Archive for the ‘Success’ Category
Turn-ON and Grow Rich
Turn-on is compelling, enrolling, motivating, creative, fun…..and more. At a women’s group this week we filled two flip chart pages with words defining and expanding what turn-on is. I realized that when I’m turned-on, things get done, business flourishes, life works, and relationships are alive. When I’m turned off, the opposite is true. I never thought of it this way, but one of my joys as a coach is to support turn-on in my clients. Turn-on keeps their energy, juices, ideas, connections flowing in a project, business, relationship, etc.
Napoleon Hill, in his book “Think and Grow Rich” has a chapter called “The Mystery of Sex Transmutation”. He says that the highly successful people he studied and those he read about going back 2000 years “possessed highly developed sex natures”. In other words, they’re turned on! He writes about transmuting sexual desire from only physical expression to creative and intuitive and mental outlets.
“Sex desire [turn-on] is the most powerful of human desires. When driven by this desire, men [and women] develop keenness of imagination, courage, will-power, persistence, and creative ability unknown to them at other times. So strong and impelling is the desire for sexual contact that men [and women] freely run the risk of life and reputation to indulge it. When harnessed, and redirected along other lines, this motivating force maintains all of its attributes of keenness of imagination, courage, etc., which may be used as powerful creative forces in literature, art, or in any other profession or calling including, of course, the accumulation of riches.” Napoleon Hill
Many of my clients have been looking for work, and they are not turned on. Sometimes we find that the kind of work they feel they should be seeking is not really the work they desire right now. They get turned on when they let their dreams come to the surface.
Mini-Coaching:
If you’re not turned-on about something you care about, just notice without judging what is happening. Explore the circumstances and the environment around you as well as within you. Get curious about what might be the turn-off. Don’t immediately try to fix it- keep exploring and allowing it to be for a few hours or days. Begin an inquiry, “What is turn-on for me?” “Where am I turned on in my life?” “What’s happening in me and around me when I’m turned on?” When you’re ready, turn up the turn-on in your turned-off situation by experimenting with inspired changes and actions. I’m available to work with six more clients in August for you to make some powerful changes here.
Have a hot, turned-on rest of the summer, because why not? What’s turned on in your life? Why?
Are We Having Fun Yet?
The sun bounced off the water on a beautiful summer afternoon at Lake Chabot where I was walking with my business partner, Julia. She’s about to take off for 10 days and won’t be looking for internet connections or have her cell phone on. We started looking at how, even http://www.emergingbrilliance.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/07/Dreamstime-Mountain-Hiker-150×150.jpgthough we own our own businesses, we don’t shut down and take off for fun. We need fun, happiness and laughter for health and creativity.
I asked a client who was looking for work for months and frustrated to take a day off for her favorite activity, golf. She agreed not to spend any mental energy on her challenge and fears around finding work during the day. A few weeks later, she had an offer. I
assert that the peace, centering, and rest afforded by a true, deep, fun chunk of time is invaluable for clear and heartfelt thinking, creative solutions, and results. You all know that, but do you do it? Do I do it? No.
So, since I’m the coach here, I’ll ask the questions you’re expecting, and some you may not be expecting, to uncover something new about fun. What’s your payoff for “keeping your nose to the grindstone”, for staying in electronic communication even when you’re out for fun, for never taking more than 24 hours off? If we’re doing it, there’s a payoff. And an underlying belief.
What’s the price you pay for going and going and going and going with the daily commitments?
Since fun leads to relaxing which leads to reduced stress (which is a physical state in your body that wears on it, not to mention your productivity and joy) which leads to increased health and creativity, what do you need to do to take care of yourself for fun? Will a few hours do it? Or will it take a week or two or a month away? A woman I’ve worked with has her own business. She took two months off over the summer. She was afraid she’d lose all her clients. Many waited for her. When she got back, she had more business than ever which has been steady for two years.
Are You in the Gap?
Look up high in the rafters of the circus tent. Trapeze performers in glitter and glory release one swing and gracefully fly through the gap for a brief second until they grasp the next swing, perfectly timed for their arrival. In that brief moment in the gap, all structure is gone and there is nothing.
Are you experiencing the Gap? Have one or more of your structures crumbled, walked off, or booted you out? Have you chosen to discard structures in your life? Are you in the gap that exists before you grab onto the next structure?
We often struggle, cry, and rail against that gap. But what a delicious time! This is where you are creative, acting on faith, intuition, and courage, even though you may feel terrified. You know you are alive. What would it be like to relish this crazy, uncertain, risky but alive moment of life? What about holding this moment as flying, as needing all your wits and energy, as a demand to draw on your creativity and resourcefulness?
OK, what about you who have no job, been unable to find work, and are losing things that matter to you like cars, homes, and savings? Where’s the glitter in that? On the one hand, yes, it’s messy, scary, and undesired. On another hand, what skills have you honed or created? Who have you met you wouldn’t have met? What have you learned? What are you willing to learn? What if you were five years old and didn’t know enough to be scared, what would you do in this gap? Yes, these are not easy, but they are what grow us.
I’m celebrating 25 years of marriage this month. My former husband divorced me and sent me reeling into the gap for a year. I learned who I was, what I wanted; I learned that I could be fine on my own; I learned what I wanted in a partner; and I learned where I failed in the relationship. I would not be here without that gap.
What have you discovered in your time in the gaps? Will you share it?
Be Your Own Valentine
Eric Fromm
Self love – if you believe you do not have it, then check and see if you have a pulse and a breath. Yes? Good, then you do. You need to allow it to blossom in you, and move into a leading role in your play, your experiment as Nancy or Joyce or Sam or George. How? Here’s an idea – see what happens.
Let’s suppose your self love, that blossom of warm bright energy and exquisite aroma that you offer to yourself is merely covered up with garbage thoughts and beliefs. They are garbage because they are not needed, they serve no purpose. They might have at one time, to protect you and help you sort out your world, but when they keep the blossom of self love buried, they are garbage. Refuse the refuse. Some fairly common garbage that could be burying your self love are:
If I wasn’t around, others would be happier. I cause pain
I hate my body, it is so not OK this fat or thin or sick or male or female.
I’m scared I’m scared I’m scared I’m scared
If my parent’s didn’t love me, I must be worthless
Action:
Pick up one piece of garbage thought. Before you throw it out, hold it in your hands. Know that thought was useful once. Thank it for its use, for how it helped you sort out pain or fear or lack. Send kind thoughts to the you who made it up at whatever age you were. When you’re ready, imagine your way to release the energy of that thought from its negative hold on you – perhaps it goes in the compost pile, is buried in the earth to decompose, or is burned in a bright fire (what color is it?) Or….?
Good. Now nourish that little blossom of self love. Go to it every day. Take a moment and treasure, cherish, and savor that part. Just the statement, I am willing to love, or I am willing to learn to love, is nurturing. Go out and buy a Valentine’s card that says just what you want to say to yourself. Celebrate you.
SuccessFlow
Success is an inside job – it begins in the heart with what matters to you, what you love, and what brings you joy. Maybe it’s numbers, or music, or cooking, or inspiring, or teaching. This you knew when you were a child – it is what attracted your attention and was joyful. Unfortunately, we often choose to ignore our heart in favor of shoulds, opinions, fears. It can be a long journey back to the heart.
Once you find your way back to your heart, the head does the implementation. It works out the details, gets the help, designs, and plans in service of the heart.
Finally, success is an outside job. The body gets into action with speaking, writing, building, selling,dealing and doing whatever it takes to bring to reality the heart’s passions and purpose. This is the most challenging step – to go from the mental, emotional and spiritual energy of the heart and head to the slower, denser, physical energy of the body and of making an idea real. Just know that it is normal to have bumps and setbacks bringing your brilliance to reality. 
And, when actions and goals are aligned with the heart’s purpose, those goals flow, things work better, and the transition to the physical has more grace and synchronicity.
Moving gracefully from inside to outside, may your success flow in 2010.


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