Welcome to The Life Studio a place where you can rest up, take off your shoes and be yourself
Tuesday, 7 August 2012
Here is your assignment....
1. YOU WILL RECEIVE A BODY
you may like it you may not, but it will be yours for the entire period of your time here
2. YOU WILL LEARN LESSONS
You are enrolled in a full-time informal school called life. Each day in this school you will have the opportunity to learn lessons. You may like the lessons or think them irrelevant and stupid
3. THERE ARE NO MISTAKES. ONLY LESSONS
Growth is a process of trial and error and experimentation. The 'failed' experiments are as much a part of the process as the experiments that work
4. A LESSON IS REPEATED UNTIL IT IS LEARNED
A lesson will be presented to you in various forms until you have learned it, then you can go onto the next lesson
5. LEARNING LESSONS DOES NOT END
There is no part of life that does not contain its lessons. If you are alive their are lessons to be learned
6. "THERE" IS NO BETTER THAN "HERE"
When your "there" has become "here", you will simply obtain another "there" that will again look better than "here"
7. OTHERS ARE MERELY MIRRORS OF YOU
You cannot love of hate something about another person unless it reflects to you something you love or hate about yourself
8. WHAT YOU MAKE OF YOUR LIFE IS UP TO YOU
You have all the tools and resources you need, what you do with them is up to you. The choice is yours
9. THE ANSWERS LIE INSIDE YOU
The answers to life's questions lie inside you. All you need to do is look, listen and trust
10. WHETHER YOU THINK YOU CAN OR CAN'T, IN EITHER CASE YOU'LL BE RIGHT
THINK ABOUT IT.......
Thursday, 10 May 2012
Gut Instincts, friend or foe?
Do you always trust your instincts? Some of the most stressed and anxious clients I've worked with have had one major thing in common. They ignore their gut instincts. Some can't even hear their instincts anymore they have turned up the dial on the chatter in their head so high it drowns them out. They create a life full of distractions, so there is never a moments silence for the instincts to get through with their message. Others hear their instincts loud and clear, but are afraid to trust themselves. The theory is that 'gut instinct' is the intelligence of the unconcious mind.
Stress is created when the gut says 'no' and the head says 'yes', or when the gut says 'yes' and the head says 'no'. This battle creates an inner conflict which causes you disharmony.
Trusting my gut instincts has actually saved my life. I had already had one malignant tumour removed, and my gut was telling me that the tiny freckle appearing on my left side wasn't right. Two consultants looked at it thoroughly, and said it was fine. My instincts were literally screaming at me 'this is not fine'. This gave me the confidence to go back again unhappy about their opinion. After a biopsy it was confirmed, it was indeed another potentially deadly tumour. Because it was caught early, I had an excellent prognosis. This just proved to me that even listening to my gut over expert opinion is important.
Of course it isn't always quite so straight forward. A friend was recently telling me that she felt her boyfriend was lying to her about working away for some of the weekend and not coming back until Saturday evening. (he often worked away in the week) 'something just doesn't feel right' she said. This led her to become very upset at the conclusion that he was cheating on her. It turned out that her instincts were indeed right, he did lie to her about working away for the weekend. After tears and MI6 style questioning he finally admitted that he had wanted to play golf with his colleagues on the Saturday, instead of the planned family day, and felt it would be easier to just say he was working. Her instincts had acurrately detected a lie, but she had convinced herself that he was cheating, when in fact he just lacked balls. (forgive the pun!)
How do you start trusting your instincts?
1) Like any good relationship, spend time alone listening
2) If it argues with you it is not your gut instinct it's your head
3) Develop trust by going with your intuition more and more
4) Be confident in following your instincts, even if the rest of the world is going the opposite way
FOLLOWING YOUR INSTINCTS + BALLS = A GREAT LIFE
Stress is created when the gut says 'no' and the head says 'yes', or when the gut says 'yes' and the head says 'no'. This battle creates an inner conflict which causes you disharmony.
Trusting my gut instincts has actually saved my life. I had already had one malignant tumour removed, and my gut was telling me that the tiny freckle appearing on my left side wasn't right. Two consultants looked at it thoroughly, and said it was fine. My instincts were literally screaming at me 'this is not fine'. This gave me the confidence to go back again unhappy about their opinion. After a biopsy it was confirmed, it was indeed another potentially deadly tumour. Because it was caught early, I had an excellent prognosis. This just proved to me that even listening to my gut over expert opinion is important.
Of course it isn't always quite so straight forward. A friend was recently telling me that she felt her boyfriend was lying to her about working away for some of the weekend and not coming back until Saturday evening. (he often worked away in the week) 'something just doesn't feel right' she said. This led her to become very upset at the conclusion that he was cheating on her. It turned out that her instincts were indeed right, he did lie to her about working away for the weekend. After tears and MI6 style questioning he finally admitted that he had wanted to play golf with his colleagues on the Saturday, instead of the planned family day, and felt it would be easier to just say he was working. Her instincts had acurrately detected a lie, but she had convinced herself that he was cheating, when in fact he just lacked balls. (forgive the pun!)
How do you start trusting your instincts?
1) Like any good relationship, spend time alone listening
2) If it argues with you it is not your gut instinct it's your head
3) Develop trust by going with your intuition more and more
4) Be confident in following your instincts, even if the rest of the world is going the opposite way
FOLLOWING YOUR INSTINCTS + BALLS = A GREAT LIFE
Wednesday, 4 April 2012
Hands Up for Panic Buying
Come on, hands up! Who queued up for petrol over the past week like a lemming?
Did you pack sandwiches and make it an outing, or sit fuming at the inconvenience?
Maybe, like me, you saw that the gauge on your dashboard was just under half a tank, saw the queues building, the updates on facebook, and after passing three garages resembling a car park, decided to seek fuel and fill up so you could relax for the next week. Some of you (you know who you are) drove around on faith and fumes, ignoring the amber light on the dashboard, laughing in the bored faces of those of us that succumbed to the flash mob fuel queue. And some of you (I don't know who you are) were so desperate you stole fuel from others.
All of this because we believed there was a possibility of a lack of fuel. The reality was there was plenty. It was only our belief that fuelled the lack of fuel. Look at the Northern Rock story. The belief that there was a lack of money, caused a panic, and the fear manifested into a very real lack of money and the downfall of a bank.
The point is, when we believe there is a potential lack, we all behave in different and strange ways. A collective belief is the most powerful entity. Wars have been started and won, lives lost, and lives saved, people's lives changed and others destroyed.
So how might someone behave if they believe they have a lack of love or weren't good enough? What would they most likely be creating in their lives?
Did you pack sandwiches and make it an outing, or sit fuming at the inconvenience?
Maybe, like me, you saw that the gauge on your dashboard was just under half a tank, saw the queues building, the updates on facebook, and after passing three garages resembling a car park, decided to seek fuel and fill up so you could relax for the next week. Some of you (you know who you are) drove around on faith and fumes, ignoring the amber light on the dashboard, laughing in the bored faces of those of us that succumbed to the flash mob fuel queue. And some of you (I don't know who you are) were so desperate you stole fuel from others.
All of this because we believed there was a possibility of a lack of fuel. The reality was there was plenty. It was only our belief that fuelled the lack of fuel. Look at the Northern Rock story. The belief that there was a lack of money, caused a panic, and the fear manifested into a very real lack of money and the downfall of a bank.
The point is, when we believe there is a potential lack, we all behave in different and strange ways. A collective belief is the most powerful entity. Wars have been started and won, lives lost, and lives saved, people's lives changed and others destroyed.
So how might someone behave if they believe they have a lack of love or weren't good enough? What would they most likely be creating in their lives?
Thursday, 12 January 2012
Ode to 2011
I don't know about you, but 2011 was a rather constipated year for me. I relentlessly invented, fearlessly tried new ideas, and let go of and binned anything that no longer served me. In a fury of consistent shovelling I only ever paused to check if anything was being produced at the other end. Nada! Not even a pellet.
So 2012 is all about movement and flow for me, and so far I can feel it coming.....
Captain..'we're gonna need a bigger boat'
Happy 2012 all, welcome aboard.
So 2012 is all about movement and flow for me, and so far I can feel it coming.....
Captain..'we're gonna need a bigger boat'
Happy 2012 all, welcome aboard.
Wednesday, 12 October 2011
X Factor Rehab
Between the USA show and the UK show, last week, I spent
more hours watching X Factor than I did,
What are your negative investments costing you?
PS. Janet to win!
1) going to the gym
2) bathing
3) seeing friends (watching X factor with friends doesn’t
count!)
By the time the finals come and go I will have spent a staggering
54 hours watching, and been subjected to around 144 adverts.(I hear you
laughing smug sky+ owners!) That’s a serious investment. Even on minimum wage I
would be paid £328.32 for my time. So what exactly am I getting in return for
my investment? Entertainment? Relaxation? Improved relationships? Time with
Gary Barlow?
Um….
When I look at how some of my clients are spending their
time, they are always gob smacked. A client last week worked out how many hours
they had invested the previous four weeks worrying. The answer was 168!! On
minimum wage again, if she was being paid for worrying she could put away a
tidy sum of £1021.44. Another business man worked out how many hours he had
been angry about being overlooked and bullied on a project. This was affecting
his sleep, his quality of relationships with his family, and his Sunday nights.
What are your negative investments costing you?
Let it go…
Wednesday, 31 August 2011
8 Tips to Walk the Talk in Any Situation
Who do you picture when you think of a confident person? Alan Sugar, Richard Branson, Oprah Winfrey, someone closer to home, or someone more deluded like David Brent perhaps. Whoever it is we all have an idea of what confidence is, and use that to measure whether we have it or not. Confidence in who you are, and what you do has never been more essential, especially if you are a business leader. It takes confidence to inspire the people who depend on you.
Why is genuine confidence important?
Confidence demonstrates that you are trustworthy, resourceful, knowledgeable and a good bet to be a safe ship in a rocky harbour based on our primitive purpose to survive.
And confidence is not...
David Brent, being the loudest, deluding people, taking risks that harm others or self, dismissing others ideas, aggression, relentlessly telling people you are the greatest or over compensating arrogance.
For many people their perception of confidence is the latter, and therefore no wonder they subconsciously try to avoid appearing too confident. People organically like people who are like them; it is a basic requirement for human social interaction. So if confidence is ultimately about trust and being capable check out these tips to revolutionise yours
1) Smile - Yep easy right. So why do most people dilute their smiles to appear more professional? A smile is your personal and business shop front. Not smiling is the equivalent of a 'not today' sign.
2) Passion - Passion for what you do cannot be faked (think recent politicians). Create passion in place of unconfidence when facing new situations. Passion is infectious and unforgettable
3) Practice - Prepare an elevator style (pretentious way of saying 1 min intro) speech so that you always have a confident intro for who you are, and what you do in your minds back pocket. You will also put others at ease by leading the conversation.
4) Ask questions - The person asking the questions always controls the conversation. Just don't tell my clients! Show interest in others by asking questions about them.
5) First impressions - Focus on making a good impression, words are only 7% of your communication, 38% is voice tone and 55% is your body language.
6) Certainty - we all like a balance of certainty and uncertainty in our lives. Decide what balance is right for you is it 60% certainty and 40% uncertainty? or a you a higher risk taker with an optimum 50/50. There is no right or wrong, just what suits you best. Understanding this will help to improve how you view new situations, which will increase your confidence.
7) Avoid introducing yourself and listing your weaknesses - 'Hi, I'm Dan, I'm not very good at this.'
8) Labels - Check your labels. How do you know 'that' feeling means you are feeling unconfident? It might actually mean that you are just experiencing something new.
'Confidence is the art of making others feel confident in your presence'
Why is genuine confidence important?
Confidence demonstrates that you are trustworthy, resourceful, knowledgeable and a good bet to be a safe ship in a rocky harbour based on our primitive purpose to survive.
And confidence is not...
David Brent, being the loudest, deluding people, taking risks that harm others or self, dismissing others ideas, aggression, relentlessly telling people you are the greatest or over compensating arrogance.
For many people their perception of confidence is the latter, and therefore no wonder they subconsciously try to avoid appearing too confident. People organically like people who are like them; it is a basic requirement for human social interaction. So if confidence is ultimately about trust and being capable check out these tips to revolutionise yours
1) Smile - Yep easy right. So why do most people dilute their smiles to appear more professional? A smile is your personal and business shop front. Not smiling is the equivalent of a 'not today' sign.
2) Passion - Passion for what you do cannot be faked (think recent politicians). Create passion in place of unconfidence when facing new situations. Passion is infectious and unforgettable
3) Practice - Prepare an elevator style (pretentious way of saying 1 min intro) speech so that you always have a confident intro for who you are, and what you do in your minds back pocket. You will also put others at ease by leading the conversation.
4) Ask questions - The person asking the questions always controls the conversation. Just don't tell my clients! Show interest in others by asking questions about them.
5) First impressions - Focus on making a good impression, words are only 7% of your communication, 38% is voice tone and 55% is your body language.
6) Certainty - we all like a balance of certainty and uncertainty in our lives. Decide what balance is right for you is it 60% certainty and 40% uncertainty? or a you a higher risk taker with an optimum 50/50. There is no right or wrong, just what suits you best. Understanding this will help to improve how you view new situations, which will increase your confidence.
7) Avoid introducing yourself and listing your weaknesses - 'Hi, I'm Dan, I'm not very good at this.'
8) Labels - Check your labels. How do you know 'that' feeling means you are feeling unconfident? It might actually mean that you are just experiencing something new.
'Confidence is the art of making others feel confident in your presence'
Monday, 15 August 2011
To Do or to Don't?
What does your to-do list say about you – are you a ditherer or a sensible planner? Dreamer or a doer? Explore the meaning behind some of our scribbles to ourselves.
Ever wondered what one of the Queen's to-do lists might look like? Perhaps we would find a vertical list written in fountain pen: text Obama, walk dogs, reign longer than Queen Victoria, hair appointment, phone William, buy birthday card, write apology letter on behalf of Philip, call palace window cleaner and a tiara doodle at the side of the page!
A to-do list is a window into the private world of someone. A scribbled list on a torn off piece of paper, or the back of an envelope provides an honest snapshot into our real lives. It reveals both our anxieties and our goals, how we manage our time, and highlights what we are avoiding in life. Today we need lists more than ever, but how many lists are too many lists? How many lists have you made recently about what you have to do, rather than what you want to do? If you have lists about lists than maybe it's time to create a to-don't list instead.
An old flatmate of mine was a list fanatic. She would pack into a day so much I began to question if she had somehow discovered a magic way of having 30 hrs in a day. She would always be running around with an old white envelope in her hand, ticking her way through a long list of tasks. She was constantly in a whirlwind of doing. I was the polar opposite at the time, stuck in a becalming of thinking. Lists to me were still an enigma back then. She decided to explore opening a sandwich shop. Every evening she would sit at the kitchen table with a blank A5 piece of paper, chewing the pen lid as she thought excitedly about the many sandwich fillings she would offer in her shop. These lists read more like a shopping list: bacon, avocado, chicken, cheese, ham etc, all the way to the bottom of the page. Each night she would start again. She moved on to another project quite soon after, for the next two years I would find random sheets of paper with bacon, avocado, cheese written on it. We still chuckle about it now.
Your lists should be helping you to explore possibilities and acting as memory support. There is a very fine balance between thinking and doing. It's a ballet of discipline and dance. Too much thinking can prevent someone moving forward in his or her life, they get stuck in a cycle of thinking. Next time you ask someone to do something and they reply 'I'm thinking about it?' they probably don't know how to do part of the task they are putting off, there is a block. They get stuck there sometimes for years, or avoid it until the 'not doing it' causes enough pain. Too much doing, can sometimes create a busy fool bingeing on small chores. Without thought and defined purpose, the doer has to feed their sense of achievement with doing.
The brain loves an orderly list. The direction helps the brain to tidy up information hanging around in its in-tray waiting for further instruction from you. Once filed, that stressful feeling that things are getting on top of us reduces. Our list habits show electronically too. If you are one of those people that have many screens open at the same time, flicking from one to another and working simultaneously on different projects, you may want to consider thinking through what you are working on and completing one at a time. You will feel so much more relaxed for it.
Holocaust survivor and psychiatrist Victor Frankl was very aware of the relationship between our wellbeing and our ability to get things done. He believed that putting unpleasant jobs at the top of the list was the only way to attack them. Your lists should be helping you to control the chaos, make sure they are not controlling you. Lists do point to an unhealthy mental state when they become a tool to satisfy a need for excessive control. But for those that get stressed at the mere thought of writing a list, this can indicate that you perhaps need to look at some of the benefits that embracing a list habit will bring.
Make sure that you give yourself a reward for achieving your lists, particularly if you have dealt with some of those unpleasant jobs. Sometimes just getting everything ticked of can feel like an achievement, the truth is most people will focus on what they haven't achieved and berate themselves. This then sets up the brain with resistance next time it meets a 'tough things to-do' list. Wouldn't we all try to avoid a telling off?
Writing things down is very important for a clear mind. When I ask clients if they have written a 5-year plan they frequently tap their heads and tell me 'kind of, it's all in here.' Help yourself to get clarity, write it down. A habit shared with me recently by a very successful client was that before he goes to sleep each night he writes down seven ideas for the next day. It means he sleeps well and can start the next day with focus.
Help your mind to be clear, and make sure that you aren't operating at the cost of spontaneity. Life is a constant to-do list, its up to us to create what goes on the list, and choose where it takes us.
The List of Lists
TO DON'T LIST
Things to stop doing! Rehab for list bingers, control freaks or people that are time poor.
TOO HARD FOR NOW LIST
Anything that you don't want to deal with right now. It's very important to set a date to come back to review the task. Just leaving it in the abyss will not create a peaceful mind. Create a 'thinking' list to explore a solution i/e 20 ideas to help me solve xyz.
Ever wondered what one of the Queen's to-do lists might look like? Perhaps we would find a vertical list written in fountain pen: text Obama, walk dogs, reign longer than Queen Victoria, hair appointment, phone William, buy birthday card, write apology letter on behalf of Philip, call palace window cleaner and a tiara doodle at the side of the page!
A to-do list is a window into the private world of someone. A scribbled list on a torn off piece of paper, or the back of an envelope provides an honest snapshot into our real lives. It reveals both our anxieties and our goals, how we manage our time, and highlights what we are avoiding in life. Today we need lists more than ever, but how many lists are too many lists? How many lists have you made recently about what you have to do, rather than what you want to do? If you have lists about lists than maybe it's time to create a to-don't list instead.
An old flatmate of mine was a list fanatic. She would pack into a day so much I began to question if she had somehow discovered a magic way of having 30 hrs in a day. She would always be running around with an old white envelope in her hand, ticking her way through a long list of tasks. She was constantly in a whirlwind of doing. I was the polar opposite at the time, stuck in a becalming of thinking. Lists to me were still an enigma back then. She decided to explore opening a sandwich shop. Every evening she would sit at the kitchen table with a blank A5 piece of paper, chewing the pen lid as she thought excitedly about the many sandwich fillings she would offer in her shop. These lists read more like a shopping list: bacon, avocado, chicken, cheese, ham etc, all the way to the bottom of the page. Each night she would start again. She moved on to another project quite soon after, for the next two years I would find random sheets of paper with bacon, avocado, cheese written on it. We still chuckle about it now.
Your lists should be helping you to explore possibilities and acting as memory support. There is a very fine balance between thinking and doing. It's a ballet of discipline and dance. Too much thinking can prevent someone moving forward in his or her life, they get stuck in a cycle of thinking. Next time you ask someone to do something and they reply 'I'm thinking about it?' they probably don't know how to do part of the task they are putting off, there is a block. They get stuck there sometimes for years, or avoid it until the 'not doing it' causes enough pain. Too much doing, can sometimes create a busy fool bingeing on small chores. Without thought and defined purpose, the doer has to feed their sense of achievement with doing.
The brain loves an orderly list. The direction helps the brain to tidy up information hanging around in its in-tray waiting for further instruction from you. Once filed, that stressful feeling that things are getting on top of us reduces. Our list habits show electronically too. If you are one of those people that have many screens open at the same time, flicking from one to another and working simultaneously on different projects, you may want to consider thinking through what you are working on and completing one at a time. You will feel so much more relaxed for it.
Holocaust survivor and psychiatrist Victor Frankl was very aware of the relationship between our wellbeing and our ability to get things done. He believed that putting unpleasant jobs at the top of the list was the only way to attack them. Your lists should be helping you to control the chaos, make sure they are not controlling you. Lists do point to an unhealthy mental state when they become a tool to satisfy a need for excessive control. But for those that get stressed at the mere thought of writing a list, this can indicate that you perhaps need to look at some of the benefits that embracing a list habit will bring.
Make sure that you give yourself a reward for achieving your lists, particularly if you have dealt with some of those unpleasant jobs. Sometimes just getting everything ticked of can feel like an achievement, the truth is most people will focus on what they haven't achieved and berate themselves. This then sets up the brain with resistance next time it meets a 'tough things to-do' list. Wouldn't we all try to avoid a telling off?
Writing things down is very important for a clear mind. When I ask clients if they have written a 5-year plan they frequently tap their heads and tell me 'kind of, it's all in here.' Help yourself to get clarity, write it down. A habit shared with me recently by a very successful client was that before he goes to sleep each night he writes down seven ideas for the next day. It means he sleeps well and can start the next day with focus.
Help your mind to be clear, and make sure that you aren't operating at the cost of spontaneity. Life is a constant to-do list, its up to us to create what goes on the list, and choose where it takes us.
The List of Lists
THINKING LISTS
20 ideas to help me…
My ideal partner
How to solve...
New Years Goals
Things I want to achieve
Thoughts to remove from my head
Anxieties to go
5 year plan Finances
Pros and cons
Midnight inspiration
DOING LISTS
Itinerary
Reminders
Things to do
Where to go
Event Planning
Table Plans
Shopping Lists
Finances Incoming/Outgoing
Chores
Planning
TO DON'T LIST
Things to stop doing! Rehab for list bingers, control freaks or people that are time poor.
TOO HARD FOR NOW LIST
Anything that you don't want to deal with right now. It's very important to set a date to come back to review the task. Just leaving it in the abyss will not create a peaceful mind. Create a 'thinking' list to explore a solution i/e 20 ideas to help me solve xyz.
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