So Much Happier Blog

 

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

Feeling Out of Phase?

Well friends, here we are solidly into 2020, a new year and a new decade! Whether you were raring to go or felt blindsided by the trappings of wrapping up the old year, time marches on. Like a lot of people, I spent the transition groggy with a nasty cold, and I feel like I’m only now finally starting to wake up again. Maybe you’ve already hit the ground running with exciting new ideas and plans, and if so, well done!

Whatever your experience has been so far, remember that your personal timing doesn’t have to line up with everyone else’s to be valid. Sometimes we all get a little (or a lot) out of step with where the world seems to be headed. You may experience this in small ways, with a sense of being out of synch in your closest relationships or in your local routines. For much of human history, the local was most of what we had to worry about! However, now, with the advent of the Information Age and the 24-hour news cycle that must be filled, no matter how low-quality the programming, we are bombarded with so much more than we can ever participate in, and much of it is fear-mongering. The split focus and temptation toward constant worry that this constantly induces is confusing at best and utterly overwhelming at worst.

And this is not just experienced on a personal level. Our new normal is affecting the genesis and reaction to mass events the world over. This time in history is in many ways chaotic and shot through with layers of rudderless conflict. We’ve hit multiple tipping points that require us to change on a global scale if we want to have a planet to live on at all in another decade or three, and the majority of the world’s leaders seem convinced that childish, self-obsessed stupidity is the way to go.

I actually think a lot of our issues come down to failures in educational systems. That’s not really surprising, since education used to be only for the wealthy, and only quite recently has there been an effort to scale it up to cover everyone in cultures across the world. This effort has revealed a whole new set of challenges that are not easy or quick to solve with our current level of experience regarding the effective transfer of information and skills in group settings. And just recently, the number of readily available distractions has exploded. It used to be that for those with the luxury of free time, one of the exciting things you could do was learn, and expand your horizons in self-motivated ways. Now so much is handed to us, even foisted upon us, that learning is less a joy and more of a constant drudgery as we try to keep up with everything that a cacophony of questionably valuable tastemakers tells us we must.

I don’t mean to sound like a grumpy old person here (“It used to be that everything was just great, blah blah blah”), because there was never a time when everything was perfect on planet Earth! What I’m hearing from so many people right now, though, is that the fight against constant overwhelm is becoming more and more consuming and exhausting. If you feel like you’re bogged down in a cycle of just getting through each day and recovering from it, you’re in good company! Here are some ideas that may help you as you begin to construct your vision of this new year and begin to set it into motion:

  • Acknowledge that this world is a challenging place in which to live, and don’t be so hard on yourself about it. You have to balance yourself and your needs, the needs of those closest to you, and your relationship with the wider world, all of which are demanding, and these demands are constantly shifting. Give yourself some love and credit for keeping up with all of this. Some people like to make their lives look effortless on social media. Don’t believe that #*%~.

  • Reaffirm that only you can be the source of the most high-quality information about you. By all means, consider feedback from others as you chart your path, but if their assumptions are wrong, reject them. Only if you retain the right to be the arbiter of your opinions about yourself, and choose to make self-compassion a guiding principle, will you have access to the constant stream of creativity you need in your daily efforts to make your life the best it can be.

  • Have a written list of your priorities that you refer to daily. Focus is key. You can imagine far more than you can ever accomplish in the flesh! You must prioritize your highest values and connected projects if you ever want to get anywhere. Do you have this? Almost no one does. If you don’t, make a list now in your phone or somewhere else you can easily refer to it. Have you done this yet? Seriously, do it now!

  • Unless you are a writer or other passionate content producer by choice, focusing on living your life in the real world is far more crucial than narrating your every move in the twittersphere. Yes, stay in touch with important people in your life in the most convenient ways for you. Just don’t confuse running in endless circles online with accomplishing your goals. Simplify and focus.

  • Carve out the time you need to take care of yourself physically, emotionally, mentally, and spiritually. If you think you’re too busy, start with small steps. If you fall off the wagon, get up and keep trying. You can’t sustain an optimal life if you always put your basic needs last.

  • Get clear about the ways in which you want to contribute and give, the ways that feel appropriate and exciting for you. If you’re not sure, get out there and practice donating some of your favorite skills. Be careful to corral your giving into this mission statement so that you don’t start behaving as though you owe all things to all people. We all need to exist within a give and take dynamic with the societies we live in, but doing too much will exhaust you and deny the world the best version of what you have to give. Give joyfully, and when you can’t, plot your rest and rejuvenation, and then get back to your chosen areas of giving.

  • Keep an eye out for ways to make your life fun. If something isn’t fun at all, you’ll tend to quit, because there are limits to human reserves of willpower. Enjoyment keeps us motivated in healthy ways. It also draws us toward activities we’re good at, which helps nurture our effectiveness and deeply feed our life vitality.

  • It’s fine to be influenced by the timing of the world and the people around you, but remember that those who have invented some of the best solutions in history have been considered eccentric-to-outright-crazy because they were not following the pack. In case you haven’t noticed (you probably have if you’re reading this), the world is desperately in need of creative solutions to a wide variety of problems. Paradoxically, you may be better able to help by refusing to have your timing and your activities dictated by conventional wisdom, immediate imperatives that you’re not the right person for, and public opinion.

  • Treasure the people you trust. Friends who have your best interests at heart as well as their own, and who have demonstrated the ability to maintain relationships characterized by a balance between giving and receiving, are one of the best things in life. Appreciate these people at every opportunity!

  • There are times when we need to meet life with a warrior spirit, and no matter what you’re attempting to do with your life, it seems to me that now, this moment on this planet, is one of those times. I don’t mean that we need to be combative, but rather suffused with a courageous willingness to do what is necessary and appropriate in order to meet the challenges we face, both personal and collective. Find someone from any time in history who inspires you in this direction.

I wish you courage, focus, friendship, ease, and joy as you face whatever may unfold for you in 2020. Be awesome!

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

Ready for Your Shot?

Timing is tricky. In order to have a life that feels like it hums along and really works, it’s necessary to learn skills that help you to keep up with your goals and desires. You have to be reasonably ready for the opportunities you want when they come knocking, otherwise you don’t move forward. The challenge is that life is complex, with seemingly infinite numbers of moving parts to coordinate. It’s easy to be distracted and exhausted by less important factors before you invest your time and energy where you most want to—and that’s assuming you’ve been able to come to clarity on what you want in the first place.

Readiness requires work. I know this may not be what we all like to hear, but most of us don’t gain mastery at any skill set in a short period of time. It takes practice and the wisdom gained from experience over time to gain grounded confidence. Being willing to put in this work day after day, month after month, year after year, and so on, is a huge part of timing. “Overnight success” tends to happen to those who have done this unglamorous work in the background long before the spotlights and the acclaim showed up.

One of the most valuable skill sets that most of us don’t spend nearly enough time building is the constant acquisition of the knowledge and habits required to build and maintain our personal health and wellness, including physical fitness and vibrant energy as well as mental and emotional well being. You cannot excel when handed opportunities if you can’t get out of bed in the morning, right?

But the thing that probably frustrates humans more about timing than any other factor is the existence of all the elements we just can’t control. Earth is a pretty chaotic place, what with billions of people exercising free will to the best of their abilities all the time. Efforts to stand out, muster resources, find and team up with like-minded others, and keep all the basics of life spinning take a lot of doing. Sometimes external conditions seem prohibitive, or at least inhospitable. And when it seems like we’re not getting anywhere, we get frustrated.

We’ve all heard stories about people finding romance after long periods when such a thing seemed like it would never happen. Often, the timing of one or the other partner was such that they were in the midst of other occupations and not truly available until they finally came together. It may be that one or both seemed to wait forever, but eventually the waiting came to an end. Other areas of life are like this too. Sometimes the wait for the right conditions for success seems interminable and pointless. Yet if you fill your time as best you can, you are preparing for the moment that may yet arrive, even if well past your preferred due date.

Many things about life are mysterious. This may make us nuts, but we can never control everything—not even close! The best we can do is invest in ourselves and our goals, always learning and proceeding as best we can. There is no total certainty on this planet. We must manage our emotions around this if we wish to enjoy happiness despite never having absolutely everything we want. Because humans are pretty darn creative, it’s unlikely that you ever will. Learning to be ok with this and appreciate what you do have is at the core of allowing happiness in.

While you may feel that it’s hard to stand out among such a large population, the high number of others around you also offers you a high number of chances for collaboration. Sometimes finding the right partners or supporters makes all the difference in charting your course. As frustrating as it can be to wait for the right conditions for your success, you must keep going if you want it. Fill your downtime with friends, mental and emotional management techniques, fun, learning, and preparation, and when that chance arrives, you’ll be ready to latch onto it and make the very best of it. You can’t make timing work, but can make yourself ready—so do that! This is your part in supporting the magic of timing.

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Being You, Energy Wendy Frado Being You, Energy Wendy Frado

Planting the Seeds of Healing

Just knowing you don’t have the answers is a recipe for humility, openness, acceptance, forgiveness, and an eagerness to learn—and those are all good things.
— Dick Van Dyke

Something I've learned in my adventures with Tapping is that there is an intrinsic timing to the unwinding of old issues and traumas.  While I absolutely believe that it's necessary to decide on and keep affirming your intent to heal from the effects of your past experiences, such healing can't be forced or willed into being.  Some things can be healed surprisingly quickly.  Others can have an astonishing number of aspects that will need attention before all the pieces can fall into new and healthier places.  And the difference between these extremes cannot be predicted, because the psyche is a complex and mysterious thing.

Knowing and accepting this means that if you're serious about revamping old patterns, you'll get used to the idea that your best bet is to work on whatever feels most current for you today, and trust that the progress you are able to make is enough.  Tapping, for instance, takes focus, energy, and a willingness to confront unpleasant feelings before the process has a chance to work and reduce them.  Some days you can really make strides you'll feel proud of.  Others, you get some relief but don't necessarily feel that you've resolved anything.  This is sensitive work, and you're doing it in the context of your life's many moving parts, including all the influences of the outside world over which you have little control.  The road can seem excruciatingly long and confusing.  This is where what I call constructive stubbornness comes in!  Sometimes we need to disregard day-to-day feedback that might suggest our efforts are not yielding fruit.  When you plant an apple tree, it takes weeks for the seed to germinate and grow up out of the soil, and it may take years to produce an apple you can hold in your hand.  We live in an impatient world, but some processes just take time.  If you give up on them too soon, you never get your fruit at all.

The more you fight what's true for you today, the more you'll find yourself feeling drained and demoralized.  The more you can learn to celebrate small wins each day, and the overall picture of how far you've come, the more your calm, open energy will welcome in the healing you're creating.  The act of worrying (note that I'm not talking here about strategic thinking, but a constant mental spinning over possible negative outcomes) is toxic.  Acceptance, breathing, and appreciation for what's good in your life are forces for radical positive change.  By investing continually in them, you carve out supportive space for your happiness and your journey to a state of vibrant health, wherever you may be starting.

When we're frustrated, it's so tempting to try to force things we want into being, but this approach rarely yields results that are the best we can do—and in my experience, it really doesn't work at all in the healing sphere.  Frustration is a normal part of longer projects, and it can be a wake-up call to periodically assess our direction and progress, but it sometimes arises because we just don't like the wait.  If what we're doing is growing an apple tree, the frustration is useless, as the tree is only ever going to grow in its own timing. In this case, it's time go back to accepting and appreciating the journey as best we can yet again.  We manage our emotions through Tapping or some other daily method, and keep making healthy decisions while Nature works its magic.

Even if you're not gardening, but healing, working through the trial-and-error process may take time.  You have to envision a path, take a few steps, learn from external and internal feedback, seek out new information, reformulate your vision of the next few steps, and repeat, sometimes many, many times before you reach your destination.  You have a right to whatever emotions come up for you along the way, but you must find ways to process and manage them if you want to maintain a clear path to tread.  It is in a sacred space of self-love, compassion, and emotional release where healing processes truly thrive.  This may seem counterintuitive and even impossible as a standard, but I promise you that any progress toward maintaining this kind of internal state will help you get where you want to go faster.  Here's a mantra for you: Struggle less, heal more. 

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

Can I start Now?

I learned that we can do anything, but we can’t do everything... at least not at the same time. So think of your priorities not in terms of what activities you do, but when you do them. Timing is everything.
— Dan Millman

It feels great when life works out such that you get to follow your own best and most natural timing in working toward your goals. That seems to happen roughly never in the real world, though, doesn't it? Most of us have messy lives with lots of competing demands, and people we love, to fit into a limited schedule every day. Timing isn't just about our whims, but also balancing all of these important demands while hopefully staying healthy at the same time. Given the difficulty of juggling everything you have going on, even your most important goals can end up on the back burner.  Working toward personal goals can feel like a selfish thing to do in the moment, even if the results of your work will benefit everyone you know. Additionally, it can be particularly hard to carve out the necessary time for your pursuits if you're not confident that you really can create the results you want—and since experience builds confidence, this can be a vicious cycle.

In addition to scheduling difficulties, we also have to deal with the internal results of not following the best personal timing.  If your natural timing is constantly interrupted, that can be frustrating. Your enthusiasm can take a lot of hits if, in contrast, you just never quite get yourself on a roll. Some tasks legitimately need uninterrupted, concentrated effort to be completed well. No project ever seems to proceed in a perfectly orderly, gloriously serene manner! There will be unexpected developments and distractionsthese may even prove to be beneficial in hindsight. But when they arise, it may seem like you just can't seem to get anything done, and it's not even your fault!  In this blog, we'll look at how to deal with timing that feels less than ideal.

In the ideal scenario, if you had all the time in the world, you could organize your day in the way that you most enjoy.  You would go to sleep and wake up at the times that feel most natural for you.  You would decide each day what you'd like to work on and in what order, and when to take breaks for meals.  You would spend just the amount of time you prefer working versus spending time with friends and family.  Maybe you're laughing right now and thinking, "As if!"  But this is what I'm talking about when I mention ideal timing.  Whether we admit it or not, most of us have a fantasy of living life this way, and we long for more of this quality in our lives.  I'm not going to pretend that it's easy to move in this direction, but I will say that if you don't know what your ideal day would look like, it's helpful to consider it.  Even if you can't rework every day to look more like your ideal, you could add some of your ideal elements some days.  Even small steps in the direction of what you long for as far as scheduling choices can help you to feel empowered, energized, and more like yourself.  It's not self-indulgent to find what works best for you and try to do it.  In fact, doing this will tend to make you happier, more productive, and more pleasant for everyone else to be around.

Since it's not always possible to set up everything the way you'd most like it, a big part of sustaining your momentum is constantly dealing with the stops and starts, and the emotions that come up for you throughout this process. A few simple go-to strategies are in order here.  The top idea I recommend, which can really boost your clarity and save the day when you're stuck, is to write out both your goals and your current life priorities, and make sure they stay current over time. I've written before about why it's helpful to be able to refer to your goals on a daily basis, but since your progress toward them must be balanced against your present obligations, you actually need both. Perhaps you have young children or pets; no matter what you're building toward, they still need your care. Maybe you have adult friends and family members who depend on you, or responsibilities in your community that can't just be dropped because they're an important demonstration of your core values, and they feel like part of who you are. If you have a clear statement of these that you can refer to when you're frazzled, you will most likely find it easier to figure out how to proceed.  

Prioritizing something over something else that's also important doesn't mean you're abandoning anything, just that you're making a choice to change the order of tasks to make sure the thing you chose gets done first today.  Sometimes you'll need to ask for help, or accept that another task will be pushed back a day.  Often we have more latitude than we think; the deadlines we assign to things may be arbitrary on further examination, or we may be assuming that someone else won't be on board if we need to move things around.  It's worth asking directly.  It's also worth learning that it's o.k. to say no to others sometimes and working on increasing your comfort with doing that. You are here to live your life, and contribute what you have to offer that's unique, just as others are.  It's easy to get drawn into a bunch of scheduled items that don't have much to do with your life and your priorities.  If remembering and acting on this is hard for you, I recommend finding someone who shares some of your important values who will enjoy hearing about your adventures and sharing their own.  You can support and learn from each other as you get better at focusing your efforts.

Take just a few minutes to write out your highest values. (Really. Like now, people.)  These are qualities you wish to define you. You can clarify some of them by thinking about what behaviors from others drive you nuts! If you can't stand when others are rude and oblivious, then maybe the opposites, consideration for others and generosity, are among your core values. Put your core values in positive terms that can remind you, whenever you need it, what is most important to you and who you want to be. Reading over these should engender enthusiasm and help you refocus each day.  When you really hit the mark with these, you will find that thinking about them brings you renewed energy and gets you excited about at least some aspect of your life. Put these somewhere you can easily see them.  You can make a note on your bathroom or in your phone, or multiple places. Consult it if you're having trouble figuring out how to prioritize your day.

Keep an eye out for what helps you to want to get tasks done and try to incorporate it. Maybe you're energized by loud music.  Maybe silence is what you crave.  Maybe you like to take breaks every 20 minutes.  Maybe you need to build in social interaction to keep your mood up.  The more you learn about how to keep yourself happily engaged, the more you can accomplish while feeling like you're flowing with excellent timing. This is highly personal, so no one can just give you perfect instructions.  You need to stay observant and be willing to try thing for yourself.  If you keep doing this, you'll end up with a decent instruction manual on how to make progress to your goals with the least friction and the most ease and enjoyment.

It's normal to run up against conflicts between all of the things that are important to you. Caring about more than one thing just proves that you're human. It's a good idea to take stock at least once a week and make sure that your time is really going toward the things you most care about, and I recommend this too, but the small decisions about what to prioritize above what is the work of being alive. It's all a learning process. If you don't like how things went today, then work on changing your choices tomorrow. If you keep taking action toward your goals, you'll make progress, even if you keep getting interrupted, if you keep reminding yourself what's important and let that inspire you today.

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Creativity, Excellence Wendy Frado Creativity, Excellence Wendy Frado

Ready...Set...

Observe due measure, for right timing is in all things the most important factor.
— Hesiod

Have you ever had a good idea, rushed to implement it, and found that somehow it fell flat for reasons you didn’t understand?  This can happen for many reasons, of course, including unforeseen issues arising at the last minute.  However, this week we’ll focus on a factor I don’t often hear discussed that can be hugely important—timing.  There are several different components to timing I want to touch on that I think are helpful considerations when planning toward a goal.  If you at least think through these before taking action, in my experience, you have better chances of success in your final product, whether you’re planning the launch of a book or other product, taking a vacation, or planning a party.

·      Time needed to complete your proposed task list.  Every task should be given as realistic a time frame for completion as it’s possible to estimate.  If you’ve never done something like this before, it’s crucial that you consult someone who has.  Otherwise, your guess could be drastically off and endanger the completion of your project if there are dependencies involved—in other words, things that need to be done before, during, or after that task that depend on it.  It’s always surprising to me how many people don’t bother to even attempt to think through how much work is involved in any project or step in one, and so much can go wrong when you don’t.

·      Preparation.  What needs to happen before you can begin?  Do you need to find other team members or brush up on some skills of your own before you set the wheels in motion?  Are there fears or other resistance you’re feeling that it would be better to deal with before you get started so they don’t wreak havoc on your project once it’s in motion?

·      Context.  This is a tough one because the factors you could consider may be practically infinite depending on your project, but you should do the very best you can with what you have.  What is going on in your life and in the lives of others who will participate in or be the consumers of your project? Is someone on your team getting married this year?  What holidays, religious and secular, will fall within important periods of your project?  (There are some excellent calendars online that include a wide variety of religious holidays.)  What time of year will the project end—in January, when many are trying to turn over a new leaf with New Year’s resolutions, or during the height of summer vacation season?  What are people generally interested in or concerned about at that time?  Is there a political cycle you need to consider or other projects you need to work around?  What’s trendy and cool right now, and how does your project relate to that—for instance is there a popular festival in your vacation destination that you’d like to participate in or avoid?  This is a broad area that deserves research and brainstorming with others so you can turn up as many factors for consideration as possible and wisely choose your end date.

·      Contingencies.  What would you do if you had some bad luck, causing delays, at any point in the project?  If the end date got delayed, what would happen, and is there a time when you’d be better able to deal with this?  Is there a step in the process that absolutely can’t move?

·      Preference.  When would you rather be working on the project and when would you prefer that it be finished?  If it works to do that, go ahead so as to best preserve your enthusiasm and enjoyment of the experience.

·      Cost.  Is there a time when doing what’s necessary will cost you less, or when the end product can earn you greater benefits?

·      Intuition.  This is a wild card category, but considering it can bring important factors to your attention.  Putting aside what’s logical, is there any timing that just feels particularly right or wrong to you?  You can choose to think of this as your subconscious mind indicating knowledge you have that your conscious mind doesn’t remember.  If you have an established relationship with your intuition, you may also know this as a place of intersection with the spiritual part of yourself.  Consult your own and ask others to consult theirs and just see what you come up with. 

·      Summation.  When you put all of these together, does any particular timing become the clear winner?  If not, don’t be afraid to talk it out with someone you trust to be supportive and to have good ideas when they hear about your choices.  Maybe several people.  If nothing stands out, sometimes you have to just pick a choice and go.  That’s fine, and you probably learned some helpful things in going through this process.  Who knows when they’ll come in handy along the way.

If you take the time to look at all of these factors before taking on your next project, you’ll be able to feel more confident that you’ve avoided some pitfalls and chosen the best timing for your efforts.  Nothing ever goes perfectly as planned, but when you do your best to strategize intelligently in your initial choices, you’ll have removed every roadblock you could, and that’s better than the alternative!  You’ll learn through experience what you might have missed, but at least you won’t be kicking yourself for not trying.

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

Method or Madness

It isn’t the mountains ahead to climb that wear you out; it’s the pebble in your shoe.
— Muhammad Ali

It’s that time of year when people’s fancy turns to self-improvement.  Everyone’s doing it!  We’ve indulged, we’ve rested, and enthusiasm for a fresh start is rising!  There’s nothing at all wrong with this—in fact it can make life fun to take part in seasonal and societal shifts as they happen—and joining with others can help to reinforce your own commitment to positive change.  If you want to jump on this bandwagon, here are just a few thoughts to help you add checks and balances to your process (not just for politics, people!) so that your decisions really suit your needs and purposes:

·      It seems that, in January, physical fitness goals dominate the day.  While improving your physical health and fitness is always a worthy goal, and one that supports pretty much everything else you probably want to do and experience, adding an aggressive exercise regimen is not the best place to start for everyone.  You may be tempted to think that you have to go whole hog or nothing, but this kind of thinking gets a lot of people injured before the month is out.  That will throw a monkey wrench into your momentum for sure.  Try to keep any schemes for physical exercise moderate for your current level of fitness so that you’re not adding unsustainable stress to your body, and so that you don’t get stopped short before you can begin to solidify healthy new habits.  This is one of those areas in which you will never be finished.  There’s no such thing as “done.“  So don’t freak out and overdo, but do plan activities that will qualify as your next phase of achievement.

·      For that matter, try to keep any resolution for change to a moderate scheme.  We’re often taught that in order to get anything worthwhile done, we need to decide what to accomplish and how, and then thoroughly ignore thoughts, feelings, and life circumstances that might make adhering to the plan difficult.  This is the best thinking of two thousand years of male-energy-dominant thinking, and while it has its merits, it also exposes us to unnecessary likelihoods of stress, burnout, unhappiness that results from an unbalanced approach to life, and shame if we fail in a pursuit that was woefully unrealistic to begin with.  I’m not saying that no one should take on big goals, but we need to make sure we’re thinking about fitting new items into the context of a whole life with multiple demands.  We need to think about building in flexibility, and appropriate moments for reconsideration when circumstances change, so that we can stay in the game for the long haul as life throws distractions our way.

·      Just because someone you know or read about is taking on something that sounds interesting or inspiring, that doesn’t mean you need to take on the same.  Focus.  Really think about what you feel called to learn and grow into this year.  There is such a thing as right timing.  Events and repetitive pain points in your life may be pointing to certain areas in which it would really behoove you to acquire new skills.  Spend a few minutes noting whether there has been a recurring situation in your life lately that you could handle better if you just noticed and addressed your part in it.  This might be a more appropriate focus for your energies than climbing Mt. Kilimanjaro, or what have you.

·      No one is in a better position than you to decide what’s the right next step for your goals and your life.  Of course, it can be helpful to talk through decisions like this with someone supportive, but make sure you don’t turn to someone who has strong agendas of their own for you who might limit your sense of possibility.  It’s fine to give important people in your life input on the choice and timing of your projects, but it helps to start with your own opinions about what would be ideal for you before beginning any negotiations of this kind.  A great deal of your own power flows from following your heart about who you want to be and what you want to strive for in this life.  Don’t abdicate your opportunity to get clear on your own desires and intuition about you.

I hope this helps you to make good decisions for the year ahead.  Whatever you do or don’t decide to pursue in 2017, I wish you a happy, healthy year filled with blessings and challenges worthy of you.

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