Taking Time to Reconnect with Myself By Susan “Honey” Good I walked in on my┬áultimate concierge. He was sitting at his desk.┬á┬áI blurted out, ΓÇ£Shelly, I have been married to you for 26 years and you have never heard me say, ΓÇÿI am so┬ávery tired.ΓÇÖ Everything and everyone else┬ácomes┬áfirst┬áand┬áI have forgotten┬áabout┬ámyself.┬áI want to┬áget┬áaway and reconnect with me.ΓÇ¥ He stared at me with a worried and shocked look on his face.┬áI continued with some drama-rama, darlings. ΓÇ£I would like to go to a┬ámythical and magical place, like Shangri-La, where people live a long, healthy life.ΓÇ¥┬áFirst, he laughed, saying, ΓÇ£You are so dramatic.ΓÇ¥ I continued,┬áΓÇ£I feel I am wilting.ΓÇ¥┬áHe was┬ánow┬áspeechless, this talkative husband of mine. He finally said,┬áΓÇ£Would you like me to take you to┬áthe Golden Door?ΓÇ¥ My eyes opened wide and a┬ábig smile spread across my face┬áas I replied, ΓÇ£You would take me to the Golden Door?ΓÇ¥┬á┬áI told him I┬áwould love that.┬áJust then my iPhone rang. It was Leila, my manicurist.┬áreminding me I had an appointment in 15 minutes. The one┬áweekly┬ápleasure┬áI give┬ámyself and I have to be reminded┬áby a phone call to come┬ádarlings?┬áSomething was not right. I had lost my way. My health and well-being used to be a priority. I rarely missed a day on my treadmill. I peacefully had a quiet breakfast with my husband. I took Orchid for an early morning walk that always ended with a run┬áup the Museum of Contemporary ArtsΓÇÖ 25 steps,┬áwhere we┬áplopped┬áourselves down,┬áOrchid nestled┬átightly┬áinto┬ámy body, to┬áwatch as the world went by.┬áTaxis and buses and people racing while we relaxed in our aloneness. I was happy.┬áI escaped into great novels and┬átalked on the phone with girlfriends.┬áI shopped at the market and in stores with deliberation. I took my time with planning our calendar, now I forget to send back the reply envelope and call at the last minute. My life was out of balance. I knew it. I needed to slow down and calm down and figure out how to combat the negatives┬ádismantling my lifestyle. At the Golden Door, I accomplished my mission. I was deliberate. I knew the lack of nourishing the inner and outer me had taken its toll.┬á┬áI knew┬áwho and┬áwhat my culprits were because these type of culprits that throw off oneΓÇÖs lifestyle donΓÇÖt occur overnight. They build. You know that. The issue was to attack these culprits with solutions and┬ácome up with a new plan. I accomplished this┬áat the Golden Door. I spent much of the week,┬ábecause I had the time,┬áthinking about how┬ánot┬áto be ΓÇÿlast on my hit parade.ΓÇÖ How could I live a more peaceful life without giving up everything I loved?┬áI committed myself to living a healthier emotional and physical lifestyle.┬á┬áI found my way at the Golden Door. And, because I share my private thoughts with you (it makes me happy) I will share my solutions whereby I can┬áΓÇÿstill have┬áit all.ΓÇÖ I blocked a few people off my phone, email and text. I had never done that before. I feel so much better and I might add, powerful, because I took a proper stand. A wonderful woman who I have known for years┬áand who makes everyoneΓÇÖs heart sing┬áis going to become my personal assistant because Honey Good┬áis growing and I cannot keep up.┬áI want to┬áspend my time doing what I love most at HoneyGood.com. Writing my musings and answering your comments. No more personal trainers for me. I will take classes at a gym in stretching and whatever else I might enjoy. I will also begin walking on my treadmill 45 minutes daily.┬áI can no longer walk Orchid. She is too ill and I would not enjoy walking alone. Calm breakfasts with my ultimate concierge and my new Robot, Alexa, playing Hawaiian music┬áor Mozart┬áwhile I munch on my daily avocado,┬ápomegranate┬áseeds, one egg or a bowl of steel cut oatmeal with raisins and slivered almonds. IΓÇÖm adding a facial, a body scrub, and a monthly wax as well as a weekly massage to my routine. These are healthy habits that should become part of our lifestyle.┬áDarlings give up┬ámaterial possessions and pamper the outer you. I hope my story is teaching you how to treat yourself.┬áI hope you are getting an idea of honing in on who and what is actually worth the investment of your┬áphysical and emotional┬átime. I know you know when things are too much for you or not┬áright for you. Respect┬áyour body. Respect┬áyourself to leave relationships, a job, a friendship, a lifestyle that is no longer healthy. My ultimate concierge came to my rescue and I am grateful and appreciative┬áhe┬áunderstood what was going on in my life and could afford the luxury of the Golden Door.┬áI am a most fortunate woman and I am fiercely thankful. I take nothing for granted. I find joy in nature, in the quiet of the day, a kind word from a friend or associate,┬áa text from my grands,┬á┬áa lesson learned and now my darlingsΓǪ please come along for┬áthe ride,┬áa meaningful relationship with myself. How do you go about reconnecting with yourself? How do you get back on track? Susan “Honey” Good is the founder of┬áHoneyGood.com┬áwhere this blog originally appeared. The site is a collection of lessons learned, life advice and insights from not only her, but from a fantastic group of contributing writers, each adding their own spice to the recipe.┬áHoney Good.com representing ΓÇ£a family tree of┬áwomenΓÇ¥ — wives, mothers, daughters, granddaughters, mothers-in-law, daughters-in-law, sisters, aunts, cousins and girlfriends — coming together to talk about what┬ámakes them tick as well as what they have in common. Honey Good discusses┬álife experiences with wisdom, humor and intellect, enabling all┬áto attain┬áa “Honey Good Style of Life.ΓÇ¥