Permanent Weight Loss

[O.W.W.L. Success Tip] Do You Want to Keep Playing Small?

My colleague and friend, Dr. Marsha Lichtenstein, has been a guest speaker on the O. W.L. Keep It Off Club because she is an expert in communication and conflict management. As the president of Women in Negotiation, she teaches women how to ask for what they want and get it. When I read her article on Courage, I knew you would benefit from reading it, especially because “Playing Small” is one of our Ontological Wealth, Weight, and Leadership sabotage patterns.

O.W.W.L. Success Tip: “Life shrinks or expands in proportion to one’s courage.” – Anaïs Nin

Do You Want to Keep Playing Small?

Why is courage so important in creating the life you want?

One of the current catchphrases in the personal development world is “playing small.” Although that expression was not part of Anaïs Nin’s extraordinary and sensuous vocabulary, whether you choose to play small or play large is the underlying question.

I frequently write about how both cultural and family legacies limit our ability to speak up, speak out and advocate for ourselves. The impact of culture and what we are taught by our families set the stage for whether we will play small or play large. But you can step off that original stage and create something bigger and better that allows you to live a more authentic life. Once you understand that the original limits are not fixed but are fluid, the sky’s the limit!

Our parents did not intend to limit us or restrict us to following the lives they led. When they taught us to follow the rules, seek approval from others and not to stand out from the crowd, they were trying to keep us safe. Big news: playing it safe is the equivalent of playing small.

courageHow do you shift from being small, obedient and unsure of yourself to expansive, authentic and visible? You need courage.

What is courage? Courage honors your personal values. It does the right thing at the right time. Courage comes from listening to yourself and valuing what you believe in. And choosing what’s right for you situation by situation.

We celebrate the women who fought for women’s right to vote during March, Women’s History Month. Beginning with the 1848 Seneca Falls Convention, the 1st women’s rights convention, and ending with the 19th Amendment passed in 1920, women’s suffrage was unpopular, uncomfortable and led some women to take radical action. Although many women who fought for suffrage were willing to be patient and conciliatory, other women took to the streets, were arrested and imprisoned, placed in solitary confinement and held a hunger strike that led to their being forced fed for several weeks.

Our personal fears are just as substantial as the fears that radical suffragettes faced when fighting for women’s right to vote. Today, professional women report being interrupted when they are speaking at business meetings and they find it scary to reclaim their right to keep speaking. What if you could recover the attention you need and do it with both grace and authority? Other women feel stressed out and anxious about saying no to a son, daughter, brother or sister who asks to borrow money, even though they know in their gut that no is the right answer this time. What if you could say no with courage and compassion? Taking even tiny steps out of your comfort zone takes courage.

Courage implies stepping out of your ordinary comfort zone to break into new territory, whether that territory is in the legal and political world, or the inner world where we deal with our personal demons, negative thinking, and self-sabotaging behaviors. Courage doesn’t exist without fear.

Facing Fear

When we want an expansive life, we find our courage by facing our fears. A way to deal with your fear that I teach in my seminars is how to steal fear’s energy and use it for yourself.

Skills and strategies are necessary when you want to start living large. Skills like:

  • Knowing what to say
  • How to say it
  • Planning a strategy
  • Finding support
  • Thinking ahead of time about consequences
  • And knowing how to deal with different possible outcomes

These skills and many others are all necessary. And they are not sufficient.
It’s equally important to do the inner work: finding your authenticity and honoring it and anchoring to it. That’s what gives you the courage to face your fears and do the work – whether that work is speaking out for human rights or claiming the respect you deserve.

When you decide to stop playing small, you will be afraid: that’s normal. Fear is also a sign that you are getting to the edges of your comfort zone. I used to believe in just crashing through my fears and doing it anyway. I no longer believe in “powering through” to get to the other side.

I won’t be the one to tell you to just jump in and do it anyway. I am now more comfortable with talking with my fear instead of trying to obliterate it. I prefer to…

  • Feel my fear.
  • Sit in front of it.
  • Name it.
  • Ask how it can help me.
  • See how fear can be an ally instead of an enemy

You can steal the energy back from fear and begin to use it:

  • Dare to be yourself.
  • Grow your courage.
  • Stop playing small.

Angela Anaïs Juana Antolina Rosa Edelmira Nin y Culmell was born to Cuban parents in France where she was raised. She was a contemporary of the writer Henry Miller. Her best known writing are her diaries or journals which span several decades and provide a deeply explorative insight into her personal life and relationships. She was born in 1903 in Paris and died in 1977 in Los Angeles.

To Your Success,
Marsha Lichtenstein, Ph.D.
WiN Women in Negotiation
www.WomenNegotiate.com
Marsha@womennegotiate.com

P. S. To learn ways to identify and eliminate the #1 sabotage pattern, please download my free report:

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Success Story:

Janis Pullen is an extraordinary coach. She has a gift for blending the skills of facilitative coaching – guiding, motivating and inspiring achievement at the highest levels – with the sensitivity and attunement of the ontological coach – providing the insight and emotional support that dissolves internal barriers to full self-expression and life satisfaction. I highly recommend her.

— Gail Feldman, PhD, Psychologist, Author, Speaker, Coach

My Current Weight Loss Journey: Stepping Up with a Scary Commitment

As many of you know, I LOVE, LOVE, LOVE Latin music and dance, which is why Zumba is one of my love, love, love movements. I had gotten out of the routine, however, last year when my work schedule seemed to be more important than my personal well-being. (Can you relate?)

Well, because of my renewed commitment to self-care, I began expanding my movement, as I have been writing lately, including the 5K in “Run for the Zoo” in May. Today, however, I really STEPPED UP!

I returned to my former Zumba class with Julie Mason, a great instructor and also massage therapist, after a yearlong “sabbatical” and in a moment of courageous self-leadership told her I would be her substitute teacher if she ever wanted me. She usually just cancels the class, feeling guilty. If I learn just one session, I can repeat it each time. The scary part is standing up in front and leading, being a role model for the others. Talk about stepping into visibility! Talk about a big “why” to stick to my food and movement programs!

Her first class to miss will be March 18. I have my work cut out for me.

Aye Yaye Yaye!
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My Current Weight Loss Journey: Run for the Zoo & Accountability

My friend Salley suggested that I commit to some walking events to give velocity to my movement program and preparation for the half marathon I’ve been talking about. So I have now registered for the “Run for the Zoo” to be held in May. In addition, I have attended several Zumba classes and realize this about myself.

I realized that I do better with accelerating the workouts when I am with someone else or a group as a means of scheduling and accountability for myself. My friend Melinda is the same. Last Saturday the Zumba kicked my you-know-what. If I had been alone with my Zumba video, I would not have stepped up to the same level of participation as in the class. Same goes with the spin class vs. my recumbent bicycle at home.

So guess what, fans! I am now planning in my calendar my movement sessions with other people in order to increase the intensity. By the way, did you notice I am calling them “movement” sessions/program/workouts instead of “exercise”? The reason for the terminology difference is that my psyche embraces movement and rejects exercise. I have a body that loves to move; exercise is work!

What will support you in increasing your movement this week?

I’m wiggling extra for you this week!
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OWL Success Tips: Janis’ Interview in the ABQ Journal on “Shedding”

Are you ready to let go, or shed, in order to experience life more fully? My success tip this week comes in the form of an interview I did with a reporter from the “Albuquerque Journal” newspaper’s “Live Well’ quarterly magazine, published Saturday, March 2, 2013, in which I discussed downsizing of possessions, money, weight, obligations, and other areas.

Success Tip: To experience more quality, let go of more quantity.

Many Deciding To Shed Their Stuff

An interview with Janis Pullen by Rick Nathanson, Journal Staff Writer
People often come to a point in their lives when they realize, “all their stuff, the house, the cars, the toys, their general accumulation of possessions, isn’t serving them and it’s time to downsize,” says Janis Pullen, an executive business and life coach.

The first step for downsizers is “to know clearly what you want and don’t want, as well as what you need and don’t need,” she says. “If it’s something that makes your heart sing and lights you up, that’s not the thing to get rid of. The unnecessary surplus, ho-hum, take-it-or-leave-it stuff is where you start.”

That “stuff” can be sold traded, donated, gifted or bequeathed to someone. Rather than leave children and grandchildren items in a will, downsize now by giving them heirlooms, jewelry and artwork. For some people, generating a priority list or a timeline may be helpful in keeping on task to shedding material things.

Another strategy for letting go, Pullen suggests, is to create a photo album of items that have personal or sentimental value and give away the actual item. “It’s really the memory that’s most important, not the item itself, so whenever you want to reminiscence, pull out the photo album.”

In addition, downsizing can involve weight loss, finances, relationships and obligations, says Pullen, who is also founder of the Weight of Money and the OWL Weight Loss programs. People often decide to simplify after major changes in their lives such as retirement, illness, death of a spouse or just “reaching an age of wisdom when they realize that many of the things they’ve filled their lives with are not fulfilling.”

Whatever the reason, when people finally get to that point, Pullen says, the number one thing to remember is “stop upsizing.” In other words, “quit buying more stuff.”

Janis Pullen, executive business and life coach, says simplifying and downsizing your life can also involve weight loss, finances, relationships and obligations.

My Current Weight Loss Journey: Expanding my Movement

Recently one of my weight loss clients wanted support on staying motivated in exercise, and I wrote in my blog about different kinds of movement to consider. This past week I made a decision to expand this for myself, starting with the various offers that people have given me. For instance, I spoke for the J.C.C. Fitness Center’s spin class with the WONDERFUL Andrea Levy as the trainer, and she gave me some guest passes. So the following week I joined her class, having never participated in spin before. Although I ride a bicycle and have a stationary bicycle, this was much different. WOW! It was a great and also fun workout.

I included my husband Jay in some new things too.

We attended together some Zumba classes. I have always loved the Latin music and movement, but bringing Jay put a whole new light on things. We had a great time and went to brunch afterward.

Another event I attended last week was the Day of Dance, sponsored by a local hospital. It was a competition much like “Dancing with the Stars” with various vendors giving passes. I now have a week of Jazzercise, several free dance lessons, and other things to do with Jay.

I hope this quick synopsis of expanding my movement can inspire you too. I would love to hear your ideas here.

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