Archive for March, 2010

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Give yourself a good talking to.

Thursday, March 18th, 2010

Maybe I should say “give yourself a GOOD talking to”!  What’s your inner voice saying to you most of the time?  Is it saying: “I’m a truly wonderful human being” or “I am worthwhile” or “I’m always good enough”?  I’m guessing that, most of the time, it’s more likely to be “Oh no, I failed again” or “Loser” or “What can I do/say/think in order to be accepted and loved?”
 
I’m a life coach, not a psychologist, so I can’t tell you why we do it, but as a member of the human race I can vouch for the fact that we definitely do it.  Here in Ireland, maybe we even have an extreme habit of doing this.  Our historically Catholic ethos does not promote our ability to be proud of ourselves, congratulate ourselves or speak confidently of our own achievements.
 
So with that sort of background and schooling, I’m guessing that most of you know the kind of self-talk that I’m getting at here.  Fair enough.  But what can we do about it?  In my life coaching business, I regularly come across people who are very keen on positive thinking, affirmations, visualisations etc.  Great.  Great for about the 20 minutes that you are doing your affirmations/visualisations etc.  What about the other 23hrs 40mins of the day?  Hmmmm?
 
Here’s where I’ve got to so far.  I started out doing yoga when I was about twenty.  I thought it would change my life.  I enjoyed doing it.  I loved meeting other people who were interested in yoga.  But it didn’t change my life. 
 
Years later I trained in massage and aromatherapy.  I thought “This is it!  This will change my life.”  I loved/love being a massage/aroma therapist.  It’s very fulfilling.  It’s part of who I am.  Helping people is what I enjoy.  It didn’t change my life.
 
I studied Life Coaching.  Now - if ever there was something that would change my life - this would be it!  I trained and practise now as a life coach, helping clients, blogging and writing an e-newsletter.  I LOVE it.  I get great feedback from readers and clients.  It didn’t change my life.
 
When I started learning/studying NLP (Neuro Linguistic Programming) I began to see what was going on in my life.  I read books by Richard Bandler, John Grinder, Michael Neill, Paul McKenna, Owen Fitzpatrick and Brian Colbert, among others and these writers helped me to make sense of my life so far.  Things that fall into the “DO” category, do not change my life.  They are actions I take in my life.  I can use them to help me make positive changes.  But they are not the changes, they are just the tools.
 
Things that fall into the “BEING” category, are the ones that change everything.  When the things that I DO are in tune with the person that I AM, then my life starts to flow in a way that no amount of training can achieve.  I am very proud of all that I have studied and achieved (although even being so proud of myself took years and lots of positive self-talk), but most of all I am proud of the person that I am.  That is who I am 24hrs of the day.  So, while I may spend time visualising, time meditating, time doing positive affirmations, the most useful thing I can do is to tell myself, 24/7 that I am loved, that I am worthwhile and that I am always good enough, just as I am.
 
Try telling yourself that, 24 hours a day for even a week, and see how you feel.  You’ll sleep better, feel more relaxed and more positive about each new day.
 

Supporting our Teens

Monday, March 1st, 2010
Student graduation

Student graduation

Some schools are receiving the results of their “mocks” this week, so tread carefully around the teens in your family.  You don’t need the advice of a Life Coach to know that!
 
How do we find the right balance of things to say?  We want to encourage and support our kids, but we don’t want to be so soft on them that they don’t get to grips with the reality of facing the end of their school career and the beginning of the next phase of their development.  We’re all afraid that, by being too gentle on them, we may fail to help them cope with the normal disappointments and knocks that every life is prone to.
 
I tend to err on the side of stepping back and looking at the fact that life continues after exams, one way or the other.  The proof is that millions of people are doing it, and have done it for generations.  I can point to my parents and to myself and husband as the most immediate examples that, for good or bad, the end of school - while significant - is not the end of life as we know it.
 
This post is not a “How to understand your teens” or a “10 steps to guiding your children to success” because I don’t have the answers for you.  You have.  I am busy working my way through it for myself.  All I can suggest to you, from my own experience, is:
 
  • do a lot more listening than talking
  • assume the best about your kids - it gives them something positive to live up to
  • use the phrase “how do YOU feel about that?” in place of telling them exactly how you feel yourself
  • remind them that no exam changes how you feel about them
  • tell them you love them, don’t assume they “just know” it
  • tell them again
  • and again
  • and again
and remember - you, as the responsible adult, have seen many things come and go, so you can afford to be philosophical and know that - this too will pass!
 
If you have any comments to make, please do.
 
 

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