I develop my “Lessons for the Month of…” post ideas from the month that just passed. Usually, after I finish a blog post, I’m mentally drained. That is a good time to just “tune in” to my inner self and think about what I’d like to write about for the next month. The blog post begins at that point with my writing the title, a few sentences of my idea for that month, and then I let it “stew” for a bit until I’m ready to write. What is fascinating to me is how much the topic correlates to actual events in my life, like I had planned the event to support my blog post idea! And, the realization hit me this morning: I’ve been executing on my ideas all month and see the accomplishment. (BTW, as I edit this, there is a loud snoring coming from my dog who graces me with his presence today. It is a comforting sound to hear a creature so trusting that he sleeps soundly on the floor next to me. I’m enjoying my present today. ❤ )
Here are the notes I wrote to myself last month: “Write about how important an idea is, and that one must “execute” the idea because an idea without execution is just a dream. Make your dream a reality through planning, planner peace.”
Well, Dear Reader, once I put my idea in storage for the month, I usually let the idea go to either root for further examination in the following month, or to totally get dumped with a new and emerging idea or event. I have given myself the ability to pivot whenever I feel the creative juices flow in a different direction. Funnily enough, however, I’ve never done the latter and just scrapped an idea for my ideas have always had some kernel or nugget of truth in the month that just passed. Isn’t that interesting? Anyway, I had planned to discuss the importance of acting on an idea and that is just what I’m doing these days and, to my surprise, it feels great!
In my notes, I mention “planner peace” which many of you may not relate to this, or be familiar with the term. (For me, this is a key tool to anchor me in my thinking.) For those of us who enjoy all things productivity, planner peace is like a type of Nirvana. For those uninitiated, planner peace is defined as “…When you find the perfect system and style….w(h)ere every planner wants to be. There are many options to consider – size, functionality, style and much more.” Planner peace is something I’ve strived for each day – trying to be better and accomplish everything in my heart’s desire, all rolled up into a paper journal or organization system.
I’ve recently found this planner peace in my life but not in the way you may think. After years of videos, different planning styles, using “Frankenplanners” which are combinations of multiple systems, studying technology for productivity, and everything in between, I realized that nothing works if you don’t use it — which kept happening to me. I felt like a personal failure each time I failed. Then, I watched a Skillshare course on “Planner Peace” by this instructor who is so inspiring to me. Rather than beating myself up over yet another failure, I began to accept that this try did not work – AND it was only a try so rather than wallow, why not assess what worked and what failed…. and why, and gave myself a bit of tolerance to try again. (Not my normal M.O.) In doing so, I realized that I loved writing things down but not everything, that I wanted something that was pretty and made me happy (sorry, plain paper), and that I could also add my own flair – if I wanted to.
I settled on a Happy Planner for my pretty needs, a horizontal layout which gives me just enough room for what I want to record, and stickers for little notes and to add some bling. I can be found adding stickers to my planner during long meetings where I’m in listen only mode. I found that if I’m busy with my hands, I can listen a bit better, too, as I’m not mentally distracted from the subject matter. Unfortunately (or fortunately?), after this month of endless meetings, my planner is decorated all the way through October! (And, having this all set up makes me so happy!)
And, speaking of endless meetings, I also began to write down my One Thing each day in the different areas of my life that are – right now – extremely important and part of my focus. They are: personal, home and work. That is it, folks. Three One Things done each day for me to feel like the day was a success.
And, that, right there is the key: Feeling like a success. While my planner for this month really shows how busy I was, the colors, notes, and stickers really enforced that I am busy, and that I was able to really “level up” these areas of my life through this extreme focus. My house is clean, my work is caught up, and I have found such a great new You Tube inspiration that I’m not willing to share…yet. Throughout the month on a few too many days my One Thing was “meetings” which, in the past, I never accounted for. However, when you have ten meetings in an eight-hour day, “meetings” become a work task. (I never recorded my meetings as a “task” before, always wondering why I felt like I hadn’t accomplished anything that day. When you think about the schedule, it’s a wonder I even had lunch!) I also stopped deliberately multi-tasking during these meetings by focusing on other work that needs to get done; adding stickers to my planner doesn’t require a lot of thought so my attention can be directed to the meeting and not what I’m not accomplishing by sitting in “listen only” mode. I also recognized that the idea of multi-tasking is not a healthy mindset for me. I mentally benefit from the ability to focus on my One Thing, complete my tasks, and then, if I have time, add any additional work or chores. To try and be or do so many things at once dishonors myself and the work, too, for it cannot be my best work.
This realization allowed me to really use my planner in a more productive way; a tool that helps me to mind the future and today. Anything related to the past is documented and I can easily go back to view that, too, so the past is in my mental past, too. Keeping my mind in focus for “today” has been a struggle as I tend to live my life in a future mindset. I’ve realized that I haven’t always been happiest in the present moment, living with a mindset of “In the Meantime“….like I’ll do this right now because future me will want something else when X happens. Well, folks, X ain’t coming any time soon so why not enjoy right now, give it all you got, and let X take care of itself? I defer many times to “future living” which I plan to write a series about (How ironic!). “Future Living” is my term for my mindset each day and how I can sometimes be so focused on tomorrow that I miss out on today. (Do you do this?) I, unknowingly, compromise today for the idea that tomorrow brings something better. In the planner world, however, we can be about the future — recording appointments, goals, birthdays…you name it!
However, if you aren’t also recording the “today”, you may not act on any of those wonderful goals you have written in your planner because there was no action plan. I improperly used my planner as I had no “action plan” for today to reach those goals; I only recorded future events and goals and failed to construct the steps needed to reach (Key pro-tip, folks!) those future goals through changing my today. (Enjoy this TedTalk on the gap between planning and execution.) Because of the lack of planning for “today”, I did not open my planner each day and missed being able to execute on my long term goal through a short term activity for today. So, by finding my Planner Peace, and allowing myself to fail a few times, I’ve actually been more productive! Now, as I look back at July, I don’t dwell in what I didn’t accomplish because I can see by all of my entries, my color coding, stickers, and post its — I was damn busy! By creating a daily plan with my One Thing identified, I can do these small incremental tasks to achieve the larger goal. Because I’ve taken the time for myself each day, I don’t worry about what I didn’t do (past) or what I have to do (future) because today is where my head is at and my action plan for today says “Begin Wobble (August) post.” And, there it is. Check. Peace.
(Note: As I edit this post, it is August 29th and I wrote it a few weeks ago when inspired. Since then, I failed to properly plan each day and fell into old comfortable habits of letting my email dictate my priorities. I’m editing this feeling a bit uninspired and lethargic. The inspiration in my post renews my faith that, in all things, today ain’t no guarantee. Be okay in the struggle for, in it, comes a diamond of an outcome. I’ve added a new link of a TedTalk about filling the gap between having a plan and executing on said plan.)
I found that I owned over 40 different wine glasses for a person who does not drink wine. These glasses have been unused in my cabinet for the past 20 years and have been screaming (OK, not literally) at me to use them. What I “heard” was this: “I am made for celebrations and parties, not for display!” Glassware has a usefulness so I have always felt okay with collecting it. However, my wine goblets and pretty crystal stemware were not being used for their intended purpose. I decided to “rehome” most of them by donating most to my local
I began to wonder why that is? How can the excess and free space impact me so immediately? I realized through my studies that “things” all have energy and operate at different levels of vibration. Or, the
It is filled with old formal wear that no longer fits, concert t-shirts from the 80s, empty hangers, and all of my holiday decorations. It is time to clear that close because if my green blazer ever fit again, the shoulder pads would rival Joan Collins’ best day and, frankly, I’d never wear the jacket anyway unless it was Halloween and I was revisiting 40 years of history.) Yes, my personal clutter has gotten so bad that in order to clear out an entire room of my house, I need to clear a place to put the stuff out of the way.) So, before I can even work on the office, I plan to de-clutter my guest bedroom closet first which, having done my own closet years ago, should be relatively straight-forward. Once my guest bedroom closet is straightened up, I plan to then begin my office de-clutter. (Now you know why I planned a full week for this.)
I’m already expecting that I will need to purchase cabinets and/or organizational tools to help me better place my things. Before I just go out willy-nilly to purchase something, I want to be really sure on where it is, what it is, and how I will use it. (See #4.)
My own personal negative thinking was out of control and virtually undetectable except in bitter self-talk that was so ingrained, this talk “
Really? What is shocking is how bad this guidance is because wouldn’t any reasonable person think that, if I could do this, I would do this? Does my doctor or therapist really think I like being obese? If you’d taken the time to actually pay attention to me, you’d realize that I’m a highly intelligent and educated woman who is struggling. There was another answer for me and I couldn’t find a decent medical professional to actually help me.
So, now that you are educated in this area, why don’t you examine if you, too, have a fat bias? If you struggle with your weight, honestly consider if a fat bias is preventing you you from realizing your own goals. How might decades of ingrained thinking be impacting you? Are you looking for that magic pill to fix your situation? (Don’t, there isn’t one.) Be kind with yourself and accept that we are all trying our best and that you are a product of your environment and perceptions, self including. It is my hope that this information helps you to fight for what you need and to not let someone else’s – or your own – bias prevent you from living the life you were meant to live. Peace.
The cycle continued until I no longer enjoyed falling down as part of my skating effort, or I was unwilling to risk my physical and mental injuries caused by an accidental fall. Note I said I was unwilling to take the risk. Was this a conscious decision on my part? Nope. Just woke up one day and said, yep, I’m done with falling down. I began to see my falling down as extremely tiresome and, well, painful, and alchemized the desire to not fall down to result in my desire to stop roller skating. The scars of falling down, however, have lived in me for many decades. I have a fear of falling and – up until recently – a fear of humiliation or disappointing my parents. Skating, you ask? Yep. This fear doesn’t necessarily stem from skating but from how I handled the falls and resulting mental anxiety from the idea of falling. This became a personal filter for me, along with many other filters from living life.
she mentions the idea of filters in how we view our lives. “Although we can’t control what happened to us in childhood, as adults we still seem to carry that baggage with us, often without realizing it.” Moorjani continues: “We still view the world through that same old lens that no longer applies! We may thing we’re seeing the truth, but actually we’re viewing the world through our own filters.” (Page 124) I believe that these filters cause us to operate at a certain frequency or vibration – or an energy. The idea of energy has intrigued me for my entire life. (For years, I’ve pondered the question of what makes my heart continue to beat.) Those types of introspection were common for me. I also used to wonder how and why people see things so differently when we all see the same event. Isn’t that fascinating? Take being a witness to a crime. In obtaining the witness’ recollection of the crime or event, each witness will respond very differently, even down to the description of the individual. How does THAT happen? It really boils downs to what we pay attention to and how mentally attuned we are to the situation. If you know that you are in the middle of some event where you may need to recollection the activities of said event, you pay attention. Just like in school, when you know if have a test and haven’t studied, you may pay more attention. It is attention management that is really key in both of these situations, and, frankly, in how we live our lives.
Our filters create an unconscious response that continues to perpetuate the filter, or we are creating our own stories. All the time. I don’t even listen when I’m in the middle of creating my own filtered story because I was operating in a world where my filter was my reality. In trying to always multi-task, I’m giving those filters a lot of room for expansion because I never set my attention on something long enough to even identify my personal filters. (Yuck!) Remember, too, that everyone has their own filters. This is why listening
In fact, the number one definition on the Merriam-Webster online dictionary defines the term “alchemy” as “…
We are all gold just as we are but may not believe that because we’ve actually alchemized our living experiences through the brain’s filtration system and came out with the wrong answer. The idea of disappointing my parents is a filter that is realized by my skating but also comes through in very different ways, too. This single filter is huge and has impacted – or alchemized – my life experiences.
mind. You see, my hands just don’t seem to “see” my creations in the same way as my brain because my hands really don’t execute the vision all too well. My hands are very solid and have served my utilitarian needs quite well, of which I’m extremely thankful. They have not, however, been able to interpret just what my mind’s eye sees to be able to create the masterpieces I dream of. It all ends up in a mess on whatever I’m painting/drawing/sculpting…you name it. (It seems to all end up being ashtrays.) My hands just don’t really keep up with my mind’s eye of what I see.
I just did not have these feelings for my own art as I was way too self-judgmental, a handy trait to have in business but not necessarily for a creative person. I think my mindset was more of a “Why let other’s beat you up when you are doing such a fine job of the task?” This is what art does – it creates an introspection of feeling and expression. Those feelings are what the art evokes and is why we all appreciate art because it makes us all feel….something.
At the same time, I was trying to handle a failing personal relationship. In a deeply personal moment, I read my poetry to my father’s body giving him a piece of me to take with him on his new journey, and I included my poetry in his casket for cremation, like a piece of my heart is always with him. And, THAT, is what art is: A piece of one’s heart.
For those of you unfamiliar with Dr. Kross’ work as I was, linked here is an
This is an easy-to-watch, 30-minute primer for you to see if this book may resonate with you as much as the message resonated with myself. Kross is a professor of psychology and management at the University of Michigan and director of the Emotion and Self Control Laboratory with the University. Or, no slouch. The book is chock-full of referenced information and studies so this is not just one person’s opinion.
Both are excellent reads and touch on very similar subject: the voice inside us. Each tackles the idea of mental chatter, and the source, dangers, and necessity but from different perspectives. This chatter creates the emotions or feelings that then drive our behavior. How we think about something (or, the chatter) really determines how we feel and, accordingly, how we respond. I’ve done quite a lot of blogging on my realization that I even had this voice – and the negativity it espoused. An area that Dr. Kross discusses is about the power of nature and awe in such a unique – yet, not unique – kind of way. This is something that has provided me comfort throughout my life yet I never realized why. How did you feel looking at the photo? Did that sense of wonder give you a bit of a release from your own personal chatter? The comfort of nature and feeling my own smallness has helped me in the past but I was never aware of why. I just knew it worked. With the knowledge I know have from Kross’ book, I can move forward to use the power of nature and awe more deliberately in my life. I’ve learned this month that deliberate intention helps to frame the situation so that we can achieve the maximum amount of benefit from the experience in whatever way we choose.
In a video game I finished called Concrete Genie, the main character (Ash) is chased and bullied by other kids who are struggling with their own demons. Ash is painting his world more beautiful and removing the shadows of leftover emotions in the town. When my character is captured and held by these children, he is unwaveringly calm and not fearful. These bullies ask why he is not scared, he responded that he realized their anger towards him was not about him but about them. You know, it always is that way, even with our own anger. Many times, we mistake this negative thought about one’s self as an external “trigger” and the misunderstandings escalate; this trigger is actually internal and under our own control. Couple this with our inability actually listen with an open mind, these misunderstandings grow and grow, based on a false or misunderstood premise. We then argue over something that is so far and away from the true issue that we forget the real matter and just are trying to be right. (Speaking from experience.)
When my first husband became comatose about three weeks after we were married, I sat for days outside, with my own thoughts, in my Adirondack chair, noticing how the spring came in, watching my backyard begin the ritual of a seasonal change. Being in nature gave me the peace of mind I needed to begin each day and understanding that the world had its own plans and that my little life plans were really unimportant in the larger view of life. This feeling, at its truest, positive sense, was a feeling of awe. Once I settled into the idea that the life I had planned with him was not to be, my greiving became more about missing the person and not the life we were supposed to have – obviously, the life we had planned was not to be. I was crying over the loss of the expectation of life being a certain way. In my daily trips to the hospital, I would open my sunroof in my car to feel the air outside and the sunlight and comfort of being warmly cuddled. This gave me strength to sit by my spouse and ensure he was being being cared for. It was during one of these trips that I felt the extreme release of just giving up as I sat in my car, struggling with my emotions. It felt like a turning point of allowing me to stop mourning something that was never to be. In this, I felt a sense of awe, of smallness. I had figured out something about myself and that my role was to help my spouse exit his life as it was done – and was not going to include me anymore; my life was meant to continue but without him. The awe I felt at this realization was extremely humbling and allowed me to move on, both in my mental space and my heart space.
I figured he was baking for the elves since they did not taste the treats that Santa obviously devoured when visiting our house! To this day, even on the other side of the country which is where I now live, sunsets like this create a sense of awe in me with the fondest of memories, too.
,
found that I loved English chocolate treats, and would enjoy it all. I was so excited to find something new and different each day, too! We traveled to a new site – a
cathedral like Salisbury Cathedral shown here, or stately manor or palace, or museum, or even just the shops in town – and took it all in with a sense of awe. When I would come home, my mother would wonder if I ran out of money since I had lost weight and must have stopped eating at some point during my trip. Very interesting that I would lose weight while really enjoying life. Yet, in my day to day, I struggle with weight and body image issues. (Not sure what to make of this but I find the link with awe very fascinating and something I will be exploring for myself.)
Some people experience it when they see Bruce Springsteen in concert, read an Emily Dickinson poem, or take in the Mona Lisa at the Louvre. Others may have awe-drenched experiences when they see something extraordinary in person, like a high-stakes sports event or a legendary object like the U.S.. Constitution, or witness something intimately monumental, like an infant taking its first steps. Evolutionary psychologists theorize that we developed this emotion because it helps unite us with others by reducing our self-interest, which provides us with a survival advantage because groups fare better against threats and can achieve loftier goals by working together.” Fascinating work, Dr. Kross, with tons of practical application.
This is a new series I will be starting as a reflection of the month that just passed. I do so much living in my head with all of my best and worst memories keeping me company. Instead of just keeping them all company myself, you, Dear Reader, will be pleased to hear that I would prefer to leave the past back in my rear view mirror. Like many of you, we can do so much living in our memories that these experiences color our perspective of today. Today cannot be compared to anything: past or future. Sort of like, living in the present without the noose of the past, looking forward to what will be. (I highly recommend it.)

clearly is not “life or death” unless one is in 
Perspective – in our news and our lives – is so important to maintain. When something doesn’t feel right to you, it helps to distance yourself and examine the situation without emotion, without judgment, and just be within the feeling. I’m currently working through the idea of resistance and how the resistance to the feeling actually magnifies the situation. I’ve come to also realize that how someone else “feels” is not really my business but their own. If feelings are to help shape perspective, who am I to deny you, Dear Reader, the ability to shape your own world just how you’d like it to be…for you.
As I began to contemplate the “for me” aspect to my life, I began to journal and this helped me to get my thoughts out of my head and on to paper. Since I am a visual person, I’ve learned that writing things down when I’m bothered or when I have an important decision to make really helps clarify my thinking. I guess “seeing is believing” holds true in this aspect of mentagility, too. I’ve realized that everything in my life has happened for me to learn and respond to…there is no emotion that would need to be included here although I have certainly spiced my life with all kinds of emotions – good, bad, and everything in between. We all have done this, haven’t we? It is how we are taught to live our lives – or it is the lack of teaching at a young age that is now requiring correction as an adult. I cannot imagine what my life would look like now had I learned this at age 16 when first presented with these aspects of myself. I was unready for such knowledge as this greater understanding only comes after years of experience for the knowledge to really sink in. About two years ago, I heard the other voice that Singer describes and was startled at the realization of the voice in my head…and what it was saying that kept me so small. I wrote an entire blog post of the experience, too, without knowing just what happened and have an understanding of what this event meant to me and my future.