Today’s Note From The Universe

Aurora Borealis, the colored lights seen in the skies around the North Pole, the Northern Lights, from Bear Lake, Alaska, Beautiful Christmas Scene, Winter Star Filled Skies, Scenic Nature

Photo by Beverly & Pack

What if, loneliness was simply a feeling of impatience, telepathically sent to you by friends you’ve yet to meet, urging you to go out more, do more, and get involved, so that life’s serendipities could bring you together…Would you still feel alone?

What if illness was just the signal a healthy body sent to urge clarification of your thoughts, feelings, and dreams…Would you still, at times, think of yours as diseased?

What if feelings of uncertainty and confusion were only reminders that you have options, that there’s no hurry, and that everything is as it should be…Would you still feel disadvantaged?

What if mistakes and failures only ever happened when your life was about to get better than it’s ever been before…Would you still call them mistakes and failures?

And what if poverty and lack were simply demonstrations of your manifesting prowess, as “difficult” to acquire as wealth and abundance…Would they still cause you to feel powerless?

Well, whatever you feel, I still consider you my only begotten, my champion, and my equal.

Are we close, or what?

~The Universe

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11 Rules Your Kids Did Not and Will Not Learn in School

I’ve seen this post of rules floating around the internet for a couple weeks now.  While I love it, I didn’t exactly feel comfortable sharing it not knowing where it actually came from.  For all we know it’s not even from Bill Gates – it sure seems to be a little harsh (for lack of a better word) coming from someone quite so philanthropic.

So I did a little research and wasn’t able to turn anything up.  Though I do find it interesting that not one newspaper or newsource has picked it up (lending me to believe it’s not actually from Bill Gates). Which of course, got me to dig a little deeper and check out Snopes.com.  And of course, here is their write-up about the history of the piece.

It turns out, it’s actually edited version version of an op-ed piece that appeared in the San Diego Union-Tribune on September 19, 1996 (the original was 3 rules longer and each rule was defined further). It was written by Charles J. Sykes, best known as the author of “Dumbing Down Our Kids: Why American Children Feel Good about Themselves, but Can’t Read, Write, or Add.”

That said, I still like the message behind it and think many can use a reminder that life isn’t always fair and there’s not all that much wrong with failing from time to time.

It’s all part of the learning…and living…process if you ask me.

(Explore #177!) 700+ views!??!Rule 1: Life is not fair – get used to it!

Rule 2: The world doesn’t care about your self-esteem. The world will expect you to accomplish something BEFORE you feel good about yourself.

Rule 3: You will NOT make $60,000 a year right out of high school. You won’t be a vice-president with a car phone until you earn both.

Rule 4: If you think your teacher is tough, wait till you get a boss.

Rule 5: Flipping burgers is not beneath your dignity. Your Grandparents had a different word for burger flipping: they called it opportunity.

Rule 6: If you mess up, it’s not your parents’ fault, so don’t whine about your mistakes, learn from them.

Rule 7: Before you were born, your parents weren’t as boring as they are now. They got that way from paying your bills, cleaning your clothes and listening to you talk about how cool you thought you were. So before you save the rain forest from the parasites of your parent’s generation, try delousing the closet in your own room.

Rule 8: Your school may have done away with winners and losers, but life HAS NOT. In some schools, they have abolished failing grades and they’ll give you as MANY TIMES as you want to get the right answer. This doesn’t bear the slightest resemblance to ANYTHING in real life.

Rule 9: Life is not divided into semesters. You don’t get summers off and very few employers are interested in helping you FIND YOURSELF. Do that on your own time.

Rule 10: Television is NOT real life. In real life people actually have to leave the coffee shop and go to jobs.

Rule 11: Be nice to nerds. Chances are you’ll end up working for one.

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The 9 Skills Every Woman Should Master

I recently went through a realization (thanks to my mentor, Christine Kane) that it’s okay to be imperfect.

For so long, I think we all – women in particular – strive to do whatever we do perfectly.  Many times we let that lack of perfection hold us back.  We tell ourselves that we can’t claim our expertise, get more clients, teach that class…do whatever…until we get it just right.

Thing is, we can’t continue to hold ourselves back like that.  We can’t get stuck in the what’s not done’s or the it’s not ready yet’s any longer.  And for my own personal journey…I can’t keep beating myself up for getting behind on my blogging.

Really…it’s not the end of the world here.

I love this article from Christine Kane about the 9 skills that she things every women should master and thought I should share it with you.  Notice that imperfection is #5.

Which of these nine skills are you ready to take on and master?  Imperfectly, of course ;-)

The 9 Skills Every Woman Should Master
by Christine Kane

Freedom is a Feeling !There’s a popular Esquire Magazine article* called “75 Skills Every Man Should Master.”  There’s stuff about baseball, neckties, and other things that most of the extraordinary men in my life could care the least about.

It got me thinking about the happiest, coolest, most successful women I know.  And how they would take the question of mastery about 40,000 leagues deeper than neckties and baseball.

In fact, it dawned on me that the burning desire beneath my outward goals is almost always the mastery of one of the following skills.  The goals themselves – be they money, fitness, etc – are really the means to becoming a student of something much much cooler.

So, here are 9 Skills Every Woman Should Master…

1 – Reveling in your own preferences

Taking the time to notice your delight. Trying new things, and honoring yourself enough to make time for them.  (No matter how stupid they seem.)  This is the key to the authenticity we women crave.

Unapologetically reveling in your own preferences gives you permission to be real – and serves others by letting them see your joy and choose (or not) to bask in it with you!

2 – Listening without judgment

I’m convinced that suffering comes from judgment.  Not just self-judgment. But ALL judgment.

That being said, many people think that “listening” means “waiting my turn to talk.”  Which means that much of our time is not spent actually listening.  It is spent judging what’s being said.

Learning how to truly listen without judgment – whether to another person or to yourself – awakens the intuition.  It heals and empowers the speaker.  It enriches the present moment.

3 – Discerning “Nurture” from “Distract”

Many of us lead exciting, challenging and sometimes stressful lives.  We are serving children, clients, parents, co-workers. Our self-care matters if we are to be of true service in the world.

There’s a huge difference, however, between nurturing ourselves with what we truly want and need – and distracting ourselves in order to stuff the stress or fill the time. Learning that difference, and honoring our true needs (ie, getting a massage vs. eating a sleeve of Oreos in one sitting) is crucial.

4 – Letting go of the need to “fix”

Most of us know that when we try to fix another person, we rob them of empowerment. (And often, our “fixes” are more for US than for them.)  Allowing others to find their own wisdom, to make mistakes and to be exactly where they are on their path teaches us to accept the present moment as well as the mystery.

It also teaches us that we are not the ultimate deciders of what is right and wrong!

5 – Becoming an Imperfectionist

Having a purpose, taking action, trying new things – all of these contribute to our deep satisfaction and joy.  When we expect ourselves to be perfect before trying new things, we cut off many avenues to happiness.

When you become an Imperfectionist, you finally recognize your ego voice exactly for what it is:  Your own personal Success Prevention Expert.

6 – Getting Out of the Comfort Zone

Our growth and success are often proportional to how often we’re willing to let ourselves be uncomfortable.  We kid ourselves (and our souls) when we convince ourselves to play it safe.

Getting out of the comfort zone doesn’t mean extreme sports or stepping onto a stage. Sometimes it can be as seemingly small as saying no – or trying a yoga class.

7 – Saying No with Clarity

Learning to say no is really about learning to say yes.

When we say no to something we don’t want to do, be, or have – we are actually saying Yes to our deeper desires.  Many women don’t believe they can have what they truly want, so they learn to settle, and their lives are filled with “maybe’s.”

Saying no – with clarity and without explaining – is really about honoring other people as well as ourselves.

8 – Allowing disappointment

When we say no, or when we follow our dreams or true callings – people might be “disappointed” in our choices.

Life is not a campaign. We don’t have to get votes.  People can love us and still feel disappointed that we didn’t do it their way.   Too many women go on campaign trails to get others to agree with them before they take proactive steps.  This only serves to rob them of the creative energy they need.

Allowing people their disappointment sets us free.

9 – Re-Deciding

Half the fun of setting intentions is seeing what comes up to be healed or released in the “becoming” that is required to meet that goal.  (Okay, so “fun” might be stretching it a bit!)

In other words?  To reach the goal or manifest the intention, we must master the art of Re-deciding.
Re-deciding means making the decision over and over again that you are creating the outcome you desire – even if you can’t see it in front of you right now.  Many of us give up if our intention doesn’t manifest in a week or a month.  Re-deciding means getting back in alignment with our goals as many times as it takes.

*the original Esquire article can be found here: http://bit.ly/9o5rChEsquireMag


Performer, songwriter, and creativity consultant Christine Kane publishes her ‘LiveCreative’ weekly ezine with more than 12,000 subscribers. If you want to be the artist of your life and create authentic and lasting success, you can sign up for a FREE subscription to LiveCreative at www.christinekane.com. For more articles like this, check out Christine’s blog – Be Creative. Be Conscious. Be Courageous – at ChristineKane.com/blog.

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Allowing For an Imperfect Life

imperfection is your ally

photo by Peter John Chen

Well, I could whine and harp about how I’ve been so busy that I haven’t had time to blog in ages. But really, what would that accomplish?

Instead I figure it’s best to acknowledge that I’m by no means perfect (who is?) and just jump right back in and start blogging again (both personally and professionally).

And of course, now that I say I’m going to do that, I can’t exactly think of something pithy or witty to say. Go figure.

I have realized though that often times, we hold ourselves up to some lofty and crazy expectations. In my case, I recently decided to sign up for a ten week business program with a 2 hour+ weekly commitment.

I knew that this wasn’t the best time. I was already way behind in blogging (both personally and professionally) and I haven’t touched my newsletter in weeks (which is really amounts to months, when you do the math). I was also just finishing up my Beyond Social Media Basics Intensive with immediate plans to redesign and relaunch the program.

On top of it all, I managed to book 4 out of town trips within an 8 week window. One of those trips is yet another business conference. And all the while I need to finishing putting the office back together (some might call it organizing, I’m thinking it’s slightly closer to breaking the pre-hoarding cycle).

And as could only be expected…I feel behind in the (10 week ) program that I paid some good money for.

I could beat myself up about this. But instead, I figured I might as well practice the fine art of imperfection.

I knew before I even started that I wouldn’t be able to keep up with it all. No one could.

So instead, I’ve decided to move at my own pace and be grateful for being able to do so. I have to say, once I decided to allow for this (and chose to not beat myself up), it felt like a weight was lifted off my shoulders. I’m no longer clenching my teeth. I feel more relaxed.

Which of course makes me wonder…why do we often hold ourselves up to such high and often stress-inducing expectations? Why can’t we just go with the flow and allow stuff…life…to just happen?

As Ieyasu Tokugawa reminds us, “Persuade thyself that imperfection and inconvenience are the natural lot of mortals, and there will be no room for discontent, neither for despair.”

That works for me.

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The Things I Did Today Instead of Doing What I Needed to Do

Yes, today was one of those days.

I had something that needed to get done. As in the “it must be done for tomorrow” sort of done.

You see, tomorrow I’ll be presenting  “Navigating the LinkedIn Landscape” at the Social Media Marketing Workshop at Blankspaces and I needed to finalize my handout.

Now mind you, I’ve talked about LinkedIn to many different groups.  In fact, it was the focus of this past weeks’ Beyond Social Media Basics call this week.  It’s not like I needed to think long and hard about creating something.

Sadly, I think that was my downfall.

Instead of sitting down and pounding it out in an hour or so, I puttered away the ENTIRE day doing the following (in no particular order):

  • Facebook updates
  • Watched this week’s Psych episode
  • Made lunch for my husband
  • Went shopping for missing lunch ingredients
  • Washed my car
  • Gassed up my car
  • Chatted up the cat
  • Played with the dog
  • Cleaned the bathroom (scrubbing the toilet included)
  • Watched some videos on YouTube
  • Listened to some music
  • More Facebook updates
  • Sent emails
  • Read emails
  • Read a magazine a bit
  • Read some articles online
  • Did an exercise in productivity (of all things) for my Uplevel Your Business class that starts next week (ironic much?)
  • Lamented a typo in one of my SuccessForSolopreneurs FB updates
  • Talked a friend through updating her FB privacy settings for their Places app
  • Wrote a step-by-step outline for a current FB campaign that a friend’s team wasn’t doing correctly
  • Drank a lot of water
  • Ate too many cookies (that I won earlier this week from Maria’s Italian Kitchen)

And I’m sure there’s whole lot more that I forget (but I refuse to spend the time trying to remember).

Did I get my handout done?

Kinda.

My copy is written.  After dinner, I’ll come home and create the actual handout version and print it off.

Basically…it’s mostly done.  But now, it’s time to head out for dinner.

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Facebook Places Goes Live: Change Your Privacy Settings

Facebook location-based application, Places went live today.  For the most part, I could care less as I’m already on Foursquare and Gowalla (when I want to update to FB, I just click that permission in my application).

But…once again, Facebook has their privacy settings set to opt-out instead of opting-in.  So you’ll need to change that if you don’t want FB to post where you are when you check in.

Here’s what you’ll need to do to change your settings…

1. Account ➨ Privacy Settings

2. Customize Settings ➨ Places I Check In To

3. Customize

4. Pick your privacy settings (I’m going with “Only Me” since I can post manually through Foursquare)

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