Showing posts with label coaching. Show all posts
Showing posts with label coaching. Show all posts

Thursday, July 25, 2013

Future Goals and Your Past

For better or worse, without your past you wouldn't be standing here today in all your richness, full of possibility - and that is a gift we awaken to daily.

Every client I coach comes to me with the hope of changing something in their life, whether their habits, coping skills, relationship, career, etc. They come longing for a future that is different from their present. Most are ready to sit down and discuss where they see themselves developing and evolving over the next month or year and almost all are surprised when I ask them to look back as well as forward. Why? Because we don't want to look at the actions and circumstances that got us to the place we're not content to be - Our Present Situation.

However, looking back as a way of moving forward is essential. When you begin to observe the treasure of characteristics that helped you along the way, it's empowering and invigorating! Just as empowering, although a bit more vulnerable, is being attentive to the characteristics and actions that have hindered you.  After all, you don't want to repeat the steps that lead to your failure, you want to learn from them. It is by far one of the lessons that people tend to resist and one that I like to reframe as: 

"All of your past has been part of your ongoing development. You are not static; you are an unfolding, evolving and interconnected individual. Some of your capacities are more developed while others are less developed.. As coach and client, we need to maintain those characteristics that have fostered your success and we need to strengthen areas that are less developed that hinder your success."

And the way to do this is to honor all parts of you. Because every part of you has a valuable lesson to teach. Yes, every part of you.

As an Integral Developmental Coach, I am most effective in assisting your growth when you are able to share not only: your joys and pleasures but your fears and anxiety; not only healthy eating habits but your lack of exercise; not only your close relationships but the people you can't stand to be around; not only the people and institutions that you feel supported by but those that you feel pull you down.

In putting this all together, we come up with a map. A map of the territory called You! You'll begin to witness the interconnected levels and stages of your life and have a better idea of where you came from, where you're going and how to get there.

Think of your past as stepping stones towards your future.  When you do this, you thrive!

Here's To Your Evolution,

John Herberger, M.Ed.










Thursday, March 7, 2013

The Body Is A Container For Your Emotions (Is Your Container Leaking?)


Have you ever noticed a child on a playground fall down and skin their knee?  Often times they will look up stunned, searching the scene for their parent or caretaker and only when their parent is within sight does the child begins to cry.  A good parent will scoop up the child in their arms, allow them to cry, begin to soothe the child’s emotional fear by talking to the child, reframing their fear and then instill a belief that everything will be ok. The parent is a container for their child’s emotion.  In most cases this is all the child needs and within minutes they are back playing with their friends.

As we develop into adolescence and further into adulthood we learn to contain our own emotions and rely less on others for validation. Some of us are better at it than others.  That’s okay because it’s one of those areas in life we can always cultivate.

Many of us have worked to ensure we become more adept at dealing with our emotions.  We read self-help books, attend workshops and surround our self with like-minded people.
Yet at the same time we overload ourselves with tasks, workloads, information and technology.  This wears the body down and over time the ignored body is no longer proficient at holding our emotions.

So what are some ways we can honor the body, ensuring it continues to be an effective emotional container?

1.      Sleep – science has indicated that lack of deep sleep is epidemic in our western society.  Most people need 8 hours of sleep a night to refresh the body and process the day’s information. The average person is falling 2 to 3 hours short of this goal.  If this is true for you, begin by increasing your sleep by half hour increments a week.  Prepare for bed a half hour earlier; set the tone by shutting off technology and cultivating a space to enter into sleep. Not only will your body be a better container for your daily emotions, many emotions may be processed while sleeping.

2.      Exercise – even if it’s walking 15 minutes after dinner. This doesn’t have to be an intense workout or yoga routine.  Start where you are and build from there. If you did 10 minutes of exercise each weekday morning, focusing on a different body part you will have exercised 50 minutes a week and you’ll increase your health, body image and work out some stress.

3.      Breathe - there is nothing easier.  Much has been written on various breathing techniques; however, you can begin by simply counting your in-breath, holding for one second and then making your out-breath at least one second longer than your in-breath.  Do this for 5 to 15 minutes a day and watch the stress melt away and feel your body relax and unwind.

4.      Diet – are you feeding your emotional container what it needs, fresh vegetables and fruits, less processed foods, caffeine and alcohol?  Again, you can start slow. Add a piece of fruit to your diet while cutting back on one caffeine drink a day.  Stimulants and depressants will not allow the body to contain emotions effectively - for many reasons the least of which are serotonin levels that effect mood.

5.      Contemplate and/or Meditate – spend some time contemplating a reading, journaling or meditating.  This does not require hours sitting on a mat in a lotus position.  It can be as little as 10 minutes in the morning, on lunch break or before bed. Sit quietly and let go.

In some ways this is your higher-self parenting the developing emotional-self,  holding the wounded emotions soothingly in its arms.  It is a stance of compassionate and loving-kindness directed toward self. 

I leave you with one of my favorite quotes from Don Miguel Ruiz’s Four Agreements.  He states “Always Do Your Best. Your best is going to change from moment to moment; it will be different when you are healthy as opposed to sick. Under any circumstance, simply do your best and you will avoid self-judgment, self-abuse and regret.”

John Herberger, M.Ed.


Friday, February 15, 2013

So You Want Your Life To Change

So you've examined your life and decided something needs to change.  Now that you have figured out what it is that needs changing . . .

How much time are you going to invest in changing?

This question is pivotal.  Whether it's your relationship(s), your career, your spiritual growth or any other aspect of your life.  Knowing you need to change is the first step and don't stop there.

Invest your time -
In researching the issue
In brainstorming
In contemplating
In planning
In acting differently than you've been acting.
Do something different! Do something more.

Decide how much time you're going to spend investing in change.

Until you do, things will just remain the same . . .

Much Aloha,
John Herberger M.Ed.
InAwakening.com






Tuesday, January 22, 2013

Quit or Continue?

Quitters never win and winners never quit!

Actually sometimes the opposite is true.
There's a philosophy prevalent in our culture of "never give up" or "die trying" mentality.
But some of the most successful people in the world are ones who knew when to hold 'em and knew when to fold 'em.  These people are adept at realizing when they should hang in there trying and when it's time to jump a sinking ship.

Most of us have struggled with this balance, whether it was a relationship, business venture, employment or even a belief system.  Our nature to second guess ourselves doesn't help bring clarity to this dilemma either.

So how do we bring clarity when we find ourselves in this difficult place?

1. Get Back To Your Center
Use what works to return to your center - meditate, run, breathe, hike, EFT, etc.

2. Continue With #1 - Don't Rush
When we desire change, it's easy to jump the gun.  Spend some time in your center. The longer you are there, the clearer your decision will be (even if you don't know what that is yet) and the less likely you will be to second guess yourself later or be riddled with guilt.

3. Revisit Your Original Vision
What was your original vision? Write it down and look at it. Whether it's qualities you're seeking in a relationship or an original business plan or a belief system.  What happens when you view it?  Does it excite you?  Make you feel alive? Then spend some time with this and see what emerges. Spend everyday looking at this (again, don't rush - you didn't get into this dilemma overnight and unless there is a deadline looming, you can afford to marinate in your vision)

4. Revise
If you feel lackluster after spending some time with your original vision, it may be time to revise your goal.  Start penning your new goals until you feel energized and enthusiastic.

5. Return to #1
Spend some time in your center again.  After any time spent re-energizing your Vision/Goal, it's time to return to center.  Most people skip this step, we like the feeling of being re-energized (for some people it's even addictive).  Coming back to your center is the needed balance in the process. You'll be less likely to take missteps towards your vision.

6. Make Changes
We usually want to make changes after step one or two.   However, if we follow all the steps above we will be in the best place cognitively and emotionally to change our actions to meet our original vision or to actually change our vision (and therefore our actions)

Aloha from Maui,
John