Vibes of HOME:

Vibes of HOME: We believe that healing is a personal and sacred journey.

HOME: Healing Ourselves More Everyday Join us for an inspiring gathering of alternative and holistic practitioners, all united by a shared passion for empowering our Pueblo community to thrive! 🌿 Mission Statement for HOME: Healing Ourselves More Everyday 🌿

At HOME, we are a heart-led community of holistic practitioners devoted to helping individuals reconnect with their inner wisdom and emotiona

l well-being—one moment, one breath, one experience at a time. As a mobile and collaborative collective, HOME brings together intuitive guides, energy/reiki workers, shamans, crystal workers, sound bowl practitioners, dream interpreters, oracle card readers, color therapy facilitators, speakers, leaders, guides who serve individually, in pairs, or as a group. Our mission is to hold a compassionate space, offer accessible soul-nourishing tools, and inspire self-discovery so people can continue Healing Ourselves More Everyday—wherever they are.

06/12/2026
06/12/2026

24” Custom Board 🌱

Many people living with chronic illness spend years asking themselves the wrong question.The question often becomes:"Why...
06/06/2026

Many people living with chronic illness spend years asking themselves the wrong question.
The question often becomes:
"Why can't I do what everyone else seems able to do?"
But perhaps the better question is:
"How do I build a life that works with the energy I actually have?"
For many, the challenge is not a lack of motivation, intelligence, desire, or effort. It is the reality of living in a body that changes the rules from day to day.
Most productivity advice assumes stable energy. It assumes that if a person can do something on Monday, they can likely do it again on Tuesday.
Chronic illness rarely works that way.
For many people, energy behaves more like weather than a schedule.
Some days are sunny.
Some days are cloudy.
Some days are thunderstorms.
Some days are blizzards.
No one expects a blizzard to behave like a sunny afternoon, yet many people with chronic illness hold themselves to standards designed for bodies that operate consistently.
Perhaps success is not found in forcing consistency where none exists, but in learning to work with the weather instead of fighting it.
Some people find it helpful to think in terms of energy zones.
On Red Days, success may look like resting, staying hydrated, taking medications, and simply making it through the day.
On Yellow Days, success may be answering one message, watering a plant, journaling for five minutes, or folding a small basket of laundry.
On Green Days, there may be enough energy for work projects, household tasks, social activities, gardening, or pursuing meaningful goals.
In this framework, success is not measured by catching up.
It is measured by adapting.
People living with chronic illness are often not "catching up."
They are surfing changing conditions.
Another layer that is often overlooked is grief.
Chronic illness not only creates physical symptoms.
It can create the ongoing loss of:
• Independence
• Reliability
• Consistency
• Identity
• Contribution
• Plans
• Momentum
Many people associate grief only with death.
Yet chronic illness often creates repeated losses throughout a person's life.
Just as someone adapts to one limitation, another challenge appears.
Just as a new routine begins to work, symptoms shift again.
The result is a form of ongoing grief that is rarely acknowledged.
What appears to others as frustration may actually be heartbreak.
Many people also discover that the problem is not laziness.
More often it is a combination of overwhelm, executive dysfunction, uncertainty, pain avoidance, brain fog, and limited energy resources.
When energy is scarce, the mind naturally asks:
"What if I spend today's energy on the wrong thing?"
And sometimes the answer becomes doing nothing at all.
Not because nothing matters.
Because everything matters.
For some, the answer is not pushing harder.
For others, the answer is not giving up.
Instead, it may be creating goals small enough to fit within reality.
Not "build the business."
Not "clean the house."
Not "finish the project."
Simply:
"Touch it."
Open the document.
Write one sentence.
Answer one email.
Spend ten minutes on something meaningful.
Then stop if necessary.
Progress does not always arrive in large visible steps.
Sometimes it arrives in tiny acts repeated whenever the weather allows.
Perhaps one of the most important lessons chronic illness teaches is that a person's worth is not determined by their productivity.
A difficult day is not a moral failure.
A week spent recovering is not laziness.
A season of reduced capacity does not erase a lifetime of value.
For many people, the journey becomes less about returning to who they once were and more about learning who they are now.
Not the person they were before the illness.
Not the person they are on their best day.
But the real person living in the body they have today.
And that person deserves goals, expectations, support systems, and dreams that are built for reality rather than comparison.
The challenge is not learning how to live someone else's life.
The challenge is learning how to live well within the life that is actually available.
Elizabeth Ann
Creator, educator, and Intuitive Guide of Vibes of HOME: Color & Convo LLC
Vibes of HOME: Color & Convo LLC

Many people living with chronic illness spend years asking themselves the wrong question.

The question often becomes:
"Why can't I do what everyone else seems able to do?"

But perhaps the better question is:
"How do I build a life that works with the energy I actually have?"

For many, the challenge is not a lack of motivation, intelligence, desire, or effort. It is the reality of living in a body that changes the rules from day to day.

Most productivity advice assumes stable energy. It assumes that if a person can do something on Monday, they can likely do it again on Tuesday.

Chronic illness rarely works that way.

For many people, energy behaves more like weather than a schedule.

Some days are sunny.

Some days are cloudy.

Some days are thunderstorms.

Some days are blizzards.

No one expects a blizzard to behave like a sunny afternoon, yet many people with chronic illness hold themselves to standards designed for bodies that operate consistently.

Perhaps success is not found in forcing consistency where none exists, but in learning to work with the weather instead of fighting it.

Some people find it helpful to think in terms of energy zones.

On Red Days, success may look like resting, staying hydrated, taking medications, and simply making it through the day.

On Yellow Days, success may be answering one message, watering a plant, journaling for five minutes, or folding a small basket of laundry.

On Green Days, there may be enough energy for work projects, household tasks, social activities, gardening, or pursuing meaningful goals.

In this framework, success is not measured by catching up.

It is measured by adapting.
People living with chronic illness are often not "catching up."
They are surfing changing conditions.

Another layer that is often overlooked is grief.

Chronic illness not only creates physical symptoms.
It can create the ongoing loss of:

• Independence
• Reliability
• Consistency
• Identity
• Contribution
• Plans
• Momentum

Many people associate grief only with death.

Yet chronic illness often creates repeated losses throughout a person's life.
Just as someone adapts to one limitation, another challenge appears.
Just as a new routine begins to work, symptoms shift again.
The result is a form of ongoing grief that is rarely acknowledged.
What appears to others as frustration may actually be heartbreak.

Many people also discover that the problem is not laziness.

More often it is a combination of overwhelm, executive dysfunction, uncertainty, pain avoidance, brain fog, and limited energy resources.

When energy is scarce, the mind naturally asks:
"What if I spend today's energy on the wrong thing?"

And sometimes the answer becomes doing nothing at all.
Not because nothing matters.

Because everything matters.

For some, the answer is not pushing harder.
For others, the answer is not giving up.

Instead, it may be creating goals small enough to fit within reality.

Not "build the business."
Not "clean the house."
Not "finish the project."

Simply:

"Touch it."
Open the document.
Write one sentence.
Answer one email.
Spend ten minutes on something meaningful.

Then stop if necessary.

Progress does not always arrive in large visible steps.
Sometimes it arrives in tiny acts repeated whenever the weather allows.

Perhaps one of the most important lessons chronic illness teaches is that a person's worth is not determined by their productivity.

A difficult day is not a moral failure.
A week spent recovering is not laziness.
A season of reduced capacity does not erase a lifetime of value.

For many people, the journey becomes less about returning to who they once were and more about learning who they are now.

Not the person they were before the illness.
Not the person they are on their best day.
But the real person living in the body they have today.

And that person deserves goals, expectations, support systems, and dreams that are built for reality rather than comparison.

The challenge is not learning how to live someone else's life.

The challenge is learning how to live well within the life that is actually available.

Elizabeth Ann
Creator, educator, and Intuitive Guide of Vibes of HOME: Color & Convo LLC
Vibes of HOME: Color & Convo LLC

Many people living with chronic illness spend years asking themselves the wrong question.The question often becomes:"Why...
06/06/2026

Many people living with chronic illness spend years asking themselves the wrong question.

The question often becomes:
"Why can't I do what everyone else seems able to do?"

But perhaps the better question is:
"How do I build a life that works with the energy I actually have?"

For many, the challenge is not a lack of motivation, intelligence, desire, or effort. It is the reality of living in a body that changes the rules from day to day.

Most productivity advice assumes stable energy. It assumes that if a person can do something on Monday, they can likely do it again on Tuesday.

Chronic illness rarely works that way.

For many people, energy behaves more like weather than a schedule.

Some days are sunny.

Some days are cloudy.

Some days are thunderstorms.

Some days are blizzards.

No one expects a blizzard to behave like a sunny afternoon, yet many people with chronic illness hold themselves to standards designed for bodies that operate consistently.

Perhaps success is not found in forcing consistency where none exists, but in learning to work with the weather instead of fighting it.

Some people find it helpful to think in terms of energy zones.

On Red Days, success may look like resting, staying hydrated, taking medications, and simply making it through the day.

On Yellow Days, success may be answering one message, watering a plant, journaling for five minutes, or folding a small basket of laundry.

On Green Days, there may be enough energy for work projects, household tasks, social activities, gardening, or pursuing meaningful goals.

In this framework, success is not measured by catching up.

It is measured by adapting.
People living with chronic illness are often not "catching up."
They are surfing changing conditions.

Another layer that is often overlooked is grief.

Chronic illness not only creates physical symptoms.
It can create the ongoing loss of:

• Independence
• Reliability
• Consistency
• Identity
• Contribution
• Plans
• Momentum

Many people associate grief only with death.

Yet chronic illness often creates repeated losses throughout a person's life.
Just as someone adapts to one limitation, another challenge appears.
Just as a new routine begins to work, symptoms shift again.
The result is a form of ongoing grief that is rarely acknowledged.
What appears to others as frustration may actually be heartbreak.

Many people also discover that the problem is not laziness.

More often it is a combination of overwhelm, executive dysfunction, uncertainty, pain avoidance, brain fog, and limited energy resources.

When energy is scarce, the mind naturally asks:
"What if I spend today's energy on the wrong thing?"

And sometimes the answer becomes doing nothing at all.
Not because nothing matters.

Because everything matters.

For some, the answer is not pushing harder.
For others, the answer is not giving up.

Instead, it may be creating goals small enough to fit within reality.

Not "build the business."
Not "clean the house."
Not "finish the project."

Simply:

"Touch it."
Open the document.
Write one sentence.
Answer one email.
Spend ten minutes on something meaningful.

Then stop if necessary.

Progress does not always arrive in large visible steps.
Sometimes it arrives in tiny acts repeated whenever the weather allows.

Perhaps one of the most important lessons chronic illness teaches is that a person's worth is not determined by their productivity.

A difficult day is not a moral failure.
A week spent recovering is not laziness.
A season of reduced capacity does not erase a lifetime of value.

For many people, the journey becomes less about returning to who they once were and more about learning who they are now.

Not the person they were before the illness.
Not the person they are on their best day.
But the real person living in the body they have today.

And that person deserves goals, expectations, support systems, and dreams that are built for reality rather than comparison.

The challenge is not learning how to live someone else's life.

The challenge is learning how to live well within the life that is actually available.

Elizabeth Ann
Creator, educator, and Intuitive Guide of Vibes of HOME: Color & Convo LLC
Vibes of HOME: Color & Convo LLC

Both "Spoon Theory" and "Fork Theory" are popular metaphors used in the disability, chronic illness, and neurodivergent ...
06/04/2026

Both "Spoon Theory" and "Fork Theory" are popular metaphors used in the disability, chronic illness, and neurodivergent communities to explain invisible energy and stress levels.
While Spoon Theory measures your internal energy, Fork Theory measures your external stress tolerance.


Spoon Theory: Internal Energy. The Concept: Created by Christine Miserandino, this theory uses spoons to represent your physical and mental energy. You start the day with a set number of spoons, and every daily task (showering, working, socializing) costs one or more spoons.
The Limit: Once your spoons are gone, you cannot perform any more tasks without crashing. Spoons are generally finite; running out means you are physically and mentally drained. Best used for: Visualizing and rationing physical energy, pacing yourself, and explaining to others why you have limited capacity to get through a to-do list.

Fork Theory: External Stress Tolerance. The Concept: Conceived by blogger Jen Rose, this theory plays on the phrase, "Stick a fork in me, I'm done."
Instead of energy, forks represent the maximum amount of "nonsense" or sensory/emotional stress you can handle. The Limit: Everyone has a "fork limit." You might be able to tolerate one or two minor stressors (a small fork), but eventually, one more minor inconvenience—like an itchy clothing tag or a spilled drink—will push you to your breaking point and cause a meltdown, shutdown, or burnout. Best used for: Identifying environmental stressors, sensory overload, and emotional hurdles. It highlights that breakdowns often aren't caused by one giant issue, but by the accumulation of many small stressors piling up.

Summary: The Key Differences
Spoon Theory = How much fuel do I have in the tank? (Internal, depleting)
Fork Theory = How much pressure/stress can I endure today? (External, accumulating)Sometimes, the two are combined into "Spork Theory," meaning your low energy (no spoons) makes you far more susceptible to sensory and emotional triggers (too many forks).

Elizabeth Ann
Creator and Intuitive Guide of Color & Convo LLC
Vibes of HOME: Color & Convo LLC

https://www.google.com/search?q=spoon+theory+vs+fork+theory&rlz=1C1VDKB_enUS1070US1070&oq=spoon+theory+vs&gs_lcrp=EgZjaHJvbWUqBwgBEAAYgAQyBggAEEUYOTIHCAEQABiABDIICAIQABgWGB4yCAgDEAAYFhgeMggIBBAAGBYYHjIKCAUQABgKGBYYHjIICAYQABgWGB4yCAgHEAAYFhgeMggICBAAGBYYHjIICAkQABgWGB7SAQkxNzg1MmowajeoAgCwAgA&sourceid=chrome&ie=UTF-8

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