How to Be A Successful Human

So the last decade of my life, and in particular the last five, have been beyond educational and jam-packed with growth.  Some was growth I wanted and some, not so much.  But the end result is I am exactly where I am supposed to be.  All of it got me right here.

In 2009 my company went through leadership training.   The goal was to make us better leaders and  we did an exercise to uncover what was holding us back from being a successful leader.  From that I created the following list of where I felt I fell short as a successful leader:

I’d be a successful leader except…

  • I’m afraid others will think my ideas/goals are stupid/not worthwhile
  • I am doing only safe things.  I am sticking with only what I feel I am good at
  • I’m not always being honest with myself about what I want
  • I’m not challenging myself as much as I could
  • I’m playing it safe

Once that list was created, I slowly but surely changed those behaviors in a drastic way.  In my job I became exceptionally outspoken and even more direct than I thought possible.  That evolution for me was life changing and once I had proven to myself that I didn’t have to be afraid to express and be myself,  it began to create pressure in other parts of my life.  What I discovered, is that once you become aware you aren’t being authentically you and decide to change that, you really can’t put the genie back in the bottle.  Being authentic means that the barriers and blocks that you’ve accepted in your life previously, are no longer acceptable. You can’t be direct and open in one part of your life and then stuff it back in the box in other parts of your life, it just doesn’t work at least not for long.  I think that growth was a significant piece of the undoing of my marriage.  There were many signs before that made me realize that that union wasn’t going to be forever. It became clear to me that I was not being true to myself in that relationship and that there was really no room for it there.  It was only a matter of time before it was really over. But, when it was over and I no longer had to tap down my “me”, it freed up energy I could use elsewhere to bloom and grow.  That list of items where I felt like I wasn’t being as successful leader were turned into:

I am a successful human being because…

  • I’m not afraid of what others will think of my ideas and I will share them without being afraid of the response
  • I take risks and go outside of my comfort zone.  I try new things even if I am not instantly good at them.
  • I am honest with myself about what I want
  • I continuously challenge myself
  • I do not play it safe

And I would also add to that list:

  • I trust my gut and my brains to come up with a good solution
  • I understand that success is not instant and takes time to cultivate and grow and I appreciate the process along the way
  • I am as compassionate to myself as I am to others
  • I make sure my soul is fed before feeding others
  • I thank people who help me whether it be in deed, word or gesture
  • I actively listen to others with my ears, eyes, brain and heart
  • I communicate with others by not getting caught up in “the story”/drama of a problem, I ask if they want a solution or just an ear
  • I can’t understand what it’s like to live in someone else shoes, but I respect others point of view and emotions and always try to find common ground
  • I thank others for their attempts, efforts,  and successes and let them know how much I value and appreciate their work and energy
  • I thank myself for my attempts, efforts,  and successes and let myself know how much I value and appreciate my work and energy

Looking back on all of this I was a bit of a zombie in my life.  I was waiting, playing it safe and making so many trade-offs mostly for a sense of security and denying my true feeling and passions.  I no longer believe in that sense of security and not because I am trying to be a fatalist or feel burnt by experiences in my life. but because I trust my ability to be flexible and to change and because I understand that nothing is permanent.  Instead of that being scary, it’s exciting, it means that my life has room for growth, joy, challenges and excitement.  I will never be caught off guard by change because I already know it is all always changing.

I encourage you to write-up your own set of rules to live by, to be strong by.  Write them in present tense and don’t allow in any excuses.  Write it in the strongest of terms. This list doesn’t mean that you live them perfectly everyday, but you try to.  It is your own benchmark for behavior and your life.  This is a list for you to see how strong you are and remind yourself of your value, outside of the needs and commitments to others. Fortify and bolster yourself up, no one else can do it better than you can.


How to be a Successful Human www.cijablack.com Just Remember to Breathe

Why Isn’t the Universe Cooperating?

So I am in month three of voluntary unemployment and I have learned some things:

  1. Whatever amount of time I thought it will take to decompress I should have multiplied by two (at least).  I really thought that after 1 month I would be raring to go on writing and everything else I planned to tackle.  But 20 years of gradual but constant stress takes longer to unwind from than I thought it would. The first two weeks all I could do was watch movies and maybe shower.  By the end of the first month I was ready to go outside again and deal with humans and Dave and I took a week-long road trip.  But, it still took me a little longer to start NEVER under-estimate your need for decompression.
  2. Be flexible: Whatever master plan you had before you quit may not pan out the way you hoped. My plan was to  write like crazy and in between that Jazzercise like Jane Fonda.  Well with my heart stuff (see previous post) coming into play and answers from my doctor taking many more visits than I expected, my time has not played out the way I planned. Time just gets sucked up somehow or another  and zip another day is gone.   Appointments, errands, dawdling (yes I now have time the dawdle!)
  3. The bad habits and behaviors I had when working 40 hours didn’t magically go away when I quit my job.  I was a stress case when I worked. Even though I (eventually) wasn’t worrying about my old job, I discovered that the stress went somewhere else like stressing about my heart.(Oh irony) Beware the traveling bad habits.

Yes I am only in month 3 of this time off and I am already analyzing this (see item #3 above) My initial goal is to do not need a “real” job until at least the end of the year and so far so good. What I am starting to understand is that I need to be flexible and stop worrying so much if the my world is sticking to the plan.  I need to trust myself more and enjoy the ride.

I have of course also discovered some awesome things about time off.  For the first time in I don’t know how long, I am “present” most of the time.  I actually find myself paused in a moment truly enjoying it.  I am writing and enjoying it, making some headway on the dating book I am working on (that process is a whole other post).  I still have a way to go on this adventure but the world is swirling around me a bit slower these days and for that I am thankful.