LIFE COACHING
Some of these ideas and insights about happiness from Bob Tschannen-Moran, President LifeTrek Coaching Internationalmay inform your thinking :
If we want to be happy, if we want to do good and to make life more wonderful for one and all, then we would do well to make the following twelve shifts on the trek of life:
1. Avoid Control / Embrace Freedom.
As human beings we have a natural desire to control things. And over
the millennia we have developed a wide variety of control systems,
including magic, religion, politics, and science. But sometimes, in
spite of our best efforts, those systems fail to work. Sometimes, the
panacea fails to cure, the security fails to protect, and the foam
insulation still flies off the fuel tank. To think we can control the
course of life is magical thinking that we best give up if we hope to
promote spiritual wellness.
Better to embrace freedom instead.
Freedom from attachment to particular outcomes, from addiction to
particular practices, and from adherence to particular illusions. We
must intentionally give these up if we hope to be spiritually well. And
to stay well it takes more than just intention. .
2. Avoid Cynicism / Embrace Possibility.
Once we give up on our ability to control particular outcomes, it's
easy for the pendulum to swing all the way over to cynicism. "Why
bother!" we exclaim. "If there are no systems that are guaranteed to
work, then why strive for anything at all? Better to just live for the
moment, since tomorrow we may die."
Although living in the
moment is an important part of mindfulness, to stop striving for
anything is to ignore the possibility that human beings do have a
natural ability to influence things. Just because nothing works all of
the time does not mean that nothing works any of the time. In fact, the
possibilities are limitless. Spiritual wellness brings this awareness
to the forefront. We approach life not with guarantees as to what the
future holds but with confidence as to what holds the future.
3. Avoid Manipulation / Embrace Mindfulness.
Unfortunately, this confidence can incline us to manipulation. We may
not be able to control the future, but perhaps we can beg or barter our
way to the top. "Do me this one favor," we promise the Great One, "and
I'll be good." But the Great One cuts no deals. Not even "the power of
positive thinking" can make everything turn out all right. As it turns
out, positive thinking is not very powerful at all.
But that
doesn't mean we should stop thinking or paying attention to life.
Indeed, paying attention is a powerful spiritual practice. Instead of
trying to control life with the power of mind over matter, we seek to
notice life with the attention of mind to matter. Instead of whining
about life because it doesn't conform to our expectations, we engage
with life as it proceeds in the here and now. The more mindful we
become in the present moment, the more opportunities we will discover
to move forward in the direction of our dreams.
4. Avoid Pessimism / Embrace Responsibility.
While the cynic questions whether anything will ever work out, the
pessimist knows that nothing will ever work out. In some cases, that's
because pessimists blame the world. In other cases, that's because they
blame themselves. Either way, they suffer from what M. Scott Peck calls
"disorders of responsibility," taking on either too little or too much
responsibility to be spiritually well.
Better to embrace the
ability to respond, regardless of what comes our way. In good times and
bad, we can be responsible. But don't confuse this with being
accountable. Accountability is about answering for something, as in
taking the credit or the blame. Responsibility is about engaging with
something, as in giving our best selves to every situation. In both
challenging and comfortable times, we can take responsibility for life.
5. Avoid Distraction / Embrace Silence. There are many
things that can distract us from examining our lives. Some of us live
at a frenetic pace, allowing precious little time for reflection and
planning. Others are numbed by chemical and social mendicants, such as
alcohol or television. Still others have never learned to appreciate
the value of critical thinking. Whatever may be your distraction,
Socrates was right when he observed that "an unexamined life is not
worth living."
That's because we have to go deep if we want to
give our lives a sense of meaning and purpose. These things do not
emerge without some measure of wrestling and contemplation. So finding
moments of silence, both short and long, becomes an important spiritual
discipline. There we can learn to release our fears and to approach
others with gratitude. There, in the absence of noise, we can learn the
truth about ourselves and about our place in the family of things.
6. Avoid Exclusivity / Embrace Diversity.
It's easy to get seduced by the word "exclusive." It sounds so
attractive, favorable, and special. From exclusive offers to exclusive
communities, we find ourselves drawn to privileges and perks. But this
is not the road to life. Exclusivity does more harm than good. It sets
people up, one against the other, in competitive us-versus-them
relationships. It tears at the fabric of human community and undermines
our ability to be spiritually well.
Better to embrace diversity
as though the whole human family were of one body, mind, and spirit.
"We have learned to fly the air like birds and swim the sea like fish,"
Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. once noted in a sermon, "but we have not
learned the simple art of living together as brothers and sisters. Our
abundance has brought us neither peace of mind nor serenity of spirit."
That comes only when we learn to embrace the rich multidimensionality
of the human community as not just a fact of life but as a positive
value to be celebrated and encouraged.
7. Avoid Anxiety / Embrace Mystery.
We live in an age of anxiety. Troubles and terrors, both of natural and
human origin, are real. But that does not mean we can afford to live
from that anxiety. Not only is anxiety unproductive, it undermines
creativity, obscures possibility, and negates temerity. It brings us up
short in the game of life.
Which is especially unfortunate given
the mysterious way things have of working out. What may, at first, seem
to be a catastrophe often appears, in hindsight, to be a blessing.
Indeed, the very nature of our quantum universe argues against anxiety,
which is itself a remnant of the Newtonian principles of cause and
effect. If that's the only way things happen, then we have reason for
anxiety. But if the universe can jump natural barriers, respond to
subtle energies, and generate synchronicities then we can embrace
mystery as our way of being in the world.
8. Avoid Aimlessness / Embrace Hope.
It's hard to say what represents the most frequent reason people come
to coaching. Many, of course, want assistance to make their dreams come
true. Many others, however, want assistance to remember their dreams.
Life has become an aimless routine of getting up and going through the
motions. There is little to no engagement with a personal or
professional sense of cause. As a result, life has become empty, flat,
and devoid of meaning.
Enter the mystery of hope. Working with a
coach is itself an act of hope. The notion that we can together discern
the themes and dreams of a person's life implies that we believe they
are there, even when they are buried. Learning to manifest those themes
and dreams is yet another act of hope. It is to come from the place
that believes we can make a difference in the world, even if we sing as
but one solitary voice. Even when the odds are stacked against success,
hope enables us to make a strong and vital witness to the things we
hold dear.
9. Avoid Superiority / Embrace Humility. Just
as confidence in what holds the future can incline us to manipulation,
so can hope incline us to a superiority complex. We can become so
certain of our witness that we can bowl people over along the way. We
start showing off, taking credit, and demanding privileges for all that
we do, say, have, and are. But this is not the way of true mastery and
it sows the seeds of our own demise.
Remembering that there are
no guarantees in life, that we exercise influence rather than control,
it is both more appropriate and more effective to become a humble
witness to the things we hold dear rather than a haughty one. No one
enjoys people with an attitude! But humble people, who know the ground
from which they come and the shoulders on which they stand, attract the
energy that makes their hopes and dreams come true. They don't boast of
what they know; in fact, they hardly notice what they know as they seek
to give themselves away in service to others.
10. Avoid Inferiority / Embrace Beauty.
But humility is not to be confused with inferiority. Humble people do
not think poorly of themselves, they just don't think of themselves.
And they certainly don't think poorly of others. Inferiority breeds
failure since it becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy. If you think,
feel, speak, act, and pray as though you don't have what it takes to
make things work, then things won't work. If all you can see is
impossibility, then nothing is possible. If you deny your access to
intuition and instinctive intelligence, then you won't notice the
things that make for success.
Embracing beauty is an antidote
for inferiority. No matter how poorly you think of yourself or the
world in which we live, noticing beauty will lift your spirits and move
the human community in the direction we need to go. Sometimes beauty is
easy to see, especially when we are surrounded by nature, art, culture,
and love. Other times we have to look hard, such as when we suffer the
indignities and shattering blows of life. Either way, beauty is always
there for the noticing and doing so makes all the difference in the
world.
11. Avoid Scarcity / Embrace Justice. In a world
that's drowning in a sea of abundance, where self-storage has become a
bigger industry than the motion-picture industry, it's hard to believe
that people still suffer from a scarcity mentality. But this mentality
-- that there just isn't enough to go around -- lies behind the
practices and policies of many institutions, movements, and people in
the world today. Time, money, energy, and love are all viewed as
limited commodities that need to be traded and protected carefully.
So
instead of pursuing justice for all, we end up pursuing justice for
some. We can't even see the perspective of oppressed peoples, global
ecology, and world peace since these things threaten to undermine our
standard of living and our sense of security in the world. But what if
our standards are the very things that contribute to our insecurity?
Spiritual leaders the world over, from every tradition, have long made
this connection. Apart from justice, there is no chance for wellness of
any sort to flourish and prosper.
12. Avoid Selfishness / Embrace Love.
Selfishness is the personal manifestation of scarcity thinking. Lest we
fail to have, do, or be enough, we hoard everything that comes our way.
"More, more, more" and "mine, mine, mine" become our mantras. We can
even come to justify this in terms of extreme self-care. Unless we take
good care of ourselves, we reason, we can't take good care of others.
So we live selfishly with the hope that it will somehow benefit one and
all.
Fortunately or unfortunately, that's not the way the world
works. Self-care is not a product of selfish living but a byproduct of
pursuing generosity, justice, peace, and love. These are the things
that make for spiritual wellness and all other forms of wellness. The
more we extend ourselves for others, not because of who they are and
what they can do for us but because of who we are and what we can do
for them, the more joy we will find in life and love.
These,
then, are the twelve shifts that make for happiness: from control to
freedom, from cynicism to possibility, from manipulation to
mindfulness, from pessimism to responsibility, from distraction to
silence, from exclusivity to diversity, from anxiety to mystery, from
aimlessness to hope, from superiority to humility, from inferiority to
beauty, from scarcity to justice, and from selfishness to love. These
are the things that make life worth living. The more we incorporate
them into our daily living the more we will contribute and the closer
we will be to the Great Spirit of life.
REFLECTION :
Which of these shifts do you practice most regularly?
Which ones do you practice only occasionally?
Which ones would you like to practice more?
How could you make all of them more a part of your life?