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The Pursuit Of Happiness

…Maybe that’s the problem.

Pursuing happiness is like chasing a rainbow. The faster we go, the harder we try, the farther off it becomes.

I have learned that happiness is not a pursuit— it’s a choice. Happiness is a state of mind, obtainable at any time, in any moment of your choosing.

Licking a cone of creamy vanilla Häagen-Dazs makes me happy. But if someone knocks the cone out of my hand, I’m no longer happy. Happiness can be fleeting and unstable, like that ice cream cone. It’s really just a temporary sensation of pleasure, like entertainment, shopping, eating or sex.

Our beliefs about what will make us happy are heavily influenced by other people, Hollywood or commercial media. We race along this “hedonic treadmill” perpetually feeling like something is missing, like happiness is one toy, one trinket or one promotion away, but always just beyond our reach.

And still no rainbow. Disappointing career choices, heartbreaking relationships and midlife crises indicate that our assumptions about happiness and the pursuit of it often miss the mark.

It’s not the pursuit of happiness we should concern ourselves with, but rather the pursuit of fulfillment, purpose and significance.

If I have created a life of meaning in which I have a deep sense of purpose and value, that won’t change because someone knocks my ice cream cone over. Fulfillment is a state of existence, not a fleeting emotion.

What then creates a fulfilling life?

That’s the all-important question you have to answer for yourself. In fact, it’s the subject of the classic tome Man’s Search for Meaning (which I recommend!) by psychiatrist and concentration camp survivor Viktor Frankl. Typically a life of meaning requires deep relationships, a connection to a community, a sense of well-being, contribution to others and continual challenge, growth, learning and progress. Now those are some virtues worth pursuing. And once you start out on this pursuit, you will realize that crossing the finish line is not what’s most rewarding; the journey itself and the anticipation of achieving your goal is what’s so exhilarating and wonderful.

So what about being happy?

There are two ways you can choose to be happy at any moment.
One: Think about all you have to be grateful for. Some of the happiest people I have ever met are those who have comparatively few accoutrements to be happy about. When you feel gratitude, you cannot feel fear or worry at the same time. Gratitude washes it all away. If you are reading this, you’re breathing and above ground, so you have many blessings to be grateful for—just remind yourself at any moment you want to feel happy.

The second way to choose happiness—the best way, in my opinion—is to do something to make someone else happy. The person who bestows happiness always gets much more of it in return.

Article by Darren Hardy

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Put Your Dreams Under Scrutiny

Article by Todd Smith

Dream Big

What is the most dominate dream you think about? Would you like to know your odds of achieving it? In three minutes you will know your answer.

As part of my desire to continue learning and growing, I attended a leadership event this past weekend hosted by Bob Burg and Paul Martinelli featuring three of my favorite teachers, Les Brown,  Bob Burg and Dr. John C. Maxwell.

Dr. Maxwell (internationally respected leadership expert, speaker, and author) gave an insightful presentation on his book, Put Your Dream to the Test. He said, “The more valid reasons you have for achieving your dreams, the greater your odds will be of achieving them.”

He highlighted 10 important questions you MUST answer to test your dreams.

Are you ready to take the test? Pick ONE of your dreams. Got it? Now answer Maxwell’s 10 questions to determine if the odds are in your favor.

1. Is my dream really my dream? If you want to achieve your dream, you must “own” it. It must be yours, not your parents’, teachers’, or anyone else’s. If the achievement of a dream is not of great importance to YOU, it’s unlikely that you will do what’s required to accomplish it.

2. Do I clearly see my dream? What does it look like? The more specific you are on what your dream looks like, the more likely you will be to achieve it. This is one of the reasons I encourage people to cut out images of their “big” goals and dreams, create a collage, and look at it regularly. At first you may only see a piece of your dream; but each day as you move closer, the clearer it will become.

3. Am I depending on things within my control? This is when you have to be honest with yourself and determine if reaching your dream is within your control. Are you depending on others? If so, who? Do you have the talent, skill or ability to make it come true? If not, can you develop what you are lacking?

4. Do I have the energy to achieve it? This is the passion question. Think of your last great accomplishment. How much energy did it require of you? Is your dream important enough to you that you will put forth the energy necessary over the time period required?

5. Do I have a strategy? I see very few people who take the time to put together a “real” plan to reach their goals. I am often left in awe, wondering, “How do you think you can achieve your goal without putting together a plan?” A plan outlines the things you must do in a prioritized sequence to achieve your desired outcome.

6. Who do I have around me that can help me? Dr. Maxwell said, “A nightmare is a big dream with a bad team.” Who’s on your team to support, encourage, and help you? If you don’t have the right people on your team, identify people you admire and respect; then determine how they can help you.

7. Am I willing to pay the price? This is when you have a gut check and ask yourself, “Am I willing to do what is required of me to see my dream come true?” The bigger your dream, the more it will require of you. Are you willing to put forth the effort, overcome the obstacles, and deal with the disappointments that you will face on your journey?

8. Am I moving closer? This is the tenacity question. Am I closer to reaching my dream today than I was yesterday? Was I closer yesterday than the day before? Look at your “To Do” lists over the last week and identify the steps you have taken toward your dream.

9. Does working toward my dream bring satisfaction? If you are not growing and developing yourself in the pursuit of your dream, it may be time to identify a new one. Your journey must be fulfilling.

10. Does my dream benefit others? If so, Who? Why? If your dream is all about your selfish desires, it’s unlikely that it will ever be realized. Zig Ziglar, the most recognized sales trainer in American history, said, “When you help enough other people get what they want, you will have everything you want.”

How many times did you answer, “Yes”? The more yeses you answered, the more on target you are to achieve your dream. Each of you has the capability to visualize a dream—one that is rewarding and beneficial—and most of you have the ability to accomplish it.

So, what are the odds of achieving your dream? If they’re not high, what can you do to increase your odds? Do you need to put together a plan? Do you need to re-evaluate your commitment? Do you need a new support team?

“Only as high as I reach can I grow, only as far as I seek can I go, only as deep as I look can I see, only as much as I dream can I be.” Karen Ravn

Let me encourage you to print this lesson and ask yourself these ten questions with every dream or goal you consider. Since we can’t reasonably pursue everything we desire, we need to be wise and focus only on the things that pass the test.

Dreams come from hidden desires and possibilities. Everyone has dreams that occupy their minds, but it takes determination, a practical plan, and consistent effort to achieve them. Pursue your dream; begin today.

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25 Things To Do To Get Out Of A Rut In 2012

By Randy Gage

Hope you’re having as much fun with this  creativity series as I am writing it.  And thanks so much for playing all out.  It’s been great to see so many fascinating and interesting comments each day.

We talked about  the neural pathways in your brain.  Here’s the fascinating thing about that:  You have tens of thousands of thoughts a day.  Unfortunately if you’re like most people, it is the same thoughts, day after day.  Scientists have discovered that many of these frequent thoughts you have over and over actually create ruts in the neural pathways of your brain.

The more creative you are, and the more diverse the stimuli you expose yourself to, the less ruts you will have.  And when you do specific things to foster the communication between the two hemispheres of your brain, this cultivates whole brain synchronicity that geniuses like Mozart, Edison and Einstein demonstrated so well.

Here’s a list of some fun, fascinating, and interesting ways to develop your creativity.  There is no particular order here, but a plethora of great ideas that help promote whole brain functioning and stimulate your creative powers.

  • Start wearing your watch on the other wrist.
  • Move your ring, keys, wallet, pager, and pen to a new place every day for a week.
  • Brainstorm 25 alternate uses for a toothpick.
  • Take a different route home every day for a week.
  • Count to 100 by 2s and 3s at the same time: 2/3, 4/6, 6/9, etc.
  • Count backward from 100 by 4’s.
  • Check the dictionary and learn five new words every day for a week.  (Or a lifetime.)
  • Do all the scrabble, jumble, Sudoku and puzzlers in the day’s paper.
  • Take a common object like a pencil, watch, or spoon and examine it in detail using all your senses.   Think how a five year old would view it.  And remember, there is no spoon.
  • Identify all the geometric shapes that you can see from where you are right now.
  • Sit in a new place for meals, meetings, church, or temple.
  • Strike up a conversation with someone you don’t know or would normally avoid.
  • Sleep on the other side of the bed.  Note what happens when you wake up.
  • Use your non-dominant hand to eat, brush your teeth, dial phone calls, etc.
  • Listen to and try to appreciate a different style of music then you normally do.  If you like country, try opera.  If you love classical, try hip hop.
  • Take regular “disengagement breaks” when you’re working on a project.
  • Journal and mind map using colored pen or pencils.
  • Buy a tie or scarf in a color you would never normally wear.
  • Decide what your drag name or porno name would be.  (No, I won’t be telling you mine.)
  • Write a limerick.
  • Go out to a restaurant and order a peanut butter and jelly sandwich with a chocolate milk.
  • Invent some unimaginable or impossible thing today!

Do these things and you’ll be creating many new neural pathways in your brain and spark up your creative juices.  Which is just in time for my annual “Night Before Christmas” poetry competition, which comes up on next post!  Watch this space…

Please share how doing any of these made you feel, and any other ideas that work for you.

P.S. to my Jewish readers, hope you are enjoying a joyous and wonderful Chanukah!

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What I Needed To Hear

I have something to tell you but you best sit down because it might get a little uncomfortable. You ready? Okay, here I go…

Not everybody likes me.

Shocking, I know. Who would’ve thought?

Amazingly, I piss some people off. Wow, I didn’t see that coming. Much. Whether it’s speaking to groups or writing for them, I often manage to get someone offside. Well technically, they do it to themselves but I’ll leave that philosophical discussion for another day.

Options A and B

Over the years I’ve learned that not everyone wants to be challenged or prodded into positive change. Of course. And that’s totally okay. These days, for a bit of fun, I often give audiences the option of my feel-good, comfortable presentation or my feel-shit (for a moment) not-so-comfortable one. ‘Option A’ being quite digestible and mildly amusing (but ultimately worthless from a ‘creating better results’ perspective) and ‘option B’ being confronting and uncomfortable but potentially transformational.

Not wanting to appear too pathetic, most groups will go for option B. And yes, some will do it reluctantly.

Reward Without the Effort?

Experience has taught me that, when it comes to the process of creating a better life (or component of that life), some people are all for the transformative journey as long as they are not required to actually do anything. Or acknowledge anything. Or change anything. Or get uncomfortable.

Which is something of a problem.

And Me?

As for me personally, there have been more than a few times (I remember them all clearly) when people – whom I trusted and respected – have given me feedback that I absolutely did not want to hear, consider or believe. In one case, I didn’t talk to my ‘friend’ for a week because he had been such a prick. In my mind, anyway.

An honest prick with great insight.

I hated that.

The F*ck Off Wall

Deep down (in fact, it wasn’t really that deep), I knew he was right but my fear and ego were both so desperate to ignore his obvious insight that I immediately put up the wall. The Craig wall. The F*ck Off wall. Back then, nobody was gonna get through that sucker. I had most people fooled but not him. He saw through my rubbish and told me exactly what I was (and wasn’t) doing.

At that moment in time, I so wanted him to be wrong that I wouldn’t even have a discussion with him. I pretended it was because he had offended me but in reality, it was because I did not want to acknowledge what he (and I) knew to be true. 

When I finally managed to climb down from my very high horse, I was able to see things a little clearer. And by the way, my friend wasn’t a little bit right with his feedback towards me, he was totally right. Which was why I reacted the way I did. Naturally, it was easier for me to get angry and defensive than it was to find some honesty, humility and courage.

In the short term, not changing is usually easier than changing. But only in the short term.

Over the years, I’ve learned that, in order for me to keep growing, evolving and learning, sometimes, the things I need to hear are not the things I want to hear. I’ve also discovered that, more times than not, it’s impossible for me to be objective about me because I am me.

Who’s Your Unreasonable Friend?

I’ve written before about the idea of having an ‘unreasonable friend’; someone who is more concerned with your long-term welfare, development and happiness than they are with making you feel momentarily comfortable in the now. They are the person who will tell you what you need to hear – even if it’s not what you want to hear. They are not critical; they are objective, logical, caring and measured.

I’m all for support and encouragement but sometimes the thing we really need is a little objectivity and tough love. And no, this discussion is not about self-loathing but rather self-awareness and self-improvement.

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