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SPARK Day 18: Seek inspiration!

Spark Jan 2014

Welcome to Spark Day 18! 

I spent Wednesday at an educational summit focused on how to help children succeed.  It was incredibly informative and inspiring and I left with pages and pages of notes from the speakers and lots of other ideas, too.  As I was reviewing all the ideas once I got home and Happy down for the night, I was reminded how inspiring it is for me to go to workshops, conferences, and talks.  That kind of inspiration pays infinite dividends for my sense of wellbeing, my sense of inspiration, my sense of possibility.

At the end of last year, when I was doing my new year personal summit, I was reminded how much inspiration moves me and made a commitment to a few things that would help me mine the world for inspiration:

1.  I set up a Watch/Read file and signed up for several newsletters of writers/ bloggers who move me.  When their emails come, I move them to my watch/read file and I try to put 10 minutes a day into reading and watching videos that are sent my way, so there are little pockets of inspiration in my day.  Moreover, I also have the TED app loaded on my phone for some easy listening when working out or tinkering around on a project.

2.  In addition, I also added reading a chapter a day to my daily to do list as part of my wellness prescription.  I don’t get to a full chapter everyday but making time to read feeds my soul and writing it on my daily to do list reminds me to prioritize it.

3.  I also decided to put 4 days aside (one per quarter) this year for personal/professional development.  To insure that happens, I went ahead and blocked off those days for the year.

Then, today as I was looking over all my notes, I decided to go out and seek some “being in the space” inspiration.  I looked up speakers coming to area colleges and upcoming workshops and went ahead and pencilled things in.  I also love seeing movies, plays, and dance performances, checking out museums and even get a lot of ideas when I wander around the library, bookstores, and gift shops.  So I am adding more of those things to my calendar to keep my creative juices flowing.   Because inspiration and provocation await.  And only good stuff can come from that.

Where will you seek inspiration today?

SPARK Day 17: Explore Your Favorites

Spark Jan 2014

Welcome to Spark Day 17!  On SPARK Wednesdays, we’re going within.

The cornerstone to an intentional life is really knowing who you are and what you want to offer the world and understanding how to get there.  Sometimes, we think by the basis of our age that we should know everything there is to know about ourselves, but we are constantly changing and, if we are busy, it could be that we aren’t getting quiet enough to discover the newest truths about ourselves and embrace what they mean for our lives.

Every Wednesday, I’m sharing questions designed to build your self-awareness so that you can proactively and powerfully live with intention and infuse your life with the feelings and experiences you most wish to have.

Today, our theme is your favorites.  What do you love?  What makes you happy? What restores and sustains you?  Sometimes, when things are difficult, what we most need is to get right back to our core and having your favorites on the brain can really help with that.

As Mary Anne Radmacher says, writing is the process one follows to learn what is already known deep within.  So, grab a notebook and pen or your favorite writing app/program on your phone, tablet, or computer, a little something to drink, and answer these questions honestly and completely.  Your answers can bring delight, insight, inspiration and more…

Naming Your Favorites  

Favorite book:

Favorite television show:

Favorite movie:

Favorite song:

Favorite poem:

Favorite food:

Favorite recipe:

Favorite thing to wear:

Favorite way to celebrate:

Favorite recent memory:

Favorite memory from long ago:

Favorite thing about getting older (and we are always getting older, even if you are 16 and reading this right now!):

Favorite thing to tell a loved one:

Favorite thing to be told:

Favorite thing about who you are in the world:

Favorite thing about your body:

Favorite gift to give:

Favorite place to go:

Favorite advice you have heard:

Favorite advice you give:

 

What showed up for you with today’s questions?

SPARK Day 16: Know your more and less.

Spark Jan 2014

Welcome to SPARK Day 16!

I have  three favorites questions to ask.  And, today, we’re going to deal with two of them.  

What do you want more of in your life?

What do you want less of in your life?

Eh, you are thinking.  “As far as questions go, they are interesting, but, really, they are your favorites?  How is that?”

Because these two questions can totally illuminate how your life is and isn’t working for you right now.  And then help to get you on the right track.  That’s a game changer.

Early last year, I went to see my college roommate and one of my BFFS get promoted to a LTC in the US Army.  I have known her and her family since I was 13.  Her family of origin is- bar none- the funniest group of people I know.  I adore them.  Needless to say, she has married an equally hysterical guy and her kids have tremendous funny bones.  The trip came just after some sad and tough news in my world and after an incredibly busy time for me professionally.  I was exhausted physically and emotionally and then I proceeded to laugh my tail off for every waking hour of my whirlwind Washington DC trip.  I mean holding my sides, tears in my eyes, yelling, STOP IT! STOP IT! I CANNOT BREATHE! funny.  It felt so good to laugh like that. The laughter clinked around inside of me, breaking down some of the walls I had been building against pain and fear.

The next week, I had a meeting with a dear friend and she asked how the weekend was.  It was supposed to be great, of course, as I was watching one of my dearest friends receive a really prestigious honor and that part was indeed INCREDIBLE but it was surprising, too, because what I hadn’t expected– all of that laughter– had been like a balm. Showing me that even in serious times, not everything has to be taken SO seriously.  I need more laughter in my life, I told my friend.  Even though I know there is crap going on.  And so I made note of that “more” that I wanted and ratcheted up my own funny and appreciated the funny around me even more.

What do you want less of in your life was another critical question I asked myself at some point last year.  And feeling daunted by the time Wednesday came was one of those things.  And so I thought about what would help life feel in control come Wednesday and the answer was one that I had certainly considered before but not one that I had prioritized- because I really like to be as accommodating as possible- and that was preserving every single Monday to sit down at my desk and get the business of the week started.  While I always had a preference for spending my 3 working hours (while Happy is at preschool) at my desk, getting the week’s most important tasks done then so that a solid foundation has been established, if someone wanted my Monday morning time, I gave it to them.  Preference very rarely become reality.  But if I was honest with myself– which a question like what do you want more or less of in your life pretty much demands of you– giving away that time gave away more than just time.  It gave away a feeling of clarity and awareness and grace. In fact, I was giving away my work time so often that I met, met, met while Happy was at preschool and then worked, worked, worked into the night.  And so I stopped scheduling voluntary things on Mondays.  I didn’t even offer Mondays as an option when someone wanted to get together.  And when they suggested a Monday, I just said that I couldn’t do that day, could we look at some other options.  And no one (at least to my face) has said, “she’s so inaccessible and difficult”– and let’s remember it’s not my business what anyone thinks of me anyway– andy every meeting has been had and it has all been just fine.  More than that, though, I feel happier, more focused, clear, and linear each week.  And my computer comes to bed with me A LOT less often.

So, today, I want you to sit yourself down and make two lists.

What do you want more of in your life?

What do you want less of in your life?

And then I want you to figure out how to move towards a life where your more or less are prioritized because, when you do that, you move towards a life that more completely nourishes you.

SPARK Day 15: Complete the Wheel of Life exercise

Spark Jan 2014

Welcome to SPARK Day 15!  

One of the best gifts I have ever been given is the book The Artist’s Way by Julia Cameron.  One of my college roommates and dearest friends gave it to me as a birthday gift my first year out of college.  The book is a 12 week course in discovering and recovering your creative self.  It was revolutionary for me.  In fact, it is what led me to consider the pivotal role writing had played in my life and wonder how it could continue to play a role in my life and how I could use it to play a role in the lives of others.  At 23, I had no idea what was coming, but The Artist’s Way is one of the tools that helped me to see possibility and understand that our lives are always being written and formed; we are always evolving.

The book is organized by weekly themes like Recovering a Sense of Identity, Recovering a Sense of Power, Recovering a Sense of Connection.  Each week has a handful of exercises that you are to complete accompanied by an essay to read.  During week 2: Recovering a Sense of Identity, I came across a tool that I have modified over the years to become a central tool in my self-care and self-awareness.

Cameron calls it the Life Pie and here are her instructions:

“Draw a circle. Divide it into 6 pieces of a pie. Label one piece spirituality, another exercise, another play, and so on with work, friends, and romance/ adventure.  Place a dot in each slice at the degree to which you are fulfilled in that area (outer rim indicates great; inner circle, not so great). Connect the dots. This will show you where you are lopsided. As you begin the course, it is not uncommon for your life pie to look like a tarantula. As recovery progresses, your tarantula may become a mandala.  Working with this tool, you will notice that there are areas of your life that feel impoverished and on which you spend little or no time  Use the time tidbits you are finding to alter this… even the slightest attention to our impoverished areas can nurture them.”

Over the years, I have modified this tool to what I call The Wheel of Life, and I have created some structure for my understanding of it.  Today, I want to share this tool with you as it has been so revolutionary for me; it’s the first tool that I pull out when I am feeling out of balanced or am seeking a check in.

Step 1: Draw your circle, divide it into six pie pieces, and label them as follows:

Personal Growth: The way you are personally growing and refining yourself each day.

Spirituality:  How you connect with the world in a way that has larger meaning to you.  That might be through a more traditional religious connection or it might be a more alternative connection- -this is about your roots and connection to the world and it’s meaning and should be defined by you.

Health/ Wellbeing: The way you care for your body, mind, and soul.

Vocation/ Mission: The way you live your mission in life.  It may be that you do this through your actual job or outside of your actual job.  My mission, for example, is to help people live authentic and empowered lives so that they can give their gifts to the world and I do that through my jobs- teaching and writing- but also through my volunteer work like Circle de Luz.

Family/ Friends: The way you support and are supported by family and friends as well as the level to which you are enjoying those relations and reaping positive benefits from them.

Fun/ Adventure:  The way you are enjoying the world around you in a way that makes sense and is satisfying for you.

You’ll notice these categories are a little different from Cameron’s.  For me, these are the six categories that make-up a meaningful, balanced life.  Some significant differences are that I don’t have romance explicitly laid out but now that I am married, I would count my fulfillment in my marriage as part of my family/ friends category and when I was single, I counted my satisfaction with my romantic life as part of my fun/ adventure category.  I also replaced play with personal growth because making sure that I am challenging myself to be continually growing is very important to me and needed to be in the six categories of a balanced life for me.  Then I just added the concept of fun to the adventure category.

Here’s how it should look:

Step 2:  Imagine that there is a dotted line in each category (but you don’t need to draw this dotted line, the below is just for illustrative purposes) and that dotted line represents the continuum for that category.  The central point is 0 and the outer most point is 10.

Now, for each category, rate your degree of fulfillment for each area and put a dot at the appropriate place on the continuum (if you are really fulfilled, maybe it’s getting a dot where the seven would be.  If you aren’t fulfilled in that area, maybe you want to put a dot where the one or two would be).   Here is how your dots might look when you are done.

Step 3:  Connect your dots.

Step 4: Now it is time for some analyzing and goal setting.

First, some frame of reference.  For me, I consider a good, balanced life clicking along at about a 6.5-7 in each category.  That brings up two interesting points.

1.  I don’t think you can nail a 10 in every single category at all times.  Now, granted, that’s just my perspective.  I happen to think there is a finite amount of energy and that’s there not enough energy for personal highs in every category every week and, to me, a 10 should be about a personal high.  I do not at all mean that negatively.  In fact, I mean it to give us a break.  When we strive for perfection in every category every time, I think what we might really be doing is sliding away from fulfillment and into obsession and rules that aren’t fulfilling.  The pursuit of perfection to me is a fool’s errand– it is a way to punish ourselves– so I’m not going for that and I am certainly not going to ask you to go for that. My goal is more fulfilled than not in every category with peaceful harmony between them.

2.  But, there’s a caveat, sometimes you really do need to kick an area up.  Let’s say that your Mission is to write a book (about perfectionism let’s say) and you are a month away from your deadline.  Likely, you are really going to kick up the energy you are extending in your mission category and, in exchange, you are going to have to dial back your energy in another category (maybe you are going to go out with friends less or dial back your workouts or quit your pleasure reading to instead read past pages).  If you did the Wheel of Life during this time, maybe your mission would rank a 10, but something else- your fun/ adventure category, let’s say- is going to take a hit and fall down to a 3.  Sometimes in life, you have to make those trade-offs.  The key, though, is to be in the driver’s seat of those changes, consciously making those decisions rather than realizing months down the road when your health is spiraling out of control that you made a trade-off you weren’t aware of- mission for wellness.  I say this from experience as I traded mission for wellness most everyday during the three years that I taught and coached at a high school.  Now, I like to ask myself when I need to dial up a category to a 9 or 10 what trade-off I am willing to make so that I don’t discover it just happened to me later.

With that background in mind, here is what I want you to do.  Review your Wheel of Life.  Make note of 2 areas where you’d like to make incremental improvements in the next week.  Set one goal for each area that is achievable by one week from the day you are doing this exercise.  Maybe 1 concrete goal is to go to a yoga class. Maybe another is to cook dinner at home or go to a movie with a friend or go to bed by 10:30 for at least 4 nights.  Set your goals by category and write them underneath your Wheel of Life.  Now, schedule them in your calendar or weekly review.

Step 5:  Return to your Wheel of Life one week from today.  Review your goals and how you did.  And then complete the Wheel of Life exercise again with this past week in mind.  Do it in another color and label the weeks so that you can tell them apart.  I like to do 4 or 5 weeks on one wheel to see how the wheel’s shape is changing over time.  You can do that or do a new wheel each time.  Once you are done with your wheel, set your goals for this week.

What do you think?  Could this exercise be useful to you?  Do you think it is possible to operate at a level of 10 fulfillment in all categories at the same time?  What areas do you need to pay more attention to and what sort of goals are you setting for yourself this week?

SPARK Day 14: The Happy Sheet

sparks a light in you

SPARK Day 13: Plan your meals.

Spark Jan 2014

Welcome to SPARK Day 13!

As you  know, I love my weekly review.  It has been a total game change for me, making me productive while also making sure that I have some creative and self-care time built into my days.  But there is another weekly habit I have that has served me- and my family- well and that is a weekly menu plan.  By planning what we’ll eat for a week at a time, I shop smarter, more efficiently, and more cost effectively at the grocery store; I don’t lose time figuring out what’s for dinner each night or chasing ingredients, and I have a system in place where I am completely replaceable in the cooking equation– which allows BF to take the lead a few nights a week while Happy and I play more Uno or take an early bath or I take off for a meeting.  

At first, you might resist a weekly menu plan.  It seems like a lot of planning up front (It doesn’t take me more than 10-15 minutes now and then, voila, I am set for a week).  How are you supposed to know what you want to eat on Wednesday night (fair enough but I address this by either just going with what I’ve planned anyway or swapping nights mid-week– Tuesday’s salmon gets swapped for Thursday’s Black Bean Pie if I am not feeling fish)?   But once you start living with the weekly meal plan, the relief it brings far supersedes any sadness over lost mid-week dinner surprises (and, typically, I do the weekly review from Sunday to Thursday or Sunday to Friday which leaves a night or two open for whatever).  Interested in trying it for yourself?  Here you go…   

Step one.  Figure out your grocery shopping schedule.  I go once a week– typically every Saturday morning while my boys are still in pjs and lollygagging around the house.   If I am leading a workshop or have  a Circle de Luz event on Saturday morning, I go on Sunday morning as soon as the store opens.  You may want to go 2x a week or 2x a month or something else entirely.  Or you may need to shop at different times at different places (maybe Farmer’s Market on Saturday Morning and grocery store on Sunday afternoon).  But what I do know is knowing when you wish to shop for groceries is an important first step towards having intentionality with your meals.

 

Step two.  Pick a planning day.  Since I go to the grocery store on Saturday morning, I plan our meals for the next week every Friday afternoon or evening.  I start by looking through what we have (especially perishables) and plan how to incorporate those into our dinners.  Next, I plan what other meals we need (for example, if I have an evening meeting for Circle de Luz, I plan for something really simple for BF and Happy to do like heat up some soup that I have frozen and pair it with steamed broccoli- or I send them to Subway).  On our family’s master calendar, I  write down each night’s meal on the coming week’s schedule.  I keep in mind how much prep time we will have for meals, meetings out of the house for either me or BF or practices for Happy, and other responsibilities as I plan.  As I do this, I go through my printed recipes and on Pinterest and put any recipes I need that week in a little plastic sleeve that only contains that week’s recipes that sits in the same spot on the kitchen counter every day.  That way, we can quickly reference what’s on deck for the week.

 

Step three.  The grocery list.  As I am planning our next week’s meals, I make our grocery list.  My grocery lists are made on the back of scrap computer paper but I organize that paper in sections that correspond with the grocery store where I shop.  Imagine the paper divide up into six quadrants– three across the top half and three across the bottom.  The top left hand column is for the produce section.  The top right hand column is for dairy and meats.  The middle section is for things in quirky sections of the store (I shop at a Target for a lot of our basics and so maybe I want a new candle.  That goes in that top middle column).  The bottom 3 columns are for canned, boxed goods (tomatoes, beans, applesauce, rice).  The middle column is for cleaning supplies– for both the house and our bodies.  So both Tide and Shampoo would be in that column.  And the far right column is for frozen goods.  This set-up works for me (it is kinda like zone defense grocery shopping).  It may not work for you.  I know some people who completely break their grocery list down aisle by aisle (man defense grocery shopping?) and that might be worth trying.  What I do know is that organizing your grocery list will save you mad time in the grocery store.  The other thing that saves me time is going through coupons right then and only taking with me to the store the coupons that I need.  That way I have less coupons to go through while I am shopping which helps me be more efficient.  One more note: as soon as I get home from the grocery store on Saturday, I start my next week’s list.  There is a spot where it sits on the corner of the counter (just on top of the weekly recipe file) and as soon as we come across something that we need during the week, we write it on the list.  So when it is time to menu plan on Friday night, several things are already on my list.

 

Step 4:  The nightly review.  After Happy goes down each night, there are a few standard things I do.  Clean the kitchen (with the help of BF who is our primary kitchen cleaner), occasionally make Happy’s lunch if I can stomach going ahead and doing that, and then pre-planning the next day’s meal.  I’ll go check out the command center and see what the next day’s dinner is and then do any prep work for it. It could be as simple as pulling out the non-perishable ingredients and putting them together on the counter with the recipe.  It might be marinating something or cutting up vegetables.  While the degree of effort varies, I do spend a few minutes doing some meal prep for the next day so that things are a bit smoother at an often busy time of the day.

 

What are your meal planning strategies?  What works best for you?  Where do you need more help?

 

 

Here are some easy meals and sides that we prepare on the regular at our house:

Mark Bittman’s Minestrone Soup 

White Bean Tortellini Soup 

Black Bean Tortilla Pie 

Taco Soup 

Spinach Ravioli Casserole 

Simple Salmon 

Sweet potato turnovers 

Zucchini Fritters  

Do you have a favorite recipe staple to share?

Spark Day 12: Reflect with Friday Reflections

DSCN5877
Welcome to Spark Day 12!  Every Friday, I reflect on the week that has just passed by doing a little senses exercise.  This practice is a gentle, easy way to tune into how we are doing, what we are experiencing, and what we are grateful for while more acutely tuning into our senses.  It’s a whole heart exercise with plenty of bodily input, if you will.  Because this practice has been so good for me, I want to encourage you to do it, too.  Building some gentle reflection into our weeks is a nice way to stay grounded while maintaining some big picture perspective.  So please join me in this week’s Friday Reflections (with each sense as your inspiration, consider how experiencing it impacted your week).
Here is my sensory round-up for this week:

tasting ::  roasted broccoli, homemade minestrone soup, hibachi shrimp, onion soup, salad with ginger dressing, spicy shrimp pizza, spaghetti with a homemade mushroom ragu

hearing ::  Happy sing as we write songs about everything these days. From brushing our teeth to eating dinner, everything’s a song.

smelling ::  Body Shop Satsuma Body Butter- this citrusy scent is delicious!  Also pots of soup simmering on the stove (speaking of delicious!).

seeing ::  fun works of art, my team (the Panthers) lose their playoff football game, my new body image students for the first time as the semester just started,  season 2 of Homeland, and my vision board come to life.

feeling :: grateful to get back to routines and settled in (you know, as much as one can settle into life).  Also, excited that I am reading again– I haven’t ready much since mid-Novmeber but I finished 3 books this week.

wishing/hoping ::  for a great day of college-readiness programs on Saturday with our Circle de Luz girls and their amazing mentors!   

What about you?  What were your sensational experiences this week?  Please share!

This post was inspired by Teacher Goes Back to School who was inspired by Pink of Perfection’s Five Sense Friday.

SPARK Day 11: Practice a bedtime routine

Spark Jan 2014

Welcome to SPARK Day 11!

Well, after Tuesday’s focus on morning routines (and, dang, I must have been ready to get my morning ritual going again because guess who woke up bright eyed at 4 am on Tuesday?  That would be me.  And then I promptly finished two books that I had started reading ages ago.  My first two books read in my 40th year), you must have known that this was coming.  It is time to create our personal wind down routines.

As intentional as I am most of my day, that intentionality falls apart at bedtime.  It is like I am uber-focused until I walk into the bedroom and then I plop down in bed, play something off the DVR while answering email or playing Lucky Wheel for Friends and then I remember that I still need to wash my face, take my allergy medicine and vitamins, take out my contacts, and brush my teeth and I think, “I don’t wanna do all that” and so I brush my teeth and take out my contacts and call it a day.

Fortunately, I don’t do that all the time but I do it enough to know that my bedtime routine isn’t working for me.  And maybe yours isn’t working for you either.

So, today, I want us to come up with a list that feels like the pre-bed self-care that we most need and then I want you to apply it to actual times (because it starts to really illuminate when you need to start the process to feel ready for lights out).  For me, it was easiest to do this backwards, but here is what I landed on and will begin to practice…

10:30  Lights out/Bedtime

10 pm  Television Off, Record a sentence of reflection or appreciation about the day in Happy’s journal, then read!

9 pm  Enjoy television, play Lucky Wheel, visit Pinterest, chat with BF about non-logisitical items.  Do not answer emails.

8:30 pm  Tackle all the care items: do a favorite stretch or two, take out contacts, wash face, moisturize, take meds, brush/floss.

8 pm  wrap up final house chores including any final emails for the night.

Ideally, I really want to move to the point where I am going to bed at 10 instead of 10:30 but I stayed up late much of November and December so I feel like I probably need to really get into the habit with 10:30 for a bit and then move bedtime a little earlier.

What about you?  What needs to go into your bedtime routine?  What time do you want the lights out?

 

 

 

 

visionSPARK hits the road

begin with intention

So, in late December, one of my high school besties emailed to say that she had been hoping to travel down for visionSPARK but out of town company wasn’t going to make that possible and what could we do.  Well, after a flurry of emails and exploring the possibilities, I am so excited to announce that I am taking visionSPARK on the road to Richmond, Virginia.  Yep, me and all of the vision board supplies you can imagine, are hitting the road on February 15th to offer women in the greater Richmond area (I am talking to you Charlottesville and even Washington DC) this amazing, hands-on workshop that is all about getting real, getting intentional, and claiming what you wish to create in your life.

Want to join the fun?  I sure hope you will.

visionspark2014

visionSPARK RICHMOND

Saturday, February 15 1 pm until 5pm at Canterbury Nursery School in Richmond, VA

Every new year begins with our vision for it. But dreaming about it isn’t enough. Vision has to be captured, inspiration alighted, and intention set. At visionSPARK, you’ll capture your ideal life’s vision not just in conversation and words but in a tangible, inspirational vision board. You’ll imagine the possibilities in a pre-workshop workbook, gather inspiration, and then create your vision with thoughtful support during the workshop. You’ll leave with an inspirational board to display, a touchstone word to root you and reinforce your commitment during the year, a gentle call to action to guide you and the motivation to manifest the life you imagine.

What do people say about visionSPARK?  Here are remarks from this year’s visionSPARK evaluations:

Having the opportunity to spend some time intentionally setting my focus for the new year through this workshop was a gift. Not only was the actual workshop time valuable, but the prep time also made me realize that Rosie’s mantra of organizing your thoughts around who you want to ‘be’ (instead of what you will do) will truly ground you in your specific purpose going forward. Having Rosie as our ‘Vision Guidess’ was ideal- she has an intuitive way of knowing exactly how to help you zero in and boil down your thoughts and ideas into that one main important point on which you will focus. Would highly recommend this workshop!  ~Donna Scott

Dreaming about and planning for the future can be done alone, but it’s so much more creative, inspiring and fun when in the company of other women! Rosie encourages and leads in a gentle, yet get-it-done, manner — and workshop participates jump in with affirming support. The information and exercises are practical, while the experience is joyful and uplighting!

On a crisp cold NC blue sky day, Rosie lit up the room with her warmth and spirit! It was a wonderful experience to listen to her words and to the words of the other women who shared this workshop with me. Rosie has a nurturing touch which guides others to see the real uniqueness that each person has to give to the world. I left with a peacefulness and knowledge of actions that would help me travel through my 2104 journey. ~Laura Mulkeen

What a great way to envision a new year! The VisionSPARK workshop with Rosie encouraged me to reflect, focus and articulate my desires in a fun and interactive way. Bravo!

Rosie’s open and encouraging demeanor sets a great tone for group participation and her prompt questions and discussions are engaging and thought provoking. The setting is beautiful to boot.

SPARK Day 10: Explore your lens on the world

Spark Jan 2014

 

Welcome to Spark Day 10!  On SPARK Wednesdays, we’re going within.

The cornerstone to an intentional life is really knowing who you are and what you want to offer the world and understanding how to get there.  Sometimes, we think by the basis of our age that we should know everything there is to know about ourselves, but we are constantly changing and, if we are busy, it could be that we aren’t getting quiet enough to discover the newest truths about ourselves and embrace what they mean for our lives.

Every Wednesday, I’m sharing questions designed to build your self-awareness so that you can proactively and powerfully live with intention and infuse your life with the feelings and experiences you most wish to have.

Today, our theme is your lens on the world.  How do you view the world?  What are the values you bring to your interactions and work?  What are you sure about?  What do you believe?  All these things inform how we go out into the world, what we offer, the way we offer it.  And it is powerful to really observe that and act from a place of awareness with it so that what is where today’s ten questions/ sentence stems (where I give you the first part of the sentence and you finish it up) are leading you.

As Mary Anne Radmacher says, writing is the process one follows to learn what is already known deep within.  So, grab a notebook and pen or your favorite writing app/program on your phone, tablet, or computer, a little something to drink, and answer these questions honestly and completely.  Your answers can bring delight, insight, inspiration and more…

Explore Your Lens on the World 

What are you intensely interested in?  What news stories do you always catch?  What kind of books do you read?

About what do you not run out of things to say?

Think of five different places that you “go”.  You might think of work, your own home, out with your friends, to church, your gym or studio, your meditation mat, etc.  How do you show up in each place and why is that?  How do you wish to show up in each place?

You have the world’s audience for five minutes.  What must you make sure everyone knows or understands when you are done?

For what do you want to be known?

What do you think your genius is?  What are you amazing at or what would you like to be amazing at?

What is always in the back of your mind?

What values do you bring to what you do?

What’s your message?  What do you always emphasize?

I believe…

I know for sure that…

I offer…

My hope for the world is…

I want my place in the world to be…

Today, I will…

What showed up for you with today’s questions?