Rabu, 19 September 2012

How Your Beliefs Are Holding You Back in Your Love Life

A few months ago, I worked with Shelly Lefkoe, of the Lefkoe Institute, on eliminating my fear of public speaking. The institute was founded by Morty Lefkoe, Shelly's husband, to "help individuals dramatically improve their effectiveness and sense of well-being in all areas of their lives." When I tell people I struggle with this particular insecurity, they're perplexed. A typical response goes like this: But you hosted radio shows and an Internet TV show, you still make various radio appearances, and you have taught classes -- you're constantly in the public eye! How could you possibly be afraid of public speaking? Well, just because I do it doesn't mean I don't get anxious. To be sure, my response to this fear has not been one of avoidance. Rather, I constantly place myself in uncomfortable situations until I become more comfortable. Essentially, I practice. I expose myself as much as I can to public speaking appearances with the hope that the fear will dissipate over time. This route has worked for me, but I have long been curious as to what exactly is behind my anxiety. Why did it develop in the first place? What am I so afraid of? It's not like it's a life and death kind of thing. As Shelly said to me once: "I asked my daughter if she was afraid of speaking in front of people and she said, 'why, do they have guns and knives?'"

I had four sessions with Shelly, and although my fear hasn't been completely lifted, our work together did help me recognize how tremendously powerful our beliefs can be and that when we work on understanding where our beliefs about ourselves come from, we can start to work on changing those beliefs. By changing our beliefs, we start to notice that our responses to situations that typically induce fear can change. Of course, most people get a little nervous about getting up in front of people -- being the focal point of attention can be intimidating -- but, as Shelly teaches, deeper fears about public speaking are often manifested in childhood experiences and our parental relationships.

I'll spare you the details about the possible origins of my public speaking fears. But from the perspective of a dating coach and columnist, I can't help but transfer the lessons I learned from Shelly to the world of dating and relationships.

Consider the following:

If a deep fear of public speaking is present, it is possible you got any number of negative messages during your childhood, such as: mistakes and failures are bad; I am not important; what I have to say is not important; people aren't interested in what I have to say; I'm not capable; I'm not competent; I'm inadequate; I'm not living up to the expectations of others; if I make a mistake or fail I'll be rejected; I'm not good enough.

Now, most parents can't fulfill their child's needs at all seconds, and all parents at one time or another have, probably inadvertently, sent one or more of these messages to their children. However, we don't form beliefs about ourselves without the attachment of meaning. Stay with me to see how this applies to your love life.

For instance, let's say your father was emotionally distant with you. As a result, you might have attributed the following meanings for your father's behavior: He acts this way toward me because I'm bad, I'm not good enough or I'm not lovable. But the truth is, any of those reasons could be a meaning for why he acted cold toward you -- though I doubt it -- but it doesn't have to be the meaning. Maybe your father had cold parents; maybe he was constantly stressed when you were a young girl; maybe he had low self-esteem. These reasons might have prohibited him from being emotionally present and loving with you. Yet, you might go your whole life believing you're not good enough or deserving of love and emotional nurturing because of the original meaning you attached to your father's rejection; in turn, that belief system plays out in your love life later on down the road.

The ultimate trick is to realize that events or the behaviors of others don't actually have meanings. Certainly your father's coldness toward you doesn't have a definitive meaning. It only has the meaning you attach to it. Apply this logic to so many aspects of your dating life: Your, say, being rejected by various men doesn't have meaning (I'm not pretty or good enough); it only has the meaning that you attach to it. From those meanings you assign to events and others' behaviors, you form beliefs about yourself which ultimately color your thoughts and behaviors. And it becomes a reinforcing cycle. Because every time you are now rejected by men as an adult you reinforce that age-old belief that you're not good enough, that nobody can love you - the meaning you attached to your father's rejection of you as a girl. You might even settle for someone who treats you badly and is emotionally distant, because you don't believe you're worthy of more.

I would also argue that you don't always have to go back to your childhood to understand how you form subconscious beliefs about yourself. Choose a recent negative experience in your dating life. Understand what meaning you attached to that experience and the attendant belief about yourself that you formed or reinforced as a result.

Once you realize that you assign meanings to other people's behaviors and events in your life, you rid yourself of your harmful, limiting self-beliefs. And once you understand that you are the one creating your beliefs, you can work to create new, healthier ones about yourself. Which means you create your future. And when you create your future, the possibilities in your love life are endless.

 

Follow Neely Steinberg on Twitter: www.twitter.com/neelysteinberg

Selasa, 18 September 2012

Do I Look Fat In This Body? How I Gave Up Body Hate

Do I look fat in this body?

That's the question I always wanted to ask. I knew it wasn't the dress or the pants or the angle of the camera. What I really wanted to know is "does this version of my body make me look fat?" If it does, will you judge me?

I swear if I have to read one more "half my size" article I'm going to hurl myself out the window! It's not that I think losing weight is bad. In fact, I think it's wonderful! The part of these articles I hate is the "my life sucked and now it's great" part. Dear [weight] loser, your life isn't better because you lost weight. Your life is better because you found the courage to make it better. Putting down Fritos might have been part of the process, but I know that's not the whole enchilada (pun intended).

I have been every size from 2 - 24. I have adopted vegan diets and I've binged out like a fiend. I have exercised responsibly and run until I passed out. You wanna know what made my life feel good? I mean, really, really good? Giving up body hate.

I was ruled by body hate for YEARS. I was terrified at size 2 and shame-filled in size 24. The size of my hips didn't change the size of my neurosis. I was most obsessed at my thinnest. How was I going to keep thin and where could I find "my food?" What if I got invited to a party!? Thin me had the biggest worries of all.

Ultimately, I abandoned the body hate treadmill because I recognized that it was killing me. I've never used crack (exactly) so I can't speak to that particular detox experience. I have, however, given up alcohol and man, did that process suck! Suddenly, Zima ads where everywhere! Sorry young people, I quit drinking in 1994, back when Zima was all the rage. Substitute Red Bull, or Mike's Hard or whatever boozy thing is popular right now. Everywhere I went, people were partying with Zima and I was missing the boat. That's how it felt detoxing from body hate. Oh look, there's a Cosmo cover promising that I can "lose 10 lbs in 10 minutes." How I longed to try those diets!

Fad by fad, I committed to body love and created my own way. I gave up the scale and surrounded myself with body-loving fellows. I talked about my feelings (thank god for therapists) and I committed to my new way forward. I educated myself about nutrition and refused to drive myself crazy. There's a time for ice cream and cake and there's a time for carrots. Both are awesome in moderation.

Today, I love my body. Not because it's skinny, I love it because it works. This belly has carried babies and these arms have rocked them to sleep. These breasts helped attract my beloved and they really fill out a dress. Even if they didn't, they're all mine and I'm more than happy to have them.

Relatives and infomercials are happy to remind me how "wrong" my body seems. "Maybe if your hips weren't so wide or maybe if you were a little taller..." Thank you, grandma, and how are you today? I know JHud lost it on Weight Watchers and Mariah's doing it with Jenny. They're not me. Me, I have this totally radical plan. I eat healthy, move every day and get a lot of rest. That's it. I wear clothes that honor where I'm at and I avoid the voices of shame.

I might never be on a "half my size" cover and that's ok with me. What I have is peace in my pants (and skirts and blouses). I am off the diet treadmill and I eat the food I like. Feeling badly about myself doesn't help me with my weight. It stressed me out and made me crave cookies. You wanna know what makes healthy eating easier? Not worrying about healthy eating. When I feel good, I eat well. When I eat well, my body takes care of itself.

Kathy Carter Woods is a featured columnist for Ricki Lake Magazine.

 

Minggu, 16 September 2012

The Myth of Lasting Happiness and Why It Makes Us Unhappy

We want to be happy. Everyone, everywhere, is trying to find -- and hold onto -- happiness. We do everything we are supposed to do, follow the experts' advice, practice the techniques -- and still, more often than we should be (given the amount of effort we are putting in), we are not consistently happy. As a psychotherapist, I have spent the last two decades watching people feed their addiction to happiness; they get their short-term fix here and there, but end up "back on the street" searching for happiness yet again, even more desperate. The thing we want most and spend the majority of our time trying to accomplish, eludes us.

We human beings are remarkable creatures. We can do anything we set out to do. So why not lasting happiness? Why is there such a gap between our desire for happiness and our ability to hang onto it? After many years of listening to people talk about their failed attempts to hang onto a state of happiness, I began asking myself the following questions: What is this thing we call happiness? Is it achievable? Is it reliable? Is it sustainable?

As I studied happiness, I became intensely aware of its fragility. When our life circumstances change and the thing that was making us happy goes away... Poof, our happiness goes away with it. When uncomfortable feelings appear within our state of happiness or the object that was bringing us happiness no longer works, happiness is lost again. We are constantly acquiring and losing happiness.

It is not our efforts to create happiness that are flawed, but rather our choice of happiness as a goal. Happiness is the wrong goal for this life. Happiness relies on our ability to control circumstances that, no matter how hard we try, we cannot control. Happiness relies on circumstances staying the same. Nothing stay the same. Uncomfortable feelings always arise, and what we want is always in flux. This nature of life is transitory. We should be grateful for happiness when it is here, but as a goal for life, it is inherently flawed.

Normal life is not easy for anyone. Why then do we expect ourselves to be happy all the time? This foolish expectation is responsible for tremendous suffering.

Is there something larger, deeper, and more lasting than happiness? Is there a state of well-being that can sustain itself in the midst of the changing circumstances and emotional shifts that every life includes? Is there a way to feel grounded and well, even when the contents of our life are not? If so, what shift must we make to discover this state that is deeper and larger than happiness?

For a long time, I used my spiritual practice to try and achieve peace and happiness. And I did, in stretches. And yet, again and again, when life presented its toughest challenges, inevitably, the peace and happiness that I had achieved slipped away. Somewhere along the path I got tired -- luckily, tired of trying to get to peace and happiness, or rather, of getting there and watching it disintegrate. And with my weariness came an interesting development: I got curious about what was actually true. I stopped trying to do something with what I was experiencing, to change it in any way, and just let myself see what was there, to experience what I was experiencing.

No longer trying to get to somewhere else, my meditation practice, and consequently my life, could then be what it was, whatever that meant at any particular moment. It was through this shift that I began to glimpse a state of being that is radically different and amazingly okay, a state that is deeper and more eternal than happiness. Indeed, it was not until I stopped trying to create happiness -- as a way out of now -- and started investigating what is here -- a way in -- that I discovered a doorway to something far more blissful than happiness had ever offered.

We spend our lives trying to get to some imaginary there, where lasting happiness awaits. What we don't know how to do is to get to here, where we are. We discover well-being when we shift our focus toward this moment and what is actually here. The secret to well-being is counterintuitive: Allow whatever is happening inside you to happen, don't do anything with it, don't judge it, don't try to change it, don't turn it into an identity -- something that says something about who you are. Allow the feelings, allow the thoughts, allow all experience to happen within you without turning any of it into a story about you and your life. When we let go of achieving a particular outcome with our experience and meet our experience as it is -- wanted or not -- we discover a state of deep well-being and contentment, which relies on nothing and no one, and is inherently and eternally ours. Indeed, we discover who we really are.

Excerpted from the upcoming book, Inviting A Monkey to Tea: Befriending Your Mind and Discovering Lasting Contentment. (Hohm Press, October, 2012)

For more by Nancy Colier, click here.

For more on happiness, click here.

 
 
 

Follow Nancy Colier on Twitter: www.twitter.com/@ncolier

Online Stock Trading Guidelines

Description

Many a do-it-yourself investor has been confused by the mass of options when it comes to selecting an online broker. There are many to choose from and they all seem to offer exactly what you need. This is why it is very important to make sure you do your research before selecting an online broker. Look for online websites that will give you impartial evaluations on different brokers. Find out what others have to say about the broker you are considering. Make sure you take selecting a broker seriously. Take your time in selecting a broker. Look for one that will be available when you need them. If you know there will be specific time that you will most likely need your broker make sure that their site is available at this time of day or night. You should also find out how long it takes for their site to load during peak times. Nothing is more frustrating that needing to make an important trade and being unable to load the webpage to do so online! Find out if they have a lot of technical difficulties that will prevent their site from loading. It can very annoying if you want to contact your broker on an important issue and get the response, site not responding check back later. Even if the page does load successfully, it is still a good idea to visit several of their links to ensure everything is working properly. See what type of promise or guarantee they have in regards to their website and its availability.

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Source : http://www.yubster.com/doc/229/online-stock-trading-guidelines.html

Sabtu, 15 September 2012

Ego, Part 1: Ego Is Like a Hyperactive Robot

When you are driving along the road, do you sometimes engage in a conversation with yourself? I do. I wish I could run a tape recorder on my brain.

My internal arguments would be a bit embarrassing to replay -- but they are part of being human. Watching my mind at work has been such a humbling and wisdom-building process. It is amazing how my ego can see "danger" in harmless situations. I sometimes picture my ego as the Robot character from the old TV show, Lost in Space. The Robot's most famous line is "Danger, Will Robinson! Danger!" (Yes, I know I am showing my age!)

The robot metaphor is powerful because our egos often run on automatic programming. And like Will's robot, they are prone to saying "Danger! Danger!" -- even if the danger is perceived but not real. This bears repeating: The ego alarms even when the danger is imaginary.

Here is a theoretical example. You are walking down the hall at work. Your boss is coming from the other direction. She has an unhappy look on her face. You say, "Good morning." Your normally upbeat boss says "Hmmmph. Not looking so good to me right now." Your inner alarm goes off. You start imagining what might be going on. Soon your ego locks in on an interpretation. "Ah, there is a layoff coming! I knew it!" You go into the coffee room and confer with a friend. "You know that layoff we were thinking might happen? Well I just saw the boss and she said she is having a bad day. She was coming from the CEO's office. I think she just got the news!"

The rumor mill is now off and running! Drama is in high gear. And in a few minutes the anxiety level of the whole department is scoring a 10 out of 10. Work grinds to a halt as people gossip, start updating their resumes, and worry about how they will pay their bills if they are let go.

Why do we stir up such drama? It is not because we are evil or stupid. It is because our egos are tightly linked to our "fight-or-flight" system. Our fight-or-flight responses need to be lightning-fast. We need to react quickly to external threat. If a bus is about to hit you or a wild animal is chasing you, fast reactions can save your life.

But there are two serious problems we experience with this ego-fear system:

1. It triggers too easily. It sees threat when there might not be any threat. Its philosophy is, "It is better to overreact than to under-react!"

2. It runs on "old programs" -- habituated reactions are coded in our interior software when we are kids. They are ways we learned to "stay safe." They include withdrawing (flight) or a million ways of "fighting," from passive-aggressive to openly aggressive.

Our ego dumbs us down to keep us safe. This hyper-reactive, habit-based aspect of ego deprives us of our IQ, EQ (emotional intelligence), and SQ (spiritual intelligence). We lose the flexibility to choose a response from among evaluated options (IQ) -- sacrificing blood flow to our higher brain functions to instead send it to our muscles, hearts, and lungs in preparation for running or fighting. Hijacked by our limbic brains, we surrender our ability to experience empathy or to manage our own emotional triggers (EQ). And in robot mode, we certainly cannot act with wisdom and compassion while maintaining inner and outer peace (SQ).

So what is the solution?

We can learn to calm the ego and put "Higher Self" in the driver's seat of our lives. We can learn to stop, take some deep breaths, and discern if the threat is real or not. We can learn to calm down and bring all of our intelligences back to full capacity. And then we can deal with the situation from a much more competent place.

When I feel my own drama story rolling out, I breathe, and then I thank my ego for being alert and wanting to protect me. I talk to it like it is a child and tell it to calm down. I tell it that the grown-up me (Higher Self) is here and in charge and all is well. Then I try to make a game for my mind to play with: "What are the other possible explanations for my boss having a bad day today?" And I can typically come up with dozens (I have played this game a lot!).

Here are some possible alternative stories (interpretations) for the boss's upset:

  • She has received some bad personal news about her health or the health of a loved one
  • There is a problem with one of her children
  • Her marriage or relationship is in trouble
  • She got bad performance feedback from her boss
  • She didn't get a promotion she was desperately wanting

Because ego wants to keep us safe, it is seeking to find the worst-case scenario for us and then protect us from it. Yet none of these very reasonable alternative explanations threatens us. Disaster-planning is useful if you really are facing one. But spending our lives in hyper-alert mode is exhausting and unhealthy.

Relying on our SQ skill set, we can choose to challenge the inner robot warning system. We can choose to challenge the assumptions and interpretations of ego. And we can seek to understand what is really going on.

Even more importantly, we can choose to be a soothing, helpful part of the situation. We can go up to the person who is upset and ask, "Hi. Is there anything I can do to help?"

For more by Cindy Wigglesworth, click here.

For more on emotional intelligence, click here.

 
 
 

Follow Cindy Wigglesworth on Twitter: www.twitter.com/CindySQ21

Jumat, 14 September 2012

Guide to Personal Brand Management

In the previous article, I spoke about how we can defuse tension or deflect misunderstandings though the simple action of pausing -- to think, to reflect and gather your thoughts and intentions. By pausing, I have found I've created better results in both personal and business situations.

One of my biggest concerns today is that people are forgetting that what they say, type and Tweet can be spread around the globe in a matter of seconds. With as little as one out-of-context comment, an individual can mar their reputation or offend both friends and strangers. On the Internet, unlike in spoken dialogue, comments are etched in our digital footprints and can come back to haunt or inhibit future relationships from occurring.

This leads me to reflect upon the wise words from my grandmother when she would say, "At the end of the day all we have is our integrity and dignity." This does not mean I have to have everyone like me, or even agree with me, however, it does mean that I desire/need respect if leading a team, and/or does require that my profile reflects the skill set I am "selling" to companies; and on a personal level, it requires I don't look like a raging lunatic to my family/loved ones. Even if our reputation is interpreted falsely by others, regardless if we are even liked, if we know that we did our best then we can remain closely honorable to our intention. And chances are that by doing so, our reputation will remain intact.

So what does this mean for the digital era?

I believe it requires us to be more thoughtful, more strategic and above all more willing to be transparent. Not about private topics, but certainly about areas we are wanting to be recognized for.

My umbrella company, The Communication Group, has an eight-year-old company that has been repositioning companies and people online; and using this knowledge The Communication Group is now developing a new business unit, SOCME Academy, an online certified training program that teaches individuals, companies and brands how to set up their social media profiles. First, even before any setup occurs they will be instructed to consider their own understanding of who they are and who they wish to be seen as online. One may have a squeaky clean LinkedIn, but we must be sure that our other social profiles are in line with this professional.

Consider this before uploading, updating or sharing on your profile:

  1. Like email, if you hesitate to post, comment, or share -- there is likely a reason. Wait for 24 hours, and/or ask someone you respects advise before pressing "upload."
  2. Although posts, comments and shares can be deleted, they still can have lasting impacts on the minds from which they've been viewed.
  3. Realize what you want as the outcome of your post. What are you looking for? Laughter could be one, respect could be another, etc.

These are just a few examples of what is critical to think about. At the California Women's Conference on September 23, my panel will be drilling down further into setting up LinkedIn effectively and showing a few case studies. Likewise, the launch of socmeacademy.com will provide anyone interested in remaining relevant in the workplace, or learning new very much desired skills a way to learn effectively, efficiently and affordably. We are very excited about this, and thank all who have helped inform us along the way.

I'll leave off by saying that it is important to not only garner our own personal profiles but to help others protect their online reputation. It is unfair when people have no considerations for small businesses on business review websites, such as Yelp or CitySearch. It is easy to witness how a poor review can bring down an entire business. It must be recognized that these negative actions and comments lack character, compassion, and professionalism. I suggest taking complaints offline and in turn direct them in a private message. This gives the small business owner the opportunity to correct their mistake or respond to a poor experience.

There are many ingredients that add up to the recipe that is your reputation, and it is imperative to remember a good measure of intention. Get crafting!
Enjoy - c

For more by Clare Munn, click here.

For more on success and motivation, click here.

 

Follow Clare Munn on Twitter: www.twitter.com/claremunn

Why You Can Have Everything You Want (Even Though You're Fat)

Even though it has never been far outside the norm -- in fact, the average American woman wears a size 14, and 14 is my own average -- I've always been ashamed of my size. This could be for a number of reasons: I grew up with a gorgeous mother who, despite her gorgeousness, always worried about her weight; I attended a series of fancy private schools populated by the sort of thoroughbred humans who rode thoroughbred horses; I fell in love with fashion at a very young age, coveting the lithe forms which showed it off best and knew that my own round shape could never measure up unless I whittled it down.

In ballet class at age 5, I noticed that my belly stuck out farther than the other girls', so I hiked up my tutu for camouflage. Fastening the waistband of my old-fashioned plaid uniform in second grade, I was careful to suck in my gut so it wouldn't spill over. And if I was wearing a bathing suit, you can bet I was also wearing a t-shirt to "protect my delicate skin from sunburn," even when the pool was indoors.

As a child and teenager, I distinctly remember experiencing my fatness as a secret -- something I felt that I had to be vigilant about hiding. Never mind that anyone could see what size I was just by looking at me; I cut the labels out of my clothes whenever I could.

As someone who really knows, let me tell you something: It's a waste of time to go through life constantly freaking out about how fat other people must think you are. No matter what your size, I promise you: The only person who truly gives a whatever about how fat you are is you.

There are people who always seem to daydream about their "thin days," the good-old-years back when they thought they were fat, but before they had any idea how fat they were really going to get. I am not one of those people.

While I have never been fat-fat, I have also never been thin-thin. I have traveled through life in the netherworld of size ambiguity, fat enough to have a "weight issue," thin enough never to be ostracized because of it. Luckily, I am conventionally pretty, fairly well proportioned and smart, with a freakishly high -- some might say bordering on narcissistic -- level of self-esteem. It's rare that I don't find myself to be one of the smartest, kindest, best-bone-structured people in any given room. OK, the smartest, kindest, best-bone-structured person. (In order to compensate for fat-girl low self-esteem, a gal has to learn to think highly of herself in other ways.)

Still, my weight has almost always been the thing I think of as holding me back. It's my albatross, the excuse I use to explain all life's failures, injustices and cruel twists of fate.

In fact, until pretty recently, I believed that my "weight problem" would keep me from ever finding the kind of person worth spending my life with. Or maybe it wouldn't keep me from finding him, but it would certainly keep me from winning him and keeping him. I believed that by failing to lose weight, I was sentencing myself to a lifetime of solitary confinement as punishment for my pathetic lack of willpower.

Then, at 35, I fell in love. And all the fears I'd had about being undesirable because of my weight -- that I was physically unattractive, that I lacked inner strength, that any self-respecting, successful man believed he deserved to have a skinny wife, which meant he believed he deserved better than me -- all those fears disappeared overnight, just like everyone had always said they would when I met the right person. Did I all of a sudden feel happy with my body? Of course not. But I no longer believed that my physical body would stand between me and the life I had always wanted.

You might think that all these mind-blowing realizations would enable me to lose weight, once and for all. That's what always happens in movies and cheerful chick-lit books, right? Fat chick identifies her core issue, shoots it down like a Space Invader, jogs sloppily around a track in a big sweatsuit, drinks gallons of smoothies, then sheds her terry cloth cocoon to emerge a skinny, self-confident butterfly in Spandex.

Nope, not my story. In fact, in the time that my boyfriend and I have been together, I have put on a solid fifteen pounds (thanks entirely to his mother's ridiculous lemon bars). My boyfriend swears he doesn't care that I've gained weight, and I believe him -- when it comes to his being attracted to me, anyway. But I know that my being frustrated with myself affects both of us, and that in order to feel my best, my prettiest, my most confident, I need to get back to being as active as I used to be. So despite having found happiness in so many ways, my struggle with my body continues on.

Dream boyfriend or not, though, I've never let my weight issue hold me back outside the arenas of dating and self-esteem. This doesn't mean that I'm some sort of fat activist, just that I've never doubted my intellect, potential or abilities the way I doubted my body. I can probably thank my parents for this strong -- if somewhat delusional -- belief in the contents of my own skull.

I've been an editor at a top women's magazine in New York. I've set up house in the most happening 'hood in Hollywood (right underneath the freaking sign!). I've survived working for a singer who offered me (unsolicited) Adderall and diet pills on our second day together, explaining that she knew how hard it was to carry around extra weight in the entertainment business, and that these magic pills had helped her to conquer her own weight problem and ascend the ladder of success.

Weirdly, though, no amount of shame or peer pressure has ever been enough to make me get thin. The skinny girls at the magazine? So dumb and shallow! There's something wrong with somebody who thinks it's OK to spend her entire two-week paycheck on a pair of stripper shoes. The waifish starlets walking their dogs around my block in Hollywood? They probably moonlight at suburban Friday's restaurants, covered in "flair." I couldn't survive one day of hauling around trays of half-eaten crab dip and guacamole -- gross. And when that malnourished "artist" offered me those pills, as she huddled in her garage, sucking on a secret cigarette, I felt sorry for her. So successful, so pretty, such a perfect body -- and still so insecure!

I used to think that my inability to jump on the skinny bandwagon simply meant that I had no willpower. Now I see, though, that maybe I don't hate my body as much as I always thought I did.

Why am I telling you all of this? Because I want to help you not-hate your body, too. But not in a precious, touchy-feely, rub-aromatherapy-lotion- on-your-skin-and-give-yourself-the-care-you-deserve way. I want to help you stop hating your body by no longer allowing it to be the thing that stands between you and your happiness. My goal is to prove to you that you are not the elephant in the room.

Now just because I don't hate my body doesn't mean that society doesn't hate it. There's no question that as obesity rates skyrocket, our culture puts a higher and higher premium on skinniness. But, I promise, you can make western society's unfortunate bias work for you.
One of the reasons skinny people make life so difficult for fat people is that they're jealous. Jealous that fat people eat what they want. Jealous that fat people don't derive their self-esteem from the labels sewn into the clothes on their backs. Jealous of the psychic freedom that comes from refusing to live by everybody else's rules. Instead of telling you not to be envious of skinny people, I am going to tell you to use their secret envy of you to your advantage.

No, I am not delusional. (At least I don't think I am?) I'm not trying to encourage a bunch of 200-pound chicks to pursue careers as fashion models. (I mean, If you're a 200-pound chick who wants to be a fashion model, Godspeed, but you'd better be ridiculously pretty. Like, Helen-of-Troy-level pretty. And start your career off on the right foot. In Samoa.)

But I'm sick of hearing 200-pound chicks -- even 140-pound chicks! -- say they can't succeed at their careers, get a cool boyfriend, hike to the top of a mountain, insert whatever mundane-yet-seemingly-unattainable goal here just because they don't look like fashion models. Listen up, people: Do you realize how absurd it is to let your physical body affect your success in the non-superficial arenas of your life? Is one required to possess a law degree from Harvard in order to be qualified to host the Miss America pageant? No? Then why do you think you need to look like Miss America in order to pursue your law degree at Harvard?

If you don't yet have the life you want -- the life you feel you deserve -- you're going to have to change. But I'm not talking about losing weight. Maybe you'll have to be a little more assertive sometimes, a little less self-righteous other times. You'll have to forgive stupid assholes for being reductive and judgmental, and you'll have to acknowledge that sometimes you're a bit reductive and judgmental yourself. You're going to have to accept that being fat is not an excuse to disengage from the aesthetic side of our culture, or, even worse, to disengage from our culture entirely.

Being fat comes with a host of responsibilities, not only to yourself, but to other fat people. Represent! You can be both fat and pretty. Both fat and handsome. Both fat and self-confident. Both fat and rich. Both fat and wildly attractive. Both fat and -- yes, it's true -- happy.

Rebecca DiLiberto is the executive editor at "The Ricki Lake Show." For an upcoming schedule of episodes, visit Ricki's site.

 

Follow Rebecca DiLiberto on Twitter: www.twitter.com/TeamRickiRD

Kamis, 13 September 2012

Can Good Stress Improve Your Health?

It turns out that having a challenging career can actually be quite good for you. Counter to what we often hear, a landmark study recently found that certain types of stress are linked to living longer lives.

This research, summarized in a book called The Longevity Project, shows that qualities like ambition, perseverance, and motivation are pretty healthy for you.

But reacting to colleagues? Not so much.

Howard Friedman, Ph.D., who co-authored the study, wrote, "The results were very clear: Those with the most career success were the least likely to die young."

Perhaps we already know this intuitively -- living a purposeful life feels great. And the data indicates that purposeful living is healthier than feeling unsatisfied with your work, or not living up to your potential, even if you are not in your dream job.

Friedman says that your own road map is more important than family biology, and the chances of predicting your health and longevity from your genes are mediocre at best. "The experience of your relatives is not very precise at all. Your own life path matters more."

We all know that health care costs are increasing exponentially, and radical changes are needed to shift from a disease-focused system of care to a health-focused one.

Couple the questions about rising costs with the fact that our assumptions about what is healthy can be misleading, and we see how important it is to dig deeper into the longevity question. Also, common wisdom says that to live a long life you should exercise, not smoke, and eat well. These are helpful ideas, but is there more to the story?

Scientists are still striving to understand what causes people to live longer, according to Dr. Thomas Rando, Deputy Director at Stanford's Center on Longevity.

In a talk at the Aspen Ideas Festival, he questions the thought that aging is unavoidable. He mentions Jeanne Calment, the world record holder as the "clearly documented oldest person." In her 122 years, she met Vincent Van Gogh in her French hometown and almost saw in the millennium.

Anecdotally, Rando also showed the audience photos of Tina Turner at 70 compared to Charles Darwin at 64. Needless to say, Tina looked much better than Charles. Baby boomers today generally look and act much younger than people used to in their 60s.

It's not just boomers, either. "Eighty-year-olds today are living healthier lives than 80-year-olds used to. We don't know why," said Rando.

What occurs to me from reading the findings of The Longevity Project is that perhaps one reason for this is that people are growing in their sense of purpose. If qualities like conscientiousness and altruistic ambition are healthy, perhaps consciousness, rather than genes, plays a more significant role in longevity.

If so, then it's never too early to start thinking more about developing such spiritual qualities. But how do we bring them out in our lives?

At one point I changed careers after some soul-searching. I took a major cut in pay and a humbling shift in roles. My new, part-time, position was with an organization whose mission I fully supported, but I felt that the role didn't challenge me intellectually. I could be orderly, helpful, and kind; however, that didn't feel like it was enough. So I started to consider more deeply the kinds of qualities I wanted to be expressing while working.

I focused more on my spiritual identity as the expression of the divine consciousness that couldn't be hindered in its purpose -- and I saw that I was naturally able to exhibit the full range of qualities this entailed right where I was, no matter what chair I happened to be sitting in.

And as I expanded my thought, my job description expanded to embrace the need for those qualities, too. As it turns out, the part-time role soon led to a full-time one and then on to many bigger opportunities.

So that's one side of the coin. But what about reacting with hostility or hurt pride to interpersonal issues, which research has shown to be unhealthy?

For me, that's often the toughest part of work.

At one company, I worked for someone who was often vocal about his negative feelings and frustration with the work. I didn't know if I could continue on there. Sometimes I would find myself standing in his office doorway receiving a verbal lashing.

I sought guidance on this issue by turning again to a sense of what was spiritually needed. I was led to look for good qualities that this guy already expressed. It wasn't easy at first to see many, as I felt blinded by my reaction to his overriding negativity.

But I started to see that his heart was in his work, and he really wanted to benefit others through the efforts we made. I saw qualities like diligence and thoughtfulness.

After a few months of thinking this way, I realized I didn't have the same reaction to him anymore. Not only that, but he also started to visibly change his approach as he became more interested in spiritual aspects of life. Today we remain friends, and there isn't a trace of the animosity or resentment I had felt.

I still have much more to learn regarding harmonious interactions with people, but my daily aspiration is to appreciate what's good and divinely beautiful about the people around me. This approach helps me put aside feelings of wounded pride, jealousy, or dissatisfaction, and replace them with more love, selflessness, and stillness.

To me, this approach follows, in a small way, what Jesus meant when he said, "Blessed are they that hunger and thirst after righteousness, for they shall be filled." To seek what's good and pure ultimately leads to fullness and true satisfaction, so much more so than getting enmeshed in office politics.

If we find ourselves dissatisfied in a current role, seeking this type of spiritual fulfillment sometimes might lead to finding a new role. But other times, it may involve seeing differently what's been there all along.

That thought shift can change everything.

For more on Sharon Frey, click here.

For more on the spirit, click here.

 

Follow Sharon Frey on Twitter: www.twitter.com/sharonfrey

Feeling Bored or Uninspired? Six Quick Fixes!

I've had a few moments recently of feeling, well, really just bored and completely uninspired and kinda purposeless. And these feelings, once they grabbed a hold of me, really didn't want to let go! These feelings then took me farther down the rabbit hole into a space of desperation where I wanted to latch on to anything that would make me feel alive... anything that would give me some instant gratification, some instant spark. An upper, so to speak... even if that "upper" is not a positive thing.

And that's what prompted me to write this. Because first I turned to chocolate. And that didn't help enough. But next I had to stop myself numerous times from scrutinizing my boyfriend's Facebook timeline, trying to find something to prove that he isn't as into me as he says, which would then give me reason to pick a fight with him (a sure-fire boredom cure!). Or the scouring of the Internet for all the people who have succeeded in their lives -- their successes taunting me for being such a loser-failure who has nothing inspiring or purposeful to do with her time. All of these things cause a burst of energy (albeit it a negative one), but they still give me that immediate rush that drama or anger brings, yet after the fact cause much more trouble than anything else... And all because I couldn't think of another more proactive way to snap out of my boredom and lack of inspiration.

Some other ways we try to grab instant gratification when we're feeling useless and uninspired that can only end poorly are: Googling exes (or worse, contacting exes for some sort of convoluted validation or trying to start drama with them), comparing our life to that of a college roommate or high school rival on Facebook and seeing how they have everything and we have nothing we thought we'd have by now, eating junk food, turning to massive amounts of caffeine, picking a fight, or checking our email like 17 times in one minute. We're looking for something when we do this. We're looking for something to make us feel alive, anything to give us a quick fix.

So. If we're feeling purposeless, bored, uninspired, how can we snap out if it? Instead of grabbing for a negative quick fix, which is guaranteed to cause us to crash after... what can we do that's proactive?

1. Start thinking about what you DO want. Close your eyes for a moment and visualize yourself on the vacation you want to go on, working at your dream job, moving into the new home, using your talents to help people... whatever it is you DO want, focus on it. The moment we focus on what we do want, our whole energy shifts, and I bet you won't feel uninspired anymore!

2. Take one action step toward accomplishing a higher goal. Write a few sentences of that book or article you've been wanting to write, sign up for that online dating site or for the class you've been wanting to take, email the contact you've been putting off reaching out to, start brainstorming on paper your idea for a new business, or workshop, or product... Whatever higher goal you have for yourself, take one action step toward doing it.

3. Get moving! Even if you're at a desk at work, get up for just a few minutes. Walk around the block, or even just the office if that's all you can do. Moving around and any sort of physical activity immediately changes your state and shakes things up.

4. Contact a friend instead of an ex... Hopefully a friend who will in no way, shape, or form, allow you to contact your ex! No explanation necessary here.

5. Read a few lines from inspirational writing or watch a few minutes of an inspirational video. The web is FULL of both of these things! So instead of getting on the Internet to cyber stalk, obsess over Facebook, or check your email for the millionth time, watch, read, or listen to something uplifting.

6. Help someone who is in need. Check on a friend who's been in bad shape, get a cup of tea for your disgruntled co-worker, send a note of love to your mom "just because." As soon as you get out of thinking only of yourself, you will immediately feel uplifted.

Changing our state really isn't that hard. It's just that we've been programmed to reach for immediate gratification, for some sort of "medicine" to cover our discomfort, to reach for something external to fix us quickly, to lift us up. But all it takes is a different choice. All it takes is one moment. So just choose differently next time and see how it feels. I'll tell you that for me choosing to write instead of choosing guaranteed drama feels much better in the long run. There is no hangover... there is no crash... and there's a blog out of it!

For more by Holly Sidell, click here.

For more on emotional wellness, click here.

 

Follow Holly Sidell on Twitter: www.twitter.com/HollySidell

Recalculating: You Can Re-Mind Yourself

I've battled depression for most of my adult life. I don't discuss it much but when I do, like now, it's to encourage someone suffering from depression. The response is usually one of surprise, like "You seem so energetic and positive!"

"That's my nature," I respond. "And I have to fight for it everyday."

My most debilitating bout with depression was in my 20s, but I've been managing the aftershocks of depression for 20 years. Intrusive thoughts, mental dullness, self-directed anger and days of sadness still pass through like unwanted freight trains at a crossing when you have somewhere to go.

The big "D" doesn't rule my life anymore, but it sits right under the surface like vermin watching the action above ground from a sewer drain. It lurks at street level in line with the lowest vantage point as I walk above, seeing the sun and breathing cleaner air, being very careful not to fall into a hole and meet up with it. Oddly, it has brought tremendous meaning to my life as I have learned how to be very conscious of my thoughts and choose them differently, if need be. If there is one thing I've learned, it is that just because I think it, doesn't mean I have to believe it. I saw a bumper sticker the other day that captured my motto: "Don't believe everything you think."

The Buddha said that all suffering is due to attachment. It is the mind that causes attachment. It is the mind that concocts an ironclad argument about how we are right or how we've been wronged or about how the world operates and it is such that creates the cell that isolates us. We have made up our mind or it has been made up for us. The good news is that we can change it. We can be re-minded. And to heal our perception is to give birth to freedom and meaning.

We are all faced with choices, whether we battle depression or not. Do we allow ourselves to be fear-minded, anxiety driven, scarcity-minded? Do we allow anger, hurt and resentment to rule our minds? It's not simple to make the choice, unfortunately -- there may be work needed in therapy to unravel the root beliefs -- but it is absolutely possible to free ourselves from fearful and angry thoughts to embrace thoughts that nurture love and connection. What's interesting is that some of the smartest people with the most developed minds suffer the most at the hand of their own high analytical ability when it comes to having happiness and meaning in their life. These often black-and-white thinkers who see very little that is grey or colorful, are highly and quickly decisive but can also easily miss joy in the way they process. Quick to decide what is good and what is bad, little room is left for mystery and discovery and some of the other elements that slow us down long enough to feel meaning.

When things do not go our way, it is easy to believe the mind's condemnations. By doing so, we put ourselves into a far deeper hell than the true event could possibly cause. To avoid that hell is to choose to be re-minded. It is a chance to question our disappointment or pain or resentment, and to stop assuming what we think is the truth.

We could all stand to be reminded of our true essence. We are love, in essence. We are goodness at our core. When we can download that truth into our minds, we can nurture a loving, forgiving mindset.

We could all use a little re-minding; we need to be reminded of who we really are. When we do, we stop reacting and have time to choose our responses. With the mind calm and the breath steady, we are opened like a geode. We can be ready to shine what is spectacular about us and receive what can help us show our brilliance. We'll have corrected our course and we can get back to the business of living.

Excerpted from The Little Book On Meaning by Laura Berman Fortgang, published by MJF Books in arrangement with Tarcher/Penguin Books

For more by Laura Berman Fortgang, click here.

For more on emotional wellness, click here.

 

Follow Laura Berman Fortgang on Twitter: www.twitter.com/LauraBFortgang

Rabu, 12 September 2012

Independent Woman

For me, being an independent woman is not about being married or single, having a lot of money or even about status in your career -- it is a state of mind. I feel like I have been an independent woman since I was 3 years old. I have always had a certain outlook on life that has carried me through adulthood and it stays with me to this day. It is what makes me an independent woman.

From when I was a little girl, it was that, "Wonder Woman", "I am Woman, Hear Me Roar" attitude that made me the woman I am. I know that if I want to achieve something, I will. That is not said out of arrogance; it is because I will not give up. If one opportunity ends, I will keep at it until another one presents itself. We, as women, have to believe in ourselves and take ourselves seriously if we want anyone else to take us seriously.

I think that too often, people confuse independence with never asking for help. We aren't born knowing everything. Over the years, to become more independent, I have had to ask for help many times. If you know how to do something and I don't, please teach me. How else will I learn? The next time I won't have to ask. I will be able to make home improvements by myself but I wasn't born with that knowledge. Someone showed me. Once I learned, I never had to ask for help with it again.

Can I ask a man to do it for me? -- Sure. Can I pay someone to do it? -- Yes. I just never wanted to be that dependent on the time or schedule of another human being (regardless of who it is). Besides, why do I need someone else to do for me what I can do for myself? You can sit around waiting for your prince charming to come ride up and save you or you can take the reins of your own white horse!

I didn't want to be held captive to someone else's plans or schedule. When I was young, I would call my friends to go out and they couldn't because they would be sitting around waiting for the superintendent of their building to come and fix something or their boyfriend fix their car. Eventually, I would get so tired of it that I would go over and fix whatever it was and, by the time our boyfriends got home, we went out for a girl's night and left the guys at home together. It wasn't long before this mentality caught on amongst my friends as we got older (and times changed).

The key to becoming an independent woman was gathering as much information as I could about as many things possible. If I didn't know how to do something, I learned. I read a book about it. Someone showed me. I took a class. I wanted to know how to take care of myself. It had nothing to do with men or relationships, it had more to do with pride. I wanted to take pride in myself and feel capable. I wanted to look at what I had just fixed or made and feel good about it. So, I return to my original statement: Independence is a state of mind. It is a feeling of pride and empowerment that no one can take away from me!

 

Follow SidneyAnne Stone on Twitter: www.twitter.com/SidneyAnneStone

Selasa, 11 September 2012

'Growing Up' to Your Highest Potential

Despite your chronological (or numerical) age, it's quite normal to feel like you still need to grow up in certain areas of your life. Whether you're feeling disconnected in your relationship, your career seems mundane and unrewarding, or your spiritual life is unfulfilling, you can begin to take the steps to "grow up" to your highest potential in any part of your life you choose to work on. Many adults will ask themselves (or someone close to them) -- sometimes in jest -- "What do I want to do or be when I grow up?" If this rings a bell, it may be a comment that's more grounded in reality than you think.

In my new book Stage Climbing: The Shortest Path to Your Highest Potential, I explain that there are a variety of reasons why individuals often get off the path to reaching an optimal level of maturity in certain life areas. It may be fear, anxiety, or self-doubt that's preventing you from making the most of a given part of your life, but as soon as you allow yourself to be aware that it's time to make changes, these inner conflicts no longer need to control your life.

Here are some first steps to jump-starting your maturation process in any part of your life where this dilemma sounds familiar:

Asking questions: Begin by asking yourself what part of your life could be better? In which area could you feel happier or be more motivated? In which area do you feel like you have not yet fully "grown up"? As you bring these questions to mind, notice what part of your life seems most important to address first. By simply comparing what your life is now to what it could be, you have taken a very powerful first step toward reaching your potential.

Focus on yourself: Notice how the expectations of others are affecting you. Are you doing what's best for you or what someone else thinks or says is best for you? Without strong reasons to change something that's no longer working in your life that are truly your own, the motivation for you to change may not be there.

Take initiative: Ask yourself what you could do to take some definite initiative. This may be something you can do on your own, like updating your resume, for example, or perhaps one where it's necessary to get some help. Mentors, support groups, coaches, and therapists are great resources when stuck in trying to take initiative to move forward in one or more specific areas of your life. Remember to think of whatever steps you come up with, as the first in that journey to reaching your highest potential.

Take responsibility: Stop blaming others for where you are in your life. Forgive parents, partners, bosses, ex-spouses and lovers or colleagues for the ways in which you believe they have contributed to your stuck feeling. Most importantly, forgive yourself for your role in not being where you want to be in your life. With your acceptance of yourself and anyone else you may blame, you'll feel empowered to move forward toward living a life where your passions and happiness are in your hands.

Don't settle: Give yourself full permission to strive for the fulfillment you are seeking. Certain thoughts or attitudes can make it difficult to move forward. Staying in a relationship or a job because you believe you don't deserve better or are incapable of changing will almost certainly hold you back from living according to your true passions.


Happiness and fulfillment are not out of reach. For many resources to help you take steps to grow up to your highest potential wherever you believe you may have stayed behind, visit StageClimbing.com.

For more by Michael S. Broder, Ph.D., click here.

For more on wisdom, click here.

 
 
 

Follow Michael S. Broder, Ph.D. on Twitter: www.twitter.com/DrMichaelBroder

Senin, 10 September 2012

Success Advice That Actually Works (You're Going to Want to Hear This)

I recently devoured Tama Kieves's new book Inspired & Unstoppable: Wildly Succeeding in Your Life's Work! In it, Tama instantly becomes your career coach, biggest cheerleader and most understanding champion. She tells you why everything you think you need to succeed may actually be standing in the way of your success and shares why doing the work you love will bring you the best results. And she's not the woo-woo type that says things that sound nice but aren't actually applicable to your life or your business. She's a Harvard educated attorney-turned-super successful and sought-after career coach whose own story proves that she's on to something big.

Here are some of my favorite lessons from Tama's book for succeeding in your life's work:

1. Marry your dream. You and your dream are in it for the long haul. Rather than rush your dream -- which will just impoverish your experience -- relax and give your dream the time it needs. Though it's natural to feel antsy, Tama questions the idea that great things happen at great speed. "Train wrecks happen at great speed," Tama writes. "It's okay to explore, practice and deepen your craft."

2. Circumstances fluctuate, but your experience of ease and faith doesn't need to fluctuate with them. You know the ups and downs: one day you've scored a big client, sold a piece of your art, or found your name in print or lights, and the next day you're wondering how you'll ever pay the rent or find an agent or sell another one of your products. The ups and downs are part of the journey. But what doesn't have to be a part of the journey is all the angst and worry. Ride the waves.

3. Do the activities that come easy for you. I often come across tasks that I feel obligated to complete, but they drain and exhaust me. Sound familiar? Instead of trudging through them, take action that you have the energy to take, and either outsource or cross off the ones that deplete you. "Release yourself from unnecessary pain," Tama writes. "Move with your heart, not with your head." You will do and be your best at work you love to do. The rest is just distraction.

4. Accept imperfection. Don't wait to take action on that dream until everything's perfect. You have to start somewhere, and that somewhere is right here, right now. What's your need to be perfect costing you? My guess it's the chance to actually live the life you want to live, get your business off the ground and make your dream come true. As Tama says, the longer you avoid the possibility of failure, the longer you avoid success.

5. Go your own way. The way to success is your way. You get to discover, innovate, create and forge your own path. "Creating the work you love is not a path of doing everything right," Tama writes, "creating the work you love is a path of doing everything right --for you."

6. You're irresistibly attractive when you're naturally attracted. "Great energy draws abundant opportunities to you," Tama writes, "it's just natural and inevitable." So when you're filled with love and joy for the work you're doing and the activities you're engaged in, you're automatically attracting the opportunities and people that are right for you.

7. Excitement always leads you somewhere, unless you dismiss its value. You know those moments when you feel totally emerged, exhilarated and excited -- a total "yes" moment -- even when nothing totally concrete has happened? Don't discount that feeling. "It's not about literal outcome," Tama writes, "It's more about how an encounter makes you feel, the truth it ignites within you, the possibility that becomes real through you, and how you use and express that energy." Though these moments may fall apart later -- deals don't go through, clients don't sign up, a big account doesn't buy your product -- you have to relish the possibility. "Possibilities keep us alive," Tama writes. "Even if they don't turn out the way we hope, their energy gets us somewhere."


You can find Tama's book on Amazon. To get more from Alexis, check out her website.

 

Follow Alexis Sclamberg on Twitter: www.twitter.com/AlexisSclamberg

Fearless Living Boot Camp Is HERE! (VIDEO)

Welcome to Fearless Living Boot Camp!

I am so excited for you to join me, The Huffington Post and Social Workout on this 28-day journey.

Are you sick of feeling stuck? Ready to build major confidence in yourself?

Are you finally ready to quit giving all those negative thoughts all that power?

Are you ready to get out of your own way and get on with your life (as in, the life you want)?

Why listen to me? Because I know how important confidence is... because there was a time I didn't have it.

I let fear run my life for years. No more. I finally figured it out. And when I did, my life changed. Radically. I want to share what I learned with you, and to challenge you to challenge yourself.

Fearless Living Boot Camp is built around a simple but powerful tool I created to alter people's lives in days, not years. It's called "Stretch, Risk, Die," and we're going to turn it into a procrastination-beating, courage-building game. What are stretches, risks and dies, you ask? Well, now's a good time to watch our first two-minute video...

Great! You're about to take a BIG step toward silencing the negative voices in your head. Here's how it works:

Step 1: Commit Daily Acts of Fearlessness!
Every day for 28 days -- starting today! -- I will post a new blog item, with video, giving you a challenge that will put you smack dab in the fearless zone. Inspired by my daily posts, your mission is to do at least ONE daily "Stretch," one weekly "Risk," and one "Die" over the course of the month.

Step 2: Earn Fearless Living Points!
The Boot Camp is about accountability and group support. SO, each day you'll log your acts of bravery, small or large, on the Boot Camp homepage -- or via the Boot Camp "widget" which will appear beneath all my posts. To spice things up, we've created a simple "Fearless Living" points system. Here's the quick Boot Camp cheat sheet:

  • STRETCH (1 POINT): Something you know you COULD do, but, um, you just aren't doing.
  • RISK (7 POINTS): Something you aren't quite sure you could do, and you aren't positive you will be successful.
  • DIE (28 POINTS): Something that makes your brain freeze, and you might find yourself saying, "NO WAY AM I DOING THAT. EVER!"


Your job is simply to focus on each day's challenge, and let the points worry about themselves. That said, a "perfect" would be 84 points. Overachievers can absolutely exceed 84 points, which would be super duper amazing.

Step 3: Win Big!
Over the next month, you will not only become more fearless, but you might also win some fab prizes. We'll be picking daily and weekly winners, AND one overall Boot Camp Champ. You might win my bestselling book, Fearless Living. Or you could be given free entry into my kick-butt Fearless Living Training Program. Or you could even WIN three private one-on-one coaching sessions with me. Yahooooo!

What does it take to be a winner? Well, your Fearless Living point score is the most important factor, BUT we're also interested in hearing from you about your experiences, victories and defeats. So, when you tally up your points each day, don't be afraid to share your experiences on the Boot Camp homepage. We're also looking for team players, i.e. people who help others overcome their fears. This Boot Camp will leave nobody behind, so don't be afraid to cheer on your fellow enlistees!

If you miss a day, no worries. Just catch up when you can or skip ahead a day and get right back into the groove. It's about committing to doing something different, something fearless, something now. Do the best you can. You will not be perfect, so don't let that stop you from doing your best.

Without further ado, then, it's time for the first day's challenge!

FEARLESS LIVING BOOT CAMP CHALLENGE, DAY 1

  1. Write down in a notebook, on your computer, OR ON THE CHALLENGE HOMEPAGE: "I am committed to completing the Fearless Living Boot Camp Challenge."
  2. Silently say to yourself: "I am willing to see myself as someone who can be, and is, fearless."

That's it! Don't worry about whether you believe it or not; that will come later. Your job now is to complete each challenge for the next 28 days and, effortlessly, you will start to feel... well, different. Better. More fearless!

Okay: Was today's challenge a Stretch, Risk or a Die for you? (Be sure to watch today's video, so you can figure that out!) How easy or hard was it to claim -- and BELIEVE -- that you could be fearless? Go ahead and log your points!

Now keep moving forward, and don't forget to share the Boot Camp with your friends and family. Let's get this world Fearless!

Until tomorrow, practice being fearless!
Rhonda

Join the Boot Camp and log your fearless activity using the Social Workout-powered widget just below. If you're a Facebook member, simply click the "Connect" button. To sign up with your email, cheer on your fellow enlistees, and to see all the daily videos and commentary, go to the Boot Camp Homepage!

Oh, and if you'd like to read my introductory Boot Camp post, you can click here.

For more by Rhonda Britten, click here.

For more on becoming fearless, click here.

 
 
 

Follow Rhonda Britten on Twitter: www.twitter.com/RhondaBritten

Talent Isn't Always Enough...

For many years I've been helping, guiding, and in some cases, persuading clients and friends to imbue the power of positive psychology. Moreover, my bottom-line required outcome continues to be that people I coach take positive actions. I'm referring to taking actions that will enhance their lives. These include improved health, more upbeat thinking and developing a higher level of EQ (emotional intelligence). As a result of adopting these qualities, they are able to flourish greater. For the most part, I have been successful in achieving success with the majority of my clients. Of course, I've had some disappointing outcomes, however, as the HR director of a prominent international bank said to me, "Malcolm, some people are un-coachable." Hearing those words was of great comfort to me, I felt as though I was not entirely to blame for any coaching outcomes that were less than satisfactory.

A number of the individuals I work with are very talented, however, in my considered opinion, talent is often not enough. To be able to use your talent most effectively, you also need a strategy. Or, to put it a different way, have a plan of action. Like some of the great sports personalities who are hugely talented, without an action plan, be that via a trainer, coach or business partner, it's likely that their talent will not be enough to garner the accolades that come with great success. For those who are not interested in pursuing the kind of success that comes from exemplary achievement, this blog may not resonate with you. Nevertheless, irrespective of your aspirations, my hope is that this post helps you to make better and more effective decisions, be that in business or in your personal life.

First, one needs to consciously decide to take control of their life. To direct your life is both a pleasure and a pain. The pleasure is a symptom of going through the pain. And by just making that decision, we begin our journey to being the person we've always wanted to be. The best way to take control is to first know your purpose: What are you here to do? This is the key to knowing yourself better. And it enables others to know you better too. You might start with, "I'm here to teach people how to..." or "My purpose is to help individuals to experience more..." If you tap into your intuition, you'll be giving a kick-start to the process of self-discovery. Please remember, it's only when we know ourselves well enough that we can begin to make changes, changes that affect our lives, and the lives of others, positively.

Lord Chesterton once said, "Whoever is in a hurry shows that the thing he is about is too big for him" So the one thing you're going to need loads of is patience. In addition, discipline is a vital key because it helps us to focus, even when we'd rather not. I don't recall who said this, "Successful people always do the thing they want to least, first." Whenever I try to put something off, that saying always comes to mind, and then I get on with tackling my least favourite challenge first. Of course, the word "successful" can mean many different things. Here, my definition is to do with being the best version of you that you can be.

Some tips for you to begin your journey:

  • Ask yourself what you do very well
  • Ask yourself what you'd like to do better, or would like to further enhance
  • Ask yourself what you are passionate about
  • If life throws you a curveball, duck and be agile enough to catch it, in spite of any emotional disturbances
  • Never give up. Instead, use the 3 P's: Persistence, Passion and Perseverance
  • Read avidly the kinds of books you know you can learn from


To learn more about Malcolm Levene, visit www.malcolmlevene.com

For more by Malcolm Levene, click here.

For more on success and motivation, click here.

 
 
 

Follow Malcolm Levene on Twitter: www.twitter.com/malcolmlevene

Online Stock Trading Guidelines

Description

Many a do-it-yourself investor has been confused by the mass of options when it comes to selecting an online broker. There are many to choose from and they all seem to offer exactly what you need. This is why it is very important to make sure you do your research before selecting an online broker. Look for online websites that will give you impartial evaluations on different brokers. Find out what others have to say about the broker you are considering. Make sure you take selecting a broker seriously. Take your time in selecting a broker. Look for one that will be available when you need them. If you know there will be specific time that you will most likely need your broker make sure that their site is available at this time of day or night. You should also find out how long it takes for their site to load during peak times. Nothing is more frustrating that needing to make an important trade and being unable to load the webpage to do so online! Find out if they have a lot of technical difficulties that will prevent their site from loading. It can very annoying if you want to contact your broker on an important issue and get the response, site not responding check back later. Even if the page does load successfully, it is still a good idea to visit several of their links to ensure everything is working properly. See what type of promise or guarantee they have in regards to their website and its availability.

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Source : http://www.yubster.com/doc/229/online-stock-trading-guidelines.html

Minggu, 09 September 2012

Loving At all A Course In Miracles

"Greater really like has no one like this; that a man set down his way of life for his friends" (a variety taken from the Bible). This here is an perfect picture of unconditional really like. And indeed, no man has ever done this without expecting something in come returning. Only one personal has ever done this. And He is the author of A Course In Amazing things, God.

Jesus was able to show unconditional really like in the factor that choose to die for us. For us, it would be much easier to really like somebody if he is fantastic. But how about the unloveable? In Jesus' scenario, the sinners and those who have done him wrong. For us, this contains those who have deceived our believe in and annoyed us.

Just the regarded of these people would often damage, referring to past emotions. A very apparent example of such a scenario would be a man who saw his near family members being killed by his others who remain close by. A few a few several weeks after, he signed up with a fellowship where he noticed a exercising about loving your others who remain close by. He was so dissatisfied with what he noticed.

Later that day, he approached the speaker saying, "Pastor, how can you really like your others who remain close by if they were the ones who killed your family associates members, and you were there to notice it all? Tell me, clergyman, are they even fit to be known as your neighbors?" The clergyman carefully addressed, "If you can't really like them as your others who remain close by, then really like them as your enemies". This here is a apparent example of how it is to really like your unloveable others who remain close by, your competitors. No one noticed what happened after that, but definitely it would have been challenging for that personal to accept what the clergyman has said.

Unconditional really like is challenging for people. However, A Course In Amazing things advices us about what God would have preferred us to do. God was the perfect example of this kind of really like. It's not what He did that developed Him an perfect example. Rather, it was Him, Himself.

Jesus liked even those who were regarded challenging to really like. These people were sinners and in some circumstances, the hardest of them all. He liked those who killed Him, and crucified Him on the mixture. This is apparent when, instead of cursing them, God asked for God the Dad to remove those people because they generally did not know what they were doing. It was an breathtaking act of really like verified by absolution.

But it wasn't possible for God, He was personal. He wrestled with it, when He asked for forgiveness His Dad to let the cup of having difficulties finish by. Nevertheless, He published to it and went to the mixture anyway. What really pressured Him to go to the cross? It was His unconditional really like for us and even for those that crucified Him.

A Course In Amazing things advices seeker about this kind of really like, and how to remain out this kind of really like. And this is done by breaking areas we've developed between us and really like.

Forgiveness And Unconditional Love Go Hand In Hand

There are factors in this globe that go side in side if you really want to see good changes occurring around you. The same relates to unconditional really like and absolution. It is challenging to really like and be able to absolve if we have been injured by another. We cannot give what we do not have.

The injuries in our minds and hearts can sometimes tracked way returning from when we are still infants, and even infants. We get them way before we were even created. It comes from the denial we sensed since enough time we are still designed. Because the kid can encounter whatever the mom seems. So whenever the mom seems upset, the kid can obtain those feelings.

For example, when a kid is designed by chance, the kid will think he is undesirable. This happens because the mom may have feelings of apathy towards the designed child. Those feelings of "unplanned"-ness would sign-up to the kid's unconscious. He matures with this sensation within him and gradually produces to denial. Being rejected is designed when the kid activities bad encounter from others.

Because of this, the kid will always encounter upset about his/her mom and father even without any purpose at all. He produces old sheltering those feelings towards his/her people. There would be feelings of range most especially during puberty where feelings are at its levels. The mom and father may wonder why it is so. At periods, the kid matures a insurgent and unmanageable.

With this type of atmosphere, it is almost challenging to launch absolution and unconditional really like. However, for real treatment to really take position, one has to deal with this fact and agree to factors as they are. This is getting into the main of the issue. It indicates going further into the injuries and discover out what and who triggered them. Quite boring, but once a injured spirit begins to go through the procedure, the outcome is fulfilling.

There was this tale of a little lady. She has been a insurgent since her puberty. She did not really comprehend why. She cannot even discover what her people did that was too difficult to absolve. But as time went by, she is familiar with to agree to factors as they are when she began to go returning to the origins. She discovered that her people have had faults of their own, she was "unplanned" and was always remaining at home with no one to deal with me. She increased up alone and separate, that was why at the first indication of adjustment by her mom and father, she went crazy and fought herself no cost.

But there was discomfort and depressive disorders, she realized she required treatment. Time she realized how, she made the decision to get on with it. There came the procedure of absolution. She was able to absolve her mom and father, knowing that they too were injured, that's why they did not have the potential to provide really like ahead. The very day she discovered absolution was also the day she discovered unconditional really like. It was not simple, adoring the unloveable, such as my mom and father. But it was fulfilling and the joy was limitless.

Carry on Some Self Respect

Self respect is a useful factor of your new effective way of lifestyle. It provides out the best features that lie within you and allows you to keep in amazing wellness at all periods. Have the bravery to stay definitely to become who you really are. Think about your durability here as you would like it to be – and then keep that picture and perform towards it.

Respect who you are in the present and you will discover the provides hidden within your key longings. Then you will be able to arrive at out for your objectives. You will make it, once you are real to your primary self. To respect yourself is to believe in you regardless of what the conditions are.

Sometimes you do not experience able to take on some self respect. You mistreat your body; allow others to cure you incorrectly because you are reluctant to get rid of them or because you experience you need them. The truth is that the only individual that can stroll your direction is you.

So you should begin doing some factors for your better amazing. No one can offer you fulfillment if you do not look for for it by your activities, principles and feelings. To take appropriate your real system by training and getting right is an ideal begin. Then you have to cope with your psychological self – always adhere to your inner objectives and motivation. Lastly, your sensible principles should also be taken appropriate wellness proper proper by option that impact your development in a amazing direction.

William Shakespeare said, some age groups ago: «This above all; To Thine Own self be real, and it must adhere to, the evening as the day, Thou canst be bogus to any man». Self respect comes out from a continuous feeling of self-worth, and that you can only catch by being at all periods devoted to your own identification. Do not think about or try to be someone else. You are developed to be… you. If the Galaxy developed to have someone else in your position, then you would not be here to begin with.

Self respect method for understand to use an simple two-letter word: «NO». No is a decreasing term, actually, but very amazing when you use it in someone else. Say no to your risky friends; no is the ideal respond to all that causes damage to your physical wellness and health and fitness and real body; yell out no to those coming principles that somehow damage your best objectives. Figure out how to say «NO» and definitely you will be a more pleased individual.

Self-regard needs a lot of attitude; however, it does not have to be considerable on you. Keep in principles that if you respect yourself, all other individuals immediately will. Absolutely rid yourself from all objectives, group conferences and desires that others make about you. Your way of lifestyle is yours only.

The motivational fire within your primary being is a record for you to offer and make more amazing. The mild that it yard garden yard sheds on the earth can only be if you have a regular activities of self-respect.

Understand How to Help Yourself

By providing your way of way of lifestyle a opportunity, you may actually help yourself. Your everyday living can be a lot better and satisfied if you select to perform out your own satisfaction instead of ineffective aspects. No one knows what will be taken to you in the next day, but you can take liability for your own alternatives in whenever.

Confidence seems to be nearly difficult to find in this globe where there is always someone better than you. Be careful of actions though, because sometimes individuals who seem the very best are not. Procedure to create your satisfaction the evaluate of your abilities to be in this globe. To relax assured is to know that, regardless of what happens in the exterior globe, you will create it.

To experience more in observe with your inner being, start to select little information talking about your day-to-day way of way of lifestyle. Besides all the other individuals and around conditions, the only able being able of determining what is best for you is… you. So help yourself and start your means of treatment by getting kid alternatives towards your complete freedom.

More cash will come as a impact of your new-discovered believe in in the decision-making process. As soon as you experience better about the way you want to go, you can find that getting possibilities is a element of that self-discovery process. Only you can be you, with your exclusive abilities and locations of abilities. When you see your objective and some of the tracks that can cause you there – and when you start strolling down that street – you will know that cash has a way of discovering your pockets.

The law of attention features definitely with regard to prosperity: the wealthy you are and experience and the more you perform towards your own concept of achievements, more simple becomes to get identified through what you do. The key here is that is not enough to think and feel: you have to do something to be able have fun with something, or as we use to say: help yourself.

To enhance your connections, create your own satisfaction your problem. You will see that satisfied individuals entice same – perform to become a individual that you would like to be with. Interest suggestions only perform for those that try to be better. So be the individual you would like up to now.

In conditions of connections, keep in concepts that «sticks and rocks may crack me my cuboid, but conditions will never harm me». Help yourself by knowing in your a while to power and power to become your own achievements. Believe yourself with all your thoughts and center, even though those around you may not know what you are trying to accomplish.

In brief, to experience more assured, generate more income and enhance your connections, you can provide the globe the best resource you have: you. If you believe yourself, everything will come your way. If you question yourself, you will only find out out out impact – and frustration. Procedure to be real to your own picture of satisfaction regardless of what. Help yourself.

Kamis, 06 September 2012

Stopping the Anxiety Cycle

Description

To overcome your anxiety you need to learn how to break your automatic and habitual cycle of fear that keeps you stuck. By now you know what the cycle is and how it’s all playing out inside your mind. The trouble is, it happens very quickly and can easily become automatic behavior that occurs without any conscious thought. What’s critical for you to realize, is that in between the thought that causes your amygdala to react and your fear response, is what I call “The Pause”. There’s a measurable time period, maybe not a long time, perhaps only a second, but a definite moment in between the anxious thought and your reaction. One of your goals is to learn to increase The Pause and give yourself room to make a decision about what to do next, instead of simply reacting with anxiety just because that’s what you may be used to doing.

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Source : http://www.yubster.com/doc/224/stopping-the-anxiety-cycle.html

The Master of Delegation

Have you noticed how we rarely do anything on our own anymore? My mother likes to call me the master of delegation. Meet me. I am the type of person that buys everything from toilet paper to toothbrushes and dishwasher detergent on Amazon.com.

I have a lawyer, an accountant, a publicist, a graphic designer, a writer, an assistant, a cleaning service, an aesthetician, a hair stylist, and a personal trainer. I even had someone at one point who managed my online dating profiles. And if that seems like a lot to you, most people I know have gardeners, pool servicers, dog walkers and a variety of other services you may not even believe existed (sleep butler, anyone?).

I argue that delegation is best because it allows the servicemen to do what they are good at so one can focus on what they themselves are good at. But are we really doing what we are good at, or are we just spending more time distracting ourselves with less-important tasks like incessantly checking our Facebook newsfeed, updating our every move on Twitter and beautifying our mobile photos on Instagram filters?

In recent months I have found myself bored while driving (If I could afford to, here is where I would hire a driver) so I often find myself fantasizing about what I could be doing (again checking email, Facebook, jumping on a call) to just feel busy! Then it occurred to me that the problem is that I (like many others out there) are equating being busy with being valuable. And if that's true, then why am I delegating almost every task that I have?

Here is what I realized. Firstly, being busy does not always equate with how valuable one is. One can make themselves busy with a variety of meaningless tasks, so value every moment that you have and when you are busy ask yourself, is this something that really is helpful to my future and my life?

And lastly, but most importantly, if you choose to delegate, know its OK to have some down time. Life can't always be a frenetic power play game of who gets the most done first, or else we will all die of stress-related illnesses and family loses its meaning. So enjoy some time off and focus on those that you can't tend to when you are busy.

As for me and my need to delegate, I don't think that will ever stop, but I have vowed from here on in, on the occasions I find myself with free moments of time, I will enjoy my boredom rather than curse it and remember that time is something that cannot be taken advantage of!

For more by Samira Asemanfar, click here.

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