Monthly Archive for November, 2009

The Exhilaration of Completing a Long, Hard Project

I’ve just published a book.  For almost a year, I’ve been spending significant hours every week working on this project.  It was a joint project, so I’ve spent time writing to my co-authors and coordinating our various priorities.  It was a book project, so I’ve spent time polishing the language and trimming out the errors.  It was a publishing project, so I’ve been learning how to work with a publisher and developing my delegation skills.

And it was a life coaching project.  So all along, I’ve kept my eyes on making it useful to its readers.

It’s quite a thrill to see a project like that complete.  Now I can look at it and see that it is good.  The cover is beautiful.  Each of my co-authors has brought her own expertise and perspective to specific life challenges, and the chapters rock.  I can now hold in my hands something that was only an idea last December.

The satisfaction of completing a project like that is enhanced by the long effort I put into it.  I’ve made something - more, I’ve exercised the persistence and discipline to continue work on this project through ups and downs these eleven months.  I’m here to tell you that it does pay to plan and persevere.  And even a long term project does come to its end, step by step.

Have you felt the urge to start a long term project?  Would you like the sense of accomplishment for tackling and completing something really big?  What would it do for you, to know you had persevered to accomplish a significant project?

If you are hesitating, try taking a small step.  The view at the end is worth it, I promise.

Oh, the book?  It’s called Changes of the Heart.  We’re throwing a coming out party for it December 1 and 2.  I’ll let you know all about that next time.

May you receive the exhilaration of completing a challenge that fully tests you.

With all my best wishes,
Anna

Writing Tip

Writing a book is a big project.  Arrange to celebrate your milestones along the way.  Also, find a first reader who believes in you and supports you.  One person to share your journey is a significant help.

Small Steps

“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:  Browse space news at http://space.alltop.com

We are truly seeing a flowering of space activity.  Space is back.  This time, it’s commercial.  Take a look at the articles here, and think back to where we were a few years ago.  This is a truly exciting time for space.  Again.  At last.

Book Recommendation

Back to Methuselah by George Bernard Shaw

Of all the authors my literature classes introduced me to, Shaw may be the one I’m most thankful for.  He was an optimist, and a forward thinker.  He had a sense of humor and a strong point of view.  Back to Methuselah is a play in five acts.  It’s meant more to be read than performed.  The first act starts at the dawn of humanity, and each one moves ahead into the future, finally ending at “Summer afternoon in the year 31,920 AD.”  It’s interesting to see what this thinker born in 1856 projected for humanity’s brilliant development.

Words Shape Lives

“We don’t describe the world we see–we see the world we describe. Language, as the single most fundamental force of the human intellect, has the power to alter perception. We think in words, and these words have the power to limit us or to set us free; they can frighten us or evoke our courage. Similarly, the stories we tell ourselves about our own lives eventually become our lives. We can tell healthy stories or horror stories. The choice is ours.”  from What Happy People Know by Dan Baker.

Martha Beck coach Holly Berman recently posted this quote to her online journal.  Here’s what she went on to say about it:

“Buddha states that all is illusion. He is referring to the same property described above. We CREATE our world by how we think about it. We create our own suffering–what Dan Baker refers to as horror stories. This doesn’t mean that “bad” things don’t happen to us even when we tell “healthy” stories. It means that our reaction to it (the words we use to describe it or to think about it, i.e, our “story” about it) determines if we suffer or not. For example, many people would imagine that having Stage IV cancer and undergoing chemotherapy is a horror story. It struck me that way in the beginning. Not any more. I am deeply happy because the way I think about it doesn’t allow it to frighten me or drag me down.

“If I can do this, I know anyone can do this. We just have to have the desire to change our way of thinking, the techniques to do so, and the patience to turtle step our way toward a new way of being in the world.”

Holly has taken cancer and transmuted it to wisdom.  Is there any alchemy stronger than this?

I love how clear her view has become, and wanted to share this with you.  Words shape lives.  Holly has chosen to put words of strength around her situation.  And she is thriving, in what many would consider a terrible situation.

What story are you telling about your life?  Does that story serve you?

You can read more from Holly Berman at http://www.caringbridge.org/visit/hollyberman.  She is also one of the featured coaches in the upcoming book, Changes of the Heart.  Thirteen Martha Beck coaches each contributed a chapter on a challenge they know well.  (My chapter is about writing.)  The book will be out in December.

Writing Tips

Each observer adds their own meaning to an event.  Take a moment to separate out the events from the perspective.  Then consider what meaning someone with another perspective might give that event.  Often, the first perspective may be obvious or clichéd, and a second or third perspective will have something more interesting to tell.

Small Steps

“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:  Read the Augustine Report.

There has been a lot of controversy and analysis about the recent report on the state of US space activities. You can go directly to the source and read the original report here: http://www.nasa.gov/offices/hsf/meetings/10_22_pressconference.html