Monday, 29 June 2015

5 Ways To Help Find Your Happiness Today

Happiness isn’t as elusive as it seems….

All of us yearn for happiness, yet most of us have a very difficult time finding it.
How do we get it? What do we have to do? Is it even possible to find it considering what’s happened to me?
We talked with women’s empowerment coach Julie Santiago about happiness hoping to find answers to the questions we all have at one point or another.
She gave us a list of five great tips to get you started on your journey to a more fulfilling life:

1. Claim you’re ready to be happy

“So often we know that something’s off in our lives but we aren’t really sure what it is and we’re afraid to admit it,” Santiago told us.
These moments or seasons of dissonance reveal something important: we’re missing an element of happiness. The good news is, Santiago said, you can find it.
“It’s time to make the claim that you are ready to be happy and you are ready to do something different.”
Start by making the claim that you want to be happy, whether it’s by verbally saying it every morning, writing down on a note card and sticking it to your mirror or saying a daily prayer for happiness.
“If you don’t say it and you don’t claim it it can’t really happen. Whether you repeat it or write it down, it’s time to make the claim that you are ready to be happy and you are ready to do something different,” Santiago said. “When you make this claim or say this prayer or set this intention, everything in the world begins to align to help you you find exactly what you need.”

2. Keep a journal

You’ll discover that keeping a journal is essential to personal development, particularly when it comes to cultivating a life of happiness.
“It’s so important to tune in to what’s actually happening in our lives and our bodies…those things hold the key to our happiness.”
Writing down the way you react to certain events or people you encounter during the day will guide you in your journey to happiness.
“A journal is an indispensable part of keeping track things. It’s so important to tune in to what’s actually happening in our lives and our bodies – when they’re open and when they’re closed,” Santiago said. “Those things hold the key to our happiness.”

3. Write down the things that make you feel alive

Your journey to happiness is a matter of keeping your eyes and your journal open. In the positive sense, it’s essential that you make a note of the activities, relationships and events in your life that make you feel vibrant.
Smile, Julie Santiago, Goaly Blog

“Check in with yourself when you’re doing things that make you feel resonant,” Santiago said. “Write down when you feel alive and when you’re resonating with what’s around you when you resonate with what you’re doing and when you feel open and expansive and alive.

4. Write down the things that make you feel closed in or dark

On the other side of the happiness spectrum are the moments in which you feel closed in – when you are feeling disconnected and distant. It’s just as important to make a note of these moments as it is to record the moments which make you feel connected.
“Notice when you feel dissonant, when you’re contracting or feel closed or dark or moody or angry.”
“Write down what makes you feel closed, dissonant or unhappy,” Santiago said. “Notice when you feel dissonant, when you’re contracting or feel closed or dark or moody or angry.”

5. Let go of one of those things that makes you feel closed.

As you open your eyes to the things which affect your mood and outlook, it will become clear that certain things in your life need to go. Saying “No” to the things which make you feel dark or trapped is one of the crucial steps on your journey to happiness.
“In order to bring in more of what you love in your life, you have to first let go to what you don’t love.” 
“In order to bring in more of what you love in your life, you have to first let go to what you don’t love,” Santiago said. “If you’re holding on to these things you’re doing just because you feel like you have to do them and they’re making you feel flat and uninspired then you can’t be given the things you do love in your life.”
Saying “no” to the things which detract from your happiness isn’t only a matter of cutting off the dead parts of your life – “When you let go of something you don’t love, you’re making space for something you do love.”

http://blog.goaly.com/5-ways-to-find-happiness-today/

Saturday, 27 June 2015

Four Ideas Essential to Your Happiness

Finding the diamond….

Happiness is on the decline in the Western world.
According to the 2013 World Happiness Report, the 25 countries which saw the greatest decrease in overall happiness from 2005 to 2012 were littered with wealthy, modern countries: Belgium, the United States, Finland, Japan, Portugal, Italy and Spain.
In fact, only four European countries were in the top-15 increases in happiness, while North America had zero countries in the top-15.
Zero.
Most of us are losing sight of happiness, no matter how much wealth or modernity we have. But don’t worry, said Supercoach founder and bestselling coach Michael Neill – happiness is a natural component of your life and you can find it.
Neill shared with us four important points you need to remember as you try and find the happiness you’ve been missing.

1. You Were Born Happy

Many times we get caught up in the idea that happiness is an entity which exists outside of ourselves and we have to search for it as one would search for a treasure. That simply isn’t the truth, Neill told us – the happiness you want already exists in you and around you.
“We were born happy. As a baby, I can guarantee you didn’t need therapy.”
“We were born happy. As a baby, I can guarantee you didn’t need therapy,” Neill said. “When you cried it’s because your needed changing or you needed food. It wasn’t because you were worried about tomorrow or you were worried about yesterday.”

2. We Don’t “Lose” Happiness

Happiness isn’t like your car keys or a credit card: you can’t magically lose it forever. Because it’s something innate in us, we can find it even though we feel like we’ve lost so much of it that we can never return to it again.
Smiling Woman, Michael Neill, Goaly Blog
“Happiness isn’t something you have to go out and create, it isn’t something you can lose, it isn’t something you can get. It’s who you are. It’s as much a part of you as the nose on your face,” Neill said. “When you start to see that, you can relax into that.”
“Happiness isn’t something you have to go out and create, it isn’t something you can lose, it isn’t something you can get. It’s who you are.”
It doesn’t matter how far gone we think our happiness is.
“No matter how long you’ve lost sight of your happiness, you’re never one thought away from becoming aware of it again,” Neill said. “And not matter how long it’s been since you felt happy, you’re really no more than one thought away from relaxing back into that true nature, into that happiness and into who you really are. “

3. We Obscure Our Happiness

Have you ever tried to encase a diamond in horse poop? That’s how Neill describes what we do over time to our natural happiness.
“Imagine that the very heart of who you are is a perfect diamond and it shines,” Neill said. “Over time, imagine that diamond gets covered over with horse crap – the thinking and ideas about ourselves starts accumulating on top of the diamond and it obscures the diamond and you can’t see that, at the core, there’s this beautiful, perfect shiny thing.”
We’re petrified of the crap, Neill said, so we do our best to cover up our stink.
“We don’t want to walk around smelling like horse crap, so we take nail varnish and we coat the horse-crap covered diamond and we make it look pretty and that’s our personality,” he said. “But that’s all the coating we put around so people won’t notice the horse crap that we start to think is who we we really are.”

4. The Diamond Remains

Our true happiness remains beneath all our efforts to try and cover up our shortcomings and our flaws. Gaining the happiness we desire isn’t a matter of digging into some deep place to find the treasure of joy; it’s a matter of embracing our true self.
“The diamond of your essence, who you really are, the you that was born happy, is still there,” Neill said. “It’s still perfect and still as good as new as the day you were born.”
http://blog.goaly.com/four-ideas-to-help-you-embrace-happiness/

Thursday, 25 June 2015

4 Steps To Conquering Fear

Taking the Terror Out of Fear

1. Fear is just a feeling

We’ve been lulled into believing fear is more than just a feeling.
However, it’s just that: a feeling, an emotion. In the same way that you can be happy, sad, joyous or contemplative, you can be afraid.
“Fear is just like every other emotion, but somehow, in this world, it’s gotten this elevated status,” Cole said. “Start thinking about fear as you would other feelings. You have the power to change the way that you feel.”
“If fear is just a feeling, you have the power to change it.”
Recognising that fear is just an emotion is a very good thing, Cole said, because it opens you up to be able to control your fears as you would other emotions.
“Imagine that fear is just a feeling and not a fact, how would your life change,” Cole asked. “Unless you live in an active war zone, 98% of the time the fear that you are feeling is just a feeling. If fear is just a feeling, you have the power to change it.”

2. Create a sacred space

Think of the first step in conquering fear — that fear is just a feeling — as the tool you’ll use to start working on your relationship with fear.
You’ll need a workshop to get the work done, and that’s where a “zen den” comes into play.
“This is a sacred space in your home where you can do the work we’re talking about, where you can meditate, to think and to expand,” Cole said.
meditation-fear-terri-cole-2
Decorate your space with calming accents which inspire you, whether they’re candles, pictures of loved ones or leaves and flowers.
“All you want for a zen den is a place for you to take a nice, deep breath and exhale,” Cole said. “This is going to be a place to meditate because this work is best done in a space where you can create some stillness and silence internally.”

3. Relax

Your zen den is the workshop where your work will get done.
In order to get that work started, you’ll need to be relaxed. Calm. Focused. Centered. Getting to that point is a difficult one. For many — Cole included – a state of relaxation is best achieved through mediation.
“You need to have an open mind to see what it is you need to see.”
Once you reach this meditative, relaxed state, you’ll be ready to ask some hard questions in the next tip.
“You need to have an open mind to see what it is you need to see,” Cole aid.

4. Ask Yourself the Hard Questions

“I hope that you’re sitting in your sacred space so that you feel expansive and you’re brave enough to look the real answers for you so you will be able to decode your relationship to fear,” Cole said.
Questions about your family of origin are a key element in confronting your fears and getting to the root of their power over you.
Many times, Cole said, the influence of fear on your life is a direct result of the environment you grew up in. Terri’s “Conquer Your Fears and Find True Freedom” free video strategy explores this environment with a series of probing questions.
We’ve included three of those questions here:
  • What was your family’s relationship to fear? Was there a lot of superstitions? How was your family origin when it came to fear?
  • What was your parents’ view of the world? Did they see it as a generous benevolent place or did they see it as a scary place?
  • Did your parents suffer in their own relationship to their own fear? Did they have anxiety, difficulty sleep or were they always afraid something was going to happen to you?
http://blog.goaly.com/4-steps-to-conquering-fear-terri-cole/

Tuesday, 23 June 2015

9 Most Common Limiting Beliefs and How To Overcome Them Now

We love our limiting beliefs…

Our personal refrains of “I’m not good enough” and “I don’t deserve that” or “I can’t be loved” are what experts call “limiting beliefs”, those powerful notions in our minds that deter us from doing certain things because we believe they are beyond the limits of what is due to us.
New York-based life coach Lisa Romano – author, head of her own coaching practice and mother of three – pointed out one of her previous limiting beliefs: that surviving was more important that happiness.
“Life was always about survival,” Romano said. “When I told my father about me wanting to divorce my first husband … he looked at me square in the eye, and as disgust swept across his face he said, ‘Who ever said you had to be happy Lisa? Life is hard. All you have to do is survive.’ I knew in that moment why it was that I never accomplished the goals I set out to achieve.”
Romano’s experience is just one of many common limiting beliefs which hinder us from inner liberty and joy. Here are nine common limiting beliefs and how to overcome them now:

#1 “I cannot be loved because I have too much baggage.”

Part of  Lisa Romano’s struggle was that, after having three children and being divorced, her family and friends told her ‘baggage’ made her undesirable.
The key to overcoming this limiting belief was to refuse to give up on her dream of finding a loving partner. As feelings drive thoughts, she said, you have to feel your worthiness.
I held steadfast to my dream of one day manifesting a relationship that would make me feel seen, heard, validated, and respected.
“In spite of how ingrained my limiting beliefs were, I held steadfast to my dream of one day manifesting a relationship that would make me feel seen, heard, validated, and respected,” she said. “I know it is hard to believe, but my new husband asked me out on our first date precisely on my forty-fifth birthday. It’s been almost two years since we married, and life is better than I ever could have imagined.”

#2 “What other people think matters more than what I think.”

Carole Ann Rice, a life coach based in the United Kingdom, said this belief is far too common. The results of this limiting belief, she pointed out, are devastating – “When you live by the approval of others you die by their criticism.”
The key to overcoming this belief is to acknowledge and embrace that you are in control of your own fate.
When you live by the approval of others you die by their criticism.


“I get the client to ‘own’ their own lives, to see that they are the authors of their own destiny and that they can’t live by the rules of others,” she said.

#3 “What if people think I’m crazy?”

Barrie Davenport, the life coach behind the Atlanta’s Live Bold and Bloom, said this limiting belief usually arrives when we are making daily choices big and small.
“We all want a guarantee of success and ease when it comes to change and decisions in our lives and work,” Davenport said.
We feel a sense of uncertainty that spurs our doubts. The key to overcoming this limiter, she said, is coming to terms with the fact that nearly every decision you make carries a certain measure of the unknown.
We all want a guarantee of success and ease when it comes to change and decisions in our lives and work.
“Get comfortable with the feelings of uncertainty and learn to trust your own intelligence and judgment,” she said. “When you apply common sense, the wisdom of experience and appropriate due diligence, you are doing everything you can to lessen the risk. But eventually you must take a leap of faith.”

#4 “I am a failure.”

Gary Amers, a top life coach in the United Kingdom, said the limiting belief that you are a failure sticks to us like a magnet. The bond which keeps us chained to our limiting belief is a mix of images, sounds and language.
Amers said the use of negative language as we think about our failures is a key component of our limiting thoughts. If you’re constantly telling yourself you’re a failure, change the language. 
If you actually felt like a success, how would that feel?


Amers suggested asking yourself the following questions: “What if you weren’t a failure? How would that feel? If you actually felt like a success, how would that feel?”
Once you’ve asked those questions, turn your focus to your limiting belief: “Could you doubt your belief even just a little bit? How does it feel to know you can doubt it? Now that you’ve analyzed your limiting belief, is it a complete lie? How do you know for certain?”

#5 “I’m too…”

One of the most common limiters life coaches hear is the “I’m too” phrases: “I’m too old,” “I’m too set in my ways,” “It’s too hard” and the like. These limiters, Barrie Davenport said, are based on fear — we make excuses to have a reason for passing up an opportunity.
I challenge (my clients) to break down the effort into small and manageable chunks and take the first few steps toward their goal
The best medicine for this limiter, she said, is to take the big task and divide it up into easier-to-approach parts.
“I challenge (my clients) to break down the effort into small and manageable chunks and take the first few steps toward their goal,” she said. “More often than not, they see their limiting belief didn’t hold any water.”

# 6 “I am not enough.”

California-based life coach Christine Hassler and Las Vegas life coach and New York Times bestselling author Christy Whitman both pointed out this limiting belief. Whitman said it’s “the most common and usually the hardest to change.”
We feel the unending pressures of our job, our families and our inner growth and we succumb to the sense that we are missing something.
“(This belief) comes from forgetting we are totally whole, complete, and connected to Source energy. When we were born, we knew we that,” Hassler said. “But then things happen in our life that create hurt, fear, doubt, judgment, etc. and we totally forget and buy into the limiting beliefs.”
Overcoming this limiting belief is a matter of remembering who we really are, exploring our past and discovering a sense of spirituality. 
Remembering we are one, loved and totally connected to source usually requires doing personal growth work.
“Remembering we are one, loved and totally connected to source,” Hassler said. “Since remembering that is not always easy, it usually requires doing personal growth work to tend to some of the past hurts in combination with getting on a spiritual path of some kind.”
Whitman said using your mental energy for positive thoughts and not the negative ones you normally entertain is  another technique to overcome this belief.
“We need to find the energy in our minds and bodies and shift it into what we do want and then feel the new energy replacing the old energy,” she said.

#7 “Somebody else can do it better than me.”

Jill Tupper, a life coach in Kansas City (Mo.), said this limiting belief is one of the most effective in stopping us from taking action.
“We hold ourselves back, utterly convincing ourselves that it’s not worth the effort as another can do it better,” she said.
The starting point for deconstructing this lie is seeing yourself as you truly are — imperfections and all.
We hold ourselves back.
That can be difficult, she said, because we hold ourselves to such high standards of perfection we often cower back from a task and let someone else accomplish it.
“Cognitively we know this is absurd,” she said, “yet we fall for it again and again.”

#8 “I have less value as a single mom than I did as a married mom.”

Many single moms face the startling realization that the world around them — even their friends and family — is disappointed they got divorced. Live with this disapproval long enough and you start to believe it, Jill Tupper said, pointing to her own experience with this limiting belief.
“It had infiltrated the depths of my psyche in such a way that its talons had sunk their grip into my mind and heart and I bought it unquestionably,” she said.
It was rolling up my sleeves, facing my fears and stepping way out of what I thought I could do on my own.



Tupper’s personal solution was to do something in direct opposition to the belief — she took her kids to Mexico for nonprofit work, an idea she said she had convinced herself was crazy because she was a single mom.
“It was rolling up my sleeves, facing my fears and stepping way out of what I thought I could do on my own that broke the dark curse I had placed upon myself,” Tupper noted.

#9 “I don’t deserve this.”

This limiting belief comes from a weak self-esteem, Barrie Davenport said.
“We don’t feel worthy enough to be successful or to go after what we really want in life,” she said.
One of the best ways to rebuild your self-esteem is to do the thing you don’t think you deserve.
For a lot of people, this belief is instilled in them during their childhood and they nurture it as they grow older. Davenport said the best way to combat this limiting belief is to approach it head-on: identify the thing you think you don’t deserve and pursue it.
“One of the best ways to rebuild your self-esteem is to do the thing you don’t think you deserve,” she said. “Go for the goal and achieve something meaningful to you. Accomplishment is an amazing self-esteem booster.”

Learning to be somebody different

Limiting beliefs, no matter which ones they are, can become so ingrained into our way of thinking we lose sight of who we can be. Restoring our thoughts and our self-perception is possible, said Aboodi Shabi, a personal development and leadership expert: we can be who we want to be.
Even though you think you might be attached to your fixed notions of self, and resistant to change, they begin to understand they can learn to be somebody different than who they currently are.
“In my coaching, the biggest realisation for clients is that many of the ‘truths’ they have about themselves are just something they learned,” he said. “And, even though they might …  be attached to their fixed notions of their self, and resistant to change, they begin to understand they can learn to be somebody different than who they currently are.”
http://blog.goaly.com/9-most-common-limiting-beliefs/

Sunday, 21 June 2015

Motivating Your Teenager in Three Simple Steps

You Don’t Have to Do it the Hard Way

The art of motivating a teen can resemble dentistry – there’s a lot of pushing, pulling, pain-laden groans and brute strength.
Unlike the dentist’s office where your dentist sees you for a few hours a year, you have to live with your teenager every day. Should you be content with the impasse you feel every time you try to motivate your son or daughter, or can inspiring them be more than the parental equivalent of pulling teeth?
We talked with expert parenting coach Lisa Read about the finer points of managing your teen’s motivation. She gave us three simple steps to make it happen.

1. Focus on connection first

The old saying “They don’t care how much you know until they know how much you care,” may be a little campy, but it’s 100 percent true.
You can spend hours lecturing your teen on right, wrong and what you’d do if you were them, but your effectiveness boils down to your ability to connect with your son or daughter.
“If a teen feels that you really are interested in their well-being, they are far more likely to listen to your advice.”
“If a teen feels that you really are interested in their well-being, they are far more likely to listen to your advice,” Read said. “Teenagers often complain to me that they’re not listened to by the adults in their lives, they’re just told what to do.”

2. Offer choices

“You will do this” is not nearly as effective as “Here are three different jobs you can do,’ Read said. Giving your teen choices allows them to take ownership over their daily routine.
Teenager, Lisa Read, Goaly Blog

“If you’re trying to motivate a teen to be more helpful around the home, for example, you could discuss with them what your needs are,” Read said, “and ask them to come up with ideas about what they could do to help.”
Allowing them to choose their job or their task gives them a small slice of ownership in your plan.
“This gives them a sense of control over their situation, and you still get to have a tidier house,” Read said.

3. Create buy-in

Teenagers are much more willing to help you or help themselves when they can see the bigger picture behind what they’re doing.
“If you want a teenager to be motivated, they need to buy into the purpose behind what you’re wanting them to do.”
“If you want a teenager to be motivated, they need to buy into the purpose behind what you’re wanting them to do,” Read said. “Think about the outcome you’re aiming for and ask yourself, ‘What would have got me motivated when I was a teenager myself?”
As you go through this process, you’ll notice most of your own memories will involve three factors, Read said:
  • Inspiring stories
  • Positive encouragement
  • Clearly setting out expectations all help
http://blog.goaly.com/motivating-your-teenager-in-three-simple-steps/

Friday, 19 June 2015

5 Ways to Motivate Your Teenager

It’s not impossible to motivate your teenager.

This week we talked with academic coach Hayden Lee who specialize in working with teenagers and families. If there is anything we’ve learned from them, it’s that teenagers have the tremendous potential to surprise not only you, but themselves as well.
In most cases, though, that surprising ability doesn’t happen magically. It takes a discerning parent, guardian or educator to draw out the awesome which lies just beneath the surface of their teenager’s rather disinterested gaze.

1. Identify a short-term goal

While it may sound deliciously idealistic to help your teenager create a massive goal that doesn’t seem possible, academic coach Hayden Lee says taking small steps is a great way to increase the likelihood your teenager will follow through on his or her goal. 
Creating a short-term goal makes the goal more manageable.
“Creating a short-term goal makes the goal more manageable,” Lee said. “Using the school calendar is a good marker.”
As an example, Hayden said using the end of the semester is a great goal for students who want to raise their grades.

2. Figure out what your teenager needs to transform in himself or herself.

Once the goal is set in place, your teenager can compare what that goal requires to their current state of mind, pattern of thinking or habitual actions. 
Identify what change that you need to make in yourself in order to make that goal easier to achieve.



In most cases, there will be a disconnect between the desired goal – in this case, getting better grades by the end of the semester – and the desired behavior to reach that goal.
“Identify what change you need to make in yourself in order to make that goal easier to achieve,” Lee said.
In the case of his example  (the student who wants to raise his or her grades by the end of the semester), the student might realize they have to take school more seriously in order to reach their goal.

3. Discover the “how” of your goal.

Goals are a great thing to have, Lee said, but they have a tendency to be vague. They might answer the question of “What?” but they don’t always answer the question of “How?”
Answering the “how” aspect of your goal can be just as important as the goal itself. 
Start making concrete and specific action steps that are within your control.
“Start making concrete and specific action steps that are within your control that will contribute toward your goal,” Lee said. “Using the example above, since the teen wants to improve his grades and wants to put in more effort in school, his action step can be to write in his planner every day and to plan out exactly what time he will begin homework during the week.

4. Plan out what you’ll do after school

It’s easy to lose sight of a goal if you aren’t reminded of it every day through intentional, direct planning.
This principle carries over into the life of your teenager. Reaching their goal will be much easier if they have a constant sense of direction and purpose – planning each school day is an invaluable asset to this sense of forward movement. 
It’s much easier to stay motivated when you know exactly what to do and when to do it.



“It’s much easier to stay motivated when you know exactly what to do and when to do it,” Lee said. “Encourage your teenager to use a planner every day in every class in which to write down their homework and to plan out how they will spend their time after school.”
One of the best ways to do this is to have your teenager set aside time on Sunday night to do most of the planning. With planner in hand, they can write out their schedule for each day, including what homework/project is due and what they’ll accomplish after school.
http://blog.goaly.com/5-ways-to-motivate-your-teenager/

Wednesday, 17 June 2015

7 Crippling Parenting Behaviors That Keep Children From Growing Into Leaders

Today, Kathy is sharing with us a post she wrote for Forbes titled  “7 Crippling Parenting Behaviors That Keep Children From Growing Into Leaders”. The article has been read around 7 million times ; it’s a must for any parent. Enjoy!
Kathy Caprino
While I spend my professional time now as a career success coach, writer, and leadership trainer, I was a marriage and family therapist in my past, and worked for several years with couples, families, and children. Through that experience, I witnessed a very wide array of both functional and dysfunctional parenting behaviors.
As a parent myself, I’ve learned that all the wisdom and love in the world doesn’t necessarily protect you from parenting in ways that hold your children back from thriving, gaining independence and becoming the leaders they have the potential to be. 
I was intrigued, then, to catch up with leadership expert Dr. Tim Elmore and learn more about how we as parents are failing our children today — coddling and crippling them — and keeping them from becoming leaders they are destined to be.
Tim is a best-selling author of more than 25 books, including Generation iY: Our Last Chance to Save Their FutureArtificial Maturity: Helping Kids Meet the Challenges of Becoming Authentic Adults, and the Habitudes® series. He is Founder and President of Growing Leaders, an organization dedicated to mentoring today’s young people to become the leaders of tomorrow.
Tim had this to share about the 7 damaging parenting behaviours that keep children from becoming leaders – of their own lives and of the world’s enterprises:
1. We don’t let our children experience risk
We live in a world that warns us of danger at every turn. The “safety first” preoccupation enforces our fear of losing our kids, so we do everything we can to protect them. It’s our job after all, but we have insulated them from healthy risk-taking behavior and it’s had an adverse effect.
Psychologists in Europe have discovered that if a child doesn’t play outside and is never allowed to experience a skinned knee, they frequently have phobias as adults.  
The “safety first” preoccupation enforces our fear of losing our kids, so we do everything we can to protect them. 
Kids need to fall a few times to learn it’s normal; teens likely need to break up with a boyfriend or girlfriend to appreciate the emotional maturity that lasting relationships require. If parents remove risk from children’s lives, we will likely experience high arrogance and low self-esteem in our growing leaders.
2. We rescue too quickly
Today’s generation of young people has not developed some of the life skills kids did 30 years ago because adults swoop in and take care of problems for them. When we rescue too quickly and over-indulge our children with “assistance,” we remove the need for them to navigate hardships and solve problems on their own.
Today’s generation of young people has not developed some of the life skills kids did 30 years ago because adults swoop in and take care of problems for them. 








It’s parenting for the short-term and it sorely misses the point of leadership—to equip our young people to do it without help. Sooner or later, kids get used to someone rescuing them: “If I fail or fall short, an adult will smooth things over and remove any consequences for my misconduct.”
When in reality, this isn’t even remotely close to how the world works, and therefore it disables our kids from becoming competent adults.
3. We rave too easily
The self-esteem movement has been around since Baby Boomers were kids, but it took root in our school systems in the 1980s. Attend a little league baseball game and you’ll see that everyone is a winner.
This “everyone-gets-a-trophy” mentality might make our kids feel special, but research is now indicating this method has unintended consequences. Kids eventually observe that Mom and Dad are the only ones who think they’re awesome when no one else is saying it. They begin to doubt the objectivity of their parents; it feels good in the moment, but it’s not connected to reality.
This “everyone-gets-a-trophy” mentality might make our kids feel special, but research is now indicating this method has unintended consequences.
When we rave too easily and disregard poor behavior, children eventually learn to cheat, exaggerate and lie and to avoid difficult reality. They have not been conditioned to face it.
4. We let guilt get in the way of leading well
Your child does not have to love you every minute. Your kids will get over the disappointment, but they won’t get over the effects of being spoiled. So tell them “no” or “not now,” and let them fight for what they really value and need.
As parents, we tend to give them what they want when rewarding our children, especially with multiple kids. When one does well in something, we feel it’s unfair to praise and reward that one and not the other. This is unrealistic and misses an opportunity to enforce the point to our kids that success is dependent upon our own actions and good deeds.
Be careful not to teach them a good grade is rewarded by a trip to the mall. If your relationship is based on material rewards, kids will experience neither intrinsic motivation nor unconditional love.
5. We don’t share our past mistakes
Healthy teens are going to want to spread their wings and they’ll need to try things on their own.
We as adults must let them, but that doesn’t mean we can’t help them navigate these waters. Share with them the relevant mistakes you made when you were their age in a way that helps them learn to make good choices. (Avoid negative “lessons learned” having to do with smoking, alcohol, illegal drugs, etc.)
Also, kids must prepare to encounter slip-ups and face the consequences of their decisions. Share how you felt when you faced a similar experience.
Also, kids must prepare to encounter slip-ups and face the consequences of their decisions. Share how you felt when you faced a similar experience, what drove your actions, and the resulting lessons learned. Because we’re not the only influence on our kids, we must be the best influence.
6. We mistake intelligence, giftedness and influence for  maturity
Intelligence is often used as a measurement of a child’s maturity, and as a result parents assume an intelligent child is ready for the world. That’s not the case.
Some professional athletes and Hollywood starlets, for example, possess unimaginable talent, but still get caught in a public scandal.
Intelligence is often used as a measurement of a child’s maturity, and as a result parents assume an intelligent child is ready for the world. That’s not the case.
 Just because giftedness is present in one aspect of a child’s life, don’t assume it pervades all areas.
There is no magic “age of responsibility” or a proven guide as to when a child should be given specific freedoms, but a good rule of thumb is to observe other children the same age as yours. If you notice that they are doing more themselves than your child does, you may be delaying your child’s independence.
7. We don’t practice what we preach
As parents, it is our responsibility to model the life we want our children to live. To help them lead a life of character and become dependable and accountable for their words and actions.
As the leaders of our homes, we can start by only speaking honest words – white lies will surface and slowly erode character.

As the leaders of our homes, we can start by only speaking honest words – white lies will surface and slowly erode character. Watch yourself in the little ethical choices that others might notice, because your kids will notice too. If you don’t cut corners, for example, they will know it’s not acceptable for them to either.



Show your kids what it means to give selflessly and joyfully by volunteering for a service project or with a community group. Leave people and places better than you found them, and your kids will take note and do the same.

Fear and Lack of Understanding

Why do parents engage in these behaviors (what are they afraid of if they don’t)? Do these behaviors come from fear or from poor understanding of what strong parenting (with good boundaries) is? Tim has some great answers for us:
“I think both fear and lack of understanding play a role here, but it leads with the fact that each generation of parents is usually compensating for something the previous generation did. The primary adults in kids’ lives today have focused on now rather than later. It’s about their happiness today not their readiness tomorrow. I suspect it’s a reaction.
The primary adults in kids’ lives today have focused on now rather than later. It’s about their happiness today not their readiness tomorrow. 
Many parents today had Moms and Dads who were all about getting ready for tomorrow: saving money, not spending it, and getting ready for retirement. In response, many of us bought into the message: embrace the moment. You deserve it. Enjoy today. And we did.
For many, it resulted in credit card debt and the inability to delay gratification. This may be the crux of our challenge. The truth is, parents who are able to focus on tomorrow, not just today, produce better results.”
How can parents move away from these negative behaviours (without having to hire a family therapist to help)?
Tim says: “It’s important for parents to become exceedingly self-aware of their words and actions when interacting with their children, or with others when their children are nearby. Care enough to train them, not merely treat them to a good life. Coach them, more than coddle. “
“Coaching can be an intimidating world for parents. Here’s a few tips on how to coach well:
1. Talk over the issues you wish you would’ve known about adulthood.
2. Allow them to attempt things that stretch them and even let them fail.
3. Discuss future consequences if they fail to master certain disciplines.
4. Aid them in matching their strengths to real-world problems.
5. Furnish projects that require patience, so they learn to delay gratification.
6. Teach them that life is about choices and trade-offs; they can’t do everything.
7. Initiate (or simulate) adult tasks like paying bills or making business deals.
8. Introduce them to potential mentors from your network.
9. Help them envision a fulfilling future, and then discuss the steps to get there.
10. Celebrate progress they make toward autonomy and responsibility.
How are you parenting your children? Are you sacrificing their long-term growth for short-term comfort?
http://blog.goaly.com/7-crippling-parenting-behaviors-that-keep-children/

Monday, 15 June 2015

The Most Important Dimension of Human Existence


We’re here to find that dimension within ourselves that is deeper than thought.

This teaching isn’t based on knowledge, on new interesting facts, new information. The world is full of that already. 

You can push any button on the many devices you have and get information. You’re drowning in information.

And ultimately, what is the point of it all? More information, more things, more of this, more of that. 

Are we going to find the fullness of life through more things and greater and bigger shopping malls?

Are we going to find ourselves through improving our ability to think and analyze, and accumulate more information, more stuff? Is “more” going to save the world? It’s all form.

You can never make it on the level of form. You can never quite arrange and accumulate all the forms that you think you need so that you can be yourself fully.

Sometimes you can do it for a brief time span. You can suddenly find everything working in your life: your health is good; your relationship is great; you have money, possessions, love, and respect from other people.

But before long, something starts to crumble here or there, either the finances or the relationship, your health or your work or living situation. 
It is the nature of the world of form that nothing stays fixed for very long — and so it starts to fall apart again.


~ ~ ~

The voice in the head that never stops speaking
becomes a civilization that is obsessed with form,
and therefore knows nothing of the most important
dimension of human existence:
the sacred,
the stillness,
the formless,
the divine.

“What does it profit you if you gain the whole world and lose yourself?”

*    *    *

It has been said that there are two ways of being unhappy: not getting what you want, and getting what you want.

When people attain what the world tells us is desirable — wealth, recognition, property, achievement — they’re still not happy, at least not for long. 

They’re not at peace with themselves. They don’t have a true sense of security, a sense of finally having arrived.

Their achievements have not provided them with what they were really looking for — themselves. They have not given them the sense of being rooted in life, or as Jesus calls it, the fullness of life.

*    *    *

The form of this moment is the portal into the formless dimension. It is the narrow gate that Jesus talks about that leads to life. Yes, it’s very narrow: it’s only this moment.

To find it, you need to roll up the scroll of your life on which your story is written, past and future. Before there were books, there were scrolls, and you rolled them up when you were done with them.

So put your story away. It is not who you are. People usually live carrying a burden of past and future, a burden of their personal history, which they hope will fulfill itself in the future. 

It won’t, so roll up that old scroll. Be done with it.

You don’t solve problems by thinking; you create problems by thinking. The solution always appears when you step out of thinking and become still and absolutely present, even if only for a moment. 

Then, a little later when thought comes back, you suddenly have a creative insight that wasn’t there before.

Let go of excessive thinking and see how everything changes. Your relationships change because you don’t demand that the other person should do something for you to enhance your sense of self. 

You don’t compare yourself to others or try to be more than someone else to strengthen your sense of identity.

You allow everyone to be as they are. You don’t need to change them; you don’t need them to behave differently so that you can be happy.

*    *    *

There’s nothing wrong with doing new things, pursuing activities, exploring new countries, meeting new people, acquiring knowledge and expertise, developing your physical or mental abilities, and creating whatever you’re called upon to create in this world.

It is beautiful to create in this world, and there is always more that you can do.

Now the question is, Are you looking for yourself in what you do? Are you attempting to add more to who you think you are? 

Are you compulsively striving toward the next moment and the next and the next, hoping to find some sense of completion and fulfillment?

The preciousness of Being is your true specialness. 
What the egoic self had been looking for on the level of the story — I want to be special — obscured the fact that you could not be more special than you already are now. 

Not special because you are better or more wretched than someone else, but because you can sense a beauty, a preciousness, an aliveness deep within.

*    *    *

When you are present in this moment,
you break the continuity of your story, of past and future.
Then true intelligence arises,
and also love.
The only way love can come into your life
is not through form, but through that inner spaciousness that is Presence.
Love has no form.


http://talentdevelop.com/articles/TMIDOHE.html