Hope Is A cold Nose and Other Inspirational Stories January 2022

Let me first say that I trust this email finds your 2022 is starting out well for you!

So, if you are familiar with December’s Hope Has a Cold Nose update, you will understand when I say

the quest has begun!

My search for what

Hope Is.

Before you begin following the trail markers I have left below, let me offer ideas for how you might want to follow the map of Hope Is.   You could certainly follow the map all in one sitting (i.e., read below all at once).   Or you could visit each trail marker one week at a time, as I have (translation, visit a coordinate location each week).   Or perhaps you would enjoy the daily visit of a trail marker, and then walk the path a second or third time until February’s Hope Is message is sent. (This is something I anticipate I will do, too. {smile}) 

In whichever way you decide to follow my quest, may you find joy, inspiration, and meaning

As I am. 

42.529163° N, -85.85243° E

The first week of my hope-full adventure began with a dear soul reaching out to share with me what hope is for him.  Hope could not wait for the new calendar year.  His gracious words reaching me as 2021 prepared to whisper see you in your memories.  His heart-full sharing the gentle breeze to open the map that said here is where we begin.

Hope exists on a cure for a disease without a cure

Alzheimer’s is the disease for which this dear soul hopes one day there will be a cure, as his heart grieves the inner knowing that there will be no available ransom great enough to bring his stolen wife back to him.  

When Guilt outstretches its arms and wraps this dear soul in a bear hug in how he is no longer able to be the sole caregiver, he finds hope in the deep breath he musters to take as Gratitude unfolds the tight squeeze of Guilt, and whispers she is doing well at Vicinia Gardens.   Gratitude also gently says thank you for the resources available to support me physically and mentally.  Hope in each breath to keep stepping forward as his heart the basin of tears trying not to waterlog the fifty-two years of memories that he holds on to for them both. 

I am reminded of a life story I wrote for someone who was beginning her journey with the early stages of Alzheimer’s.   One of her two children joined our conversation so that he could fill in pieces of her story she might no longer remember.   I can still see the smile on her face and hear her sweet voice when she said honey, can I show you something?  To my instant and eager Yes, she got up and went to her TV stand and grabbed a family portrait of her children and their families.   As she handed me the framed picture with a bright twinkle in her eyes and a light-heartedness to her voice, she proceeded to say he can tell you who they all are

In that moment I was caught between her joy and her son’s brave-faced smile that masked his sadness.  Like the dear soul above who feels the pain of his wife slipping away, I could feel this person’s son hurting that his mother was also losing her foothold on names and faces.   One by one, he pointed out each name and once he was done, his mom placed the framed picture back where she had first grabbed it. 

After sharing other pieces of her story with me for the next few minutes, with her beautiful smile and her equally beautifully sounding voice, she then said honey, can I show you something?  To my yes, please, she got up and went to her TV stand and grabbed the family portrait of her children and their families.   As she handed me the framed picture with the same bright twinkle in her eyes and a voice unapologetic, happy, and innocent, she proceeded to say he can tell you who they all are

After meeting with this dear storyteller and her son, he walked me out to the lobby expressing his appreciation that I never said to his mom you already shared that with me.  He appreciated the dignity I handed to her each time she repeated something she had said only moments before.  I then shared with him something writing life stories taught me.

We each experience 86,400 moments to every day.   If we were blessed to have lived many years like this dear storyteller now in her 80’s, we would fill up bookshelves, if not libraries with the story of our life.  But we tend not to remember every moment.  Think back to last week.  Or last month.  Or five years ago.  If I were to ask you to share with me the story of your life over the past five years, I anticipate you would provide me several key memories – good and perhaps not always good – but you wouldn’t provide me 157,680,000 memories. 

We remember what matters most to us.  We hold on to the good.  And the not always good that we consider the most important things to hold on to.  I didn’t see this storyteller’s loss of names and faces.   I saw that what this storyteller continued to show me was one of her most precious valuables – her family.   Even if names, words, memories, and faces were starting to retreat, her heart was not.   In what she couldn’t say, she could show.  In the twinkle of her eyes, in her joyful voice, in her radiant smile was a person who was happy having been a mother and a grandmother and a great grandmother.

Hope Is

The heart that doesn’t forget even when a thief comes along to rob the mind of treasured memories.

52.14785° N, 19.37776° E

Next involved a life story, a book, a podcast, and a mourning dove  

He sits beside his brother on the plane, and lies on the ground beside Shay…” I used to have this crazy idea…” He pauses.  “It’ll keep flying on its normal route to Los Angeles, and I’m its counterweight.  They’re all alive up there, as long as I’m alive down here” …Moonlight beams through his eyelids and he can see, as if it’s the lake in front of him, the pain and loss he’s been swimming in for years.  In the moonlight, though, the pain is revealed to be love.  The emotions are entwined; they are the two sides of the same gleaming coin.  – From the book Dear Edward, written by Ann Napolitano, a fictional book about a sole survivor of a plane crash

While in dialogue with someone recently, she shared with me a chapter in the life story of her mother, grandmother, daughter, and herself.    Her mother survived the Holocaust by being given away to a nun’s convent when she was a small child.   This particular convent had as its mission to provide adoptive homes to children they would rescue from the risk of deportation to concentration camps.  Or worse. 

At one point in this compelling life story, the storyteller struggled to find her voice.   This storyteller, a mother, imagining in this moment of the narrative how she would feel if she stood in the same pair of shoes as her grandmother had.   If she had to give up her own daughter, handing over her own flesh and blood to a stranger, knowing that last time she felt this child in her arms may be the last time she felt her child again.   All for

Hope

That this child would live. 

As the story-listener the one thing I kept thinking was there is no greater act of unconditional love.  

And then, as an once historian while in college studying the Holocaust era, once a researcher completing an independent study of this indescribable time in world history, twenty-two plus years later I was that young student again.  In the moment of listening now to this life story, I was in the past, reading stories and looking at pictures, seeking the ways in which meaning was found as a result of all the ways meaning attempted to be destroyed.    

Hope is

The story-teller’s daughter.  The granddaughter of the holocaust survivor.  The great granddaughter of a dear soul who handed her child to a nun, holding back her inner screams of No!, striving to keep her body upright despite the twisting and turning insider that nearly doubled her over with the agony of letting go.  For in letting go, not just this dear soul’s daughter lived. 

Two more generations were born. 

And live on.

A life story, a book, a podcast, and a mourning dove.   In that way that I was meant to deepen my sense of hope not as optimism, but that there is meaning, regardless of how it turns out, in the same week I listened to episode 94 of 3 Books by Neil Pasricha.   Neil quoted from the book The Americans, by Robert Frank.   Black and white are colors of photography.  To me they symbolize the alternatives of hope and despair to which mankind is forever subjected.   

That dance of grace between opposites.   In the deepest loss is also found the greatest love. 

Hope is

The circle of life.  

This past weekend found my home state with a near zero wind chill.  Harsh conditions for Nature’s winged inhabitants.   As I was walking out our door, nestled against the door frame was a mourning dove.   Cupped hands, a towel lined box, and a towel as blanket the attempts to assist this fragile soul in regaining its body heat.  

Hope is

Compassion

Unfortunately, as dusk started to knock, it revealed that the bitterness of the cold had already done irreversible damage for this winged friend.  In the moonlight, though, the pain is revealed to be love.  The emotions are entwined; they are the two sides of the same gleaming coin

Hope is

Having lived a life in which one experienced love

55.85781° N, -4.24253° E

Week three found the power of choice.  And unconditional acceptance.

Hope to me is really living this life in however we choose to.

These words shared with me by another dear soul who reached out narrating a chapter of her and her children’s life stories.   

Approximately eight months prior this dear soul had accepted, with a heavy heart, her oldest child’s wishes to not return to their home abroad when she and his younger brother would.  An adult, old enough to make this choice, at least defined in part by what we say when a child has reached eighteen or nineteen years of age.  And yet, a child, at least defined in part by a parent’s ability to wisely see what could be missed in the naivety and innocence that youth still hold strong at that age.   They parted with him choosing to see freedom, play, and experimentation while she boarded the plane dancing between worry, grief, and trust in the returning after letting someone spread their own wings.

Fast forward to January, nestled back home abroad again after a return trip to her domestic home to celebrate the holidays with her oldest son and extended family.  She is writing to me what Hope Is as she glances periodically at her surroundings.   Her living room with its cozy antique decor, her furred housemates, her youngest son.  And her oldest son sitting a few feet away from her physically.   

After his few months of exploration through uncertainty – also part of being nineteen – he has decided that spreading his wings is best closer to his mother, his need for independence integrated with the wisdom he knows that the person who can best guide his winged flights is the one who has learned for herself how to fly beautifully between uncertainty and the urge to travel to sights not yet experienced or seen.   

This wise mother knows that she needs to hold this time in her delicate embrace.  She has knowledge to make his flights easier.  She has dreams for the flights she hopes he will take.  Yet, her wisdom also knows that she can share her experiences with him of what she has learned on her own flights through life, but it is not for her to tell him what choices she thinks he should make.  She can close her eyes, put her hand to her chest, and hold the deepest intention that if his landing on a branch is wobbly or he crashes into a limb he will still be safe and well; she cannot choose the branch he tries to perch on.   She can Hope that what he will choose most of all Is to live life to the best of

What is best for him

She can watch, listen, and accept without condition that even if he is searching in directions that she might not choose for him, what he seeks is not putting him in harm’s way.  If she can foresee harm, she can offer her wisdom and hope he chooses to listen to the years they have shared thus far in which she has always guided him away from harm into the nest of love.    

Hope Is

Trusting that how each of us chooses to live life is what gives all of us

The gift of living life

With soaring wings

12.903773° N, -84.92182° E

Week four.

I had already been blessed in 2021 to have my path cross with the founder of this extraordinary organization during a fund-raising event.  

Nicalove.  

As I began my quest for what Hope Is, one of the first people I thought to reach out to was Julie.  From following Nicalove on Instagram and in the routine email communications Julie provides, I knew she would have a powerful perspective.   

On my quest thus far, some of the narratives shared with me has provided me the opportunity to add my own words.  This time, there are no words for me to add. 

It is my privilege and a very sacred honor I have been given to share with you what I learned at this stop of what Hope Is.

Having a positive impact on the outcome of another’s hardship.

Since I was young, I have always found myself drawn to people and animals in need.  I was a “sensitive” child and the suffering and pain of others attracted me like a moth to a flame.  I was keenly attuned to my gifts of healing and being of service to others. In my youth, I constantly found myself wishing I could help others, in any way possible, even if it was just to extend my hope and compassion into their lives.  I felt misunderstood, but as I have come into adulthood, I have begun to use what I now know as my “superpower” and created a life where I can share my idea of HOPE with others in need. 

NicaLove, born from my infinite love of all beings, is my way of offering hope to abandoned and stray animals suffering from the consequences of human errors.  Through my compassion and desire to serve others, I have created a true impact by spreading hope to those in need within my reach. NicaLove began as a “one-woman show” and has grown to a tribe of compassionate animal-lovers who share my beliefs and trusts our impactful animal welfare work in Nicaragua.

Though it may have begun with just me, the idea came to be that If I could draw on the hope and compassion of those around me, collectively, we would be able to expand our impact, and ultimately save more lives. Through harnessing the hope of others our NicaTribe continues to grow, serving others and saving lives.

Hope, to me, is about having a positive impact on the outcome of another’s hardship. It’s about sharing compassion, kindness, love, and inspiration around you. I believe that even the smallest drop of hope can have the largest ripple effect and change someone’s entire world – whether that be human, animal, or even an insect. Hope is having the optimism that our actions have a positive outcome on the circumstances on another’s life.

So much wisdom in this heart-full sharing by Julie!  

I encourage you to visit the link above to learn more about Nicalove.  I also have this link on my website HOPE LINKS – Christine Hassing.  (Be watching…additional links will be added to this page as the Hope Quest continues.)   Each time I witness through a posting another act of compassion and love on the part of Nicalove, I am reminded of the mourning dove I wrote about above.  I am reminded of the starfish parable I love so much (https://brightagain.org/parable-of-the-starfish/).

To make a difference for one.   To give one the feeling of unconditional love.

I can think of no greater ripples to cast to balance the sorrows of this world than the actions of

Hope for… a positive impact on the outcome of another’s hardship

42.38337° N, -85.95741° E

In case you are wondering about the two cold noses who are often part of these monthly emails, Ginger and Kutana have been enjoying this quest, too.   Of course, they are partial to any stories that are about fur souls like themselves.  And they certainly like curling up next to me as we recap in writing what we have found on our quest.  Most of all, I think they like being a part of spreading

Hope.

The very least you can do in your life is figure out what you hope for. And the most you can do is live inside that hope. Not admire it from a distance but live right in it, under its roof. – Barbara Kingsolver

Sincerely,

-Christine

P.S.

If you have enjoyed this month’s message, please pay it forward to others.  They can also subscribe to future emails by visiting www.christinehassing.com.   Encourage others to share what Hope Is.   I welcome sharing their input in future messages!   

Namaste.’ 

August 2021 Hope has a Cold Nose

You may write me down in history

With your bitter, twisted lies,

You may trod me in the very dirt

But still, like dust, I’ll rise

Just like moons and suns,

With the certainty of tides

Just like hope springing high

Still, I rise

Excerpt From Maya Angelou poem, Still, I Rise

First, I wish to share the recent honor I received to be a guest on this wonderful podcast Dog Save the People, hosted by John Bartlett with support from a great team that includes, Jack, Maggie, and Scott!   

How Service Dogs Are Helping Veterans with PTSD — Dog Save The People Podcast

Once you listen in continued support of Hope Has a Cold Nose, I encourage you to listen to other episodes that you can find on Apple Podcast, Spotify, or by visiting

www.dogsavethepeople.com

So much good information about organizations and individuals who serve those who serve us humans so unconditionally!

Speaking of unconditional, as I write this month’s update, the two expert teachers – Ginger and Kutana – are basking in the outdoor air beside me, grateful that the humidity has dissipated and in its place are a pleasant breeze and dancing butterflies, and that the only thing they “have” to do today is nap and dream of chasing squirrels and of pointing birds with a raised paw and tail aimed horizontally straight. 

In addition to their daily lessons of unconditional acceptance and love, I have been listening to their wisdom regarding authenticity.    

Each have innateness unique to their personalities.  Authentic to Ginger is her introversion, a more serious aspect in her approach to things.  She is someone who puts others first, a desire to please.  Among her starting places is a strong sense of responsibility, listening, and not challenging who she believes to be in authority.   She also considers herself the office manager when I am working.   She is on high alert to keep watch of others who might try to distract me.  Like a vehicle or a squirrel getting a little too close to the window out of curiosity.   After all, that squirrel might just knock on the window and disturb my meeting or writing! 

Kutana is more social and sees interruption as opportunity to do something out of the routine.  And, oh, boy, is Kutana observant of anything new, different, and now within her reach!  Ginger likes to be a few steps ahead of me on a morning run, but still in close to the next steps of my feet.  Kutana likes to blaze the pathways for us three.  Kutana’s quick and ever exploring curiosity is the balance to Ginger’s steady patience to not hurry the journey. 

Kutana has a serious watchful take it all in dimension to her, but oh does she thrive on every day is a day of joy!  Her motto is to live wide open, including periodically treat the house as a racetrack from room to room because mom, I might just spontaneously combust I am so happy I don’t know what else to do!   And though Kutana has a deep desire to please, she has a fierce independence, determination, and a need to honor what is innately her true being.  She first chooses to listen to her authenticity, then in a close second, but second, listen to others who might be trying to guide her to stay safe or to better actions then she might be currently choosing.

Each have their authentic traits unique to who they are as individual pawed beings.   They also have natural tendencies as members of the canine species.   For example, there is their love of sniffing new scents to sleuth who has been in their yard since the last time that they walked the parameter.   Both love to walk and run outside, especially if the humidity has waved goodbye.   And then of course there is their innate traits such as their certainty their only purpose in life is to love people unconditionally.  

Even when canines may be at the hands of harm or unwantedness, they keep their hearts full of hope and love.  

In that nothing is coincidence way in how I believe life’s moments flow, my husband and I turned on a movie a few nights ago starring John Travolta Life on the Line.  Based on a true story, it was about the power company linemen who keep our homes and business functioning with light, often at the risk to their own lives.  It was a movie blending joy and sorrow, including scenes of one character who was experiencing PTSD after his deployment. 

Though he wasn’t the main character, the movie showcased his emotional distance from his family as well as two scenes in which he attempted to take his own life.  I couldn’t help wondering as I watched this movie what others would think when watching it.  Would they hold compassion?  Or judge?  Or not even pay attention, focused on when the next scene would feature the star of the movie? 

My husband and I watched this movie, went to sleep, had a storm roll in, and we lost power.  I immediately though of the movie and the information shared at the end about the fallen linemen.  I thought about who might have left their families at midnight last night to answer their emergency calls that hundreds of homes were now in the dark. 

I thought about the anxiety rising in customers who worried of being cool in the abnormal heat and humidity, or the impatient customers because, well, they’ve developed an impatience with feeling out of control.  I pondered and reflected if I was holding more empathy for what it takes to restore power having just watched that movie.   If I hadn’t watched that movie, would I be more impatient or already trying to move to Plan B or Plan C for that sense of controlling uncertainty?  Would I be in the peaceful place I now found myself in if I hadn’t just watched Life on the Line? 

Recently I was listening to Neil Pasricha’s 3 Books podcast in his interview with Douglas Rushkoff who, among his books, authored Team Human.  Neil and Douglas were engaging in dialogue, and Douglas was sharing about two stories – one from the 1960’s and one from our history approximately four to five years ago.  Douglas talked about the power of perception and how quickly people discerned in the 60’s that the story was not true and how more recently the second story, also untrue, was perceived as absolute in facts. 

Douglas shared this perspective.  People don’t know how to surf reality.  They trust the facts and not their soul.  Everything is taken literally.  There’s no metaphor.

What is our innateness for each of us as individuals? 

What is our innateness as humanity?    

In our dance of grace between opposites in the flow of life, have we collectively chosen to stop dancing as a team? 

Have we chosen to stop listening to our souls? 

Last month I wrote about a sacred journey I took to the summit of Mount Adams.  It included sharing about one of our teammates who, at the last days, could not join us on the climb.  I wrote these words: 

He could not join because judgment is in the lead of humanity’s actions and reactions… [he] is now fighting a raging war of collective anger and hate directed from perceptions and emotional pain towards stereotypes and labels…Appearance many are holding as certainty there is no gray nor exceptions nor any other view but absolute. 

Innate to our Mount Adams teammate as an individual is his gentle and humble heart, his fierce bravery, his desire to serve.   His desire to serve in active duty, as first responder, and for his family, friends, and anyone in need.   Most recently amidst all the struggle he is currently moving through, he spoke not what others could do for him and his family, but what he could also do in return: it’s helping others that has always helped me with all life’s obstacles.

What I can’t help thinking most of all is innate to him as an individual is also innate to his

Humanness

From his soul

Gentleness, humbleness, bravery, a desire to serve others we care for.

Words to describe being human.

From how I choose to see. 

A very dear friend reframed my mountain climb experience for me in metaphor for the journey through our current world transformation.   You started at the base in anger, you found hope at the top, and you found joy on the way down, for as I sat 9000 feet up processing through my emotions of a very profoundly moving day, a hummingbird (a spiritual symbol of joy) flew inches from my nose left and then back right again.  

My continual dance of grace between wishing we could be more like our wise teachers with paws and fur to unconditionally listen not necessarily to always accept, but simply to compassionately appreciate that we might build far more bridges

Then walls.

Love and compassion are necessities, not luxuries.  Without them, humanity cannot survive. – Dalai Lama

Sincerely,

-Christine

P.S.  The Writing of Book 3 has begun!  Stay tuned!   Hope in the form of a Moose:  Inspiring Stories of…

If you have enjoyed this month’s message, please pay it forward to others.  They can also subscribe to future emails by visiting www.christinehassing.com     Namaste.’ 

Hope Has a Cold Nose book cover

July 2021 Hope Has a Cold Nose

Dear All,

Tell the story of the mountain you climbed.  Your words could become a page in someone else’s survival guide.  – Morgan Harper Nichols

The journey to the top began in December 2019 when the first person after myself to believe in Hope Has a Cold Nose when it was only an idea called me.  He was moved to “make it matter” for yet another story of an exceptional life that reached a point in which this individual’s strength to live was harder than the arms of despair squeezing out his will to continue.  The book of his life not meant to be finished by his own choosing.  

This first person who has never paused the championship of HHCN, nor his mentorship of me, suggested a mountain climb to increase awareness just as HHCN has as one of its goals.  We could model the “event” after a university course this individual created and teaches annually.  Just as this mentor gave me the gift near two years prior when he said without hesitation Yes! to the idea that one written story become one written book, I immediately said Count me in! 

We became the “A-team”, short for Mount Adams, with another dear soul; the three of us seeking, asking, and brainstorming to form a planned event.  We had among our goals to increase awareness but hold the sacredness of these stories written thus far in a manuscript not yet finished.  This was not to be a sensationalized event.  Who to invite?  Do we focus on this climb as a healing event, targeting veterans journeying with PTSD?  Do we include all alumni to the university?  Do we narrow the scope to veteran alumni?  Seeking.  Asking.  Brainstorming.  Repeat. 

Landing on university veteran alumni and/ or spouses of veterans.  Trusting who signed up would be who was meant to be on the climb. 

As soon as a team of between fifteen and twenty said Yes! the remaining stories for HHCN appeared.  The energy of a team of individuals who believed in HHCN set in motion its completion to a published state. 

We picked a date in 2020.   We adjusted that date.  We held strong to resilience and hope that what was closing down the world would pass before our adjusted date. 

With reflection, and with sadness, and with determination that not if, but when, we let go of 2020 and looked to 2021. 

Some who could attend in 2020 could no longer join in 2021.  Others not on the virtual team calls in 2020 joined the team in 2021.   Trusting who could go on the climb would be who was meant to be on the climb. 

I began this climb for twenty-three co authors of HHCN.  And, for twenty-two lives a day who lose hope. 

I also began this climb for one of our team members who only days prior determined he could not join because judgment is in the lead of humanity’s actions and reactions.  An extraordinary individual of gentle and humble heart and equal bravery and conviction to serve and save humanity as first responder is now fighting a raging war of collective anger and hate directed from perceptions and emotional pain towards stereotypes and labels.  Appearance many are holding as certainty there is no gray nor exceptions nor any other view but absolute.  This team member desires to serve humankind.  Humankind is rejecting help. 

Five days before the climb I heard of another friend, also a first responder, facing collective anger and hate.  Two days prior to the climb a dear friend shared with me how she had just heard Alan Jackson’s song on the radio “Where were you When the World Stopped Turning”.  Her heart was hurting because 20 years ago when 911 occurred, the world came together.  Now our world is trying to find a way to turn again, and we are torn in…shattering pieces. 

It was with this view I began the climb with a team of fourteen extraordinary individuals. 

Resilience, anticipation, excitement, and willpower through ascending.   Check.

Beautiful scenery, majestic mountain views, steal breath-away sunsets and sunrises, and star-filled skies including a shooting star at the start of ascending day two.  Check.

Team support of one another at the tired moments, laughing, sharing, learning, bonding.  Check.

Standing at the summit of a mountain for the first time, moved to tears of gratitude and joy, my heart whispering this is for every story I have heard and all whose stories I have yet to hear, and whose stories ended at what feels like an incomplete book.   To be a bridge between voices unheard and heard, I made it to the top of this mountain.  Check.

See a dog at the summit and though not a service dog, still symbolic of why I was standing thousands of feet above the ground.  Check.  

Start the descent to be kissed by dog number two, and a German Shorthair Pointer at that!  Check.

Where is our teammate?  Missing?    Please do not let this become a check.

Begin searching.  Check.

At long last.   Finding.   GRATEFUL Check.

Each team member moves into a position to support a teammate in need.  Check.

Ah, but dear reader, so much more than a simple check.

I witnessed every team member come together through far more words unspoken than said to assist our teammate.  Yet.   And.  I witnessed a piece of our world in which I have been given the sacred gift to enter as a guest and storywriter but recognize I cannot begin to be a true member of.  Military and first responders are those who would lay down their lives for a brother or sister in arms or a civilian in need and they know experiences that I can only know through imagination and a willingness to listen.  In a collective society that struggles with death and dying, addiction, mental instability, abuse, terrorism, robbery – i.e., all the “ugliness” of life, there are team members of society who feel called to step into the ugliness head on and fight for their beliefs in peace, safety, and re-direction for lost souls.  Serve others over self who they feel called to be. 

I witnessed the words I could only reverently respect when told to me for HHCN now being put in action.  Got your six, have your back, no man left behind.  Some team members were the front-line defense of what was coming ahead in the twists and turns of the pathway.  Others moved rocks out of the path and were the tour guides for footsteps.  Another team member was the anchor at “command center”, a port in the storm, and a calming energy force field pulling every member down safely. Additional team members were the life-giving water supply awaiting depleting hydration.

 My eyes beheld the beauty of a veteran inches behind our now fragile teammate’s back – also a veteran – as this veteran helped guide our teammate’s unstable footing.  One was not going to let the other fall, no matter the weight on his own back nor his own fatigue.  I experienced awe and gratitude for strangers also descending beside us who kindly offered to help carry backpacks down for our teammates.  

No barriers.

No anger.

No judgment.

Only compassion.

For a fellow human being.

As I descended in humble awe from this grand powerful piece of Nature standing 12,600 feet above our every day lives, I also drank in the extraordinary beauty of witnessing humanity unconditionally supporting one another.  

I physically climbed the mountain in hope and faith, and a heart stepping towards my own anger and judgment at the collective rage ascending higher and higher in our world.  Lost in my own line of sight was the reminder that people are crying out to be heard, and the anger is because we as a human race have stopped listening.  Snow-blinded by everyone striving to know they matter in a vast world of information of the mind and painful histories in which traumatic cycles have not yet been broken to begin turning in new ways, collectively the world can no longer see that all of us are souls made up of shadow and light.   No one wants to get lost, yet it feels like there is a descending towards darkness with our headlamps turned off. 

The mountain handed me back faith and hope and a reminder of what I so deeply believe.  It is the lens in which we choose to see.   I can judge judging, or I can cast ripples of non-judgment.  The choice is mine. 

The choice is for each person.

Like my favorite starfish parable or the words that I just heard recently by Nikki Giovanni:  I used to think I could change the world.  Now I know I won’t change the world, but I do know I won’t let the world change me.  I may not be able to make a difference in how we listen for all the starfish on the beach.   Yet, if together with a team of storytellers who give me the gift of their willingness to share their stories not easily listened to, at least one sentence makes a difference for one person.

Who finds dignity in their own story,

Or hope,

Or their story inspires another’s survival guide in this thing called life,

Or influences another to see and see again for there IS ALWAYS more to a walk in someone else’s shoes then we perceive.

A difference will be made for that one person.

And making a difference for one on a team is everything.

There is only one goal.  Everyone makes it down the mountain.  Making in a difference in how we listen seems like a good goal in life, don’t you think?  May we find a way to make it down this mountain of divisive time in our history as one team.

It’s what you do today that is your success for tomorrow – Dr. Adrian Popa

Sincerely,

-Christine

P.S.  Stay tuned for future updates regarding Book 3!  For now, I will simply say what do you think of Hope in the form of a Moose and other Inspiring Stories of…

If you have enjoyed this month’s message, please pay it forward to others.  They can also subscribe to future emails by visiting www.christinehassing.com     Namaste.’ 

May 2021 Hope Has a Cold Nose

Dear All,

The story about becoming beautiful isn’t about the ugly duckling becoming a swan; it is about the ugly duckling realizing it was a swan all along. – Leta Greene

A couple of days ago I danced between opposites when the natural flow of Nature intersected with Kutana’s authenticity.  Actually, make that Ginger, Kutana, and I danced between opposites as we each played our part in the innateness of Life. 

The girls (as I like to affectionately refer to Ginger and Kutana collectively) and I were on our morning trail run among the apple trees.   Ginger was only slightly ahead for staying near me to guard against anything that could be lurking is her determined purpose she has established on both our behalf.  Kutana, aka gazelle, was further ahead relishing her joy in running with speed.   That is until her greatest gift signaled put on the breaks NOW!   

Her nose is her gift, and it is my cursed word or two in moments when her nose leads in opposition to what I would prefer she smell.   Most of the time I love watching her in action when her nose is in the lead.  It is poetry in motion when Kutana and I play our game.  I hide a few kernels of her dog food in four different places while she holds stay, frozen in place until I give her the yep and she then circles wide to catch the scent of her food on the wind currents.  Her authenticity is absolutely beautiful and wonderous to observe.  

Until this particular moment a couple of days ago when her nose smelled young life.  Before I understood why she suddenly stopped and began sniffing at the base of an apple tree, Life was already in motion to be my teacher yet again.  Too late to influence a different destiny, I witnessed two baby rabbits tossed in the air at the mouth of Kutana who, in that instant, I desperately wanted to know that though she was a dog, she should not act like a dog!   As I stood at yang, certain Kutana was the shadow yin, she heeded NO! and sat down with a look that was trying to remind me that perhaps my feelings in that moment at her actions were yin and that in her mind she was acting with the purest of yang.  

My gentle Ginger, who also has a huntress tendency, began to move towards the two victims until she received the same direction as her sister and sat down a few feet behind Kutana.   I picked up one baby bunny to recognize I was touching that part of Life that teaches Grief.   I picked up the second baby bunny to quickly understand I was being handed the lesson plan of Life that offers opportunity for Gentleness, Compassion and Unconditional Love as I held this little one gently in my warm hand next to its sibling no longer of this Earth while baby bunny two took its last breaths.   Life whispered not your will, but the will for the greatest good even if you can’t fully see there is a larger purpose in what is happening.   There is no greater good then being fully present with a reverent heart beside another’s journey. 

I looked over at the girls, my calm wise elder one and my joyous curious one and witnessed Nature’s animal kingdom reverent for Nature’s kingdom of animals.  Kutana normally the investigator for anything I am doing that is new was sitting quietly, watchful, respectful, honoring this sacred moment.   Ginger was wearing her usual look that communicates I am here, I know what you are doing matters to you, and I will wait patiently and silently for you until you are done. 

I put both little souls back in their nest and the girls and I started to walk away to continue our run.  Ah, but Life had one more lesson to teach.   This time Ginger paused to sniff a clump of grass, which created a reactive squeak.   With a No, Ginger! I rushed to Ginger’s side to find another baby rabbit unscathed striving to hide from the giants who had just found its siblings minutes before. 

Though one part of me knew I should not touch this little one so that the scent of me would not cause rejection by Momma Bunny, greater in me was the wish to ease this little one’s fears.  For the brief time our paths were intersecting, I wanted this little one to know Life brings Traumatic moments we wish would not take place, but Life also brings Compassion and Love.   As I sat this little one down and it began hopping away, I knew Life was teaching Hope, Resilience, and Choice in what we decide to see. 

Life was my dance partner with opposites whispering in my ear will you stay with Grief and let Anger join the walk? 

Or will you celebrate Life always finds a way to continue flourishing?  Will you accept that I, Life, cannot teach you the depths of such things as Appreciation, Compassion, Hope, Inspiration, and Love if I do not bring the experiences of loss, suffering, and uncertainty? 

Dear Life, if I may say, every once in a great while I wish there were an easier way to learn all that you have to teach.   

Recently I was in conversation with someone, and we were talking about the continued significant world events.   This individual was choosing to see positively amidst her philosophical questioning as to why things were happening.  This person was also empathetic to people who were struggling to stay optimistic.  To stay hopeful.  To those who were experiencing Life’s lesson plans of Grief and Anxiety. 

For some people, Life is bringing a heaviness that seems to be a relentless one more thing, one thing after another in a way that makes these same people want to shout STOP!  It is enough!

I anticipate twenty-three co-authors would tell these people they understand.     

They know what it is to be tested to stay positive.  To stay hopeful.  To keep pushing through one more issue, one more judgment, one more setback, one more Life test, ONE MORE thing!

In my choice in how I wish to see, I am holding tight to the belief that all the significant turmoil and suffering is a cracking open like a caterpillar who breaks out of a cocoon to reveal it is a butterfly.   Or the ugly duckling that hatches to reveal its beauty as a swan.     

Things are cracking open for better things.

If we choose to see. 

And choose our reactions and actions that create better things. 

Like Joy, Compassion, Hope,

and

Service dogs who save lives by loving and accepting unconditionally. 

I am not sure I can think of any greater Life teachers than those with cold noses and pawed feet.

Life ain’t always beautiful.  Sometimes it’s just plain hard.  Life can knock you down, it can break your heart…But the struggles make you stronger.  And the changes make you wise.  And happiness has its own way of takin’ its sweet time.  No, life ain’t always beautiful.  Tears will fall sometimes.  Life ain’t always beautiful, but it’s a beautiful ride. – Lyrics from Life Ain’t Always Beautiful by Gary Allan

Sincerely,

-Christine

As a reminder, Calling all Stories of Hope (christinehassing.com)    If you know of someone who would like to share their story, please share this link with them. 

If you have enjoyed this blog, please pay it forward.  That is how the ripples of hope cascade.    Namaste’.

February 2021 Hope Has a Cold Nose

Dear Hope Has a Cold Nose readers,

“Dog Lessons for People – Be loyal and faithful. Play every day. Drink lots of water. Forgive quickly. Avoid biting when a growl will do. Sit close & listen. Follow your instincts. Give more than you receive. Take naps. Be a best friend. Love unconditionally.” – Author Unknown

If you have read the acknowledgments in the last pages of Hope Has a Cold Nose, then you were able to learn about how, on the journey of co-creating HHCN with twenty-three authors, I was led to many wonderful organizations who are each honoring the call to serve others in need – both human souls and those souls wrapped in fur.  The blessings of my path intersecting with extraordinary organizations has not stopped now that HHCN is published.  Most recently I was interviewed for a podcast by the Doggy Diva Show that will air Saturday, March 13th.   To learn more about what – I should say – who – inspired the creation of the Doggy Diva Show, please visit https://www.thedoggydiva.com.    I will simply say, never underestimate the smallest of beings to cast the biggest ripples of positive change.  Dear Sophia made her story matter when another dear soul heard her cry for help, and together they created a way to give purpose to a story that began in heartache and ended with great unconditional love. 

Recently I saw a visual post on social media that displayed a person holding up a plywood board to display a section of grass beneath it not buried by snow.  The picture further showed a chihuahua standing on the grass and the caption was related to an idea people could create something similar so that their dogs would not hate going outside for their restroom breaks in deep snow.   As I was preparing to scroll past this picture I saw one person’s comment that read I don’t think dogs have hate in their make-up…

I started thinking about Ginger and Kutana over these past couple of weeks as we, like so many others, experienced frigid temperatures, and continual falling snow.  Ginger likes her heat.  Completely covered under a blanket or basking in the warmth of the summer sunshine outside, or, as I am writing this, having her sister lay completely on top of her, is her ideas of heaven.  Well, maybe not the sister laying completely on top of her part, though her eyes closed and her soft snoring tells me she sees it as a gateway to happiness.  

Now Kutana, on the other hand, whose lean body should be the one to signal to her eager spirit um, nope, we don’t need to go outside and bounce into drifted snow head first, can’t wait for the temperature to reach an acceptable level to safely go outside.  Is it time?  Is it time now?  Mom, do you hear that?  Outside wants me to come run, hike, and play?  Outside wants me to dive head first into that snow drift RIGHT OVER THERE!  Can we now, please?!  PRETTY PLEASE!  Unlike her big sister Ginger who demonstrates an impeccable braking system at the doorway when her initial desire to go outside is met with the rush of cold air, Kutana seems to find a renewed energy to that burst of refreshing take your breath away air.

Kutana seems to run to her coat I hold in my hands.  Well, maybe run is a tad exaggeration, but she certainly does not resist.  There is no slight head hang that seems to communicate aww, shucks mom do I have to?   She does not communicate with her body that her pink fluffy coat makes her look silly or that she is too grown up for such frills.   It is her hall pass to outside, and outside matters far more than any risk her mom dresses her funny in front of the birds and squirrels. 

Ginger, on the other hand, is a very good communicator with her body that very clearly lets me know her orange coat makes her look less like the royalty she is certain that she is.  My dear Ginger is a girl after my own heart when it comes to a little bit of stubbornness, and there is no misunderstanding on my part in her decision to show me a little bit of her essence when I reach for that orange coat.  Now, granted, if she has had any preview to what awaits her outside, then in her mind, the orange coat I am holding is a hall pass, straight to the detention room.  And she has no problem deciding to become immovable weight on her ottoman when I am trying to adorn her in her orange attire. 

Yet, to the comment the individual stated on social media, Ginger has always read my heart to know that if I am insisting that she goes outside, it is for her own health and well-being.  She may not appreciate colder weather over her ideals of warmth, but in addition to her essence of a stubborn streak, her very core is unconditional love.  Her heart does not know hate.  Nor does Kutana’s. 

I was in recent dialogue with someone and our conversation turned to this sentiment.  If you start from a good place in your heart, then even if the conversation you need to have with someone else is a tough conversation to have, you will be honoring the reason your paths have intersected.  You will be the messenger the person needed for that individual to then make a choice in how they wish to respond, learn, and potentially grow.

By “good place in the heart”, I think of things like non-judgment, unconditional listening, compassion, empathy, generosity, gratitude, joy, and kindness.  I have this perspective.  We are souls in human form who are giving our lifetimes to grow in our experiences with these “good place in the heart” things.  We are also given the capacity to fear, to feel anxious, to be frustrated, to hurt, to know anger, to grieve, to know unimaginable loss.   We are given lessons in which we learn such tools as bravery, vulnerability, determination, perseverance, resilience.   And in every choice that we make through every experience we have, we choose to step closer towards conditional empathy or conditional kindness, or closer towards unconditional compassion or unconditional love. 

Where are you at in the steps on your journey?

I hope your path finds you closer to unconditional.

As recipient.

And as giver.

What if others could say of us, I don’t think that person has conditional in their make-up…

Together we are all on a journey called life. We are a little broken and a little shattered inside. Each one of us is aspiring to make it to the end. None is deprived of pain here and we have all suffered in our own ways. I think our journey is all about healing ourselves and healing each other in our own special ways. Let’s just help each other put all those pieces back together and make it to the end more beautifully. Let us help each other survive. ~ Ram Dass

I hold the intention that wellbeing keeps you in safekeep.

Sincerely,

-Christine

My gratitude to Connecting Vets for their support of the power of hope!

https://www.radio.com/connectingvets/news/veterans-share-stories-of-how-dogs-provide-hope-in-new-book

My gratitude to We Are the Mighty for their support of the power of hope!

My gratitude to Southern Living for their support of the power of hope! 

https://www.southernliving.com/news/hope-has-a-cold-nose-service-dogs-military-veterans-ptsd

For an engaging webinar facilitated by Dr. Alan Westfield, with sharing by Dr. Adrian Popa, Michael Ortiz, Taylor Rowell, and me, please click on the link below:  

Listening, Empathy, Awareness & Dignity: LEADership Through Storytelling & Companionship

https://www.gonzaga.edu/school-of-leadership-studies/news-events/leadership-through-storytelling-and-companionship

To purchase Hope Has a Cold Nose:

Amazon:

https://www.amazon.com/s?k=christine+hassing&ref=nb_sb_noss_1

Barnes and Noble:

https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/hope-has-a-cold-nose-christine-hassing/1137781095?ean=9781982255282

Balboa Press:

https://www.balboapress.com/en/bookstore/bookdetails/811622-hope-has-a-cold-nose

or you can contact me: https://christinehassing.com/contact/

For additional impactful and powerful information regarding the healing impact of service dogs, please visit https://www.northwestbattlebuddies.org/a-vision-of-hope/.    

January, 2021 Hope Has a Cold Nose

Dear Hope Has a Cold Nose readers,

Every child is born in the garden of humanity as a flower.  Each flower differs from every other flower.  There are many messages in our society that tell us, even when we’re young people, that there’s something wrong with us and that if we just buy the right product, or look a certain way, or have the right partner, that will fix it.  As grown-ups, we can remind young people that they’re already beautiful as they are; they don’t have to be someone else.  – Thich Nhat Hanh in How to Love. 

I am humbled, honored, and grateful that Hope Has a Cold Nose is being shared to high school students at a local community north of where I live as well as to third grade children in the school district I attended when I was growing up.   Young lives being positively influenced by service for others, wisdom, resilience, and hope exhibited in each of the co-authors’ stories.  

On one of the morning runs with Ginger and Kutana, I was reflecting on this special ripple that is taking place in which the stories of Hope Has a Cold Nose can inspire those who are still at a most impressionable age in comparison to those of us as adults who still form impressions, but who have already banked within ourselves a significant number of imprints that impact how we see and hear. 

Ginger and Kutana have beautiful cold noses.  And.  They have very powerful noses that create moments in which they might go a tad astray on our runs.   Suddenly.   Now with Ginger the only ramification is my voice calling her back from what we affectionally call “chasing the bears”.  Not bears, literally.  Please don’t worry.   Ginger has this routine in the mornings when my husband leaves for work in which she insists she must exit the door before him and bark in all directions of our yard as to ward off anything – or anyone – she is certain is lurking to get my husband if she does not make sure it is safe for him.   After all, that racoon in a tree might just climb down and get her dad!  {smile} My husband and I refer to her gesture as “chasing the bears away”. 

So, if a sudden whiff to Ginger’s nose sends her into a run and or bark mode, she gets called back with an assuring voice that all is safe.  Now Kutana, on the other hand, is the silent one.  No barking.  The only ramification is to my rib cage and a rapid readjustment of my footsteps in the middle of our run.  Why my rib cage?  Kutana and I are joined with a waist leash because, as Kutana’s trainer once told me, she has an almost intuitive like nose.  It can smell things that none of us can see, let alone smell.  And dear K is also very driven when she gets something on her mind.  Translation.  The ears turn off when the determination kicks in.  If she were not leashed with me, she would not hear the hark to come back right away.    

I do have a tiny bit of influence to avoid where these rich aromas are when we are running in mother nature.  I can steer us to certain trails so minimize where the night critters have walked before us.  I also strive to use positive reinforcement.  Good girls.   Good, good girls!  That’s my girls!  I am so proud of you!  The bears, racoons, deer, and owls hear echoing through the woods as they watch two reflective coats lower to the ground and a headlamp running through their homes.   (We typically run before daylight.) 

Ginger conveys her I am? Yay!  Thanks mom.  Okay, I’ll keep doing this with a turned head, smile, and this little footstep dance I cannot begin to describe as she goes into a happy trot.  Kutana, still an eager puppy in learning gives me the hmmm. what?  You want something else? No?  Oh, you mean do what we are doing right here.  Ok, if you say so.  Her tail raised high in pride, she turns her head back around and forward we go on the trail. 

On the flip hand are their responses if they hear No!   In addition to those beautiful cold noses are taste buds for mother nature that I am so grateful I do not have like dogs do!  (smile) If these “discovering” moments happen for what the girls believe is cavier calling to them, Ginger puts her ears back in a way that is a blend of sorry mom and you ruined the potential fun mom.   Kutana hangs her ears down in a way that communicates ooohh, mom is not happy with that little move I just tried to make, I guess I better listen.   

What we say, and how we say it, in response to the moments that are teachable. 

Which is every moment we live.  At least how I choose to believe.

Recently I had the privilege of providing happy birthday wishes through video to a friend’s daughter who was turning thirteen.  Her mom – my friend – had invited a large group of people to post messages on a private social media page so that her daughter would receive a big celebration for this milestone birthday since an in-person celebration was not possible.   My focus in the message was on all the ways this amazing young soul is going to help the world transform.  I have already been witnessing her do so and I am certain she has only just begun to make a positive impact. 

What message are we providing to young lives regarding the pandemic and all that our world has experienced over the past twelve months?  Are we communicating that these fledgling souls have chosen to enter this lifetime when they have so that they can be the change agents for our world’s transformation?   

Or are we focusing them on all that they have lost? 

Are we holding tightly to what was, fearful that because children did not experience life as we did, the future is destined to not be as promising? 

Or are we fostering in youth that the sky is the limit for them and that the old systems that are not working as they did are crumbling so that the youth can create new systems that are calling to be built even better than what we have known or experienced? 

On the journey of writing Hope Has a Cold Nose my path intersected with a veteran who was a peer support specialist for other veterans.   He shared about a research study he had read in which individuals who had struggled significantly with pain, trauma, sorrow, or despair were individuals who had also experienced a traumatic event as a child but had not been able to process that event in a positive healing way.   

All that 2020 held introduced a traumatic event.  

For adults and youth both.

We need to honor the grief.  That is part of the positive healing journey. 

Yet, in what we say, and how we say it, are we fostering positive healing and new beginnings? 

Are we creating hope?

If you want to change the world, you have to change the metaphor – Joseph Campbell

May wellbeing continue to be yours. 

Sincerely,

-Christine

My gratitude to Connecting Vets for their support of the power of hope!

https://www.radio.com/connectingvets/news/veterans-share-stories-of-how-dogs-provide-hope-in-new-book

My gratitude to We Are the Mighty for their support of the power of hope!

My gratitude to Southern Living for their support of the power of hope! 

https://www.southernliving.com/news/hope-has-a-cold-nose-service-dogs-military-veterans-ptsd

For an engaging webinar facilitated by Dr. Alan Westfield, with sharing by Dr. Adrian Popa, Michael Ortiz, Taylor Rowell, and me, please click on the link below:  

Listening, Empathy, Awareness & Dignity: LEADership Through Storytelling & Companionship

https://www.gonzaga.edu/school-of-leadership-studies/news-events/leadership-through-storytelling-and-companionship

To purchase Hope Has a Cold Nose:

Amazon:

https://www.amazon.com/s?k=christine+hassing&ref=nb_sb_noss_1

Barnes and Noble:

https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/hope-has-a-cold-nose-christine-hassing/1137781095?ean=9781982255282

Balboa Press:

https://www.balboapress.com/en/bookstore/bookdetails/811622-hope-has-a-cold-nose

or you can contact me: https://christinehassing.com/contact/

For additional impactful and powerful information regarding the healing impact of service dogs, please visit https://www.northwestbattlebuddies.org/a-vision-of-hope/.    

https://www.hopehasacoldnose.com/,

https://studio.youtube.com/video/VD5a8wnL1sI/edit

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