Archive for ‘How to’

May 19th, 2009

See Your Life Unfold Like a Movie

Maybe I haven’t entirely let go of my favorite TV show Scrubs yet, because today I thought about another poignant piece featured in the last episode.  J.D. was watching his life as if it were a movie.  Specifically, imagining all the amazing possibilities his future could bring like getting married, having more kids, and making memories with his closest friends.  That image gave me goose bumps not because I was vicariously living through his character, but because it hit close to home.  

It got me thinking about the importance of dreaming and visualizing fantasies of our own future.  Obviously, no ones life turns out exactly the way we want them to be (unless you’re psychic), but it’s dreaming that helps motivate us and leads us to our goals.  

The best part?  You’re totally free to be the producer of your own movie without the fear of being judged or criticized for what you want. That means in my dreams, I can be a successful Carrie Bradshaw wannabe making enough money to buy tons of clothes not to mention shoes and enough time to hang out with my friends on a daily basis and still come up with witty, intelligent copy on a daily basis.  Aw, to dream.  It may not automatically make me a star but it’ll surely give me the chance to be the star in my own future movie.  And that kind of reaction, well that can inspire real dreams to unfold gradually.

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=War9m52LrV4&hl=en&fs=1]

May 16th, 2009

Faith Keeps One Foot in Front of the Other

DSC04689

I had a lightbulb moment when I realized that ALL people regardless of social status and class, go through moments of uncertainty.  

Though it’s easy to get lost in the familiar tunes of “woe is me,” it also doesn’t really suit your cause.  If your cause is to fulfill your dreams.  I just got this a few days ago as I was typing away thinking about how that BIG space in front of me that points to my future was still empty and I still didn’t understand how I would get from where I was standing to where I wanted to be.  I started to fantasize about all of the successful people in my life and the ones on TV and thought about how they were so lucky that they had life figured out and didn’t need to think about these things like me.  And then it hit me!  They still had challenges like everyone else but maybe that mountain in front of them is that much bigger because they had already climbed all those bunny slopes before then.  What a wake up call that was.  

I thought about Oprah’s story the one that she tells of not knowing whether she could make it on TV and the funny moment when she pronounced Canada CON-YA-DA and started laughing live on camera.  That’s when they put her on a morning talking show and in an instance she knew that that’s what she was meant to do.  It reminds me a lot of hiking.  When you see that mountain up ahead, sometimes it’s hard to struggle and put in the effort especially when there are days you doubt whether you’ll make it.  But I realized that all you need to do when your in moments of self-doubt and uncertainty, is do what Finding Nemo’s Dory says, “Just keep swimming…” and somehow that blank empty space in front of you will transform into steps, tiny at first, but then it’ll become clearer and more certain and soon you’ll be there-right at your goal!

May 5th, 2009

Anger Redefined

Anger is one of those emotions we’d rather not express, experience, talk about or feel.  In fact, especially as women, it’s one emotion we like to keep hidden.  We store away this socially unacceptable emotion until we can’t hold it in any longer and let it out on who else, but our family.  Yet, have you ever watched a child when they get upset?  There’s no holding back with kids.  Anger is seen in loud outbursts, arms flailing, and sometimes a bit of stomping.  Even my little rabbit will thump and growl when he’s upset.  So why is that when we get older we try so hard to dishonor it?

For one thing, no one wants to see an adult throwing a tantrum.  And for another, anger has been given such a bad rap.  When we see someone red faced and yelling, the last thing we want to do is be around them.  And the act of holding in our anger is absurdly valued and believed to be a virtue instead of a flaw.  Yet, holding in your anger can be like holding in a sneeze.  Instead of getting rid of all those toxins from your body and releasing the energy into something that feels good, you’re inhaling, repressing, and storing all of that negative energy and irritants inside.  Ironically, although we might avoid confrontation with friends or hold back our anger at work to prevent fights and the end of a relationship, the opposite tends to happen when we don’t act on it.  

The good news?  Expressing anger isn’t as scary as you may think.  In Finding Your Own North Star, Martha Beck’s statement that “well-used anger lies at the heart and soul of making the world a better, more humane place” floored me.  She gives examples in her book of how Rosa Parks and Gandhi, people who we revere as peacemakers, used their anger to change the world.  That gave me goose bumps because previously my impression of anger was of the “throwing your hands and feet on the floor” type.  I didn’t realize that anger could be the catalyst for positive change.  It’s already helped me on one occasion where I chose to use my anger toward a few drunk people’s insensitive remarks to help me write a new article on racism.  Because anger is such a powerful, adrenaline inducing emotion, it can help motivate you to do something significant and life changing.  So the next time you’re feeling angry, remember that this seemingly negative emotion can contribute positively to the world.