Step out of the “Comfort Zone”

Is Comfort all it is cracked up to be?

Think with me for a moment. Think about the times during your life that you have been comfortable. Comfort with your job. Comfort in your relationships. Comfort with your home. Is there a sense of peace that comes to mind? Is there a status quo? How about a bit of boredom and inactivity? Perhaps even complacency? I’d like to pose the concept that being too comfortable can also be a detriment. When we are most comfortable and confident we often become stale and sometimes even lazy.

We are not as aware of changes and nuances going on around us. It happens to people, and it happens to whole companies as well. When we lose our edge to too much comfort, we risk stagnation, and in this fast paced world, we WILL be passed by.
Now lets look at the places in your life where you encountered your most significant growth. These are generally places when we are outside our comfort zone.

Often they are times when we are not in control of the outcome. It can be as painful as a divorce and having to learn to be on your own for the first time, or the loss of a job, or your first year out of high school or college, struggling to make it, getting that first job. Consider the discomfort and the investment you had to make and the risks you had to take. Looking back at a difficult time we have come through, we can see we had skills or developed skills we did not believe were possible.

When it is all over and done, we have grown, learned lessons about ourselves and the world and how we may more “comfortably” move through a difficult place the next time. And even more interesting, we have enlarged our field of comfort or our comfort zone. Not that we would choose to put ourselves in as painful a place as divorce or job loss, but we now can recognize skills, and attitudes we had to develop, that we can use in lesser situations.

Each time we step outside our comfort zone we are faced with growth and learning, we enlarge our world. Another return on our investment of stepping out of our comfort zone is the perspective we can gain. What was once the most feared loss, can sometimes become a gift.

My challenge to you is to find YOUR Growth ZONE, somewhere between comfort and pain. Take some steps outside your comfort zone and embrace the growth and strength it fosters. Take responsibility for a project at work or at home that will stretch your abilities. Join Toastmasters and hone your speaking skills. Take one step, then another.

Love and Light
Kevin

http://www.visionlogic.net

Change Your Thinking!

“One of the reasons people don’t achieve their dreams is that they desire to change their results without changing their thinking.”

John C. Maxwell , Thinking For A Change

As a personal and executive coach I partner with people to create change in their lives, whether it is changing the career path they have chosen, the level of management they are seeking, the kind of clients they want to be selling to, or the balance they want to experience between their personal and business lives.

When an individual begins the coaching partnership it is often because they are frustrated with their current progress, it is not moving along fast enough, they are experiencing many roadblocks and they can’t seem to keep focus or stay on track towards their goal. Our first step is usually to discover where they are on, what I identify as, “the clarity scale”.

Do they truly know what the goal is and why they want to attain it? Have they defined the goal in a manner that they can feel connected to its purpose? What are their thoughts in connection with the goal?

Many times the first questions are answered with great detail and they have even created a strategy to reach the goal they wish to attain, broken it down into manageable steps and have begun the process to reach the goal. Most often the missing piece that causes the roadblock to success is not their ability or knowledge or even their organization, but the thoughts they harbor around the goal.

The first business I started was an insurance agency. I worked hard to build the agency for 5 years putting in hours and effort beyond what most people would ever put forth. After blood, sweat, and tears, the years of hard work finally started to pay off. I made many mistakes and many good decisions along the way, but I learned and progressed to the point of being “successful” financially and figuratively. I stayed in that plateau for 10 years thinking that was all I deserved, until some drastic changes in my thinking allowed me to go beyond the plateau and brought 10 times the success with less effort.

I shifted from earning a living to attracting abundance, and the shift was made in small little changes in action, skills, and most of all my “thinking”. The abundance was always there, it was I that needed to change.

Coaches Challenge: Examine your thinking around your goals and who you are with this goal. Ask yourself some questions to trigger understanding of your current thought processes and what changes you may have to make.

• If your goal is to balance your home and work days: Do you believe it is possible? Do you think you deserve to have a balanced life? How does a balanced person think, react, look?
• If your goal is to change your client base to a more affluent group of people: How do you have to think differently to make this change? What thoughts do you have that will inhibit/forward this goal?

Begin to change the way you think to enhance your goals.

Namaste
Coach Kevin

http://www.visionlogic.net

Procrastination

Most ALL of us use procrastination at some time in our lives, do we not?

It seems to me if a tool is so widely used, there must be something to it. As a personal and corporate coach, procrastination is almost always the first thing my clients want to eliminate from their lives. As you will read, I advise them not to eliminate the very tool that is there to help them navigate the rough spots in life and business.

I prefer to think of procrastination in the same category as a detour in the road. The purpose of a detour is to give us a warning, help us avoid something un-navigable, or dangerous and provides a safer route. Detours usually take a little longer, they circumvent the problem, but in the end we arrive at our destination unscathed.

In most cases you will discover that properly employed procrastination, like a detour, will give you an alternate route to the solution of the problem at hand.

Talane Meidaner, in her book, Coach Yourself to Success poses this question: “What if procrastination was a good thing, and we stopped beating ourselves up about it and learned why we do it?” She describes several circumstances in which people find themselves procrastinating and offers solutions to the problem.

The Put Off: We Put off something we do not like doing. Sometimes if we procrastinate long enough it causes another person to do it for us, sometimes it becomes too late to do it and we end up not having to do it at all. What if instead, we looked at what it was we were putting off, determined it was something distasteful to us and immediately found a way to delegate it to another person? There may even be times when it makes sense to decline to do the task. In this instance it would be important to inform any people that may be depending upon us for the result or task, but in the end they are better served if we decide and inform them as soon as we know so they can get the job completed by someone that will probably do a more complete job anyway. And our reward is: the uncomfortable or distasteful task is off our plate and the energy drain caused by its presence is eliminated.

The Fear Factor: Sometimes we find ourselves procrastinating because we are frightened. We may believe we are not capable of completing the task. We may believe we do not have the knowledge or expertise to complete the project. We may believe we do not have anything of value to contribute. We may be frightened of rejection. The project may feel too big to us and we allow ourselves to become overwhelmed with its scope and not able to move ahead with the process. Fear is a real emotion and one to be heeded. But the possibility exists, to examine the fears and discover the energy behind them.

• If lack of knowledge or expertise is the fear, we can find ways to gather the knowledge we need or find experts in the particular field to support our work. We may need to request more time for research, but we can move ahead and complete the project.
• If the fear is that of not adding value, or being rejected: we can review our strengths, research, brainstorm and discover a method of adding value that may also eliminate the potential for rejection.
Once we can name the fear, we can often find a solution to its source and eliminate it.
There are many reasons why we procrastinate. The above examples are just a few. Think about times when you get stuck or are overwhelmed and procrastinating. What are some of your reasons?
In most cases you will discover that properly employed procrastination, like a detour, will give you an alternate route to the solution of the problem at hand. You can shorten the detour or speed up the process if you treat your procrastination as a tool that can help you through life rather than beating yourself up and wasting time in self-chastisement.
You can learn to use the five steps to using procrastination as a tool for life.
• First: Recognize when you are in procrastination mode. Speak out loud and call it by name!
• Second: Congratulate yourself for using so valuable a life tool!
• Third: Take the time to stop, think and look at why you are procrastinating.
• Fourth: take each why and discover solutions to those issues. Once you discover the why, and there may be multiple whys, it is much easier to break the problem into smaller parts and approach each issue.
Fifth: Create a strategy and timetable to carry it out.
Coach’s challenge to you this week is to begin to look at procrastination in this more positive light. You will discover that it immediately becomes a friend, not a foe and the energy around it relaxes. Go a step further and begin to employ the five steps to using procrastination as a tool for life.

Love & Light
Coach Kevin

http://www.visionlogic.com

Priorities

Do you ever think about getting organized so you have more time for the things in your life that are important?

Often people ask me if coaching can help them organize their life in a manner that will take care of that issue for them. My first question is always, “What are you really asking? If you are asking if I can help you have 25 hours in a 24-hour day, the answer is a resounding, NO! If you are asking for support and coaching to help you set your true priorities and learn to live them, yes, coaching can help.”

It is not always that we are unorganized or inefficient in the use of our time. Many times the true issue is that we have allowed the outside world to dictate our personal priorities. If that is happening to you, you probably have some of the following symptoms: A feeling that you are gerbil running in a wheel. A fear that if you stop running you will be run over and that to step off the wheel is not possible. You never have enough time or energy for your family or the things that are enjoyable and fun. No matter how hard you work it will never all be done.

These symptoms can be a reflection of inefficient use of your time or lack of organization or it can also be your having given away your power to decide for yourself what will be most important in your life.
Whatever the cause, or combination, the starting point is getting control and clear on your priorities. So much of our lives may seem dictated and out of our control. You can take back control. The first step is to take a close look at what is absolutely necessary and non-negotiable. Survival items like food, shelter and clothing generally come first. After we have met those criteria we are truly at choice. This is where priority setting comes in. We each have the opportunity to decide for ourselves what is truly important. What is it for you? Is it success at work? A job you are passionate about? Time allocated for entertainment. A healthy lifestyle. Time enjoyed with the family and friends. For many people it is a fine balance of all of those items.

Organization and time management can insure we get the best use of our time and that little or none is wasted. If a person is well organized they generally have what looks like a lot more time because they accomplish so much in a day. Organization and time management are necessities for those of us who insist on a full life with many facets. Often times just getting organized can give us back precious hours we can then choose to spend on other priorities.

Once we are organized, and have taken back the lost hours, we are still faced with the reality of 24 hours in a day, no more. Then what? This is where priorities become important. We get to decide what is most important and use our time accordingly. This can often be a struggle, because we want to, feel like we should or feel like we have to “do it all”, that we can’t say “No”. The strange realization for many of us is that regardless of what we do or don’t, the world will probably go on and the “in” box will always be full. One less business proposal out may mean a potential loss of financial gain, but the lifelong connection created with your son or daughter because you were there when they hit that first home run is immeasurable.

I know I struggle with this. It’s caused many times for me by not realizing that true meaning in life comes from the simple moments with loved ones not from the proverbial “success” I am searching for at work, or the feeling of accomplishment sought after when trying to make a difference in the world. Usually what I am searching for is already within myself when I stop and appreciate what I am already blessed with.

Coaching Challenge: Review your priorities. Decide what the top 5 are in your life. Then take your 168 hours of your week and determine how many hours you will spend towards each priority. Don’t forget sleep! and personal grooming and eating. Usually you are left with about 100 hours after accounting for those. Then see how your week goes allocating the remaining 100 hours to these top 5 priorities. If the balance is too far to one side or the other, look at possibilities to tip the balance back. Make changes and try again until it feels right.

Just learn when to say no to things that do not fit your priorities.

Good Luck!

Namaste
Kevin

http://www.visionlogic.net

A Glass “Half Full”

It’s all about choosing our attitude! Each and every day, or part of a day, we have the ability to consciously choose our attitude and the mindset with which we approach the remainder of that day. How do you approach your day, your life?

Are you one who acknowledges your accomplishments and celebrates along the way? Or do you only see a long “To Do” list that grows daily?

Do you focus on “The Gap” that is in between you and where you want to ultimately be? Or do you turn around and see the great progress made so far on your path to your desires?
Do you leverage and grow your strengths, or lament your weaknesses? Do you recognize challenges, evaluate their impact and determine a strategy or solution or do you spend your emotional and energy bank account compulsively in worry and anxiousness over issues you cannot control.

Take a moment and think about yourself in these circumstances. If you resonated with the first half of each question, you see the glass as half full. Congratulations! You are on your way to success and proactive positivism, not only your own, but probably that of your team and or family as well. If like many of us, you find yourself connecting to the second half of some of the questions, you see the glass as half empty, at least part of the time and are possibly struggling with expectations and attitude adjustment.

The Challenge :You have created or been given a plan to accomplish a complex goal or project. There are numerous steps in the plan with time lines and deadlines to meet. There is information you have to discover or processes you have to learn in order to move forward. In order to carry out the plan: a combination of organization, management and both personal & team building skills are required. The final result depends not only on your creativity, vision & brilliance but also upon written as well as oral communication skills. There are several people or teams of people upon whom you have to rely in order to complete the project or meet the goal. You will bump into stumbling blocks along the path to fruition. You will have to re-think some parts of the strategy; brainstorm and make changes to insure the project is accomplished with the most efficient methods and in a timely manner. This scenario applies to the most complicated business start-up project or growing a family and running a household on a budget.

Now: Choose Your Attitude!
Accomplishments vs. Overwhelming “To Dos” Half Full: Within your plan, you set smaller goals and celebrate each one with your self or your team as you accomplish them. This choice renews your energy and enthusiasm to continue the project and highlights your momentum, dwells on completions and builds your team. Half Empty: Get caught up in the bigger goal, the deadlines and the unknown information. Dwell on what is not done and the growing list of tasks at hand. This attitude saps your energy, paralyzes a team and causes procrastination to flourish.
Leverage Strengths vs. Lament Weaknesses Half Full: Discuss or review the tasks at hand. Determine what tools, skills and talents are required to accomplish them. Distribute the tasks according to the strengths of your team. If you are your own entity, attack the tasks that your strengths speak to and look for ways to delegate or barter to accomplish the rest. If those methods do not work, brainstorm an alternative method to accomplish the task that honors your strengths. This choice creates synergy, builds self-esteem and maintains the project’s momentum towards its goal. Half Empty: Discover all of the tasks that cannot be accomplished by the team at hand and allow yourself to be overwhelmed by the impossibility of it all. Dwell on your personal weaknesses or those of your team. Continually second-guess decisions and work quality. If being stuck is your goal, these attitude choices will insure the hardening of the cement!

Recognize A Challenge vs. Compulsive Emotion/Energy Expense Half Full: A stumbling block/problem arises that is out of your control; you take a deep breath and see it as a challenge. You review the issues and determine the severity of the block, and its impact on the project. Along with your team, you discover the best strategy to minimize any negative impact and overcome the challenge. You create a method or procedure to insure the challenge does not arise again. This choice costs a few steps back and a reevaluation of the time line but you move on and past it with a sigh and possibly a stronger team! Half Empty: The same block arises; you allow yourself to view it emotionally as an insurmountable catastrophe. You expend an immense amount of energy worrying about the possible impacts, the potential losses and how people will respond to it. You assume the worst and are sure the project is doomed to failure and you will lose face or your job. You lose sleep over the problem and become anxious and unable to think clearly. Your lack of clarity causes you to compound the problem, creating a worse dilemma. With this attitude, you lose it!
The Coaching Challenge :What attitude do you choose? Do you react or do you respond to the world around you? My challenge to you is to become aware of your attitude choices. Notice when your attitude is slipping or ask a trusted friend or partner or coach to gently help you see the times your choice is leaning towards the half empty. Ask yourself questions about your negative reaction. What is the payback? Once you have developed awareness and determined the payoff, look at possibilities and the paybacks for responding with a positive attitude. Remember, whatever you decide, your attitude is always your choice!

Respond don’t React.
Better Choices, Better Results!

Namaste
Kevin Brough

http://www.visionlogic.net

The Art of Listening

Have you heard the saying?

“We have two ears and one mouth to let us know that we should listen twice as much as we speak.”—unknown

One of the most important skills to hone as a coach of executives and individuals is the ability to listen. Listening is not only about the words, but also about meanings spoken and not spoken, the tone of the voice, the speed with which the person expresses themselves, the breathing patterns, eye movements, energy patterns of light vs darkness, and the volume of and specific words that are chosen.

Each aspect brings something to the table of understanding and learning. The acuity developed to make these observations is the greatest tool I have to guide my clients to a better life.

Becoming a good listener can improve your employment, promotion and relationship opportunities.
Everyone wants to be heard. We all have opinions and ideas that often need a listener to help them grow to maturity. Sometimes it may be that it helps us feel respected or valued when we are heard by another. There are many varied reasons why being heard is important for us. Think about the people in your life and work.

With whom would you rather be stranded on an island or any place for that matter: a thoughtful listener and communicator or one that speaks constantly and rarely takes a breath? It is generally unanimous: the thoughtful listener wins!

With that person you thought of in mind, let’s discuss HOW we can become better listeners and WHY it will positively impact our world & work. The how is not all that easy. Developing good listening skills requires two things: one; we honestly recognize where we are on the good listener scale and begin to evaluate ourselves and two; we break old listening habits that are not working and establish new ones that enhance our ability to communicate and learn.

Recognizing shortcomings in our listening skills requires the help of trusted colleagues and friends. These must be people from whom we can hear criticism. Rarely do we realize on our own that we are not listening. Ask these trusted people to evaluate your listening skills. Do they feel heard by you? Do they feel you value their input, ideas and stories? Ask them both: why they do feel heard and valued and why not. Have you ever played the child’s game of Simon Says? It is all about listening.
One habit that may be recognized as hindering listening, especially when we are nervous, perhaps in an interview, might be that of finding ourselves thinking of how we will respond to the speaker instead of truly listening. We are so worried about our intelligent response that we can often completely miss what is being said. Another hindering habit is thinking of a similar story that we can relate. This often comes across as one-up-manship. Can you relate to a time when you told a pretty good story or offered an insight, only to have your “listener” immediately tell a bigger story? When that happens, there can be a sense that the listener does not really care about us, or what we have to share, but they are concerned only about themselves. Usually this is NOT the listener’s intension, but it can easily be understood in that negative manner.

Becoming a good listener is to evaluate ourselves with help from trusted friends, create awareness, and replace old habits with listening for the many aspects of what a person is trying to communicate. You will be amazed by what you can learn if you truly listen and observe with all of your faculties “Heart, Mind, Body, & Spirit”.
Once you have discovered some of your listening traps, start your self-awareness campaign. When you notice yourself thinking of a response instead of listening, stop yourself mentally and open your ears, heart and mind to what is being said. Realize that a good listener will be valued for taking a moment to consider what is being said and responding thoughtfully, and perhaps not immediately.

Now here is the WHY: It is more often in OUR best interest to have truly heard the information and to respond more slowly and thoughtfully. Think of times when you have said yes, committing yourself to a responsibility, and moments later could have kicked yourself for agreeing. What about being in an interview situation. Have you emerged from an interview and could not think of anything that they told you? You spent your energy telling them about yourself and probably selling yourself, but did you hear them? Do you have enough information to make a careful decision about accepting a position if they ask you? There are so many job seekers that do not listen and end up in a position that solves their problem of unemployment but they are underemployed, frustrated and unhappy. The same can apply to the opposite side of the desk with interviewers. Often, we tell the potential employee everything about the position and the person that should fill it and never really get to know who the candidate is and whether they will truly be a good match for the position and the company.

The WHY is about us. When we are good listeners we can have our minds opened to new ideas, we can learn fascinating things about the people around us allowing us to attract and create valuable connections and relationships, we can make more informed and thoughtful decisions. We have two ears and one mouth for very good reasons!
We can learn from the Native American “talking stick” that the words we use should be sacred as they create our world. Fewer words spoken in wisdom is better, so “shut your mouth and listen”, it is the quiet warrior that wins the war or get’s the game he tracks.

Coaches Challenge:
Put together a team of trusted colleagues to discover your listening quotient. Create self-awareness around your listening. Try this acronym: WAIT. Why Am I Talking ?
I am still working on practicing what I preach with truly listening in all contexts of my life (funny how often I forget this skill when with family). It takes practice and diligence to change.

Best of Luck

Love & Light
Kevin Brough