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Wednesday 18 November 2015

Pounding In and Pulling Out Nails – with Michael Josephson

Courtesy of Bob Proctor’s ‘Insight of the Day’

WHEN my daughter was confronted with the fact that she had really hurt another child with a mean comment, she cried and immediately wanted to apologize.

That was a good thing, but I wanted her to know an apology can’t always make things better. So I told her the parable of Will, a nine-year-old whose father abandoned his mom two years earlier.  

Are you pounding in nails? (Pic by freedigitalphotos.net)
 Will was angry, and he often would lash out at others with hurtful words. He once told his mom, “I see why Dad left you!”

Unable to cope with his outbursts of cruelty, she sent Will to spend the summer with his grandparents.

His grandfather’s strategy to help Will learn self-control was to make him go into the garage and pound a two-inch-long nail into a four-by-four board every time he said a mean and nasty thing.

For a small boy, this was a major task, but he couldn’t return until the nail was all the way in. After about ten trips to the garage, Will began to be more cautious about his words.

Eventually, he even apologized for all the bad things he’d said.

That’s when his grandmother came in. She made him bring in the board filled with nails and told him to pull them all out. This was even harder than pounding them in, but after a huge struggle, he did it.

His grandmother hugged him and said, “I appreciate your apology and, of course, I forgive you because I love you, but I want you to know an apology is like pulling out one of those nails.

“Look at the board. The holes are still there. The board will never be the same. I know your dad put a hole in you, but please don’t put holes in other people; you are better than that.”

A fourth-grade teacher recently told me how she tells this story to her class in the beginning of the semester and uses it throughout the year.

When she comes upon a child saying or doing a mean or unkind thing, she will say, “Did you put a nail in someone?” Then she’ll ask, “Did you take it out?”

She says her students always know what she’s talking about and recognize what they did was wrong, which isn’t always the case if she simply asks the child what happened.

(That usually results in a string of blaming everyone else).

She urges her students not to use the automatic, “That’s all right” after an apology, because usually what was done was not all right and the person saying it, rightfully, doesn’t feel it was all right.

She tells her class to say, “I accept your apology” or, “I forgive you” instead.

The teacher also uses the story to help her kids understand difficult family matters outside of the classroom.

She tells them some people will never take out the nails they’ve pounded into the children, but everyone has the power to pull them out themselves and get on with their life rather than let others rule them.

She told me, “The story is simple, but the message is powerful – especially when reinforced with: “You’re better than that!”

Remember, character counts.

Michael Josephson
www.whatwillmatter.com

Friday 13 November 2015

Your One Wild and Precious Life

By Linda N Spencer

OVER a year ago, I moved to Europe. This past week, I spoke to one of my dear American friends to learn that she was moving to Europe as well.

She won't be living in the same country as me, but at least we'll be on the same continent. 

Are you leading a  'wild and precious life'?
Over the summer, I sent her a photo I took on the beach where we live in Costa del Sol.

It was a perfect picture with the Mediterranean Sea and the words from Mary Oliver, "Tell me, what is it you plan to do with your one wild and precious life?"

I'm at that certain age when people typically start to evaluate what they've done in their lives. Decades have passed. Children have grown.

As I joked recently with a colleague and friend, this is the time when we start to gain wisdom only to have our bodies begin to fall apart. One begins to assess things.

When my friend told me she was moving to Europe, I was fabulously happy for her. I know that she came to a point in her life where she needed a fresh perspective and she wanted to make a bold choice.

We both had been speaking about it for years, when I lived in New York.

Many of my friends are at that stage in life where they're reflecting back on the path that brought them to a particular point in life.

While many are content, I do have some who want to break free from living in a particular city or country. I have others who want to leave a career after having done it for 20 years.

Still others know the time is coming when they have to re-evaluate if they stay with their spouse and partner. Not everything is meant to be forever.

While I'm happy that my friend will be living on the same continent as I am, and hence, we can hopefully see each other more often, I'm really more content in the fact that she is living a new dream.

What's more, I am delighted that she decided to strike out on the journey - not knowing whatsoever what the path ahead will bring.
It takes an infinite amount of courage and faith in the unknown to do what she's doing. In fact, I'm not sure I would have moved to Europe all by myself if I didn't have my husband.

I'd like to think I would have, but I don't know. Maybe. Maybe not.

But, here's the thing. None of us are promised tomorrow. We're not even promised the next moment in our lives.

Although we think we'll be here tomorrow, next month or ten years from now - there are absolutely no guarantees. The older I grow, the more absolutely precious every moment I'm here becomes.

I have a greater respect for the fragility and temporal joys of life now than I ever did in my 20s.

So, if you find yourself in that place where you're evaluating, here's some advice for you. Jump. Leave every excuse of why you can't or shouldn't.

Do the planning. Make the decision and do it. Life's absolutely too short. You'll never get today ever again. You'll never have this chance again if you don't take it. Don't wait for tomorrow. It may never come.

Yes, you'll have people in your life that will challenge you when say you want to move, finally divorce your partner or change your career.

But, here's what others who have danced to their own tune and I have learned. You'll always have those people. There's always a chorus predicting failure, drama and tragedy.

This has nothing to do with you. It's because they're expressing their own fears and anxieties.

In Mary Oliver's poem, the sentence before her most quoted line about your wild and precious life is this:

"Tell me, what else should I have done? Doesn't everything die at last, and too soon?"


© 2015 Linda N. Spencer and "Living For Purpose". All rights reserved.

Please visit the original article - with key links - on my blog at http://lnspencer.com. You will also find other great articles about philanthropy, life and travel.

Please like my Facebook page at https://www.facebook.com/living4purpose and follow me on Twitter at @LNSpencer. Thank you so much!

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/9196343

Thursday 5 November 2015

Daily Habits of Successful People – with Brian Tracy

Posted by John Lee of YourBestYouEver.net

‘It’s all about routine’. That’s the sub-text of this excellent video by entrepreneur, professional speaker, success expert and best-selling author, Brian Tracy.
  
Personal development expert, Brian Tracy
 And Brian’s well-qualified to comment as someone who pre-dates, by quite a few years, the rise in popularity of concepts such as the ‘Law of Attraction’ and ‘Success Manifestation’.

Yet while many more recent commentators, specialists and ‘gurus’ seem to complicate what are already fairly esoteric ideas, he remains refreshingly clear, practical and down-to-earth.

In this five-minute video, he looks at the role of ‘habits’ in our everyday lives and what we can do to form useful ones, while ridding ourselves of those that are less helpful.

As the title suggests, Brian also offers six of the best to adopt for a healthier, more fulfilling and more successful life – taken from his book, ‘Million Dollar Habits’.

There’s a link, too, that enables you to download, for free, a chapter from another of his works entitled, ‘No Excuses! The Power of Self-Discipline’.

It’s well worth a look. Simply click on the link below to be taken to the original recording:

http://tiny.cc/ea583x