to be truly connected to my life because it hurt too much. But, I also knew I couldn’t go back to living in such a disconnected way. I was sick with confusion, frustration, and a deep desire for something to be different.
The hotel room became my fortress of solitude, as if the outside world did not exist. I called out for help from any and all of my spiritual guides, including my dad who had just passed, knowing that I was going to need all the big guns in the universe to help me if something was going to change. I very clearly wrote the words, My Life Will Change,
almost as a decree.
I continued writing:
My life is not the same and I AM happy living my life in a free and joyful way.
I am free from drugs and alcohol.
I am free from pleasing others and trying to make others happy.
I am helping the world evolve while evolving myself.
As I wrote these words, there was conviction in my hand, energy in my body, and hope in my heart even though my head was trying to comprehend how this would happen.
A few weeks later, I went out to dinner with my mom and some friends of hers for her birthday. I got extremely inebriated at the dinner and was going from table to table talking to her friends. I thought I was being charming, but there was no question I’d had about five too many and everyone knew it. I remember riding home in the car with my mother and her saying, Randy, I think you have a problem.
I got angry and, once we were home, I stormed off knowing I was heading into the part of the roller coaster ride where I was at the top with about one more click to go before the heart-pounding drop into uncertainty.
The next day, I called my mom and told her I needed to get help. I said, I don’t want to live like this anymore, and I know something needs to change,
and then I started researching rehab centers. Three days later, I went out for the night and fell into my typical intoxication pattern, but this ended up being a particularly heavy binge. I stayed up all night with a few friends and one of them asked for a ride home. I did not typically drive while intoxicated at this stage in my life having already become all too familiar with DUIs, but the next morning I drove my friend home, still really messed up. I had no memory of it except for a faint recollection that I was driving, unable to keep the car straight and barely able to stay awake. Somehow, I made it to my mom’s house and passed out face-down in her food pantry five minutes later. She came in and saw me out cold on the floor and was about to call the paramedics when I came to.
Five days later, I checked into a rehab facility in Utah. I felt it was important to get away from home, family, and friends so I could be immersed in my healing without distraction. I did a lot of therapy in which I finally had the chance to grieve for my father. I also remember grieving for the parts of me that had not received the nurturing I needed and the parts of me I had lost along the way. My therapist at the facility was soft-spoken and deeply spiritual—exactly the type of person I needed to guide me back to my spiritual nature.
After rehab, everything changed. But, what I experienced went much deeper than getting clean and sober. Don't get me wrong; that had a huge impact on my life, and a necessary one because it was only by removing that destructive force that I had the room to go deeper and remember my spiritual essence. But, the change wasn’t just in behaviors and attitudes; it was at the soul level and all of this was only possible because of one simple but never easy step I took: I asked for it. Not only did I ask, I pleaded. I vowed deep within my heart to make this count. I longed to have an unbreakable connection to my own soul and to discover my purpose—to know why I am here so I could live the life I knew was in store for me. I vowed to love myself, accept myself, and expand myself. I had no idea how to make all of this happen. I just knew that my vow to be me, not what everyone else wanted or expected, meant that I had to get to know the me that was in my heart waiting patiently to be remembered through my cloudy journey—the me I didn’t know very well, the me that looks back on that period now as if it were another lifetime.
It has been nine years since I started on this path, and I can tell you wholeheartedly, that although it will always be part of my journey, my life now bears little resemblance to the life I once led. As I reflect on those times, having the benefit of being on the other side of them, I am filled with gratitude for those experiences. They have allowed me to help so many people with similar struggles. Addiction or no addiction, connection to self is at the core of being able to know, embrace, and love yourself in this mysterious journey you are on. This is the essence of what Unlimiting You is all about.
As we go through this experience together, I will share more of my story with you and show you how you can identify and release your own limitations to become more empowered and connected. My hope is that, at the end of this book, you will have discovered your true self or, at least, have begun uncovering who that person is so you can begin living your life in a more unlimited way.
Unlimiting Your Worth
What lies behind us and what lies before us are tiny matters compared to what lies within us.
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Has there been a time in your life when you just wanted to feel special—to feel you mattered and that you were important in some way? We all need to have this sense of value, whether it is to the world, to the people around us, or simply to ourselves.
There