Archive for March, 2011

March 29th, 2011

The Five Steps to Discovering Your Niche

by guest blogger

Ever ask yourself, “Who am I?” Or, “What is my purpose in life?” Sometimes even when we think we have been walking on the right path, something happens to make us doubt our purpose. I have had that happen to me more than once. But sometimes getting clear means taking the time to ask ourselves a few questions to get on the right track.

I recently posted a blog on finding your niche. The process for me has been a difficult one. I wish I had read this guest post by Niche Clarity Coach Sherrie Koretke to help me get to my niche sooner. Finding your niche is definitely key to making sure you are on fulfilling your life’s purpose. Ready to get started? Here’s her inspiring story.

{flickr photo by: bbp}

Finding Your Purpose

For the longest time I felt a restlessness that wouldn’t go away. I knew deep inside that I was destined to do something very powerful but what that was eluded me for years. The need to know the meaning of my life and how to use that meaning became powerful.

So, I went on a journey of self-exploration in search for my life purpose. This search and the answers I discovered lead me to work professionally as a “Niche Clarity Coach.” I now help people design businesses around their own special niche and lifestyles.

I developed a process from my experiences and identified five questions that should be answered before you move towards creating your own niche. Taking the time to answer these questions can propel you into a new, exciting future.

Here are big five questions to ask in order to discover and create your own niche.

How Do I Help Others?

What is your life purpose, your day-to-day contribution to the people in your life? It could be as a healer, teacher, or a person who inspires or motivates others.

Why Am I Here to Help?

Professionally I labeled this as a Divine Calling, which is your contribution to the collective consciousness of the world. This would encompass bringing joy, happiness, love, peace, or enlightenment to everyone.

Who or What Do I Help?

Who or what pulls at your heart and you feel motivated to help? Be specific on the types of people, animals, environment, or culture that you relate to and desire to work with more than others.

Where Do I Do My Work?

Questions to ask yourself are: Where am I working? At home? In an office? in the field?

When Can I get Started?

In order to move forward and live your dream career you need to have a start date. Decide what you need to accomplish to launch your career. What training, skills, networks to do you need to put in place before you can officially start?

Once you answer the above questions you can start the planning process of creating your niche. Knowing your “who, what, where, how and why” helps break down the process so you can focus clearly on the steps you need to take to move forward. Don’t get caught up in the hoopla over how to start a business or new career before taking the fundamental to clearly identify yourself. You will save you a lot of grief in the future.

Thanks Sherrie!

Sherrie Koretke a.k.a. The Niche Clarity Coach is a Certified Professional Career Intuitive
Business Intuitive Coach/Consultant
Ordained Minister, Spiritual Healer. You can find out more about her and her services on her website: www.sherriekoretke.com

March 25th, 2011

Friday Gratitude

For a second, forget about your dishes. Forget about the bills that haven’t been paid. Forget about the plans that haven’t been made.

For one minute, imagine what your life would be like without all the people you love in it. Imagine the roof under your head suddenly taken. The computer you’re reading this on no longer yours.

For a moment, think about all the things in your life that you have to be grateful for. Think about the food that you just ate, the blanket that warmed you, the friends who laughed with you, the family members who have cried with you.

It’s so easy to forget all the wonderful things in our lives that we take for granted. We get caught up in what we don’t have, what we want, what is missing in our lives.

It’s not Thanksgiving, but I think gratitude is in order.

Just for today, be grateful. For who knows what comes tomorrow…

{flickr photo by: Lel4nd}

March 24th, 2011

What Do You Really Want?

{flickr photo by yuan2003}

I once thought the hardest thing I could ever do was quit my cubicle job. But not just quit that cubicle job, but all of them. I was partly right. It was difficult saying goodbye to the hopes and dreams my parents had of me making a stable income. It was difficult throwing my fears to the curb as I walked barefoot and vulnerable into the unknown. And it was difficult to start something without any security or purpose.

But I didn’t realize that the journey had just begun.

Dealing With the Unknown

I don’t know anyone successful or not, who doesn’t have a little bit of fear or insecurity about what they are doing.

As a freelance writer, I have been riding the wave of that uncertainty since I began.

But I think that part is normal and uncontrollable. What we can control is how we deal with what we don’t yet know.

What Do You Really Want?

If you’re feeling lost and confused and don’t know how you got here, take a moment to stop and figure out where you are in this moment. Have you veered too far from where you want to go?

It’s okay to back up, reverse if you have to, and start again.

The only thing worse than making a mistake is not doing something about it. If you realize, for example, that maybe fame and fortune are not what you wanted, then stop, turn around and refocus your goals.

Maybe it’s time you ask yourself if what you’ve been doing is getting you closer or father away from your goals.

Maybe it’s time again to quit what’s not working, step out eyes wide open, take two steps out in the open and walk in the direction of the right path.

Which path are you on right now?

March 22nd, 2011

Perfection & Productivity Can Kill You

Big IslandThe Lure of Being Productive

This weekend I was highly productive. I wrote three queries, worked on two essays, did a painting and caught up on my reading. I also spent time with friends, went to a museum, a farmer’s market and a coffee shop.

In the midst of all my doing, however, I started to wonder if I was veering way too far off course. In the process of all that doing, was I neglecting just being?

There were a few bread crumbs that led me to question my latest endeavors. There was this post by writer hero and friend Jordan Rosenfeld who I once interviewed here.

And then there was this passage from Gregg Levoy’s Callings: Finding and Following an Authentic Life: “The beating heart of self-esteem is the feeling that we’re acceptable as we are, without having to earn it.”

And the feeling of dread as I put down my paintbrush when I saw that the painting before me was not the beauty of perfection I had hoped.

In Mark Nepo’s Book of Awakening he says,”What we need is always harshly and beautifully right before us, disguised in the wrapping of our nearest urgency. We just refuse to accept this, because it feels so difficult to face.”

The True Purpose of Life

All experiences reminded me that perfection, production, completion are not the goals of this life. That one does not need to perform perfection in order to earn love and self-worth. I was reminded that although we creatives often need validation, we should not be seeking it through our work.

The process, however, imperfect and painful is part of the journey.

Learning to hold ourselves in that process is the key to truly living a meaningful, purposeful life.

March 16th, 2011

If You’re Tired & Wired, You Need to Read This Now

Adrenal Glands BookIt’s Wednesday. I’m tired. Are you? I’ve been given the gift of a second chance. This time I’m going to learn from my mistakes and not over do it so that my illness doesn’t become life-threatening.

Will you do the same or will you work yourself to the grave?

This is a harsh post, but one I hope you will take to heart. If you haven’t already done so, take my Get More by Doing Less Challenge. And if you have completed it, “Congratulations.” If you’re still in the process, keep going.

I received an email in my inbox today and was surprised and delighted by it. Hay House sent me information about a book called Are You Tired and Wired? It’s about the fatigue women feel and how it can be related to adrenal dysfunction (something I have).

They sent me a free pdf of the first chapter. And I wanted to share it with you. Read it and maybe it will save your life. Maybe it will convince you to stop overworking yourself, putting everyone else’s needs before your own. Maybe, just maybe you will get the wake up call you need. That’s my hope for you.

March 14th, 2011

Following the Beat of Your Own Drum

{flickr photo by: MarthaRiley}


The Difficulty with Following Your Dreams

The other day I wrote about one way to find your calling. This post is all about what happens when you take the steps towards following it.

Here’s the short of it: The journey toward following your dreams will feel lonely at first. The tumbleweeds will blow as you step out on your own and you suddenly wonder where’d all your peeps go (not the marshmallow sugary kind).

And the long version…

It’s not to discourage you. But going out on your own is hard. When I did it a few years ago, I was stunned by the response I got.

Co-workers, friends, family and even acquaintances had an opinion. And they were not good.

One person said, “I have a friend who has tons of experience and he can’t even make it. How will you?”

When I told a friend that I decided to get my masters, instead of excitement and congratulations I got, “Do you think that’s very financially responsible? There are a lot of people who have dreams, but don’t pursue them because they can’t afford to.”

I soon learned over and over again that if I wanted to take big risks, I had to get used to the criticisms that usually came with it.

Gregg Levoy, author of Callings: Finding and Following an Authentic Life says, “One of the frightening prospects of saying yes to a calling is that you may find out who really supports you and who doesn’t.”

The Solution to Minimizing Negative Reactions from Others

Watch what you say and how you tell people about your decision to follow your dreams. What does this mean?

Here are a few tips Levoy advises:


  • Be honest. You might be scared, confused, and need support. Instead of focusing on their reaction, focus on being honest about what you’re going through. You will come across as cocky, overconfident, unrealistic or even irrational if you sound certain about your plan and they may feel left out of it as if you didn’t consider them at all. This will only entice your friends and loved ones to talk you out of your dreams.
  • Don’t try to please others. One of the people Levoy talks about in his book experienced tons of rejection and criticism from those he loved. It was difficult to get such negative feedback so he did what most of us do, he tried to convince them that what he was doing was right. But all the energy trying to please others and get their support worked against him. It’s hard to people please and it’s especially difficult when you don’t know why you’re drawn to being an artist or have a strong feeling to quit your job and move. But try explaining that to people who don’t understand either and you’ll set yourself up for more heartbreak. In The Right to Write: An Invitation and Initiation into the Writing Life, Julia Cameron says, “Seeking to value ourselves, we look to others for assurance. If what we are doing threatens them, they cannot give it. If what we envision is larger than what they can see, they cannot give support for what it is we are doing.” Maybe we should focus on ourselves, our purpose and value what we can do and accomplish instead of leaning on our loved ones to hold us up when we feel doubtful of our abilities.
  • Be compassionate. One of the hardest things about change is that it impacts those around you. When we finally take that step to do the unthinkable (move, get a new job, quit our old one, change careers entirely) it affects those who haven’t changed. Loved ones may feel abandoned or worry about how the change will impact them. Levoy says, “When others protest our changes, it’s not that they don’t want us to change; they just want us to change to meet their needs, not our own.” If we can learn to be compassionate to how our decisions will affect others, we can minimize their worries and learn from their reactions instead of resist and react to them.
  • Don’t try to change others. When you go through some life-changing event, it is very tempting to pass on what you’ve learned. But the people in your life may not be ready for that type of change. And pushing your own beliefs and values may make others resent you.

The truth is following your passion isn’t supposed to be easy. It’s not just the fear of failure that comes with the territory, it’s the fear of rejection and abandonment from those you love as well.

But there is a purpose to the heartache. If you can sustain it, you will find great lessons from those that hurt you most. They can teach you compassion and to be true to yourself. They can even give you real feedback on things you need to know to keep you grounded.

All we need to do is walk through the path with eyes wide open and an open heart.

March 10th, 2011

Don’t Feel Limited By Your Limitations

Growth

{flickr photo by gerardov}

Feel limited by your limitations? Don’t. Your limitations can free you and provide hints to your calling.

How?

I’m reading this book at turtle speed because that’s how much I love it. It’s called Callings: Finding and Following an Authentic Life by Gregg Levoy. And in it, Levoy talks about the power of our so-called limitations.

Here’s what I mean:

“Limitation can impede growth, but it can also induce it. In environments with little water, plants developed spines. People who lose one of their senses often find that the others are heightened…Criticism can teach you to rely on your own intuition…Personal tragedy can propel you to start up an organization to help others who have suffered the same fate.”

Levoy says that limitations become our strengths because it forces us to find creative ways to deal with them.

If you are feeling limited by your limitations, try opening yourself up to the possibility of its potential.

Don’t have a degree in art? Neither do I. But I try to get away from that by focusing on my intuition and by practicing my craft.

Don’t know what your purpose in life is? Think about the moments that moved you, that defined who you are. Was it your critical parents, the job you hated, the sickness that impacted your family? Usually it was those moments that provide hints to your calling.

I am a living breathing example of finding power through limitations. I grew up in a small town in a negative environment with not a lot of resources. As an adult, I was continually tested on my faith. I took jobs I hate, dealt with critical family and friends, and it all taught me the importance of self-worth, passion, purpose and defining your own life instead of having someone define it for you.

If you look deep within at all of your limitations, you may find the answers you are looking for. You may find yourself. Search deep enough and you will find your calling in life.


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