March 2008
Monthly Archive
Tue 25 Mar 2008
This post is from my most favorite book on Space Clearing, Sacred Space by my teacher Denise Linn.
There are three basic tenets that are the foundation of all space clearing techniques:
- Everything is composed of constantly changing energy.
- You are not separate from the world around you.
- Everything has consciousness.
“Your home is an evolving being much as you are an evolving being. You home’s Beingness is one that you may communicate with, it provides protection and healing”, Denise Linn. Learning how to communicate with your home can help you to create a life that is balanced and in harmony with life (nature).
The Sacred Spacebook is the basis for the professional Interior Alignment™ certification course and most of the workshops I hold for the general public.
All Rights Reserved. Copyright, Yvette Neshi Lokotz, March 2008.
Fri 21 Mar 2008
I recently collaborated with two other Interior Alignment™ Master Educators, Deborah Redfern and Deb Swingholm regarding our desire to assist all certified Interior Alignment™ practitioners. As educators of Interior Alignment™ we have a special stewardship regarding the ongoing education of current Interior Alignment™ practitioners, current Master Interior Alignment™ Teachers and of course future practitioners and teachers.
Deborah, Deb and I have been spending time researching and learning how to optimize our personal business websites. We teamed up as we all have a passion for research and putting together puzzles. We are not experts in website search optimization, but I think we have tapped into a solid understanding of why website optimization is important and also the how to actually get basic optimization done.
If a feng shui practitioner has a business website, the basic reason for the website is for other people (future clients and students) to be to find you and the kind of services you provide. We all know that the internet is a huge virtual space that takes some skill and self confidence to actually find what you are looking for. By completing very basic website optimization a practitioner’s website ranking is vastly improved. For instance, with some tweaking of meta tags and also title text changes both Deborah and I have moved our Google ranking up from “no where land” to second and third page ranking.
Each of us has placed a document of how to apply very basic optimization ideas on our business websites under Resources. This document is in PDF form. Here is a link to my Resource page: http://www.two-feathers.org/documents/SEO_HowTo.pdf
Another great tool is Google Analytics. This is a free service from Google. They provide a code to track pages of your website so that you can determine if your money and energy is well spent. The statistics will also assist you in seeing how effective your website is by how many people visit your website, what pages are read and what key words they used to start their search that brought them to your website. This is fabulous information to help a practitioner to set clearer intentions for their website.
Another Interior Alignment™ practitioner or teacher may wonder why three Interior Alignment™ Master Educators would want to share such valuable information with possible competitors. The short answer is we believe that we are here to serve and if you are a practicing Interior Alignment™ practitioner and teacher, we know that you made the conscious decision to be of service to others, your clients and students. Personally I believe that competition is an illusion.
Those who are meant to study with me or become a client are drawn to my unique vibration.By sharing the website optimization basic information we are assisting other Interior Alignment practitioners and teachers to become more visible to those who are attracted to their unique vibration.
When we, Interior Alignment practitioners and teachers, come together as an Interior Alignment community which is in service to others, we all prosper including and most importantly all our clients and students also prosper.
All Rights Reserved. Copyright, Yvette Neshi Lokotz, March 2008.
Wed 19 Mar 2008

As we approach a very powerful time of year, I feel the renewed energy of growth and new beginnings. A time of exhilaration as I feel the desire to play hooky and spend time outdoors.
The Spring Equinox marks a balance point of time when energy starts to rise as experienced through tree sap rising and beginning to flow. We also see maple trees being tapped for their sap and we look forward to (okay drool) the maple syrup and candy to made. This time of year we balance an egg on its end which is a visual of the balanced energies on the exact Equinox. The Spring Equinox is a time of balanced male and female energies found in the changing and new beginnings. From a feng shui perspective this can be seen as a balancing of the element of water and the element of fire.
The Spring Equinox comes from the place of the crosswinds on the Medicine Wheel. The north-east direction celebrates the end of winter and the arrival of spring when everything comes back to life and awakens.
The Spirit, wind, of the East is the influencing wind during this time. We can begin to feel the aliveness in the breeze and smell the aroma of Mother Earth as the cycle of rebirth begins. We can feel the faster moving energies that come with the equinoxes.
On the Medicine Wheel, the birth totem for March 21-April 19th is the Falcon. Kenneth Meadows, author of Earth Medicine, writes that Falcon people learn the life lesson of adaptability without compromising their ideals and principles. They spread their wings as a symbol of new ideas and experiences.
Ted Andrews states in Nature Speaksthat the Spring Equinox is a timie to focus on conscious transmutation. I believe this means taking time to become aware of what needs to be changed in your life.
You may consider taking some time to sit in quietness for some time outdoors and consider if there is anything in your life that you would like to transmute, balance, birth as a new project.
May your Spring Equinox bring you many blessings. Neshi
All Rights Reserved.Copyright, Yvette Neshi Lokotz, March 2008.
Sun 16 Mar 2008
I recently wrote a blog article for Where Energy Flows blog regarding creating an altar and space clearing my office cubicle. I thought maybe it would be an interesting read for Between the Beats, if I shared a little bit more of that experience.
I worked in a government building with a grey concrete exterior much like most government buildings built in the 1970′s. The last 4 or 5 months of my employment, I had many mornings where I felt like I was in the movie Joe versus the Volcano starring Tom Hanks and Meg Ryan. In the very beginning of the movie, Tom Hank’s character, Joe, is walking toward a big grey building in which he works. As he gets closer to the building his steps become slower and slower. Joe then pauses for a very long while before he actually enters the building. I know what that actually feels like.
The building I worked in is well known for its possibilities of having the Sick Building Syndrome. I knew that in my training from Interior Alignment™ that I had options to create a sanctuary in my cubicle. My cubicle could be a space that could support me both physically and spiritually.
I took steps to clarify my intention for my cubicle. How did I want to feel when I was there? How could my cubicle support me in my work? Most importantly, how could I be a role model for my co-workers? I wanted to live by Gandhi’s famous quote, “be the change you wish to see in the world.”
As I used feng shui principles in my cubicle such as adding color, placement of bookcases and binders, as well as placement of pictures and altars. I also had to deal with a computer monitor that was situated in a way that had my back to the entrance, doorway, of my cubicle. I placed a small round mirror next to my monitor that allowed me to see the reflection of someone standing behind me at my door. Most of my co-workers thought I was using the mirror as a communication tool for phone calls. You know, people can hear your frown or smile over the phone.
Once I had the feng shui set in my cubicle, I then performed a space clearing ceremony. I went in much earlier than usual. I created a very small and simple altar for the ceremony. Since there was a rule about not having open flames, I still used a candle to symbolize fire, but didn’t light the candle.
I also used a very quiet method of space clearing called the Breath of God. I couldn’t use my drum or bell as it would have been too big and too loud for the space as I was only clearning my cubicle and not the entire office. Since I was not asked to perform a space clearing on the entire space, I could only take responsiblity for my own cubicle.
The results from creating a sacred space in my cubicle is that I had visitors. My co-workers would stop by because it felt good in my cubicle. The best example of how my space supported me and those who came to visit was 9/11.
I was at work that day. I remember our receptionist telling a co-worker and I that she had just heard on the radio that a plane had crashed into the World Trade Center in New York. A short time later, the receptionist came back and told us that there was a second plane that also crashed into the World Trade Center. I remember saying to my co-worker that something was wrong and that it sounded like a terrrorist act.
As the morning wore on and our employer placed a television in our conference room, I could feel the energy shifting within the staff and office. I went to my cubicle to be met by two co-workers sitting in my cube waiting for me. They just wanted to be in my cubicle because they felt safe. At one time I had 6 people in my cuble besides me. At lunch time, I stayed and space cleared my cubicle and reset the energy. I cleared away the released emotions from that morning.
As I look back and remember that time, I know in my heart that my cubicle was an island of comfort and safety during a time of such distress. The intention I set for the energy of my work space is important even now as I work from my home office.
I will write a future blog article about creating an altar for space clearing. Or, if you like, please visit http://www.wherenergyflows.com to read my articles about space clearing and feng shui that I have already written.
Thank you for reading Between the Beats. Many Blessings. Neshi.
All Rights Reserved. Copyright, Yvette Neshi Lokotz, March 2008.
Wed 12 Mar 2008
My family members, my clan, gathers for the naming ceremony for one of our daughters. She is a year old and will not remember this special ceremony in her honor. Her grandfather speaks in his native language, Potawatomi, as he calls to the Creator and to all that the Creator has made. The little girl’s grandfather holds her in his arms as he bestows her Indian name upon her.
As the child is given back to her mother, the child’s grandfather continues with the ceremony. The name he gave to his granddaughter is of the Thunderbird Clan. Within this family’s naming ceremony, ancestor names are carried down to the new generation so that those who have passed are remembered and honored.
I describe my own naming ceremony. I have asked my mother questions on different occasions about that time in our lives. As I grow older, I become curious about the ceremony itself, how my name was selected, what the feast was like, what gifts were given. I received my Indian name at such a young age that the name has become a part of me just as much as my English name and the breath that I take. (more about this in a future blog article)
My full Indian name in Potawatomi is Bneshiqwe. The English translation is Bird Woman. My grandfather, my Misho, shortened my name to the nick name of Neshi. He passed away 28 years ago. After he was gone, I heard my name infrequently. My mother calls me Neshi on rare occasion but generally writes in my birthday cards.
On Monday night, I was one of the 700,00+ attendees of the Oprah and Eckhart Tolle’s New Earth Webinar. As they discussed the ego and labels, my thoughts drifted to our individual names. I also had a passing thought about the nurmerology of our names and how much numerology identifies our physical life. More importantly, I thought about my Indian name and other non-native people who I know who have received a Spirit name.
If I received my Indian name at such a young age that I identify with a clan and totem, according to Mr. Tolle, who I am becomes entangled with the identity of a bird. Once we name or label a physical object we attach to the mental concept rahter than the essence of the object.
Following this train of thought…then, Iam called Neshi, rather than I am Neshi. I really get that concept. Most Native American Nations have a belief system that all things are a live and have a Spirit as we all come from the Creator/Spirit, we are connected to Spirit. This concept of Mr. Tolle’s helps to explain how we honor and respect the life essence of all things. How cool is that?!
Thank you for reading Between the Beats. Migwiitch, Neshi.
All Rights Reserved. Copyright, Yvette Neshi Lokotz, March 2008.
Sun 9 Mar 2008

Feng shui your front door is an invitation to Chi. This statement means thatwhen your front door is pleasing to Chi (Life Force or Vital Force); you are attracting and inviting Chi to your home.
Take a moment and imagine standing across the street from your home. Visualize the front of your home. Focus in on the walk to the front door. What does it look like? If you walked up to your front door what items do you see?
As you do this imagination you are Chi being invited to your front door. Are you welcome and invited in?
According to my training in Interior Alignment™, instinctive feng shui, the architectural front door of a home is the “mouth of chi”. We also have a belief that very thing contains Chi, life force, even items that may seem inanimate objects. So, your home is just as a live as you are. When Chi is invited to your home, it is like your own body receiving an extra boost of energy. When this energy has a smooth and balance flow, it feels great. When this energy moves to quickly and fast, it does not feel so good.
Why is feng shui for your front door important? Well placed items, such as plants and lighting, encourage the flow of Chi to be smooth and balanced. Chi loves beauty. If you have healthy plants, and low voltage lights lighting a meandering path…Chi will flow smoothly as it is led to your front door.
Your front door affects the energy of the entire house and creates a first impression for Chi. Is your front door a pleasing color, is it in good healthy condition, can the door be opened easily and fully?
The ideal front door will be proportionally sized to match the overall size of the house; there is a beautiful water feature in the front of the home; the front yard feels expansive; there is a curved meandering front walk; healthy plants are along the path and near the door; there may be a wind chime near the front door; and the color of the front door matches the overall intention for the home (is your home a quiet contemplative home or is your home party central for friends); lawn ornaments and statuary are scaled to the house and gardens.
Spring is just around the corner. Now is the time to consider what the outside of your front door looks like and ask yourself is Chi is invited to your home. Take a picture of your front door and make a few paper copies. Take the paper copies and draw in where you would like a garden or two. Draw in potted plants and water feature. Play with the possibilities…dream about your ideal front door. Then take action and decided what can be done easily. Decide what will take some time to plan and money to complete.
In this picture of my previous home, we took three years to plan and build the covered front porch. This made the whole home feel much warmer and friendlier. We were also the only family in our neighborhood with a front porch. We met our neighbors as we sat out to read the paper. And, when it was time to move to another home, this porch was the main selling point of that home.
All Rights Reserved, Yvette Neshi Lokotz, March 2008.