Monday, March 22, 2010
Be, Then Have Your Dreams Come True
Sunday, March 21, 2010
People First, Performance Now
To Be, Or Not To Be?
WHAT if I could change the way people think? What if I could enable the mindset for performance, productivity, creativity, innovation, and excellence?
I’d do this by connecting people to their natural needs, drives and motivations. I would wake them up to their gifts and talents and reconnect them to their essential nature. I’d work on their identity, enhance their self-concept. I’d constantly ensure that they readjust their self-esteem to 100 per cent. I’d remind them of their immense worth and value as human beings, as master creators of the universe.
If I did this, and you all worked with me, what then could this country achieve as an economy, and as a nation? I haven’t even begun talking about the deeper benefits from this — hopefulness, happiness, harmony, purpose and passion.
Monumental task? Completely doable! Human beings are born creative. As we go, we learn how to be who we are. We keep expanding our potential. We keep reinventing ourselves to become the best version of ourselves – according to our perception and our model of good.
Once shown the way, we could take the science of this process down to an art. What could block my vision? Misunderstanding excellence with perfectionism could. Lack of acceptance drives perfectionism. Apply this absoluteness to diversity and we can see how this can hurt growth and development. Acceptance conquers perfectionism and other forms of mental and emotional intolerance.
Another thing standing in the way is the dilemma of leadership vs control. Just like how openness and transparency invites creativity, the need for absolute power – over would obliterate the space we need… to think, to choose, and to respond in order for creativity, productivity, and excellence to arise. Fear of making mistakes, of challenging what is, will certainly kill our spirit. I wonder if it’s true, that our education system stifles us? The urban myth is we have no room to express. The system keeps us at the lowest levels of tolerance – we’re rewarded when we keep our heads down, when we operate “inside the box.”
If creativity is a matter of selection, if it’s about our freedom to choose, to design our lives, and how we want to label things, if everything is decided for us, if our importance and significance is pre-determined, then why bother to unleash potential? Education drives national progress. Think about that. They say a life without hope is worse than death.
Are life, joy and paradise really in our hands? Not in our hands but actually in our mind. Creativity, productivity, excellence happens when we nourish our aspirations, when we encourage and validate people for who they are before what they know or can do. When we plant the fire for learning, the lust for discovering and the habit of questioning, we’re on our way to optimal life, peak performance, personal excellence, self-actualisation, best practices in companies, thriving communities. It happens through self-awareness, self-respect, self-confidence, self-discipline and self-mastery.
“To be or not to be, that is the question” from Shakespeare’s Hamlet. I wonder if life might be a campus instead of the Bard’s proverbial expression of a stage? My experience is Malaysians don’t care to learn. Somehow we’re always spouting some kind of excuse. “No money. No time. No use.”
Think of how what you actually lose when you pass up the chance to improve yourself and speak from a platform of certainty rather than guesswork. Truth is only when we respect knowledge can we come to respect ourselves.
The hardest part about learning is that it takes humility to operate from the “know nothing” state. In actualising our potentials we need to melt down our faulty thinking patterns, to release ineffective ways of behaving and mould the mush into new forms. The most awesome change happens when the best resources blend together, when the fires swirl without consuming our zest for life. The most meaningful transformation occurs the moment we’re prepared to recognise the truth of where we’ve been and embrace the courage to take all that and become all we can become.
Age doesn’t bring wisdom. Experience doesn’t guarantee transformation. Unless there’s a change in attitude, unless we’re prepared to take responsibility, unless we accept what we are and take all that to the next level, chances are our out-of-controlness may bring bitterness, not betterment.
People first, performance now, competitive advantage, did we say? Lest it become mockery, best we learn from history, so we will not be doomed to repeat its mistakes.
Boss who’s just too busy to help
Q: I’m a manager who’s been delegated work but when I make appointments to see my boss for approvals, direction and support, he’s always too busy. Meantime I’m wondering what to tell my team. Work stops because I have no authorisation to move at all.
A: Send your boss to me for some self-actualisation coaching! Then he’d know that leadership is not about hoarding power but to use it to enable others at the touch-points of business to make decisions and to take the business forward at a rate and speed no one can ever do on his own.
That said, how well do you know your boss? Use your energy to compose conversations where you both can set up an understanding of how work can proceed when he cannot provide hands-on direction. Propose options, scenarios or solutions wherein your response would be like such and such. So in situations where you need to act, you’d already have pre-approval.
Quit whining. Act on whatever is in your circle of influence. Do what you can with what you have. Take responsibility. Think. If your boss is so tight-fisted with you, could it be something you’re doing/not doing? What can you do differently to inspire a different response?
Fair play for women?
Q: Lower pay for females. Sexual harassment. Emotional blackmail. Incest. Rape. What is the world coming to? When will women be treated fairly? Doesn’t it just boil down to basic human rights?
A: I believe the most certain way to predict the future is to create it for yourself. I believe if you’re looking for a helping hand, the closest ones are found at the end of your own arms. I know this: No one owes me a living. I know if it is to be, it’s up to me.
You want more money? Work for it. Demonstrate how your contribution adds value to your company.
As for male brutality, let’s start by checking ourselves. What’s the level of our self-esteem? If it’s intact, you’ll have had your boundaries in place.
Human rights. How well do you know the law that surrounds what you do at home, at work, in your community? If you operate from the flimsy platform of not knowing, then you’re fair game to anyone who wants to try his luck. I abhor men who disrespect women. I think the punishment for sickness like paedophilia, incest, and rape should be increased.
But women must take responsibility too. First, we must learn to speak up.
We must stop looking away when we see our sisters suffer. What do we often do? We condemn our own gender instead. How sad is that? If you’re complaining, my question to you is, so what are you doing — yes, YOU! — in your little neck of the woods?
Me, Myself and I
OUT of the blue, someone I practically just met remarked: “You don’t know who you are.” Taken aback, instinctively I responded, “No, I don’t.”
I was speaking from the standpoint where as human beings we’re always in a state of formation, of being and becoming, of self-actualising.
Huh. Strange comment, I thought, and moved on.
But his words kept haunting my memory. If my admission were true, the person I think I am is actually only a memory I have of myself… unless I fix myself to time and space, which I cannot.
If I am the thinker of my thoughts, the perceiver of my emotions, the observer of my actions… that makes me more than my thoughts, actions, and emotions, doesn’t it? So the real me, is beyond my five senses? I think myself to be… someone who empowers others. I think myself to have… qualities that support my mission. Hmm… I appear to be a force greater than myself. That man was right. I don’t know who I am.
Park that. Suddenly, with this piercing awareness, life, like a mirror, through a sequence of events and relationships, seemed intent on reflecting back images of me, showing me glimpses of myself. The message is that I must be more patient and compassionate, more accepting and less questioning, more open and less suspecting.
Apparently I must be more alert and awake to the needs and values of others. I must free myself from expectation. I must allow innocence – experience new impulses without criticism or censorship. I must work on my freshness – that is, release old traumas and not let the past cast shadows over the future. And to protect my energy, I must replenish my capacity to renew and rejuvenate.
It’s not easy to take feedback, let me tell you. One’s first reaction is to deny and defend. But how would that serve me? I figure the better way is to accept and honour my duality – strengths coexisting with weaknesses, courage with fear and pride with guilt or shame.
More struggle, because ego demands public importance, exclusiveness, and separation. Its place is to fulfil our lower needs – to survive, be safe and to belong. When everything is about I, Me, Mine, how can we think of others? How to contribute? How to reach my highest and best?
To bolster courage and confidence and to free myself from insecurity and fear, I take the bull by the horns. Will my true identity suffer if I reveal this? Will my essence be diluted? Why do I hide my impulses? How would I be hurt if this is exposed? When I hear a voice judging me harshly, who from my past is actually speaking? Why do I choose to live with guilt instead of without it? Why not choose to be free?
Some people try to self-actualise through their lower needs. They believe they can find meaning, happiness, or significance through the things (or people) they own, the money they have. What do you think? I should think we’re in trouble the moment we start defining ourselves by what we have. I’ve called this psycho-shopping, psycho-eating and psycho-sexing. Weighs us down, doesn’t allow us to connect with our higher needs – unity, justice, order, contribution, beauty, significance, legacy etc.
Do these have meaning for you also? Once we serve our basic requirements for life and love, they subside. With a roof over our head, clothes on our back, and food in our tummy, the deeper reality can manifest – one that ego has little or no awareness of – the truth about life itself.
Einstein said no problem could be solved with the same level of awareness that caused it. So there must be a higher consciousness within me… the place where my creativity, insight and inspiration come from. Apart from ego, I am this higher consciousness. I am my personality (or character) my mind-body. All these components blend confusingly into each other. That’s why I don’t know, or forget, who I am!
So how is this related to reaching my potential? If my best life equals feeling safe and secure about myself, feeling lighter and less burdened about little things… if I want to feel peace, if I want to stop acting on my fear, doubt, and anger, then I want to be able to go to that place within me and know that I am connected to that force that is greater than myself.
Then I become wholly, completely and entirely all that I am. Then I am connected to All That Is.
Tessie Lim is the Founder of World Center of Personal Excellence, a company she set up for the purpose of enabling and driving dreams through facilitating and realising potential, defining purpose and meaning for an optimal life. She is a certified performance coach with an extensive background in behavioural psychology, marketing, business and education. You may write to her at tess@wpx.com.my
Letters will be edited for length and clarity.
DOCTOR WHO’S SO MISERABLE AT WORK
Q: To please my parents, I recently graduated from medical school. But I find ward work difficult and I’m so miserable.
A: Our emotions often indicate whether we’re in alignment with our true self. We get angry when we feel our rights are being violated or we get dispirited when we’re not passionate about work.
Then again, there are some things we do that we may not enjoy, like exercise. Sometimes we just need to get started to appreciate the benefits. The more we exercise, the more we reap the reward of health and fitness. In the end, what it boils down to is commitment and the question is, “how committed are you to being true to yourself? How committed are you to being happy?”
Ask “what are the qualities that make me feel really good about myself? What do people say I’m good at?”. You say you’re a doctor because of your parents. What would you rather be? Like most parents, yours obviously want your wellbeing – financial, physical, and emotional. Perhaps you show them you can have all these by doing something you choose for yourself?
NOT GIVING UP HER CHEATING HUSBAND
Q: When I found out that my husband had an affair, I was angry but I love him and want him back. I don’t want to throw away our years of happiness or deprive our children of a happy family.
A: You want your husband back the way he was? Well, that’s not possible. He’s been with other women and if his affair was with one woman, then he’s built emotionally-intimate ties outside. If you want him back, you’ll have to take him back as a different man. Can you do it?
It sounds harsh, I know. That it’ll be up to you to make things good again. Not impossible. Hillary Clinton did it. She saved her marriage and retained her self-respect. Sienna Miller didn’t with Jude Law though he desperately wanted her back. She chose to move on – to better men I hear.
I don’t mean to sound flip, but here’s the thing. A woman’s love and loyalty to our cheating partner can be seen as being a tad desperate. Why is it that betrayed parties are given the hardest time? Society lauds “fellas who are playas” while we scorn other women who “can’t even hold onto their husbands”.
My advice is to talk to your husband. Fight for what you want but decide together. For things to work, it’ll have to be what you both want.
Increase Your Worth
Saturday, March 20, 2010
I’ll Have Some of That!
Questions For My Self
Feel The Magic Happening
Question of What You Want
Stay In the Game
Heed Your Personal Powers
In Search of Clarity
Like how cut, colour and carat affect value, clarity’s cousins are focus and concentration, confidence, congruence and alignment. Clarity lends success to purpose and intention. The wise know well how a lack of clarity can cripple. Morpheous: Welcome, Neo. I imagine right now you’re feeling a bit like Alice, tumbling down the rabbit hole? I can see it in your eyes — you have the look of a man who accepts what he sees because he expects to wake up. Do you believe in fate, Neo? Neo: No, because I don’t like to think that I’m not in control of my life.
Morpheous: I know exactly what you mean. Let me tell you why you’re here. You’re here because you know something. What you know you can’t explain, but you can feel it. You’ve felt it in your entire life. You know there’s something wrong with the world; you don’t know what it is, but it’s there, like a splinter in your mind.
Do you know what I’m talking about? Do you want to know what it is? The Matrix is everywhere. It’s the world that has been pulled over your eyes to blind you from the truth.
In the movie The Matrix, Lawrence Fishburne plays Morpheous. He challenges Neo, played by Keanu Reeves, by asking him what he understands by “truth”, and how much of what he knows is actually real. The movie illustrates wonderfully how our perceptions weave a convoluted web that when not analysed, classified, deduced and clarified, can often confuse, complicate, distort truth and immobilise our progress. Best with a clear head, we analyse, decide, know and trust. By our senses we see, hear, feel, touch, taste and intuit. By our mind, body and emotions we experience, understand and learn. Yet science proves that whatever we consider real is only vibration. “Things out there” (including you and I) are just sub-atomic particles vibrating, producing electromagnetic energy at various frequencies. These vibrations cause electrical and chemical activity in our brain. And miraculously we become aware. Then “in here”, we know. In the absence of vibration, there’s no experience. See what happens when we get clear? It can be life-changing, even transformational. Then again, reality is different at various levels of awareness. Just think how over-generalising and pre-supposing, omitting, personalising, and black-or-white thinking could colour and distort truth. We do this all the time, and there are thousands more perceptual filters that hypnotise us into oblivion! In the theatre of our mind, all make up our own movie about life by the meaning we give to whatever is happening and by the way we code and categorise what’s going on in our world. Be careful how you navigate through life — the map is not the territory! So how do you get clear? Start by wanting to know for sure who you are. What do you want? Do you feel people “get” you? The meaning of your communication is the response you get! People say ignorance is bliss, but whose enjoyment are you satisfying by your ignorance? As we get clear about who we are and what we can do, we self-actualise. Our self (consciousness) grows. As we engage our potential, we improve our expertise. We improve our ability to recognise critical distinctions others fail to see. If you don’t see it, it isn’t there for you. The wise learn to look, so we see more and more each time. Bliss belongs to the conscious! You get in the way of truth when you freeze everything in time — space. When you over-identify with facets of self, you become a prisoner to your roles, titles and labels.
Truth is, we’re all in the process of being and becoming, transforming and actualising. I have a body, but I am not my body. I can feel emotion, but I am not my emotion. I have an intellect, but I am not that intellect. My behaviour is only an expression of myself. My thoughts and feelings are impermanent projections of myself. What would remain after I discard my mind, body and emotions? The essence of my self, my consciousness is the only “thing” which gives “me” a sense of permanence. After all, without consciousness there would be no life.
“Know that one thing; by knowing which, everything else is known,” teaches the Vedanta. No need to be a poet or a preacher. To your self, be true.
True strength comes from within Q: Please explain what the higher self is. At present, my life is so messed up — my husband just lost his job, I suspect our only son is addicted to something, and suddenly I’m the sole wage earner in the family. I fear I’m going to break down. Is the higher self the stronger self? A: You mentioned the higher self. Then you must have some suspicion, even if remote, that the spirit exists at some level. That somewhere, something greater than our imagination, is possible. That higher self refers to that part of us that has access to that realm beyond our imagination. Some call it God, others call it soul, conscience or life force. We all have it.
Let me invite you to step back from your life as you know it. Close your eyes and imagine yourself on a balcony looking down at all that’s happening to you. Remove yourself emotionally from what you see. Just observe. Now imagine a third position, from a much higher place, that isn’t fixed in earthly space. Imagine this place among the stars, so beautiful that you gape in awe. Now you appear like a spec in the distance. Check your feelings.
Your higher self is in touch with the real you — the one that belongs to all of creation. It stands guarantee to your immense potential. Just like the cosmos, it offers infinite possibilities. Take a snapshot of that image and keep it in your heart. Now go and feel that — really breathe the feeling in.
Now what were you saying about lack of strength? Just look within and trust. You will overcome. There are no mistakes — everything is on purpose.
Act on your thoughts Q: You knock the Law of Attraction. Didn’t you say our thoughts are powerful? What other strategy can you offer if I want to get the things I want? I’ve read about creative visualisation. I suppose you disagree with that, too? A: Somebody is actually paying attention to what I say. Thank you for the compliment! The Law of Attraction falls short on one score. It says our thoughts manifest — that’s exactly right. Then we must act on our thoughts. Act consistently and repeatedly. Act in ways that leave ego out of the equation. Then the universe, in all its bounty, will conspire with your intention to bring you what you want.
A few guidelines on how to get your ego out of the way: 1. Live independent of the good or bad opinion of others. In simple language, lose your addiction to approval, praise and compliments; refuse to personalise criticism. 2. Just go do your best.
3. Focus on the process and detach from the outcome.
4. Release the need for power over others.
5. Practise gratitude. Gratitude is especially successful because when we experience gratitude, ego cannot dominate. Now the process: Ask for what you desire. Affirm with compelling reasons (first get ego out of the way). Commit that you will do everything within your power to have what you want. Don’t quit. Banish all thoughts of failure. Keep refreshing your vision of what you wish for. Continue to fuel your dream with passion.
Genius ... who me?
Student: I was so scared, I froze.
Tess: What thoughts entered your mind, that made you access the state of fright? What pictures did you see in the theatre of your mind... that sent a command to your nervous system, causing your body to “freeze?”
Student: My teacher pouted, pointed, paused, then she pounced.
Tess: What did she seem like when she did that?
Student: Like a wicked witch.
Tess: How big was she... what colour was she?
Student: Like a monster... big and black. Her finger was boney.
Tess: And how did you feel then?
Student: Horrible... Ugggghhhhh. Like she wanted my blood.
Tess: Hmmm... if the best learning is when we’re relaxed and having fun, is inducing fear a great strategy for encouraging learning?
Answer: NO (duh).
EVERY experience (positive or negative) has a structure. Therefore we can, if we’re not careful and most times unconsciously if we stay around others along enough, imitate their characteristics or habits (useful or not) and become like them.
Like how history and culture can affect our way of being in the world – whether corporate or social – and we only ever realise we exhibit these traits when we control quality and practice self-awareness.
When our sensibility kicks in, we notice our quirks or when other people say, “Oh how fascinating!” or “Eeew, yuk!”
What’s important about knowing this is... because human beings share the same neurology – if someone can, we can.
Remember the one-minute mile? Yes, after Roger Bannister ran it, suddenly hundreds could do the same. That’s right, we can when we think we can! And what we want is to consciously model genius, not unconsciously mimic idiots. What we want is to constantly measure ourselves against the greats, not mark ourselves down or sell ourselves short by imitating mediocrity.
For five years now, I’ve travelled far and wide to study the process and format of what enables people to perform their unique and personal excellence. I’ve spent time working with genius of all types – entrepreneurs, entertainers, coaches and trainers (like me) and also the less official kind – social workers, university students, and parents.
All the time, I ask myself, “How are they able to be so extraordinarily successful... so effective, and yet able to live and breathe peace and happiness? How is it that the product of their genius expands and spreads happiness all around to others?
Of course, every man I interviewed claimed to be an expert lover. (And they were only too eager to demonstrate how.) Fortunately genius is as genius does, and their trail of evidence isn’t solid enough to convince me!
Here’s the pattern. From countless hours of interviews and listening (even to what isn’t said) from calibrating facial expression, gestures, spatial and non-verbal cues, I’ve discovered that everyone I consider an expert, goes through this process. Definition of expert: Someone who has accomplished more in their field than others and has the supporting social panorama as evidence.
1. Honouring Self
Each subject has a high level of self-esteem and a firm belief in their capabilities. While they all understand and accept they have weaknesses, each subject has a strong sense of response-ability and ownership over their existence, believing they have power over Self and control over their choices.
2. Clearing interruptions
Each subject has an array of “tools and tactics” that successfully removes blockages, resistance or excuses. In order for them to perform at higher levels, they deploy any or all of these, thus clearing the pathway to excellence. The belief frame is, “it’s a long and winding road to success – when the going gets tough, the tough get going.”
3. Intense focus and purposefulness
Each subject knows exactly what they want. They do not dabble. They have a definite strategy for personal effectiveness and get a twice done in half the time. They work all the time. They say, “what I do is so enjoyable, it doesn’t seem like work at all.”
Imagine applying yourself to life at your genius levels! After all, genius is only a state, just like inspiration and creativity are states.
No doubt, a complex state... or what we call an emergent state... a state that arises out of a combination of several states. Would focus + purposefulness + passion + creativity + curiosity increase your genius? What else could texture and fine-tune “genius” for you?
So how will you know when you’re in the “zone?” Each subject describes a state of (wonder + delight + congruence + heightened awareness) — a place where time stands still and the world goes away... Hmmmm... Genius > Best Life. That’s so right!
Irritating boy in class who says silly things
Q: There’s a boy in my class who really irritates me. He’s always fooling around and wasting everybody’s time. He’s not actually dumb but it seems like he doesn’t get anything from what the teacher says. I want to shout, “what about that didn’t you understand?”. He says the silliest things.
A: So there’s a boy who fools around and seemingly doesn’t “get” his lessons.
What he does have is the ability to push your buttons, so much so you “get irritated” and want to shout.
You use labels like “not dumb,” “silly” and “wasting time”. I wonder... as you step back from all this, what are you beginning to realise about yourself — as his classmate, as a person?
Isn’t it funny how we learn about ourselves when we interact with others? There’s the tendency to judge, blame, label and make excuses, but the question really is, “who am I? What do I want?”. Is your self-identity dependent on other people’s behaviour or is it solidly up to you who you wish to be?
How we portray ourselves — if we have a “tit for tat” attitude — if we pick on others and compare them with ourselves, whether we have a superiority or inferiority complex, will show straightaway in our words and behaviour.
I like to play this game: I ask myself, “If I were a friend, what would I do? If I were to share my gifts, how would I behave?”
Ask yourself, “What would I need to think so he doesn’t have such power over me?”
So difficult to find good workers
Q: I’m a human resources manager in a small firm. It seems I can’t find good staff. Everyone doesn’t last. They all want less work, more pay. They say things like, “your business is too complicated for me”. What do I do?
A: You tell me! I’ve been asking myself the same question! I’ve also been noticing how I’m attaching unpleasant feelings to stuff when this happens.
I don’t like feeling those things (like self-flagellation: “Did I do something wrong?”), so I ask myself, “Hey what if I could experience something nice instead, as those people demonstrate what you described.
Now when I experience that, I play a cartoon in my head (like rewinding a funny film where the characters speak like chipmunks!)
And when that happens, I do a quiet giggle and I’m able to smile as I feel the humour come through.
What else can I say? What can we do? For as long as people have this “Gimme! Gimme!” attitude (meaning they want to take and not give) or they keep “I can learn!” out of their menu list of possibilities — then I say arm and insulate yourself with as much humour as you possibly can.
That’s how I stay positive. Find out what technique will work for you.