The Question That Could Change Your 2015 (And Your Life)

So, if you will, bring to mind your life right now.
Your romantic relationship.
Your relationship with your children…siblings…parents.
Your work life.
Your health.
Your lifestyle.
Your relationship with money.
Your spiritual practice.

Think about…
Where you get reactionary.
Where anxiety spikes.
Where you feel drained.
What you’re enduring.
What you long for but don’t have.

Here’s the question that will change 2015 and your life, if you allow it to:

“Are you willing not to recognize yourself a year from now?”

Please take a moment to let the question sink in. Perhaps read it again.
And again.

It’s a perfectly phrased question because it begins with the most important factor: are you willing?

If you’re not, I suppose we’re done and you can return to your life as-is.

But if you are willing, shall we explore what’s possible and how you might do it?

Let’s take the second element of the question: “not recognizing yourself.
If they were unrecognizable to you one year from now, what would be changed in your:

Romantic relationship?
Relationship with your children…siblings…parents?
Work life?
Health?
Lifestyle?
Relationship with money?
Spiritual practice?

What about the places where you get reactionary and anxious now? In one year—if you were unrecognizable to your current self–what would your responses to those things look like? And what would life be like then?

What about the areas that drain you? Or those people, conditions and things you repeatedly tolerate in quiet desperation. If, in one year, you were unrecognizable to yourself today–what you would be doing with them?

And how would your life be different because of it?

“Are you willing not to recognize yourself a year from now?”

What’s your answer on this second go-‘round?

Maybe you’re thinking, “Yes, I’m willing but how do I become unrecognizable to my self?”

Scarlett Has the Key

Back ten years ago, when I was a personal transformation coach, I coined the phrase “Scarlett O’Hara Moment” to illustrate the critical moment of change in any human being’s life: the moment when we have a fierce reckoning with ourselves, and with our God, because the soil underneath us is dried, devoid of nutrients…and we’ve gone without too long.

We feel weary and hopeless, on our hand and knees…but then, something powerful rises within us; the sense that we are not supposed to live this way, that things can be better, that we can make them better. And we get to our feet. We raise our fist to the sky, train our eyes on whatever power needs to hear us, and we declare, in no uncertain terms, as Scarlett did: “As God is my witness, as God is my witness they’re not going to lick me. I’m going to live through this and when it’s all over, I’ll never be hungry again. If I have to lie, steal, cheat or kill. As God is my witness, I’ll never be hungry again!

It is a deeply private moment that no one sees and perhaps no one ever knows about, but in it, a promise is made. An unbreakable covenant between you, yourself and whatever is there to listen. You declare that no externals will take you down. You will live through the drought until it rains, and once it does, you will never, never, never go thirsty again. No matter what you have to do (and sometimes it is far scarier than lying, stealing, cheating or killing; it is burning boats, saying good-bye, saying ‘no’, letting go, forgiving, giving up control)—you will do them, you will do them all, because as God is your witness, you will never ______again!

This is the moment that creates change. I have never known or seen any other way. You cannot expect a mountain to move by gently asking it to. It requires something profound rising up from the deep well within you, a fierce decision that you are done with the old; that you deserve the new, the all-new, the all-new you. I had such a moment as I saw my 50th birthday looming over me this last year—and what it provoked me to do, and the transformation that resulted; the fact that I am unrecognizable to the self I was just 6 months ago–was made possible only because I raised my fist to the sky.

The transformation we’re seeing all across the globe is happening only because people are rising to their feet and declaring an end to the old.

This is the time of year when we typically seek the new–but by March, our ideas and intentions have pretty much fallen away as we slip back asleep into our status quo. This could happen to you; probably has every year you’ve been alive. On January first, you are passionate that your relationship be more intimate, or that your work be more meaningful. You feel the exhilaration of swimming against the default-stream of your life and charging after new possibility. But when the current of your life gushes strong again, you allow yourself to get carried away by it. Again.

This is because there was no stake-in-the-ground, as-God-is-my-witness, final, fierce, no-going-back-ever-no-matter-what-it-takes, Scarlett O’Hara Moment.

If you don’t generate one, you will most likely live another year staring down at the cracked, arid land beneath your feet.

“Are you willing to recognize yourself a year from now?”

The question was altered. Did you read it with the missing word?

Are you willing, one year from now, to still be involved in toxic or empty relationships? To still be in a job that steals your life force? To still be struggling with money? Still be stuck in your business? Still feel anxious? Sick? Lonely? Restless?

If your answer is a resounding, “NO!!!” then you are on the cusp of your own Scarlett O’Hara Moment!

Do This Before You Can Talk Yourself Out Of It!

Continue with the picture I was just painting for you. Picture yourself, one year from now, in the same life. Go through every single area listed in the first two paragraphs. And agitate yourself. You must get yourself to a state of being utterly, completely, 100% done with the old that no longer fits you.

I encourage you to bring yourself to the floor, or to a place on the earth outdoors, and allow the torrent of emotions within you to be unleashed that arise at the idea of enduring more of the same for another full year.

You cannot be tame, tacit or tolerant in this moment! You must allow your emotions to rule here. State, out loud, what you’ve been enduring, what you’ve been struggling with and allow the pain of it all to coalesce.

And then, either close your eyes or look up to the sky, and feel the possibility of the new. What is there in a new future that is not here now? Who is there? Who are you?

It is there, with that glimpse of what is possible and of what you deserve, that you will rise to your feet. What comes next is all your own, but it must come from a decision. Decidere in latin means to “cut off.” This is the moment when you cut off from the old: the status-quo, tolerating, stifling, struggling, longing, heart-ache, guilt, shame, regret, grief, and all other experiences that shrink you and the life you are here to live.

Raise your fist—(truly do it)—and with a determination befitting all that is worthy of you—make your covenant. “As ___ is my witness, I will never ____ again! _______ is not going to best me. I will live through this and when it’s over, I will never _______ again. If I have to ___________ and ________ and ________I will never ______ again!

And then, stay true and on-course with the rolling current of your powerful declaration. Allow the strength of that promise that rent the air to take you to new places and into all new behavior.

Then, before you know it, you will come to the end of December one year from now. You will take yourself to the same spot (if it still exists) that you brought yourself to this year. And you will hear me ask: “Do you recognize yourself?”

I can see your smile. It is brilliant.

Happy New Year. Happy New You.

Unsure of Your Purpose? 8 Questions to Reveal An Answer…

I was asked by a colleague, Jill Berquist, to be on her weekly community call and speak to “those in transition” about Inspired Leadership. Now, I’m used to speaking to entrepreneurs—and visionary ones, at that—so I had to take a few moments to consider what I could say to folks who aren’t sure where their feet will land next. They want some sort of direction.

What I wanted them to understand, first and foremost, is that they have it in them to lead. They’ve been around the block a time or two and have amassed a storehouse of knowledge and wisdom. My job was to help them see that there is a natural leadership role waiting for them. I ended up taking them through a series of questions that I believe will help anyone—an established entrepreneur, or you, if you’re not sure yet of your purpose in the world.

But first, we need to define “leader”—which everyone and his mother has done for the last sixty years. But here’s my definition—and note the four distinct parts: A leader 1) has something to say 2) that is unique, 3) relevant—and has 4) direction for people, a clear sense of the destination that would be most helpful for them.

An inspired leader has something to say that inspires others to a destination that has them aspire to something greater.

If that seems daunting–and I thought perhaps it would seem so to the audience on this call–it isn’t at all and I wanted them to know that immediately. So I told them that the fact is, all of us have opinions about what is most helpful for others. We all have a “destination” we believe is most helpful for others to get to. It’s just a fact. Even those of us who believe in “live and let live” and don’t like to put forward opinions…have an opinion about that, and probably believe that philosophy is a very helpful destination for everyone!

So, I had the attendees look at the idea of leadership and purpose with the following questions. Are you ready to take yourself through them?

  1. What area of life do you feel you have an opinion about? You have knowledge and wisdom because of some experience in it? The 6 areas of life are:
    1. Romantic relationships
    2. Health and wellness
    3. Parenting/Family
    4. Finance
    5. Career
    6. Mental/Spiritual Potential
  2. Now, in just 1 sentence: What is the most amazing or critical thing you learned about that area when you were going through your experience of it?
  3. What was the pain you had PRIOR to that realization?
    What feelings did you have that hurt?
  1. How did you get out of that pain?
  1. Imagine having about twelve people with the same pain in a room with you. Answer this in one very succinct sentence: What opinion would you offer them about how to alleviate the pain? (One sentence.)
  1. If you could alleviate this pain for thousands, would this satisfy you profoundly?
    1. If not, what is missing?
  1. If “yes,”—What would you encourage them to aspire to? What “destination” (intangible, perhaps) would you inspire them to reach for?
  1. What vision comes to mind for the way that you would lead them there?

Of course, as I said, as a leader, you will have something unique to say (and relevant.) We’ve covered the “relevant” piece in these questions. Now, the final question—the BIG one—is what could you say to them that is provocative and fresh…new to the ears?

Good weekend thinking, don’t you think?

(BTW, that’s the work I do. You may always email me to find out more!)

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