David Brett Williams
  • About David
    • About David
    • Start here
    • Contact David
  • Podcast
  • Blog
  • Resources
    • Boost Your Strengths
    • Boosting Your Resilience
  • Work With David
    • keynote speaker
    • Motivational Speaker
  • Shop
    • Mentoring
    • Online seminar
  • About David
    • About David
    • Start here
    • Contact David
  • Podcast
  • Blog
  • Resources
    • Boost Your Strengths
    • Boosting Your Resilience
  • Work With David
    • keynote speaker
    • Motivational Speaker
  • Shop
    • Mentoring
    • Online seminar
  •  
  • 0

Home / 2019

2019

How To Close Your 2019 Year

As the year winds down to a close, the temptation is to slow down.

And it can be easy to forget that a new year full of plentiful opportunities is about to begin!

As we move into the holiday season, it’s also the season for businesses to close their books for the year.

Businesses close their books to make sure that all the financial information about their business is accurate and entered correctly.

For a business, it is an opportunity to get it right before preparing final annual financial statements and corporate taxes.

As we draw our year to a close, what can we learn from business and their year-end closing process?

Let’s define precisely what is meant by a year-end close.

In business, it is an accounting procedure to close out business from the previous year, carry forward balances of the prior year, and open posting accounts for the upcoming year. 

 

Annual Operations

The Year-end close is part of a company’s annual closing operations.

It is used to generate the company’s financial statements.

Effectively, the business will review their year to set themselves up for the next year. 

And we could learn from business and apply our own year-end closing operation because we must keep going. 

The close of the year does not mean that we stop doing what we are doing.

In fact, we should accelerate if we can. 

That means make that extra call. 

Ask for the sale one more time. 

Offer an additional product or service. 

Aim to finish the year strong, so you maintain your momentum into the next year. 

Remember your physics lessons, it is much easier to keep moving than to stop and then start.

All we have to do is to keep going. 

If we stop or slow down, we have to accelerate again next year. 

That is more work.

And it is hard work to get moving again.

Go even faster

Put your foot on the accelerator now. 

As 2019 winds to a close, go even faster.

To make sure 2020 gets off to a fun and enlightening start, let’s look at all the influences of our 2019 experiences.

What were the books, movies, and other media that made an impact on you?

What did they inspire in you?

Did you remember to capture that inspiration so you can shape it into new goals for yourself?

That’s what the year-end close is all about, reviewing your year to give you great insights.

 

Task 1

What went right?

This part is fun, and it motivates you to keep going.

Trust me, you will be astonished when you realise what you did accomplish.

If you are struggling, get in contact, and I will give you tips to guide you through exactly how to trigger these memories to learn what you did, how you were inspired, and what themes you want to carry forward…themes you might never have noticed before.

 

Task 2

What went wrong?

This is an honest assessment of things that didn’t go right over the past year.

Guess what?

This is good news!

You don’t have to do it again!

Doing a year-end close helps you avoid repeating things that don’t work for you.

How To Close Your Year

Task 3

What can you learn about yourself?

How can you improve your life in the next year?

This is what we call “collecting the pay” from your year.

You work on improving yourself all year.

Doing this year-end close means that you actually learn from that experience, giving you a solid foundation for levelling up in 2020.

I hope you’ll join me and do what may be the most rewarding activity of the year, a comprehensive review of our year, setting ourselves up to make the most of 2020.

The end of the year marks an exciting crossroads, AND You have a few paths forward:

 

PATH A: 

Dig yourself deeper for the next few week more procrastinating and missing targets, passing all responsibility to

“Future You.”

Magically hope that Future You will have all sorts of additional free time and motivation to achieve your goals.

I do not recommend Path A. It never works. Ever.

 

PATH B: 

Do your best and figure things out on your own.

This works for MOST people and is a fantastic path for somebody that can self-motivate and keep themselves accountable. 

(I think Path B is excellent for most!)

 

PATH C: 

Work with a pro that is really good at this stuff, and start 2020 with a crazy amount of momentum rather than dread! 

(Path C is an excellent fit for the right person!)

As you might know, our mentoring program has helped thousands of clients transform.

You can find more details here.

Related Articles:


How To Build Resilience, Your Competitive Advantage


Make Creativity Your Superpower


Build the Courage to Achieve Anything


 

  • 30 December, 2019
  • Personal Development, Professional Development
  • More

Be A Flexible And Accurate Thinker

Resilience requires flexible and accurate thinking and the ability to see differing perspectives.

Flexible and accurate thinking allows you to find multiple solutions to a problem. 

We know how life is full of unexpected detours and roadblocks, so being able to develop alternative plans is a vital aspect of resilience.

This is backed up by research from Albert Ellis, Karen Reivich, Martin Seligman and others that show it’s your thoughts that drive your emotions and reactions to a specific event. 

Our ability to assess a situation accurately is influenced by our thinking traps, our core values and deeply held beliefs, and our downward spiral thinking.

When we know how to identify these factors that interfere with our accuracy, we will build self-awareness and a more realistic thinking style.

Be A Flexible And Accurate Thinker infographic

Click the image to download the full infographic

“Thinking is more interesting than knowing but less interesting than looking”

— Johann Wolfgang von Goethe.

Every situation we encounter bears at least a million different intricacies to consider and as many or more memories to compare them to. 

We would have to process a vast amount of information to make a completely accurate judgment of any event.

That is something we are just not capable of. 

That is why two people are highly likely to feel differently about the same event.

Simply because one highlights and focuses on different pieces of the available information than the other. 

 

Mindset

Much of this is dictated by mindset.

Someone with a more positive mindset will concentrate on specific aspects of a situation that someone with a more negative mindset will not.

But neither of them is necessarily in the wrong. 

Wanting to adopt a more positive mindset doesn’t mean you have to lie to yourself or get brainwashed.

What it does mean is that you have to focus on different aspects of the situation selectively.

Your state of mind determines how you predict future events and also, how you evaluate events as they are happening. 

These two factors work symbiotically to reinforce each other.

Our predictions about the future are derived from the information we have stored about past experiences. 

When compared to pessimists, optimists tend to evaluate their daily events from a more positive perspective.

This means they are continuously creating positive memories and beliefs to influence their predictions. 

https://davidbrett-williams.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/12/Be-A-Flexible-And-Accurate-Thinker.pdf

The cycle perpetuates itself

You can see how this cycle works.

The more optimistic the outlook, the more positive evaluation of daily events, the more positive the memories, and the more positive the expectations about the future.

And it continues to perpetuate itself.

And good predictions are priceless, the act of expecting an event to happen makes it much more likely that it will happen.

In other words, if choosing between an optimistic belief and a pessimistic belief, know that the optimistic one will usually lead to measurably better outcomes.

Because optimists make more positive predictions, they are more likely to be successful than pessimists.

Which means they have the opportunity to store even more positive memories and reinforce better beliefs.

There is an easy way to become more positive.

Start now to evaluate events as they happen from a better and more positive perspective.

That way, you slowly build up more positive memories and beliefs.

 

We evaluate events according to three dimensions: 

  1. Internal or External 

Whether we think the event was inside our control (Internal) or outside our control (External). 

  1. Stable or Unstable 

Whether we think similar events in the future will turn out like this (Stable) or are subject to more variable factors (Unstable).

  1. Specific or Global 

Whether we generalise it to other events (Global) or keep it specific to this event (Specific).

Not surprisingly, optimists and pessimists tend to use different combinations of these three dimensions to explain events.

An optimist who just failed an exam might think: 

“I did the best I could (external).

I’m sure I’ll do better in my other exams (unstable).

And this was just a blip (specific)”.

Instead, a pessimist is more likely to think: 

“I am so dumb (internal).

There is no hope I am going to fail all of my exams (stable).

And I will never graduate or find a career (global)”. 

Of course, other combinations are possible.

Consider these as the best and worst-case explanatory styles to explain a negative event like failing an exam. 

https://davidbrett-williams.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/12/Be-A-Flexible-And-Accurate-Thinker.pdf

Massive impact

How you evaluate the events in your life has a massive impact on you.

When you evaluate life events as internal/stable/global the impact of the event is intensified, rather than minimised.

That will have more significance to you and your life than if you evaluate it as external/unstable/specific which tends to brush the event away. 

Optimists tend to apply the first combination (internal/stable/global) to positive events and the second one (external/unstable/specific) to negative events.

The optimistic model is to not let negative events affect them too much and emphasise the meaning of positive events. 

Unsurprisingly, pessimists do the opposite. 

When pessimists ace an exam, they are still likely to use the worst-case explanatory style.

“The questions were easy anyone could have passed (external), I got lucky this time (unstable), with my luck this will never happen again (specific). 

Compare that to the best-case evaluation.

One that influences your predictions in the most positive way and gives you the most confidence.

“I deserve this A+ grade because I studied hard and I am good at this (internal).

My next exams will turn out just as well as long as I put the time in (stable). I am confident about my abilities, and I know I will be successful in the future (global).”

 

The most realistic explanatory style

So, what is the most realistic explanatory style? 

Two of the dimensions have a clear objective alternative: unstable rather than stable and specific rather than global. 

If you explain events in unstable and specific terms, you concentrate your evaluation on this event only.

You don’t generalise.

This means for all negative events, the optimistic explanatory style is the more objective and realistic one. 

If you explain events in stable and global terms, you generalise your evaluation of this event to future events.

“And this is the rubbish that I can expect from now on.”

Taking all of that into account you would be led to believe that for positive events pessimists would, strictly speaking, be more objective.

However, that is not the case.

This is where the self-fulfilling prophecy comes in.

If you generalise positive experiences they will influence your beliefs more and improve your future predictions.

All it takes is to choose to evaluate positive experiences as more meaningful and exemplary. 

When you do that your generalisations will eventually become reality.

https://davidbrett-williams.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/12/Be-A-Flexible-And-Accurate-Thinker.pdf

Thinking is hard work

I am not telling you that this will be easy.

Thinking is hard work. 

Let’s take a moment to realise how amazing you are.

What you’re doing right now is quite extraordinary. 

You’re taking a series of squiggly black lines and extracting meaning from them.

No other creature can do that like you can. 

And you can probably achieve it with relative ease.

You see the words in front of you and process them in an instant, never thinking of the words themselves, only what they represent.

Remember that time when it wasn’t always easy to read?

It might be ages ago, but when you were first learning to read, you would have had to put a lot of effort into it. 

Unusual words would have been obstacles.

You would have stumbled, concentrating on the individual letters and how they are pronounced. 

It’s impressive just how far you’ve come.

Most learning follow this trajectory.

You learn and that learning requires effort. But the knowledge you form afterwards becomes easier to use. 

We have all been a student of life for many few years now.

We have picked up many skills along the way.

Think about it, we can read, talk, walk, use cutlery, brush our teeth, and all with little effort. 

Most of our daily activities can be done while we are entirely detached from the activity itself.

This is pretty darn incredible.

What’s more, you probably have unique skills and knowledge that most people don’t have.

Maybe you have an interest in math or physics or math, cooking, or psychology. 

 

Your thoughts make you YOU.

Your mind is like your fingerprint, it’s yours and only yours.

You are a unique mixture of abilities, concepts, facts and memories.

Your thoughts make you YOU.

But you had to work to get here.

You had to work to become you. 

And, you’ll have to work to become your future self, too. 

And you will only undertake that work if you see the benefits of doing it.

Learning is refining the mind, making it more accurate, efficient, and versatile. 

As beneficial as it may be, learning isn’t always a pleasant experience.

To become our future self requires some discomfort.

 

  • 23 December, 2019
  • Personal Development, Professional Development
  • More

New Year’s Resolutions to Boss Your 2020

Many of us make New Year’s Resolutions in the wind up to New Year’s Eve, and then by the end of February, they are long forgotten.

The most common broken resolutions are to get out of debt, lose weight, quit smoking, and be more relaxed.

According to a University of Scranton survey, around 45% of people make New Year’s resolutions.

However, only 8% will accomplish them.

A common reason we fail to accomplish our resolutions is because we set goals that are almost impossible to reach.

The truth is, many of us still have to become the person that is capable of achieving our audacious goals.

This is not the time to give up hope!

Instead, in the coming year, we can focus on the tangible actions that will bring us closer to achieving our New Year’s resolutions.  

Here’s a list of 13 action-packed resolutions we can use to transform each one of us into that person who makes their dreams come true:

New Year's Resolutions

1. Make a new friend each month

Human connection with others is one of the most important aspects of being human.

And having friends increases our sense of well-being.

Commit to getting to know an acquaintance, a co-worker’s family, or join a meet-up group for a hobby that you are interested in.

 

2. Do something nice on a daily basis

It can range from something small like paying someone a compliment to something significant like giving blood.

Knowing we are making a difference increases our own happiness and sense of achievement.

Commit to being the person that makes others feel special.

 

3. Let go of needing to be right

Everyone can learn from opening our minds and genuinely listening to what other people have to offer.

Practising humility is a sure way to change our need to be right and prove others wrong.

Practising humility does not mean that we have to accept their beliefs and ideas.

When we have true confidence in our own choices, we don’t have to prove anything.

Commit to keeping an open mind.

 

4. Save a little more

Most of us don’t have a pension fund or a substantial sum of money in our bank accounts.

Making automatic investments is a small step we can make to remedy this problem.

When we receive a bonus or pay increase, we can put that money into our savings.

It’s easier to invest that money when we don’t have to think about it and when it’s automatically taken out.

Commit to making sure that a portion of our salary is deposited into a savings account and/or pension fund each pay period.

New Year's Resolutions

5. Change your retail habits

Shopping is a difficult pleasure to give up for many of us.

Instead, look at where you are spending the most money and then limit your shopping to those places.

When making a purchase, opt for quality over price.

Good quality items last longer and will not need to be replaced as frequently as a lower-cost one.

Other great ideas include using coupons or discount codes and go thrift and consignment shopping.

Commit to spending less and saving more.

 

6. Start a new routine

How boring to do the same thing every day. But that is what we typically do.

What can you add to your daily routine to make it more fresh and exciting?

It doesn’t have to be anything drastic, it can be something as simple as changing your route to work or reading five pages of a book each morning.

Commit to adding something new to your daily routines.

 

7. Avoid elephant traps

If we want to be more productive in 2020, we can start by putting away our phones and closing the internet browser on our computers.

The vast majority of text messages, e-mails, phone calls, and social media updates can wait.

This discipline gets us focused on our essential tasks and limit our tendency towards procrastination.

Commit to focusing on the important and not urgent.

 

8. Do something on your bucket list

Doing one new thing each year of our lives from now until we die, will have lead to us living an incredibly fulfilled life.

Let’s prepare to scuba dive with tropical fish, climb that mountain all the way to the summit, go tandem skydiving, or mentor an at-risk youths.

Commit to doing one new thing each year for the rest of your life.

New Year's Resolutions

9. Turn off technology

It’s a beneficial idea to turn off our phones while at important meetings, while we are sleeping while spending time with someone, or when trying to focus on being productive.

Our phones are a more significant distraction than we will ever admit to.

While we’re playing on our phones, life is passing us by.

Commit to being fully present.

 

10. Start journaling

We all have feelings, thoughts, and things that make us happy, but many of us commit the mistake of sharing it all on Twitter or Facebook.

The best thing to do would be to start a journal.

It’s private to you, it’s easy to re-read and reflect on, and it doesn’t offer unsolicited advice for our problems.

Commit to journaling your thoughts and feelings daily.

 

11. Believe that obstacles are part of the plan

Life isn’t easy.

The challenges we have to overcome in life serve to develop us and assist us in personal growth.

Each hardship we go through shapes us into a stronger, more resilient person.

Commit to trusting that whatever we are going through is part of a bigger plan instead of resisting and attempting to control the order of life.

 

12. Speak to yourself kindly

Surely, we can try to be our own best friends each day?

The best friend that gives ourselves empowering compliments.

The next time we let a negative thought fester in our thinking, let’s take a moment to consider what our friends would say about us.

It is only when we learn to treat and speak to ourselves more kindly that we become better partners too!

Commit to talking to yourself as if you were talking to a valued friend.

 

13. Get to know yourself

What qualities do we express when we are the best version of ourselves?

And what qualities at our worst?

What brings out the best in us?

And what brings out the worst in us?

What can we do to avoid situations that bring out our worst qualities?

Commit to determining your strengths and weaknesses and see how your character traits are best used for success.

 

To boss your 2020 you need to act on your resolutions and here you have thirteen to get you started.

If you make a resolution commit to accomplishing it. Choose to be amongst that elite 8% who accomplish their resolutions.

This year, focus on the tangible actions that will bring you closer to achieving our New Year’s resolutions.

Do that and you will transform yourself into that person who makes their dreams come true.

Related Articles:


How To Build Resilience, Your Competitive Advantage


Make Creativity Your Superpower


Build the Courage to Achieve Anything


 

  • 16 December, 2019
  • Personal Development, Professional Development
  • More

Find Your Smile

A lot of people out there need to find their smile. Because while going through life, they lose the ability to laugh, to laugh without worry.

The change is gradual and subtle.

You might brush it off because you don’t even notice yourself changing.

That is what happened to me.

I woke up one day to realise I was taking life too seriously. 

Growing up, I had disappointments, as we all do. But despite that my hope for the future outweighed all of that.

Of course, I encountered some disappointments and obstacles, and my future didn’t play out as I imagined it would.

smile

Click the image to download the full infographic

A cycle of blame.

I entered a cycle of blame.

Blaming myself for not being wiser to make better decisions.

Blaming myself for not being smarter to catch my wrong decisions.

And when this cycle of blame made me feel miserable, I blamed myself for feeling miserable.

After all, resilient people don’t waste energy or time feeling miserable.

Then I got angry but worse, I felt I was entitled to my anger.

Through feeling wronged and directing my anger outwards, I stopped being able to experience joy, and of giving it too.

 

1. A ritual.

Having a ritual, any ritual helps give me a sense of grounding and stability.

When we follow rituals that are aligned with our beliefs, values, and life purpose, it makes us feel calmer and more in control over other areas in our lives.

I chose the ritual of saying, “Thank You!” three times after waking up. Something I copied from Wayne Dyer.

This simple act of gratitude in the morning uplifted me and gave me the assurance that I could develop other habits and rituals to change other areas of my life too.

2. Smiling more.

Research shows that our external expressions act as a continual feedback loop to reinforce our internal emotions.

So, we don’t smile when we are happy, we need to smile to be happy.

Yes, smiling more even when we are down in the dumps will gradually make us happier. 

True to this, smiling at other people takes us beyond our own world and has us focus on another’s happiness.

If smiling made me feel good and smiling is contagious then by smiling at other’s I was making them feel good too.

We all have activities that elevate our mood.

It might be listening to music, dancing, cooking, reading, cleaning, or being in the company of relatives.

Make time to do things that give you more opportunities for “smile-time.”

smiling girl

 

3. Everyone, including yourself, is only human.

One trait that contributes massively to our well-being, fulfilment, and happiness is forgiveness. 

Everyone in the world has been hurt or let down by somebody they trusted.

Or at a minimum, wishes they had been treated better.

We are all standing at one single point in the massive learning curve that is life.

When I use ‘we’ that includes yourself and the people that hurt you.

And our actions spring from our perceptions from that particular vantage point.

If you want to learn the skill of forgiveness, then spend more time with kids.

They manage to practice the art unerringly.

 

4. Start somewhere.

We put off our plans because we think we are not there yet, not ready to start.

We’re too judgemental of ourselves and as a consequence are afraid of showing our imperfections to the world.

We all make the mistake of waiting for the perfect time to start or launch something.

Mother nature took millions and millions of years to get to where the world is today.

And amazingly, the world will continue to evolve for millions of years from now.

If that is the case, why do we have to be perfect today?

 

5. Breaking the pattern.

When we feel angry with somebody, it is because we associate something negative with them.

When we consciously associate positive things with them, like the time they helped me or remembering the skill they are really good at, the negativity will melt away.

Of course, the negativity can come back, but the more you counter it with positive thoughts, the less power it has.

The next time you find yourself getting annoyed with someone, remember a positive thing about them.

It makes a world of difference.

smile more

6. Make a decision.

There is a difference between making a decision and taking a decision.

It is an essential but subtle distinction.

When you make a decision, it is a process that happens over time.

It is when the decision is constructed or made.

It is about how you get to the decision, ensuring you understand the whole process.

When you take a decision, it occurs in an instance.

The decision is taken from the options available options.

Consider that a decision is taken at the moment the choice is made. 

Decision making, precedes the decision being taken.

What often happens is that we rush the decision-making.

And some may still be undecided, unclear, or even unsure.

The likelihood is that they might be unclear what the consequences of the decision are or unclear what actions are required following the decision.

You need to be crystal clear what decisions are required and how you will make them.

Whenever you are faced with a significant decision, making it is an enormous emotional leveller.

Make a decision to find your smile. When you do, it will clear the old clutter and restart happiness.

You will feel invigorated, even if it is hard work.

 

7. Be aware of the triggers.

Our health has a significant effect on our mood and vice versa.

When I am stressed, my diet suffers, and my body fails to run optimally, and this, in turn, causes my mood to suffer further.

I would then procrastinate, which made me feel bad about myself.

I am cautious about over-scheduling myself, so things don’t pile up.

When they do, I feel inefficient and inadequate.

Our body is continuously giving us signals. Even when we try hard to ignore them.

Maybe it is time to start paying attention.

To find your smile and have renewed happiness, you need to invest in yourself.

Be kind to yourself and take time to understand yourself.

Spend time doing the things you love and remember to afford yourself time to heal, no matter how painful it is right now.

 

  • 9 December, 2019
  • Personal Development
  • More

Make Friends With Your Imperfections

We all have imperfections and there is so much pressure to get ahead these days that it’s easy to lose sight of what’s essential.

Everywhere you look, there are reminders to set and reach stretch goals, to look to the next challenge, the next promotion, a bigger house, and a better car. 

It might be tempting to give up, even maybe feel like you’re a failure for not having an Instagram-worthy day every day.

Here are some suggestions for embracing your imperfections. 

 

Own your individuality and your flaws

It’s time to cut yourself some slack and make friends with your imperfections.

It is not only human to be imperfect; it’s what makes you an individual. 

All those little quirks, the crooked smile, the cowlick, even the frown when you’re concentrating, all make you irresistibly you. 

It’s the same with skills.

So you’re not good with figures, or your ball skills are lame.

No one is good at everything, and no one goes through life without making mistakes. 

Owning your flaws will make you more relatable as a person and more compassionate in your dealings with others.

Practising some self-compassion will make you a kinder, more accepting person. 

Imperfections

 

Get some perspective

Learn to be objective about your mistakes and how important they are in the big scheme of things.

Often making mistakes or failing can be a big aha moment. 

You learn what didn’t work, you change course, and you move on. 

Reset your expectations and learn to think of mistakes as stepping stones to long-term success, not as damning indictments of you as a person.

The sooner you detach yourself from identifying with your failures, the better! 

It’s how you respond to failure that defines you, not the mistake itself. 

 

Be kind to yourself

Perfectionists tend to lose sight of the real issue.

Did you do your best?

Did you give it your best shot? 

So many things are out of your control and have the potential to support or derail your projects.

If you did the best you could at the time, and you have learned from the experience, that’s enough. 

Instead of locating your self-worth in other people’s opinions or the success or failure of a project, find success in how you behaved and what you did. 

Make friends with imperfection by seeing yourself as a rounded, complete human being. 

Imperfection is necessary to keep growing and learning and discovering new and exciting things about the world and its possibilities. 

 

When You Embrace Your Imperfections

Did you know that as soon as you stop trying to be perfect, beautiful things happen? It’s true! 

Choose to step away from continually striving to get ahead, to achieve an impossible ideal, and you will see life open up like a flower. 

Here are some of the blessings of embracing imperfection.

Imperfections

 

You realise your uniqueness

Tone down the critical self-gaze and suddenly those little quirks stop being flaws and start being beautiful things that set you apart and make you your own, unique, beautiful self. 

No one else has your smile or your frown of concentration.

No one else can write the way you do or make your style of French toast. 

 

You can stop comparing

Embracing your imperfections releases you from the destructive cycle of comparing yourself with other people.

Your Inner Critic can stand down because being better than the next guy suddenly stops mattering. 

Seeing your flaws as unique characteristics making up your self also releases you from needing external validation.

So, what if you don’t have a thirty-inch waist or your legs don’t go on forever? 

Real validation comes from within and what other people think or how they look doesn’t matter. 

 

You become more positive about yourself and others

Stepping out of the competitive measuring up changes your mindset.

Instead of being judgmental and self-critical, you focus on the things you like about yourself. 

And as soon as you stop beating yourself up, you become more relaxed about other people. 

You become kinder

People who are okay with their less than perfect aspects tend to be more forgiving of other people’s flaws. 

When you embrace imperfection, your standards become more realistic, and in turn, you take a kinder more compassionate view of yourself and others. 

 

You lose your fear of failure

Once you’ve become more okay with imperfection, failure shrinks down to more realistic proportions.

You can see mistakes or missteps as an inevitable part of being human. 

Failure is an essential part of learning, a stepping stone on the path to success. 

And because fear is no longer a catastrophic prospect, it’s a lot safer to take some risks, to stretch your challenges and who knows, even have more significant successes. 

 

Your self-esteem grows

Accepting that failure is okay, and that imperfection is inevitable means that you become happier with who you are and how you’re doing.

It doesn’t mean you don’t work hard or stop having goals, but it does mean you are less hung up about doing everything correctly. 

All your characteristics and experiences become aspects that make you the beautiful individual you are.

And that’s pretty wonderful.

We all have imperfections and when we learn to embrace our imperfections we become more resilient and keep focused on what’s essential. 

Related Articles:


How To Build Resilience, Your Competitive Advantage


Make Creativity Your Superpower


Build the Courage to Achieve Anything


 

  • 2 December, 2019
  • Personal Development
  • More

Build Meaningful Connections With Others

Whether you’re talking about developing resilience, managing stress, or finding greater life satisfaction, building meaningful connections are a must.

You and I and all humans have a basic necessity to connect with others.

These interactions lend meaning and happiness to our lives.

Too many people succumb to the misconception that the ability to connect with others is an unteachable trait that belongs to only a blessed few.

The reality is that the ability to build meaningful connections is under your control.

And it comes down to a matter of emotional intelligence.

Matthew Lieberman at UCLA conducted some research that shows being social and connecting with others is a fundamental human need similar to food, shelter, and water.

Click the image to download the full infographic

 

Social Pain

Lieberman discovered that the social pain we feel at the loss of a relationship originates in the dorsal posterior insula.

That is the same part of the brain as physical pain.

We are designed for survival, and the primary function of this area of the brain is to alert us to threats.

Think about that and you realise how powerful and important social connection is to us. 

We are hard-wired to be social creatures.

Taking a moment to reflect on our daily encounters can help us determine whether the interactions we have with others constitute meaningful connections. 

Countless interactions occur with family, friends, teachers, coworkers, service providers, baristas, children, neighbours, and coaches.

The list is literally endless. 

connections

 

Impossible And Exhausting

It would be impossible and exhausting to make a meaningful connection at every encounter, yet enhancing our awareness and ability to improve relationships leads to many benefits.

Connecting with the person who makes my latte? You must be joking! Give me a reason why I should. 

Meaningful connections support our well-being in a holistic sense.

People in positive, supportive relationships gain a greater sense of self-worth.

And the better quality relationships at work, then the higher your work satisfaction. 

The research conclusively shows we experience overall health benefits such as reduced symptoms of depression, anxiety, and stress. 

It is also shown that caring behaviours, which are evident in meaningful connections, release stress-reducing hormones. 

No wonder that a phone call with a friend helps us feel more relaxed, confident, and content.

 

Convinced Yet?

It is easy to make meaningful connections because they can occur in any interaction and are not limited to your most profound relationships.

Whether it is working on a project with a coworker, supporting your partner through a difficult time in their career, or coordinating snacks with another rugby parent, qualities such as compassion, honesty, respect, support, and positivity enhance every interaction. 

Interactions create meaning when something personal happens.

We bond instantly over a shared experience that conveys respect between two people.

Here are some easy ways to enhance the quality of your connections:

 

1. Opportunity

You increase opportunity by allowing yourself to be available to interactions initiated by others.

Start your day with the intention to improve your meaningful connections. 

Develop the broad intention to enhance relationships throughout your day or define specific groups of people with whom you desire to strengthen your bonds. 

When and where do you feel least connected with others?

When you identify the when and the where then you can develop ways to make meaningful connections with those people.

 

2. Open-Ended Questions

When interacting with others, asking more open-ended questions creates an opportunity to discover common ground, learn about someone, and begin to establish a bond. 

Open-ended questions invite information to be shared. It is a way to demonstrate your interest in listening to what they have to say. 

“What is important for you to accomplish in this?” 

“What is your ideal vacation?” 

“What’s the craziest thing you have seen in your job?” 

These are examples of conversation starters.

3. Listen 

Listen intently to what the other person has to say and respond with interest, banter, or empathy.

Preoccupation with your own day can preempt your ability to stop and listen. 

Demonstrating that you care builds respect and invites reciprocity.

When someone feels heard, it creates a sense of value and meaning.

 

4. Greeting  

When you give a warm greeting establishes an instant connection and acknowledges another person’s existence. 

It signals to another person that you are approachable, which may lead to continued communication or sharing.

 

5. Variety

Connecting with a variety of people throughout the day and throughout a lifetime helps expose us to new ideas and new activities. 

With each person, we experience something different such as a new inspiration, new information, or a unique bond that helps bring out different parts of our whole being.

 

6. Your Inner Voice

A massive thing that keeps us from connecting with other people is we’re thinking too much while the other person is talking.

Instead of really listening. 

We become so focused on how what the other person is saying is going to affect us or on what we’re going to say next that we fail to hear what’s being said.

While we hear the words loud and clear, the meaning is lost.

You must quiet this inner voice if you want to connect deeply with people.

It is not a big deal if you forget what you were going to say or if the conversation changes direction before you have a chance to make your point. 

 

Internal Soundtrack

If your goal is to connect with another person, you have to shut off your own internal soundtrack long enough to focus on what they’re telling you.

The good news is that we are hard-wired to connect with each other; we just get in our own way. 

Every time you meet someone new try these strategies.  

They are simple. They will enhance connections at all levels, including those with our children, our spouses, our coworkers, even the barista who makes our latte. 

These enriched interactions with others not only increase your health and happiness but provide a deeper meaning to our lives.

 

  • 25 November, 2019
  • Personal Development
  • More

The Cost of Perfectionism

It might come as a surprise to you to hear that perfectionism is not a virtue. It might just be the thing that’s holding you back.

Wait? What?

But isn’t perfectionism seen as a good thing? Don’t perfectionists do a fantastic job?

And what about that interview advice? You know the one that suggests you say your weakness is perfectionism?

According to the latest research, perfectionism is not such a good thing. Here are some of the proven costs of it.

 

Perfectionism is bad for your physical health

There is evidence that perfectionists are at a higher risk of several chronic diseases. Diseases like diabetes, Crohn’s disease, ulcerative colitis, and high blood pressure.

In part, this is due to their high levels of chronic stress. Perfectionists have greater difficulty coping with chronic illness and as a result, are pessimistic about their chances of recovery.

 

Perfectionism is bad for your mental health

Your average perfectionist is likely to be suffering from low self-esteem, anxiety, and depression.

If you’re a hard-core perfectionist, a lot of your time is spent judging yourself and finding yourself
wanting, no matter how hard you try.

Perfectionists tend to see the glass half empty. If they score 95 on a test, they beat themselves up for the 5% they got wrong. And chances are they only got a few answers wrong.

Because perfectionists can never be good enough, they fret and worry and blame themselves into a state of constant stress. And continuous pressure harms us physically and mentally.

perfectionism

Perfectionism harms relationships

Perfectionism is not something you want to look out for or find in a life partner, friend or colleague.

They can be nitpickers, nags, and bullies.

Nothing is ever good enough, and mistakes are seen as massive failures.

Perfectionism makes you less compassionate and patient, more critical and judgmental.

 

Perfectionism lowers creativity

If you’re a perfectionist, you are more likely to stick rigidly to the rules and have to do everything “the right way”.

That’s not a recipe for creative flow or finding innovative solutions to problems.

The perfectionist mind tends to be closed to possibilities and risk-avoidant. As a result, innovation suffers.

 

Perfectionism lowers productivity

The perfectionist is committed to everything working out correctly, with no errors and zero deviation.

That might sound great for being goal-oriented but makes you less likely to take action, especially the bold steps that are sometimes required to breakthrough.

Being a perfectionist often goes hand in hand with procrastinating. This often leads to “writer’s block”, crippling stage fright, and other forms of performance anxiety.

Unless a perfectionist can guarantee to do something one hundred per cent right, they’ll find it challenging to do it at all.

Convinced that perfectionism is a hollow and costly pursuit? Let me add this thought; life presents enough challenges without us fabricating our own.

As an alternative, I suggest that it is time that you embrace your imperfections.

perfectionism

Embrace your beautiful imperfections

Everyone seems intent on ironing out imperfections, from using social media filters on selfies to consciously curating their lives.

It appears that any level of fault is intolerable, and failure is a catastrophe.

And for most people that is just setting yourself up for an unhappy, unfulfilled life as the mirage of perfection moves further and further away.

Here are six good reasons to stop chasing that mirage and learn to embrace yourself as you are, imperfections and all.

 

You stay focused on what’s important

Perfectionists tend to get derailed by the slightest mistake or little thing that doesn’t go right. They agonise over details; they get in their own way.

If you keep your eye on what you want to achieve, not some unattainable ideal, you’ll be much more likely to reach your goals.

 

You’ll be more compassionate

Once you’ve stopped judging yourself for every little thing, you’ll find it easier to be kinder and more compassionate towards other people.

You’ll be more patient and not get irritated by quirks or habits where previously you might have reacted.

Embracing perfection makes you a lot less reactive all round.

 

You’ll feel lighter and happier

Making peace with your imperfections relieves you instantly of a whole bunch of stress. Your Inner Critic can stand down and put its feet up, allowing you to relax and get on with your life, unburdened by not feeling good enough.

Liberated from the need to be seen to be perfect, you’ll feel a lot happier and more content with who you are and what you’ve got.

 

It’s easier to stay in the present

If you accept yourself for who you are, it becomes much easier to stay in the present and feel grateful for your life.

Instead of anxiously chasing future goals or beating yourself up for past mistakes, you can be comfortable with the here and now, knowing you’re doing your best.

 

Your relationships will improve

Being a more accepting person will strengthen your relationships with family, friends, and colleagues.

Accepting that imperfection and mistakes are a normal part of life means that you become a lot less ego-driven, and judgmental.

You might even become a role model for others!

 

You get a different perspective on life

Once you accept that flaws and mistakes are a normal part of the human experience, you will be more resilient and grounded.

You become more aware of the bigger picture, and that life’s not all about you.

Perfectionism is not the virtue we are led to believe it is and to pursue it extracts a high cost on us.

But we can change, we are more than the habits we do.

We can embrace our imperfections and live an outstanding life.

Related Articles:


How To Build Resilience, Your Competitive Advantage


Make Creativity Your Superpower


Build the Courage to Achieve Anything


 

  • 4 November, 2019
  • Personal Development
  • More

Know Your Sentence

I stumbled upon a wonderful post called: What Is Your Sentence? in Daniel Pinks blog. This is how people would talk about you. Or more precisely, how YOU want people to remember you or describe you when you are no more. 

Know your sentence is a simple way to identify what your purpose is. 

While it is a favourite theme of Daniel Pink, he acknowledges in his book Drive the idea originated with Clare Boothe Luce who was a businesswoman and one of the first women to serve in the US Congress.  

Luce expressed her concern to President John F. Kennedy that he might be in danger of trying to do too much. And as a result, would lose focus. 

your sentence

Click the image to download the full infographic

One sentence.

She told him early in his presidency that “a great man is one sentence.” 

What she meant is that a leader with a clear and strong purpose could be summed up in a single line. 

This concept is useful to everyone, not just presidents.

Your sentence might be, “He helped raise three children who became healthy, happy, adults.” Or, “She invented an app that made people’s lives much easier.” 

For example, Prime Minister Winston Churchill’s life could be summed up as, “He saved Britain in it’s darkest hour.” 

 

So what is your sentence?

Have you thought about your sentence? If you have, that is amazing! If you already have a sentence, please share it with us in the comments section.

And if you don’t, then it is time to do that. 

One time, Ernest Hemingway was challenged to write a story using only six words. Many thought this impossible, even for the great author. 

But not for Hemingway, the next day Hemingway produced this, “For sale. Baby shoes. Never worn.”

 

A mighty challenge.

It takes time and effort to distil down the essence of what you’re trying to achieve in a short and memorable sentence.

Reducing life to a handful of words is a mighty challenge. 

Why is it so bloody difficult to sum up your life in one sentence? After all, articles have headlines, brands have tag lines, and even Twitter limits you to a few characters.

Does it feel too cheesy, morbid, or limiting? Is it reminiscent of a dating profile or a tombstone? 

It might be a little bit of all of them. We consider ourselves multi-dimensional beings with professional and personal lives, not to mention family, friends, hobbies, and interests.

How is it possible to capture all that in just one sentence?

your sentence

So what is your sentence?

Begin by focusing on what is most important. There is no right and wrong or good and bad.

But there is ONE thing that probably defines you more than anything else. 

One Sentence for one defining moment.

Creating a six-word memoir is a useful exercise in self-analysis. More so if you apply the process to reflect upon your results and your goals. 

Did I achieve what I set out to achieve? 

Did my results stand the test of time?

Did I help others to succeed? 

This simple yet complex exercise works well as a form of aspiration, that is, how do you want to be remembered?

This is powerful at any point in your career, but the sooner you do this, the more time you have to make changes so that you can become the person you are capable of becoming. 

If your sentence is aspirational or a goal not yet achieved, then ask yourself, “How might I live up to my own sentence?”

You may be familiar with the story of Alfred Nobel.

A wealthy and successful man who was recognised for manufacturing explosives that killed people more effectively than anything previously. 

 

An accident.

One day, there was an accident that blew his plant up. Everyone, including the press, thought he had been killed.

The next day, the newspaper headlines told of the dead man who made dynamite that had killed so many people.

Nobel was not at the plant that day, and he was shocked to see how he was remembered by the press.  

He made an immediate decision to change his life. Thus, the Nobel Prize that we all know today was created. The one sentence of his life changed just like that.

Consider these fundamental questions to help you consider how you would sum up your life in six words or less.

How can I help? 

What is my influence? 

As humans, we are motivated to work for goals greater than ourselves. We achieve great things through the efforts of others.

They must create conditions for others to succeed. 

Summing up your purpose in a few words challenges you to think about what work and life mean to you and how you influence the people around you.

 

So what is your sentence?

The reason for doing this now and delaying is that once you decide how you want to be remembered, the entire focus of your life changes. 

You then concentrate on the essential things that will help you achieve what you have always dreamt of.

I know, this will put some people off, but believe me the sooner you do this, the better your life will be. I promise.

If you are struggling to come up with your sentence, don’t despair, enrol in the free webinar, 5 Ways To Perform At Your Best.

Dare to dream.

Follow your passion.

Be outstanding each and every day.

  • 4 November, 2019
  • Personal Development
  • More

What Keeps You From Fulfilling Your Life Purpose

Sometimes you can know your life purpose but then get sidetracked and never fulfil it.

The vast majority of people don’t know their life purpose or they are unsure about their purpose.

It is difficult to find something when you don’t know what you are looking for.

A few know their purpose but feel they don’t deserve it. Others know their purpose but are afraid of failure.

A small few know their purpose, but they get stopped because they feel they could never handle the responsibility that comes with it.

That’s a combination of guilt, fear of failure, and fear of success. Imagine the sadness and frustration of knowing your life purpose to then get hindered from moving forward.

If you don’t know your life purpose, don’t fret just yet, you may need longer to discover it.

You need to do the work necessary to find out what is that makes you feel happy and fulfilled.

In this post, I will give you tips to uncover your life mission and show you the three most common reasons that stop people from fulfilling their life purpose.

 

What is your life purpose?

Bob Proctor posed this question, “If I could spend my life doing one thing, what would I really love doing?” 

In answering this challenging question, you will uncover your life purpose.

At first inspection, it may seem an easy question, but it can take many people weeks or months to find the answer.

Everything fulfils a purpose in this world. Though wasps might be an exception.

The Sun provides light and warmth to support and sustain life. The Clouds provide the rain giving water to all living things.

Sand and rocks serve to filter the water. Plants provide oxygen and food for us. Do I need to mention that bees pollinate the plants or do you get my point?

These all have a set purpose. You could argue that they were designed or created for that purpose. For example, trees can’t decide to provide oxygen or not.

 

We choose

We humans are different, we can choose our life purpose.

Mark Twain said, “The two most important days in your life are the day you are born, and the day you find out why.”

What I think he means by this is that discovering your purpose gives your life real meaning.

Discovering your life purpose gives you a reason to get out of bed every morning.

If your answer to why you get out of bed is, “Because I need to go to work.” It is not the right answer unless you love your job.

There has to be more than going to work because you need to pay your bills.

There is a great story dating back to when John F. Kennedy visited the NASA space centre.

The then President of the USA saw a janitor pushing a mop and walked over and asked him what he was doing.

A man on the moon

The janitor replied with this brilliant line, “Mr President, I’m helping put a man on the moon.”

He was not being sarcastic or smart-mouthed, he had a strong sense of purpose. The purpose is that sense that we are needed, that we are part of something bigger than ourselves, that we have something better ahead to work for.

Read the janitor’s reply again. You can feel the pride he has in his job.

He may not be that high on any organisational chart depicting the story of America’s space exploration.

But there he is, filled with pride at the mention of the common purpose he shares with the very men who would walk on the moon.

Your purpose is your reason for living. Like it was painting for Michelangelo or writing was for Shakespeare.

Every person is hardwired to do something, we all have an exceptional talent or skill.

It might be some kind of sport or art, writing, researching, helping others, serving, being a good parent or spouse.

life purpose image

Never work another day

There is a joy to discovering your purpose. Once you do, you will never work another day in your life. Why? Because you will love what you do.

You will be passionate about it. You will be eager to get out of bed every morning to fulfil your purpose.

Picasso said, “The meaning of life is to find your gift. The purpose of life is to give it away.” 

Once you discover your reason for life, you will create your vision. Your vision shows you what you need to do to live a life of purpose. Then you get to set your bite-size goals to get there.

Despite all of this, some people find themselves not acting on fulfilling their purpose. These three reasons are the ones most likely to stop you and keep you stuck and frustrated.

 

3 Things That Keep You from Fulfilling Your Purpose

The important step you need to take to get out of that rut is to decide to take control now. You need to identify what it is that stops you from moving forward.

In all likelihood, you’re in the grasp of one or more of the following three everyday things that stop people from finding and fulfilling their purpose and living their life mission.

But you don’t achieve your life purpose. What prevents you from fulfilling your life purpose? What is keeping you stuck?

Being stuck and your lack of progress is frustrating. You might even feel depressed.

You need to get out of that negative cycle, out of that rut you are in. The good news is there is an important step you can take to get out of that rut.

If you have been searching for your purpose, mission or vision for your life, and are still searching with angst and restlessness, like I was, you’re probably making one of these three mistakes.

 

1. Self-doubt

All of us, even the best amongst us, falls prey to self-doubt at some point. It’s a way to keep yourself safe in an often-confusing world.

The most significant thing that holds people back from realising their true potential is probably fear of failure.

And in a world that values wealth and conspicuous success, striking out for something you believe in can be risky.

But if you stay stuck in a mindset of fear, it’s guaranteed you will never achieve anything substantial.

When you stay small, it prevents you from acting, it prevents you from growing and being your best you.

 

2. Other people’s opinion

Self-doubt is fed by caring what other people think of you. Reality dictates there will always be a plentiful supply of naysayers trying to stop you from pursuing and living your dreams.

And I can give you a cast-iron guarantee that whatever your life purpose, you will encounter people who doubt your dream and your ability to achieve it.

Thankfully, there will also be some people who support you and believe in you.

And your biggest cheerleader should be you!

You don’t need anyone’s permission to live your purpose.

You only need a strong sense of conviction and the will to pursue your passion.

 

3. Lacking intention

This is not often talked about but living purposefully with intention is crucial to staying true to your life purpose. It’s pointless to have a passion or dream and to be lazy about it.

Be intentional about your life purpose and step up to the plate.

Use the same approach you would for any other project. Be methodical, be organised and give your life purpose the attention and care it deserves.

Yes, that means having a plan, writing it down and making yourself accountable. You start by taking the attention off yourself and thinking about the impact you want to have on the world. What legacy do you want to leave?

I am not worthy

Maybe it is not, “I’m not good enough.” But how about, not strong enough, smart enough, or simply “don’t have what it takes”? 

life purpose image 2

Anxiety

These feelings are unfortunately all too common. These anxieties are more than happy to exploit you.

We are all in the battle of our lives in our personal war with anxiety. Anxiety attempts to make us believe that we aren’t worthy enough and that we don’t deserve to live our life purpose.

One of those ridiculous ways is to make us think that we are being selfish if we celebrate our achievements.

Anxiety tries to invalidate you by saying: “Are you mad? Don’t do that.”

Who are you to be showing off, and making yourself out to be better than anyone else?

Who do you think you are robbing someone else’s nose in your success? Especially when you know exactly how that feels.

And anyway, it’s not that big of a deal. It’s not like you won the Nobel prize.”

After that doubt is placed in your mind, you downplay every victory and every good quality you have.

And, before we realise it we are questioning if we are worthy of any good thing.

 

This vicious cycle

Forget about celebrating something when you are not worthy of it in the first place.

This vicious cycle reinforces the negative thinking and lack of self-respect and self-confidence.

Old habits are hard to break. Negative thinking and lack of self-respect and self-confidence may have been a part of your life for a long time.

To make it more difficult, we have society telling us at every moment that we need to act a certain way, look a certain way, and wear a specific size of clothing.

You can defeat the demons of anxiety, guilt, fear of failure, and fear of success that stop you from fulfilling your life purpose. It will take discipline and dedication.

Are you up to the challenge? If you are, then enrol in my free webinar, 5 Ways To Perform At Your Best. and remember happiness is a result of accomplishing what you were born to do.

  • 4 November, 2019
  • Personal Development
  • More

Get Out And Stay Out Of The Weeds

Most successful people spend a lot of time in the weeds.

So how is it that we vision something more significant for ourselves than where we are at this moment?

The very first thing is to get out of the weeds.

Being in the weeds has to do with a golf ball landing in the “rough”.

The rough is the long grass off the fairway, and this long grass makes it hard to play your ball as you run the risk of falling behind. 

Getting in the weeds is a golf metaphor for losing control and being overwhelmed.

The more you have going on then, the busier you are, and the more time you can spend in the weeds.

To see something more significant for yourself, the critical step is to get out and stay out of the weeds.

weeds

Click the image to download the full infographic

Are you stuck in the weeds?  

Do you find yourself working incredibly hard, while at the same time feel like you are not getting much done? 

When your day ends, do you find yourself saying, “I didn’t get to what I wanted/needed to do today, but there is always tomorrow.” 

And then without surprise, you utter the very same words the next day? And the day after that too?

Don’t you feel like this person? I know I do.

You wake up, brush your teeth, make a cup of tea, feed the kids, pack the lunches, get them to school, get to work, text your friends, get coffee, feign interest, answer emails, update Facebook, avoid the meeting, make a few calls, look busy, crunch some numbers, update Facebook, get in the car, collect the kids from after-school club, feed the dog, check email, update Facebook, kiss your partner, climb into bed, fool around.

Are you kidding? 

I’m exhausted! 

Just turn off the lights.

I’m exhausted.

I’m too busy. How can I ever see something more significant for my life, I have kids to take care of and when I have a business to run when?

You have to gain control of your life, you need to get out of the weeds.

stuck in the weeds

We are all meant to live a life of greater meaning and purpose.

It may seem as though there is no way out of the weeds. And sometimes it truly is unavoidable. 

However, in most cases, this condition is not only self-imposed but self-perpetuated.

“That is crazy!” You might say. 

“You think I am choosing this?”

Yes, you may be choosing this, maybe not consciously, perhaps not intentionally.

I won’t apologise for being blunt. I am on a mission to help you figure out what you want to do with your life and to get it done.

A life of purpose beckons to us each day.

When we answer that call, we feel invigorated, energised, and deeply gratified.

And when we procrastinate and resist, we are overwhelmed, tired and frustrated.

 

Stuck in the weeds.

We don’t always realise when we stray off course until we find ourselves stuck in the weeds, becoming stagnant and increasingly irritated with our lives and ourselves.

This can happen in our professional or personal life when a project or endeavour takes us past our comfort zone and into procrastination. 

It can happen in critical conversations when we skirt around the real issues and stay mired in trying to save face or placing blame.

Or it can happen in relationships when we resist taking things to a deeper level and play it safe instead. 

And it happens in our lives when we trade our dreams and visions for doing what gets us by.

And then we go through the motions of staying busy instead of doing what we are really meant to do.

The problem is about RESISTANCE.

 

Resistance occurs when we face something that we fear will lead to pain or discomfort.

It has us focusing on all the things that could go wrong rather than all that we have to gain by moving forward. 

Resistance conjures up a multitude of negative emotions.

Embarrassment, betrayal, inadequacy, defeat, fear, humiliation, abandonment.

You name it, and these negative emotions have us engaging in anything we can to avoid experiencing them.

Resistance intends to have us play it safe. Planning, controlling, preparing, and orchestrating.

Resistance urges us to cling to the familiar, even if the familiar is unpleasant. 

It leads us to control our emotions rather than merely feeling and experiencing them. 

Here are five steps to get out and stay out of the weeds.

These steps will overcome the resistance that stops you from living the life you were meant to live.

 

(1) Take responsibility. 

When we are in the weeds, it is usually the result of an earlier decision we made to stay in our comfort zone. 

Sometimes, these decisions could have been made in default, like the kind of choice we make when we choose not to make a decision.

When we make the decision to play small, then we get distracted by anything that will keep us there. 

We blame the distractions for taking us off course, but the reality is that they are the outcomes of what we have decided to focus our attention on. Often these decisions are made at an unconscious level.

No one else is responsible but you.

Taking responsibility is vital because, without it, we relegate ourselves to being a victim and convince ourselves that we are immobilised and powerless. 

When we see beyond this self-imposed illusion, we recognise that we always have the opportunity and ability to reselect.

weeds stuck

(2) Reselect.  

Envision the state you would like to be in at any given moment. 

Get your head out of the weeds and look at the horizon.

What do you really want for yourself? 

What do you want to create? 

What do you want to feel? 

What do you want to experience? 

This might be a matter of remembering the goals you set for the last time you paused long enough to focus on them. Perhaps it is creating or revisiting or your vision for your personal and professional life.

It could be identifying what you would like to be experiencing in this moment.

Whatever it is, you need to make it real for yourself.

Fully step into it.

Embrace it.

Feel it.

Flesh it out.

Become it.  

Take a moment, and remember the last time you felt whatever it is you want to experience and relive it once again. I can’t stress this enough, it really helps. 

That means seeing what you saw, hearing what you heard, tasting what you tasted and feeling what you felt. 

Talking it over with people who believe in you and inspire you and can help you to reconnect with what you genuinely want and breathe new life into it. 

Write it down and move deeper and deeper into it. Revisit what you wrote and re-read it and add more as it comes to you.

 

(3) Commit to yourself.  

There is a massive difference between wishing and committing. 

You can hope for a better life. You can want a great relationship and a bright future.

Or you may be interested in learning to do something different, trying something new, creating something exciting and fun. 

All this is great, and useless for keeping you out of the weeds, that is, until you commit, until you make that empowering decision.

Committing is making a decision to live the life you want to live.

The life you have imagined. 

It is about expressing and embracing all that you are without allowing anything to get in your way.

It is not about being anything that you are not.

Scottish mountaineer and writer William Hutchinson Murray wrote, “Until one is committed, there is hesitancy, the chance to draw back, always ineffectiveness“.

Concerning all acts of initiative and creation, there is one elementary truth, the ignorance of which kills countless ideas and splendid plans: that the moment one definitely commits oneself, then Providence moves too. 

All sorts of things occur to help one that would never otherwise have occurred.

A whole stream of events issues from the decision, raising in one’s favour all manner of unforeseen incidents and meetings and material assistance, which no man could have dreamt would have come his way. 

I have learned a deep respect for one of Goethe’s couplets:

“Whatever you can do, or dream you can, begin it.

Boldness has genius, power, and magic in it!” 

To commit to yourself means dealing with challenges, facing fears, accepting love, embracing diversity, and being comfortable to feel all emotions.

It means confronting many things that we might have run away from for a long time.

This is a willingness to step up and commit fully to what you want to do with your life.

You will be afraid of the emotions as they come up, but remember all it is, is an emotion. As human beings, we are meant to feel, it’s not a normal process for us not to feel emotion.

 

(4) Let go.  

We are brought up with the misconception that to get anything done, we need to get out there, be bold, and make things happen. 

Consequently, we spend a lot of time pounding square pegs into round holes and planning our next steps by reacting to things in our past. 

Uncertainty makes us uncomfortable, and we live a big chunk of our lives mitigating uncertainty by controlling everything in our power. 

But the future is by definition, uncertain. 

And our attempts to maintain control keep us stuck in the familiar, resistant to moving beyond the expanse of what we think we know.

The real power lies in admitting that we do not have all the answers and are ready and willing to learn.

We begin listening to new information and asking more critical questions.

Throughout the history of time, this is what the most celebrated artists, inventors, musicians, scientists, and geniuses in all fields have done. It requires that we tune in to a new way of knowing, one that goes beyond the need to figure everything out.

When we balance our logic with intuition and take one step at a time, we learn to feel our way to where we want to go.

And that is so much better than having to figure everything out in advance.

(5) Trust.  

The resistance we experience when we embark upon something new and extraordinary is our fear of the unknown. 

Our resistance would have us conjure up a show stopper as the worst-case scenario.

And this stops us when we believe we wouldn’t be able to handle it. 

A leader’s job is to instil confidence in others.

To have your people believe that they all have what it takes to rise up to any challenge they may be faced with.

To believe that they can overcome any obstacle in our path. 

There is a simple law that needs to be applied here, we need to do this for ourselves before we can do it for others. 

Being willing to let ourselves flow with the current requires trust in something bigger than ourselves, something that is working for our highest good. 

 

It requires faith

Moreover, it requires faith in ourselves and our ability to persevere, to adapt and to thrive in any environment we find ourselves placed in.

To find this trust and faith, we can reflect on the events of our lives that have led us to the very point where we are today.

Regardless of the fear we may have experienced, the peril we faced, and the uncertainty we had to navigate through, we have arrived at the point we are now. 

The sum of all of our experiences, whether pleasant or otherwise, has prepared us perfectly for whatever lies ahead of us.

No doubt we will find ourselves in the weeds from time to time.

There is no shame in being in the weeds, in fact, you are free to stay there as long as you wish. 

But when it dawns on you that living that way is no longer enough, and it will, you have the ability and the power to recommit, trust and let yourself flow with the current of adventure in your life.

A current that has the power to bring us to the realisation of all our greatest dreams and visions.

If this wasn’t enough to yank you out of the weeds or you would like more actionable steps to stay out of the weeds, then enrol in the free webinar, 5 Ways To Perform At Your Best.weeds CTA

  • 28 October, 2019
  • Personal Development
  • More

Recent Posts

  • The Best Way To Take Advantage Of How You Define Success
  • 101 Superager Quotes That Will Inspire You
  • How To Win The Battle That Is Team Dynamics
  • 8 Ways To Unlock More Opportunities In Your Life
  • Need An Instant Confidence Boost? Here Is The Solution

Recent Comments

    Archives

    • October 2020
    • September 2020
    • August 2020
    • July 2020
    • June 2020
    • May 2020
    • April 2020
    • March 2020
    • February 2020
    • January 2020
    • December 2019
    • November 2019
    • October 2019
    • September 2019
    • June 2019
    • April 2019
    • March 2019
    • February 2019
    • January 2019
    • December 2018
    • November 2018
    • October 2018
    • September 2018
    • August 2018
    • July 2018
    • June 2018
    • May 2018
    • April 2018
    • March 2018
    • January 2018
    • December 2017
    • October 2017
    • September 2017
    • August 2017

    Categories

    • Personal Development
    • Professional Development
    • Super Ager

    Meta

    • Log in
    • Entries feed
    • Comments feed
    • WordPress.org
    We use cookies on our website to give you the most relevant experience by remembering your preferences and repeat visits. By clicking “Accept”, you consent to the use of ALL the cookies.
    Cookie settingsACCEPT
    Manage consent

    Privacy Overview

    This website uses cookies to improve your experience while you navigate through the website. Out of these, the cookies that are categorized as necessary are stored on your browser as they are essential for the working of basic functionalities of the website. We also use third-party cookies that help us analyze and understand how you use this website. These cookies will be stored in your browser only with your consent. You also have the option to opt-out of these cookies. But opting out of some of these cookies may affect your browsing experience.
    Necessary
    Always Enabled
    Necessary cookies are absolutely essential for the website to function properly. These cookies ensure basic functionalities and security features of the website, anonymously.
    CookieDurationDescription
    CookieConsent38 years 7 months 17 days 12 hoursThis cookie stores the user's consent state for the current domain.
    cookielawinfo-checbox-analytics11 monthsThis cookie is set by GDPR Cookie Consent plugin. The cookie is used to store the user consent for the cookies in the category "Analytics".
    cookielawinfo-checbox-functional11 monthsThe cookie is set by GDPR cookie consent to record the user consent for the cookies in the category "Functional".
    cookielawinfo-checbox-others11 monthsThis cookie is set by GDPR Cookie Consent plugin. The cookie is used to store the user consent for the cookies in the category "Other.
    cookielawinfo-checkbox-advertisement1 yearThe cookie is set by GDPR cookie consent to record the user consent for the cookies in the category "Advertisement".
    cookielawinfo-checkbox-necessary11 monthsThis cookie is set by GDPR Cookie Consent plugin. The cookies is used to store the user consent for the cookies in the category "Necessary".
    cookielawinfo-checkbox-performance11 monthsThis cookie is set by GDPR Cookie Consent plugin. The cookie is used to store the user consent for the cookies in the category "Performance".
    PHPSESSIDsessionThis cookie is native to PHP applications. The cookie is used to store and identify a users' unique session ID for the purpose of managing user session on the website. The cookie is a session cookies and is deleted when all the browser windows are closed.
    viewed_cookie_policy11 monthsThe cookie is set by the GDPR Cookie Consent plugin and is used to store whether or not user has consented to the use of cookies. It does not store any personal data.
    XSRF-TOKEN1 dayThe cookie is set by Wix website building platform on Wix website. The cookie is used for security purposes.
    Functional
    Functional cookies help to perform certain functionalities like sharing the content of the website on social media platforms, collect feedbacks, and other third-party features.
    Performance
    Performance cookies are used to understand and analyze the key performance indexes of the website which helps in delivering a better user experience for the visitors.
    CookieDurationDescription
    YSCsessionThis cookies is set by Youtube and is used to track the views of embedded videos.
    Analytics
    Analytical cookies are used to understand how visitors interact with the website. These cookies help provide information on metrics the number of visitors, bounce rate, traffic source, etc.
    CookieDurationDescription
    _ga2 yearsThis cookie is installed by Google Analytics. The cookie is used to calculate visitor, session, campaign data and keep track of site usage for the site's analytics report. The cookies store information anonymously and assign a randomly generated number to identify unique visitors.
    _gat_gtag_UA_105432831_11 minuteThis cookie is set by Google and is used to distinguish users.
    _gid1 dayThis cookie is installed by Google Analytics. The cookie is used to store information of how visitors use a website and helps in creating an analytics report of how the website is doing. The data collected including the number visitors, the source where they have come from, and the pages visted in an anonymous form.
    Advertisement
    Advertisement cookies are used to provide visitors with relevant ads and marketing campaigns. These cookies track visitors across websites and collect information to provide customized ads.
    CookieDurationDescription
    _fbp3 monthsThis cookie is set by Facebook to deliver advertisement when they are on Facebook or a digital platform powered by Facebook advertising after visiting this website.
    fr3 monthsThe cookie is set by Facebook to show relevant advertisments to the users and measure and improve the advertisements. The cookie also tracks the behavior of the user across the web on sites that have Facebook pixel or Facebook social plugin.
    IDE1 year 24 daysUsed by Google DoubleClick and stores information about how the user uses the website and any other advertisement before visiting the website. This is used to present users with ads that are relevant to them according to the user profile.
    test_cookie15 minutesThis cookie is set by doubleclick.net. The purpose of the cookie is to determine if the user's browser supports cookies.
    VISITOR_INFO1_LIVE5 months 27 daysThis cookie is set by Youtube. Used to track the information of the embedded YouTube videos on a website.
    Others
    Other uncategorized cookies are those that are being analyzed and have not been classified into a category as yet.
    CookieDurationDescription
    _t_r_b4e7106cc80ab87c657c55f96a1f83207 daysNo description
    1b03333c1a16ead83e324b901d0edbf622f295fe1 dayNo description
    3e408b56530bb0516e8c7f1632ad3cc60e588c1c1 dayNo description
    702cbf995ad697992774a39fd79fc211706ef08c1 dayNo description
    92c0a6b5b4f5a2dd21cb83630b9a1ad293cfd1181 dayNo description
    abb585ced425bccaba2943d5b5c555d60d49bb311 dayNo description
    CONSENT16 years 7 months 18 days 12 hoursNo description
    ea4a5dfb26b337562b7992aad021e2bdcf729e621 dayNo description
    wj_reg_track_2185177 daysNo description
    wj4s1 dayNo description
    wjevents1 dayNo description
    SAVE & ACCEPT
    Powered by CookieYes Logo
    About David
    Creatambitionate
    (Creative, Ambitious, Passionate)
    Mission Statement: "My mission is to empower every individual I interact with to achieve more."
    Privacy policy | Cookie Policy | Terms and Conditions | Sitemap
    Stay Connected
    © Copyright 2018 – David Brett-Williams