Who’s helping you?

I spent today with my mastermind group .

Actually, it’s one of three mastermind groups I’m in.

I’m in one small group with a handful of other mentors that meets via skype every week to bounce around ideas and share experiences. We also meet up for a full day every now and then: this time to grill each other on our plans for next months to come.

I’m in another small group of professional speakers that meets face to face quarterly to help each other with the speaking side of our businesses.

And I’m in a big group of folks who do a lot of stuff online who meet virtually every month to discuss online strategies and to partner with each other on promotions if appropriate.

Each of those groups contributes something different to my business. Today’s session put my plan for 2014 through the wringer and helped me with priorities. Tomorrow I’ll be listening to a recording of the online group call I missed because I always get a lot of insight from hearing what’s working and what’s not for the other folks in the group.

And they all provide camaraderie and friendship too. Rather important for anyone.

Have you got something similar for your?

Three groups might be a bit over the top. But I promise you, a regular mastermind group will work wonders for you.

If you’re not part of one, why not set one up yourself? Google “mastermind group” to see how they work and speak to a handful of people who you think have complementary skills and experience to yours.

It could be the best thing you do for your in 2014.

Apart from joining Personal Mentoring, of course 😉

Smile, breathe, and go slowly!

Dieter Langenecker
Dieter

 

PS: If you want to comment, ask a question or inquire how personal mentoring can help you to live a meaningful life visit www.langenecker.com/lifementoring.html

 

The yardstick of success is not measured by fame and wealth;
it is measured by your level of understanding of
who you are, why you are here
and where are you going from here. (Tulshi Sen)

 

pine-tree
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Do the opposite this time around

There is a good chance you are not in the New Year’s goal setting mode anymore.

Hopefully.

A study I read claims that 96% of all goals we set for a new year are on the (permanent) back burner within 21 days.

We know that.

But have you ever given it a deeper thought why this happens? And what, if anything, can be done about it?

Paul Watzlawick, the late author of “The Situation Is Hopeless, But Not Serious: The Pursuit of Unhappiness” (and fellow Austrian) once said: “complex problems are best solved with simple solutions”.

And this is very true here as well: most New Year’s resolutions are about superficial or external goals, but not in sync with our deeper needs, and lack the inspiration and motivation needed for their implementation.

Because if – deep down – we ask ourselves: “Is this everything life has to offer, everyday the same routine? Isn’t there more to it than increasing profits or making more money?”,  stopping to smoke, eating more healthy, doing more sports is simply “cosmetical” only.

What is missing is the inner fire. When we were younger we had dreams, ambitions, hopes that we can do something great.

And I’m not saying that we should dig up the old dreams. “Great” probably means something different to you now. But there is still some “small great thing” inside us which would love to come to the surface – and which we have suppressed over the years because of the urgent demands of life.

We have not learned how to deal with life’s real questions in school. But now we have the experience, have suffered from the rollercoaster life sometimes is – and therefore know better, what is really important to us (and for others) in life.

Therefore it is easy, definitely easier than 10, 20 or 30 years ago.

And the first step is to ask yourself:

What is it that would give you real satisfaction, meaning and happiness in your life?

What is it you can do with your talents and experience to help someone else, to contribute to make the world a better place, to live a meaningful life?

And don’t allow your “little inner voice” to block you (again) when it says “forget it, this can’t be done, because ……..”.

Rather, finding an answer to this question will make everything else much easier.

Make this year count; make your life count.

 

Smile, breathe, and go slowly!

Dieter Langenecker
Dieter

 

PS: If you want to comment, ask a question or inquire how personal mentoring can help you to live a meaningful life visit www.langenecker.com/lifementoring.html

 

The yardstick of success is not measured by fame and wealth;
it is measured by your level of understanding of
who you are, why you are here
and where are you going from here. (Tulshi Sen)

 

279766,xcitefun-world-best-nature-photography-4
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Interesting stuff I’ve found recently

Meng’s TED Talk  

Chade-Meng Tan: Everyday compassion at Google
Chade-Meng Tan: Everyday compassion at Google
Reaching Across Cultures Without Losing Yourself
The Quest for Wealth
Giving Voice To My Fears Helped Me Find Empowerment

 

Smile, breathe and go slowly,

Dieter


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A Guide to Practical Contentment

A lot of people search for ways to find happiness, but I’ve found the idea of contentment to be more important than happiness.

Why contentment over happiness? A couple of important reasons:

  1. Happiness can go up or down each day (or moment), but contentment is something more stable.
  2. We tend to seek to increase happiness by adding things (food, excitement, a warm bath, time with a loved one) but contentment is a skill that allows you to subtract things and still be content.
  3. Contentment can actually be a good place to start as you make changes (changes and contentment might seem paradoxical to some, but hear me out).

What is contentment? For me, it’s really about being happy with who you are. Which I wasn’t for many years, and I think most people are not.

In my life, I’ve learned to be better at the skill of contentment (not that I’m perfect, but I’ve learned). I am happy with my life. I am happy with myself. I’m happy with where I am professionally, and don’t seek to add more readers or pageviews or income. I’m happy wherever I am.

And while many might say, “Sure, you can say that now that you’ve reached a certain level of success,” I think that’s wrong. Many people who achieve success don’t find contentment, and are always driven to want more, and are unhappy with themselves. Many people who are poor or don’t have a “successful” career have also found contentment. And what’s more, I think finding contentment has actually driven any success that I’ve found – it helped me get out of debt, it helped me change my habits, it has made me a better husband, father, friend and collaborator, perhaps even a better writer.

Worst of all, with the attitude of “you can be content because you’re successful”, is that people who say this are dismissing the path of contentment … when it’s something they can do right now. Not later, when they reach certain goals or a certain level of financial success. Now.

Let’s take a look at the path of contentment, how it’s a good place for habit change, and how to get started down the path.

The Path of Contentment
We start out in life thinking that we’re awesome. We can dance in public as 5-year-olds, and not care what others think of us. By the time we’re adults, that’s been driven out of us, by peers and parents and the media and embarrassing situations.As adults, we doubt ourselves. We judge ourselves badly. We are critical of our bodies, of ourselves as people, of our lack of discipline, of all our faults. We don’t like our lives.

As a result, we try to improve this lacking self, try to get better because we suck so much. Or, we doubt our ability to get better, and are very unhappy. Or we sabotage our attempts at change, because we don’t really believe we can do it.

This self-dislike results in worse relationships, a stagnant career, unhappiness with life, complaints about everything, and often unhealthy habits like eating junk food, drinking too much alcohol, not exercising, shopping too much, being addicted to video games or the Internet.

So what’s the path to being content with yourself and your life?

The first problem is if you don’t trust yourself. That’s an important area to work with.

Your relationship with yourself is like your relationship with anyone else. If you have a friend who is constantly late and breaking his word, not showing up when he says he will, eventually you’ll stop trusting that friend. It’s like that with yourself, too. It’s hard to like someone you don’t trust, and it’s hard to like yourself if you don’t trust yourself.

So work on this trust with yourself (I give some practical steps in the bottom section below). Increase it slowly, and eventually you’ll trust yourself to be awesome.

The second problem is that you judge yourself badly. You compare yourself to an unreal ideal, in all areas. You want a beautiful model’s body. You want to achieve certain goals, personally and professionally. You want to travel the world and learn languages and learn a musical instrument and be an amazing chef and have an amazing social life and the perfect spouse and kids and incredible achievements and be the fittest person on the planet. Of course, those are completely realistic ideals, right?

And when we have these ideals, we compare ourselves to them, and we always measure up badly.

The path to contentment, then, is to stop comparing ourselves to these ideals. Stop judging ourselves. Let go of the ideals. And gradually learn to trust ourselves.

Read on for the practical steps.

Changing Habits and Contentment

Before we get to the practical steps, let’s talk about contentment and change. Many people think that if you’re content, you’re just going to lay on a beach doing nothing all day. Why do anything if you’re content with the way things are?

But actually contentment is a way better place to start making changes than unhappiness with who you are.

Most of us are driven by the need or desire to improve ourselves, to fix certain things about ourselves that we don’t like. While that can definitely be a place for driving some changes, it’s not a good place to start from with those kinds of changes.

If you feel there’s something wrong with you that needs to be improved, you’re going to be driven to improve yourself, but you may or may not succeed. Let’s say you fail in your habit change. Then you start to feel worse about yourself, and you’re then on a downward spiral where every time you try to improve, you fail, and so you feel worse about yourself, and then you’re on the downward spiral. You start to self-sabotage your changes, because you really don’t believe that you can do them. Based on past evidence, you don’t trust yourself that you can do it. And that makes you feel worse.

That’s if you fail. But let’s say you happen to succeed, and you’re really good at succeeding. So you succeed – maybe you lose weight, and so maybe you don’t feel as bad about your body now.

But what happens is, if you start in this place of fixing what’s wrong with you, you keep looking for what else is wrong with you, what else you need to improve. So maybe now feel like you don’t have enough muscles, or six pack abs, or you think your calves don’t look good, or if it’s not about your body, you’ll find something else.

So it’s this never-ending cycle for your entire life. You never reach it. If you start with a place of wanting to improve yourself and feeling stuck, even if you’re constantly successful and improving, you’re always looking for happiness from external sources. You don’t find the happiness from within, so you look to other things.

If you’re externally looking for happiness, it’s easy to get too into food, or shopping, or partying, or overwork, to try to be happy.

If instead, you can find contentment within and not need external sources of happiness, then you’ll have a reliable source of happiness. I find that to be a much better place to be than relying on external sources of happiness.

A lot of people wonder, “If you find contentment, won’t you just lay around on the beach, not improving the world, not doing anything?” But I think that’s a misunderstanding of what contentment is.

You can be content and lay around, but you can also be content and want to help others. You can be content and also compassionate to others, and want to help them. You can be happy with who you are, but at the same time want to help other people and ease their suffering. And that way, you can offer yourself to the world and do great works in the world, but not necessarily need that to be happy.

Even if for some reason, your work was taken away from you, you’d still have that inner contentment.

Practical Steps Contentment

The question is how to get there. How to go from being unhappy with yourself to being content?

The path is learning a few crucial skills:

1. Build self-trust. The only way to fix a lack of trust is in small steps. If you the unreliable friend wants to rebuild trust with you, the right way is not for him to say, “Now, trust me with your life” – instead, it’s to start building trust in small steps. Do little things, and see if the trust is held up. Over time, you open yourself up more and more.

What I usually do to build trust is to start with small things that I’m totally certain I can do – drinking a glass of water every day is an easy example. I want to drink more water, so I set a bunch of reminders to drink a glass of water when I want to wake up. If you can keep that up for a week or two, it helps you trust yourself. Most people try to change hard stuff, fail, and then the trust is gone. So start with the small stuff.

2. Notice your ideals. The other problem for finding contentment is that we’re constantly feeling bad about ourselves, because the reality of ourselves does not meet some ideal we hold. That ideal could come from mass media, looking at magazines and movie stars. Or it could just come from some idea about how perfect we should be. When it comes to productivity or how our bodies should look.

The truth is, the reality of ourselves is not bad, it’s only in bad in relation to the ideal that we have about ourselves. When we let go of the ideal, we’re left with the reality that can be judged as perfectly great. It’s a unique human being who is beautiful in its own way.

So ask if you’re feeling bad about who you are and how you did. If so, it’s because of the ideal. To recognize that takes awareness first. Notice your ideals.

3. Let go of the ideals. Once we notice the ideals, we need to stop comparing ourselves to them. Let go of the ideal. The only way to let go of the ideal is to see the pain that it’s causing in yourself and realize you want to end that pain, and letting go of an ideal that’s hurting you is self-compassion. Watch the pain. Be compassionate with yourself and stop causing pain in yourself with this process of comparing yourself with ideals.

Smile, breathe and go slowly,

Dieter


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Ask Dieter July 2013

Listen to this month’s Ask Dieter; simply click on the image (the podcast slideshow is best viewed in full page mode):

Ask Dieter Podcast

Or read the transcript:

This month’s question from my portal  Ask Dieter comes from a young lady in India, who wants to remain anonymous.

Question

 

 

I want to know my purpose in life. ,I don’t enjoy life as my life is having too many ups and downs, pls guide me. Thank you.

 Answer

 

Hello my Dear!

Thank you very much for writing to me!
In my humble opinion you are asking THE question!
Most people don’t dare to ask this question because we have never learned to deal with it (besides in a material way); and in most cases something serious has to happen before we start thinking: “this can’t be everything, there must be more to life than just making a living or helping other to make more profits”;
It took me years to define my life purpose/mission, and it was an interesting, educational but also sometimes painful journey. And I came to the conclusion that in order to live a fulfilling life we need to live for something bigger than ourselves.
Now, how can you start to get a clearer picture of your life purpose?
There are 3 questions which can get you going:
1st: What are your talents, where are you (might be) very good?
2nd: What do you really enjoy doing, which not only benefits you but others as well?
and
3rd: What are the roadblocks in your life?
(These 3 questions are based on the “Hedgehog Principle”; you can read more about it here:  http://www.jimcollins.com/media_topics/hedgehog-concept.html)
Also, instead of only trying to find answers intellectually you should meditate (in whatever form) on them; after all, deep down we all have our answers inside anyway, we just have to allow them to surface (you can find an explanation of the different meditation approaches at http://zenecagate.ning.com).
And be patient, it is a journey with all its delays and detours. And it is a wonderful journey!
Don’t hesitate to let me know if you want me to be of further support to you.
Smile, breathe, and go slowly!
With kind regards

Dieter Langenecker
Dieter Langenecker

PS: You might want to sign up for the free “Claim Your Life” online course, which deals with exactly this question; sign up at http://bit.ly/lmfreeresources

“Ask Dieter: Directions for living a meaningful Life” is a monthly no-cost
program that is open to everyone! Each month, I’ll select and personally respond to one question received via the above “Ask Dieter” page that I feel in my heart will help the most people. (You may choose to remain anonymous if you wish, with our full support.) It is my deep, heartfelt intention that in answering your questions I may provide you with wisdom inspirations that in committed application will set you free. Simply submit YOUR burning question at:  www.langenecker.com/askdieter.html


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Interesting stuff I’ve found recently

Interesting stuff I’ve found recently:

  

A young boy contemplates the meaning of life, free will, and the possible existence of alternate universes. Impressive!

 

Follow Your Bliss… Even When It’s Not Easy

http://intentblog.com/follow-your-bliss-even-when-its-not-easy/

Nine Things Diagnostic: The purpose Nine Things Diagnostic is to give you a better sense of how much you’ve used each strategy in the past when trying to reach your goals, and which areas you may want to pay particular attention to. 

 

http://www.9thingsdiagnostic.com/

 

Which Comes First, Success or Fulfillment?

http://www.ackertadvisory.com/which-comes-first-success-or-fulfillment/ 

Why You Don’t Have The Life You Want (Yet)

 

http://kenmcclinton.com/why-you-dont-have-the-life-you-want-yet/ 

Smile, breathe and go slowly,

Dieter


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Value, anxiety, and happier

Good stuff I found recently:
We give “value” to all kinds of things, some times in terms of money, and sometimes in terms of usefulness. Yet I think there is another set of values that we overlook at our peril – we value things by what we had to give up to get them.
My mother, until she died, was constantly worrying about what would happen to all her valuable things in the house. After her death we discovered that even though these things may have cost a lot of money, no one wanted them at the auction.
When she had selected and bought those objects, years before, it was with a view to demonstrating how far she’d come in life. She’d risen above her background to live a rather more glamorous life than her school friends. So, of course these things were valuable. She’d given up her home, her native language, and much of her cultural background when she married my father.
No wonder the objects she bought were so “valuable” to her. They were compensating her for all she’d lost.

 

THE “LAZY” HABIT OF ANXIETY 
Anxiety!  It can sprout as fast as mushrooms in a dark room.  It seems to multiply in the closets of our minds.  So why would we associate the word “lazy” with it?
Lazy thinking?  We usually associate speed, racing, activity, hysteria, imbalance, over-functioning, plate-spinning, and other out-of-control activities with anxiety.  But not laziness. Active and highly motivated are the attributes that come to mind in a word association with anxiety.  Those folks who are anxious are immersed in the thought of failure, so like a scared rodent, they speed up the treadmill.
Yet could it be lazy thinking that prevents anxiety sufferers from pushing against the thoughts that seed this emotional terror?
Lazy thought habits fuel our anxiety.  Yes, some have a predisposition to suffer from anxiety more than others.  We know that anxiety can be an affliction.  All humans have some degree of anxiety affliction.  The continuum goes from very little to extreme.
Here’s the point.  Continue reading …
 
Happier
“You are one hundred and ten years old. A time machine has just been invented, and you are selected as one of the first people to use it. The inventor, a scientist from NASA, tells you that you will be transported back to the day when, as it happens, you first read Happier. You, with the wisdom of having lived and experienced life, have fifteen minutes to spend with your younger and less experienced self. What do you say when you meet? What advice do you give yourself?” ~ Tal Ben-Shahar from Happier

 

With kind regards,

  Dieter Langenecker
   Dieter Langenecker
PS: If you want personal support in uncovering and implementing your life’s purpose visit  Personal Mentoring
PPS. For free resources go here

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