5 Overlooked Ways Women Show Their Strength

Women have long been labeled as the “weaker sex,” and are constantly battling against this laughable stereotype. Naturally, our weakness is determined in comparison to men’s apparent strength, which has somehow become the only yardstick for measuring perseverance and power. But strength is much more than heaving heavy objects or crushing corporate competition. If we expand our definition of strength, we quickly discover that women are as strong—if not stronger—than their male counterparts. Here are five feats of strength that women perform on the regular:

 

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What I've Learned After Launching My New Book – Blog Post

It's been an absolute whirlwind of activity since my new book, Wounded Warrior, Wounded Wife, was released on October 15! The book has already gotten a tremendously positive response from readers and reviewers alike, and I'm so grateful for everyone's support.

Even though it has only been a couple of weeks, I feel I've learned so much from this transformative process.

I've learned that the wives of wounded warriors are rallying behind this book. At a book signing at Bay Books in Coronado, I sold 100 copies in a single night! Many of them to spouses of veterans who live in my hometown and surrounding areas. It was humbling and inspiring to speak with them and hear their supportive words. Wounded Warrior, Wounded Wife is currently ranked #27 in Amazon's Military Families topic, and I'm thrilled to know that it is being read by the spouses of injured veterans all over the country.

I've learned that these stories resonate with caregivers of all kinds, not just spouses to injured veterans. Speaking with readers and reading their reviews on Amazon has taught me that all caregivers yearn to be recognized and praised for their tireless work. My book shares anecdotes and offers advice that will support everyone who engages in care-giving, from parents of special needs children to anyone looking after their own aging parents. It's gratifying to see that others are recognizing this, too!

I've learned that my passion for this topic and desire to help this community is just growing stronger. I won't lie: Researching and writing this book was a long and sometimes exhausting process. But now that it's out in the world, I find myself thoroughly invigorated. I'm excited to do even more to support wounded warriors' wives in every way that I can.

With that in mind, I'm looking forward to SPA Day on November 6 – an event that is now in its ninth year! – and connecting with another amazing group of women.

And I'm continuing to spread the word about Wounded Warrior, Wounded Wife through press appearances all over the country and a handful of in-person bookstore events. Take a peek below to see if I'll be visiting your hometown, and for a few nationally broadcast interviews you can tune into!

BARBARA MCNALLY PRESS AND BOOKSTORE APPEARANCES

Friday, November 4

11:00 p.m. EST
Westwood One Radio Network: “The Jim Bohannon Show
(Nationally syndicated to 500 stations!)

 

Thursday, November 10

Around 8:30 a.m. EST
Virginia This Morning,” Richmond, VA
WTVR-TV (CBS Affiliate)

3:30 p.m. CST
Wisconsin Public Radio, “Central Time” with Rob Ferrett and Veronica Rueckert
This show is nationally syndicated throughout the Midwest

6:30 p.m. EST
Fountain Bookstore, Richmond, VA
Book signing event! Hope to see you there!

 

Friday, November 11

Around 8:30 a.m. EST
Great Day Washington,” Washington, D.C.
WUSA-TV (CBS Affiliate)

10:30 a.m. EST
Sirius XM Radio “The Maggie Linton Show

 

5 Facts You Didn’t Know About Women in the Military

Remember back in 2013 when former Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta lifted the ban on women in frontline combat positions? It made major headlines and seemed like a huge breakthrough, right? But what we forgot back then—and tend to forget ongoing—is that women have ALWAYS played a major role in wars, combat, and military service. Ancient warrior women from cultures the world over fought alongside men. Celtic warriors like Boudicca and Grace O’Malley, along with more well-known historic figures including Helen of Troy, Joan of Arc, Lysistrata, and Cleopatra were all instrumental in planning and executing wars on behalf of their home nations. Here in America, however, women were relegated to non-combat roles from the Revolutionary War right up until 2013. So it makes sense that we’d be surprised when they were finally welcomed back to the front lines. And since women warriors are still overlooked much of the time, here are some fascinating facts about how women have contributed to—and been affected by—military service over the decades:

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SPA DAY! - Last Chance to Apply!

SUNDAY November 6th, 2016
10:00 A.M. TO 3:00 P.M.

 

A DAY TO HONOR & THANK OUR UNSUNG HEROES, CAREGIVERS OF WOUNDED WARRIORS.

Spa Day gives women the opportunity to enjoy being a woman, bond with other women going through similar transitions, focus on their own care, and refresh and recharge. Spa Day includes massages, swim & sauna, guest speakers and lunch by the pool. To register online and place your name in the drawing for a massage simply click here to submit your Name, Address, Phone Number and a brief message of your life as a caregiver & what you have found helpful to relax and rejuvenate amidst your challenges.

The drawing will be held October 18th and if chosen you will be informed by phone/email by October 21st! Location: Hotel Del Coronado 1500 Orange Ave. Coronado, CA 92118 Lunch will be provided.

ONLY 24 SPOTS AVAILABLE – FIRST TIME ATTENDEES ONLY RSVP By: October 17, 2016

Questions call: (858) 268-4432
SPONSORED BY: BarbaraMcNally Foundation AND Southern Caregiver Resource Center/Operation Family Caregiver

REST RELAX REJUVENATE

4 Misconceptions About Wounded Warriors’ Spouses … and How We Can Help

We’re less than a month away from Veteran’s Day, which means that our brave servicemen and women are getting slightly more attention, affection, and praise from the general public than usual. And that’s a good thing. The people who fight in our armed forces are everyday heroes. They deserve to be honored for their sacrifices and acknowledged for their courage, especially if they’ve returned from combat with life-altering wounds. Know who else deserves our admiration and applause?

The spouses of our wounded veterans. Many Americans will only think about military servicepeople on the holidays that honor them, or when news footage of war-torn countries flashes by. But how often do we think about the wives, husbands, and families that support our injured fighters? Not often enough. And when we do, we may land upon one of these common misconceptions:

 

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Book Launch and Reception October 20th: Bay Books, Coronado, CA

 

Please Join

Barbara McNally
at a
Launch & Reception for Her Newly Released Book

Thursday, October 20th

5:00 p.m. to 6:30 p.m.
 

Bay Books
1029 Orange Avenue, Coronado, CA 619-435-0070

 

Wine and appetizers will be served

Barbara’s proceeds to benefit Coronado Hospital Foundation

Wounded Warrior, Wounded Wife provides much needed insight into the lives of our military heroes and their families. Through these stories we learn how we can begin to create a healing environment through caring, compassion, community support and love for one another.”

- Susan Stone, CEO Sharp Coronado Hospital

Book Signing Sunday, October 16th: Warwick’s, La Jolla, CA

Please Join

Barbara McNally

for a

 Meet & Greet Book Signing of her Newly Released Book

 

Sunday, October 16th

Noon to 2:00 p.m.

Warwick’s

7812 Girard Avenue

La Jolla, CA

858-454-0347

Barbara’s proceeds to benefit Soroptimist International of La Jolla

“Our club’s three-year focus is dedicated to supporting women in the military, active duty and separated from service. Wounded Warrior, Wounded Wife gives us a thoughtful look at the various ways women are affected by military service. We look forward to learning how we can be of support to these heroic women through Barbara’s book.”

- Bonnie Mendenhall, Past President, Soroptimist International of La Jolla

www.barbaramcnally.com

Essential Archetypes: What Does it Mean to Be a Mother?

Writing a memoir can seem like an egocentric act; It takes guts and confidence to insist that your life story is one worth telling. But for me, processing and describing my own experiences crystalized my desire to help and support other women. After publishing Unbridled: A Memoir, I felt compelled to establish a foundation to help women from all walks of life live fully and authentically by expressing each of the four feminine dimensions I had explored on my personal journey: Mother, lover, warrior, and sage. My hope is that by naming my foundation for those four archetypes, I've given it a near- universal resonance. All women may not identify with all four, but nearly all of us feel drawn to at least one.

Over the years, I've traveled around the country and worked with women from a variety of backgrounds and coping with the gamut of challenges. They've taught me that these archetypes are even more complex and multifaceted than I'd realized. So I'd like to explore them one by one with you.

Let's start with the Mother.

The strength of motherhood is greater than natural laws.
— Barbara Kingsolver

 

Motherhood is an experience that has been shared by billions of women, and yet is entirely unique for each. Every conception, every pregnancy, every birth, and every childhood is different. And I don't just mean that individual mothers have varied experiences, though that is true, too. Mothers who have borne multiple children will tell you that every one of them was utterly singular, different, and memorable.

And being a mother means so much more than merely bearing and caring for your offspring. It means agreeing to walk around in the world with your heart outside your own body, carried in pieces by each of your children. It means delighting in their successes and suffering alongside them. It means biting your tongue when you long to lay down essential wisdom so that your kids can learn for themselves. It means feeling the love in your heart expand exponentially when your children have their own children.

But the Mother archetype is about more than children, too. Motherhood and mothering take many forms. 

Caregiving of any kind is a form of mothering. As I've explored in my upcoming book, Wounded Warrior, Wounded Wife, many spouses of injured veterans feel a type of mothering energy when they choose to help their loved ones heal. My own experiences as a physical therapist and conversations I've had with other healthcare workers reinforce this idea. When you tend to the needs of another, selflessly and lovingly, you are channeling the Mother archetype.

Mother is a verb, not a noun.
— Proverb

Nobel Prize-winning author Pearl Buck was committed to another facet of the mother role. From the 1930s until her death in 1973, Buck devoted herself to the global needs of unwanted children. Having grown up in China, she was outraged that the existing adoption services considered Asian and mixed-race children “unadoptable.” So she founded Welcome House, Inc., the first international/interracial adoption agency. Buck herself adopted mixed-race children, and Welcome House has found homes—and mothers—for thousands of children who desperately needed loving families.

And a less literal type of mothering can be found in backyards and gardens everywhere. The earth may not be a child, but it is an entity than needs attention, nourishment, and care. Flowers and plants, pets and wild animals, the natural resources we use, every aspect of Mother Nature can draw mothering energy from women everywhere.

The Mother archetype may seem like it only applies to women with children, but in reality it is an attribute present in us all. Nurturing, selflessness, and caregiving are all traits we access at certain times and under certain circumstances. When we tend to injured loved ones, our blossoming gardens, children in need, our pets, or even ourselves, we are connecting with the universal Mother.

A mother is the truest friend we have, when trials heavy and sudden fall upon us; when adversity takes the place of prosperity; when friends desert us; when trouble thickens around us, still will she cling to us, and endeavor by her kind precepts and counsels to dissipate the clouds of darkness, and cause peace to return to our hearts.
— Washington Irving​

SPA DAY! - Apply Today!

SUNDAY November 6th, 2016
10:00 A.M. TO 3:00 P.M.

 

A DAY TO HONOR & THANK OUR UNSUNG HEROES, CAREGIVERS OF WOUNDED WARRIORS.

Spa Day gives women the opportunity to enjoy being a woman, bond with other women going through similar transitions, focus on their own care, and refresh and recharge. Spa Day includes massages, swim & sauna, guest speakers and lunch by the pool. To register online and place your name in the drawing for a massage simply click here to submit your Name, Address, Phone Number and a brief message of your life as a caregiver & what you have found helpful to relax and rejuvenate amidst your challenges.

The drawing will be held October 18th and if chosen you will be informed by phone/email by October 21st! Location: Hotel Del Coronado 1500 Orange Ave. Coronado, CA 92118 Lunch will be provided.

ONLY 24 SPOTS AVAILABLE – FIRST TIME ATTENDEES ONLY RSVP By: October 17, 2016

Questions call: (858) 268-4432
SPONSORED BY: BarbaraMcNally Foundation AND Southern Caregiver Resource Center/Operation Family Caregiver

REST RELAX REJUVENATE

The Importance of Authoring Your Own Life

There is a Native American parable about a grandfather who says, “I feel as if I have two wolves fighting in my heart. One wolf is the vengeful, angry one. The other wolf is the loving, compassionate one.” When asked which wolf will win the fight in his heart, the old man replies, “The one I feed.

How do we learn to 'feed' the stories that heal?

It's not something we think about often, is it? The notion that some stories we've told ourselves for decades may be doing us more harm than good. Or that changing our perspective on events from our own pasts is not only possible, but may help us heal decades-old wounds. We think of our personal histories as being set in stone, unchangeable, in the past and therefore out of reach. But this is not so. Because history is rooted in memory and shaped by those who recall it.

Crack open a German history book to the section on World War II, it's likely to highlight and emphasize VERY different events than an American or British or Japanese history book. Not becausehistorians are lying or mistaken, but because each culture has its own, specific memory of that long and brutal war. And each set of historians was tasked with recalling the war in a way that is unshakably connected to their own native culture, each group retells the war's events from the perspective of their home country. It's all history, and it's all valid … but very distinct versions are created in each telling.

And this is good news for individuals, too, because it means that the way we remember past events may be more influential and important than the events themselves. How we frame and recall pivotal experiences may be more important than what “really happened” based on our memories or photographs. Which means that painful, traumatic, or infuriating events that have plagued us for ages can be re-cast and reconstructed to be meaningful in more positive ways.

You've probably gone on vacation a time or two in your life, right? And while you were away, a few things may have gone haywire: Your luggage got lost, you caught a nasty cold, the museum you were dying to visit was closed for renovation. At the time, you were frustrated and enraged … but what happened when you discussed the trip with friends and coworkers three weeks after you'd returned? In all likelihood, you “retouched” your memories to highlight the good and omit the bad. (I've done it myself for virtually every trip I've taken!) And while this may seem dishonest on the surface, it's actually a brilliant tactic. Because it enables you to let go of the minor inconveniences and celebrate the joys. Focusing on what you loved about your trip crystalizes it as a positive experience in your mind and memory.

Our brains do this naturally with some experiences—like vacations—but others need a bit of help. If you are aware of certain relationships, experiences, or lessons from your past that have been perpetual thorns in your side, the easiest way to re-cast them is to do some focused journaling. You can quite literally rewrite your own personal history, tell stories about your past in ways that are healing and transformative. By focusing on lessons learned, positive feelings experienced, and strengths gained, even situations that once seemed utterly catastrophic can soften into significant but beneficial events. And by taking control of your own internal narrative—by authoring your own life and choosing how it is remembered—you reclaim a huge amount of personal power. Staggering amounts of healing can take place if you're willing to dive into your past through intentional, regular journaling. You can become your own historian, shaping each recollection of your life's journey and rewriting it with care. You can gently “retouch” memories so that they resonate with wisdom and reinforce self-knowledge. This isn't dishonesty, it's separating wheat from chaff: Taking what is good and useful, and leaving behind the dead weight.

I encourage you to feed the stories that heal. What story are you living? How do you choose to remember your story?”

When you make yourself the author of your own life, you can answer those questions with confidence, clarity, and control. Shape the story you are living, and watch how your re-cast past can fuel a limitless future.