Archive for August, 2009

The Comeback Rules

When the novelist F. Scott Fitzgerald famously wrote that “there are no second acts in American lives,” he was obviously incorrect and ignorant to the fact that human beings have an enormous capacity for overcoming adversity both personal and professional, with intelligence, patience, and panache.

Comebacks, redemption and second acts are ubiquitous in our culture today and so often it is a major setback — cancer, divorce, job loss, the death of a loved one, bankruptcy, or an accident — that puts the spotlight on our lives and shows us the way to a meaningful “second act.”

Its Time to Raise the Bar

It's Time to Raise the Bar

Yes, we all get knocked down, but successful people know how to pick themselves back up. So how do we do it? Here’s your playbook for success!

Comeback Rule #1 – Refuse to Die

Those with the character to triumph in the end tend not to allow the indignity of failure to force them down. A comeback accepts disaster, laughs in its face, and crawls to his feet again.

Comeback Rule #2 – Decide to Fight

Comebacks have an inner sense of justice that refuses to be violated. They manage their emotions, reminding themselves of where they’ve been and why they’re here, and resolve that nothing will stop them.

Comeback Rule #3 – Get Mad

Pain, failure, loss and embarrassment are such great motivators and you should allow adversity to force your hand to make new choices and take new actions.

Comeback Rule #4 – Get Creative

The savvy fighter won’t make the same mistake twice. He accepts the hard rules of the real world, analyzes how he wound up on his back, and charts a course around the problem.

Comeback Rule #5 – Focus on Results

Once you’re on your way, don’t look back and do not allow a previous faux pas slow you down. A hundred distractions, doubts, and setbacks will haunt someone recovering from disaster. The true champion rolls with the punches and keeps coming back for more.

The Chinese word for crisis is composed of two characters, one representing danger and the other opportunity. This reality is fascinating to me—that, in times of danger, great opportunities abound.

You must look at every obstacle, setback, rejection, and constraint as an opportunity to redeem yourself and in the 100 Day Challenge. I’ll show you how to turn your life around quickly!

August 31, 2009 Posted Under Success

Take Initiative or Get Out of the Way

Let’s begin with a question; what have you done lately to demonstrate initiative and a willingness to go the extra mile in your own life?

This question asks you to demonstrate that you can recognize what tasks need to be completed, when those tasks need to be completed, and how those tasks are going to be completed.

Your answer and behavior demonstrate you ability to think outside the square and display a passion for work.

Initiative can be defined as your ability to activate yourself to do something even if no one has asked you to do it.

Take Initiative

Take Initiative

In our highly competitive world, your ability to consistently demonstrate initiative is a true competitive advantage as the vast majority of people lean towards procrastination and hesitation as their operative performance state.

Your life doesn’t just “happen.” Whether you know it, like it, or simply choose to dismiss this reality, your life is carefully designed by you.

The choices, after all, are yours. You choose happiness. you choose sadness. you choose decisiveness. You choose ambivalence. You choose success. You choose failure. You choose courage. You choose fear.

You also choose to take initiative and take control of your future, or you choose to suck your thumb and wait for someone to tell you what to do.

Just remember that every moment, every situation, provides a new choice. At any moment of your life, you can choose to take initiative or to offer up an excuse to procrastinate.

And in doing so, it gives you a perfect opportunity to do things differently to produce more positive results.

Take the 100 Day Challenge and you’ll learn the true secret to taking initiative and proactive behavior!

August 30, 2009 Posted Under Success

Are You Ready For a Challenge?

100 Day Challenge

100 Day Challenge

One thing we all have in common is that we all love a challenge. For some it could be a goal that puts you to the test, an obstacle that says you can’t beat me, a belief system that is begging for a breakthrough, or even a mountain that just dares you to climb it.

Whatever it is, you’re attitude should be BRING IT ON, as there’s nothing quite like a good old fashioned challenge to see what you’re made, to push the boundaries and tests your limits as it is ONLY when we overcome these trials that we get to reap the sweetest rewards.

During the past few years, I have been working on what I believe to be the most comprehensive approach to goal setting and performance enhancement.

The 100 Day Challenge is a structured 14-week performance improvement program where challengers compete against themselves to achieve a number of challenging goals and finish the year strong.

 
You and other competitors from around the world will be provided with a performance plan, a disciplined implementation process, daily measurement systems, and a very unique accountably tool along with specific tactics and strategies to attain your goals.

Check out the 100 Day Challenge!

August 29, 2009 Posted Under Success

Behavior Never Lies

Walk the Talk

Walk the Talk

Practice what you preach; do as you say, walk the talk, and actions speak louder than words are all derivatives of what I believe are the three most important words in your life—behavior never lies!

Who you really are is defined by your behavior, not your words.

When a person’s words and behaviors are not in sync, the result is fraud, hypocritical behavior.

The disconnect between what people say versus what they actually do steals trust, sends mixed messages, distorts reality, undermines clear communication, and creates doubt.

It negatively impacts all parties, the giver and receiver. The challenge we all face is to balance the spoken word with our actions.

I can tell you this with complete confidence, that by examining your behavior and results, I can see a clear picture of your commitment, I can gain an innate sense of your character, I can grasp a near perfect understanding of your beliefs, and I can most certainly see what you are really made of.

Your behavior is a reflection of what you believe to be true about yourself. Your behavior tells me how you think, your behavior tells me how you talk about yourself even when no one’s around, and your behavior tells me what you do every single day.

To learn how to walk your talk and to ensure that you learn the behavior and habit patterns of highly successful, check out the 100 Day Challenge.

August 28, 2009 Posted Under Success

Healthy, Wealthy, and Wise

Happier, Healthier and Wealthier

We all love a challenge!

If you’re tired of struggling with debt, fearful of the current economic crisis, and paralyzed by the pace of change, I’ve got a great way for you to take control of your future.

You see, one thing we all have in common is that we all love a challenge!

For some it could be a goal that puts you to the test, an obstacle that says you can’t beat me, a belief system that is begging for a breakthrough, or even a mountain that dares you to climb it.

Whatever it is, you’re attitude should be BRING IT ON, as there’s nothing quite like a good old fashioned challenge to see what you’re made, to push the boundaries and tests your limits as it is ONLY when we overcome these trials that we get to reap the sweetest rewards.

I’ve created a powerful program that will show you how to make maximum performance gains in the shortest time possible. It is very effective and very affordable.

It’s called the 100 Day Challenge and you get all the details by going to Start Fast Finish Strong!

August 28, 2009 Posted Under Success

Cover Your Eyes, It’s the Little Green Monster!

Note: This is a guest post by Jered Slusher of Copper Copy

Everywhere I go, I have this little green monster telling me what I should and should not do. The monster criticizes everything and tells me that if I want to be the very best I have to avoid certain things, and embrace others. He tells me to shave and to brush my teeth so that I look presentable. He also tells me to avoid picking my nose because it’s embarrassing. This can be overwhelming at times, especially when he tells me how to write.

Cover your eyesYes. This ugly monster happens to be my inner critic. And just now, as I sat down to write this article, he jabbed his elbow into my neck and told me that I had to start this article off just perfect. “You’ve got to hook the reader,” he says, “grab the reader’s attention.”

All the time he pokes and prods. “That comma doesn’t belong there… You shouldn’t use the passive voice… Why on earth would you phrase that sentence like that?”

He’s so frustrating, so demanding, he exhausts me to the point where I can’t write anymore and I feel like running and jumping off a cliff.

And it’s not just when I sit down to write articles. It’s when I sit down to journal too. He’s sitting there waiting to critique my every move, pounce at the slightest opportunity to tell me I’m wrong. A lot of times I listen because I don’t want to feel like an idiot or look stupid. But then again, I did tell you that a little green monster follows me around.

Well, if we want to become stronger writers and get the most out of our journaling, we’ve got to stop this monster now. Allowing the inner critic to stifle our journal writing is extremely damaging to our personal development. If we get hung up on backspacing, revising, and editing as we journal, we’re really just feeding the inner critic to get stronger and better at revising, editing, and backspacing our thoughts as well.

So how do we get rid of this annoying little monster so we can start focusing on the real issues at hand?

We poke his eyes out… literally and figuratively…

Well, that may sound violent, but it’s true. The secret to good journaling is to get rid of the inner critic’s ability to see what the heck is going on. What results is what we highly sophisticated and jargon prone writer’s have coined blind journaling.

To partake in this highly effective personal development project, all you have to do is set a timer for five to ten minutes, sit down at the computer, shut your eyes and start writing. Write whatever comes to mind as quickly as possible. Perhaps instead of shutting your eyes you can turn the monitor off, but whatever the case may be you should not review what you’ve already written during the time you’re writing.

The key to this is to not think about what you’re writing, but to write out your thoughts as they occur to you. Because you are blind, you are not allowed to edit your thoughts in any way. You may find it beneficial to pause and to think about a specific situation that interests you, but the goal should be to compose as much as possible without letting your inner critic intervene.

After you’re done blind journaling, it may help to go back and review what you’ve written. Expand upon an idea that catches your eye. Ask yourself questions about what you’ve written and perhaps why it is important to you.

This type of journaling is most beneficial because it gets you thinking primarily about ideas and allows you to take chances by not letting anything influence what you write. By disabling your inner critic, you enable your ability to reflect upon the world in meaningful ways without being distracted by that limiting little monster.

If done correctly, the ultimate result is that you will relieve yourself of the traditional inhibitions that most writers have when journaling. Instead of thinking about what others will think of you, you are engaging in a truly individual and organic experience that is focused on your ideas, rather than harshly judging your writing ability or ideas.

Whatever you do, don’t let the overly critical little green monster win.

Jered Slusher is the editor of CopperCopy.com and is also a Senior English Major at The Ohio State University. Jered has worked with hundreds of clients to help them improve their communication and business skills to achieve their goals. For more information on how to improve your writing, visit http://www.coppercopy.com

Photo by fotographix.ca


August 21, 2009 Posted Under Success

How to Be a Better Person Day by Day

Every day, in every way, I am getting better and better.
Emile Coue

Be a better personBeing a better person is a process. No matter how good someone is, he can’t be perfect overnight. So the important thing is that you grow every day. Make growing a habit and you will see significant progress when you look back.

Here are several things you should do to be a better person day by day:

1. Take responsibility

Only I can change my life. No one can do it for me.
Carol Burnett

Before anything else, you should realize that the one who is responsible for your life is you. Don’t blame other people or external condition for how you live your life. No matter how bad the situation might be, it’s you who decide how to respond to it. No matter what happens to you, it’s you who decide how it affects you.

2. Choose to grow

The strongest principle of growth lies in human choice.
George Eliot

After taking the responsibility for your life, the next thing you should do is deciding that you want to grow. Choose to grow rather than staying where you are. Choose to be a better person every day.

3. Make room for growth

If the shoe fits, you’re not allowing for growth.
Robert N. Coons

How can you grow if there is no room for it? What I mean is not physical room, of course. Instead, you should make room for growth in your mind. Believe in yourself that you can grow. Believe that you can make the changes you want. Don’t limit yourself and aim to be the best that you can be.

4. Don’t expect instant results

While you should make room for growth, you should also have realistic expectations. If you expect too much, you might get disappointed and discouraged. It takes time to grow so don’t lose heart if you still couldn’t become the person you want to be. Remember what Moliere said:

The trees that are slow to grow bear the best fruit.

5. Extract lessons from your experiences

Extracting lessons from your experiences is essential for your personal growth. Those who do will outgrow those who don’t. So make every experience a learning opportunity. Open your eyes and grab every possible lesson.

6. Keep a journal

Whatever lesson you learn, write it down in a journal. Keeping a journal can save you a lot of time because you don’t have to repeat the same mistakes again and again.

7. Build positive habits

Doing small things consistently can make a big difference over time. Choose a simple activity that helps you grow and do it every day. For example, you may choose to read for half an hour every day. Or you may allocate time to pray or meditate every day. The important thing is that you do it consistently.

8. Face your fear

Your fear limits your growth. Because of that you need to identify, face, and conquer your fear. It’s not easy to do, but as Anais Nin said:

Life shrinks or expands in proportion to one’s courage.

9. Have quality input

Your input determines your output. That’s why you need to feed your mind with positive and uplifting thoughts every day. Listen to motivational audio and video programs. Read inspiring books. Read quotes by great people.

10. Be around positive people

The people around you have great influence on you. They can make or break your life. I’m lucky to have a lot of positive people around me that encourage me to grow. They act as a source of energy and inspiration for me.

11. Find role models

It’s much easier to achieve something if you have role models that become examples for you. Instead of having a lot of abstract ideas of what you want to be, you have concrete examples in front of you. So find people with positive traits you admire and let them inspire you.

12. Find mentors

Mentors are even more important than role models. You usually don’t have personal relationships with your role models, but you do have personal relationships with your mentors. A mentor is someone who can guide you through the walk of life. Mentors can help you grow much faster because you don’t need to repeat the mistakes they have made. No longer do you need to find the right path yourself. No longer do you need to find truth the hard way.

Photo by ewen and donabel


August 18, 2009 Posted Under Success

The Great Stress Lie: Finding the Real Cause of Your Stress

my pupils are sometimes different sizes
Creative Commons License photo credit: the|G|™

“Instead of trying to cover the whole world with leather, put on some sandals.” – Shantideva

Stress. Tight throat, saw jaw, headaches and an uneasy stomach. It is everywhere you look and in everyone you know. Some people experience mild cases of it whilst others need to spend half their Wednesday in a shrink’s armchair. Some people are good at dealing with it while others struggle to get out of bed. Whole industries are perpetuated by the great lie of stress; a bunch of professionals telling you that you should be stressed.

But there is something you need to know; something no one bothered to teach us in school:

Stress is not a real thing. And its cause isn’t what you think it is.

In this post I am going to show you that stress not real and that its causes are actually inner events, not outer ones. Hopefully someone out there will find some benefit in my ramblings.

The great stress lie: stress is a real thing

We are all conditioned to believe that stress is a real thing. We are told that it can make you sick and that your problems are all due to the stress you are feeling. Over time we have become so accustomed to blaming stress that we have given it a solid reality. It is like a bad person that follows us around.

But is it as real as we think? I don’t think so.

Stress does not have a baseball bat in its hand. Stress is not a murderer or a rapist. Stress has no color or shape or location. Stress is a figment of your imagination. Stress is created in your head, like a dream. And like a dream, it is possible to ‘wake up’ from stress-ridden life. And the way you do that is by tackling the true causes. Read on.

The lion and the dog: outer and inner causes

Lioness
Creative Commons License photo credit: Mark Turner

We all know what stress feels like. Its dreadful. And we all know what triggers our stress. It could be money worries, marital problems or a fear of sickness. There are literally millions of different outer causes for you to be stressed. It would be impossible to eliminate them all.

So what about the inner ones? Would it perhaps be more intelligent to look at the inner causes of stress and learn to deal with that? I think so. Instead of trying to control the whole world we could look inside and learn to deal with our own reactions. Perhaps then we might get somewhere.

To use a wonderful Buddhist analogy, the issue of stress is like throwing a rock at a lion and a dog. When you throw a rock at a dog the dog will chase the rock. When you throw a rock at a lion the lion will kill you! We need to be like the lion. Instead of chasing after all the rocks in life we need to tackle the root cause.

The inner causes of stress

Aaahhh!!!
Creative Commons License photo credit: Evil Erin

So what are the inner causes of stress? It is a very interesting and expansive topic. In fact, it is impossible to address the issue in its entirety in a simple blog post. Many great philosophers and scientists have dedicated their whole life to this topic. But we can give a general overview. That’s what I will try to do. As always, if you have anything to add I would love to read your comments.

1. Self cherishing
The first and most powerful cause of stress is the world is something called “self cherishing”. Self cherishing is rampant in our world and it is something that is even encouraged in many societies, especially western ones. At school kids are told that they are most important and in the media we are told to “get ours” before we help others.

But self cherishing always brings pain. We create this massive ego in our life times. We educate it and feed it and give it sensual pleasure. But we never stop for a second to consider whether we are actually creating the causes for happiness. Many meditation masters refer to this phenomena as “licking honey off a razor”. Sure it tastes good at first but sooner or later you realize you have made a mistake.

Stress comes about due to self cherishing. Putting ourselves before others. Thinking of our own needs before considering what would help another person. Take a look around you, the people who are the most stressed are the ones who are most self obsessed. Those who are less stressed usually have more compassion and concern for the welfare of their friends and families.

If we spend all day thinking about “me” we will soon start stressing about how we can best protect that ego.

2. Fear
The next true cause of stress is fear. Humans fear the loss of the known. We fear losing our wealth, families and status. We fear a lot of things. Quite often you will find you are stressed because you are afraid of something.

As you have probably noticed, fear has a lot to do with self cherishing. If you cherish your self more than others you will soon start to fear losing what you have built up over your life time. My parents do this a lot. My father fears losing his status as a business man so he constantly stresses about work. My mother fears losing security so she constantly stresses about bills and marriage issues.

But there is something quite remarkable about putting others before yourself. You develop a keen and powerful sense of bravery. And bravery helps you deal with stress in a way that you often don’t even know its there. Take a look at a doctor or a firefighter. Their only concern is to help others; sick people and people caught in fires. They put themselves aside and they act solely for the welfare of others. And how brave are they? Incredibly. Stress becomes a very minor concern for these people.

How to beat your stress

Thailand 1 722
Creative Commons License photo credit: epbourgois

So far we have learned some important things that will help us deal with our daily stresses.

Firstly, we know that stress is not real. It is not a solid entity that can hurt or control you. It is in your mind and anything that is in your mind can be changed, controlled and manipulated.

Secondly, we have learned that the real cause of stress is not outer events like work, bills or sickness. It is the inner events like self cherishing and fear.

So how do we put all this information together and beat our stress? Well it is really quite simple. You need to learn to look directly at your stress. Consider your stress to be strange figure in a dark room. It frightens you because it looks real and intimidating. Now consider your awareness to be a flashlight. When you shine the light on the figure you see that it is just the curtain blowing in the wind or a pile of clothes on the floor. It is not real in the way you thought it was.

The very act of becoming aware of stress and its lack of reality will make you less stressed. This is a very powerful method.

What do you think?

Are you convinced? Do you think stress is something that has its causes inside us or do you think that stress is directly linked to the external world. Do you feel like you could try and get rid of self cherishing and fear using your awareness or will you still need something more? I would love to hear your opinions.

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August 14, 2009 Posted Under Success