So Much Happier Blog

 

Being You, Creativity, Energy, Excellence Wendy Frado Being You, Creativity, Energy, Excellence Wendy Frado

Hit or Fold?

Growth is painful. Change is painful. But, nothing is as painful as staying stuck where you do not belong.
— N. R. Narayana Murthy

Sometimes working on a personal project ends up, at some point, feeling like a real slog through the mud. What started as a seemingly great idea is now causing you to wonder whether you were crazy to have ever taken up the banner.  You start to wonder whether you should give up and can it. This can be a hard decision, though, because what about all that time and effort you’ve already sunk into your project?  No one enjoys feeling like time and energy has been wasted! You also have to confront how you’ll judge yourself if you walk away—will that mean you’re a loser/a failure/a (fill-in-the-blank)?  It may be tougher to ignore this question if your project is visible to others, because then you end up thinking about how others might judge you as well.  Is it better and more noble to keep throwing good resources into a mysterious hole in hopes that things will work out eventually than is is to quit too early, and maybe never be sure you did?

Making good decisions about what to do in this situation requires multiple dimensions of consideration.  Your deliberations need not take long, but if you don’t cover these bases, you may be left with nagging uncertainty and an unnecessary hit to your confidence.  Here are the areas that I recommend you explore before making your final decision:

  • Physical. Are you guilty of ignoring your own basic human needs (sleep, nutrition, exercise/movement)?  If so, you may need to rely on answers within the other areas to make your decision, because ignoring your body over time will make everything feel like a slog!  It’s fairly trendy in some circles to claim that only weaklings need these things, and “real men,” “warriors,” “entrepreneurs,” or whoever, can power through without without all those silly indulgences the peons distract themselves with.  I’m sorry to break it to you, but this is an old-fashioned myth left over from less educated times!  We now know that without these things, the body, and the brain that resides within as an inextricable part of it, falters, struggles, and ages far more quickly than necessary.  You can use your precious energy to rail against the fact that you can only experience life on planet Earth in a body that has limitations, OR you can learn to choose the simple decisions that allow you the joy and fulfillment of functioning at peak capacity.  Like adequate sleep and healthy food.  Which would you rather?
  • Mental.  Our culture is very focused on logic, so this area should be familiar to you.  Logic is, of course, an amazing tool for assessing where you are, extrapolating where you're headed based on this, and figuring out how you might want to change course.  If you're not great at thinking through things logically and analyzing your situation, find someone with more skill in and enthusiasm for this area who can help you do this.  If you think things are taking way too long, or you just don't have what it takes to reach your goal realistically, you may be right that there's something you're missing.  That may not mean you can't fix it, but isolating the problem, where it lives, and how to address it may take some digging.  Access to the super-computing power of the mind is one of the benefits of being human, so let's not leave its powers on the table in our decision making!
  • Creative.  Once you've figured out what the problem seems to be, you need to get out of pure logic and turn on your natural, playful creativity.  This can be tough when you're stressed out, so you may need some help here too.  You can search the Internet on the topic in question, find a book on how others have solved similar issues, or rope in a friend to troubleshoot how you might bust up your impasse and move forward more productively.  The problem might even be that you just forgot to have fun and bring creativity to the daily work you've been doing on your project.  That'll kill anyone's enthusiasm over time.  Life is supposed to include elements of fun.  If your project doesn't have any, you'll feel like something is wrong, when it's just that you need to loosen up a little to make it over the long haul.
  • Emotional.  That brings us to the emotional side of things, another area where we may have been taught there's nothing important to learn and we should just sweep everything that comes up under the rug!  But emotions exist for a reason, and they're an important tool in our toolbox, even if we're not yet sure how to wring the magic out of them.  In order to trace the emotional connections to our projects, attention and the openness to decoding hidden meanings is required.  Yes, you may have to devote some actual time and attention to this!  You may feel like this is a self-indulgent idea, but that's likely because you've never been taught what to do to get helpful results out of such time with your emotions.  Tapping/EFT is an incredibly productive tool in helping you to stay calm through the act of creating openness to the emotional realm, and in gaining clarity about what's really going on in your emotional states and why.  That clarity doesn't necessarily arise immediately, but it tends to result after you've done some Tapping on exactly how you feel without filters or judgment.  Sometimes this is all you and your project need.  Once you've blown off some steam and allowed yourself to express what seems true, the clarity starts to arrive, and new perspectives on possible solutions often effortlessly appear.  However, you may find that your emotions tell you some truths about what you really want that you've been unwilling to look at.  This can help you make new decisions that will serve you better.  Sometimes you might even decide to end the project as previously imagined.  Sometimes you learn as you go that the realities of reaching your goal are not acceptable to you, not healthy for you, or just not something you're ready for at this time.  Accepting this may be the best choice even if it doesn't seem entirely logical to you or others.
  • Spiritual.  This is the hardest area to quantify, because spiritual experiences often defy explanation.  We all have this part of us that is an "x" factor, explain it as you will.  Sometimes, you just experience a strong knowingness that something is or isn't true for you, or right for you, or good for you despite how it looks on the surface.  Often this part of you speaks in desires and joys that are unique to you.  Again, if this isn't an area you feel comfortable with, you can consult others who live more easily in this space and see if anything they have to offer resonates with you.  But without taking it into account in some way, you may be missing an important piece of the picture.

Sometimes, when you're hung up with a project, something has changed with circumstances, and you just need to recover from the shock and get more creative.  Sometimes, you're tired and frustrated, and you need a break or to bring your sense of fun back into play.  Sometimes, what has changed is you, and the truth is that you no longer really want to support the project at all.  

Once you have a better sense of all this, the final challenge is accepting the good work you've done on the decision, and finding a way to let go of any worries about what it means about you, the world, and your future potential.  This is another area in which Tapping can be a life saver.  It can help you work through any resistance to doing what you think is best that arises because of your (or your perception of or anticipation of others') judgment or fears. You have a choice as far as what meaning to assign to the events of your life.  When you forget that, you become a victim to every outside influence.

Making truly good decisions, ones you can look back on with satisfaction because you did the best you could with the knowledge that you had at the time, is a process best served by considering numerous areas of inquiry.  When you've done this to the best of your abilities and used all the tools you have to make your peace with what you choose, you can get back to putting your energy toward what you really want, and working toward it with renewed resolve and patience.  Life involves work, but if it feels like every moment of yours is tiresome, it's time to stop and consider whether new decisions are in order, or whether you're already on the best path and just dealing with the challenges of the journey.

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Basics, Being You Wendy Frado Basics, Being You Wendy Frado

When You See It, Believe It

The superior man is modest in his speech, but exceeds in his actions.
— Confucius

The world can get pretty crazy, pretty overwhelming, and it can be very hard to know who to trust when it seems like there's an endless parade of people and businesses constantly—and loudly—vying for your attention.  The stress of the constant stream of small decisions required to navigate through your day can be exhausting. Here's a simple trick we all probably know, but it bears repeating as an aid in making good decisions:  Rely on what people do, not on what they say.

In the context of private relationships, this means that, though we all think and talk about many courses of action (some with great enthusiasm), we won't end up following all of these to successful completion. We all have to make value judgments in order to land on decisions about what to do with our limited time, and this happens in an ever-changing medium of context. While talk will tell you what people would like to do and experience, only their actions will reveal what they are willing to work and sacrifice for. 

Some people's value judgments will be easy to understand. Others' will seem erratic and inscrutable to you. Still others' will be reprehensible in your eyes. It simplifies life and reduces stress to align yourself primarily with those whose actions you can mostly understand and approve of ("mostly" because let's be honest—no one is perfect, and everyone's viewpoint is slightly different based on the cauldron of experience, good, bad, and ugly, that has shaped them).  While we can't expect faultless reliability or other flavors of perfection from anyone, we can expect that interactions with some people will feel good to us because they're fun to be around, and a good match for some of our most important values. Others won't. This matters. But if you're not also watching their long-term actions and allowing those to educate you about this person, you'll miss all the best indicators of where they're actually going.  

Predicating your life on someone's potential rather than on who they actually are in this moment will open you up to a world of hurt and  disappointment. I believe that people have boundless potential, but a happy life requires that you learn to choose relationships with people on a similar enough wavelength that you can love and enjoy them as they are now. By all means, challenge yourself to appreciate and love people who are outside your current comfort zone, but don't expect to live peacefully if you've allowed a whole bunch of people whose actions betray wildly incompatible values into your inner circle. 

In a business context, you're looking for something similar—how does the business treat its customers? How do you feel when you interact with it, respected or played? Are its sales pitches showing you value that might help you and inviting you to participate, or seeking to manipulate you and your emotions through pressure and control tactics?  How the business and its representatives behave is more important than the words, which may turn out to be acutely self-serving, just as any single person's may be.

As you move through your life, I hope you'll let the actions of others inform your actions, and that you'll find it a lot easier to make healthy decisions for yourself this way. It can cut down on the confusion in making all the judgment calls that make up a day in a modern life. Anything that provides clarity and greater ease so that we can all be less stressed and have more time to live out our purpose is definitely what I'm after! Feel free to comment below on how observing others' actions has helped you, or would have had you managed to do it!

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Basics, Being You, Creativity, Energy, Excellence Wendy Frado Basics, Being You, Creativity, Energy, Excellence Wendy Frado

Free Your Mind

The historic ascent of humanity, taken as a whole, may be summarized as a succession of victories of consciousness over blind forces - in nature, in society, in man himself.
— Leon Trotsky

When dealing with a long-term challenge, even if you find that you're well on the way to a solution, it's often true that nothing happens as quickly as you want it to. Problems that you acquired over time will usually take time to solve. The thorniest part of addressing them is often dealing with the daily disappointment, or even heartbreak, of still having the problem despite all your efforts. One of the most powerful things you can ever do is condition yourself to celebrate even your smallest wins rather than bemoaning your losses and worrying about how you will confront tomorrow. This may also be one of the hardest things you'll ever learn to do. It sounds very simple, but is, for most people, astonishingly difficult. It also changes everything about how you experience your life and what is possible for you, once you understand and become practiced at it.

When you think about what a downer it is to harp on what's not working, it makes a lot of sense that consciously focusing on the progress you're making instead would be more helpful. (I'm sure you've spent time around someone who complains all the time. I bet you can't wait to get away from that person when it's someone else.) Unfortunately, your mind is most likely in the habit of worrying about what might go wrong, including everything that ever has for you before. This may be due both to Nature and to Nurture—it's a rare family situation that teaches children only to be aware of risk for practical reasons, but otherwise steeps them in confidence and zest for challenge. Usually there's a lot of "you can't" and "don't you dare" and "what if" mixed in in frenzied tones. It might all be protective and well meaning, but sometimes it's also other things like power plays and unconscious panic. As far as Nature, the mind is designed in part to protect us from risk, and in addition to running the the stressful thinking patterns we learned from others, it tends toward obsession over possible risk as a survival mechanism. If you want to counter these powerful formative and ingrained forces, expect it to take some doing. And here's the kicker:  The work you do, if you really want to succeed, can't all be done in and with the mind. Uh oh! Wait, doesn't that make this all of a sudden a lot more complicated? Yes, my friend, it sure does. And that's why it ends up being difficult!

Focusing on progress rather than fueling your every moment on fearful thinking requires work that goes to the very nature of being alive, to all your notions about how safe you are, and what human nature is all about. These reside not only in your conscious mind, where it becomes apparent what your basic beliefs are if you just choose to start becoming more aware of them, but also in the subconscious parts of your mind, where your body and spirit are much more involved. You may be starting to wonder what the use is of my opening up these complexities, since rarely does anyone teach us what it's like to deal in the coin of these realms of us. Because of the personal journey I've been on, I know from experience that a deep well of experience and belief that you're probably unacquainted with is running your life far more than you would believe if I tried to tell you at this moment. 

It might sound like I'm trying to scare you or manipulate you, but I'm not. I want you to understand that, from what I've found, a better quality of life, less stress and more confidence, result from clearing out chaff that is weighing you down in ways you can't even see. While there are many wonderful ideas, systems, and people out there in the world doing good work, nothing I have found has ever done for me what EFT/Tapping does in facilitating this clearing out. Because it's a self-help tool, you are in the driver's seat as far as how you use it and on what. You also often become aware of profound understanding and shifts in how you think and feel as you use it. This process is empowering in ways I can't describe. You really have to experience it in order to fully understand what I'm saying. Once you start to get on a roll with this clearing out process, it's amazing how much easier it becomes to think in more constructive ways so that you can enjoy a more happy, vibrant life. I've said it before, but I'll say it again—there's little else I can recommend that would be more helpful to creating more of what you want than learning the basics and making a practice of using EFT. As you do, you will encounter and clear out impediments that will help you greatly.  I'm betting that some of what you find there will also surprise you as it did me, and that the process of removing its charge will thrill you as well.

When you can spend more time using your mind in positive ways, you make fewer decisions out of fear and more out of inspiration, and the healthy desire to create better conditions for yourself and others. As long as you're trying to accomplish everything with your mind, you're missing out on the power that can be yours when you get other important parts of you on board. As you use Tapping, you will also tend to naturally build compassion for others that will make you even more effective in understanding and communicating with them.  So much can be gained from this practice, so don't put it off! Learn it, love it, and live it!

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Being You, Energy, Excellence, Basics Wendy Frado Being You, Energy, Excellence, Basics Wendy Frado

Where the Rubber Meets the Road

Endure and persist; this pain will turn to good by and by.
— Ovid

There are many personal qualities that are important contributors to long-term success, but I’ve been writing about some of the most powerful ones over the last few weeks.  Along with focus and creativity, persistence is absolutely necessary if you’re to keep yourself moving ever forward in life toward greater mastery of your chosen subject matter.  Life has a way of surprising us with all manner of challenges no matter how well we plan.  It’s easy to become discouraged by the constant disruptions and the necessary adjustments those challenges call upon us to make.  In order to hang in there long enough to get where you want to go, you’ll need to be able to fire up your persistence day in and day out, almost no matter what may be happening around you.  Yes, I know, that’s a tall order!  I can hear some of you groaning already—this is starting to sound very un-fun.

And yet, what if you could find ways to maintain a calm sense of balance in the midst of chaos?  What if you knew how to feed your confidence throughout challenge so that persistence didn’t seem like such a Herculean effort?  These are just skills that can be learned, like any other.  While some people will be more naturally gifted than others in any area, almost everyone can become at least functional in most skill sets.  If you’re someone whose motivation gets knocked off course often, such that you’re often starting and stopping your efforts on things that really matter to you, here are some things to try on the road to becoming unstoppable. 

·      Remember the importance of focus?  You’ll need to apply it to keep reminding yourself that persistence is a skill, not some magical quality that you weren’t born with, so why bother?  Some people were taught the skills that feed persistence early, and some need to learn them later, but you have to acknowledge that it’s possible to learn them before you can effectively build them.

·      You’ll also need to focus on what’s important to you consistently.  Every day.  Find ways to do this that appeal to you.  It’s good to make this fun, so indulge yourself!  If you like, write reminders to yourself on bright sticky notes and scatter them around where you’ll see them throughout the day, or make a recording of yourself repeating your top priorities and play it back in the car, or take a few minutes before you get out of bed and before you go to sleep at night to go over them in your mind and enjoy how they express the truth of you.  There can be great joy in just repeating your most important values to yourself often.  You might be surprised how enjoyable and inspiring this becomes.

·      Practice reviewing your priorities before making decisions throughout your day.  When you get into the habit of making sure that what’s most important to you is at least considered in your smallest decisions, you reinforce your ability to strategize with them always in mind.  When the larger, more pivotal decisions come up, it will be easier to do the same, and you’ll become brilliant at making decisions that serve your values and goals.

·      Keep a journal on decisions you made and how well they support your goals.  This is an excellent way to give yourself credit for and celebrate good decisions, as well as notice decisions that you made in a hurry, forgetting to think through what would really be best for you and everyone else before charging ahead.  If you don’t take time to frequently review what’s happening in your life, it’s easy to fall back into old patterns and find that you’re getting nowhere.  If you keep an eye on things, you have opportunities to do better every day, and you’ll progress much more quickly.

·      Sometimes, you will have a bad day.  You will need the love and support of at least a few people who you can count on to care about you no matter what.  Practice reaching out to them when things aren’t terrible just to talk through a choice or share a win or a concern.  This will make it more natural and easy for you to ask for attention when you really need it.  Everyone needs support sometimes, and being reminded that someone else cares about you and believes in you helps restore your courage and keep you in the game.

·      Manage your mind and your emotions.  This cannot be said enough.  Your mind will have a tendency to judge you, and others, and spiral into negativity.  If you want to build persistence, you must gain the ability to arrest this cycle and bring your mind back to a neutral state at least, and practice more resourceful thinking.  You don’t have to pretend that everything is always rosy, but if you’re always indulging in negativity, there’s no way you’re going to reach your goals—and if you did by some stroke of luck, you wouldn’t be able to enjoy them.  Your emotions, in the moment at least, proceed from your thinking.  There are also probably a bunch stuck in your system from previous events and thinking.  For clearing those, the best technique I’ve ever found is EFT/Tapping, and it’s easy and free to do, so if you haven’t taken the time yet, learn the basics and try it!  It’s so much easier to make good decisions when you’re not being overwhelmed with outdated mental and emotional habits left over from the past.

·      Be stubborn.  Every two-year-old knows how to do this like a champ.  If you’ve forgotten how, channel your inner two-year-old and stamp your feet and yell, “No!  No, no NO!  I want _______!” at the top of your lungs every once in a while.  Jump up and down for added effect.  In addition to being hilarious and getting your blood pumping, this can reconnect you with your most basic desires and your conviction that you deserve to get them.  Small children don’t spend time worrying about whether it’s prudent to want a pet unicorn, they just go ahead and want it.  When you really connect with your desires, a lot of energy becomes available to you that you can use to take action.  Your zest for life resurfaces.  You can’t achieve goals if you’re always exhausted and don’t remember what all the effort is for.  You have to let yourself want things in order to feel fully alive.  Even if they seem impossible, your desires have important messages for you, and help you to keep finding your direction in the face of adversity.

A few caveats:

·      Sometimes persistence is not the right tool for the job.  If you’re persisting but continually missing the mark, it may be time for a new strategy and some course correction.  Mindless persistence can end up looking a lot like reckless stupidity.  You want to stay open to learning new things, and benefiting from outside perspectives.

·      There will always be moments in any life when it’s time to take a break, either just for vacation, to rest and recharge, or because you’re going through a major transition of some sort—but when you can decide when to take time rather than always struggling to recover enough to get back on the horse, that’s a better place to be. 

·      Each of us has things we’re just really, really not suited for, in addition to things we’re great at.  If you’ve applied yourself enough to gain some ability, but still loathe and get bogged down by a certain activity, it’s wise to partner with someone who is good at it, or find other ways to work around doing it. 

·      If you’re someone who is motivated by joining with others in some way, then by all means find a buddy who can help you keep at it on a daily basis, or pay a coach to help you stay focused on your goals and the actions you need to take to keep growing.  Most people enjoy effort more if they can share accomplishments with others who cheer them on and appreciate their progress.  Relationships make life, and our successes, more meaningful and more fun.  Look, we brought it back around to fun!  And we should.  Why be so serious when we can build fun into all of our days with just the intention to do so?  Balance means playing as well as we work, because play helps us to relax, de-stress, and regain creativity.

Maintaining persistence is a lifelong pursuit, like maintaining good health.  We’re never done.  But if you don’t ever get around to investing time and effort into creating basic habits that will keep you going, you can’t expect to live the kind of life you want.  Start small if persistence is hard for you, but start!  You can do this.

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