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General

January Blues! Remedies and Goals

On this day, the day they call Blue Monday, supposedly the most depressing day of the year, let’s think about the antidote.  Make fresh, new goals (or re-do the old list, that also counts) because that’s the one thing you can control today.  So let’s look at the tried and true, in no particular order of importance:

  1. Review and update your goals for 2023
  2. Book a holiday in the sun
  3. Leave that tired relationship behind
  4. Hire a life coach for help with changing the goals
  5. Book a massage or commit to regular sessions of them
  6. Start dating again
  7. Start a new fitness regime
  8. Book counselling (to help with deeper, emotional wounds)
  9. Get a new job or start your own business
  10. Learn something new (skill, language, start a new course)

The odds are many things on this list will be the same as last year.  But we shouldn’t be down-hearted about that!

If we’re doing the same type of thinking again this year, it may be that we started but we didn’t get as much traction as we wanted; we lost heart, or we didn’t see much progress or it seemed, once you’d started, a bit futile.  Maybe we didn’t start at all.  Maybe we didn’t know where to start or the task seemed impossible to scale.  However, just because these are back again, that doesn’t mean they were not important to you and not finishing them all does not make us a failure.

It means we have to calibrate and review what has gone on so that we can have something different in the future – and that makes you a success, in my view!  The list is the start and enlisting some kind of help will show the universe your serious intention to make changes.  Going a step further, it’s a good idea to have help keeping you accountable, re-modelling that plan more often than you would on your own and making course corrections where you need to.  That’s where a coach comes in.

There may be some issues that get flagged up for deeper investigation once you start something on  the list.  Maybe those are things you were always curious about, but put off because… you thought you were selfish or too self-involved or you didn’t prioritise yourself sufficiently.  You may find that now’s the time to review childhood, relationship or family issues, and that’s where a therapist or counsellor would be able to help on that journey.

So this really could be the year to really change your life. But be patient and kind to yourself – think carrot, not stick!  Take the first step and decide… without punishing yourself, to keep going through the year.  That way, resolutions become a part of the journey and not just a means to an end.  Happy new year!

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General

Compassion for yourself

 

 

A month, five weeks or so from the burial of both my son-in-law and my nephew, reality is an every-day shock of finding those people not where they are supposed to be. It’s only just the beginning of healing. We’re still coming to terms with what life means right now without those people in it. There’s something like a permafrost of the soul that we battle through on a daily basis; to succumb totally to sadness, curl oneself up in a ball and hide in a cupboard or in some other darkness is not allowed so we quietly… endure.  We don’t want to distress others by appearing to let absolutely everything go. Fortunately… well, in this context “fortunate” is only relative to what else could be… fortunately, for us, we have other people relying on us to keep going. Also, we’d really be alarmed if we just curled up in a ball.  There’s no way of not participating in life even though it may be the last thing we really want to do.

With regard to the people who rely on us, there’s a duty or sense of need to be there for them. In the middle of all this sadness is the really deep knowledge that it’s the least those other people deserve. Even more than that, we know they are hurting from the loss of their father too. For the loss of their brother. It’s impossible to ignore them in their pain and we don’t want to. Before these deaths, we found a way to balance showing love to those important people to us with loving ourselves and loving other people and loving our work, our lives, our world. We cared about those things and even then it was a struggle to have the balance – but mostly the struggle was unconscious, we didn’t give it our full attention. Or, where our religious beliefs informed our daily lives, we found a way to be ok with the spread of love, the distribution of it, in our lives. Now, every other grief in addition to our personal circumstances (such as wars, the effects of the pandemic, climate crisis and surging energy costs) adds to our grief, amalgamates and merges it; swells the feelings so that we feel the need to protect ourselves even more.

Separating from the things that hurt you makes some sense and is almost instinctual; the pain of grief can drive one to retreat as if one’s life depended on it. Actually – and in some corner of our minds we know this – the retreat is temporary. It’s like we’re waiting for the storm to pass, taking temporary cover and we intend to come back out into the world as soon as it’s safe enough. It makes sense to retreat from a daily or hourly diet of world news and social media when we’re feeling so tender. But what if, instead of looking for more distance from well-meaning friends and likewise suffering family, we decided to get closer? How would that be?

I would suggest that, taking everything in small, manageable bites and judging from day to day (moment to moment, if that’s what works) we can test this out. Our people need us and so the mantra could be: just for this point in the day I will extend myself, beyond what’s really comfortable, beyond my comfort zone in the now moment, to be with this other person who I know is also suffering in this now moment. I thought that I knew what the meaning of “compassion” was. I thought that in times of stress and grief I had first to extend that to myself and allow it – and that’s still true.

Only now I’m finding that it’s also a commitment to myself to practice an unlimited compassion with myself and others; to be better with my empathy, to be just a few degrees more tolerant in the sight of grieving relatives or clients and to provide that compassion without boundaries. When I can. Some days are more challenging than others. And that’s ok too, we do the best we can.

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General

Yesterday I was Clever… Today I am Wise

 

Welcome to 2022.  I was moved to include a Rumi quote for this month – and then realised I could go with Rumi quotes for months and years to come.  Has Rumi got the answer to everything? Rumi is more than capable of forming all the questions and all the answers very beautifully, I’m sure.

All the answers are out there but not necessarily right, cannot possibly be right, for all of us.  Some will be, some won’t.  So in the end what’s important is finding one’s own answer for oneself.  Where you find your own truth.  At this point wisdom kicks in and we search for what’s meaningful to us as individuals.  To find these answers, however, the resources are other human beings, ones willing to walk with you as you find your answers.  You’ll know which are true for you as it will be a felt experience.  The resource is just a guiding light – a coach, counsellor or lightworker/mentor.

Coaching will help with seeing what you have and how to organise it and when to organise it, building the steps to achieving or improving.  Counselling will usually be a deeper dive into how you have come to have what you have and will give clues as to how to re-organise to achieve in the future or improve your situation.  That’s the value in looking at “water under the bridge”.

The work we can do at Jaci Harman Coaching means we’ll use all the tools we have available to move organically and smoothly between setting goals and working through past issues to inform and improve the future.  Here’s where you can start that.  Do get in touch with me for an initial consultation.  Time to be wise.

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General

Your Right to Grow

I wouldn’t consider someone a friend who tried to shut me up… would I?

It’s considered part of the “friend” job description to protect them from opening their mouths in the wrong place, at the wrong time or to the wrong person and that may be ok.  That’s probably sensible.  But the point we’re looking at here is that there are times when you should speak to your friend about something that’s tough to face head on.

What do you do, for example, when you find out your friend is ok with Hamilton, the musical, but doesn’t like that all the players are people of colour?  Maybe it’s a flatmate that you thought you knew well but this startles you because, wtf?!?  Or whatever words you would use to say you are not ok with this.  Maybe you need the rent money and decide that even if this is a bit “off colour” you’ll let it pass and say nothing.  I’d say to you that if you do this, this person isn’t very close to you and that you have now decided this person won’t be close to you.  However, I expect – and I may be wrong – that if this person is important to you – a family member, a life partner, your best friend – finding out that they have this opinion about things will be disappointing.

At this point you can challenge the person, lovingly.  You might start playfully “dude, wtf?!?” and then go on from there.  If you’re super skilled at challenging and know yourself, you’ll dial back a little on the emotion that there might be around this for you and check in on their understanding of Hamilton, what it’s about for them and maybe you’ll talk about what it’s about for you.  Together you’ll tentatively make inroads to understanding each other.  In this way you may be able to save your relationship.

This could also be a great opportunity to enhance your relationship.

You may decide that it’s ok to have different views on this and on the world and that that’s ok.  To me, the important thing would be to have the conversation and you can both decide.  What’s important is that once you’ve had the discussion you’ve both had the chance to grow; to change your mind or allow the other to change their mind.  Or you can accept them just where they are and go on, maybe feeling differently about them and that being ok.

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General

Courage and honesty in your relationships

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General

It’s Not the Years in Your Life…

I’m fascinated by quotes – are they only fascinating because famous people have said them?  That could be something for another discussion or voice your opinion in the comments box below.  Whatever, some things resonate with me at the point when I first come across them, then I feel the need to share in case it hits the same way with someone else.   A single quote can trigger a whole coaching or counselling session sometimes and open us up in interesting ways.

When I use a quote I like to check the source and usually end up going down this whole rabbit hole of seeing the context in which it was originally used, but the expression stands on its own, is thought provoking and the reader can apply their own meaning.  That’s what interests me.  This one is usually attributed to Abraham Lincoln, but a quick search result says the words haven’t been found in Lincoln’s printed works so when you see the quote attributed to him, it’s not correct!  So I learned a new word today – apocryphal.  The original source cannot be confirmed.  I kind of like that too, again, the reader can make his own meaning in his life.

I’m considering for myself why the correct source is so important to me in the first place?  I know a lot of people are like me and like to know that, but we will all have different reasons.  I’m also loving the fact that I can fact check very quickly; as a child, learning usually involved a trip to the library, which I loved  back then (no need to do that  for a quick check now, of course, we love online) but if not that if something was printed it was just true!

That accounts for a lot of the problems with online information today, social media in particular, for me… But that’s another topic for another day and anyway the upsides there outweigh the downsides.

 

Jaci

February 2021

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General

To Risk is to Love…

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General

Let there be spaces in your togetherness…

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General

All men seek one goal…

 

So many reasons to seek the help of a life coach with your goals, especially in these days when we seem all to be going off in many directions and the sense of commonality of men is like a dream… But there’s this one, common goal we can all agree to strive for – success and happiness.

Categories
Work Related

“Therapy Talk” – Full Youtube Interview with Jaci Harman

Here’s the interview of me with Dorothy Holford, a California-based hobbying film maker starting her own youtube channel. She interviewed me about becoming a coach, my career so far, life hacks and life generally.

Dorothy is interested in showcasing businesses, authors, artists, etc and plans to have some travel and food features in the future. “The project is my way of giving back and lifting up people who are brave enough to step into their purpose” Dorothy says. That far, we’re in sync with our aims in helping. We may make this a regular thing – this was so fun!