There’s more at Anderson Laymans Blog: On mistakes……………….

On Wants and Need…

Acts 3:1-7 NIV

“One day Peter and John were going up to the temple at the time of prayer—at three in the afternoon. Now a man who was lame from birth was being carried to the temple gate called Beautiful, where he was put every day to beg from those going into the temple courts. When he saw Peter and John about to enter, he asked them for money. Peter looked straight at him, as did John. Then Peter said, “Look at us!” So the man gave them his attention, expecting to get something from them. Then Peter said, “Silver or gold I do not have, but what I do have I give you. In the name of Jesus Christ of Nazareth, walk.” Taking him by the right hand, he helped him up, and instantly the man’s feet and ankles became strong.”

Jesus frequently gives people what they need instead of what they want…

Remember to Take Care of Yourself

Cover of "The Language of Letting Go (Haz...

Here’s a moral with a story from Melody Beattie

Jenna started dating a new man. Like many women, she was a little frustrated with all the losers that had come along before. She thought she’d put this one to the test. She wanted to see how good he’d be to her.

So when he called her up and asked her what she wanted to do, she told him she thought he should take her on a little trip.

“Hawaii would be nice,” she said. “You get us the tickets. And find someplace nice for us to stay when we get there. I don’t want to be in a cheesy hotel.”

He had enough money in the bank. The trip, she thought, would be exquisite and luxurious. She envisioned the first-class air travel, the limos, and the home he’d rent complete with maid service and a cook.

When the day of the trip arrived, they took a taxi, not a limo, to the airport. And when she boarded the airplane, he led her back to coach. When the flight attendant came around asking if people wanted to rent movies, her boyfriend shook his head and went back to reading his book. She had to dig out the four dollars to pay for the movie.

She sat scrunched up in her seat, all the way to Hawaii. When they got there, he took her to a time-share condo. Then he drove her in the rental car to the grocery store and said, “Pick out what you want to cook.”

Throughout the vacation she spent a lot of time stewing in her head, but when they got home, she decided to give him one more chance.

So when he called her up and asked her what she wanted to do Friday night, she said she thought a movie would be nice. She hung up the phone, then dressed up and did her hair. She thought maybe he’d take her to a nice theater.

He picked her up, then drove to the nearest Blockbuster. “Go in and pick out whatever video you’d like to rent,” he said. “Do you want to watch it at your place or mine?

The moral of this story is twofold and simple. The first les­son is if you know exactly what you want, you need to spell it out clearly. The second is that it’s better not to expect people to take care of us. Even if they agree to do it, we might not like how they do the job.

While it’s nice to have people love us and do things for us, it’s better to plan on taking care of ourselves.

God, help me remember that it’s my job to take care of myself.

Source: April 18: Remember to Take Care of Yourself | Language of Letting Go

Hmmmm…

Lately I’ve been learning a lot about expectations. I think the simplest way to avoid disappointment is not to have them. Or, as Melody points out if you DO have expectations “you need to spell it [them] out clearly” or be prepared to meet them yourself…

A Strategy For Switching Off Fear

Good stuff from Gemma Stone…

Fear can be a good thing. In the early years of humanity, it protected our ancestors from saber-tooth tigers. It encouraged them to run, fight, or hide in order to save their lives. Fear is a natural and helpful feeling. It’s also one of the strongest emotions that we can experience, so strong that it can be paralyzing. I’ve felt that level of fear once or twice, and boy, it’s a doozy!

via a strategy for switching off fear | Gemma Stone.

Follow the ‘via’ link above if you want more…

You are Responsible for You

More from Melody Beattie:

We can delegate tasks, but we can’t delegate responsibility, if the responsibility is really ours.

Sometimes, it’s normal to delegate tasks to other people. We may hire people to do certain things for us. We may engage in contracts with a therapist or a healer to help us work through a certain issue. But the responsibility for which pieces of advice we follow, and the decisions we make in our lives, ultimately belongs to us.

It’s easy to get lazy. We can let a friend, an employee, or even a skilled therapist begin making our decisions for us. We can listen to what they say and blindly take their advice. Then we don’t have to take responsibility for our lives. If the decision doesn’t work out, we can say, “You were wrong. Look at the mess you’ve gotten me into. I’m a victim, again.”

Yes you are. But you’re a victim of yourself.

We can listen to advice and let other people help us, but if they’re helping us do something that is our responsibility, the ultimate responsibility for the decision still belongs to us.

Get help when you need it. Delegate tasks. But don’t give away your power. Remember you can think, you can feel, you can take care of yourself, you can figure out your problems.

Don’t get lazy. Don’t give away responsibility for your life.

God, help me remember that I am responsible for me.

Source: April 17: You are Responsible for You | Language of Letting Go

5 Steps to Deal with Self-Doubt…

“When you doubt your power, you give power to your doubt.” ~ Honore de Balzac

via 5 Steps to Deal with Self-Doubt and Trust Your Self Again | Tiny Buddha: Wisdom Quotes, Letting Go, Letting Happiness In.

Follow the ‘via’ link above if you’d like to know more about the 5 steps…

10 Websites to Organize Your Life

There was a time when “spring cleaning” meant dusting the bookshelves, straightening up your drawers, and packing off a few things to consignment, but with a broad array of organizational websites and mobile apps now conveniently at your fingertips, why stop at just the house? These days, you can get a handle on everything from your bank account to your biceps—all from the phone in your pocket—and many of these new tools take getting organized a step into the future by harnessing the very powerful tool of analytics. After all, as they say, if you can’t measure it, you can’t manage it. Vogue.com has pulled together ten of our favorite new startups and digital classics that help you to tidy up that closet and get yourself in top form.

via SpringCleaning.com: 10 Websites to Organize Your Life – Vogue Daily – Vogue.

Follow the ‘via’ link above for some good organizing resources. To Vogue’s list I would add

  • Use Gmail for just in time info…
  • Use Google Reader for just in case info…
  • Use Google Tasks for your todos…
  • Use Evernote for the stuff you have to remember…

These are all ‘websites, too!

Talk to yourself the way you’d talk to someone you love. | notsalmon.

On the seasons of life…

“No matter how difficult the situation is, it won’t last forever. What follows the night is the day; what follows the winter is the spring.”―Tony Robbins

via On the Road with Oprah’s Lifeclass: Insights, Inspiration, and Getting Real with Tony Robbins « Positively Positive.

On taking care of your self…

 

14/52/2012 Me To Infinity

C. M. MacNeil shares this from Melody Beattie…

Our most important focus during times of stress is taking care of ourselves. We are better able to cope with the most irregular circumstances; we are better able to be there for others if we’re caring for ourselves. We can ask ourselves regularly: What do we need to do to take care of ourselves? What might help us feel better or more comfortable?
Self-care may not come as easily during times of stress. Self-neglect may feel more comfortable. But taking care of us always works.

Today, I will remember that there is no situation that can’t be benefited by taking care of myself.

via April 14, 2012 – Today’s Gift from Hazelden « cmmacneil.

Love what you’re doing and love it in front of others

“You rarely have time for everything you want in this life, so you need to make choices. And hopefully your choices can come from a deep sense of who you are.

The thing I remember best about successful people I’ve met all through the years is their obvious delight in what they’re doing and it seems to have very little to do with worldly success. They just love what they’re doing, and they love it in front of others.” ~ Fred Rogers

Source: Love What You’re Doing and Love it in Front of Others | Escape Adulthood with Kim & Jason

On powerlessness and true power…

An interesting perspective from Gabrielle Bernstein…

The fable of fear…

“Fear: False Evidence Appearing Real.” ~Unknown

Source: The Fable of Fear and 3 Simple Steps to Conquer It | Tiny Buddha: Wisdom Quotes, Letting Go, Letting Happiness In

Go to the source if you’d like to read the fable. I’m more interested in the ways author Barrie Davenport offers to overcome fear…

You can put Fear in a box. And let me tell you, once you do this, your life will turn around 180 degrees.

You will do things you never thought possible.

You will be bold and enthusiastic about life.

You will find passion in life and seize every opportunity.

If you want to start disempowering Fear right now, here are three things you can do today: Continue reading “The fable of fear…”

“Forgiveness”

I don’t care if you don’t like rap music! Listen and read along — this is good stuff…

You can choose to be happy – 10 things to do, today!

Marie Wetmore says…

I say all the time: if you want to be happy, you have to choose to be happy. Sometimes it helps to stop thinking about happiness as a state of mind and instead think of it as an action. If you were to put happiness into action today, what would you do?Everyone’s answer is different, but I’ll share 10 things that have worked for me or my clients, so you can choose to be happy today!
via You Can Choose to Be Happy – 10 Things to Do, Today!.

Follow the ‘via’ link above to get the rest of Marie’s thoughts on the topic…

An invocation for beginnings…

Not sure where to start? Not sure if you should? Crank up your speakers and click the play button. Warning: NSFW!

Anderson Layman’s Blog: …extend that generosity to myself…..

Count your blessings…

Think your life sucks? Watch this and think again…

Anderson Layman’s Blog: Top 100 First World problems……

If your ship does not come in…

Click the image to go to the source…

Are you living up to your full potential?

Potential

“The potential of an average person is like a huge ocean unsailed, a new continent unexplored, a world of possibilities waiting to be released and channeled toward some great good.”―Brian Tracy

It is generally believed that the average person uses only about ten percent of their potential. That is to say that the average person could be ten times more productive and successful than they currently are. Studies done at Stanford University Brain Institute are even less flattering. They claim that the average person only uses about two percent of their full potential. No matter which figure you agree with, it is clear that we perform far below what we are capable of.

According to Abraham Maslow we are consistently “selling ourselves short.” We concoct all kinds of reasons to rationalize and justify our poor performance and lack of success, ignoring the fact that we all have the ability to develop far beyond anything we have achieved so far.

Source: Are You Living Up to Your Full Potential? [BLOG] « Positively Positive

Go to the source for 3 ways you can start to reach your potential…

Be uniquely you

Melody Beattie writes…

We will discover the nature of our particular genius when we stop trying to conform to our own or to other peoples’ models, learn to be ourselves, and allow our natural channels to open.

— Shakti Gawain

We have much in common with each other. And recovery, growth, and change are strengthened by honoring these similarities. But each of us is unique. We each have our own strengths, weaknesses, gifts, vulnerabilities—our own per­sonalities.

The purpose of spiritual growth is not to eliminate the personality. It is to refine and enhance it, and allow each of us to express ourselves creatively.

We are not meant to be just like anyone else. Comparison will leave us uncomfortable, either on the side of pride or of inadequacy.

You are you. The wonder of life comes in finding your own rhythm to the dance, your own way of seeing the world, your own brush stroke, phrase, or special combination.

Continue reading “Be uniquely you”

Choose Your Own Adventure

Paths

I get a variation on this email quite often: “I wish there was a job in social media for _____, because I’m really skilled in _____.” What’s fascinating is that the person is waiting for permission, and worse, waiting for someone else to create and open a role for them to fill. My first thought upon receiving this is to ask the person, “Who do you admire in life?” They often cite some famous person. I then ask, “Did someone make that job for them? Or did they choose an adventure that brought them there?” Sometimes, the light bulb goes on right then and there. Other times, well, bless your heart.

Source: Choose Your Own Adventure

Go to the source if you’d like the rest of Chris Brogan’s thoughts on the topic…

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