The Questions Coaches Say You Need To Be Asking Yourself

Leigh Newman writes:

Ellie Gordon, a personal and executive life coach, helps us figure out what we really need to be thinking about when we’re looking for lasting, hard-to-make change.

1. Can I Replace The Word ‘Afraid’ With The Word ‘Alert’?
“An artist client recently introduced me to this question,” says Gordon, “and it quickly proved effective at dealing with fear.” Fear, as most of us know, is the biggest obstacle to change. Sometimes our fears are authentic (“My husband is going to leave me because he’s having an affair!”) and sometimes they are inauthentic (“My house is going to blow down even though it’s made out of brick, I have a new roof, and the wind isn’t blowing!”). Either way, we usually try to dismiss our exclamation-pointed feelings as silly, ignore them altogether or blow them up to such a hellacious magnitude that we can’t move, breathe, sleep or… well… live. Continue reading “The Questions Coaches Say You Need To Be Asking Yourself”

Never let your job prevent your passions

6910976_460s_v19GAG.com Site Feed

via Never let your job prevent your passions.

How to Practice Radical Acceptance

Kristin Barton Cuthriell got me started with her post this morning and I can’t let this thought go. Here, an eHow contributor give instructions on how to practice radical acceptance:

Radical acceptance is the practice of accepting life on its own terms and finding effective strategies to cope with whatever is happening. It doesn’t mean being passive, but accepting “what is” with the understanding that you have the power of choice. Practicing radical acceptance is a choice that can ease stress and depression and enhance your overall quality of life.

Get the instructions here: How to Practice Radical Acceptance | eHow.com.

Self-esteem via Like button :-)

Click image to enlarge…

The Joy of Tech comic… self-esteem via Like button.

Happy Canada Day!


Number 26? You read jokes from a Palm Pilot in a monotone at the dinner table. via Happy Canada Day!.

Through people like Ron Tite, Carrie Klassen and Gemma Stone I’ve met and worked with so many lovely Canadians. Happy Canada Day to you all!

Work and recovery

Melody Beattie writes this about work:

Just as we have relationship histories, most of us have work histories.

Just as we have a present circumstance to accept and deal with in our relationship life, we have a present circumstance to accept and deal with in our work life.

Just as we develop a healthy attitude toward our relationship history – one that will help us learn and move forward – we can develop a healthy attitude toward our work history.

I have worked many jobs in my life, since I was eleven years old. Just as I have learned many things about myself through my relationships, I have learned many lessons through my work. Often, these lessons run parallel to the lessons I’m learning in other areas of my life.

I have worked at jobs I hated but was temporarily dependent on. I have gotten stuck in jobs because I was afraid to strike out on my own and find my next set of circumstances.

I have been in some jobs to develop skills. Sometimes, I didn’t realize I was developing those skills until later on when they become an important part of the career of my choice.

I have worked at jobs where I felt victimized, where I gave and gave and received nothing in return. I have been in relationships where I manufactured similar feelings.

I have worked at some jobs that have taught me what I absolutely didn’t want; others sparked in me an idea of what I really did want and deserve in my career.

Some of my jobs have helped me develop character; others have helped me fine tune skills. They have all been a place to practice recovery behaviors.

Just as I have had to deal with my feelings and messages about myself in relationships, I have had to deal with my feelings and messages about myself, and what I believed I deserved at work.

I have been through two major career changes in my life. I learned that neither career was a mistake and no job was wasted time. I have learned something from each job, and my work history has helped create who I am.

I learned something else: there was a Plan, and I was being led. The more I trusted my instincts, what I wanted, and what felt right, the more I felt that I was being led.

The more I refused to lose my soul to a job and worked at it because I wanted to and not for the paycheck, the less victimized I felt by any career, even those jobs that paid a meager salary. The more I set goals and took responsibility for achieving the career I wanted, the more I could decide whether a particular job fit into that scheme of things. I could understand why I was working at a particular job and how that was going to benefit me.

There are times I have even panicked at work and about where I was in my employment history. Panic never helped. Trust and working my program did.

There were times I looked around and wondered why I was where I was. There were times people thought I should be someplace different. But when I looked into myself and at God, I knew I was in the right place, for the moment.

There were times I have had to quit a job and walk away in order to be true to myself. Sometimes, that was frightening. Sometimes, I felt like a failure. But I learned this: If I was working my program and true to myself, I never had to fear where I was being led.

There have been times I couldn’t survive on the small amount of money I was receiving. Instead of bringing that issue to a particular employer and making it his or her fault, I have had to learn to bring the issue to my Higher Power and myself. I’ve learned I’m responsible for setting my boundaries and establishing what I believe I deserve. I’ve also learned God, not a particular employer, is my source of guidance.

I’ve learned that I’m not stuck or trapped in a job no more than I am in a relationship. I have choices. I may not be able to see them clearly right now, but I do have choices. I’ve learned that if I really want to take care of myself in a particular way on a job, I will do that. And if I really want to be victimized by a job, I will allow that to happen too.

I am responsible for my choices, and I have choices.

Above all else, I’ve learned to accept and trust my present circumstances at work. That does not mean to submit; it does not mean to forego boundaries. It means to trust, accept, then take care of myself the best I’m able to on any given day.

God, help me bring my recovery behaviors to my career affairs.” via Thought for the Day — Hazelden.

Honorary Canadian, eh?

e1evation, llc is pleased to have been chosen to design the new blogging home of DX3 Canada — the place where Canadian business gets digital. Click the image to go to the site…

DX3 Digest - Where Canadian business gets digital!

Challenge: Finish the Sentence: “I am __________ .

I AMGood stuff from Positively Positive this morning…

Who would you be be if nobody told you who you were?

Holy Sweet Downward Dog, I don’t know the answer. I don’t know who I’d be.

At that time the question blew me right out my seat.

I came back to my seat fully inhabited as somebody else.

You mean I get to decide who I am? I get to say who I am in the world rather than simply letting someone tell me?

What the what?

For a long time I let the people around me dictate who I was. Sure, I was dealing with depression but the constant reminder that I should smile more, that I was so sad all the time actually had the effect of keeping me in that space. So I decided that was who I was. Sad and depressed.

And that was that about that.

I also have a severe hearing problem and before people knew that important fact they would think I was an airhead or just very checked out. You kind of start to believe it after a while. I’m just a dingbat. I’m just an airhead.

Enough people tell you what and who you are and—what do you know?—you start to decide it’s the truth! You start to accept that’s just the way the cookie crumbles.

Source: Challenge: Finish the Sentence: “I am __________ .” « Positively Positive

The author, Jennifer Pastiloff goes on to say…

You get to decide as many times as you like just who you are. Moment to moment. Breath to breath.

I was a waitress at the same place for thirteen years. Half-heartedly pretending to be an actress. Now I am a yoga teacher (or joyologist as I like to say) and a writer and motivational speaker. No pretending or half-heartedness.

And guess what else? I decided that I am not an airhead, I simply CAN’T HEAR!
Despite what the world told me about my character and who I was. I chose differently.

As I say in my poem “How To Make A Lifeyou get to decide over and over, as many times as you like , just who you are.

I lead an exercise in my workshops and retreats where I have people finish the sentence I am _____.

You cannot finish the sentence with: I am fat, I am broke, I am tired , hungry, bored, etc.

Let your sentence be something powerful and authentic. Something that you truly believe you are, despite all the buts and ifs.

After all, this is your life sentence. Literally.

For example: if you’ve thought of yourself as just a mom for years (and I know many who have thought themselves that even though the “just” makes me cringe), especially if you have done that, this exercise is profound.

You are the one making the rules.

You get to finish your I am-ness with whatever you like.

Why not? You are the creator of your world.

So here’s who I am. At least today: I am a healer. I am a writer. I am inspired. I am inspiring. I am powerful.

But most of all: I am love.

I lead my Manifestation retreats and workshops all around the world where I provide a safe space for people to connect to the truth of who they really are.

One exercise I ask people to do is to say their “I am-ness” aloud and then pick someone in the room as a partner. They then share their “I am-ness” before looking in their partner’s eyes for three minutes straight, without saying a word.

(It’s intense. Try it with someone.)

Some people weep. Some laugh. Some want to crawl out of their skin and beat the sh*t out of me.

But all know that the person looking in their eyes sees them exactly as who they said they were.

Who are you?

Be brave.

I dare you.

Today’s Challenge is the question: Who Would You be if Nobody Told You who you were?

Add your response below in a comment.  Finish the sentence I am ________.

Fill it in with something powerful and inspiring.

Fill it with you who really are. Despite it all and because of it all.

Contact me to find out how to get powerful temporary tattoos that say: I AM by Conscious Ink if you need a little reminder.

Go ahead and say it. I am ___________.

Source: Challenge: Finish the Sentence: “I am __________ .” « Positively Positive

What will YOU do with this today?

On respect for the American flag…

I don’t know why this bothers me so much, but a local dairy in our area is not only flying a Mexican flag on the same pole, but their American flag is in SHAMEFUL condition…

Click image to enlarge...
Click image to enlarge...

The flag should be cleaned and mended when necessary. Source: USFlag.org: A website dedicated to the Flag of the United States of America – Flag Etiquette

When a flag is so worn it is no longer fit to serve as a symbol of our country, it should be destroyed by burning in a dignified manner. Source: USFlag.org: A website dedicated to the Flag of the United States of America – Flag Etiquette

When flown with the national banner of other countries, each flag must be displayed from a separate pole of the same height. Each flag should be the same size. They should be raised and lowered simultaneously. The flag of one nation may not be displayed above that of another nation. Source: USFlag.org: A website dedicated to the Flag of the United States of America – Flag Etiquette

Call the owner and let him know how you feel! Or, maybe we should set up a fund to buy this ‘poor’ farmer a new flag…

Duescher’s Legendairy Farms
N6388 Longfellow Rd, Algoma, WI 54201
(920) 487-2040

P.S. Here’s an Italian company in Ashwaubenon that gets it!

Click image to enlarge…

Algoma or Atlantic?

Hmmm. Seems like the windspeed should actually be higher looking at these photos, but apparently it only takes a 22mph wind to make Lake Michigan look like the Atlantic…

Here I am experimenting with two different ways of viewing pictures in WordPress…

This slideshow requires JavaScript.

Clicking an image below will pull up a nice photo gallery. Both are great native features in WordPress.com!

Image representing Android as depicted in Crun...
Image via CrunchBase

Things we’ve been tracking in the past 24 hours…

 

Thanksgiving show and tell…

My #6 son needed a picture of the turkey we raised for Thanksgiving dinner for show and tell today. I don’t know his teacher’s email address, so I’m posting it here so that she can find it…

Happy Thanksgiving to Mac’s class!

P.S. Hi, Sydney!

Parking fail…

…becomes social media success story! A security camera caught this parking ‘fail’ on camera:

httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Do6pmYfNco0&feature=player_embedded

Hyundai Canada [manufacturer of the victim’s car] saw this YouTube video and was quick to turn this into a social media success! The moral of the story? Everyone wins with social media done well…

httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JyD6arNlTE8&feature=player_embedded
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