Archive for the ‘Jobs & Work’ Category

Rejection Is Cold Company

Tuesday, March 16th, 2010

A good friend of mine had to shake me out of my gloom yesterday. “Rejection is a good thing,” he told me. “It means you’re still putting yourself out there. You’re still in the game. You stop being rejected, then you’re in the bleachers, not on the bench.”

You can guess what kind of “go leap off a cliff” look I gave him. When you’re blue, it’s hard to hear any kind of pick-me-up talk, even from people who care about you.

You see, I’ve been feeling passed over a lot lately, like the dish at the picnic that no one tries. The kid not picked for the team, while all her buddies pick each other. The girl waiting to be asked to the dance, while all her best guy friends ask someone else. Rejection is an experience that comes early and the sting stays, no matter how old we get. Psychology Today has a good article that explains why it’s necessary that we carry around such deep emotional responses to rejection.

As professionals and adults, we still encounter it when we’re passed over for a job, or when the person we’re dating kindly lets us know that we’re not “clicking,” or when the bank rejects your loan application, or in any of a myriad of other situations. “What’s wrong with me?” we ask ourselves.

What does the Flow tell us about this? Why are we overlooked, or snubbed, or passed by or not chosen? Let’s take a moment to acknowledge our feelings, first:

To begin with, we have the emotional response. This is the pout, the hurt feelings, the ego that says, “But why not me? Am I not [insert any word here: 'good enough,' 'talented enough,' 'smart enough,' etc.].” The emotional response is based on biology, and it’s actually necessary for our survival. But we don’t have to let it dominate.

This is where the intellectual response comes in, as we try to rationalize the rejection: “Maybe I just wasn’t exactly what they were looking for. Who knows what criteria they really have. Maybe the fit really wouldn’t have been right.”

But finally, there’s the Flow response, and this is where you involve trust. It’s true, trust is hard to come by on the heels of hurt and disappointment, but if you steer your thoughts back to your Flow, you can release both the emotional and intellectual responses, and feel peace again.

When you’re rejected, your Flow is saying: “Listen up! You wanted a great fit, right? You wanted happiness, satisfaction, fulfillment, expression and reward from this thing on your list, right? Well I’m telling you is that this path wasn’t it. You thought it was, but you need to consider whomever or whatever it was that rejected you as a cog in the machine, spinning you into a different direction–one that’s better for you. You can’t see it yet, but someday you will. Trust me.

Think about this for a moment: What areas of your life right now are flowing freely, where you’re experiencing very little rejection? And now, in which areas are you encountering rejection?

You see, some areas are wide open for you now. Think of a toll road: these are your fast track lanes. If you want to get stuff done, drive there. Those areas may not always be on “fast track.” Take up the opportunity while you can, instead of looking at those lanes where you’re stuck behind the slow moving trucks while the other drivers are honking at you and making rude gestures.

We often take for granted the lanes that move for us, particularly if they’re a lifelong. Maybe you’ve always had an easy time in your career, but never with love. Or vice versa. And so we dwell on what we don’t have, rather than on what we do. The obsession to fix the “delayed” or “dysfunctional”  or “non-flowing” areas can become overwhelming.

But, Flow thinking says, “Trust.” Just let go and trust for awhile. Trust isn’t for wimps. It’s one of the very hardest things to do. So allow the areas where the rejection is roiling to settle and cool. Then return, and begin feeling around the area again. Things are always changing; people, jobs, health, everything. So release it, trust, and return to the game. Consider your time spent on other activities the equivalent of time at the batting cages, warming up. Rejection, as my friend says, means you’re still in the game. At some point, you will be chosen.

Best Resources to Learn Flowdreaming

Friday, April 3rd, 2009

Today’s post is a little unusual for me. Most of the time, I write about situations in my own life and how I’ve applied the Flow perspective to them. Or, I talk about solutions to the emailed questions that readers send to me, or ways, generally, we can look at our life and understand why we have what we have, and what to do about it if it “ain’t so great.”

So please grant me this exception…you see, a few weeks ago my second book about Flowdreaming came out. It’s called Creative Flowdreaming. And hot on the book’s heels is my other new project: a 6-month online course called, The Art of Flowdreaming, to teach you how to become a Manifesting Practitioner in your own life.

Between these two, you can learn everything you need to know to make real, concrete changes in your own life. First, it isn’t another “Law of Attraction” book. (LOL, I think just about anything worth being said on that has been said.)

Instead, Creative Flowdreaming takes you deep into what living in the Flow really means. Sure, the first few chapters lay out the nuts and bolts of the technique, and give you a thorough introduction to the art of manifesting in general, but from there, I go into the deeper questions that I’ve encountered over the years. Questions that are usually deal-breakers for the inexperienced manifestor, (more…)

Your Ideas: Lead … or Gold?

Thursday, March 12th, 2009

I suffer from the “great idea” syndrome. In other words, I’m always thinking of what I think are good ideas. Then I (often) fruitlessly try to get other people to go along with them. What I’ve had to learn over the years is this: 1) not everyone will see the value in what I offer, 2) if I feel strongly about my idea, then I’m probably going to have to make headway on it myself and quit waiting for other people to help me, and 3) if it genuinely is a great idea, then my Flow will likewise scoop me up and help smooth the way for its implementation.

Let’s start with #1. For many years, I’ve been in a position where I’ve offered some excellent business ideas to someone. (more…)

How to Know What You Should Be Doing with Your Life

Sunday, March 1st, 2009

Alright, this post is blatant rip off from Brazen Careerist. I read Penelope Trunk’s blog regularly, not because I’m always looking for business advice, but because I like her. She’s someone with just enough neurosis—and personality—to fit well in my own quirky family of renegade thinkers. For instance, she’s always telling us that to do well in business, you just have to be likable, not skilled. And because of her, I’ve decided that I’m not particularly likable. Though I am highly skilled.

Anyway, she posted recently about how to find your life’s work. Now, this is coming from a woman who’s written for yahoo business, and other fancy big-name sites. Penelope has also worked for corporations—as have I. She’s had start-ups. So have I. And she’s got young kids in the midst of it all. So do I. So I was curious to see her advice, and after I read it, I thought, Gee, what would I say?” (more…)

Some People Are Just Not Going to Like You

Tuesday, February 10th, 2009

Some people don’t like you.  And, they’ll never  like you. And you can’t make them like you. And there is nothing you can do about it.

I took a yoga class this evening with a new teacher. We spent an entire hour doing what felt like a variation of the same standing pose, and the teacher was full of criticism. My butt was too high, my shoulders were drooping, and my feet were not wide enough apart. When I inadvertently stretched in between poses to unkink my aching arms, she scolded me, “We are not doing that stretch right now.”

Twenty minutes into the class, I wanted to leave. And twenty minutes later, I found myself thinking what an awful teacher she was, and how her rigid yoga philosophy was so unlike my own. Twenty minutes after that, I thought, “What is my Flow doing bringing me here?” and so I spent the rest of class thinking about that way I really disliked this teacher, while around her the other students were happily chirping that this was the best class in town, since you really got to learn each yoga pose so well.

Not long ago, I made the decision to finally begin teaching workshops in person. (more…)

What Are You Worth?

Wednesday, February 4th, 2009

I feel like an egg that’s been cracked open, and all my gooey insides are running out. It has been quite a day…a week. To feel better, I did two things. First, I spent an hour on my radio show ruminating about how we create value—how we value ourselves, how money or talents are valued—and how we can confuse those two things so easily. And then I went shopping. (Yes, I really did. And I found a really great blouse.)

But I promised listeners of yesterday’s Flowdreaming show that we would continue this conversation about worth—especially self-worth. My own self-worth has been rocked pretty hard lately. And you know how things seem to happen at once? (more…)

Welcome! Will You Be My Midwife?

Sunday, February 1st, 2009

Hi Friends,

I’m so happy that you’re here, visiting my blog. I’m birthing it during a time of some serious upheaval in my life. Outside my home office window here in Southern California, the sky is like a solid turquoise upturned bowl, radiating light and warmth. But my own sky has been falling. My Flow is carrying me into very new waters. I’ve learned to let go and follow during points like this, and it’s coinciding (mysteriously! synchronistically!) with the debut my new way of speaking with you in the world, through this blog.

You’ll find my free Online Learning Library here, where I’ll be tucking especially informative articles. You can also sign up to receive my blog posts as emails, automatically, whenever I publish one. Just go to the top right of this page and type in your email address.

But I need your help. I’m the kind of person who rarely asks for help, so when I do, you know I mean it. I’d love to see this blog become a giant source of information for seekers like you out there in our world. To do this, I need to get the word out. Would you help me? Would you send a link to this blog or post to some of your friends right now? Would you link it to your own site, or blog about it yourself? Every blog comes into the world alone—like a baby—with no one but its momma or papa with it. So I’m asking, from my heart, for all of you to be my midwives.

My goal is manyfold: I want to have a way to continue to share and teach with you about being a manifesting practitioner and working with the subtle energies of the universe. I want to continue to bring Flowdreaming to the world, since when people use it to grasp their true inner power, we all benefit. And I want to get to know you, in this new community, through your comments and your experiences with this work.

Much love and blessings! May you stay in your Flow.

Summer

The Prosperity Challenge

Friday, January 16th, 2009

Sometimes people ask me what the difference is between my CD, Flowdreaming for Lots of Money, a Great Job, and a Luxury Lifestyle, and my Flowdreaming Prosperity Challenge. Here is what I posted on the Powerful Intentions Flowdreaming Forum:

When I made the CD “Flowdreaming for Lots of Money, a Great Job, and a Luxury Lifestyle”, I was thinking specifically about situations in my own life that I’d encountered. I wanted each of those things: money, great work, a fabulous lifestyle. So I recorded the Flowdream I myself used to create each of these outcomes in my life. Each Flowdream is distinct and has a pinpointed purpose to bring these things in–to change your career painlessly, to bring in new avenues of income, etc.

Years later, because I had learned so much more about manifesting wealth using the Flow, I knew that a systematic program would really reach a lot of people. Each “day” in the 2 week program addresses a different aspect where people get hung up in both their thoughts and in the energies when it comes to creating or flowing wealth in. So some people get the most from the Flowdreams for Day 2 and 4, others from Days 1 and 7, and so on. Cumulatively, they add up to create a whole shift in your thinking. Plus I wrote a little book to with it that better explains the process itself.

Together, both support each other. So I guess it’s a matter of individual preference which you like best!