Manifesting Your Dreams And Goal by Calvin Harris, H. W., M.

Manifesting Your Dreams and Goals

If you are not manifesting your dreams and goals, it could be because of your weekly ritual or what some call Habits that are not allowing for it.

I would like to call your  attention to two ideas that can change everything about getting results:

1). We want to go beyond your ideas on achievement, to look at the quality of your Actions that are used to bring about your goals and achievements.  

AND

2)  More important than the ‘action’ is having an open, mentally fertile environment with others to allow for creativity and critical thinking to take place.  If you are in a state of mental isolation, your ability to take action can be hampered or killed.

We all, at one time or another, have been hampered, felt overwhelmed and unfocused, or have procrastinated over our best and boldest ideas, letting them fall by the wayside.

If you find yourself in this state,  stop beating yourself up over it and instead, look to the cause and perhaps a solution.

You see, it may be in your programing, in how you approach a situation, it may be in the way you have always done things in the past;  Projects you just jumped into; projects handled pretty much unconsciously, automatically processing them the same way you have done for decades. This type of action has been called working from your monkey mind, or on automatic pilot, or your habitual way of getting something done.

This is unconscious programming, which repeats within you, and determines how you focus, execute, and achieve projects, goals, and dreams.

If the aim for results do not appear,  and it occurs time and again, this means many of us are wasting time, energy, and money on what we think is our goals but turns out to be busywork that leads us away from our goals or buries us in a “paralysis of analysis”  or the chasing of bright shiny objects.

Then at some point, we must become conscious of our situation and say, “I have had enough.”

You may come to the discovery of needing to be supported and being accountable.

You may begin to seek help. It may be in the form of taking a class;   attending a group; or seeking a Mentor or Life Coach to work with.  Hey, these things can start to turn things around for you.

 

Working with others can allow you to break the chains of mental isolation.   Consciously tapping into your creative genius that allows you freedom from the cycles of mediocrity, and allows you to love what you are producing.

Yes, it may take a personal trainer, life coach, or mentor to get you the support and accountability you need.

That enables you to become more conscious of your goals and planning; To steer you in the direction you want to go, and to maintain the progress you want to achieve. This happens through regular check-ins, being held accountable, and having the support to keep you focused and on track.

The bottom line is that you want to reconstruct Conscious Intention over Automatic Habit Responses, informing new habits that consistently turn your dreams, ideas, goals into visible concrete results.

Contact me for a discussion about your needs.

Aloha,

Calvin

The (missed) Perceptions that Leads to Penis Envy in Men By Calvin Harris, H.W.,M.

It seems that sooner or later that within a conversation about masculinity the subject of the Penis will pop up and rear its head. Since all things Masculine has been a subject of conversations, reading, and writing with me lately I am not surprise the subject of Penis came up. Since this is a difficult subject to discuss, some levity has been added in this post as "puns" disguised as  "Freudian Slips." We learn through humor as much as through struggle. 

Neptunes Penis bologa, Italy

Neptunes Penis bologa, Italy


I am not new to the subject of men and their relationships to their penis, but in this context, of Penis envy, two situation occurred that tip the balance and moved me to write. One situation is a repeating occurrence that happens, and the second situation occurred in a relax few friends at lunch gathering. I was taken aback by the rise of emotion and  in heat of the conversation over the despair at the lost of foreskin and the possible pleasure missed as a result of that. At the time, I felt pieces were missing to the dialogue presented at the lunch conversation and needed to be put in a larger context along with Health, Love, Sexuality, Sensuality, and Relationship.  

I am not surprised with the notion about the penis and its importance in receiving pleasure in some men's lives (it is the most interesting thing they do), yet I am surprise as to the absence of any mention of other components to pleasuring oneself such as through other erogenous zones about the body, or to healthy relationships either with the self or anyone else? Well back to my story.

The latest instance for me in the Penis envy scenario occurred three weeks back at this pub, when an associate I don't know well, turns to me and says: “How" lucky I was to be born African American!, with that look of envy on his glassy eyed face, and you know that he didn't mean I was born with a silver spoon in my mouth. As I looked at him, you could just picture, in his minds eye, him in that 1974 scene as the Monster with Madeline Kahn, from the  Young Frankenstein Movie – He sees himself toting an enormous schwanzstucker. You can hear Marty Feldman saying to him - “You are going to be very Popular.”  Unfortunately, I am looking at him and thinking maybe, He should sober up before meeting his date, that sexual encounter he describes he wants with such vigor ( upturn  shot glass after shot) and yet his fear of self prophecy of being dissipated, failing  his date, by being a rudely inebriated mess that has repeatedly fallen asleep mid coitus.  Personally I am thinking she declines sex with him, and considering an android companion that talks, learns and satisfies sexual desires on que.

Sizing each other up

Sizing each other up

The second instance of professed envy came during a lunch meet up of several friends, when  the discussion turned to an article by Van Barrett, an author and blog writer. He had written a blog on the envy of the uncircumcised penises.  One of the men felt a strong need to defend Barrett's  position, for it turn out, that he too longed for and desired foreskin.  A wish not to have been circumcised.

Van Barrett blog had come about due to one of his fictional book. his feeling  was so prevalent in the book that a reader wrote to question his sexual gender. The article he wrote in  response is found at the end of this blog. 

As to Mr. Barrett and the Lunch partner,  bemoaning lost of foreskin - It sounded like "the grass is always greener." To give the other side of the coin, we turn to - Hayley MacMillen, who did an article on the problems that Uncircumcised men face in the U. S. in her article in Cosmopolitan Magazine, Oct 5, 2016. The magazine titled - 9 Things Uncircumcised Guys Want You to Know.
Cosmopolitan quoted one interviewee, named only as Henry, as saying: “that while he’s open about not being circumcised with his partners, it’s a different story with his guy friends. "I never talk about it with other guys," he says, and even though "guys talk about their dicks all the time ... fear is absolutely a factor because being different is stigmatized."

 

What is key here is  'Perception' - "What are men focusing on when it comes to  pleasurable sex?"

Most times Male banter is about  “getting off,” not about having an experience that is a satisfying sensual-sexual experience.  This maybe due to Porn, or the speed of living life, or the unwillingness of men to make time for themselves to create an environment for true sexual pleasure. There is a large majority of men that  have concluded that all sexual pleasure is encapsulated in the manipulation of the skin that surrounds their penis, and they want to work it until, in the jargon of the day, you bust a nut - i.e. get off.

Given how much symbolic baggage this body part carries, it’s no wonder the misconceptions about it. To enlarge this conversation, as difficult as it is, it is  yet worthwhile.  Beginning with the misperception that your penis is '"The" Sex Organ', if you think that is so, you have completely missed out on your Biggest Sex Organ experience, which is the Skin that covers your entire body coupled with the creativity  of the Consciousness of the Mind …. roll that around for a while, you may find that statement to be correct. Now that being said, think then how much sense- satiable pleasure you have missed out on, if you are not activating your whole-body/mind experience? 

Dr. Debby Herbenick, a sex researcher, educator, and author as wells as the Co-Director of the Center for Sexual Health Promotion at Indiana University School of Public Health-Bloomington & the Kinsey Institute for Research in Sex, Gender and Reproduction.  From her research findings, she states: “Often when people think about the pleasures of sex, they think about genital arousal (e.g., erections or vaginal warmth or lubrication) or orgasm. While I certainly wouldn’t argue these, I would add that one of the most pleasurable parts of sexual intimacy is the experience of touching and being touched all over.

Decades of research have shown that humans.... need touch…. not only to survive, but to thrive. Touch can have a biological effect that releases oxytocin (which has often been referred to as the “Cuddle Effect”) Touch can have psychological effects of helping people to feel loved, happy, accepted, calm or reassured.

In sex, we have the uncommon opportunity to touch and be touched all over our bodies. ... press bodies against each other in a hug or, while kissing or in one of many possible sexual positions, they get to experience an enormous amount of skin closeness. They may touch cheeks, lips, chests, legs, and feel... hand along their back, thighs, or stomach. There is, after all, something qualitatively... intimate in the experience of being exposed – physically, and often emotionally.” [sexual dilation].

From that point of view then the almighty penis becomes just another body part, vital but still one among many body parts in a mind body- somatic sexual dilation.  I’d like you to entertain the notion of making time for the sex experience (or putting sex on maximum drive).  Think of sex as something you gift to yourself be it alone or with a partner. Permit yourself to be mindful of being naked, of touching all over as much you can. To relax into an exploration that promotes sensual enjoyment, an inner awareness of intimacy and dilation.  Have an experience of sexuality that does not start nor stop (uncircumcised or circumcised) with those few centimeters of skin that extends over an Erect Penile Length and Circumference but engages a full mind-body (somatic) experience.  Then and only then can the identity of Sexuality be disengaged from the notion that it is a control of genitals. You can begin then to stop comparing or lamenting about genitalia, what you have or do not have and start enjoying the mind-body (somatic) wholeness that you truly are.

I recommend the following four books, they can be helpful in your striving for control and perception of a healthier, loving, and more pleasurably experience during sex. 
 

The Penis Book Photo.jpg

The Penis Book: A Doctor's Complete Guide to the Penis―From Size to Function and Everything in Between” by Aaron Spitz MD


Manhood: The Rise and Fall of the Penis” by Mels van Driel, Paul Vincent (Translator)


 Sex Made Easy: Your Awkward Questions Answered—For Better, Smarter, Amazing Sex” by Dr. Debby Herbenick.


Anal Pleasuring (A Good in Bed Guide)” by Dr. Debby Herbenick.
 

 

Now here is the article that created weeks of discussion, debate and finally my blog.  I would be interested on your take on this,  so jot me a note. 

Van Barrett, Are You Really A Man?

 An article by Van Barrett  July 28, 2016 vanbarrett.com

I had an e-mail recently from a reader of my book Seven Nights who was quite convinced that I am secretly a female, hiding behind a male pen name — and they were not too happy about it, either!

I must be a female, they wrote to me, because I write about men with circumcised cocks and men with uncut cocks — therefore, it’s a given that I’m writing about something I can’t possibly know or have firsthand experience of. Right? From there, it’s surely a small leap of logic to assume that I actually know nothing about what it is to have a cock, how they work and what they feel like, because I’m just a woman making crap up as I go. Insert eye roll here.

So? What say you, Van Barrett?

I’ll give you the answer to this burning question in a moment! But first I wanna share a personal anecdote.

I was in the seventh grade when I first had to take a ‘lifestyle’ class. I forget the exact name of it — something like “health and lifestyle” — but whatever, you get the gist. It’s the sort of course where you learn about balancing a checkbook and how to eat healthy and oh, oh gosh, (*cheeks blush*) human anatomy and sexuality. So that was the first time, age 13, that I’d had any sort of formal sex education.

And here’s where I should point out that some form of sex-ed probably should’ve come a lot sooner, as I remember riding the school bus home in the 4th grade with my best friend. Curious about sex, we looked up the word ‘sperm’ in the dictionary. We’d both heard this term, this magical sperm before, and we knew that it was related in some way to sex. When we read the definition, we looked at each other with puzzled expressions. Embarrassingly, I concluded that a sperm must be the head of your cock, and it detached from the shaft when the moment was right. Cough. We had trouble wrapping our brains around how there could possibly be some ~100 million more cock-head sperms just waiting around in our nuts to be ejaculated. Fun image, right? Clearly, something didn’t add up, and we still had no idea what a sperm was.

… Anyhow, I digress.

It was because of this lifestyle class in 7th grade that I first learned of the concept of circumcision. I’d never heard it before. I think we glanced over it and class and I didn’t give it much thought. It wasn’t until a couple days later, when I was hanging with a friend of mine, that it came up again.

My friend was uncircumcised. He gloated about being intact, he bragged about how uncut men statistically are said to have better orgasms and better sex and their partners report being more pleased. He asked me if I was uncircumcised. I had no idea! Again, I’d never heard this word before our class and even then, it didn’t seem like it applied to me. My penis seemed to work fine, and it didn’t look cut up, so why bother, right? But based on all the stats he told me, I sure hoped I hadn’t been cut!

greekwrestlers3.jpg

But I wasn’t sure. I asked my friend to describe what a circumcision looked like. There were no suitable pictures or illustrations in our textbook for me to get the idea. He kept saying something along the lines of, “c’mon, this isn’t hard — it either looks like a bell or like it has a turtleneck that can cover the whole thing up! Which one is it?”

And still I was truly stumped. But more than that, I was a little frazzled. This idea that I might have been altered as a baby … without my knowledge or consent … that resulted in a less fulfilling sex life?

“No way,” I protested. “It looks fine. It’s totally natural. It doesn’t look like it was hurt.”

He wanted to see it: he said he’d tell me if it was or not. A shy kid in my youth, I said no way. So we opted to look at my newborn baby pictures instead.

“Dude,” he laughed. “You’re circumcised, alright. See that? That’s the head of your dick and it’s not covered. That’s a circumcision, Van.”

So it was. The realization set in immediately: I had a circumcised penis.

Was I crushed? Was I disappointed?

I’m sure I was — on some level. But not a consciously-available level. That would probably require more self-awareness than a 13-year-old possessed. Instead, I adopted a psychological tool more fitting for a teen: indignant anger.

“Yeah, well, everyone says a circumcised penis looks better!” I gloated right back at him. “And it’s cleaner, too!”

Then we’d argue back and forth about who had the better and the best pleasure-giving penis. It got pretty heated — and we even wrestled and threw punches over the debate. Yeah … 13 year olds … what can you really say?

Okay, to give some perspective as to why I’m sharing this story with you — it took years for me to process the emotions I’ve had over the fact that I was circumcised. As I aged and became an adult, I thankfully dropped that self-defense mechanism of “nah nah nah boo boo, my cock is better than yours!” and I started to think of it differently.

It was kinda fucked up, after all, that I’d been robbed of some level of sensitivity down there to the tune of 20,000 nerve endings! I’d never asked for it and I probably wouldn’t have, if given the chance. I also began to see uncut cocks in a different light. Hell, they started to look kinda pretty — and that foreskin sure looked fun to play with. I was sad, angry, and depressed over what had been taken from me.

*Lifts needle from the record*

I just want to stop here and say that I don’t want to make any parents out there feel bad — that’s not my goal at all! I understand why my parents did it, and I don’t begrudge them for it at all. There’s just so much information out there, and societal customs and so on — it’s hard to make any sense of it sometimes.

But future parents, please do educate yourself about this topic before you make the decision! And if you still choose to circumcise your kids, that’s fine, that’s your choice and I wouldn’t give anyone a hard time for it. But just educate yourself because there’s a lot to learn and it’s one hell of an interesting area to research. E.g., did you know that John Harvey Kellogg, the doctor who pushed for circumcisions in the US [and yes, the cereal man], also wanted females to be circumcised? Yup — he wanted to pour carbolic acid on the clitorises of newborn girls. Lucky for all you ladies, that one didn’t catch on.

Thankfully, this story isn’t all sadness and depression. So, it was back in 2010 when I discovered that a man can actually restore his foreskin. It’s not a surgical procedure — it’s done through applied tension to the skin over a long period of time (2-5 years). It can be as simple as using your hands to tug and stretch the skin. Stretched to its physical limit, cellular mitosis takes over and the skin cells begin to duplicate. It takes a while, but you can absolutely grow your foreskin back.

Okay, so you’ll never be exactly the way you were prior to getting cut, of course. Some nerves endings are permanently lost. But it’s a big improvement, with a fuller spectrum of pleasures and sensations that simply weren’t available before.

So, yes, I write characters with cut and uncut dicks, because I’ve personally been both. I know what it’s like to be cut — the contrived sense of superiority over what is actually our natural form, the repressed anger, the jealousy, etc. I also know what it’s like to have a foreskin now — and it’s made me so much more sensitive. I also know how this topic is taboo, and a lot of people don’t like to think or talk about it at all. I’ve been called names just for going on this journey of restoring. Clearly, there’s a lot of emotional trauma swirling around this topic. It’s not an easy one for people to deal with. I get that.

So you’ve probably figured by now that in my book Seven Nights, Austin’s ‘jealousy’ and fawning over Cedar’s uncut cock comes from a deeply personal place for me. (Let’s just add an unofficial line to the epilogue: Austin, inspired by Cedar, began the journey of restoring his foreskin. Yay!)

If anyone wants more information about this, feel free to leave a comment or drop me an e-mail. Obviously, it’s something I’m personally invested in and passionate about, and believe me, I have a lot more to say.

For any guys out there, who want to get started on the journey of restoring, I’d recommend starting with the Foreskin Restoration forum on reddit. I say journey because it takes time — and it will require you to be dedicated and patient. But it’s worth it, in my experience.

Sooo, to answer the original question that prompted this blog post — yes, I’m actually a man. Shocking plot twist, eh?

SiteofContact can be reached for comments, information, or appointments at calvin2talk@gmail.com

On Healing by Richard Hartnett

ancient-Greeks doctor.jpg
"I have found it can be as simply as attention to what you are doing"- Calvin Harris

When it comes to healing, we all need to ask, "What am I expecting from a healing practice?" Do we expect a cure that will make a problem go away forever? Sometimes we get lucky and such a thing happens. However, more often than not healing alerts us to the need to adjust our behavior. Maybe its taking vitamins, getting better rest, but just as often its about approaching life differently. Healing is not always about body issues, sometimes its the heart, or the mind. The key thing about all the different forms is to notice how we were out of alignment with the universe. Life is better when we are in the flow. Let me know if you have any questions: quantumspirit@ecentral.com ~ Richard Hartnett

7 Tips for Cultivating Success and Financial Security

It was one of those parties large enough where folks had formed groups of different conversation each going on simultaneously. I decided to refill my wine glass at the bar, and on my return from the bar, heard bits and pieces of varying conversation as I move through the room. My attention was suddenly captured and drawn to a conversation when I heard the words ‘Yes, it would be a way of securing more of your money’ caught my ear, as I turned and gravitated into the group.

There I saw and heard the voice of Michael Hughes (not real name) aka the playboy and man’s man of financial gain in my circle of friends. He was at the center of a discussion where he was agreeing with some fellow over advice about finances that the fellow had gleaned from a television talk show whose guest were composed of “Sharks” (a business-themed T.V. show where multi-millionaire tycoons listen to people from all walks of life, who have come to pitch their dreams and ideas for the chance to secure funds in a business deal that could make them millionaires.) The Sharks' goal is to find a deal that brings a return on their investment and allows them ownership of a piece of the next big business idea.

The Sharks included billionaire Mark Cuban, real estate mogul Barbara Corcoran, QVC-famed Lori Greiner, tech innovator Robert Herjavec, branding expert Daymond John, and venture capitalist Kevin O'Leary. (These investors had found themselves being interviewed about keys to financial success.)

Our cocktail group conversation spring-boarded from that conversation about the show into other areas of money and success. As the conversation moved along I found myself going through my own mental check list of techniques I had tried over the years that worked and I found useful, but only when I would put them to work for me and my circumstance. Circumstance in one’s life is why a grain of salt is needed when taking any advice.

Having said that, this post is for that group of you who keep harassing me about my take on your financial decisions. To those of you that I have told on several occasions that finance is not my field of expertise! Well, I did learn something from that cocktail conversation encounter: that I had known more and forgotten it than I thought I did. It has given me the confidence to pass on these 7 tips, about finance that you may find useful to consider. I would suggest that you do your own research on it and only then to put it into action if you determine any of it useful to you.

Tip 1 - Be ready for when the poop hits the fan, because it always does

In life you learn that if you don’t like something give it 15 minutes because it is going to change.  You and your financial picture will certainly see change happen. If you are looking for security in a time of flux or a downturn, then you would need to learn how to prepare financially and emotionally for the unexpected, because there's a 100 percent certainty the unexpected will happen. It is suggested that one way to be ready for change is to keep 10 percent of your total assets in cash.

Tip 2 - Follow your heart, but do not forget your brains

People can be so overzealous about their dreams to the point that they scare themselves out of moving toward them; or they go rushing in, blinded by their passion that they miss the realities of making their dreams realized. They need to see themselves and their ideas/concepts differently, perhaps more like a savvy entrepreneur, which is a person with a plan for success, with flexibility of focus both for their ideas/dreams and lifestyle. And not to forget that they will have to generate money to survive and thrive, not only for themselves but for whatever ideas/creation they want to birth.

Tip 3 - Cultivate healthy skepticism

You can expect as an entrepreneur, a preoccupation with your dreams/creation (that could even have you forget to breath, thank heavens breathing is automatic), you will find you want to do everything possible to maintain and financially secure it.

Know that successful people have learned to take the hit on both finances and dreams, but they grew from the hit, got up and stop feeling sorry for themselves and keep moving forward.  In your financial world, you will need to apply the same strategies. Know there are opportunist looking to take a bite out of your savings, reputation and dreams. To protect yourself from paranoia about this, you must cultivate two types of focus - Knowledge and Wisdom. To do that I share a Marilyn Voss Savant quote: “To acquire knowledge you must study and to acquire Wisdom one must observe.”

Thus in your game plan development you have short term goal that involves learning to spot, what Sharks call, “Slick Willies.” These are slippery folks, quick to take shortcuts or shift stories, and they're often dishonest. Slick Willies are in every profession, from financial advisers to lawyers to real estate brokers, and the best way to tell if you're dealing with one, is to call a time-out and listen to your gut. Then proceed accordingly.

In your Long term game plan incorporate “the worst-case scenario” to every situation. For example, what would be the personal impact of a significant stock market correction in your life, if it happens in the next five years? What if a spouse, or parent falls ill and needs long-term care? What if your job downsized before you were ready to take your dream/concept full throttle, or before you were ready for retirement?

To incorporate action plans for such situations as these into your game plan, you will need healthy skepticism, or what Andy Grove, the former CEO of semiconductor giant Intel, calls Paranoia as suggested in his book “Only the Paranoid Survive” which deals with lives in sudden change.

Tip 4 - Know “Who’s On First”

The Sharks Tank show has two dramatic words, "I'm out," and when spoken, I am told, you can see the air go out of the person who is trying to pitch their idea / product. Comments of the various investors have been reported as saying: Mark Cuban of the show says: “It's an emotionally charged moment for the entrepreneurs, it is remarkably emotionless for the Sharks. That's because, ‘No deal is better than a bad deal.’ Understand the investment.” Cuban is reported as going on to say "If you don't understand what is going on, whether as an investment or a deal, then why are you doing it?" Lori Greiner said: “The problem is, most people either don't realize that when you have a dream, persistence pays off, you find a way.” Or as Barbara Cocoran says: “They lack the fortitude to walk away.” Daymond John says: "Money is purely a tool, and you shouldn't attach any emotion to it. But you see it happen all the time with the buying of homes or people living beyond their means. They get emotionally tied to something, and it eventually hurts them."

Tip 5 - Take a Risk, a Calculated Risk

Shark - Kevin O'Leary was purported as saying regarding risk - "A calculated risk is based on knowing the outcomes of similar investments over a long period of time. It means learning from the past when you're looking toward the future."

In our cocktail conversation, we talked about 3 components of risk reduction, which came down to:

  1. Invest in what you know, and in what companies or products you love.

  2. Do your homework. Research the idea or product, use your resources the Internet.

  3. A New idea for me was reported to have come from Shark Tank’s Kevin O’Leary who was paraphrased as saying: “Prioritize return of capital. Instead of focusing on how much profit you can make; determine how quickly you'll recoup your investment. The key is return of capital first, not return on capital," He goes on to says. "If I give somebody $500,000, I first figure how that money is coming home."

Tip 6 - Negotiate Everything

“I am not interested in money but in the things of which money is the symbol,” said Henry Ford. One understanding of Money that I have come to understand a great deal more of, as of late, is from etymological origins of the word Money which means EXCHANGE, and later BARTER; In Latin origin - CAMBIRE "to exchange, barter; Celtic origin, from PIE root KEMP - "to bend, crook" (with a word sense evolution from "to turn" to "to change," to "to barter".  Which suggest to me an exchange of services.

So much of life is a negotiation. It must be noted that it is a mistake when negotiating to think of the goal is ‘trying to get something over on someone’, it is more important to try to find that ground or medium where both sides walk away feeling they've gotten value. Few things are worse than remembering getting bad quality and service out of an exchange.
Understand then, Money as exchange or barter gives us all more opportunities to find ways to turn or better our situation and life. Look for new ways to bring opportunities of trade or barter to you.

Tip 7 - Listen and keep learning

Are you present in your dealings with people? Conscious of your transactions?  Listening to others as well as yourself to be able to make corrections in a bad encounter or repeat the actions that produced a good outcome? What did you learn from the interaction? These questions encourage constructive thinking, and gives you tools to learn, to change, or adapt your dreams/ideas/projects as needed to bring about success.
So I had a lot to think over and distill, to come up with my conclusions as to what to share with you regarding cultivating success and financial security. One other point I would like to leave with you, is to look for the opportunity to make it abundant in your life. Marianne Williamson is quoted as saying: “The key to abundance is meeting limited circumstances with unlimited thoughts."

These were tips to help change your mind set about creating a secure future with new ways for you to think about money and doing business. If you take action and try some of these changes, shoot me an email. Tell me how it’s going for you.

 

The Man's Guide To Doing 2016 Right

In the weeks leading up to and after each New Year, we talk a lot of Bull, things like, "This is my year," and "I'm finally going to start a gym routine," and "I will get a better job, woman, and / or life" - you fill in the blanks.

So you have your Resolutions. So what do you think is going to happen? In an age of immediate gratification, it would follow that you look to outside things, people and places to validate you to be happier, fit, richer, or more likable. Wouldn't it be cool if on December 31 you stated what you wanted and on January 01 it just happened that way? Oh baby, that would be like your favorite sauce on the meat at the barbecue. Well, that’s what your culture or conditioning will tell you is how you should expect it to happen: It’s like you are making an online mail order purchase and having UPS put it on your doorstep in less than 24 hours.

Yet by just stepping back and looking at that whole idea of Resolution Fulfillment. . . . Well, it does not seem to work that way. You see, our expectation of how it is supposed to work are more in keeping with how we are wired rather than what generally happens. So looking at your habits and / or conditioning, are you really geared up for success?

 In considering making resolutions you may want to start with an inventory of your internal thoughts, feelings, and conversations on getting what you want before we speak one more word about moving towards desired improvement.

Not playing with a conscious deck could be the reason why resolutions evaporate before the end of January. People seem to slip into routines of an automatic coma about living life. A coma from conscious direction, and when something goes wrong, well, they will say, “that’s just how life is.” Your inner critic (sometimes referred to as a conscience) - call it whatever, but at some point, this creep then creeps in and says, “You failed before. Why even bother?" or “It didn’t happen, and, therefore, you’ve failed, again,” and we believe the bullshit. The inner critic says stuff like – “Hey, no one’s helping, they don’t like me because. . . .”, and "Bad things will happen if I try things a different way."

Even though you set the goal or got that gym membership, you can fall into your habitual coma and eventually go back to Computer Gaming, or Netflix marathons, and pizza with beer binges, because it is seemingly easier. But what if you told that internal critic to piss off? What if you stopped listening or changed the conversation entirely? What if you could state your intentions better and have a backup plan for when this inner asshole feels the need to tell you that you suck at life?

Fortunately, all of this is possible if you are willing to do more than just saying what you want and then not doing it. An example of this kind of change would entail you saying you want a better body and then not going straight back to the loving embrace of your couch and beer; instead, you become conscious of diet and do exercise.

I say let’s do something different. I suggest putting down that slice of pizza and going to your keyboard to type this out.  But even better is getting a journal, paper, and pen, and write this down:

“Intentions Are Better Than Resolutions.”

Got that? Good - now, moving on. Below are three steps for you to consider and get busy with. I call it a three step recipe for “Doing It Right In 2016.”

1.  I suggest a recall of the last year, doing an inventory and review – shine a spotlight on last year’s resolutions - your goals, purpose, desires. In reviewing the year, what did you do those last six months to accomplish any of it? Rate your performance. This could include finally achieving a goal you'd been working toward, etc., finding a way to laugh when things got hard, or recognizing an accomplishment you helped another achieve that you are proud of. Was there something that was an eye opener for you, where you took a different approach than you usually would? Did that turn out for the better or worse? Would you use that same strategy next time?

In this list, there could be disappointments; if so keep them limited to only three to five from the past year. Look at anything that you wish would've gone better - whether you had control over it or not. Really think about how you could have approached the situation in a different way or perhaps handled the outcome more constructively. Disappointment is not all bad as long as you learn from it.

Now reviewing last year should give you the knowledge of whether you're all talk, half-assing it, or have been fooling yourself. It is a good idea from time to time to take a look at your list, decide - Are these the things you really want as drivers for your life? Is there something you want to add or subtract from this list? Is there some goal on that list that didn't seem to fit? If the goal does not meet your expectation, ask yourself why and, if it's a "distraction" from the things you really feel strongly about, take action on it, chuck it out, or find someone who can mentor you to the desired result.

2.  In setting your intention, be realistic. Do not make it so unattainable that you set yourself up for failure. If you're unsure of your goals or feeling not up to the challenge of all of them, then pick just three to begin.

Grab that journal now and in it you will write your intentions, one page for each intention, for each one will need its own page. Include on each page a sentence that starts with the phrase - "I intend to _______. And I am worthy of this."

Now on the flip side of each intention page, at the bottom of the page, I want you to write something that may seem like a lot of mumbo jumbo, but go with it, because it is something that can help finalize your intention for you. It could be as simple as saying – ". . . and so it is"; ". . . amen"; or ". . .it is done," etc. - you get the idea.

Here is where intentions are vastly different and way better than resolutions: Ask yourself how it would feel to be, do, or have this result, this new body, a better income. Not how do you feel in six months, but how does it feel right now? Act as if time doesn't exist and it's only here and now.

Put passion into it when you write it, and really feel the words when you finalize it. There is power in having written them in a journal. You have created a reference for yourself. You then can go back at times and remind yourself of how far you've come.

3.  Now forget it. Yup, put that journal away. On a shelf, in a desk - if on a computer, then file it under “stuff I’m not going to obsess over or worry about.” I know I said to keep them, but you do not need to re-read these every day to know that you want this. Focus instead on the conscious challenges that then will present themselves in order for you to obtain your goal, and also focus on your sense of capability. If or when you hear that doubtful voice of your critic, let the negativity come into your thoughts. Now take a breath and ask yourself, are you not more than this crap, more than this nonsense? Be ready, like a prize fighter, to now jab, punch back, and take that right hook with the big guns of conscious intention.

When your inner critic crops up to call you “a lazy fat ass, always been one and always will be,” now you can push back in the chambers of your mind with - "Even though I have struggled with fear and destructive behavior in the past, I am living a Self-directed integrated lifestyle that is healthy now."
If that critic of doubt tells you that you cannot be successful and your ideas are garbage, reply, "My identity is now reframed and focused on being successful and fulfilled."

I am fortunate that with the help of my Teacher and Mentors I came to the revelation that what holds us in a state of stuck-ness or under-achievement, is worry, impatience, fear and distrust. Yes and usually of our self, a mis-seeing of who we are and our potential.

So the intention is to consciously release worry, to be patient and forgiving with ourselves as with others (because we're not perfect), to lean into fear (with courage and a sense of humor), and to trust our ability to achieve (because we are often what stands in our own way). It only makes sense that we will come to know that we are so much more and can accomplish so much more.

When the statistics show that over 90 percent of New Year Resolutions fail, it's hard to imagine why anyone would bother. So . . . don’t. I am urging you to try something a little different, to re-frame your resolutions into conscious intentions. To write down a "Year in Review" - essentially a blueprint of how your past year has worked out: the good things, the rough spots you worked through, the growth that occurred in both yourself and your interactions with your world - to get clarity about what you’d like to work on next.

A "Year in Review" gives me perspective and a solid dose of realism, especially when I feel like not much has happened or when I'm not especially encouraged about my progress during the past twelve months. The problem is that if you don't take the time to sit down and really analyze how things have worked in the past, you're bound to repeat many of your same mistakes. We humans can have a short memory and a long sense of optimism.

So if you're like me and would like to really get a sense of what works for you and what doesn't,  try these three steps to get you started, drop me a line, and let’s talk.

 Get to it - know that you can make it the Best of Years.

Aloha . . . .