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It’s been a year…

It’s been a year…
By any measure, last week marked the start of a year of life change. It was a year ago (last week), that we were asked to stop the spread of the virus for 2 weeks.

Governments around the world asked us to stop, hunker down, and shelter in place.

Toilet paper, which was once a normal necessity, easy to find, became something that you’d be lucky to come across in your neighborhood supermarket.

If you think about it, unless you have something that defines a year, it’s hard to pin-point what you were doing exactly a year ago, and what has passed since then.

But in our case, everyone remembers where they were.

Do you remember where you were when Kennedy was assassinated when the Space Shuttle Challenger blew up when John Lennon was shot when Michael Jackson died? What about the 9/11 attacks?

This week, last year, we were experiencing one of those shocks that shake our consciousness. So, we now have that clarity to really reflect on what life looked like exactly one year ago, and ask ourselves how it has changed.

... And more importantly, we get the chance to ask ourselves how we’ve changed.

How often do you get the clarity of a period of time - like a year - to think back to where you were, reflect on the entire year, and evaluate your life?

Though exactly a year ago, many were scared, distraught, confused, and uncertain, today we can look back and choose to harvest power from it. You are here right now, and you can use this opportunity to reflect.

Right now, we have a certain level of clarity that we don’t normally experience. We know what was taking place when the year started, and we know exactly where we are right now at this moment in time.

Here are some questions that I would encourage you to ask yourself while journaling and self-reflecting:

  • Did I move toward things or away from things?

  • Did I build new things, or did I build on top of existing things?

  • Did I find myself shooting from the hip, being guided by intuition, or did I find myself planning and strategically thinking about my next move?
  • Did I have any competing commitments that came up for me this year that stood in the way of what my hopes and dreams were?

Without question, the word for 2020 has to be “pivot.”

It was most likely the least used word in 2019 and the most used word in 2020.

In the year 2020, we were all forced to pivot.

Here are some more questions you can ask yourself:

  • How did I pivot? What was the process of decision-making in my pivoting?

  • Did I see growth, did I see the results I desired, or do I look back, wishing I would have made different decisions?

The decisions you made created this past year and your results.

Earl Nightingale once said, “The quality of our lives is determined by the quality of the decisions we make.” And making decisions requires our thinking.

Did you make decisions by thinking strategically or intuitively?

Don’t look at decision-making in terms of judgment. There’s no right or wrong. One is not better than the other.  The question you really need to ask yourself is, “Did the decisions I made serve me?”

When we look at competing commitments, ask yourself, “Do these beliefs serve me?”

I’d encourage you to take this time to reflect on the past year and to ask yourself some of these questions.

There’s power in reflection, knowing where you want to go, and knowing where you’ve been.

Experience is not the best teacher. Evaluated experience, reflected-upon experience is the best teacher.

…And if you’re having trouble harvesting the good and identifying the accomplishments you made this year, I want to encourage you to ask those around you. Ask your family and close friends if there is progress they’ve seen in you.

One of the biggest challenges that we face in our life, is the challenge of the voice of our own self-judgment.

Eric Hoffer said, “No matter what our achievements might be, we think well of ourselves only in rare moments. We need people to bear witness against our inner judge, who keeps book on our shortcomings and transgressions. We need people to convince us that we are not as bad as we think we are.”

A dose of both the Paul's

A dose of both the Paul's
One of my favorite quotes of all time is by Wayne Dyer, and he says: “If prayer is you talking to God, then intuition is God talking to you.”

I love this quote because it really speaks to the power of our intuition.

Whatever name you assign to God, whether it’s the universe, the source, or something else... I believe we can all agree that there is indeed a higher power in this universe, a source of all creation, a Grand-Overall-Designer.

So, don’t get hung up on the title or the name, but let’s instead focus on the truth of this power.

Through our intuition, we have access to all the wisdom in the universe.

I’m sure you’ve experienced times where you felt a nudge - that internal nudge to do something, to act on an idea, or even the opposite. Perhaps you experienced that sense that you should be wary of someone or something or maybe some event or place.

... And you know, sometimes we trust those nudges, and other times we ignore them. And when we ignore them, I think it’s fair to say we reap the negative consequences.

So, what is your intuition, really? Your intuition is one of your 6 intellectual faculties.

I have really worked on developing a heightened sense of awareness of my intuition, my internal intuitive signals. And I really do believe those “messages” or “gut-feelings” are from God, from that higher source in the universe.

And here’s the thing… if you can learn to access your intuition, including how it is connected to the workings of your brain and your subconscious mind, you will automatically begin to trust yourself at a much higher level.

And when you trust yourself like that, you’re able to move quickly on decisions, you’re able to take steps forward with certainty, and you’re able to produce results that the vast majority of people never produce… because they’re stuck in their uncertainty, and they’re stuck second-guessing themselves at every turn.

This Saturday, I’ll be joined by Dr. Paul Scheele in a FREE lesson (FREE for a limited time, that is,) on the process of tuning into your intuition, and its connection to your brain and your subconscious mind. Or as Napoleon Hill puts it, “your sixth sense.”

Dr. Paul Scheele speaks from a background in neuroscience and psychology. He’s a master at unpacking the inner workings of the mind and understanding preconscious processing to help people activate their inner genius.

I promise you if you spend an hour with Dr. Paul Scheele and me, I know we can help you build that inner confidence, and that ability to tune into the answer you’re seeking (that is already within you), and help you trust yourself to take the next meaningful step forward.

We’ll be going LIVE at 9:30 am (ET) on Saturday, right here.

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Are you hiding your shadow?

Are you hiding your shadow?
Let me share with you a thought.

In Neale Donald Walsch’s book, Conversations with God, he writes, “Perfect love is to feeling what perfect white is to color. Many think that white is the absence of color. It is not. It is the inclusion of all color. White is every other color that exists combined. So too is love not the absence of emotion (hatred, anger, lust, jealousy, covertness), but the summation of all feeling? It is the sum total, the aggregate amount, the everything.”

I was pondering this idea. And I believe there’s a lot of truth in what Walsch is sharing.

There’s a part of ourselves, what Carl Jung called, “the shadow,” that we so often try to hide or deny.

...Those aspects of ourselves that we feel are not acceptable to our family, to our friends, and even more so to ourselves.

But the problem is, when we repress, hide, and deny those aspects of our wholeness - those characteristics that are just as much a part of us as the ones that we like (our ability to love, our determination, our work ethic, or whatever those things are that you value and see as most important) - we lose a part of ourselves.

There is a full range of human emotions and human experiences; some that we label as good, and some that we label as bad.

What would happen if we removed the labels? What would happen if instead of judging something (or someone) as good or bad, we could find a place of acceptance within ourselves?

Perhaps this is a controversial way to think, but I’m all about testing your paradigms and inviting you into the consideration of a new way of thinking.

To finish with one more quote, Jung once said, “I’d rather be whole than good.”

Have you lost touch with your truth? With who you were created to be in all of your fullness, for the sake of gaining approval from those around you, and even from yourself?