Monthly Archive for February, 2008

Prickly Gifts

“Truth springs from argument among friends.” David Hume, 1711-1776

Suppose you wanted to go see a movie. There was a theatre showing twelve different films in town, and you had time to see just one. Fortunately, you had two friends who had both seen all twelve. So you asked them which movie you should see.

Your first friend said, “They were all wonderful! The lights, the colors, the sounds! All those beautiful people on the screen, expressing emotions, doing interesting things! I loved them all!”

Your second friend said, “They were all horrible. I’ve never seen such a lame crop of films. The actors couldn’t couldn’t convince a six-year-old they were human, much less their characters, the directors were apparently blind AND deaf, and the writers should all be lined up and shot for insulting the intelligence of the audience so egregiously.”

Which friend helped you decide which movie to see?

Neither, of course. They might have influenced you to enjoy any movie at all, or to give up movies entirely, but you gained no information to help you choose between movies.

It takes a more moderate stance than all or nothing to see the difference between alternatives.

David Hume’s formula for truth contains two parts: argument and friends. He very elegantly included two necessary elements for increasing knowledge. “Argument” means there must be differences of insight, opinion, knowledge, or perspective, and they must be discussed, for there to be advancement in truth. “Friends” means that the discussion must take place between people who have some willingness to work together. When enemies disagree, no advancement in learning takes place, because each holds to their original position, discounting the other’s opinion.

It’s human nature to dislike criticism. I and most of the people I know feel uncomfortable when someone tells us we are doing something wrong. It is almost instinctive to try to avoid the discomfort by avoiding the criticism. But that also means avoiding learning and truth.

If we never accept any information that disagrees with what we already believe, we can never know more than what we know right now. In extreme cases, avoiding criticism means not even accepting feedback from reality that what we are doing isn’t working, and so continuing to do it again and again.

So criticism is a prickly gift. It can be uncomfortable to receive, and there is a jewel inside.

So here is an interesting question: How can we minimize the prickles on our way to the jewel? A significant piece of my coach training was to practice knowing I could be wrong. Now, when someone suggests I am wrong, it prickles less, because I’m already open to the possibility. And when I offer a theory or observation to a client, since I know I could be wrong, the client has room to come to their own truth. That one attitude makes coaching much different than counseling or consulting.

I’m offering a special until the end of February. New clients will receive one hour of coaching for $45 — half off my usual rate. Call 575-640-0979 to schedule an appointment and experience the jewel of respectful coaching.

Small Steps - February 19th, 2008

“That’s one small step for [a] man, one giant leap for mankind.” Neil Armstrong, as he placed the first footprint on the Moon.

This issue’s Small Step for Space: Practice friendly discussion about human exploration of space.

Try raising the question of how to explore space in the spirit of “I could be wrong.” See if others are more willing to hear you, and discover if any new truths emerge.

Book Review - February 19th, 2008

Vigilant by James Alan Gardner

Vigilant is one of my favorite of the books in the Festina Ramos universe. It can be read on its own. Humans share a planet with the friendly, winged Oolom. A small number of the Oolom take on the responsibility of being Vigilant — they offer disinterested and surprisingly insightful commentary on proposed laws and projects. When a sudden plague decimates the Oolom, Faye can only sit by the side of a dying Vigilant and admire her spirit. Then Faye, too, is called to be Vigilant — and discovers both humans and Oolom caught in a fight between intelligences far beyond either. Can Faye uncover the secret war before another plague wipes out the humans as well? Contains adult themes.

Going Places

I’ve just been to the OneCoach Mind, Marketing, and Millions conference in San Diego. I had an amazing time. Scott deMoulin, in particular, had prepared extremely concentrated presentations with targeted and beautifully laid out handbooks. I’ll share some of what I learned in a later newsletter.

I flew. I like that time in the airport, where I am out of the world, in transit, neither here nor there. On the way home, I reached the airport three and a half hours before my flight. I enjoyed looking at the people, walking along the halls, and decompressing from the intense conference.

I’ve rushed through airports. This was better.

It’s worth allowing time to relax. It’s also helpful to take a step back to look over my life.

I’m happy with my life. And taking time to observe it helped me have the life I do.

————

A couple months ago, I read this article by my sister Martha Beck trained coach Jeannette Maw. I’ve been looking for a place to share it with you. So I’m going to relax and end my words here, to leave room for a guest essay.

Expanding Your Repertoire

After taking piano lessons for eight years, you’d think I’d be pretty good at playing piano, right?

Actually, I am. Or rather, I am really good at playing two songs. That’s it. They’re the only two songs I kept playing after I stopped lessons as a teenager.

When I play these two songs, I sound REALLY good. Like a gifted pianist. It’s pretty impressive! (Or at least I like to think so.)

But ask me to play anything else and I’m lost. I actually won’t even attempt it any more, because it ruins my fantasy of being talented.

I thought about this as I’ve been giving clients the example lately of a girlfriend who has practiced misery so well she can turn any situation into a reason to be miserable. (She’s doing it right now, as a matter of fact, because I won’t pick up the phone to hear her complain about her brother.)

Any self-respecting girlfriend would drop me as a friend. But since she’s doing the misery tune and I fit perfectly into that song of hers (since I won’t listen to her complain), she uses me as another reason to be miserable. Yes, she’s gifted at “miserable.”

Her story is that she was miserably married for 14 years, got a divorce, then was miserably single, then started dating, then was miserably dating (that was really miserable), then got a boyfriend (fabulous guy), then was miserable because she wanted to be married to this guy, then got married (after dating four months), then was miserable because the family integration was challenging, then got counseling for that (which helped), then was miserable because the honeymoon was over WAY too fast in her opinion, then was miserable because her parents like him more than they like her, then was miserable because …

That’s her tune. Miserable.

I tell clients until we practice the vibration we want, it won’t matter WHAT happens in our lives. If we only know a small repertoire of vibrations, we can’t experience any others.

We have to practice the vibration we want FIRST, before we have a “real life” reason to sing that tune. We have to expand our repertoire by practicing the feeling(s) we want.

I realized I can stop using my girlfriend (whom I love dearly) as an example because I have my own example.

Years ago when I quit my job to start coaching, I was stressed out because I had no clients and thus no income. (I was still holding the belief that I had to earn money. Can’t say I’ve dropped that one 100% yet - but making good progress.)

Anyway, I was stressed out for having no clients, then stressed out because I had only a few clients, then stressed out because I had all the clients, but wasn’t sure there would be more in the future, then was stressed out because I continually had too many clients than I could fit in my schedule.

I went from where I was (no clients) to where I wanted to be (successful coach) without my vibration changing one iota. Okay, maybe an iota, but not enough to really notice the difference.

I was stressed out from start to finish. Because I hadn’t practiced anything but “stressed out.” That’s all I knew.

It started in my corporate world with a management change, and I didn’t do anything to manage my vibration other than quit my job, which I thought would change how I felt. As you just read, that didn’t happen for me.

Taking the action, changing the circumstances, making things happen isn’t what makes us feel better!

Changing how we feel is what makes us feel better; outside circumstances don’t do that. They can’t. I don’t care how many times we get married, or quit our job, or pay off our debts, or lose ten pounds … it isn’t the “thing” that makes us feel better. You make you feel better. Nothing and nobody else can.

So if we don’t practice a new feeling, we’ll never get to it.

The new song I’m learning next? How to be happy in a long term relationship where we live under one roof and expect that’s a wonderful, beautiful, rewarding thing. Because we are house hunting right now, so it’s time for me to get good at this one.

Luckily I know how to practice new vibes.

Otherwise, you KNOW the posts you’d be reading about next, right? Right. I’m not playing that song.

Instead I’m playing the one where I am so glad to have learned enough about myself and myself-in-relationship that I know how to be flexible and appreciative and focusing on what matters and considerate of my partner and believing that everything works out deliciously. And how nice it is to truly be in an intimate partnership where we know, love and support each other in ways neither of us has ever experienced before. Delicious!!

So, anyone who cares to join me in expanding their repertoire, I’d love to hear what new vibration you’re practicing, so that your next success feels as good as you expect it to. Maybe even better.

Namaste.

by Jeannette Maw. Used by permission. You can read more of her writings at:
www.goodvibeblog.com

Coaching Certification Changes Its Name

I trained with Martha Beck, and then took the further steps to earn her certification. At that time, it was called being North Star Certified.

Often enough, I’d say I was North Star Certified, and then continue to explain it meant Martha Beck’s organization stood behind me.

Perhaps this was happening to a lot of her students. Martha Beck and her group have taken the logical step of changing the name of the certification to Martha Beck Certified.

I’m still certified as a well-trained and experienced coach through their organization. Only the name has changed. I’ll be going through and changing the wording wherever it appears over the next month.

Small Steps - February 5th, 2008

“That’s one small step for [a] man, one giant leap for mankind.” Neil Armstrong, as he placed the first footprint on the Moon.

This issue’s Small Step for Space: Buy a trip into space.

Simply adding money to the space economy demonstrates the value we place on space. We are living in the first time in history when private citizens can buy a ride into space. Check out:www.virgingalactic.com

Not a small step? 200 people have already made firm reservations.
See this New York Times article

For a lower price ticket, consider: www.gozerog.com

Book Review - February 5th, 2008

Spin by Robert Charles Wilson

One night, the stars go out. Earth has been encased in a field that filters their light and the light of the sun. Worse, we soon learn that our planet is moving through time so quickly that in forty years, our sun, outside the field, will expand and consume the planet. Spin follows three childhood friends through forty years as they each approach the end of all they know in different ways.