Saturday, June 18, 2011

What you see is not all what you get

What you see is not all what you get. Human beings' arrogance creates so many blocks, it really isn't funny but is certainly laughable. It is said that, "We don't see because we have eyes, rather we have eyes because we See." Take just a moment to "see" what I'm talking about and you will start to realize that our senses are not the end all or be all. They are simply measuring tools we are born with, some of which are more refined than others. Take for example, ultraviolet light. We can't detect ultraviolet light with our eyes, but we sure notice it after a few hours of being in the sun with newly burnt skin. It actually took a different sensory tool to pick up the slack of the original one. We are remarkable creatures but must recognize not only our inherent limitations but also our unique abilities to move beyond them. Take another example, electricity. For millions of years we were unable to notice much less harness the wonders of electrical current. Now we don't think twice when we reach for the switch to light up the room. We have grown accustomed to it just working, assuming the bill was paid. The question is, How many of natures laws have we been tripping over but just have not been able to harness. One thing for sure, like electricity and gravity, these "Rules of Nature" don't care who use them or how often. They just are... Now which one can I use in order to post, "I won millions in the lottery last night".

I'll be sure to let everyone know.

Friday, October 1, 2010

What is life coaching anyway?

What is life coaching anyway?

“Coaching is helping to identify the skills and capabilities that are within the person, and enabling them to use them to the best of their ability – and by that increasing the independence within the individual, and reducing reliance”. (Rixon, Nick, UK Coaching Academy CD "Goals and Motivations)

Coaching rests on the professional use of a specific range of linguistic skills such as targeted restatements and the limited and judicious use of powerful questions with the aim to help clients shift their perspectives on an issue or ambition, and thereby discover different solutions and options, in order to achieve their goals. These linguistic skills are indifferently used when coaching clients in any field. In this sense, coaching is a form of meta-profession that can apply to accompanying clients in any human endeavor, ranging from their concerns in sports and personal, professional, social, family, political, spiritual dimensions, etc.

Life coaching is a future-focused practice with the aim of helping clients determine and achieve personal goals. Life coaches select from among several methods to help clients set and reach goals. Coaches are not therapists or consultants; psychological intervention and business analysis are outside the scope of their tasking, Life coaching has its roots in executive coaching, which itself drew on techniques developed in management consulting and leadership training. Life coaching also draws inspiration from disciplines including sociology, psychology, positive adult development, career counseling, mentoring and other types of counseling. Contemporary life coaching can also be traced to teachings of Benjamin Karter, a college football coach turned motivational speaker of the late 1970s and early 1980s.[3] The coach may apply mentoring, values assessment, behavior modification, behavior modeling, goal-setting and other techniques in helping their clients.

Coaching is unlike therapy because it does not focus on examining or diagnosing the past, nor does it delve into diagnosing mental illness or dysfunction. Instead coaching focuses on effecting change in a client's current and future behavior.

Wednesday, September 22, 2010

What should Life Coaching accomplish

 People always ask me, "What is the purpose of Life Coaching?"

Life Coaching is for growing people by facilitating change in ones life.
Its purpose is to "source out" or "draw out" a person's potential rather than injecting them with random knowledge. Through this reflective process, a person is allowed to experience noticeable life transition and mental transformation at their own pace. This process has no finish line and one's growth is limitless. The best aspect to this is that failure has no part to play. In fact, what is perceived as "failure" is really accelerated growth. Our fear of failure is toxic in our lives. We should relish our time and our growth process. I doubt anyone labelled Thomas Edison a failure in his first thousand "less than successful" attempts to construct a light bulb.

Wednesday, September 15, 2010

What am I really seeing

As a Life Coach, I am continually amazed at the subtle and not so subtle "ah ha" moments people have. These sparks of vision, as I like to call them, show up in the most random of moments. It is as if our unconcisous mind or "auto-pilot" fired off something that has been in the planning for a long time but was just waiting for the right environment and circumstances to make its debut. What makes for this "right moment"? Is it something that truely was waiting for the all the right ingredients to be in place or has it been creeping into our awareness and we were just oblivious?