MM194- Friday Reflection: Envision with Me

 

Weekly Show Reflection:

Before we get started today, I need to give a shout out to Oxana Aminov from Arizona! As you may know, we have a Fundly account established for those of you who want to be a part of our 50-state tour. I know when I see people doing something really cool and I want to help, I donate money. If you are the same way, and you want to feel like you are a part of this journey with us, just go to motivatemepodcast.com and click on the donation link. You can earn different things, like Motivate Me! merchandise or even just a shout out on the show… so Oxana here is your shout out! Thank you so much for donating to our trip! And, for anyone out there who would just like to contribute a tank of gas… that would be amazing! We would love it! We would love to know that you are on this journey with us.

OK, so thank you, everyone, for joining us for Season 2.

Season 2 is going to be a new experience for me, as a matter of fact, I think the entire theme of Season 2 is about new experiences, and about getting outside of your comfort zone. Definitely for me. And, as you know, I am going to be doing something in each of the 50 states that I have never done before. All of these things are going to be a little bit out of my comfort zone, some more than others.

You are going to have the opportunity to listen in as our episodes evolve from studio and formal interviews to interactions and updates from the road. I cannot tell you that I have a clear vision of exactly what that means just yet. There are so many things I want to be for you: I want to entertain you and inform you, I want to be honest and inclusive with you, and above all else, I want to motivate you.

This is what I do know for Season 2: I know that each episode will include a motivational quote. I know that each episode will update you on our progress. And then, I know that I cannot know what will come after that. I plan to share our journey with you through the funny things that happen and the difficult, through the ordinary and the extraordinary.

I can’t prepare for these episodes; I can’t even predict what they will include. I know this is something outside of my control. As I always say on the show: I am not going to try and wrestle it to the ground. My plan is to surrender to the hard work and belief we put into this. To surrender to our true intentions. To let be what is meant to be.

My goal is to post daily, which means 7 days a week. I don’t foresee them being long episodes, but I’m not making any rules. And if I miss a day here and there because of what life brings us, just stay tuned, we will fill you in on the following episode. Again, no rules.

Here is a thought I had today: I have told you all before that something I struggled with as a teacher was that I was preparing kids for the real world and I didn’t feel like I was living in it myself. So, I left teaching and started podcasting. And my life definitely did evolve, I was speaking with people all over the world on a regular basis. However, I still felt like working from my home studio was not experiencing the world.

Today, I had a moment of clarity. I realized that years of feeling isolated may have been the catalyst, the preparation I needed for this journey. That I needed to be pushed to this point to take this risk, to take three months away from my family, to take on the debt to do it. And really, to hopefully, change the lives of as many people as I can connect with in the process. And that means you.

What is my goal? My ultimate goal is to help people live lives they love. That’s it. Lives they want to wake up to. Why? Just listen to the joy and passion in the voices of the guests on my show. Why? Because it makes me insanely happy to think that I could play a small part in the happiness of someone else. Why? Because this is apparently my purpose in life.

I am feeling so grateful for the opportunity to experience this kind of freedom.

Now, do we have a schedule while we’re on the road? Of course. Do we have goals and required tasks? Absolutely. But here is the thing: I don’t have any expectations. And I’m not depending on anyone else for my happiness, nor do I feel responsible for the happiness of anyone else.

I am not attached to the outcomes of the interviews I have planned. The interviews will happen and my focus will be on getting to know my guest, and allowing them to share of themselves in a way that is beneficial to you. To present with them. That’s it.

And as far as depending on others for my own happiness or feeling responsible for the happiness of others: this is new for me, but there won’t be any of this on this trip. Remember, I’ve been married since I was 19-years-old. With that comes having a person there for you every day, someone who cares about how you’re feeling or if you need anything. That’s been my experience with marriage, that’s my life.

In the same turn, as a wife and mom, you feel responsible for everyone else’s well-being. You do things for them, you don’t do some things for yourself because of them. Whatever it is, it’s sacrifice and love, and beautiful, and just the way it is. But like I said, there won’t be any of that on this trip.

When was the last time you sincerely threw your hands up and relinquished the control of the outcome of something? Because I think most of us do it so often that we don’t even realize we’re in complete control at all times. What is going on in your life right now. What is going on today that you can allow yourself to emotionally detach enough from it to surrender it. I think you will be amazed at the actual outcome. It will work itself out without you. And… the people who end up taking control of it are probably the people who should have been in control of it in the first place, and they will become stronger, more capable people because you didn’t do it for them.

So, this week you got to meet my husband, Poor John. That was a fun moment for me. I love hearing his views on things, especially things that have to do with me. John is quietly confident, he is humble, and he is without ego. He is a charitable person with a huge heart. He is steadfast, the epitome of “slow and steady wins the race.” It’s pretty hard for me to rattle him. I mean, it’s been done, but it’s not easy.

Please be prepared for my married self to miss him while out on the road. Be prepared for me to feel like I need him. Because if I feel this way, I am not going to apologize for it, even though he’s already told me that I better not.

I am an independent, strong, married woman who has believed in equality her whole life, but that doesn’t mean I won’t have moments when I want my husband. And, I can tell you something else, I am not going to pretend to be something I’m not. I will be judged for this, and I’m prepared for that. And, that’s OK, I’m judged now for going on this trip in the first place.

Ladies and gentlemen, do you see my point here? These are all new experiences and when we try something new, we have fears, judgement being one of them. I love what documentary curator Thom Powers said on his episode this week: You have to move past the embarrassment you feel when starting something new.

I feel I will be judged by those who think it’s ridiculous for me to miss my husband, and I will be judged by those who feel it’s ridiculous for me to go on a three-month trip away from my husband. Here’s the beauty: I am doing it anyway. I am not letting the opinions of others, which is really all about them and nothing to do with me, control me. I am going to be me, and if I’m not feminist enough for you, or I am too feminist for you, that is on you – and truly has nothing to do with me. I’m just being me.

What about you, everybody? What is your passion and what are your fears? You don’t have to be taking a trip around the country to experience what I’m talking about here. Is there something new you would like to start but you are too embarrassed to say it, to do it? What are you afraid of? What is the worst thing that could happen? What is the best thing that could happen?

I challenge you. I challenge you to begin the envisioning process. I’m not asking you to take a step. I’m not asking you to spend a dime. I’m not even asking you to share your ideas with anyone else. If you want to keep this dream to yourself, do it. But guess what, envisioning is free. Picture yourself doing it… marinate in it for a while.

If you’re thinking about trying out for the local theater group, how would it feel to be on the stage, to be in a costume, to be under the lights? How would it feel to add rehearsals to your daily routine? Do you see yourself showing up straight from work? Maybe you are stocking feet, wearing your work dress pants, and a sweat shirt, your skin is oily from a long day, and you’re munching on a slice of pizza the cast ordered. But you’re singing and dancing and moving with a group, within a group.

Can you see yourself adding all of these new friends to your Facebook account, penciling in all of the rehearsal dates in your calendar, and the show dates on your phone? Maybe you just want to help with costumes or the scenery, can you see yourself in the dimly lit, curtain-filled backstage, carrying a mini flashlight, and moving the setting in and out, and helping the actors find their props and get out on stage in time?

Can you see yourself at the cast party?

I don’t know about you, but man, that sounds like fun. I like Netflix, and like social media, and I like reading, and I like writing, but I also like real people.

Here is something else that is super cool about the envisioning process: There is no time limit on it. I know, people always talk about jumping into action, they always say not to get paralysis by analysis – meaning you dwell in the envisioning and the exploring, and never get to the executing.

Well, here’s how I feel: You will act when the time is right for you, and if you’re not ready to act now, if you don’t want to act now, you’re not supposed to act now. If we really truly believe that everything happens the way it should, when it should, and that everything goes as planned, then you WILL act when the time is right for you. You will know that you are dwelling in the envisioning and exploring, and you will get tired of that phase. Or guess what, you weren’t meant to act and you have your sights set on something else now.

It took me probably two years to get the nerve up to go to a coaching program. I felt like my husband would want to kill me because I earned two degrees and now I want to put time and money into this. I also felt like: Who am I to tell people how to live their lives. Yada, yada. But the reality is, when it was time, when it was so obvious this is what I should be doing next, I did it. I was hesitant and I had challenges, and my husband called me out on them. When I finally had the nerve to say out loud that I wanted to go to a coaching program, but I was torturing myself over doing it, John said: “What is the biggest thing holding you back?”

And, I said, after sincere thought: “Money.”

He looked at me and said, “Life costs money.”

That was a pretty magical moment in our marriage, because he could have been scared and selfish and stingy, but he wasn’t. It is really those words that landed me here.

So the bottom line is this: I challenge you to begin the envisioning process. I challenge you to marinate in those details of what you want to do. You may be the person who wants to get involved in theater and has very little financial risk. Or, you may be a medical assistant who wants to become a dog-groomer – hmmm…invest money in school to make a similar salary? Sounds like you’d be in the hole, right? But would you, though? How would your quality of life change if you were spending it with little fluffy poodles versus medical charts and molars?

Part of the envisioning process is approaching your spouse about it, and that is not always easy. So if this is you, make sure you want it first. Be able to articulate it. And then, be ready to defend it. And remember that you are worth it and you deserve it.

I would love to hear about what you’re envisioning either in our private Facebook group: Motivate Me! Ultimate Support System or email: Lynette@motivatemepodcast.com. Remember: You’re not executing just yet, you’re just envisioning… and, hey, if that leads you right into the exploration process – it still doesn’t cost you anything, and you still don’t have to tell anyone about it.

Just like you, I don’t know where any of this will take me. All I know is that I can only do my part: work hard, believe in myself, have true intentions, and then surrender it – having no attachment to the outcomes.

It seems simple doesn’t it?

Call to Action:

 

The Motivational Go-Do!

Take the Envision Challenge with me in our private Facebook group or through email.

CLICK HERE to listen to this week’s reflection.

 

If you enjoyed, a review on iTunes and Stitcher would be much appreciated!

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Episode 193 – Be Inspired to Make Films by Thom Powers

Quote of the Day: “Saying it and doing it are two different things.” –Frederick Wiseman, Boxing Gym

Guest of the Day: Thom Powers lives just outside of New York City. He is a documentary curator for DOC NYC, as well as the Toronto Film Festival, and SundanceNow Doc Club. He is also a teacher in a Master of Fine Arts program in social documentary at The School of Visual Arts in New York City. Most recently, he has become the podcast host of the show Pure Nonfiction that launched the day of this interview! On Thom’s shows, he finds the answers to things like: How did first-time filmmakers pull of the show Making a Murderer? How did a producer from the Daily Show with Jon Stewart become the show runner for The New Yorker Presents? And how did a lawyer become an award-winning Sundance director? He also shows how often stories behind the scenes are as dramatic as what’s on the screen.

Passion: Documentary film is Thom’s passion.

Challenges: “In anything I’ve started, whether it’s a film or a film festival or a podcast, the first thing to get over is just your own slight embarrassment about it…it can be a little bit embarrassing saying that you’re going to do something that, you know, maybe people think, like: ‘Oh, yeah, sure you’re gonna do that…Sure you’re gonna make a film, isn’t everybody making a film now? Sure you’re gonna do a podcast.’” Thom adds that facing this skepticism can be very healthy because it forces you to take a good look at the decisions you are making.

Learned About Self: Viewing hundreds of documentaries a year has required that Thom be open to things outside of his own expectations. He has learned that he can be open to that and open to innovative filmmaking styles. He shares that “It requires a conscious act of humility sometimes.”

Suggested Resources:

  • A Guide for the Perplexed by Werner Herzog
  • Parallel Lines, Nina Davenport
  • Sherman’s March by Ross McElwee

To bring documentary film-making into your life…

Envision: Design the movie poster first and envision the end result. “Design how you want this film to be received by the world before you make it.”

Explore: Watch as many documentaries as you can, and get a sense of your likes and dislikes.

Execute: “In a way you have to allow yourself for it to be a little messy. And not worry that you’re doing it the wrong way, because I think there probably is no wrong way to start anything.” Thom says to just “come at it,” and “Don’t let perfect be the enemy of the good.”

 

Advice to Listeners: “For anybody who wants to make a documentary film, or any film, really, I’d recommend to them a list of Ten Rules by the Russian filmmaker Victor Kossakovsky…”

Motivational Go-Do!

Push past perfection and get started – get past your own embarrassment.

How Motivate Me! Ultimate Support System can rally around Thom Powers:

Website: www.purenonfiction.net

Twitter: @purenonfiction

Twitter: @thompowers

And, as always, on the Facebook page: Motivate Me! The Ultimate Support System

If you enjoyed, a review on iTunes and Stitcher would be much appreciated!

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MM191– Make Life What You Choose it to Be, Like Kiara O’Leary

 

Quote of the Day: “Sometimes good things fall apart so better things can fall together.” –Marilyn Monroe

Guest of the Day: Australian Kiara O’Leary is a former events manager turned events business and soulful coach for women.

Passion: Kiara’s passion is dance: exotic, salsa, and pole. Dancing allows her to embrace her feminine energy, feel sexy, and regain her self-confidence.

Challenges: “Fear of judgement, I think, definitely. And, you know, fear of judgement of when I arrived, and I was wearing high heels because they said on the website that you should wear high heels, and everyone else was in bare feet. And I just faced-palmed and thought, ‘Of course, you’re the embarrassing one.’” “And, fear of judgement, I guess, a little as well. What do I tell other people I do when I do pole-dancing because there is definitely a reaction and a set of beliefs around pole-dancing? But the biggest thing was doing something by myself.” Kiara says she was always used to doing things with other people. She didn’t even tell anyone she was planning to take dance, which was a first big step for her.

Learned About Self: “…it’s been a real journey. I’ve learned so much about myself. But in that, that I can do so much more than I think I can. And in that, as much as I love having the people to share the journey with, like the call to my mum afterwards, I don’t need them there to keep me going. I can find everything within.”

Suggested Resources:

To bring dance into your life…

Envision: Envision how it feels to be alive, connected to your body, and moving and flowing to the rhythm of dance and life.

Explore: Use the Internet to explore styles and locations and listen to your inner voice. Also, explore by asking people and dance studios near you questions to make sure you find the best fit.

Execute: Figure out the best questions to ask and then pick up the phone and ask them. You may want to know what the energy in the class is like, if it is a risk-taking environment, if they are open to new members, what happens if you don’t have the skill?

Advice to Listeners: “The one that got me through everything that I went through in those couple of years, is just asking the question: ‘What would nourish my soul the most right now?’ at every point.” Whether she was crying in the shower or mustering energy to get out of the house, considering what would help her move forward at the deepest level is what helped most.

Motivational Go-Do!

Turn on your favorite song and celebrate your energy: feminine or masculine!

How Motivate Me! Ultimate Support System can rally around Kiara O’Leary:

Facebook: Inspired Feminine

Website: www.inspiredfeminine.com.au

Instagram: Inspired_Feminine

And, as always, on the Facebook page: Motivate Me! The Ultimate Support System

CLICK HERE to listen to Kiara’s interview.

 

If you enjoyed, a review on iTunes and Stitcher would be much appreciated!

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MM190- Live a Life of Meaning, like Dr. Joanny Liu

Quote of the Day: “Stop fighting yourself and take a stand on something.”

Guest of the Day: Dr. Joanny Liu from Canada is an expert of the topic of concussions. She was an engineer for over twenty years and transformed her life to become a sports medicine physician, author, speaker, and brain expert who is internationally recognized. Dr. Joanny is committed to helping her patients get personalized healing plans.

Passion: Dr. Joanny’s passion is in concussion prevention and the treatment of post-concussion syndrome in order to save lives. Inspired by the wisdom of Classical Chinese medicine.

Challenges: Dr. Joanny’s greatest challenges came in getting the support of her husband and parents when she made the decision to quit corporate life and transition careers.

Learned About Self: “…there was so much. I had to learn how to listen, really well and deeply. I had to learn how to listen to myself really well. And…fight those doubts…those periods of low self-esteem…I didn’t allow myself to get depressed, though. I learned to be very, even more, persistent, and even more stubborn than I was before. I learned that I didn’t have to be like or accepted by everybody. I had to stand up for myself, to myself. I had to really, unfortunately, I guess the word ‘fight’ for what I stand for. Yeah.”

Suggested Resources:

To transition into a life more meaningful to you…

Envision: Spend time alone being introspective with why you are unhappy and if you need a change. See yourself making the decision to change and what will add meaning to your life.

Explore: Investigate the things you like. “Stop doing the things you’re weak at. Definitely explore the things you are strong at. Forget about your weaknesses, focus on your strengths.”

Execute: “Have a goal in mind, write it down, set up a plan for it, or at least a set of strategies to get there. Hold that goal in mind. The thing is that your plan is going to change, it’s a living and breathing thing, because we do not determine how or what we’re gonna get there, or even the timing, but stay on to that goal.” Remain flexible but know when you need to pivot. “Invest in your self-education. Invest in yourself…please be gentle with yourself.”

Advice to Listeners: “I want to tell people that we’re all here to raise the spirits of people as well as ourselves. When we heal, other people heal because we’re all in this together. And when we are sick, everybody else gets sicker along with us. So, it’s really important that you start developing better habits of thought.

Motivational Go-Do!

“Remember, you’re either growing or you’re dying, so don’t stand still. Make the changes that you need to make right now.” Make a list of the things that you tolerate but know you dislike and begin removing them from your life one at a time.

How Motivate Me! Ultimate Support System can rally around Dr. Joanny Liu:

Facebook, LinkedIn, Twitter: Dr Joanny

Website: www.drjoanny.com

And, as always, on the Facebook page: Motivate Me! The Ultimate Support System

CLICK HERE to listen to Dr. Joanny’s interview.

If you enjoyed, a review on iTunes and Stitcher would be much appreciated!

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Friday Reflection: Losses Reshape us for Gains

 

Weekly Show Reflection:

It is always surprising when you get a group of unsuspecting guests together and their life stories, their deepest passions, seem so disconnected from one another, but in reality, they represent just how tethered humans are. How similar the human experience is.

Once in a while, when I have guests who have similar interests, maybe it’s health and fitness or emotional well-being, I’ll run those shows in the same week. But generally, I air the episodes in the order I do the interviews and I wait, just like all of you, for Friday’s episode to come to see where the common denominator is between guests. To discover the common threads that binds these stories together.

Looking back over this past week, I am welling with emotion over the discoveries I’ve made. It doesn’t help that this morning when flipping through Facebook I saw a post from a woman who runs a group titled “I Hate Heroin” who informed her group that both of her sons had passed away the night before, both from heroin overdoses. And, it doesn’t help that an old friend, the kind you don’t see often but with whom you never skip a beat, posted that she realized this morning upon waking that it had been exactly thirty days since she’d last spoken to her father before he passed away. Max was one of those special, loving men who was a seriously cool cat. He was always ready with an anecdote and some humor. He was warm and unconditional, giving and dependable. He will be a legend in their family, he was just that kind of guy. I found myself in a dark room with Olive nuzzled under my chin crying for these strong women. I was overcome with the weight of their loss.

So it is with this heart-heavy perspective that I sat down to analyze our guests this week. And, at first glance, other than living their passion, a man who lost his son to gang violence, a man who has the number one singing program on YouTube, a woman who loves travel, and a mastermind guru don’t seem to have much in common. But they do. And, what I found goes much deeper than summarizing their passion in only a few words, much deeper than the fact that they are the type of people who are brave enough to live their passion.

The thread between this week’s guests is loss. They have gained, but in order to do so, they have first had to experience loss. For Monday’s guest Azim Khamisa it came in the form of murder, for Tuesday’s guest Aaron Anastasi it was in losing one’s self, for Wednesday’s guest Kylie Travers, it was brought about by domestic violence, and for Thursday’s Aaron Walker, it was in taking the life of another.

On Monday, Azim Khamisa gave us a devastating account of how his engaged, college-student son, Tyriq, lost his life in a senselessness gang initiation. He explained to us how his passion for teaching people how to forgive began. Azim, once an international investment banker, and now an author and speaker, dragged himself through his darkest days, and for the past twenty years has not only been running a non-profit organization in his son’s name to prevent kids from killing kids, he has joined forces with the grandfather of his son’s murderer to do so. He has even gone as far as to forgive the young boy, now man, who took his son’s life. And with that, they have plans for him to join the organization and the speaking duo when – or if – he is released from prison. At fourteen-years-old, he was given a 25 years to life-sentence.

Azim says in this interview that his greatest challenge was helping people to see that “there were victims on both sides of the gun.” An idea that he says was given to him by a higher power when his body went into shock at the news of his son’s passing. Azim experienced tremendous loss but with it came a passion that has since revealed his life purpose. He speaks to hundreds of thousands of children about violence. He has authored four books. He has created CDs and an interactive program on forgiveness. He has lost but he has gained. And he has helped hundreds of thousands of people in the process.

Tuesday’s Aaron Anastasi had a battle of his own, and for him it was internal. This is a guy who has a graduate degree from Princeton. Someone who studied psychology and philosophy. Someone has been coached and then became a coach. Personal-development is part of his passion. And, yet, he struggled with limiting beliefs that held him back. Beliefs that almost prevented him from achieving amazing success on having the most successful singing lesson program on YouTube – he has 10 million views. But Aaron, like most of us, struggled with imposter syndrome: “I’m a fraud. I’m a fake. Why would anyone want to work with me?”

To make this worse, his first time out he failed miserably. He had to battle the negative voices twice as hard to rebrand, refilm, redo, regroup. But he did. And here is one of the things I think is most miraculous about Aaron’s situation – the loss he experienced with the first business, the battling back harder the second time, the push to learn more about himself, where these negative voices were stemming from, and how to kick them the hell out is exactly what inspired him to write his book The Voice of Your Dreams that released the day his episode aired this week: April 12th! Just another perfect example of how our losses lead to our gains. It is not easy to lose, to battle, to see that something positive will come out of what we’re going through. But, time and time again, I am speaking with people who are proving this.

Wednesday we spoke with Kylie Travers from Australia. Kylie is in social media marketing, she is a blogger, and she is a single-mom who has been very vocal about escaping domestic violence. Kylie’s passion is travel, and she can give you a detailed description of exactly how she saw her life panning out when she was a child, which included traveling around the world with a husband and children. She was raised Mormon, though, and her life took a different path: she was married young, had children young, and discovered that her husband was abusive, and that he refused to travel. Kylie battled through bouts of depression and illness, issues with self-image and self-worth. She lost much of herself during these periods, and when she had the freedom to do what she loved, she didn’t have the funds.

Here in lies the beauty. Kylie is a doer. Kylie is a survivor. Kylie is creative. She managed to get herself a job that includes travel. So, with a strong support system, Kylie has been able to recover her dream and her person. She lost her marriage and the perfect family image she had envisioned her whole life, but the hard times have led her to times she could not have envisioned for herself: becoming a public speaker, becoming a voice for women, becoming someone who has the luxury of enjoying travel while working.

Thursday’s guest Aaron Walker – I mean, wow. Aaron is an extremely successful veteran entrepreneur who came on to teach us a Thursday lesson on the importance of mastermind groups, which he did, but something unexpected occurred for me during our conversation together. You see, in general, masterminds is a gathering of the minds. It’s a place where like-minded people come to better themselves, to solve problems for each other, to network, provide resources and find accountability. There is even much more to it than that. If you want to improve yourself in regards to the balance you are putting forward in life, this is a must listen to episode.

Here is the thing about Aaron: he is a dynamic. He is dynamic on all levels. His mastermind groups focus on being dynamic on all levels in order to live a balanced and fulfilled life. And he leads by example. There are so many things I can say here about Aaron, his episode, and the importance of his mastermind, specifically, but one thing that has really been resonating with me since our chat is his transparency. Being transparent helps build trust, he says. And, in that spirit, he shared a story with us about loss. About the loss of a life Aaron was responsible for. It was a pedestrian, 77-year-old Enrique, who Aaron accidently hit with his car.

This experience caused Aaron to go back into retirement, to move from his home – it took him five years to recover from. So while I thought we were going to speak only on masterminds, we also spoke on transparency, which lead to loss. Because, just like Aaron shared with us, there really is no compartmentalizing these different factions of our lives because they make up the collective whole. Aaron is currently impacting the lives of many men, encouraging them to be as dynamic as he: to be good men, good husbands and fathers, good entrepreneurs and people. Had Aaron not experienced this loss in his life, I wonder if he would have shifted his perspective on his own legacy, and in return, on the legacies of the men in his mastermind groups.

My guests have been leading me to a deeper discovery. And, one of my findings is the idea that there is a cost to living your passion. And that sometimes our passion is deeply rooted within us, and it doesn’t always emerge until our purpose here is revealed.

Some people believe that your passion is established when you’re a child. Some people don’t even believe in passion at all.

Here’s what I believe: I believe that your life process is the path you take to your life purpose. Your strengths and desires are derived from your passions. These two work in tandem. So your life process and your passions work in tandem. You consistently skip down this life process path picking up new skills and techniques, building upon your experiences, gaining life perspectives, gathering a network of people, learning lessons. And everything and everyone means something to you and your journey. All of them play a part in the revelation of your purpose. There is no rush to this, though. There are no wrong turns. And, patience is the key.

Look at how the life processes of this week’s guests prepared them for the purposes they are currently living. Azim says that he had always been spiritually connected in his life but never brought these ideals into the work place. He was in an international role where addressing people and organizing his business was familiar to him. He experienced the tragic death of his son, and he now runs a foundation and speaks publicly and uses the lessons he has learned in spirituality in his work place. Aaron studied psychology and philosophy, he has done acting and created films. He learned skills that enabled him to produce YouTube videos and to perform. He went to a coach, and he studied personal development in order to write a book from the perspective of a life coach on the very thing with which he had struggled: limiting beliefs.

Now, Kylie always loved writing and traveling, but part of her process was living through domestic violence, and poor self-image and self-confidence. Once she emerged from all of that, though, she was incredibly appreciative of her freedom. And she found a job that allows her travel. One where she can combine travel and writing. One where she can inspire other women. Finally, there is Aaron Walker. This guy has gone from 0-sixty his whole life: building businesses and selling them. I believe what he said on the show was that he had 35 years of business and 35 years of marriage to pull from to be a mentor. He had a traumatic event occur in his life that changed his direction. That steered his course from corporate to camaraderie from man-in-charge to mentor. One that he is emotionally fulfilled by in ways he hadn’t accomplished in business before. Sure does seem like that came at the right time in Aaron’s life.

To you, my fellow motivators, I believe there will be a turning point in your life where your purpose is revealed. And when it is, you will have the skills, the experiences, and the wisdom to pull from to be ready to take on this purpose. Your purpose will not reveal itself to you until you have these things. No matter what age this happens for you.

And, one person’s purpose is not more important than another’s, and the length of time we spend living that purpose is of no consequence. Many people live out their purpose without even knowing they are – and some are revealed in death.

My hope today was to raise your awareness. To help you see how loss is created to shape you. People, as a collective whole are this intricate puzzle. The roles of some appear bigger or more important than others, but they’re really not. And we are equally as important. I mean, what is the pitcher on a baseball team without a catcher? And if a batter’s swing carries a ball out into the outfield what if there is no outfielder to catch it? What if there are no umpires or refs? Coaches or stadiums? Concessions or mascots? Star Spangled Banner? Missing one of these pieces would alter the experience, would diminish it.

Maybe you are struggling with loss today. Maybe you are struggling with seeing your own significance. Maybe you don’t see a future for yourself. This week’s guests are here to tell you to hang in there. They’re here to say that, at some point, you will use these experiences. And, I’m here to tell you that you got this, that you will be a better, more intentional person because of it. And that you are not alone, because challenges and loss are a part of the process for all of us.

Call to Action:

 

The Motivational Go-Do!

Know that we are all the same.

CLICK HERE to listen to this week’s reflection.

 

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