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Exploring with Courage

 

Beneath the surface beats the heart of an explorer.

The January 2015 cohort includes people who make connections between their strengths and goals whether they’re working with a life coach or on their own. They’re unique in that way because most people live their lives rather aimlessly. They’re also distinctive because the work we’re doing with Strengths Survey results has proven to be exceptionally powerful.

So, we’re explorers with magical powers.

We celebrated Tessa in my blog post, Pause for Applause; here is how she’s using persistence, an underlying strength from Courage*, to get the raise she wants.

Tessa works for a web design firm in social media marketing. She worked as an intern for the firm during college, and they were so impressed with her creativity and strong work ethic that they offered her a full-time job after graduation. Now, after two years, she’s had stellar performance reviews, but she’s been waiting six weeks for a raise she was promised. Tessa has become a vital part of her work group and has expanded the company’s client base by completing projects on time and under budget. She has asked for a meeting with her supervisor and is prepared to document the details of her job performance and ask for the raise to be reflected in her next check. She intends to persist in getting the raise she’s earned.

Some people might be too uncomfortable in her position to speak out. Tessa says her diligence toward meeting project goals is what makes her valuable to her boss, so she doesn’t fear pointing out to him why she’s worthy of that raise. She is who she is.

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*Courage is one of the six universally valued virtues identified in the VIA Survey of Character Strengths. Haven’t taken it yet? Take it now: www.viacharacter.org

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Pause for Applause

 

We proudly salute Tessa* from our January 2015 Cohort—for exceptional courage and high spirit.

Our cohort has been exploring ways to create or tweak our personal goals by identifying our strengths and values in “success threads”: re-occurring stories that have shaped our past and still resonate with our self-worth and joy. Tessa is serving us as a natural team leader, and we want to take a pause to recognize her and invite her to take a bow.

We’re targeting our Top Ten strengths from the VIA Character Survey results and using them as prompts for daily journaling. Our pledge is to set aside quiet time every day—first thing before morning routine or last thing before sleeping—to unlock those re-occurring stories and document them in a Goals Journal. Tessa has been our Standard Bearer. She writes every day without fail and gives it her all.

She has also been one of the most open participants when we meet together to share, and like a person walking the leading edge, she’s allowed other people plenty of space and a feeling of safety to feel they can also open up and be vulnerable. She’s the kind of woman who defines wholeheartedness.

There are people who walk into a room and light it up. There are people who pull up a chair and warm the whole setting. Our group dynamic has felt richer and more vibrant because of Tessa. She’s one of those people who bring light and warmth, and we’re lucky she’s one of us.

Brava, Tessa! We adore you.

 

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*name changed for privacy

Want to organize a cohort? Contact drmell@drmell.com

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Keep Going

 

Your strengths profile has a “Top Ten”; they reveal the essence of who you are. Continue to cultivate stories that help you identify your strengths, intensify your focus and build on your successes.

Curiosity is a Top Ten strength from my profile, like my appreciation of music and poetry. My mother had insatiable curiosity and found joy in “making things,” and we spent countless hours enjoying our love of learning and crafting together. She and her two older brothers were reared by their grandmother, and my mother spent most of her childhood alone with her imagination. She made clothes for her paper dolls and taught herself to sew with cloth and do fine needlework when she was a young mother. She taught me how to make clothes and bedding for my Barbie dolls, and we shared the joy and challenge of finding a beautiful bolt of cloth or spotting a gorgeous design in a magazine and transforming a dressmaker’s form or a bare set of windows.

Curiosity is in my Top Ten, and although my mother has passed, my daughter has joined me in continuing our story and sharing our love.

My friends share my curiosity about human behavior and how we can all work together for the greater good. We esteem the best in ourselves and others and “make things” better for everyone. I surround myself with people whose grace and positivity feed my soul. My nearest and dearest believe in the power of We, and their activism for good causes and wholehearted spirits feed my soul. Like transforming cloth into function and form, my mentors and friends turn possibility into thriving communities that serve everyone beautifully and well.

My focus on 2015 and beyond is to search for opportunities I can engage my curiosity and experience more joy and deepen my sense of accomplishment. What’s your focus from your Top Ten?

Taken the VIA Survey of Character Strengths yet? Here’s the link https://www.authentichappiness.sas.upenn.edu/home

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Begin Again

 

Begin again.

Singing and reciting poetry were pleasures my father and I shared. He spent time with me, holding me in his rocking chair in the evening, and we sang and laughed together. My daddy taught me that music and poetry are expressions of love and soulfulness, and they will be with me forever.

What memories from your childhood resonate to this day? They are the keys to revealing your strengths, and they sustain you.

For many years, I taught English and world literature at the college-level. My delight was in reading and analyzing poetry with my students, particularly with the liberal arts majors since we were kindred spirits. My classroom became a temple on our best days, and we were astonished by the imaginations of disparate people. Ancient texts from world religions, lyrical poems from the English Romantics, hard-edged poems from Americans in the ‘60s: we heard voices singing the glory and pain of the human condition or telling a story to capture a time, place or lesson learned.

Academic work made a career for me that provided some financial security, but happily, it allowed me to enjoy the essence of who I am and am becoming.

What are your touchstones? What brought you joy before you became self-conscious and worldly?

The answers will remind you who you are—and are becoming.

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Health Sabbatical

During a respite from positive psychology research and comment, I am working on a series of blogs about my health sabbatical.

In the spring of 2007, I was forced to leave a career I loved and students and colleagues I adored. My health collapsed, and I simply couldn’t get to work anymore. My plan was work in higher education administration until I was 70, but…what’s the expression? Life happened while I was making plans.

During these seven years–and the number seven is very telling for me (I’ll share more later)–I have explored positive psychology as a path toward restoring my vitality and re-inventing my career life. My certification as a life coach is just a small chapter of this story.

Join me as I unpack the events and choices that led me here. I can promise you won’t be bored; you might even be inspired.

Dr Mell

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Change Your Health Destiny

New scientific evidence confirms that We can control up to 75 percent of our health destiny with good lifestyle choices. You may have inherited some health challenges, such as heart disease or diabetes, but science proves that you can re-direct your genetic destiny to a great extent by making good choices about your diet, exercise, stress management and sleep. Seventy-Five Percent! That’s some serious power over health problems you assumed you were destined to suffer.

My father is living proof that better lifestyle choices weigh more heavily in your health destiny than genetics. My father and his siblings were born into poverty in the 1920s in the Deep South. Children of poverty rarely have enough to eat or see a doctor or dentist for preventive care, and that was certainly their fate. My father had two brothers who made horrible health choices as they aged, but my father ate whole foods, stayed active, kept a sunny outlook and never became addicted to cigarettes, drugs or alcohol. Sadly, my uncles died many years ago—neither one of them lived to see 50. Dad is 86 this year, in relatively good health, and has outlived both of his brothers by more than 40 years!

Of course, once you cool down your happy dance over the promise of Your 75 Percent, you may say, “Rats! I want my good health in pill form.” Listen, we all feel your pain; a quick fix is a nice idea. For the sake of activating your potential for better health, hang in there and let’s keep things positive.

Think of the improvement you can enjoy—feeling and looking better every day—by making better lifestyle choices. Let me assert another piece of science that can make your lifestyle changes even easier: ONE change in habit can set off a whole chain reaction of improvement in your health. It’s called The Keystone Habit in Charles Duhigg’s new bestseller, The Power of Habit:

Changing one habit—let’s say ‘Eating Fewer Carbs’—can create a Keystone Habit, and from the brain/body changes a Keystone Habit makes, a Cascade of Change flows naturally.

So, you can impact 75 percent of your health destiny in a positive way—without worrying that your genes rule your future health, and you can change ONE health habit and, sticking to it, can set off a cascade of improvement to re-energize and heal your body, mind and spirit. Lisa’s testimonial from The Power of Habit is a powerful illustration of how The Keystone Habit can work:

Lisa…was 34 years old, had started smoking and drinking when she was sixteen, and had struggled with obesity for most of her life. At one point, in her mid-twenties, collection agencies were hounding her to recover $10,000 in debts. An old resume listed her longest job as lasting less than a year. (Prologue)

Lisa had cultivated bad personal habits, had health challenges from poor choices in diet and physical activity, was in debt from a lack of financial discipline and had a history of job-swapping that made prospective employers distrust her persistence. So, Lisa chose ONE habit to conquer—she decided to quit smoking cigarettes—and that ONE change in habit set off a cascade of positive lifestyle changes that impacted her body, mind and spirit. After she gave up cigarettes, she breathed more freely and started walking every day; she began to choose fresher, more wholesome foods to delight her re-awakened taste buds and started to lose weight; she felt more powerful and self-confident and approached her creditors with a plan to re-structure and eliminate her debt; and she found work she loved and made a pledge to commit to it heart-and-soul. Her turn-around is nothing short of incredible.

I hope the new science about the power we have to alter our health destinies and to start a cascade of positive change are inspiring to you; they certainly are to me. In my practice, I work with people over 50 who have some troubling health and spirit challenges, and they tell me how empowering it is to know they can make small changes that yield big dividends. I hope that’s true for you, too.

Focused on seizing Your 75 Percent to feel better? On choosing ONE Keystone Habit to set off a cascade of change? Good for you! Please write, text or call me and share your experience. I’d love to join you on your journey and share it with others. I’m always rooting for your best life.

All the Best Always,

Dr Mell

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Duhigg, C (2012). The power of habit: Why we do what we do in life and business. New York: Random House. Amazon Book Link

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Five Ways to Boost Your Personal Freedom

 

Today’s our Independence Day 2012 in the U.S., and we’re grateful for our republic and the common values we hold most dear. Without question, we treasure our extraordinary freedoms especially. For those of us who value positivity, every day offers a chance to celebrate personal freedom if we choose, so here are some simple steps to help you let go.

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One expert who has devoted her work to the power of personal freedom and positive psychology is Dr. Judith Orloff. She offers specific advice about being healthy and well through better habits that generate good energy. A medical doctor by training and experience, Dr. Orloff’s practice and teaching in intuition and positive energy inspire people to seek ways to use their emotional intelligence to create the professional and personal success they desire. Consider how you can use her good advice on personal freedom to create a more positive outlook.

Dr. Orloff encourages her clients to focus on the Positive Now and resist “catastrophizing” what potential crises might destroy us. She cites the physiological reaction that destroys positive energy and growth when people dwell on negative what-ifs and generate stress hormones, break the flow of happy endorphins and quash the chemicals we make in our brains that are pain-reducing.

She encourages daily meditation as a positive step toward personal freedom. She cites scientific research that shows the physiological benefits of meditating each day on a positive image and realizing a deep sense of calm throughout the body. While many people meditate morning and/or evening, she suggests her clients take mini-breaks during a personally stressful part of the day to generate more calm and well-being.

She admits to using positive self-talk for well-being and promotes its benefits to others.

This is a form of affirmation that will neutralize the tendency to focus on what is negative. For instance, if you are tired, tell yourself, ‘It’s okay to take a rest’ instead of beating yourself up over not being a super person who goes nonstop. Or say to yourself, ‘You’ve done a great job’ when you’ve done your best in a work situation or in the process of healing from an illness.

Another strategy for personal freedom is to reinforce to yourself the gratitude that you feel for what is working well in your life, instead of dwelling on what has gone wrong. This one is so powerful and so obvious, too. “Just Let Go” is the central theme: let go of negative thoughts about the past. She suggests we “always focus on the love [we] have and know the enormous value of this.”

Free yourself of unhappy thoughts or a bad mood by reaching out to help someone else. Even in small ways—listening compassionately to a troubled friend or letting someone in front of you in traffic—a simple gesture of service to someone else frees our knotted psyches and allows a surge of positive energy to re-direct our negativity or lift a dark mood. We feel better and so does The Someone we serve.

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Since I was a little girl, the word “freedom” described something powerful, almost magical to me. It still does—perhaps more now than ever before. I’m deeply grateful for having been born into a family and country that values freedom, so here’s my Holiday Salute to our righteous quest to breathe free.

Much Love and Independence, My Friend,

Dr Mell

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Orloff, M.D., J (2005). Positive energy:  10 extraordinary prescriptions for transforming fatigue, stress, and fear into vibrance, strength, and love. New York: Three Rivers Press. Amazon Book Link

Uncategorized

How Do I Love Thee?

Oh, Spring—Thou hast thy pleasures,
plentiful and sweet,
but I work two jobs to cover my bills
and search for delight in
you and arduous toil.

A sincere Salute to Spring wouldn’t be complete without a poem to pay homage to work. Viable work gives our lives meaning, helps build our self-esteem and sense of accomplishment, provides bonus relationships that are often friendly and satisfying, and offers many of us a creative outlet for self-expression and flow.

That’s a pretty incredible list of life-affirming significance! The rewards of work offer sustenance and more and simply cannot be taken for granted. It’s too easy and a little superficial to live for Friday and dread Mondays (or whatever days your regular off-times start and stop). C’mon, Surprise your friends and delight your parents and mentors! It’s unimaginative to complain about your job. As Spring turns into Summer, begin to think and act differently about work in positive ways and watch what happens to your body, mind and spirit—and your bottom line.

Admit it: satisfying work gives you the chance to build character. Since you are integrally connected to the toil you expend and the results you deliver at work, you have a chance through it to cultivate the qualities that define you and the values that sustain you. Those are powerful tools to growing a life lived in a state of flourishing.

Satisfying work builds self-esteem and adds a core function in our capacity to flourish: the function of accomplishment that helps define human well-being. Purposeful work, like no other endeavor, offers us the direct and indirect benefits of accomplishment—contributing directly to our material success and indirectly to a sense of self-worth and a feeling of real achievement.

Collaborative work connects us to other people, and connecting is another core aspect of flourishing. We need each other in elemental ways to feel accepted and supported (and supportive), and work relationships often give us chances to connect to people with whom we bond as friends. Most people thrive when they can count on interdependence with others, and those feelings often translate into professional success with other people at work.

Lastly, satisfying work is the most stimulating environment many people have for creative enterprise. In the U.S. after World War II, we’ve enjoyed a steady evolution of jobs and careers that more men and women can pursue for financial security and creative expression. Growing the American Middle Class meant that many people could earn a living wage and discover opportunities at work to ideate, design, create and develop—choices that simply aren’t possible if your work just allows you to subsist. Artists, engineers and entrepreneurs of all kinds enjoy creating at work, and our economy and culture benefit from their happiness and fulfillment.

You expected something very different from this blog at first, didn’t you? Oh, well—I like to goose things up. It seems perfectly reasonable to write a poem to Springtime; what’s wrong with writing a poem about the joy of work? Work is for lovers, too—lovers of accomplishment, connecting with others and feeling purposeful.

I challenge you to find ways, if you don’t already, to celebrate your work and work ethic, your career and accomplishments, and to be grateful for the joy and satisfaction they bring.

So, Here’s to You, Satisfying Work! You give so much to Life.

All the Best Always,

Dr Mell

Uncategorized

Spring Break

Spring Celebration 2012 continues, but not in your office, studio or pod. It’s Travel Time! Now, I already hear you backing out: you say you can’t afford the time off or can’t afford the expense. The truth is that you can’t afford NOT to break out of your tired routine for some rest and reflection. Give yourself the long-deserved break you’ve been needing, and activate the principles of positivity for fun and profit. Springtime is the perfect time for a Positivity Vacation.

Seriously: what if you blew your travel money before Easter? You can still break your routines over a long weekend and feel like you’ve taken a vacation. Springtime is time to focus your attention on something new—time to travel out of your comfort zone and shift your focus from the same ol’ routine. Since all you can control is where you focus your attention, focus it on something you don’t experience every day. You may only afford a long weekend, but your body and brain will thank you for the break.  The RIGHT changes in your daily patterns can help you change your perspective for the better.

Here’s why: muscle has memory, so your body and brain function from the repetitive choices you make every moment of every day. Your body is accustomed to the subtle cues that signal “I’m moving at my morning pace so that I’m at work on time” or “I’m pushing the accelerator ‘cause that meeting starts in 20 minutes.” Those signals tell your muscles from your nose to your knees to tense and your head to thrust forward over your body in Aggressive Human Pose.

Ever heard the expression “You have to be on your toes”? Your body responds to appointments and deadlines from head to toe, and Spring Break pushes the Relax Button and lets your body and brain re-set. Science tells us that healthy routines help people live longer and maintain an optimal quality of life—regular bedtimes and waking times, regular meal times for steady nourishment—and your body functions better because of healthy muscle memory. Use your Spring Break to change the negative habits that don’t add to your health and happiness.

Here’s how: You don’t really need a list of negative habits and better choices. Turn off the TV and cell phone and iPod and think about what you eat. Do you opt for fast or processed food when a fresh salad, fruit and granola makes you feel and look healthier? Change your negative eating habits beginning now and use your down time to shop healthier and prepare wholesome food. Or turn off everything that beeps and buzzes and think about how you move. Do you tweet and post and play e-games when a brisk, 20-minute walk every day makes you feel and look healthier? Change your Couch Potato ways beginning now, and use your “Spring Break” to get up and move!

Some people feel pinched these days because the economy’s building back slowly. Some people feel pinched because they blew their whole vacation budget for the year on a week in Cabo in March. Whatever your pinch, take the weekend off and enjoy a different sort of Spring Break. Use this vacation or stay-cation time to set sail for a new horizon and shake up your tired patterns. Your body, brain and booty will thank you.

Your Friendly Change Coach,

Dr Mell

Uncategorized

“Garden Variety” is the Best Pick

Use this season to adjust your perspective and inject some variety into your life. Springtime is the perfect time to re-think your thinking and “see” things differently.

Start by considering the phrase “garden variety” from the title. If you’re itching to adjust your perspective—to switch up your tired routines, to change your focus on your stalled career, to take a new view on your health habits—you might really get a rush out of choosing a “Garden Variety” approach. Does that sound backwards somehow? It shouldn’t. If you think of it, choosing a variety from a garden means picking edibles and flowers from a wide array of choices. So, in reality, “garden variety” is a wide assortment, not the same, tired picks.

Spend this spring switching things up a bit. Ready for a new view toward something that’s become ordinary? Choose from a variety of options: little changes make your brain work differently and better, put some spice back into your robotic reflexes, and help you create new habits that have the potential to serve you better than the old ones.

One pick from your garden’s variety is absolutely free: change your routine this spring by getting in bed 30 minutes earlier every night. This is a subtle change that will have a surprisingly rich pay-off. Millions of people are sleep-deprived, and you may very well be one of them. Adjust your evening routine this spring for two weeks; that will be time for your body and psyche to notice a shift. Stop goofing in front of the TV or computer or texting on your phone, wasting time with blinking, buzzing gizmos that delay your restful sleep at night. Go to bed an extra half hour earlier every night for two weeks, and see if each spring day finds you feeling more rested and calm.

Or try this: switch up your “garden variety” drive home from work. If you drive home and it’s safe to do so, change your typical commute and notice how the scenery and your responses to it shift. The new patterns tune your brain to a more heightened state of awareness and alert. You pay more attention to your physical surroundings for these shifts, and that’s challenging to the worn ruts in your thinking patterns. Shake It Up! If you ride the train to work, change your usual trek through the grocery store, starting from a completely different aisle and working toward your former “start.” Pay attention to new choices from displays that look fresh to your eyes and kick-start your usual diet. What’s the expression? Variety is the life of spice? The added bonuses from this switch are the early spring fruits and veggies that make “garden variety” even more tantalizing.

Find simple ways to add a little variety into your routines, especially the ones that can be sapping your energy or imagination needlessly. Change your view of the world, and change yourself for the better. Stimulate your brain with the jolt of some razzamatazz, and the whole world becomes your enchanted garden.

Mix It Up—With Love,

Dr Mell