Inspiration

Articles to inspire authentic living on the topics of resilience, spirituality, and self-growth with touches of storytelling, depth, and humor.

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Alfonsina Betancourt Blog

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Brave Heart
resilience, courage resilience, courage

Brave Heart

I have had a good share of hits, as everyone else, I suppose. It is hard for me to think objectively to determine if I have been strong or nor, but I can assume that yes, strength has been one of my prizes and my only way of salvation.

Today as I reflected in many of my life’s events, I realized that really going through something is not a sign of victory. Sometimes we go through because we are carried away and sometimes out of stubbornness. Real victory, the stuff that transform us into superheroes, is not going through difficulties until we can see them in the rearview mirror.

Real victory is to remain open hearted even when our hearts have been broken.

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Don’t Assume: a Prelude To The (Usually) Right Answers

Don’t Assume: a Prelude To The (Usually) Right Answers

Nothing like being a “why” kind of child to annoy a parent. It is a bottomless well: the more answers you get, the more questions arise. I was that kind of child, and it has taken me hours of therapy and self-help books to understand the effects of that in one’s psyche.

When we are always curious for answers, we are never satisfied with a statement. We need to know where that came from. Why did someone acted that way? Why did we reacted like that? Why that look? Why, why, why….

When I was in my early thirties, I was going through a very difficult time. My head could not get around to understand why someone had hurt me so cruelly. I played different scenarios, tried to put myself in that person’s shoes, questioned if I was in fact the one that was at fault. Through all my years of practicing the “let’s-find-the-reasons” game, I thought that there was always a motive for people’s behavior and even when I did not agree with it, understanding it made it easier to process and let go of any hurt. Was it healthy? I don’t know, but it certainly became a way to understand - and also justify - people’s actions.

While I was in that questioning process, a wise woman taught me a phrase that would become a sort of mantra for me: “don’t fill in the blanks.” It took a lot of repetition until it became second nature. If I did not have all of the absolute information, preferably from its source rather than somebody else’s recount, then I was not going to fill in the black with information I could not prove. I understood that in relationships, as in anything else, we could never take for granted we know the truth or that the other person has understood us unless we talk clearly about it. So, I practiced asking WHY to the people that had me on the dark. (continue)

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The sensibility of numbers
resilience resilience

The sensibility of numbers

Being born an artist is quite a gift. Curiosity is your biggest talent and it is easy to delight in the simplest things because wherever you see there is beauty. There is a certain rawness that comes with it as in order to create artists need to experience, to live, to feel. Yes, I love being an artist with its presents and its challenges. We tend to be boxed into a category of dreamers as if we were disconnected with reality. As in any other profession or lifestyle, that is a generalization and I got proof of it years ago.


When I was about to finish High School, we were asked to take a career aptitude test. My results were somewhat unexpected. There was a tie on two - very different - careers recommended for me: Art and Math. Art was very obvious; Math not as surprising as you would think. The fact was that I love numbers. Math was one class that I always excelled at. I enjoyed solving questions, equations, finding patterns, the fact that there were formulas to solve simple or not so simple problems. Because I had played instruments from a young age, I knew math was interlaced in every musical rhythms and pattern. So, yes, I have always being an artist with a love for numbers, and history has proven that I am not the only one.


Lately, numbers have come to chase me with the force of an axe and I has been forced to deal with the way I relate to them. No, I am not talking about home schooling through the pandemic.

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When The Tide Goes Out…We Learn The Kind of Warrior We Are

When The Tide Goes Out…We Learn The Kind of Warrior We Are

We couldn’t have chosen two more perfect days. The weather was glorious: hot and breezy, clear skies, end-of-July warm water, perfect for one night camping in an island off the Long Island Sound.

I had not been able to swim for two weeks and I was determined to make up for it. Summer is short in New England after all, and the water is not usually that warm for long. So I swam as I had not done in years, up to the middle of the cove and back. I floated, I glided, I felt the delicious water surrounding me, the taste of salt, the heath of the sun setting over the coast, and seeing the reflection of a clear blue sky turning orange over the flat surface of the sea. Once the night set in and the sight of the first starts appeared, I swam again under the moonlight. The water surprisingly warm and the sensation of small fish coming to greet my legs. Growing up on the Caribbean imprints you with a natural draw towards the ocean, I guess. I had been in so many pristine beaches of crystalline, turquoise water and white, powdery sand, but that swim under the moon has been one of the most delicious and surreal experiences of my life

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