Managing uncomfortable processes…thrive or struggle. WANT is the answer.
I met one morning this week with a coaching client who is working very hard on managing the processes that will yield the results he …
I met one morning this week with a coaching client who is working very hard on managing the processes that will yield the results he …
I was with clients this past weekend in a workshop setting. And a point was made by the presenter that sometimes in order to get …
“NO” defines us…where we set the limits of how far we will go, how much pain we’ll endure, or how much we will spend….eventually we …
When we were kids, our parents helped us with a million things. Eating. Tying our shoes. Putting on layers of clothing for going outside in the Winter. On top of that most likely they taught us to help others.
From Volume 4, Issue 7: If you’re one of the 250 million Americans who watched the saga of missing Caylee Anthony unfold over the past few years, how do you feel about the verdict?
From Volume 4, Issue 7:U.S. corporations spend an estimated $2.7 million per year on in-house wellness programs to help employees stop smoking, lose weight, and get fit. They aren’t investing for purely altruistic reasons. They’re investing in their own health, dramatically cutting healthcare costs. Yet they—and, I am willing to bet, you too—are neglecting to invest in another area that is costing American companies billions each year: playing nice.
From Volume 4, Issue 7:At Tim O’Neil’s Rally School and Car Control Center in the White Mountains of New Hampshire, students learn how to avoid “committing to the crash.” Important for the survival of rally car drivers. But in a very real and damaging way, we’re all committing to the crash in myriad ways every day.
From Volume 4, Issue 6: Do you remember the first time you drummed up the courage to kiss your girlfriend or boyfriend? Everything changed, right? How about the first time you moved over to the driver’s side of the car and took the wheel? The first time you raised your hand in class? The time you decided to quit that job or take that ballroom dancing class? In just one moment, you changed your life, and you can do it again whenever you like.
From Volume 4, Issue 6: Your spouse needs to lose some weight. Your boss needs to change how she deals with people. Your young adult child needs to stop partying and get serious about his education. If you find yourself thinking about everyone else’s bad habits, you may have the worst habit of all.