Earth Heart Living

Earth Heart Living Maryanne / Heart centred super nanny
Earth mother, walking in the presence.

29/04/2026
Growing with you. What a gift 🥰
27/04/2026

Growing with you. What a gift 🥰

25/04/2026

👊⚡️🫶🏻✌️❤️

25/04/2026

13/04/2026

I was in a terrible motor crash when I was eight. It was violent, sudden, and unforgiving. It took my legs from me. For almost a year, I couldn’t walk. I lived in a wheelchair, dependent, immobile, watching the world move on without me. At that age, when your body is supposed to feel like freedom, mine became something I had to fight just to exist inside. It's a miracle that I walk today.

Back then, though, there was nothing miraculous about it. There was only the stillness, the waiting, the slow, aching reality of a life reduced to what I could reach. I thought the hardest part was the physical loss, not being able to stand, not being able to move, the frustration of being left behind while everything else kept going.

What I didn’t realize then was that I never really processed the accident itself. It happened, and everything immediately became about recovery. There were hospital visits, routines, people helping me physically. I was taken care of in all the visible ways. But no one really sat with me in what had happened. No one slowed down enough to ask, What did that feel like for you? And I didn’t know how to bring it up either. So I didn’t. I just adjusted. I adapted. I kept going.

Years later, when I was finally back on my feet, I thought I had left it all behind me. But there was still an ache I couldn’t explain. Something unresolved that would surface in quiet moments. I wasn’t in pain anymore, not physically. But something in me still felt like it hadn’t moved on.

It was in therapy that it began to make sense. In the middle of trying to explain a feeling I didn’t fully understand, my therapist pointed me to this quote by Gabor Maté. And something clicked.

Because I could finally see it.

It wasn’t just the accident that shaped me. It was the silence that followed it. The way I had to carry the fear, the shock, the confusion on my own. Yes, people helped me heal physically. Yes, I was surrounded. But no one really entered that inner space with me; the part that was trying to make sense of suddenly not being able to walk, of everything changing in an instant. I was alone with it.

And that’s what stayed.

That’s what I had been carrying all those years. Not just the memory of the accident, but the feeling of having to deal with it by myself. Of never quite being given the space to speak it, to feel it fully, to be met in it.

That’s what Gabor Maté means. It’s not just the hurt that leaves a mark — it’s the absence of someone to help you hold it. Because pain, when shared, moves. But pain, when carried alone, settles. It lingers quietly, long after the body has healed.

And maybe that’s why it took so long to understand. Because from the outside, I had recovered. I could walk again. I was “fine.”

But healing isn’t just about getting back on your feet. Sometimes, it’s about finally turning toward the part of you that went through it alone… and letting it be seen.

10/03/2026

Children will inevitably get hurt.

They will fall.
They will feel disappointment.
They will experience fear, frustration, rejection, and loss.

None of us can remove those moments from their lives.

But what shapes a child most deeply is not simply the pain itself —
it’s whether they face it alone.

When a child feels held in the middle of their distress, something important happens.
The experience is shared.
The nervous system settles.
The feeling becomes something that can move through them rather than something that gets trapped inside.

Connection changes the meaning of the moment.

Because pain in the presence of safety is something the mind can integrate.

Pain in isolation is far harder for a child to carry.

And part of that safety is helping children understand what they are feeling.

If they do not yet know how to recognise it, how to feel it, or what to do with it, they cannot be expected to know how to move through it on their own.

These are skills children learn through guidance, language, and connection.

Skills that were never meant to be learned alone. ❤️

Quote Credit: ❣️

Follow & for more

17/02/2026

🎉You’re Invited!🎉

Join us on Thursday, February 26th, 2026, 5.30 PM at the Wester Hailes Library for our 2026 Annual General Meeting!

This is a great opportunity to voice any community matters you may wish to discuss, to learn more about the Trust and our progress on the 36 projects proposed by the Wester Hailes Local Place Plan, and to find out how you can become a member and get more involved moving forward! As always, complimentary childcare and a community meal will be provided. 🍛🤗

Interested? RSVP here! https://forms.gle/1g3y1QNBohuRNaXg7

04/02/2026

Be the light you want to see. 🌱✨⚡️🫶🏻

12/01/2026

Removing barriers for better wellbeing.

29/12/2025

Children naturally share their emotions with the people who feel safe to them.
In the beginning, that person is almost always us —
the parent, the anchor, the one they instinctively reach for
long before they understand why.

They come into the world expecting that we will be the place
where their feelings land softly.
That instinct is their starting point.
They are born assuming we are safe.

What unfolds after that depends on how we respond.

When their feelings are met with calm, curiosity, or presence,
their instinct gets strengthened —
Yes, this is the right person. I can bring my heart here.

But when their emotions are met with criticism, minimisation, fear,
or a lack of emotional availability,
children make a quiet shift.
They don’t stop feeling —
they simply stop bringing those feelings to us.

And that’s the danger we often miss.

When we’re not the safe place,
children turn to peers who aren’t equipped to guide them,
or they turn inward and carry emotions alone
that were never meant to be held without support.
They learn to mask instead of express,
to retreat instead of reach,
to cope instead of connect.

This is why being their safe person matters so deeply.
Not perfectly, not always smoothly —
but consistently enough that they know
their emotions have somewhere to go.

Because when a child discovers that their instinct was right —
that we truly are the person who can hold what they feel —
we don’t just gain their trust for the moment.
We lay the foundation for the kind of connection
they will return to again and again,
long after childhood is over. ❤️

Quote Credit: ❣️

Follow & for more

Address

Edinburgh

Telephone

+447523143340

Website

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when Earth Heart Living posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Contact The Business

Send a message to Earth Heart Living:

Share