Welcome

Jillian Coleman WheelerHello, and welcome. I’m Jillian Coleman Wheeler. I am a mentor, speaker, and creator of Reboot Your Bliss™. I work with individuals and organizations. I offer classes, and speak and write about personal development, mental health, and success in life and work.

I’m so happy you are here. I believe there are no accidents. We draw to ourselves the people and the resources we need when we are ready for them.

What are you longing for right now? I believe that whatever you want, if it is for your highest good and the highest good of all concerned, the Universe wants it for you. All that’s standing in the way is your own ability to receive. It’s time to open your heart to joy and abundance!

Through my writing, I hope to share with you my journey in life, and what I have learned. I have come a long way, from an abusive childhood, through an early marriage and divorce, years of struggle as a single parent, and a debilitating depression that almost took my life. Today that life is filled with deep love, joy and abundance, with family, fun, and personal and professional satisfaction.

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A New Look at Labor Day

Live! Work! Create! The nature of manifestation is that we humans conceive an idea, then work to bring it into physical reality. Today, Labor Day, is the perfect time to notice this process, which expresses our physical, emotional, intellectual and … Read more…

Into the Time Machine

During the last couple of weeks before my 50th high school reunion, my mind was overflowing with memories, and as they came up, I found it impossible not to write about them. In the month since, people keep saying, “Well? … Read more…

Happy Mother’s Day

Being a mother is a pretty complicated undertaking, no matter who you are or how you do it. I woke up this morning thinking about it, and wondering how I could possibly write anything meaningful on the subject in only … Read more…

Graduation

I was something of a small town political hot potato… Once I understood what was happening, I tried everything I could think of to resolve the situation. This was a tragedy in my young life, and as happens in tragedy, I moved that year through disbelief and denial, into bargaining, through anger and despair, and finally into acceptance. On graduation night, I sat in the audience…The consequences of this situation impacted my life in much bigger ways.

Soundtrack 1964

In 1964, I was listening over and over again to Willie Nelson singing I Remember You. It wasn’t like any of the music he’s known for today. He was writing a lot of music in those days for other people, but he was always experimenting. He played an amazing jazz guitar. Soldier Boy was on the radio a lot that year; it perfectly expressed our angst about the war.