Category: Success

  • The Renewable You

    The Renewable You

     

     

    “I’m making good progress in my life, I’m on a good road, I’m doing all these good things for me… I just always stay on the edge of feeling frazzled, all the time.”

    That’s what my coachee said this morning on our coaching call. I know how she feels. Today I sprang out of bed ready to go! But yesterday, I rolled over and threw the covers back over my head. Luckily for me, the rolling back over doesn’t happen much anymore because I’ve found a trick. I know a secret, and I shared it with my friend this morning.

    “Do you have a pen and paper?” I asked her.  “Draw a line from top to bottom.  Then think about yesterday.” “Ok,” she said “Yesterday I fell into bed exhausted. I went to bed at 9:30.”

    “Good! This will help.  Title the left side of the paper Energy Givers and the right side title it Energy Takers. Now think about every single thing you did yesterday, people you talked to, attitudes you had, things you ate, music you listened to.  Pay attention to how each one made you feel. List each thing as a Giver or a Taker. If something is neither one, put it at the bottom of the page as neutral. But focus on the Givers and Takers.”

    There was silence as she wrote.  Then she explained each one on the list.

    “I worked for two hours in the morning, Taker. After that I wrote a proposal for a program with the non-profit I’m volunteering for, Giver…”  The list went on until, “And lastly, my husband’s car broke down and I had to go pick him up at nine o’clock at night.  Taker! I went home and fell into bed.”

    When the list was done, her Taker side was longer than her Giver side. A lot longer! No wonder she fell into bed.

    It’s all about paying attention to the energy that flows into us and away from us.  Is our life sustainable?  If our Taker side is longer day in and day out, we stay tired, get sick more, don’t have the energy we need to do the things we love or for the people we care about. Plus, we feel generally unhappy. If our Giver side is longer we do much better. The great news is, if we list it all out, we can predict how our day will go based on the energy exchange, and rearrange.

    “That was yesterday,” I told her. Take a look at today’s list, how does that look?” She listed it all out. “It’s about even today.”

    I like to see the Energy Giver side be at least two items longer than the Taker side. If you store up energy, then the draining days won’t hit quite so hard. It’s like storing energy in an internal battery for when you need it. When we list out our days, weeks, months, we can rearrange to include enough Energy Givers, making a satisfying life sustainable.

    “How can you rearrange, take away or add so that your Giver list is longer?” I put the question to her and she began to adjust.

    What if you can’t change the list?  

    Another Coachee was an Uber driver, giving him an income while he started another business. He liked the money but driving strangers around was exhausting for him.

    My question was “How can you turn this around? How can it become energizing for you?” He thought about it and came up with an idea. Because he loved stories and jokes, he began asking his riders if they had any funny, inspiring or amazing stories or good jokes they could share. Suddenly he began looking forward to a job he had dreaded, and it gave him extra vitality to develop his budding business!

    This isn’t rocket science, we just forget to apply it, and then wonder why we are exhausted all the time.

    People are the trickiest givers and takers on the list. Some people I love so much leave me completely depleted. That means I have to make sure I spend enough time with people who energize me as well, so that I will have plenty of energy for all.

    What takes up your energy? What gives it?  Yoga? Reading a book? Hiking?

    I have a ready-made Energy Giver list, so I can plug and play on the days I need more. And, when I don’t even have time for that, I have an Emergency Energy Box. It’s a collection of quotes, verses, music, pictures, a candle, bubble bath… each small thing makes me smile, gives me an instant boost.

    Energy or lack of it flows into all parts of life. I feel it when I run. If I’m low on sleep, stressed and had a burger for lunch, I can barely make it up that crazy steep hill.  But if I’m rested and hydrated, I look at the hill and say, “What hill?”

    There’s one more thing, I hear this all the time…

    “I feel selfish if I take time for myself.”

    “I don’t have time to do it, the demands are too great.”

    “I feel guilty if I take time from others.”

    To this I say one word.

    Really?

    The whole point is to have an abundance of energy for those around you, to do the things you care about, that are important to you, to meet life’s demands more efficiently, effectively, and tackle them with delight! It’s to live so that you can look at the steep hills and say, “what hill?”

  • Becoming a Streaker

    Becoming a Streaker

    I have a new group of heroes. I’ve never met any of them, I don’t know what they look like, what they do, or much of anything about them except this one thing: they are Streak Runners. I call them Streakers but happily or sadly, depending on how you look at it, they do keep their clothes on. All six hundred on the Streak Runner list have had a running streak of at least a mile, every day, for a whole year. Some have more. Some have MUCH more like 10 year streaks, which is running 3650 days IN A ROW. Isn’t that wild? Some have run for 20 years each and every time the sun has come up, some 30 years, and Jon Sutherland from California and Jim Pearson from Washington have run over 45 years. Every. Single. Day. I am so amazed. I heard one Streaker on the radio saying that he had broken his nose once but checked out of the hospital against doctor’s orders to keep his streak going. Now, that’s just crazy.

    I’ve decided to be a Streak Runner. I’m on day number 25. I’ve tried this before but on day 81 I got home from work in a late night snowstorm and instead of running, I sat by the fire with a glass of wine. Nope. I don’t regret that wine one bit. But, I’m giving Steak Running another go.

    Out of my current 25 miles, I’ve probably run 15 more than I would have if not trying for a streak. The fact that it’s only a mile helps. I don’t care how tired I am, or how busy. One mile? Ok, one mile I can do, even if I have to drag myself out to do it. “What? It’s raining and dark?  Ugh.” But I really want that streak.

    Some friends of mine decided to run a mile because none of them ever had. They were out of shape and overweight but they wanted it bad.  Everyone ran at their own slow pace and, low and behold, they did it!  It took them a whole month and much patient work, but they ran a mile! There were hugs and tears all around, that day. They said doing something they thought was impossible helped them believe in themselves and believe that other dreams just might be possible.

    That single mile changed their whole lives.

    The first part of doing anything is believing that maybe, just maybe, we can do it. That means we put our fears and doubts behind, shut our ears to anyone telling us there is “no way,” and we imagine ourselves actually doing it. Sadly, most dreams die right here. But, if you can imagine and believe the tiniest bit, you’re on your way. The second part is figuring out exactly how it’s going to happen and here we can get stuck again, especially if our dream is very large and far away. Staring up at towering projects paralyses us; we can’t get started and probably never will. Our dreams are out of our reach.

    But there is hope.

    Small tasks are much easer to do than big ones and that leads us to the solution.

    Simplify.

    Break all that big down into tiny steps. Conquer the intimidation with tiny points of progress. I call them tiny lights. I find tiny lights of progress by asking this:   What is one thing I CAN do that will move me forward? What is a simple step, a tiny light of progress I can accomplish this week, this day, this hour?

    Simple is good.  Simple is doable. Complete one simple task at a time, then watch them stack up.  Twenty tiny lights will brighten a path.  One hundred tiny lights and, guess what?  You’re there.

    Are you writing a book? “This week I will write seven pages.”  Need more sales? “Today I will make twenty calls.” You don’t know how? “What ways can I learn this?”  Want a running streak?  “Every day I will run a single mile.”

    Simplifying makes life easy to love. Love the process, love the achievement, love making something happen. Love the rush of participating instead of observing.

    “One bulb at a time. There was no other way to do it. No shortcuts—simply loving the slow process of planting. Loving the work as it unfolded. Loving an achievement that grew slowly and bloomed for only three weeks each year.”
    ~Jaroldeen Asplund Edwards

    I figure I can dream my dream forever, or I can do it. The only difference between me and the other guy who has already succeeded, is action. That’s it.  Unless I break some bones, I’d rather fail miserably than never have tried. Never having tried is a regret waiting to happen.

    But what if I fail? Do I regret my failures? Let me tell you, failure hurts. Oh man it hurts. But this I know from all my failures – if given enough time, failure leads to something wild and beautiful. When that dream dies, space frees up for other bigger dreams that I actually CAN do because of how I failed before. Ha. Wild. Beautiful.

    So now my dream is to be Streak Runner. 340 days to go. No, wait. One day to go.

    Check out the Streak Runners at http://www.runeveryday.com.

    If you want to join me with my running streak (or walking streak), do it with me! Shoot me an e-mail at leanne@lightfootcoaching.com.

    Blessings to you,

    ~LeAnne

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