A Positive 2009 from Positiveworks - we CAN make this a good year
Let’s not let the endless doom and gloom get to us. The media and the government seem to love battering us with miserable stories but they weren’t exactly brilliant at predicting the current crisis or protecting us from it were they? So maybe they are all missing something that’s just around the corner that could actually go right - who knows?! After all, just after the last recession we got the internet and digital boom … so do get creative and get us out of this one… :>)
Our parents and grandparents lived through far worse, with world wars and a far less generous social system than we have today to support us. They lived with years of uncertainty that was not just economic but life-threatening. Talk to them about it, or to your elderly neighbour – you often find that the ‘old dear’ down the road has actually driven tanks and parachuted out of planes… far braver than battling the bugs on the District Line every morning.
But of course misery and negativity depletes our immune system so it is hardly surprising that we have a record number of flu and cold bugs going around. So focus on the positive and at least you are more likely to stay healthy and live longer as there is now a good body of evidence to show that optimism and happiness increase health, longevity and wellbeing. (And if you’re worrying about how on earth you’ll afford to live longer then optimism also increases your chances of success in sales and career and it can be learned – through Positiveworks of course! www.positiveworks.com )
The human mind tends to fret about things that may never happen. So enjoy what is going right. And if today you have some money in the bank, a job perhaps, a roof over your head, a pet, a friend, someone you love, or someone who knows and understands you then rejoice. A quick scan of world events shows us that the problems we face in the UK may be difficult but nothing like as bad as in some other parts of the world.
Also can we please have a revival of common sense: it has been under-rated recently and it has a lot going for it. Many regulations assume we have none of our own – that we have to be warned that we could cut ourselves if we aren’t careful how we use scissors to unwrap our Christmas presents. Surely we know that this is the case, that life can be risky – that grass is slippery when wet. Don’t we?
So listen to your heart. Intuition has been proven by recent research to be spot on in helping us make decisions. But you knew that didn’t you – you didn’t need a University research project to tell you. If something feels right, do it; if something doesn’t feel right then don’t. Intuition usually speaks to you through your body – if you feel tense with someone it is for a reason; if you feel light and happy with another person then there is a message in it. You don’t need books to tell you this: you just need to tune back into your self. (But of course do buy my latest book Cognitive-Behavioural Coaching for Dummies http://eu.wiley.com/WileyCDA/WileyTitle/productCd-0470713798.html )
The Credit Crunch has raised discussion about excess and ‘affluenza’. Certainly a rebalancing of what is realistic and sustainable is required at all levels. But there is little point in waging a war on wealth-creation in itself. There is no intrinsic goodness in poverty: in fact poverty divides and wrecks individuals and communities. Several people are now admitting that they ‘always knew’ that what they were doing in lending money to people who couldn’t afford it was wrong but they did it anyway in order to follow a target, gain a perk. Similarly others took on debt that they knew they couldn’t afford. So follow your own moral compass of what is right or wrong but honest toil is certainly nothing to be ashamed of. If we make money we are able to employ others, avoid living off the State, be philanthropic and give to charities. I found this quite an interesting article on this subject:
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/comment/leading_article/article5391496.ece
New perspectives are what is called for, not a return to what was. Einstein commented that we can’t solve a problem from the same place in which we created it. When it comes to your own life get creative and look at situations anew. Spend 30 minutes identifying as many ways as possible of finding a solution. The HBDI Herrmann thinking profile works brilliantly to stretch your brain and ensure you integrate creativity and realism, see http://www.positiveworks.com/products/thinkingpref.htm
You can change things: every voice matters. Even if it is just to develop a positive energy around you at home or at work. But if you care about something, write a letter to a paper or your MP or to Boris, write a blog, comment on a website, join a lobby group, volunteer for a charity, smile at someone on the tube, do any small thing that expresses what you feel strongly about. You may not be able to change the world, or your whole organisation, or the government, or the country but you can make a difference to those immediately close to you and surely that is worth doing.
Finally, fun doesn’t have to cost much. We can enjoy family, friends, good health, kitchen suppers, books, reading, listening to music, making love, dancing, going to an art gallery, playing with the paint pot your aunt bought for the kids, walking in the park, all at minimal cost. So let’s act to make this year a really good one and prove those doom and gloom merchants thoroughly wrong!
Happy 2009! Helen
7 Ideas about travelling hopefully through the economic downturn
7 Ideas about travelling hopefully through the economic downturn
The news is all thoroughly glum isn’t it. Every day there seems to be yet another story of economic doom and gloom and global break-down. So I thought I would share with you some of the things we could try to remember in these challenging times:
1. Focus on the positive. The one thing we do have control of is our mental and emotional approach to how we manage the situation. I am not suggesting that the situation is not serious: I am sure that it is. But we can either allow our thoughts to increase our sense of anxiety such as “I can’t stand this situation: it is ghastly and it is just going to get worse” or we can develop thoughts such as “this is a very challenging situation but I can manage it step by step and remain optimistic” so as to generate a feeling of calm and confidence. When we are stressed we are stupid and make stupid decisions: and we can’t afford to make bad decisions at this time so take a deep breath and decide to feel in control.
2. Focus on what we can control: decide what we can change and what we can’t. We are living through unprecedented times: no expert – politician or economist – actually knows what the solutions are so the important thing is for us to focus on those aspects of our life that we can control and not spend too much time worrying about what we can’t. What can we do? Perhaps we can watch our cash flow, save money, invest it carefully, put our all into the work we are doing, seek new career avenues and opportunities. Perhaps we can nurture the relationships and support systems we have and support those whom we love and with whom we live and work. In essence, travel hopefully and make every day as enjoyable as it can be. Each decision we make becomes more important and will take more consideration so as to ensure that we taking action where we can and accepting what we can’t change.
3. Focus on personal values. We need to flex to the changing circumstances of the economic world but the focus that can keep us sane is holding on to our personal principles and values. Doing this is not always easy but virtually always raises self-esteem and is more likely to set you on the right pathway for your own unique destiny rather than following the crowd. Groupthink can lead to panic and to not thinking wisely (look at what has just been happening when people all over the world got swept up on a wave of economic practice that was not sustainable). The pull of the crowd is strong and it takes courage to stand alone but ultimately in my experience it leads us towards those people who share our values and can support our aspirations.
4. Get real. Work with facts and evidence, not with supposition and imagining what might happen – because it may never happen. If we buy into all the fear that the media and governments are setting up we could waste several months if not years of our lives living in fear, to no good avail. Unprecedented times mean that forthcoming events are unpredictable so we may simply not have the mental models available to imagine what they might look like – and you never know, things could turn out to be better than we imagine!
5. Look for the opportunities. In every downturn there is opportunity. I have lived through three major periods of economic difficulty – the 1970s (when we had a 3-day week, power cuts to offices, rubbish uncollected in the streets), the 1980s and Black Monday, and the recession of the 1990s – when I set up Positiveworks. They don’t last forever and there are always those who prosper despite them. We can either button down the hatches and decide that everything is going to be ghastly or we can choose to travel wisely and hopefully and look for new opportunities, new ways of working, new ways of living. There are 2 books out that might be of interest to you: one called When Markets Collide – Investment Strategies for the Age of Global Economic Change. You can check it out on http://business.timesonline.co.uk/tol/business/economics/article4968973.ece . The other is The Tiger That Isn’t: Seeing Through a World of Numbers. You can check this one out in an article in The Times entitled ‘Crash! Boom! Disaster! That’s enough crazy talk’ see http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/comment/columnists/guest_contributors/article4981188.ece
6. Be discerning. The media has decided long ago that it is only bad news that sells newspapers – so that is what they focus on. They seldom tell us of all the many good things that are going on in the world. Comment always comes with an agenda too: so listen carefully to who is doing the reporting – and why. We might remind ourselves as we read or listen to the news that what is actually happening is as much about what is not reported as about what is.
7. Get creative. If the old world has gone let’s consider the shape of the new world in a proactive way: it takes the sum of our individual efforts to make change a positive experience. Each one of us has more creativity and innovation within us than we might be aware of – it is time for us to get fired up about how to make this period of global downturn a time when we shift our thinking and approach to deciding what kind of new world we want to build. If we focus on negativity and fear this is what we will shape; if we focus on constructive optimism and innovation we may be able to shape something new and exciting that is grounded in wise principles and a sense of inclusion that could benefit us all. This is our challenge: let’s rise to it!
What new world do you want to create and what action might you take to create it?
Rehabilitation of prisoners: the judgement of Jonathan Aitken
“Disgraced” Aitken to head prison reform research run the headlines in the media and surely in this one sentence is precisely the reason why prisoners or those who commit misdemeanours find it so difficult to be rebilitated successfully into our society. For Profumo it took a lifetime; forever “disgraced” and unforgiven however many good works are carried out after the event.
If we continue to judge and label people for the crime or weakness they committed many years earlier, for which they have paid their rightful penance, what hope is there for them to move on and reinvent themselves as someone who can behave well and be a useful part of society? This is precisely the prejudice prisoners face and the reason why prison is so seldom a successful means of rehabilitation. Prejudice drives society’s perceptions of offenders and this in turn drives their own perceptions of themselves resulting in insufficient confidence or esteem to hack it in the world outside prison. I hold no torch for Aitken but certainly believe that he should be judged for who he is today, not who he was 8 or more years ago, and for prison reform is it not better to seek the opinion of someone who has ‘inside’ knowledge?
The problem of other people’s stuck perceptions is just as relevant to anyone going through personal change. Colleagues, family and friends frequently wish to label you and see you as who you were rather than who you are today, let alone who you are seeking to become in future. This is why so many change programmes fail: habitual perceptions, habitual behaviours, however constructive or unconstructive, are what others have become used to and so it is often easier to hold a person into old patterns and block their progress rather than face the discomfort of change. Very often it is those nearest and dearest to you who hold you back as they are threatened by what you might become and how it will affect them personally. But equally it can be people who have never met you or know of you rather than know you who refuse to open their eyes to the fact that people can and do learn and change as they go through life.
How difficult it seems to be for humans to truly and wholeheartedly support another person’s transformation. Yet it is often when people make mistakes that they learn their hardest but most useful lessons in life and often experience a kind of epiphany. We only need to look at the lives of saints and great people to see that frequently the early part of their story was a difficult one. Look back at your own life and consider whether you have not learnt some wisdom over the last ten years? Would you wish to be labelled for some misdemeanour you committed years ago?
Whether a prisoner or not people need the support of others in order to successfully change behaviour. They also need to learn skills both cognitive and behavioural in order to become the person they want to be: it is unlikely to happen without. Why don’t we open up our eyes to see the potential of what someone could become rather than seeing them as some kind of outdated and faded image of a person they once were? Until we do this we shall continue to have the problems we have in our society with both juveniles and adults reoffending because people respond to how we treat them. There is plenty of research to demonstrate that when someone is treated as successful they become successful. It is for this reason that a coach can support individual and organisational change through constant reinforcement of the new and constructive behaviours that lead to future success. See www.http://www.positiveworks.com/coaching/executive.htm
Your inner life - reaching silence
I wonder where you are when you are reading this: in town or in country, in noise or in silence. As we turn the page from 2007 to 2008 it is increasingly difficult to find silence in the environment in which we live. Trains, planes, cars, motor bikes, tannoy announcements, ipods, mobile phones are a continuous assault on our ear drums. In other parts of the world there may be the noise of gunfire or tanks.
So finding peace can be tricky but where we choose to be can help us touch that inner silence that is available to all of us if we take the time to listen for it. I have been lucky enough to spend the weekend down in Nice. One thing I have been reminded of is how wonderful it is to be in a place where the shops close on Sunday! This large city takes on a completely different energy and sound level as people are forced to find alternative things to do with their time other than shop and spend money.
The whole city transforms itself from a hub of designer consumerism to a place where people promenade, just sit and look at the sea and the horizon, sit with their families in cafes and talk – in fact have to find other ways of entertaining themselves and, in that, come back in to themselves. On a day when there is less activity on the outside we have to remind ourselves who we are and what we enjoy doing – are we someone who likes to read, to walk, to dance, to make furniture, to paint a picture, or just to sit and do nothing.
In that space boredom can arise and it is boredom that often stimulates creativity. If our mind is always busy in external thought and action we can forget how to come back in to ourselves and be peaceful with doing nothing. Boredom – or just doing nothing, however you want to think about it - can help us to remember how to stop and to notice the birds’ song, or hear the wind in the trees. Boredom and stillness can remind us how to have the inner time and attention to listen to the voices of our children or loved ones instead of being in a hurry to answer the next email or attend the next meeting.
Sundays in London used to be like this but we have now become enmeshed in constant busy activity. So why not take this ‘inner’ time out next Sunday – tune out of the external ever-humming world and reach that inner silence. Have a whole day where you don’t go near a shop but find other, slower, things to do. You may remind yourself of that quiet state of mind where you feel more at one with the world and those you love. You may find that your mind, at rest, suddenly becomes more creative than it has ever been before… You can get more tips on how to do this from my CDs Help yourself to a Better Life and How to Survive Life Positively – take a look at http://www.positiveworks.com/products/development.htm
