Using Language to Help You Get the Results You Really Want

As I listened to several conversations over the past couple of weeks, I began to notice how much the language being used was actually helping to maintain the level of frustration I heard. That got me thinking about cause and effect.

The language we use with ourselves is immensely influential. Just take a few minutes to listen to the kinds of things you are currently saying to yourself, especially during times of stress.

For instance, if you are feeling overwhelmed by all the things that have somehow been added to your schedule, how many of these might you be saying or feeling:

"Oh, I'll never get this done in time!" (and it's making me feel even more pressure/guilt, etc.)

"I don't know where to start" (and I feel like I'm just chasing my tail.)

"There's too much to do" (and all I can see is that overwhelmingly large picture.)

"It just isn't fair!" (and why did it have to happen to me?)

Obviously, we each have our own way of dealing, or not dealing, with what happens in our life. Especially if we're facing change.

When we feel any unwanted emotion, the most important thing we can do, and the first step to recovering our balance, is to manage our own state of being. If we're stuck in the negative feelings, it's more difficult to have access to all of our own best resources.

The way we "frame" our thinking directly affects the answers and responses we are going to get. In managing our lives, which often means dealing with the circumstances, we can either be at the effect of what happens to us, or we can be in control of how we respond or react.

When we take on a "victim" or helpless attitude, we limit ourselves to thinking that assumes we have no choices, that we are limited by what is granted to us or what is allowed by someone outside ourselves.

When we shift our internal voices slightly and assume responsibility for our experience, we open up many more possibilities for acquiring or achieving what we really want.

All of us have resorted to disempowering questions at some time in our lives – "Why does this always happen to me?" or "Why did I do this again?"

These kinds of questions keep us stuck – our internal computers (brains) are busy creating the justifications for our current situations rather than looking for ways to improve, expand, or get the more beneficial results we really want.

By shifting our language, even slightly, we will often dramatically shift the focus for our problem-solving computer/brains, getting much more useful results.

Think about how different your responses will be to those previous thoughts when you make any of the following shifts:

"What can I do right now to help insure this gets done in time?"

"What small step can I take to move this forward right now?"

"What are the key elements that must be done?"

In these examples, notice that we shifted our focus from being at the effect of external causes to being in control by taking responsibility for what we are experiencing. That simple shift of language gives us a sense of power over our circumstances rather than the helplessness we felt before. We can use the same kind of thinking to ensure we ask ourselves empowering (instead of disempowering) questions. First of all, by allowing ourselves to become more fascinated (rather than frustrated) by what we are experiencing, and then by shifting our perspective to one of internal control or one of possibilities.

So, our questions (from above) could become, "How can I make sure this doesn't happen to me again?" and "What could I do to respond more resourcefully next time?"

Again, notice how this simple shift opens up many more options and possibilities, how many more choices we have, and how much more personal control we have. Same circumstances, different framework.

Christine Lavin has a great song in which she says "He's not a victim, he's a volunteer". Unfortunately that describes too many of us who have become used to believing that the circumstances in our lives control our experience of the world rather than remembering that we're the ones who create the context. And that ultimately we do have the power to control our own responses, including how and where we look for answers.

We can choose to get small and limit our experience and results by cutting off our enjoyment and our possibilities, or we can open up to the possibilities of being and having more by becoming responsible for how we manage our thoughts, feelings and responses. We have the choice every moment, and we are only limited by the framework we have constructed for ourselves.
 

Validation – the Movie

Next time you wonder what your role in life might be, take a hint from this guy.

And feel free to pass this on to anyone who might need it.

Note: I "lost" this video for a while when Brightcove.tv stopped publishing. Luckily I recently found it again, so I'm happy to be able to post the link here.

Finding Focus in Our ADHD World

If you're like most people I know, you have way too many things you need to track:

  • too many contacts
  • too many appointments
  • too many bills
  • too many clothes or shoes
  • too many ebooks on the computer
  • too many ideas you simply can't get to
  • too many responsibilities
  • too many temptations
  • too many priorities
  • too many phone numbers and email addresses
  • too many birthdays and special occasions
  • TOO MUCH PHYSICAL STUFF that no longer serves a purpose…

So recently I've been attempting to de-clutter all those pockets in my life where the "stuff" has built up. 

I have several reasons to simplify – including our desire to become "bi-local" and share our time between California, New Zealand and other ports of travel. But even with such a great reason to get rid of stuff, it's been an interesting challenge, and many times I found myself simply stuck.

As part of the process I decided I was tired of doing a manual back up of my computer data every week or so, and I bought a 2 terabyte hard drive that's supposed to do continual backups.. That was an interesting experience as it took almost 2 weeks to back up the computer, an external drive and our music drive.

And of course everything dropped to a crawl during the backup process. So I learned from that process that the backup drive gets connected at night when I'm not doing anything else & it can hog resources. Not quite what I wanted, but close enough I guess.

Once I had everything backed up, I started reorganizing files and deleting duplicates as well as anything that was way old and no longer needed.  An fascinating thing happened – as the space cleared, my energy lifted.

That's when I started hitting gold!!  I found several projects that were in various stages of completion, including one that was 3/4 finished when I had to set it aside about 7 years ago to take care of other things.

So I pulled it out and have been working to finish it up. It's amazing how much energy that in itself has created. And now I'm excited about the project again, even if I've changed my focus and it ends up a somewhat different product.

I've also begun to prioritize the other projects I still want to work on, and deciding which ones to let go of. As I complete what's in front of me, it's freeing up more energy to do what I want. Which makes it that much easier to focus on what's important to me now.

The key has always been taking action. Especially when you feel you are stuck. It's isn't always necessary to take massive action, you just have to start somewhere.  Your momentum and focus will build as you create the space for them.

Taking those first few steps towards clearing out the clutter in my life has resulted in giving me back the ability to focus.

Lessons from the 2010 Olympics

Andy Jenkins wrote a very interesting blog post about Shaun White and lessons from Shaun's gold medal run that can be applied to list building (of all things!). I found it not only an interesting read, but it also inspired me to remember the individual stories I saw unfold during the Olympics and how they affected me.  I left the following response on his blog, and decided I wanted to share it with you, challenge you to think about what inspired you, and invite you to share your own inspirations with me.

The 2010 Olympics in Vancouver provided so many amazing athletes and so many lessons!  Among my favorites:

My heart goes out to figure skater Joanne Rochette whose mother passed away just 2 days before her event started. Her strength and commitment were obvious in the short program, ultimately resulting in a bronze medal. The closest thing I can think of is how my lamaze lessons kicked in when my daughter was born – even though I was exhausted, I didn’t have to think – my body had been so well trained that it knew what to do and did it. Keep practicing and reinforcing – you will automatically do what’s needed when the time comes.

There’s Shaun White, of course, having obvious fun while doing things most people gasp at. (You can read Andy's take on Shaun – which inspired this post – at his blog.)

There’s Evan Lysacek – the hardest working man in figure skating – whose gold medal shows exactly what happens when you are unstoppable and you put in your time perfecting your gifts. He’s a gentleman who at only 24 showed incredible grace when quizzed about Plushenko’s antics. And he’s gorgeous, too.

Apolo Ohno with 8 medals making him the most decorated winter Olympian from the U.S. Every incremental advance adds up over time.

The U.S. Women’s short track relay team who continued skating despite being so far behind. They ended up with a bronze due to a disqualification of the Korean team – don’t give up, regardless of how dismal it may look, do your best and finish the race.

The U.S. Men’s nordic combined relay team – bringing home the first ever medal in the sport (a silver), a grueling sport that requires stamina, pacing and solid performance.

Team Canada for winning an amazing overtime hockey game against the U.S. – when we had already beaten them once – and giving our good neighbors to the north a stellar finish to their hosted games.

And of course, Steve Holcomb, with record setting runs and a gold medal! A man who nearly lost his eyesight and who looks more like my dear husband than a star athlete. A man who said they were treating the second day like it was a separate race and they just wanted to do it like they had the day before. The lesson – do your best. Then keep repeating the strategies you know are successful.

Every athlete who performed at the Olympics is a hero and an inspiration. No one gets there without commitment, hard work and vision.