Our U10 team…

via Instagram

Perfect weather for the soccer tourney!

via Instagram

Cabin porn?

via Instagram. I found this little beauty halfway between Kewaunee and Algoma Wisconsin while on a bike ride the other day. Looks perfect to me! Now, all I need is Google Fiber and I’d be set…

Gabby Douglas’s Beam Performance Gives Us The Defining Photo Of The London Olympics

 

Gabby Douglas’s Beam Performance Gives Us The Defining Photo Of The London Olympics.

Lighthouse Companion

Pops Digital

via Lighthouse Companion.

 

 

 

During my blogging hiatus…

…I am still sharing content on my Twylah page. You can find it here

Kewaunee Lighthouse at Sunrise

Pops Digital

via Kewaunee Lighthouse at Sunrise.

 

 

 

Time out…

I’m pondering this Michael Hyatt post and what it means to my life and business. As a result, I’m going to take some time off from personal blogging although I will continue to share content via my Twylah page at http://twylah.com/toddlohenry or via rss here. I will also continue business blogging at http://blog.e1evation.com

Just in case you’re interested in my Twylah workflow, you can see how I do it here:

I’ll also be working on finishing my book on ‘thought leadership’ marketing called ‘Be Known; how to become and be known as the expert’. If you’re interested, you can see how I’m progressing here. Registration is free for now — please feel free to comment on the content!

Open Your Mind… or you may miss something

Open Mind (album)

Kristin Barton Cuthriell writes:

Often, people come into counseling because something in their lives is not working for them. They may be depressed. They may have anxiety. Their marriage may be falling apart. Maybe they have been grieving old wounds for years, and they just can’t find joy in life. Teenagers may be rebelling. People feel stuck in dead-end jobs. Addictions are impacting the family. People have lost the ability to let life in.

People want help. They want to feel better. Some, come in with an open mind and are ready to look at things in new ways; do things in new ways. They are ready to change. Others, however, resist change, no matter how bad they feel. They continue to do the same thing over and over again, bringing them the same undesirable results.

We are creatures of habit. We often resist change and stay with the status quo no matter how miserable we feel. We avoid doing something different.

We must stop and think about what we are doing. We must ask ourselves if what we are doing is working for us. We need to remember that if we always do what we have always done, we will always get what we have always gotten.

Let go of always being right.

Let go of thinking that there is only one way to do something.

If it is not working for you, try something different.

Be open to suggestions.

Open your mind… or you may miss something.” via Open Your Mind… or you may miss something.

One of the tools I use to keep my mind open is this quote: Nietszche said “You have your way. I have my way. As for the right way, the correct way, and the only way, it does not exist.” I agree with Kristin! Let go of always being right — it’s a terrible burden to bear and you’ll feel much better when you put it down… :-D

The Best of Lifehack – July 2012

Stepcase Lifehack

One month of goodness all in one place! Get the article here: The Best of Lifehack – July 2012.

 

 

 

Follow Your Bliss!

The Daily Love

via Visual Inspiration: Follow Your Bliss!.

 

 

 

Mission accomplished

Can I tell you again how much I love Endomondo? 5 months ago I was not exercising and my life was showing it. Now, thanks to this handy app, I can look back and see that I am making progress. On the 20th of this month I saw that I had already equaled last month’s output so I made a goal to hit 200 miles of exercise for July I reached that objective.

Almost 50,000 calories equaling almost 100 hamburgers slain! For some reason, being able to look back and visually see my progress and getting all these numbers really helps motivate me. Endomondo is kind of like a coach, too, and a riding partner because I frequently use it to race against myself or the clock to get more out of my ride.

I have not yet reached Nirvana, however, I am making progress thanks to a better diet, a lot of bike riding, and Endomondo…

I added a list…

…of my favorites blogs and bloggers to the menu. On that list is a link you can click to add my sources to your Google Reader if you’d like. What? You’re not using Google Reader? Oh, wow! Comment, call or ‘connect’ so we can talk about how this applies to you and your organization…

Today, I’m making myself…

What do YOU choose?

Lead.Learn.Live.

via Today, I’m making myself…??? (multiple choice).

Your Body: One Year From Today

One of my favorite quotes in working with clients is “A year from now you’ll wish you started today”. Along those lines, Craig Harper writes:

If you’re serious about changing your body, and more importantly, keeping it that way, below you’ll find some relevant, valuable and potentially-transformational questions. They are the type of questions that I ask anyone who comes to me for coaching in this area. Keep in mind that transformation lives in the doing, not just the knowing, so if you’re in need of a physical overhaul, or maybe just a few minor modifications, take some time to answer the following thoughtfully and courageously.

What do you want your body to look, feel and function like one year from today (be specific)?

What do you need to do practically, to make your goal a reality?

What happens once your motivation subsides (it will)?

What happened last time you tried to change your body?

Why and how will it be different this time (if nothing changes, nothing changes)?

What’s your optimal exercise strategy (based on your genetics, age, goals, fitness, injuries, etc.)?

What’s one simple thing (that will make a difference) that you can change today?

What happened over the last 365 days (with your body)? Why?

Are you genuinely prepared to do the work (and to keep doing it), or do you just like ‘the idea’ of a different body?

Do you need to change your relationship with food? If so, how?

Do you have an accountability system? If so, what is it?

When it comes to the practical change-your-body variables (food, lifestyle, exercise, time management), what are your ‘non-negotiables’?

As I’ve said many times before on this site, when we ask better questions and we’re genuinely committed to change, we make better decisions, do better things, produce better results and our reality shifts.

Statistically, we know that, despite their conversations, declarations and intentions, most people won’t improve their health or fitness over the next year. Some will, most won’t. Of course, they can change and they want to change, but sadly, they won’t. Like the majority of our ever-expanding population, some will continue to get on and off the weight-loss merry-go-round, all the while complaining about their genetics, the weather, their sore ankle, their limited time and their exhausting schedule.

And then they’ll wake up and it will be July 2013.

Today, I challenge you to be in the minority.” via Your Body: One Year From Today.

When I read things like this I used to feel guilty — now I’m happy I’m on the right path! I started power walking in March and now walk, run and bike ride; thanks to Endomondo, I know I’ve put in over 500 miles in all three since I started…

I’ve lost over 100 pounds with Atkins in the past 10 years but gained 75 of it back because I don’t believe that Atkins is sustainable or healthy based on my experience. I’m sorry to tell you there is no substitute for eating better and exercising more…

What the Internet Is Doing to Our Brains (And What We Can Do About It)

I had some windshield time last night driving across Wisconsin and this podcast came up in Google Listen. I encourage you to follow the link and listen to what Michael Hyatt has to say about what the internet is doing to our brains and what we can do about it. #19: What the Internet Is Doing to Our Brains (And What We Can Do About It) [Podcast] | Michael Hyatt.

Cross-posted…

Todd Lohenry's avatare1evation, llc

This is kind of an interesting article for a social media ‘gooroo’ to curate, but I learned about this article in a Michael Hyatt podcast and wanted to share it with you. In it, Tony Dokoupil writes:

Before he launched the most viral video in Internet history, Jason Russell was a half-hearted Web presence. His YouTube account was dead, and his Facebook and Twitter pages were a trickle of kid pictures and home-garden updates. The Web wasn’t made “to keep track of how much people like us,” he thought, and when his own tech habits made him feel like “a genius, an addict, or a megalomaniac,” he unplugged for days, believing, as the humorist Andy Borowitz put it in a tweet that Russell tagged as a favorite, “it’s important to turn off our computers and do things in the real world.”

But this past March Russell struggled to turn off…

View original post 477 more words

Is it too early in the week to be ‘sick and tired’?

Nutrition for Dummies

Craig Harper offers this practical list:

1. Don’t eat anything bigger than your head. Unless it’s a watermelon. Or you have a tiny head.

2. If your meal arrives through a car window via a teenager wearing a headset, don’t eat it.

3. If it comes in an exciting range of fluorescent colours, don’t eat it.

4. Don’t confuse the marketing on the front (of the pack) with the nutritional information in the teeny-tiny box on the back.

5. Nobody accidentally eats cake. Own your choices and your behaviours.

6. Calories consumed in secret count. Your friends might not know but your arse will.

7. If dieting was an effective way to lose weight permanently, nobody would ever diet twice.

8. Don’t confuse ‘what your head wants’ with what your body needs. Your mind is a lying bitch.

9. If the ingredient list is full of weird-sounding numbers and words ending in ‘ose’, throw it away.

10. If you haven’t had a poo since June, maybe cut back on the processed food. And try a little fibre. Just saying.

11. If it comes with orange-coloured cheese, throw it away.

12. Most cereals are shit. Avoid them. Unless you want diabetes by Friday.

13. Amazingly, following a generic eating plan from a magazine is not your best bet.

14. If food is your lover, you need to get out more.

15. If you’re considering taking your kids to McDonalds for a treat, punch yourself in the face.” via Nutrition for Dummies (Craig’s version).

Thanks to David Kanigan for introducing me to Craig’s blog…

The best years of your life…

 

Quote by Albert Ellis | Lifehack Quotes.

4 emotionally intelligent (and psychologically sophisticated) signs

Get more here: 4 emotionally intelligent (and psychologically sophisticated) signs | Daniel Pink.

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