Take the thing.
Turn it round.
This way.
Then that.
Clear your mind.
See it.
Notice.
Breathe.
Allow it to transform before your eyes.
Into Something.
Something else.
Something new.
Something magical.
That changes everything
For the good.
Powerful Coaching. Powerful Results.
Take the thing.
Turn it round.
This way.
Then that.
Clear your mind.
See it.
Notice.
Breathe.
Allow it to transform before your eyes.
Into Something.
Something else.
Something new.
Something magical.
That changes everything
For the good.
You can make a difference.
You can.
And I know you want to.
But so many of us hold back because we associate making a difference with some big, grand gesture, like bringing peace to the Middle East, finding the cure for cancer or winning the Nobel Peace Prize, and overlook the fact that we can do good right here. Right now.
You could purchase a gift certificate for a local restaurant and give that as a gift to a neighbor. You are helping a small business stay afloat, and giving your neighbor an evening to remember.
You could volunteer at your local community kitchen or food bank, and bring some non-perishables along to donate. Do it often enough and you’ll form new relationships and new insights about others, and yourself.
Take your neighbor kid under your wing. You know, that kid you’ve known since he was a toddler who just graduated from college? You know he’s struggling to find his first job. Be his mentor, and help him get his start in the world.
Offer to set up a Christmas tree for the elderly widow down the block, even if you don’t celebrate Christmas yourself.
Hold the door open for the pregnant woman pushing the twin stroller through the door at Starbucks.
Allow the guy with the left turn signal flashing to merge in front of you.
Make dinner for your family.
Look people in the eye and listen as they talk. Really listen. And keep your phone in your pocket.
Be the kind of person you’d like to be friends with.
Go out of your way to be of help and assistance.
Right now, you’re saying, “Platitudes! Doesn’t she know what my work is like? I don’t have time to do any of this!”
The 10 seconds it takes to hold the door open for that woman at Starbucks – no skin off your back, huh? You can do that little thing, can’t you?
And by doing so, what do you usher into the world?
For that woman, the awareness that she is not alone fending for herself and her children.
For you, the realization that you have the capacity to help others.
And suddenly the world is not so big and unconnected.
And the world is not populated with enemies.
But by friends.
And your blood pressure lowers to a manageable level.
And you have a smile on your face.
And you have created good by doing one small thing.
At this time of year, there’s a lot of scrambling and purchasing and expectations and unmet expectations and your stress level can be through the roof.
But not if you focus on the little ways you can make a difference in other people’s lives every day.
Put a quarter in someone’s meter.
Buy a Christmas tree from the varsity baseball team so they can travel to the state tournament next spring.
Arrange for Karate lessons for you and your kid.
Hug your wife for no particular reason other than to connect in that moment.
Tell him you love him.
Tell her you admire her.
Think really small.
Do really big.
[photo courtesy: Grace Woodward]
Let’s just say you have a story going on in your head. A story something like, “I am terrible with money.” Or, maybe, “Money scares the bejeezus out of me.”
Maybe you inherited some fears about money from your mother, your father, your auntie, your granddad who struggled with money. Or didn’t talk about money. Or argued about money.
Thanks to them, and to your own experiences, you developed a story about what money is, and what money does, and who you are because of money.
Let’s say you ferociously hold on to that story – for years and years – because somehow, some way, it reinforces a much larger story:
“I’m not good enough.”
This is the story my client Elle* has been struggling with. She has her own business, and a mortgage, and a sheer terror about making financial mistakes. Because, of course, mistakes mean you’re not perfect and if you’re not perfect, you’re:
Not good enough.
Recently, as a opportunity for my Club members, Elle had a chance to do The Unstuck Process and money proved to be her biggest sticking place.
But “money” is a pretty huge category, so we took it down to the smallest, itty-bitty-est thing about her money that was a problem. Know what it was?
Ten months of unopened mail.
Ten months of envelopes that promised peril. A mountain of mail that told Elle where she had screwed up. Another place she was:
Not good enough.
To get unstuck, to prove her story wrong once and for all, Elle had to tackle that pile of pain.
We discussed the why, and the how, and the threat to her future if she didn’t do anything – that’s a vital part of The Unstuck Process. I asked her to envision her money stuck-ness continuing for two more years - “OMG,” she blurted. Which was precisely the motivation she needed to get going. Elle left the call focused and determined. I was happy, and hopeful for her.
With Elle’s permission, the recording of our coaching session was distributed to all the Club members. And it resonated with them. Resonated so much, that one member wrote a blog post about her own struggles with mail, and money. Of course, I forwarded the post to Elle, to buck her up.
Bucked up she was, indeed. She wrote me:
“So last night I started to sort through 10 months of unopened mail. 10 months. I needed to stop every 10 minutes or so and go back and read Susan’s* blog post, just to lessen my anxiety and regain the courage to keep going. But I did keep going. I got it all sorted into 3 big piles: Business; Personal; Trash. I didn’t pressure myself to open any envelopes. Last night’s step was just to get the stuff sorted.”
Great approach. Gentle, positive baby steps.
“This morning I went through the Business pile and opened several envelopes. There were two overdue bills, which I have now paid, and included a little note in each telling the recipient how much I appreciated their patience. I also opened envelopes from clients – that contained $62,000 in checks. $62,000. I just finished filling out the deposit slip. My head is still reeling. I am sure that there are some ugly surprises in there as well… but I’ve made a start. And I am going to continue moving forward, one envelope at a time. Whatever is in there can (and will) be dealt with… but I know that I wouldn’t have started had it not been for your support. I have finally reached a point where I realize that I don’t need to explain myself for the mistakes I’ve made. I just need to make them right.”
Sixty-two thousand dollars.
Sixty-two thousand dollars.
Holy moly.
Sitting right there, in shopping bags stashed in the closet. For ten months.
What a discovery – her fears about money had even prevented her from receiving money.
Her actions had created exactly the situation she feared. Funny how that works.
But she’s done with all that now:
“So I wanted to say thank you. Thank you from the bottom of my heart for showing me how to gently and lovingly move forward. Thank you for showing me that there are alternatives to ripping myself to shreds over what I’ve done (or haven’t done, as the case may be). Thank you for helping me to see that I’m not some kind of financial leper that will never be ‘cured.’ Thank you for shining a light on my wiser self… and reminding me that she’s there and accessible 24/7. Thank you for believing I can do it.”
Sometimes people are skeptical about coaching. “What’s the return on investment?” they ask. Well, in Elle’s case, it’s pretty simple. She invested $594 in nine months of Club coaching, and returned a whopping $62,000 in found money. And the prospect of a happy, healthy relationship with money going forward.
I am just saying.
[Just saying, I am so very proud of her.]
*Client names are always
changed for privacy purposes
The absolutely best, most creative question ever asked is: “What if?”
This little question has generated countless books, movies and plays. What if a Danish prince discovers that his mother’s new husband is his father’s murderer? What if a young girl falls down a rabbit hole and finds another world? What if boy meets girl, boy loses girl and then boy finds girl again?
“What if?” has also spawned greatness in other ways. Like peach salsa. Like penicillin. Like new roses. Like Impressionist paintings. Like iPads.
And yet at the very same time “what if?” is our biggest stumbling block to success.
“What if I make a mistake?”
“What if I don’t like it?”
“What if it’s not really possible?”
“What if I’m wrong?”
The stewing and fretting so many of us devote to the potentiality of every single possible “what if?” scenario keeps us completely stuck.
“What if?” we ask. “What if? What if? What if? What if? What if? What if? What if?”
Exhausting.
Yet the irony is, like the proverbial two-edged sword, it’s only by asking “what if?” that we can be free to move forward.
What if you don’t like it? Well, what if you do? You will never know until you try, so why not just try?
What if you fail? Well, have you failed before? Bet you have. I sure have – recently. And, look: you and I are still above ground and breathing, so that means we are probably stronger and more resilient than we give ourselves credit for. Failure proves it.
What if it’s not really possible? Or if you’re wrong? Well, then, at least you have collected data which shows you what’s not going to work. Which only makes it more possible for you to figure out what will work.
Pollyanna-ish? Unrealistic? Are you thinking that perhaps I don’t understand the stakes involved? How pressured your situation is? How overwhelmed you are?
Oh, I understand quite well. Believe me.
I hear it every day. And lived it myself.
But there’s one thing I know. You can make it easier on yourself by simply choosing to use the creative “what if?” rather than the limiting “what if?”
That’s all. Once choice. One little choice to come at your overwhelm and pressure and deadlines and stuff from a slightly different angle.
And create something wonderful.
I’d say there’s a process.
Maybe the first step is realizing something’s not working.
Some folks stop right there, thinking that they don’t have enough power, energy and oomph to change things.
These are my people.
The second step is entertaining ideas that just might solve the problem.
And folks stop here, too, mostly thinking of ways to eliminate options rather than grow them.
These are my people.
The third step is implementing the idea or ideas that have a chance of working.
Believe me – folks stop here. Dead stop. Terrified.
Because sometimes it’s a slog and it’s hard and the odds of success look like 125,000,000 to 1, and why not stop already?
I love these people.
And then there’s the fourth step.
Boy, this step is great.
It’s where people look up in wide-eyed wonder and say, “Wow. It worked.”
That’s the kind of people you can be.
I have a new process to help people get through the first three steps. The fourth step? Kinda takes care of itself.
From everything I’ve learned over the years, plus some new research and ideas, I’ve developed 20 powerful questions which take 30 minutes to answer.
Yes, it’s an extremely efficient process.
And you end up identifying one thing – one – that is keeping you stuck. One thing you can do just a little bit differently, and unlock your time and energy so you can move on to the place you want to be.
Will it work?
Well, what if I told you that if you keep going the way you’re going now, that in two years all you’d have to show for your effort is more of the same?
More stuck.
More misery.
More pain.
More bleah.
If that sounds fantastic to you, then this process is not for you.
But, if the prospect of two more years of what you’ve got right now makes you feel nauseous, then let me give you hope.
I’ve tested this process on myself and on several clients. One said, “I felt refreshed and uplifted. It’s like this tool shifted my perception to a different part of my brain.” Another said, “And up until our call yesterday, and that beautiful question about what would it be like if you were in the same place two years from now… I don’t know that I would have been able to put the puzzle pieces together. I don’t know that I would have been able to consider other possibilities other than the brick wall that I seem to keep running into when I think about the topic.”
Another? “I also liked some of your questions about what we want to future to look like, in positive words, how would we feel if three years from now we were still in this same position; and what has to change/what is in the way of making this happen? Michele, thank you so much for helping me move forward with my business. I can’t tell you enough how you have helped me break through barriers and given me hope for a better future.”
So, step one – let’s take it on. You up for it?
You know, I rarely try to sell you anything. But this process? It’s something else. And I think you will really benefit. Or I wouldn’t offer it to you.
I’m doing a special offer for November – give me 30 minutes and get unstuck.
Go here to schedule your phone appointment: Calendar.
And pay $100 by clicking on this link: PayPal.
Because you? You’re my kind of people. And all I want for you is to be saying, “Wow. Wow. Wow.”
Michele Woodward is a Career Strategist, Master Certified Coach, author, speaker and teacher, who helps people get clear about who they are and what they want to do – and develop a workable action plan to get where they want to go. She is the author of Lose eight, Find Love, De-Clutter & Save Money: Essays on Happier Living and is the founder of Career Invention Coach Training.
This material may not be reproduced, displayed, modified or distributed without the express prior written permission of the copyright holder. For permission, contact Michele@lifeframeworks.com.
Copyright © 2012 Michele Woodward · Genesis Framework Customization by Victoria Keale · Log in'
Recent Comments