TJ
Thursday, January 31, 2019
The Little Things
Labels:
children,
family,
grandchildren,
Guitarist,
life,
living,
love,
music,
relationships
Saturday, January 26, 2019
What's Your Story?
Your life is a story. The days flip past, too quickly to absorb, a mess of seemingly random events. So you look back and highlight certain moments as important, as turning points in the main plot. You trace each thread back to its origin, finding omens and ironies scattered along the way, until it all feels inevitable, and your life makes sense. You know how this story is going to end, but you’re still eager to skip ahead, dying to know what happens next.
But there are times when you look up and realize that the plot of your life doesn’t make sense to you anymore. You thought you were following the arc of the story, but you keep finding yourself immersed in passages you don’t understand. Either everything seems important or nothing does. It’s a tangled mess of moments that don’t even seem to belong in the same genre, that keeping changing depending on what you choose to highlight.
What kind of story is this? Just another coming-of-age tale, the same one your parents told, with the names switched around? Is your everyday life part of the origin story of something truly epic? Are you unwittingly getting by on other people’s charity, mistaking your own luck for your own success? Are you a character in a romance, a tragedy, a travelogue, or just another cautionary tale?
As you thumb through the years, you may never know where this all is going. The only thing you know is that there’s more to the story. That soon enough you’ll flip back to this day looking for clues of what was to come, rereading all the chapters you skimmed through to get to the good parts—only to learn that all along you were supposed to choose your own adventure.
TJ
Labels:
life,
living,
mistakes,
relationships,
self-care,
self-image,
story,
success
Friday, January 25, 2019
Want To Get Ahead In Life?
Don’t get too wrapped up in your feelings.
Feelings change throughout the day and they are unreliable. Don’t let them rule your life, or interfere with your goals.
Don’t worry so much because worrying, more than likely, will make things worse.
Focusing on your worries will drain your energy, and the source of your worry, what we’re dreading, doesn’t happen anyway.
Stop the caustic internal commentary.
Stop telling yourself that things are going to fall apart, or that you will probably fail, or that no one does, or will like you. Keep trying, moving forward, and keep living your life.
Stop being self-critical.
You must be your own cheerleader and your biggest fan. Keep a journal of your successes, and the times your perseverance, attitude, and inner strength helped you overcome something. Be encouraging and kind, and always lean into what makes you successful.
Stop feeling guilty.
Feeling guilty changes nothing. You are going to make mistakes. Accept you aren’t perfect and then get up and try again.
Stop worrying about what others think of you.
At the end of the day it doesn’t matter what they think. Choose your own goals for your life and remember you’re not accountable to them.
Don’t worry about set-backs or changes to your plans.
Plans always need adjusting and things always go wrong, but that doesn’t mean “it’s over” or you’ll never reach your goals. Expect to make some changes. Just be adaptable.
TJ
Labels:
goals,
happiness,
life,
living,
Psychology,
relationships,
self-care,
success
Honesty. What does it look like?
What does honesty look like?
Being open about yourself, your
feelings, and what you have done. When you are asked a question, tell the
truth, even it is embarrassing. Do not make excuses for your weaknesses, just be
truthful.
One of the biggest stumbling blocks to a healthy version of honesty is exposing yourself too much and too early in any relationship. The optimum way to build an honesty bridge is to open-up one step at a time and try to do it at the same rate as the other person in the relationship.
One of the biggest stumbling blocks to a healthy version of honesty is exposing yourself too much and too early in any relationship. The optimum way to build an honesty bridge is to open-up one step at a time and try to do it at the same rate as the other person in the relationship.
Use personal, truthful, stories to
gently encourage the other person to also expose themselves, or just to
stimulate normal conversation.
Openness can also include
disagreement. When others express views with which you disagree you can gently
state your disagreement with the view, and be careful not to reject the person.
When
you expose a personal vulnerability to another person, you are offering them a
way to criticize or attack you. This shows them that you are trusting them not
to attack. By being trusting, you encourage them to be trustworthy and trusting
in return.
It is important to be careful when
exposing vulnerabilities because you can embarrass others and make them feel
they should be open in return when they are not ready to do so. This is why you
should start small and move forward incrementally as they open up to you.
Openness implies you have the confidence
that you will not be attacked and can be a unspoken indicator of power. In
effect you are saying 'I am so powerful I can admit weaknesses or express views
because I can repel all criticism or attack.'
Open disagreement is also helpful in
creating a bond because it also encourages trust by saying 'I know you
understand me well enough not to take this the wrong way.' Of course this level
of openness requires a lot of care in accepting the person even if you reject their
argument.
TJ
Labels:
honesty,
life,
living,
Psychology,
relationships,
self-care,
success
Thursday, January 24, 2019
Looking Back on Your Life...
While you're in them, seasons of life seem extraordinary. Fiery, fragile, and erratic. But once you
have some distance from them, the moments seem to get smaller, until they are
almost out of focus.
When you look back over your life, you can see more of it
now than ever before. And yet it seems somehow diminished. Unassuming. Almost charming.
So you begin scanning your life, looking for something
interesting or beautiful. You see an ordinary house, with an ordinary yard, on
an ordinary street. It looks smaller than you remember. You once had wild
dreams and obstacles and risks looming all around you, but now they look
smaller too.
You remember giants and goddesses and villains you
encountered, but all you see now is ordinary people assembled in their tiny
classrooms and work-spaces, each of us moving around in little steps, like
tokens on a game board. No matter how many times you rolled the dice, it was
always these little moves, here and there.
We do a little work, take a little rest, make a little
friend, throw a little party, feel a little boredom, and have a little
rebellion. There are so many of these token moments, that were supposed to
represent some other thing. You keep adding them all up, as if there was
something you forgot to count, some bundle of glory that fell off the back of a
truck.
You may love the life you have, for everything it is. You
know it isn't groundbreaking, but you wouldn't change a thing. Maybe when you
first started building the life you wanted, you left plenty of room for what
might happen, and somehow lost track of what was happening.
Or maybe you were never 'in it' to begin with. Maybe you
knew even then that this wasn't the world you expected. A world so low and
common you tried to keep your distance, floating somewhere above it, where
nobody else could look down on this life you built.
Nobody else but you.
TJ
Monday, January 14, 2019
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