Lack of Peace?

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I once had a client who said she didn’t want peace because it sounded boring. She apparently knew my tagline – pursuing your potential, passion and peace, so she quickly let me know that she only wanted the first two ‘P’s.  She said she came to coaching because some stressful situations were depleting her and causing her life to be less than what she wanted.  The verse “Do not let your hearts be troubled and do not be afraid” came to mind. She said  fully realized that it was her troubled heart that was zapping her passion and keeping her from stepping into her full potential.

I explained that I love that verse because it says “Do not let,” meaning we have the power to not let it happen. We do not have to let ourselves have a troubled and fearful heart. Putting that power into action takes conscious effort for most of us, but is absolutely doable, although it may not be easy because it calls for a shift in our thinking.

When we want to change a mind set it often helps if we combine both physical actions and/or visual reminders with mental determination. I think of it as circular. Our mental state is altered by what we see and do and our ability to act comes from our mindset.  After exploring some ideas of  what might work for her and implementing them she was free to feel passionately again and able to do the work needed to grow in her potential.   


A light bulb came on at some point and she said, “well, if this is what it means to have peace, then ok, I do want it” which was good because she got it! 

Is Your Shadow Haunting You?

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When the sun is shining on you your shadow falls behind you so it generally goes unnoticed. Occasionally if you look to the side you may catch a glimpse of it in your peripheral vision but rarely do you wring your head around and stare at it, yet it follows you wherever you go.

When we are headed in the direction we desire it feels good, like a warm sunshiny day. The path is graced with things that make our heart smile and we are excited to reach our destination. We are energized, our thoughts are clear and we are not distracted by our shadow. It is always with us but it has no power to hold us back or cause us to second guess the direction we’ve chosen.

Most children go through a phase where they are fascinated with their shadow. Some kiddos try to jump into it, others try desperately to grab hold of it and some try to run away from it.  So it is in life. Our past is like our shadow – it will always be there following us. We cannot jump back into it for a re-do, we can’t hold onto it trying to keep it alive, nor can we run away from it. It is just there. Our life resembles it’s shape, but it has no power. Like a child who obsesses over their shadow, many of us obsess over our past yet we can’t move forward until we stop looking back.  It serves us well to acknowledge it’s existence so that when we catch a glimpse of it in our peripheral vision it doesn’t scare us – we just laugh at ourselves when we realize our shadow scared us for a second!

The difficult thing about the shadow stories of our past is that they create beliefs, many of which are subconscious beliefs. These beliefs are often warped by our unpleasant experiences. It may be easy to let go of our past but it is far more difficult to change the belief it created.  We often don’t realize where the belief came from.  As a coach, I do not work with people analyzing the past. It can take years of psychotherapy and in some cases people have unknowingly created false memories in an effort to understand themselves. In coaching we let the past be what it is – over.

Thank God we have the choice to change the shape of our shadow! Every day we create a little piece of history that will follow us the rest of our lives.  While altering our hairstyle or losing/gaining weight can make our physical shadow drastically different, every choice we make in life has the potential for creating new beliefs.

Pondering who we are and what we believe can be empowering because  subconscious beliefs rise to the surface.  By noting what they are, we have the power to embrace or denounce them. (This is where coaching can be helpful.)

What are your shadow stories and what beliefs have they created that hinder you? Do you identify with any of these?

Common Shadow Stories and the Beliefs They Can Perpetuate

*Shadow Story: I thought I had a happy family but my parents divorced as soon as I moved out. Belief: People just pretend to be happily married.

* Shadow Story: “I was brought up in a poor family and saw my rich relatives act condescendingly toward my parents.” Subconscious Belief: “Wealth makes people arrogant snobs so I want nothing to do with rich people and I certainly don’t wan’t to be one.”

* Shadow Story – “My mom had an affair shortly after she lost 40lbs.” Subconscious Belief – “My husband loves me just the way I am. If I lost weight I would be attractive to other men and could be tempted to have an affair.”

Shadow Story – “My dad owned and operated a thriving business and mom stayed at home.” Belief: “I can’t go back to work because my husband would have to pick up the slack at home and I want his career to thrive. Plus, my kids need me at home. It’s for the best – no one knows I hate every minute of being a housewife.” 

* Shadow Story – My grandmother raised me, and had a career while my grandpa and mom did nothing. Mom and grandpa drank too much but they never worried about much either. Grandma was always stressed out and angry. Belief – I don’t want to be stressed out all the time so if I do have to work it’s going to be an easy job – not a full blown career.

*Shadow Story – My parents had great careers but spoke negatively about people who were more successful than they.  Belief – I can’t be more successful than my parents or I’ll lose their approval.

You may not identify with any of these Shadow Stories, or, maybe you do, but your belief is different.  The point is we all have a past that has shaped us and we have adopted beliefs that do not serve us well. 

Realizing that my choices today will tomorrow be the history that shapes me help me put a better perspective on today. As adults our circumstances are largely determined by our choices and/or our response to uncontrollable circumstances. We get to choose what we believe.

Thinking about how we think if overdone makes us crazy! However, it is extremely helpful to recognize the lies we believe so that we can retrain our brains with truth, putting our past behind us like our shadow on a sunshiny day. 

Nudging in Your Spirit?

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Have you ever done something completely out of the ordinary that felt completely natural in the moment? Really not that big of a deal, but something that, had you thought about, probably wouldn’t have done?  …. but you had a nudging in your spirit…. you knew it was the right thing to do, so you just went for it? And afterward everybody started talking about it as if you were a saint and told your story publicly? I haven’t but….

I heard such a story.  It was about a young man who is an introvert to the core. I wanted to spend some time with him and dig a little deeper. Being an extreme introvert, I wasn’t sure he’d be willing but I took the chance and asked him out to lunch. To my delight he was more than happy to oblige. Maybe it was the free lunch -haha!

I asked him what prompted him to do such a thing and he said, “everyone is asking me that.”  He said that at first he really he didn’t know, but after talking with his friends decided it must have been God. “I just had a thought and did it – that’s all”. That was it, enough said, or so he thought. But no way, I just bought him Jimmy John’s – I was going to dig!

I asked him how it made him feel to be put in the spotlight? As you would expect from an introvert, the answer was “kind of embarrassed” – although he had given his permission. He told me about some other folks who were inspired because of what he did and have taken action on some of their promptings. I said, “well that’s got to make you feel good” but to my surprise he was a bit embarrassed about that too. I wanted to say, it’s ok to feel good that God used you to spark good in others, but I held my tongue because I was just so impressed with his pure motives! I was actually a bit dumbfounded. I am so “all about” doing everything in my power to spark good in others! But he just did good – with no ulterior motive. Wow!

I had to tell this story because it’s such a great example of how when we act on our promptings to do good, the affect is often way more far reaching than we ever could ever plan or even dream.

There was a torrential down pour that began as we ate, so we hung out a little longer which was nice because it gave me a chance to process what I was hearing. He kept saying things like ‘it wasn’t that big of a deal’ yet to me it was huge. . . and to others it was hugely inspirational! My intrigue intensified. I had to figure out the lesson in it all..

I love the idea of structure, schedules and goals, but when they take away our ability to freely act – there is a stifling effect on us and we miss opportunities that may indeed be far more meaningful than what we could ever plan. I posted this on my facebook page last week, “Does your need for efficiency make you a great time manager but poor mind manager? Are you getting a lot done but you’re completely exhausted and relationships are suffering?” When I had this thought I wasn’t correlating it consciously to our conversation but in retrospect, maybe that is what it stemmed from.

As I think back on what he did, nothing big, just a very kind, loving and thoughtful gesture that was totally (well…ordinarily) out of his comfort zone I am stuck by how one person’s action affected so many. It makes me wonder how different the world would be if everyone just did what they felt called to do in the moment instead of brushing our nudgings aside with excuses. An introvert doesn’t ordinarily walk up to a stranger, much less a homeless woman, and ask her to join them for lunch but that is what he did. She accepted and accompanied him back to the restaurant where he’d left his buddies to wonder where he’d gone.  After he bought her lunch they joined his bewildered friends at a table. They talked for about an hour and then went on with their day. That’s it, nothing big.

I have this feeling that more than the woman’s stomach was full. Her heart just experienced an act of love and kindness from a complete stranger. Her life may not be much different today because of lunch with three 20 something gamer dudes but many others lives are changed.

It’s crazy how what would cause overwhelming anxiety most of the time becomes “no big deal” when we have the nudging within us to act. Thank you David for inspiring us all.

I hope you too will be inspired to act the next time you have a nudging.

Unresolved Issues

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Wouldn’t you rather just avoid unresolved issues? Bringing them up can feel like we’re asking for a fight. However, unresolved issues that have caused wounds tend to raise their ugly head when new conflicts arise yet if we can keep our minds focussed on the current conflict, resolve to that issue comes much more quickly. Until past wounds have healed those memories will, more than likely, arise causing pain, uncertainty and unneceesary turmoil over current issues.

I recently took care of a 4 year old issue. I know, that’s crazy – I’m a relationship coach! But I do happen to be human. It wasn’t that I’d meant to stuff it. At first it was too painful to talk about. Every time I tried I’d end up in tears and then get flustered and couldn’t make my points and he’d get mad because we  had a good and loving relationship so he thought we should have been able to move on -and I agreed. So I stuffed it.

Years past and it didn’t rear it’s ugly head anymore – except when it did. I was going to say it was only because current circumstances seemed to mimic what had happened. I wasn’t mad but the pain felt a little raw so I’m sure hormones and other factors also played into it. Fortunately, being a relationship coach, I did realize that trying talk through it when I was feeling the pain was a terrible idea, so I waited for an opportune time. To him it seemed odd. We hadn’t dug up old stuff in years – we just don’t do that because we’ve forgiven and given most things a proper burial.
But this one thing . . .

So, one evening when we were dreaming together I caught myself backing up very quickly because a wave of fear swept over me and I knew it was the right time to bring it up.

Another thing I’ve learned is that prefacing sensitive conversations with the intention helps tremendously so I told him I needed to talk about something before I could dream freely. I told him I wanted to be confident that we could move into this new phase of life on the same page and know for certain that we would work through differences by communicating openly. I let him know that my intention for the conversation was to give me the security and confidence I needed for us to have the best relationship possible. While he still wasn’t excited to have the conversation he understood the importance. 


It wasn’t an easy conversation but by prefacing it with my intention and expressing how I was hurt rather than accusing him we were able to work through it pretty quickly. Funny thing is, there wasn’t a lot of forgiving to do. Just hearing how he viewed what had happened acknowledging both his part and mine gave me the assurance that we were on the same page. Finally it could be laid to rest permanently.

No couple will ever agree on everything and there may always be sadness around some issues, but wounds that fester and are buried do not die quickly. These memories hurt our relationship. They need to be laid to rest properly and permanently. It takes two mature people who love each other deeply and are committed to a good and growing relationship to tend to old wounds. If you’re not there, don’t rush it. The last thing you want is more damage done. 

One way to test the waters to see if your relationship mature enough to handle tending to old wounds is to preface your conversation with your pure motives and see how it flies. 

For me, I knew that I couldn’t dream about certain things with him or entertain ideas that were even remotely close to looking like the situation that our unresolved issued was around. I was afraid that a nightmare would creep in and steel the dream again. I wanted us to acknowledge that without intentionality it could happen again. And I wanted assurance that we would be make our relationship more important than the dream.

A demand for a confession or forgiveness is never helpful, so don’t go there even if that is what you think you need. Instead ask yourself, what is the benefit I want from talking about this issue? And proceed with confidence and sensitivity. Another day may be a better choice. Choosing your time wisely will help ensure the outcome you desire.

The Downside of Coaching With ME

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The downside of coaching with me has an upside for you. Regardless of the reason you come to coaching, my intent is to help you move into the new phase of life that you are desiring.

The upside for you is that life coaching is not a life time sentence. 


Every client is different, but most reach their goals in less than a year, some in just a few months. Because my clients achieve what they come for, I have a constant turnover of clients.

Although I do have several clients whom I’ve been privileged to coach for years, my goal is for you to reach your goals! These ongoing folks are unusual in that they are on a mission to be constantly growing and enjoy the support I provide. I must say, the personal transformation they have seen has been astounding to me and everyone they know and love.

The downside for me…… the initial intake, paper work and billing are not the pieces I love the most yet because my clients are successful and move on, I am in that zone often. Fortunately the joy and purpose I find in the work of coaching offsets the downside and makes it all worthwhile.