Newsletter: How we deal with failure can energize us

*|MC:SUBJECT|*
How we deal with failure can totally energize us for greater learning and change!
View this email in your browser

Do you even know how awesome failure is?

Yes, failures (especially meaningful ones) always hurt, demoralize, disappoint - basically suck. And why shouldn't it? Our self esteem takes a big hit. Our confidence is smitten. And deep fears can be triggered. 

Failure is like catching a chest cold and chest colds always feel awful. If untreated, we can end up with pneumonia. Emotionally, that would equate to shame, helplessness, even depression.

The infection is caused by the thoughts of "not enough". I'm not good enough...not smart enough...not important enough...there's not enough time...not enough money...'not enough' becomes our theme song.

These negative perceptions about ourselves and our environment are not only inaccurate but also cause more damage the more we believe them. They mislead us into feeling trapped with very few options if any, other than giving up.

And if we give up, it confirms our 'not enough' perception. This scarcity mindset blinds us from seeing support, resources, services and opportunities that could help us achieve our goals.

So actually the only thing we don't have enough of is a clear understanding of failure. Failure viewed through a scarcity lens will diminish us. Failure perceived by a mindset of sufficiency empowers.

Fearlessly framing failure will increase our awareness of our repository of capabilities and capacities to overcome challenges. And if we don't find it within, we will find it externally. Failure is essential in helping us grow our leadership, strategies and executions.

This may sound like stuff you hear in business circles but it's just as applicable to the business of raising a family. You cannot raise a healthy and successful family with a mindset and soul shaped by scarcity. Children's first 6 years are times of absorption and downloading from the environment. Even in utero, from mom's blood comes all the various emotions, chemicals and hormones that mommy is experiencing.

Upon exiting the womb, what and who baby sees and hears continues to shape their subconscious - to have a foundation of openness to learning and growth, to take risks, to express or a void of fear, anxiety and insecurity where they need to be in constant protection mode, striving for acceptance and adequacy.

And a lot of this hinges on how we have dealt with failure. If our responses have fostered openness, courage and love, we are leading our family to grow that kind of culture. If we have succumbed to perceptions of scarcity, our home environment may likely be one driven by insecurity, anxiety and worry. And our kids, during the early formative years are simply downloading these signals from their environment, forming the operating system for their future behaviors and attitudes.

Here are a few ways to effectively leverage failure to help us elevate our leadership, strategy and execution:

Learn to master failure: (a writing exercise) 
  • Failure is a great teacher:  (eg. Thomas Edison) What should you do differently next time in your preparation or execution?
  • Failure provides new opportunities: (eg. Henry Ford) What opportunities might your failure possibly present?
  • Failure can make us stronger: e.g. Diana Nyad) In what ways might your failure make you stronger?
  • Some failures are also successes: (eg. Miss Universe runner up, losing playoff games, getting to final job interviews) In what ways can you view your failure as success?
  • It's about the journey. Success is not always necessary: recent studies show that pursuing goals / making steady progress contributes more toward our sustained happiness and self-fulfillment than actually reaching them. Identify ways in which you can derive meaning and satisfaction as you pursue your goals.
  • There may be unhealthy, outdated playback / code in your operating system that's preventing these inclusions. How might you want to update them to better support your behaviors that matter most?
Healthily handling failure will significantly increase energy for ongoing dynamic change and growth. Happiness and general well being are additional outcomes.

For more examples and deeper explanations, pick up a copy of Emotional First Aid by Guy Winch.

So stop avoiding failure. Encourage your coworkers, students and family members to not be afraid to fail but rather be free to learn from their mistakes. But be sure to consistently work on your own healthy openness to failure and learning from it. 

Ready to increase your energy for change and elevate your leadership, strategy, commitment and execution? Book a complimentary 30-60 minute session and let's chat.


 
Cecil Wong is a Certified Life Coach from San Francisco, California with over 25 years of experience in leadership and teaching. He works with children, families, individuals, organizations and companies, combining personal and professional development.

Life coaching is all about getting clear about your dreams and putting the practical pieces in place to make them happen. 

Family Connections Coaching is about achieving more of what matters most.

Check out revamped website!
FamilyConnectionsCoaching.com
FamilyConnectionsCoach@gmail.com
415.420.8719


 Over this past year Cecil has been a great source of encouragement and clarity in helping me break down how to pursue my goals. I’ve never been more aware of the inner workings within myself and they so often directly correlate to the outworking of my goals. From areas of pursuing professional growth, straightening relationship, or achieving balance and rest, Cecil has been consistent in helping me realize the obstacles and the simple steps necessary to overcome them. I highly recommend Cecil in his coaching as I know he will be a great source of encouragement in helping anyone reach higher goals and success. 

~ Billy W., Philippines

 


 In my short time here at Sunset Church I've been privileged to have built some very meaningful relationships with a handful of men and I'd have to say that Cecil is at the top of that list! We've been meeting on a regular basis for the past 6+ months over "great coffee" and wonderful sharing of our lives in a very meaningful and real way. Cecil has a natural gift of "pressing in" ...encouraging & motivating the life stages one faces and I feel like I've been a recipient of his genuine care for me as a man who is seeking growth and healthy life change. I'd highly recommend Cecil as a leader who can bring his spiritual leadership and coaching skills to our body at Sunset Churchc. Cecil is truly a man of integrity, a dedicated and committed man who strives to do his best in his work and personal life. He is always someone who I can rely on and feel encouraged by in our meeting times together. 


~ Michael C., San Francisco



More testimonials >



________________________


Click on the gorilla for some of
Jim Collins' thoughts about B.H.A.G.'s:


Click this pic for some of my thoughts on a faith BHAG:
 

Pull the trigger on pursuing the dream of something huge and audacious, that will rock your world and bless your relationships, maybe even change THE world! 



 


 

 
Copyright © *|CURRENT_YEAR|* *|LIST:COMPANY|*, All rights reserved.
*|IFNOT:ARCHIVE_PAGE|* *|LIST:DESCRIPTION|*

Our mailing address is:
*|HTML:LIST_ADDRESS_HTML|* *|END:IF|*

Want to change how you receive these emails?
You can update your preferences or unsubscribe from this list

*|IF:REWARDS|* *|HTML:REWARDS|* *|END:IF|*

Newsletter: Don't let uncontrolled rumination rob you of energy and time

*|MC:SUBJECT|*
Uncontrolled rumination robs you of energy and time for growth and development.
View this email in your browser

Does your mind ever get stuck?

Repeatedly thinking about painful, emotionally negative experiences is significantly unhealthy for many reasons:
  • Increases likelihood of depression by intensifying and prolonging sadness and anger
  • Increases risk for substance / activity abuse (-holisms and disorders).
  • Fosters negative thinking and attitudes and diminishes problem solving.
  • Elevates stress responses and risk for cardiovascular disease.
  • Repeated, prolonged discussions and expressions put excessive burden on relationships.
  • Inhibits positive and productive motivation, initiative, and focus.
It's like picking at scabs and never letting them heal. Pick, scab, pick, scab ad nauseum. Kept up long enough and it not only becomes a habit but also forms a scar. Of course infection can occur as well.

We want to disrupt the cycle as well as address the root cause of the rumination.

How might we do that?
  • Distractions
    • Engage in tasks / activities that will demand your attention
      • moderate to intense cardiovascular activity
      • socializing
      • puzzles, ie. sudoku, jigsaw
      • computer games
      • mental exercises, ie. envisioning a project (home improvement/ work-related)
      • test them out to see which one is most effective at various times and places.
  • Enlarge your perspective
    • See yourself in 3rd person to gain new insights and resolve
      • Close your eyes, imagine the scene; zoom out as events unfold
      • Follow the event from beginning to end.
    • Ask why instead of how; seek to understand multiple paths to action (others and yours).
  • Reframe anger
    • Change the meaning of events to an understanding that makes the event less infuriating. 
    • Exercise:
      1. Find the positive intention in your offender.
      2. Identify the opportunities (for growth, change, improvement) 
      3. Embrace the learning moment: View negative situations as strategic puzzles (of ourselves) that require creative solutions (to fortify and mature us)
      4. View the offending person / hurtful event with a larger, deeper contextual perspective.
      5. A new resolve that redeems [what saddened, disappointed, or victimized you] to spur you in a new direction; a shift in mindset that changes your attitude towards your challenges; changing what you perceived as destructive to actually being helpful.
For more examples and deeper explanations, pick up a copy of Emotional First Aid by Guy Winch.
 

Gaining control over emotional scab-picking is essential for ongoing maturation, be it personal, professional, or organizational (families, corporations, non-profits, etc). Emotional hygiene is a keystone that mustn't be overlooked, so is physical strength training but we'll save that for another time.
 

Ready to elevate your leadership, strategy, commitment and execution? Book a complimentary 30-60 minute session and let's chat.



 
Cecil Wong is a Certified Life Coach from San Francisco, California with over 25 years of experience in leadership and teaching. He works with children, families, individuals, organizations and companies, combining personal and professional development.

Life coaching is all about getting clear about your dreams and putting the practical pieces in place to make them happen. 

Family Connections Coaching is about achieving more of what matters most.

Check out revamped website!
FamilyConnectionsCoaching.com
FamilyConnectionsCoach@gmail.com
415.420.8719


After my husband and I lost our expected triplets, I felt my world turn upside down. I quit my job when I was pregnant and felt depressed and unsettled not having a job to go back to.  The life I had envisioned for myself was no longer going to be a reality. I was having a hard time pulling myself out of the emotional wreck I had allowed myself to become.

I’ve known Cecil since I was his student in the 7th grade and have always been intrigued by his love for the Lord. As I transitioned into my new life, I knew I wanted God to be the center of my life.  I needed someone with a strong faith and knowledge of the Word to guide me, so I started working with Cecil.

During our sessions, Cecil helps me reflect honestly on the issues currently impacting my life, guiding me to dig to the core issues that drive my behavior.  The work I’ve done with Cecil has allowed me to become more relational and transparent with myself, others and God.  Cecil helps me develop obtainable long term and short term action plans.  I’m still a work in progress but am on the right path to living the life God has planned for me.

~J.C., SoCal


 Initially hesitant about engaging a Life Coach, I am so glad I did! Cecil helped bring structure and guidance to my life at a time when I felt like I was juggling too many balls, and doing so poorly. He not only helped me discover the space and power to make my own choices, but he challenged me to see how I could live a life that brought me freedom and joy with some simple changes in perspective. And he always knew when to ask, “What would make this part of your life not just work, but blow your expectations out of the water?” So grateful to be a client of Family Connections Coaching.

~ M.W., SF


More testimonials >

________________________
Click on the gorilla for some of
Jim Collins' thoughts about B.H.A.G.'s:
Click this pic for some of my thoughts on a faith BHAG:
 

Pull the trigger on pursuing the dream of something huge and audacious, that will rock your world and bless your relationships, maybe even change THE world! 

 

 
Copyright © *|CURRENT_YEAR|* *|LIST:COMPANY|*, All rights reserved.
*|IFNOT:ARCHIVE_PAGE|* *|LIST:DESCRIPTION|*

Our mailing address is:
*|HTML:LIST_ADDRESS_HTML|* *|END:IF|*

Want to change how you receive these emails?
You can update your preferences or unsubscribe from this list

*|IF:REWARDS|* *|HTML:REWARDS|* *|END:IF|*

Newsletter: Guilt can help us change - if managed correctly

*|MC:SUBJECT|*
Guilt can help us change but unmanaged, it can be a total energy drain!
View this email in your browser

Guilt: hero or villain?

Unresolved or excessive guilt
will foil your growth plans!

 

When we don't healthily manage our guilt, it becomes something that disconnects us from our true selves and our best futures. This can be a massive emotional energy drain. Losing positive perceptions of ourselves and our destiny will dismantle any hope for change and growth.

It's not only the initial wrong doing and hurt but rather the ongoing cycles of hurt, guilt, and avoidance / aggression that persist. So what may seem innocuous, slowly builds up levels that become toxic.

And what about guilt-tripping? We may have good intentions to 'help' those we care about change their ways but all it does is foster resentment, superficiality, perfunctoriness, and general decline in the relationship. All which deplete energy and motivation for true, meaningful change.

How should we deal with guilt so that it doesn't inhibit our forward development and continues to have a positive effect?

Here are a few suggestions:
  • Render effective apologies: 6 ingredients
    1. acknowledge we violated expectations
    2. Clear statement of apology
    3. Request for forgiveness
    4. Validate other person’s feelings
    5. Offer atonement
    6. Acknowledge we violated expectations
  • Exercise self-forgiveness
    • Know that this will increase our ability to enjoy life and also decrease guilt and needs to avoid those we’ve harmed.
    • A process that begins with a decision that we’ve beat self up enough and we will make emotional effort to work through it.
    • First, take full responsibility and give honest accounting of wrong doing; explicitly acknowledge wrongdoing and impact on those we’ve harmed.
    • For next steps / exercises, pick up Emotional First Aid by Guy Winch.
       
  • Reengage in life
    • Remind ourselves of the many reasons why it’s important to move forward. (This may be difficult if we suffer from low self-esteem which I'll talk about in a few weeks.)
      • For sufferers of survivor guilt: Unfair to mourn so long; loved one would’ve wanted me to move on.
      • For sufferers of separation guilt: Taking care of myself (with fulfillment and joy) enables me to care even more for others.
      • For sufferers of disloyalty guilt: Letting others dictate my life means they’re leading 2 lives - not fair.
Get more and deeper explanations and examples with Emotional First Aid by Guy Winch.

Guilt can be a hero and motivate you to make significant, highly worthwhile change. But don't let it become something that will wreak havoc in your life. It has a specific, limited function - to help us right wrongs - effectively and equitably; guilt is not intended to be an entity stagnating our growth and development.

We all make mistakes and fail in diverse and numerous ways. It is challenging to have a healthy relationship with guilt yet it's essential if we are to continue evolving and maturing to be revolutionary agents of positive change.

Ready to elevate your leadership, strategy, commitment and execution to move forward and upward? Book a complimentary 30-60 minute session and let's chat.



 
Cecil Wong is a Certified Life Coach from San Francisco, California with over 25 years of experience in leadership and teaching. He works with children, families, individuals, organizations and companies, combining personal and professional development.

Life coaching is all about getting clear about your dreams and putting the practical pieces in place to make them happen. 

Family Connections Coaching is about achieving more of what matters most.

Check out revamped website!
FamilyConnectionsCoaching.com
FamilyConnectionsCoach@gmail.com



  I have known Cecil for about 3 years. We met through Sunset Church’s children’s ministry and quickly struck up a friendship because of our mutual desire to be better fathers and faith leaders in our homes.

As it turned out, Cecil became a kind of father to me as well as a close friend. I was going through very deep waters related to the absence of my father and we cried over things, ministered to each other, drank coffee together, rode bikes, and shared the journey of life together.

At first I wasn’t sure if this was ministry or friendship. I realize now this is the heart of Jesus that God wants all of us to radiate through all that we do, rather than a conflict between work and social life. This is Cecil’s strength but sadly perceived by [some] as wishy-washy, unfocused, and difficult to measure performance.

However, “the proof is in the pudding.” For years I had struggled alone and the church as a whole was unprepared and unable to help me deal with the deep pain and wounds I carried, and at best only helped me cope. But my friendship with Cecil was life changing. He presented the heart of Jesus to me in a real person: someone who spent time with me; someone who felt my grief and pain; convinced me that he liked me; wrestled with truth. We walked a dusty path together.

And now I am able to minister to others knowing this is Jesus’ way of doing things. The world needs more Cecils, especially churches and Christian organizations.

Cecil has vision, a strong heart, isn’t easily offended, is very flexible, is a faithful friend, and sees the best in people and draws that out with his talents in coaching and discipleship.

...if you want to breathe life and heart into people and help them experience Jesus and discover their own hearts and calling, then Cecil is your man. He was made for this. 

J.Preston, Moorpark CA

More testimonials >

________________________
Click on the gorilla for some of
Jim Collins' thoughts about B.H.A.G.'s:
Click this pic for some of my thoughts on a faith BHAG:
 

Pull the trigger on pursuing the dream of something huge and audacious, that will rock your world and bless your relationships, maybe even change THE world! 

 

 
Copyright © *|CURRENT_YEAR|* *|LIST:COMPANY|*, All rights reserved.
*|IFNOT:ARCHIVE_PAGE|* *|LIST:DESCRIPTION|*

Our mailing address is:
*|HTML:LIST_ADDRESS_HTML|* *|END:IF|*

Want to change how you receive these emails?
You can update your preferences or unsubscribe from this list

*|IF:REWARDS|* *|HTML:REWARDS|* *|END:IF|*

Newsletter: Harness loss and trauma to find new energy

*|MC:SUBJECT|*
Mine the depths and find new energy sources!
View this email in your browser

Treasures of post-traumatic growth

  • Meaningful changes in priorities
  • Deeper appreciation of existing relationships
  • Stronger sense of higher purpose
  • Greater life fulfillment
How do we access this wealth?

When we lose someone or something of great value or we suffer the deep distress and despair of harmful injury (physical, emotional, or mental), we experience profound interruptions that can rock us to the core: 
  • Our lives are disrupted.
  • Our identity is disrupted.
  • Our beliefs are disrupted.
  • Our relationships are disrupted.

These disruptions force new realities on us and challenge our current narratives of who we are and what we think life's about. This causes us tremendous pain and grief, and the loss and trauma can define us if we do not heal and recover to the point where we can do the defining rather than being defined.

Ready to go treasure hunting? Here are a some mining activities:
  • Immediately after the event: Talk about it or not. Depending on how you're wired, not talking about it may help you heal by not rehashing the event over and over in your mind. Or perhaps the opposite is true for you - getting it out might be your way of processing the pain to give you more clarity and peace.
  • When you're ready to recover lost aspects of yourself, try this exercise:
    • List qualities, characteristics, and abilities you possessed before the event(s) - aim for at least 10.
    • From the list, identify which you feel are most disconnected / least expressed today.
    • For each item, write a brief paragraph about why it’s no longer expressed as much as before.
    • For each item, describe possible people, activities, or outlets you could pursue to express those more than you currently do.
    • Rank items according to which are most doable and emotionally manageable.
    • Set goals of working through the list at a comfortable pace.
  • When you're ready for greater growth, deepen your sense-making: Work at fitting the events into your framework of assumptions and beliefs about the world so they’re more understandable, even growing your courage and compassion.
    • Explore 'why' versus repeating 'how it happened'. Why triggers a qualitatively different and more productive thought process; why's widen our scope of thinking and associations to consider larger existential, spiritual, or philosophical implications / understandings. A bigger picture helps us find meaning and greater internal peace
    • Ask ‘what might have been’ / counterfactuals; they help our minds exercise more abstract thinking which is necessary to uncover greater meaning; considering abstract ideas (ie. predestination, God, spirituality) help us make connections between different parts of our lives, to use analytic abilities with greater inclusiveness of intangibles to see a bigger picture.
    • All this helps break us out of rigid perspectives to consider a larger context to arrive at fresh comprehensions and new perspectives.
    • Exercise:
      • How would your life be different today if the event hadn’t happened?
      • In what ways could outcome of events been worse?
      • What factors prevented worse outcomes?
      • How grateful are you that worse outcomes didn’t happen?
These exercises can be painful but much like physical therapy after a physical injury helps strengthen movement and speed up recovery, so these processing, restorative activities can help heal and fortify your sense of self and understanding of life.

By positioning ourselves to define our losses and traumas, rather than being defined by them, not only will we access hidden treasures of loss, we will increase our energy for growth and change.

Get more and deeper explanations and examples with Emotional First Aid by Guy Winch.

Ready to elevate your leadership, strategy, commitment and execution to move forward and upward? Book a complimentary 30-60 minute session and let's chat.



 
Cecil Wong is a Certified Life Coach from San Francisco, California with over 25 years of experience in leadership and teaching. He works with children, families, individuals, organizations and companies, combining personal and professional development.

Life coaching is all about getting clear about your dreams and putting the practical pieces in place to make them happen. 

Family Connections Coaching is about achieving more of what matters most.

Check out revamped website!
FamilyConnectionsCoaching.com
FamilyConnectionsCoach@gmail.com

415.420.8719


 I’ve been meeting with Cecil regularly for over a year and have benefited greatly from his coaching help. I came to him unmotivated, unemployed, unfocused, and unsure of what to expect…During the meetings, Cecil guides me through a great deal of life reflection…giving me a better understanding of my identity and value in God – and how that impacts the decisions and outcomes of my life.

Most notably, I’ve recently been told on several occasions by my family and friends that they’ve noticed a great change in my connectedness with people…because I’ve grown in my capacity to love others and to love myself. I’m most proud of the progress that we’ve made in this area, since this has been particularly a struggle throughout my life and my personal resolution for 2012.

Great resource of accountability and valuable insight as my life coach for the last several years. Helped me achieve much more than i can alone and to just be in a better place mentally, emotionally, and spiritually. Prior to meeting with Cecil, I would often find myself at the end of year dealing with the same unresolved issues with each passing year. Working with Cecil through my life experiences (struggles, disappointments, failures, successes, etc.) has been invaluable to me. The way I see it, progress in God’s gift of life to me and the growing capacity to enjoy it is priceless.

A few of the standout qualities of Cecil that I’ve appreciated and benefited from are:
-strong leadership skills to guide me to a point of clarity/focus from the most confusing and lost moments
-great capacity to help me make real-life connections with God’s truth should that be my desire
-flexibility in accommodating my schedule 

~ G. W., San Bruno, CA


 At the gut level, I know that nothing here on earth is as important to me as my family. Yet, there so many instances I fail to live out of my convictions or am at a loss as to what to do. It is so easy being distracted by other good things at the loss of the best. Cecil has helped me stay true to the people in my life I care about most. He has helped me realize that the way I relate to those closest to me, reveals where I am really at more than anything else does. I wholeheartedly recommend Cecil as a family and life coach. 

~ A.B., SF, CA


More testimonials >

________________________
Click on the gorilla for some of
Jim Collins' thoughts about B.H.A.G.'s:

Click this pic for some of my thoughts on a faith BHAG:

 

Pull the trigger on pursuing the dream of something bigger than yourself, that will rock your world and bless your relationships, maybe even change THE world! 


Copyright © *|CURRENT_YEAR|* *|LIST:COMPANY|*, All rights reserved.
*|IFNOT:ARCHIVE_PAGE|* *|LIST:DESCRIPTION|*

Our mailing address is:
*|HTML:LIST_ADDRESS_HTML|* *|END:IF|*

Want to change how you receive these emails?
You can update your preferences or unsubscribe from this list

*|IF:REWARDS|* *|HTML:REWARDS|* *|END:IF|*

Newsletter: Don't let loneliness deplete your growth energy

*|MC:SUBJECT|*
Don't let loneliness deplete your growth energy!
View this email in your browser

If relationships are what matter most (and they are)...


...then building bigger, stronger, more flexible relationship muscles should be amongst our top priorities.

What happens when these muscles are weak?

Loneliness - the first thing God identified as not good (Genesis 2:18).

Why? Check out these things that science has uncovered about chronic loneliness:
  • clinical depression
  • suicidal thoughts and behaviors
  • hostility
  • sleep disturbances
  • high blood pressure, BMI, and cholesterol, stress hormones
  • decreased immune functions
  • poor decision making, attention, concentration
  • as large a risk for shorter life as smoking
  • contagious: spending time with lonely people can increase your loneliness
  • highly neglected injury which increases its potential for damage
There are many causes of loneliness: being isolated perhaps by physical location of work or home; something or someone making us afraid of rejection and emotional pain; or just plain ole being too busy.

And things get worse when we develop protective / self-hiding attitudes (distrust, suspicion, cynicism, anxiety) and behaviors that atrophy our people-connection muscles.

And the cumulative effect will be less and less energy for growth and change. Over time, you may totally run out of gas and lose the capacity for responding to life's challenges and opportunities. Wouldn't you rather head in the opposite direction to be a life long learner who continues to mature in wisdom and grace?

So embrace these attitudes for an energy-growing, relationship muscle-building perspective:
  • We aren't at fault for our fears but our behaviors might be adding to our hurt.
  • Challenge our established perspectives
  • Take emotional risks
  • Be brave
And regularly engage in these fundamental exercises:
  • Challenge / battle negative perceptions
    • Remove negatively tinted glasses by fighting the pessimism; purposefully visualize scenarios of success that are reasonable and realistic in order to be able to identify connection opportunities.
  • Identify self-defeating behaviors
    • Think back to less than stellar social/relationship events and identify 3 behaviors 
    • Bravely and mindfully renounce them.
    • Keep list handy and review before times of connection / social events.
  • Deepen emotional bonds: Empathize 
    • Visualize yourself in another's situation in an immersive manner: go to the unnatural space of imagining the other’s feelings to capture the other’s emotional landscape; then returning to our own, convey insights thoughtfully.
    • What fears, doubts, hopes, might they have for their situation?
Get more and deeper explanations and examples with Emotional First Aid by Guy Winch.


We can be alone and not lonely and we can be lonely though not alone. Being alone can be restorative but being lonely is toxic. And the less we have of it, regardless of age, the more energy we will have for positive growth and development.


Ready to elevate your leadership, strategy, commitment and execution to move forward and upward? Book a complimentary 30-60 minute session and let's chat.



 
Cecil Wong is a Certified Life Coach from San Francisco, California with over 25 years of experience in leadership and teaching. He works with children, families, individuals, organizations and companies, combining personal and professional development.

Life coaching is all about getting clear about your dreams and putting the practical pieces in place to make them happen. 

Family Connections Coaching is about achieving more of what matters most.

FamilyConnectionsCoaching.com
FamilyCnxnsCoach@gmail.com

415.420.8719




 Cecil's ultimate goal is to help people figure out what matters most to them. This has definitely been my experience. No matter how big, small, or insignificant my issues were, Cecil is always willing to come alongside with me and coached me through. Cecil is not only an excellent listener, but he also shows genuine care to his clients. Before I had him as my coach, I was pretty stuck with both life and ministry. I wasn't sure how to move forward as well as figure things out. Today, I'm at a better place both in life and ministry. Additionally I'm at a healthier place physically, emotionally, and spiritually. I highly recommend Cecil as your coach. 

Daniel C., San Jose
 

 
 Initially hesitant about engaging a Life Coach, I am so glad I did! Cecil helped bring structure and guidance to my life at a time when I felt like I was juggling too many balls, and doing so poorly. He not only helped me discover the space and power to make my own choices, but he challenged me to see how I could live a life that brought me freedom and joy with some simple changes in perspective. And he always knew when to ask, “What would make this part of your life not just work, but blow your expectations out of the water?” So grateful to be a client of Family Connections Coaching. 

~ M.W., SF


More testimonials >

________________________
Click on the gorilla for some of
Jim Collins' thoughts about B.H.A.G.'s:

Click this pic for some of my thoughts on a faith BHAG:

Pull the trigger on pursuing the dream of something bigger than yourself, that will rock your world and bless your relationships, maybe even change THE world! 


 


 

 
Copyright © *|CURRENT_YEAR|* *|LIST:COMPANY|*, All rights reserved.
*|IFNOT:ARCHIVE_PAGE|* *|LIST:DESCRIPTION|*

Our mailing address is:
*|HTML:LIST_ADDRESS_HTML|* *|END:IF|*

Want to change how you receive these emails?
You can update your preferences or unsubscribe from this list

*|IF:REWARDS|* *|HTML:REWARDS|* *|END:IF|*

Newsletter: How to get energy to keep moving up and forward

*|MC:SUBJECT|*
Do you have energy for greater growth and change?
View this email in your browser

Where do we get the energy to keep moving upward and forward?



Navigating the increasing complexity of upward development can be brutal. Observe any toddler or teen and their growing pains. Ask any leader growing an organization. But successful maturation is what we all need. We can even trace our most profound societal dysfunctions to breakdowns in this process, be it personal, organizational, and even socio-political.

Having energy to successfully climbing the stages of change will depend largely on how we deal with the following: 

1. Rejection
2. Loneliness
3. Loss & Trauma
4. Guilt
5. Rumination
6. Failure
7. Low Self-Esteem


The way you handle these emotional challenges can result in greater energy for growth and change or they can diminish your soul and disconnect you from the life and love you desire most.

I'm going to spend the next bunch of issues talking about each one and offering some ideas for effective ways to turn those painful experiences into catalysts that you can use to build greater capacity and strength to achieve more of what matters most.

So let's start today with rejection. 

Rejection is one of the most common wounds we experience. It's like the breaking of our skin. Some are minor, like paper cuts. Others can be a knife wound to our gut, causing profuse bleeding externally and internally; depends on who it's from and how we're doing at the time. If these injuries aren't treated, they get infected and profound harm (and even death) can result.

The pain from rejections comes from us being hard-wired for connection and belonging. When someone makes us feel isolated or unaccepted, it attacks this deep need. The more significant the person or group that rejects us, the closer the trauma to our vitals.

The place in our brains that registers the pain is actually the same for physical pain. Studies have shown taking pain killers does actually help lessen emotional pain! (Not that I'm recommending this.)

This pain can have devastating results ie. husbands killing their wives because of imminent separation / divorce. Even the 1999 Columbine shooting was primarily motivated by rejections and ostracisms by school mates. Not excusing / justifying any of this but just identifying the link.

All this to simply say we all would do well to become more proficient at identifying this emotional hurt and knowing how to treat it. Not only this, but also teach others (especially children and youth) effective ways to bind up these wounds. Of course, if the injury is profound, we need to seek a professional.

So here are several ways to treat the pain of rejection and increase your energy for greater growth and change: 

  • Manage self-criticism
    • List in writing any negative / self-critical thoughts from romantic, family, workplace, or social rejections
    • Use counterarguments to form one or more rebuttals to each self-critical thought.
    • Whenever negative thoughts occur, immediately articulate the relevant counterargument fully and clearly to self.
  • Clarify your self-worth
    • Come up with 5 traits / attributes you highly value about yourself (relevant to the rejection)
    • Choose the top 2-3 to write a short essay covering the following points:
      • Why the quality is important to you and how this attribute influences your life
      • Why this attribute is an important part of your self image
  • Embrace healthy social connections
    • Find support groups / affiliations with better fit
    • Keep reminders of social connections close by, ie. photos
    • Recall closest, most positive relationships
    • Read meaningful emails / letters, watch videos of loved ones, interact with valued mementos

Got this great content from Emotional First Aid by Guy Winch.

Next issue, we'll look at loneliness.

Want to start planning and gearing up for 2017 to achieve more of what matters most? Book a complimentary 30-60 minute session and let's chat.



 
Cecil Wong is a Certified Life Coach from San Francisco, California with over 25 years of experience in leadership and teaching. He works with children, families, individuals, organizations and companies, combining personal and professional development.

Life coaching is all about getting clear about your dreams and putting the practical pieces in place to make them happen. 

Family Connections Coaching is about achieving more of what matters most.

FamilyConnectionsCoaching.com
FamilyCnxnsCoach@gmail.com

415.420.8719

 I found my life coaching sessions with Cecil to be both challenging and inspiring.  Having been retired for over 10 years, why would I need life coaching?  With my intention to get my son to engage in life coaching, I made an agreement with my son to participate if he would also.

I discovered through life coaching  that there were obvious areas in my relationship with my family that needed restoration and healing.  I believe Cecil has a genuine love and passion for the family and to see healing of relationships.  Being firmly grounded in the Word of God, Cecil was able to steer me in the right direction to see healing begin in our home.

L.L, Pinole, CA

 

 I had never really considered taking on a life coach until Cecil Wong reached out to me. After graduating college I found myself stuck in an ambiguous spot in my life with many unanswered questions and worries about my future in this tough job market. I needed to restructure my lifestyle and plan for my short and long-term future. Knowing Cecil personally and the line of work he has experience in, especially working with youth, I knew that if anybody was to help me navigate through my difficult situation it would have to be him.

In the few months that I have worked with Cecil, I was able to change my outlook on life and figure out what mattered most to me. He took the time to listen and understand my unique situation, and we were able to pinpoint and address the root of my issues. By setting up action plans to help me reach major milestones, I am much more at peace in my life than I was just a few months ago. With Cecil’s life coaching I have transitioned from a discouraging part of my life to the most exciting point in my life thus far.

I cannot thank Cecil enough for helping me get through my post-graduate anxieties and struggles. I highly recommend Cecil as a life coach, because he has helped me reflect, mature, and better understand myself so that I can live my own life, and not a life someone else tells me how I’m supposed to live. I look forward to continuing my life coaching with Cecil as I take on new challenges.

Sincerely,

~S. L., Reno
 

More testimonials >

________________________
Click on the gorilla for some of
Jim Collins' thoughts about B.H.A.G.'s


Click this pic for some of my thoughts on a spiritual BHAG:

Pull the trigger on pursuing the dream of something bigger than yourself, that will rock your world and bless your relationships, maybe even change THE world! 


Copyright © *|CURRENT_YEAR|* *|LIST:COMPANY|*, All rights reserved.
*|IFNOT:ARCHIVE_PAGE|* *|LIST:DESCRIPTION|*

Our mailing address is:
*|HTML:LIST_ADDRESS_HTML|* *|END:IF|*

Want to change how you receive these emails?
You can update your preferences or unsubscribe from this list

*|IF:REWARDS|* *|HTML:REWARDS|* *|END:IF|*

2 Things that Help Us Love Well

#1. Soul Keeping To love well, it's absolutely essential to get clear and go forward with what matters most. But with daily distractions, it's not always easy to identify and define which is why I so appreciated John Ortberg's book, Soul Keeping.

john-ortberg-pastor-of-menlo-park-presbyterian-church-published-april-2014-his-new-book-soul-keeping-caring-for-the-most-important-part-of-you
john-ortberg-pastor-of-menlo-park-presbyterian-church-published-april-2014-his-new-book-soul-keeping-caring-for-the-most-important-part-of-you

To consistently get clear and go forward with what matters most, we need to care for the most important part of us. Our outer world / life is what people see and what we achieve but the interior life is so much more significant. That's because it's the soul that gives strength, direction and harmony. Strength to do things right. Direction to do the right things. Harmony to discern what are the right things.

John's mentor was Dallas Willard and the foundational spiritual discipline that Dallas imparted to John was, "You must ruthlessly eliminate hurry from your life." This is the single most important discipline to grow the clarity, conviction and commitment to love well.

Too often, especially in religious realms, the soul has been understood in the context of where it goes after death. But according to Dallas and John (to which I absolutely concur), "...our eternal destiny is not cosmic retirement. It is to be a part of a tremendously creative project, under unimaginably splendid leadership, on in inconceivably vast scale with ever increasing cycles of fruitfulness and enjoyment. That is the prophetic vision which eyes have not seen and ears have not heard."

Huh?

That was John's initial response too.

What is the soul? 

To start, it is invisible so it's easy to neglect.

Soul, Mind, Will
Soul, Mind, Will

You are a soul, not just a self. Your soul makes you a person and not a thing. Your soul makes you precious, vulnerable, and yet authentically powerful. It is bigger than the will and actually the will resides in the soul.

The will is good for things that don’t involve deeply ingrained habits, patterns, and deeply rooted attitudes. The mind is a bit more substantial and effective in dealing with those things yet it is the soul that has the ability to shape both mind and will for real, lasting change and development.

The mind craves peace and does all it can to achieve it but if the soul is not well, it invariably experiences futility and unintended negative outcomes. But if the soul is well, the mind becomes preoccupied by thoughts conducive to love, joy, and peace.

So what is the soul?

It's the operating system of your life; you don’t notice it unless it starts crashing; it is made for connections and integration to synergize everything into a single, dynamic life. When our souls are well, we live whole heartedly connected to those around us. We find delight in simply being present, not having to do something for them. We are at rest from compulsions to do what we want and free from anxieties about what might happen or what others think.

However when the soul is unhealthy, disintegration occurs. We are disconnected from God and His design for wellness. This is the cause of depression and it perpetuates neglect of what matters most so we end up focusing on self - what we think is best, what we think is right, what we like. Rather than caring for ourselves, we become obsessed with ourselves.

What is the soul?

It's what takes all your senses, thoughts, feelings, beliefs, and desires and sends it to your mind, to others, and even God. When it's cared for and vibrant, you live as you were made to be - connected to God and others. This most important part of you correlates, energizes, integrates all of yourself to show up and do whatever and wherever with whoever, whenever. It even contains your secret dreams, hurts, fears, traumas, losses, and joys. It's the part of you that journeys toward peace and rest as you intentionally and tenaciously eliminate things that get in the way of achieving what matters most.

It is the inner life; our inner universe.

And to truly care for it, you need to pay attention to its needs for it is the nature of the soul to need. If you try to not need, you'll end up neglecting your soul. 

Here are some of the soul's major needs: rest, a father, satisfaction, hope, a future, a center, freedom, a keeper (each person is their own soul's keeper), blessing, gratitude, to be with God / love, i.e.  In love's presence, obedient to love, in alignment with love. Pursue these and your soul is on the way to being blessed!

#2. Improve Emotional Health

iceberg
iceberg

Emotional health is the 90% of the iceberg below the surface of what people see. It is revealed by how well or poorly we manage pain, fear, worry, sadness and anger. Low health either avoids or attacks, which inevitably perpetuates and most often exacerbates those negative emotions. High levels will empower us to experience these tough emotions yet still be able to communicate and behave in ways that maintain trust and integrity.

If we're going to get emotionally healthier, we'll need to courageously slow down to get familiar with our underlying layers of insecurity, inferiority and insignificance along with the contexts (people and events) that created those layers. Only when we get a clearer, adult perspective on difficult, personal history, will we bravely and compassionately accept pain and losses as a place to love ourselves. This is foundational to developing a more mature, truthful, and complete understanding. Of course this takes time, attention and effort.

To experience transformation of our values and priorities to create a life that actually fits us and connects deeply with others, we need to grow awareness of what we need deep down. We get stuck in emotionally unhealthy ways because of misapplied / misconceived truths about life and people. As kids, we naturally misconceive and misapply truth, but when it occurs with prolonged and profound emotional pain or neglect, the person's emotional health will be compromised. 

Over years unaddressed, the solution will not be experienced by getting filled up (by weekly sermons) or retreating or adding strategies or disciplines. It is found only in revolution; intentionally walking a new pathway. 

To improve our emotional health, we will need these steps:

  1. Know yourself that you may know God
  2. Going back in order to go forward
  3. Journey through the wall
  4. Enlarge your soul through grief and loss
  5. Discover the rhythms of the daily office and sabbath
  6. Grow into an emotionally mature adult
  7. Go the next step to develop a ‘rule of life'

To read more about each step, pick up Scazzero's book. Or click on the picture below to go to the EHS site.

EHS book
EHS book

3 Ways to Love Others Well

We all love and are loved. Ask anyone if they love their families and friends and I can't imagine any of them saying no, except for the occasional teenager super pissed at his nagging parents. But loving well is not quite as common. How many truly healthy families do you know? Most often, confusion and dysfunction are the norm. In a society where performance and productivity have created cultures of insecurity and general senses of not being, doing, or having enough, and soft skills are second class citizens in the market place, being able to love maturely is desperately rare. That's because the growth and development process of this precious gift is extremely time consuming and doesn't fit into the rhythms of the 50-70+ hour work week. Am I saying they're incompatible? Yes.

But if you've come to a place in your life where you are no longer satisfied with your capacity and ability to love (others and yourself), here are several ways to improve how you can strengthen and deepen your most significant relationships.

Daily Doses

5 love languages
5 love languages

Learn about the 5 languages by Gary Chapman. Know the love language of your loved ones and your own and get fluent. Start with yourself and take this assessment. Being aware of your own needs and how to fill your emotional tank goes a long way towards having empathy for those you want to love better. Think of it as putting on much needed equipment to see, hear, and feel what the other sees, hears, and feels.

Next, think about how to get those you want to love well to also take the assessment. Frame that initial conversation with why and how you want to improve how you love. Yes, this will be hard and awkward because it will require you to be vulnerable. So watch this first. Brene Brown does a wonderful job unpacking the power of vulnerability so that your heart will have a fighting chance against your head to make this courageous move towards transformation.

It makes such a difference when we love each other in ways that are especially meaningful and relevant to how each of us are uniquely wired. We feel that much more known, appreciated and understood. Knowing and being known is a very significant element of loving and being loved.

Love in Conflict

This is where our love usually breaks down. When sharp disagreement occurs and emotions get intense, we invariably find ourselves on the slippery slope of conflict. When our love is underdeveloped and trust has not been fortified,  we simply lack the emotional muscles to balance and navigate peacemaking responses. To put it another way, there's little to no regulation of our fight / flight response. So we just run away or come out with guns blazing.

slipperyslope
slipperyslope

To get better traction and engagingly abide in the peacemaking responses, we're going to need to get better at crucial conversations (Joseph Grenny).

DialogueModelCC75
DialogueModelCC75

The keys here are the stories each person tells themselves which will determine whether they slip off towards silence or violence or abide in the dialogue pool of shared meaning. When we're in the safety zone and our fight / flight system is under control, our learning channels remain open so we can work at understanding the other's perspective. When we're able to comprehend each other's thoughts and feelings, we're that much closer to stepping into their shoes and helping them feel known and understood.

Our love gets better when our words and actions reflect authentic empathy and humility. Through awareness of each other's stories, we're empowered to connect meaningfully and be transformed. Deeper trust is built and we draw that much closer to each other.

Giving and Receiving Relational Comfort

comfort circle.jpg
comfort circle.jpg

Stress happens and at some point before long, we will seek comfort in some way, shape, or form. It may be certain activities, behaviors, or substances but it will always be something. But not all comforts are equal. Some are healthier than others. Relational comfort is definitely at the top. Since we're wired to connect, it only makes sense that our greatest comfort would be found in another person. And in order to love well, we need to work at finding relief and refreshment from those we're closest to. This is also the way to be addiction proof.

When you see your loved ones had a stressful day, offer to spend some time to check in to see what's going on. Here's an outline of a comforting conversation. As you can see, it does take some work in being open and vulnerable to bring things out into the light. But if things stay inside, we will use impersonal comforts which often lead to some form of addiction / enslavement. In being transparent, we are exercising our vulnerability muscle and the more we exercise it, the stronger it gets. The stronger it gets, the easier it will be to share openly and receive the comfort we desperately need. The more relational comfort we can give and receive, the better we are at loving.

  • Seek Awareness:
    • “What’s your perspective on your problem / challenge?”
    • “What feelings come up?” If anger, what’s underneath that anger? Check out soul words list.
    • Engage:
      • Bring hidden feelings into the light of your relationship. Negative feelings and pain lose power when brought into the light. Conversely, they remain when we keep them hidden.
      • To experience comfort, we must take the risk to step towards the freedom that comes from being vulnerable. We draw out the emotions by naming them.
      • Explore:
        • Ask about the emotions felt in response to triggers / stressors.
        • Invite the speaker to risk being honest and vulnerable.
        • Ask why the speaker feels what they feel and if there were other times, past or present, when they felt the same.
        • Explore where / when else the feelings are felt.
        • Try to identify all the times / events that made you feel that way.
        • Try to get clear about the general emotional state and what caused it.
        • Silence and waiting for people to think and reflect deeply about the past.
        • Clarify and validate - use reflective statements.
        • Listener should not try to fix, solve, defend, or debate.
        • Enter into speakers mindset / perspective, to see things from their point of view; check to see if what was heard is accurate.
        • what comfort is needed; learning how to find relational comfort
        • “What do you need?”
        • Resolve:
          • “I hear you saying that you feel ___ and you need ___, and here’s what I can do…” [Be honest! Don't make promises you cannot keep].

Outline content taken from here.

Secure Connection. It's everything!

Envisioning a healthier core?Challenge success? Learn from failure? Ruthlessly eliminate hurry?

Why?

To be a secure connector.

Secure Connector
Secure Connector

Milan & Kay Yerkovich summarize it this way:

  • I have a wide range of emotions and express them appropriately.
  • It is easy for me to ask for help and receive from others when I have needs.
  • I can say “no” to others even when I know it will upset them.
  • I’m adventuresome and I know how to play and have fun.
  • I know I’m not perfect, and I give my loved ones room to disagree.

Connections are threatened every time conflict occurs, feelings are hurt, stress attacks, trust is broken, regretful words are spoken, or fear overwhelms. There's more but those are at the top of the list. So many families suffer and disintegrate because of the lack of secure connections. I think this is really close to what matters most.

Take this

assessment

to see how secure a connector you are.

  • After you're done, go through it again but apply it to your spouse. How secure are they?
  • If you have high school and college age kids, apply it to them.
  • How about your parents?
  • Now if you're feeling extra brave, have them do you.

Now what do you want to do with that awareness? If you're already blessed to be a secure connector, I hope you'll help others grow in this wellness of the soul. If not, push this growth area up to being top priority. Your future and everyone you love and loves you will be depending on your ability to securely connect, especially when things get hard.

Could this be why people in power lose sight of what's most important and make detrimental decisions that neglect long term welfare for those they serve and even their families?

Is this why the best leaders are able to make brave and compassionate decisions that bring great benefit and wellness to their organizations and even their families?

I'd love to hear what you think! Please share below.