It's Happening...

It’s Happening

The Happening is real, it’s love and it’s true.

It’s a Happening of energy radiant and blue.

 

It is all around us, all the time.

Can we choose to sit for just a moment and appreciate the power of the design?

So much power in the pieces that fit…

So much to learn while we rest, while we sit.

 

This visit to earth is purely adventure.

It ‘s opportunity to learn and that starts with surrender…

Some learning we accept, other learning we burn.

 

We burn this learning with our neglect to choose.

When will we learn that there’s nothing to lose?

We learn when we’re free, when we embrace our core.

Always choose love- always choose more.

 

See…this life is a visit, a ride, and a process…

This happening occurs every day…it is love all around us.

 

 

If you enjoy these posts – you might enjoy a copy of my book, “Happiness is Over There” – which is a personal memoir detailing the stories, learnings, and exercises I used to shift my life from dark and chaotic to a life of light and productivity.  Through Paperclip Thinking LLC, I also support group and individual coaching sessions as well as book talks for groups of 15-20.  You can buy a signed copy at www.paperclipthinking.com or you can email me at travis@paperclipthinking.com to arrange book delivery or set up coaching and group talks/sessions.

Love Ourselves...

Love Ourselves

 

It’s the best thing to do when paths confuse.

To love ourselves can heal abuse.

The abuse we’ve experienced, chosen, selected, endured.

To love ourselves in truly the cure.

Our lives are made to feel complex and twisted.

They are neither of those things, why have we made them conflicted?

Have we made them through fear and concerns about others.

Friends, spouses, fathers…mothers.

Do we push away experiences and desires?

Then blame our pain and fear on others?

Soon we’ll learn to embrace our journey.

To smile each day and to learn from many.

Being quiet in mind and listening to learn.

These are the paths that truly warrant the yearn.

A yearn to grow, here and above.

The secret that was absent, maybe avoided…

Was our choice to “be” Love?

 

 

If you enjoy these posts – you might enjoy a copy of my book, “Happiness is Over There” – which is a personal memoir detailing the stories, learnings, and exercises I used to shift my life from dark and chaotic to a life of light and productivity.  Through Paperclip Thinking LLC, I also support group and individual coaching sessions as well as book talks for groups of 15-20.  You can buy a signed copy at www.paperclipthinking.com or you can email me at travis@paperclipthinking.com to arrange book delivery or set up coaching and group talks/sessions.

Gratitude Inventory

Inventories.  We use them in our manufacturing businesses to count our product lines, school districts take inventory of their students, and sport teams take inventory of their equipment and uniforms. 

I use an inventory concept within my life’s introspection and that inventory becomes an exercise that supports my personal growth, so I wanted to share with each of you.  I inventory the time I spend exercising, the time I spend reading and writing, the time I spend being productive in my career, the time I spend with friends and family.  These are things that I want ample supply, so I inventory them to ensure my life has these facets.  Others might have different areas to inventory, because we all choose different areas of our lives that we deem to be important.  Interestingly enough, one area I haven’t paid attention to was an inventory of the gratitude I share with the world, the people around me, and the people I come in contact with.  How much gratitude do I recognize and share, daily?

What do I have in my gratitude inventory?  I went back through my experiences and thought about the different times of my life and here is a sample of what I’ve uncovered:

I’ve enjoyed my tenacity for experiences.  I’ve built a career that has added value to the clients I’ve supported and to my family.  I’ve continued my life-long education, I’ve learned to cook, to clean, to install ceiling fans, to paint, to drive.  I’ve flown all over the world, I’ve seen different countries, and there are plenty more to see.  I’ve been fortunate to learn how to love and I’ve learned the experiences of nature, talking to trees, watching the life cycle of a lake’s wave, and I’ve been blessed to write poetry, stories, and a book.  I’ve coached and inspired other people.  I’ve experienced wealth and financial despair.  I’ve experienced healthy and unhealthy physical intimacy. I’ve had light and darkness.  I’ve learned to listen (although I still talk too much) and I’m learning how to ask great questions that lead to great dialogue.

And this gratitude inventory led me to remember the most critical piece of my life, which is the ability to love myself, and this is reinforced through this exercise, daily.  Remember to have (dialogue) because it creates (connection), which leads to (opportunities) for amazing (experiences).  Your life’s gratitude inventory could lead to some amazing experiences- I hope you’ll try it.

 

Whole

We all begin this journey whole.

The experiences begin do we dismantle to learn?

To Yearn.

To Grow.

Piece by Piece dismantle can feel destructive…

Is it?

We are whole the entirety of our lives.

Never pieces always whole.

We’re always enough yet the masks we’ve chosen to wear separate.

Separate us from who we are.

Our wholeness is not far.

The more we connect.

Ask and share.

Dialogue’s a way to eliminate our despair.

Remember the awe the gratitude for all.

We are whole, we are enough.

Please stand tall.

 

If you enjoy these posts – you might enjoy a copy of my book, “Happiness is Over There” – which is a personal memoir detailing the stories, learnings, and exercises I used to shift my life from dark and chaotic to a life of light and productivity.  Through Paperclip Thinking LLC, I also support group and individual coaching sessions as well as book talks for groups of 15-20.  You can buy a signed copy at www.paperclipthinking.com or you can email me at travis@paperclipthinking.com to arrange book delivery or set up coaching and group talks/sessions.

What is your "one thing"...

My wife and I have three children.  Our oldest is a senior in high school and we’ve just kicked off the new school year. It already feels like the world is spinning too damn fast and the insane part about this senior year experience is how nothing has really changed, but everything feels different.  We’ve been through freshman, sophomore, and junior year, so we (his Mom and I) have witnessed all of this stuff before: tennis matches; homecoming dances; swim meets; golf matches; time with friends; band parties; work shifts; leaving his shit around the house; and yet all of it feels different because these are the last times we’ll get to see these things from the vantage point of being his high school parents.  Exciting and saddening simultaneously. 

Through the summer and into the start of this school year, I could see his wheels turning too: where will I go to school; what will I do for work; is this Common App thing going to be a pain in the ass; where will I live; how many hours do senior pictures take… and then, last weekend, he asked us for perspective on something a bit deeper.  He wanted to know why he hadn’t found his “one thing”.  I thought I understood what he meant when he asked, but I had to ask for some more clarity.  It was early evening on a Sunday night, so as much as I enjoy a good esoteric talk, I wanted to make sure I was going to be able to support what he was looking for and not take us into the wee hours.  What he shared hit home.  He expressed feeling like he was missing out on some of life because he hadn’t identified something that inspired him, fully.  Something that triggered a desire to place all of his passion and energy into it.  He went on about how he was feeling and I loved that he took my wife and me down this path.  The question saddened me a bit, especially because he was feeling that he was lacking in life because he didn’t have “one thing” to throw all of his life’s energy at.  He rattled off a bunch of friends who he assumed had their “one thing” and this assumption was powering his outlook.  What caused it?

It’s talked about often – the societal pressure that kids face today – and I think it’s totally different (and more intensified) than my Generation X cronies ever experienced.  The idea of finding this “one thing” can be painful.  And…with some wisdom behind me, I think to myself, “who wants to find one thing anyway?”  Our world is made up of diversity (we look for diversity in school, at work, in our day to day lives – you know, that well rounded person and those differing opinions that make us unique, but somehow, we have shoved the idea that kids must excel at “one thing” and find their passion by the time they graduate high school?  I call bullshit.  One sport athletes, kids being asked to choose their major before they even go off to college, asking what they want to do for a living (at 17).  It all seems so crazy to me, so very real to him.

As a side note: outside my parenting, husbanding, and occasional “adulting” duties, I am a recruiting executive, a coach, and an author.  I live by, coach, write about, and share principles that I call Paperclip Thinking.  This thinking is a way that triggers the brain to be more divergent in thought and the principles – self valuation, personal accountability, introspection, divergent thought, intentional living – have supported me in opening up the way I make decisions and process deep questions.  When I think about various topics I enjoy finding multiple solutions to a perceived challenge and as easy as it can be to get trapped in believing that there is only one right answer to a challenge, I use the following phrase as a way to open up my mind and identify more options.  The phrase, “How many ways could we…” does just that.  It challenges me to start building lists of possibilities.  Let’s apply this Paperclip Thinking to the “one thing” scenario...How many ways could you appreciate the diversity of your life’s many activities?  How many ways could tons of experiences add value in your life?  How many ways could you choose a profession/activity that inspires you?  Start writing and create lists that answer the questions you’ve posed to yourself.  I believe the answers will come from the lists of possibilities.

 

Now here is something else to think about.  Are we coaching our children to find “one thing”?  Are we inadvertently guiding them to throw all of their energy into one sport, one activity, or one club?  Could this be a recipe for pain and pressure?  Personal introspection moment…did my wife and I teach our son that he was lacking in life because he didn’t have “one thing”?  Maybe.  And if so, could we unwind this thinking before the sun rises on Monday morning?  Eh – maybe not.  I do know this.  I love learning from my son.  He teaches us as much and as often as we teach him.  His question made us think.  I, for one, have read a number of stories, watched documentaries, and have spoken to parents about this topic.  It seems there are fewer kids sampling life.  Could there really be a larger numbers of kids no longer bouncing from season to season, playing different sports, joining different clubs, interacting with different people, and sampling life?  They seem to be training, planning and preparing to do their “one thing” and I feel like this might be setting them up for a bubble that is destined to burst.

To my son…if “one thing” is the popular thing now…maybe your “one thing” could be the fact that you are exploring so many things.  You are sampling and for that…we are excited for you.  Keep it up, my man.

If you enjoy these posts – you might enjoy a copy of my book, “Happiness is Over There” – which is a personal memoir detailing the stories, learnings, and exercises I used to shift my life from dark and chaotic to a life of light and productivity.  Through Paperclip Thinking LLC, I also support group and individual coaching sessions as well as book talks for groups of 15-20.  You can buy a signed copy at www.paperclipthinking.com or you can email me at travis@paperclipthinking.com to arrange book delivery or set up coaching and group talks/sessions.

 

A new path...

If you enjoy these posts – you might enjoy a copy of my book, “Happiness is Over There” – which is a personal memoir detailing the stories, learnings, and exercises I used to shift my life from dark and chaotic to a life of light and productivity.  Through Paperclip Thinking LLC, I also support group and individual coaching sessions as well as book talks for groups of 15-20.  You can connect with me through www.paperclipthinking.com or you can email me at travis@paperclipthinking.com to arrange book delivery.

I work with high school students, college students, and adults who have in interest in a different way of thinking and living.  The anxiety that plagues so many is painful to hear about: the incessant use of technology (as a means of pulling away from dialogue and connection); how we define bullying; fear of failure, the illusion that is perfection; must have a 4.0, have to score 1300+ on the SAT, should play a sport in college, have to have the best body, need to make my parents proud, must be an entrepreneur, have to have a huge income, need to send my kids to an Ivy League school…any of this sound familiar?

Yes- all of this MUST, SHOULD, HAVE, and NEED pressure drove me bat shit crazy too, yet so many of us still seem to wonder why ADHD, Anxiety, Depression, Mass Shootings, Loneliness, and Pain appear on the Top List of all of our news channels?

I’ve had enough.  Have you?  If so…I have an invitation for you.  I have a program that I created after working my way out of “the box”.  I use the metaphor of “the box” because that’s what life used to feel like.  That box of pressure, fear, anxiety, and depression that I seemed to live in.  The beautiful news…all of that stuff that you read about, that I just listed, and we all quiver about from time to time, is partly a self-inflicted illusion (at least it was, for me).  There is another way of thinking, behaving, and responding to the world around us.  I won’t claim that stress, pain, and some of the discomfort that seems to be the norm today will simply vanish or disappear, but what I can say is that I have been practicing a new set of behaviors and they support me in seeing the creativity, the beauty, the innovation, the prosperity, and the love that is in our world.

If you feel overwhelmed by the life you’re currently living…feel free to reach out and I’m happy to share what I learned and how I apply it.  Maybe it could benefit you, too?

 

That Gorge we perceive looks deep and dark.

How do we cross? How do we part?

Part from the path where pain exists.

Across to a place where harmony persists.

One board at a time.

One board more.

Through patience and persistence- this is not a chore.

Invest in you, learn and grow, so you can experience the world’s beauty and flow.

Is this a bridge that will pave the way?

Can we build this bridge each and every day?

Building is powerful, it’s time with Dad, the time we’ve loved

and the time we’ve had.

Welcome all who build together.

For in the end we’ll fly light as a feather.

This doesn't have to be the norm...

If you enjoy these posts – you might enjoy a copy of my book, “Happiness is Over There” – which is a personal memoir detailing the stories, learnings, and exercises I used to shift my life from dark and chaotic to a life of light and productivity.  You can buy a signed copy at www.paperclipthinking.com or you can email me at travis@paperclipthinking.com to arrange book delivery.

Anxiety and Depression are way too mainstream for my liking.  Like millions of others, my first bout of anxiety started in 7th grade and it took years of suppression for that subtle anxiety to become a real problem, which led to a “break down” when I was 26 years old.  I spent the subsequent 21 years reading, writing, researching, experimenting with new behaviors, dedicating myself to remedying the anxiety and depression I lived with.  I chose to function with an anxiety pill from time to time, chose to have a few drinks, buried down feelings, reminded myself that “life is hard”, and I faced off with people who woke most mornings wondering how anyone could feel anxious or depressed and then I watched them plant their left foot in front of their right foot and keep on moving, which felt impossible to me.  This world is filled with all kinds of stories, all kinds of remedies, and I am intrigued by all of them.

I am in a different place now.  I am more comfortable in sharing my experiences because I believe it to be one of the chief purposes I am on the planet.  My purpose being to listen and share, when needed.  A purpose to remind anyone who is feeling a bit dark, a bit confused, a bit bummed out about their place on the planet - that they are not broken and that they will always have someone to talk to, and that can be me.  I will be here to listen, I will be here to support, and I’ll be here to offer experiences and ideas that could support you in shifting the trajectory of your life.

I’ve made this offer to some in my community and the people taking me up on the offer: to chat; to dialogue; to learn; are middle-schoolers, high-schoolers, and newly graduated college students.  So many young people who describe anxiety and depression as “totally normal”.  I used to believe the stereotypes that it was only the “middle aged” or the newly unemployed who faced these challenges (and was typically remedied with a “rub some dirt on it” mentality), but as you read and listen to the reports, the stories, and see the behaviors…this is officially “the norm” for so many of our children.  Let’s work to stop this.

If you know someone struggling, I’m letting you know that I’ve been there, I’ve begun to see a way more peaceful way of living and I am here to listen.  Change will take discipline, courage, and it takes vulnerability, so if you want to explore a new way of thinking and behaving…I’m here. 

Is it worth living...

If you enjoy these posts – you might enjoy a copy of my book, “Happiness is Over There” – which is a personal memoir detailing the stories, learnings, and exercises I used to shift my life from dark and chaotic to a life of light and productivity.  You can buy a signed copy at www.paperclipthinking.com or you can email me at travis@paperclipthinking.com to arrange book delivery.

Is it worth living?  How would you answer that question?  What has you say yes or no?  Each of us when faced with that question will inevitably have some kind of perspective.  Those perspectives might be as shallow as a puddle or they could be as deep as the darkest depths of the ocean, and most will have answers that sit somewhere in the middle. I’ve spent more than 12 years answering that question and working to refine and support my answer with fresh experiences and data.  I wanted the data because my answer has changed over the years.  Yes- I’ve lived through periods (like so many have) where the idea of an “early exit” seemed plausible and I’m blessed to say that I’ve reflected back and share that 75% of my life has been filled with poetic reasons that support me in wanting to live and to explore and to learn on this planet. As one of my favorite philosophers, Osho, said, “never born-never died…just visited from 1972-?”.

The 2008-2018 time of my life was filled with intense learning due to a self-reflective project that was focused on my own personal accountability for choosing happiness and life over depression, anxiety, and early death.  I captured and journaled about experiences and my learning and I share my transition from dark to light with those who are interested in some change, themselves.

As a culmination of this project, I did something incredibly courageous… I wrote a letter to my family describing what led me to my depression and to the idea of “early death”.  I wrote this letter on September 19, 2018 and it was the first time I’d shared the explicit detail on paper.  I’ve read the letter to my wife and as a therapeutic way to gain closure on my “project” and as a way to open a new door of peace and happiness in my life. I made an agreement to live for a year working and living by the very principles that I discovered during my ten year project and I’ve been writing and exploring how I feel: mentally, physically, and spiritually. I wanted to see what life would feel like when someone practiced the principles that took me ten years to discover and refine. I’m following the five pillars of the Paperclip Thinking philosophy: I’m living life aligned to what I value of myself (being rested, being a story teller, being healthy, being a connector of people, and coaching those who request support), I hold myself accountable for all decisions I make, I reflect daily (through my journalism), I work to create value daily, and I’m intentional with how I live, each day. 

Here is what the last year taught me:

I’ve learned that it is nearly impossible to feel inspired if you only think about challenges in life.  Taking time to be vulnerable (with yourself and others) can be a good thing, yet only focusing that vulnerability on areas of improvement or negativity will crush your ability to smile.  In short- don’t be too hard on yourself.

I’ve learned that all things we experience will pass.  All of your decisions (and their consequences) will work out to be okay and nothing can impact your ability to choose peace and happiness, but you.  Your spirit will remain intently focused on harmony regardless of what you are experiencing, if you choose harmony and we get to choose, every day.

I’ve learned that I have placed money as the center gear of my life and I placed my happiness on the shoulders of that “money”.  I don’t recommend doing that.  Money is fun to have, it can make life’s journey easier, so I’m not advocating against having money, I’m simply suggesting that I had been working in reverse (do what I needed to do to get it), and I learned that if you focus on finding a way to earn the money through creating value for someone else (not doing anything necessary), doing something that inspires you…that is where special shit occurs (and that is what I do for a living now), so if you don’t feel aligned, call me and I’ll guide you through ways to get to the spot where I now sit.

I’ve learned that we are all part of a very special group - and there are so many fascinating stories, learnings, and experiences that you can gain when you spend time connecting with people, so please connect with as many people as you can.

I’ve learned that dialogue leads to connections, connections lead to opportunities and opportunities lead to partnerships - and this has become my mantra for living.

I’ve learned that this life if for YOU.  If you are in a dark place- that’s okay, because you aren’t alone.  Spark a torch – and you can spark that torch with dialogue and vulnerability.  Use that torch’s light to show you a different perspective on what you are going through and then remember the previous learnings I’ve shared in this article: don’t be too hard on yourself, all things will pass, focus on what inspires you, and connect with people.

Cheers to you and your journey…

How do you define importance...

If you enjoy these posts – you might enjoy a copy of my book, “Happiness is Over There” – which is a personal memoir detailing the stories, learnings, and exercises I used to shift my life from dark and chaotic to a life of peaceful and productive.  You can buy a signed copy at www.paperclipthinking.com or you can email me at travis@paperclipthinking.com to arrange book delivery.

I’ve been curious about the topic of importance for a number of years and more specifically, the importance I place on certain things.  When I reference “things”, I’m referring to the more materially specific things, yet the curiosity I experience became focused away from the things and more on my interpretation of the word importance.  As part of my daily routine, I write in a journal, I contemplate and think about some stuff, I meditate, and then I get on with my day.  This morning, I asked myself the question, “What’s on my list of things that I would consider important?”  Yes…I was having a 1-person dialogue, which is what happens when you conduct a twelve year longitudinal study of yourself – you become comfortable with self-chatter.  After I posed myself the question, I followed with meditation, and following the meditation came a list and I’ll share a sampling:  my career is important; being a Dad is important; being a Spouse is important; earning money is important; being a contributing member of society is important; my cars are important; my trips & vacations are important…

What had those things make the list? The things on my list seemed to be titles & material items. I continued to explore and reflect and I identified healthy reasons behind each of those “things” or “titles”. Cars for safety and ease of transportation, career for income and family support, spouse & dad as a title that represents a means to guide other lives, to show love, and to be a part of a family unit. Great reflection, yet something didn’t feel right. To preemptively squash those who are already throwing out the “snowflake” digs… I’m not advocating that having stuff or being a parent/spouse is bad.  I’m reflecting on what constitutes “important”, to me.  As I mentioned earlier in the article, I was creating the list of things that are important to me and something didn’t feel right. I felt like a bit of a hypocrite because I’ve been talking, sharing, writing, speaking, and facilitating discussions about the negative impact that can occur when we make something overly “important” in our lives.  Making something overly important led me to attachment and when I’ve been attached to things, then happiness and productivity evades me.  During my reflection this morning, I looked up the definition of importance and found this - Importance is the subjective indicator of value – and I liked that.  I’m working to ascend my thoughts and behaviors, so that I can choose to spend as much time as possible doing things that I value. After reading this definition of importance, I created another list.  A list of what I value, then I reflected on how much time I spend each day doing the things I value.  Interesting result…

I value stories because of the energy they can create, I value smiles because they lift my spirits, I value trees for their wisdom and their creative nature.  I value comfort and rest because they heal me, I value exercise because it feels so powerful, I value bold colors because they create energy, and I value love, kindness, experiences, laughter, hugs, sweat, because I experience all of them with other people and I love group energy. I value cut grass for the smell and order of a cut lawn, I value music because music makes me think and ponder, I value the roll of a big lake because of the humility I experience when witnessing the majesty of a big body of water, I value cooking because I love creating and nourishing, I value the ability to explore what makes me tick because it makes me feel more normal.

Back to my observation: how often throughout the day am I immersed in the things I value?  The answer: 50%.  In 2016 that percentage was closer to 10%, so I’m moving in a healthy direction and my life is the data that supports the positive impact. Moving that percentage from 50% to 70% to 100% is where I’m intending to go and operating within my own personal values will lead to a deeper sense of peace and productivity.  What do you value and how often throughout a day are you doing the very things you value?  Take a look- might be an interesting find.

Cheers to you and your journey…

Life's center gear...

If you enjoy these posts – you might enjoy a copy of my book, “Happiness is Over There” – which is a personal memoir detailing the stories, learnings, and exercises I used to shift my life from dark and chaotic to light and peaceful.  You can buy a signed copy at www.paperclipthinking.com or you can email me at travis@paperclipthinking.com to arrange book delivery.

It’s June in Michigan, which is one of my favorite times of the year.  The leaves have returned to the trees, the grass is as green as it will be all year, the flowers are blooming, the day time temperatures are in the low 70’s and the evenings require a sweatshirt.  Vacations have been scheduled, another school year is wrapping, and I can’t help but notice how each of these pieces fit together like a watch and its gears.  If you have seen the internal workings of a clock or watch, you might agree that it is quite a beautiful dance.  The gears spin, turning each other, and consequently moving the hands that share our perception of time with the world.  Each watch has a center gear, much like cars have a power train, or bikes have their crank shaft.  These “center gears” all receive energy and then they use that energy to turn everything around them.  As long as that center gear is in aligned and working, time seems to spin effortlessly.

Now…one wrong twist of that center gear and everything risks being thrown into chaos.

I like to compare my life to the nature that I live in and the watch I referenced above.  Our planet has its own center gear and it turns the tides, the seasons, and literally spins our planet around and around.  Our lives have a center gear, too, and it is my opinion that these center gears are critical to one’s ability to experience peace, productivity, opulence, wealth, and an overall happiness.

What is that part of you that you might consider the center gear? And…how many other gears does your center gear turn?  I have a work gear, a parenting gear, a philosophical gear, and an “out in nature gear”.  I have an exercise gear, a writing gear, a spouse gear, a relationship gear – and that about sums up what makes me tick.  Each one of these gears represents a facet of my life, so what turns all of my gears?  My center gear is my relationship gear, soulful connections as I like to call them.  If I am surrounded by soulful relationships, those types of relationships where conversations flow effortlessly, the topics of discussion are wide and varied, and the relationships are loose and free – then my other gears: work, exercise, parenting, etc. all seem to flow and produce amazing results.  If I don’t work on my relationships and choose wisely with whom I am spending my time, then life gets a little crazy.

If I choose to surround myself with unhealthy relationships, everything runs the risk of falling out of place.  How does your center gear affect your life?  Ponder on it, note those gears, and ensure you take care of that center gear, because it will support your life being aligned to the core of who you are and that is more powerful than most of us realize.

Cheers to all of you and your continued journeys…

Why I choose to tell you these things...

It’s been six months since the launch of my first book, “Happiness is Over There” – and you can buy a signed copy at www.paperclipthinking.com or you can email me at travis@paperclipthinking.com to arrange book delivery. 

As I complete my 11th year of intense study, writing, workshops, reading, and coaching on the topics of self-improvement, introspection, vulnerability, dialogue, and mindfulness, I’ve had a handful of earth shaking epiphanies and the most recent one deals with vulnerability, over-sharing, and superiority.

The further I go into my own personal search for meaning I’ve recognized that I’ve had moments of total superiority – the belief that my opinions, my studies, my perspectives are RIGHT and everyone else (who isn’t in full support of me) is WRONG.  This debate of right vs. wrong does me no good (and it does no good for anyone around me). This belief led to frustration, arguments, and other negatives that I don’t want in my life, anymore.

I believe that I’m on this planet to have fun, enjoy the journey, meet new people, share and receive love, and to learn as much as I can from those around me.  In the event that some of my experiences could add value to someone else, I’ll share (when I’m asked). The when I’m asked portion of that last sentence is the new change, for me.

How will they know to ask?  They’ll see the way I’m living and grow curious.  See…If I’m not living peacefully then my stories and thoughts on these topics are just that – stories.  If I’m not listening for other perspectives, loving the people who are sharing them, and willing to support true dialogue – then I’m not in a place that is healthy, for me.

I want to be peacefully quiet, which has been a challenge for most of my life.  Making statements to prove my worth or to garner appreciation & attention only led me to isolation.  True joy occurs when I engage in the learning of others and this fuels my personal belief that peace and productivity are derivatives of vulnerability and sharing (crucial is being able to indirectly share through action: when your actions elicit the questions that spark the vulnerable dialogue).  As a good friend shares with me, often, “It’s so much more powerful to see a sermon than hear one.”

Cheers to all of you and your journeys, whatever they may hold.  A poem from me to you:

 

Why do I choose to tell you these things?

Something went dark years ago…

The belief in myself, it melted like snow.

 

What was left after the melt had begun…

An ego with depths like a majestic canyon.

 

I’ve explored those depths and realized this…

The journey I’m on is for me, my gift.

 

To squander this gift – its love and peace - because of words like right or wrong…

Is but ego’s attempt to live above ground.

 

You ask why I choose to tell you all of these things?

It’s to support YOU someday, when you too, choose your wings.

TFurlow

What I learned from choosing life over death...

It’s been five months since the launch of my first book, “Happiness is Over There”, (SALES PLUG) – and you can buy a signed copy at www.paperclipthinking.com or you can email me at travis@paperclipthinking.com.  Due to the time I was spending on the book project, I haven’t blogged in a year, and I’ve missed it.  No super esoteric reason for my lack of blogging, I guess I just didn’t want to force writing, so now it doesn’t feel forced and off we go…

My process for writing is predicated on having a clear mind.  If my mind is jumbled - I don’t tap into the same kind of creative vibrational energy that inspires most of my thoughts and future articles.  Simply stated – my thinking is way clearer when I don’t have a ton of shit in my head.  And… 2017 and 2018 were years that included ample amounts of good shit: starting with the launching of my coaching business; followed by the corporate consulting while attempting to keep the business open; changing the business to a publishing company (so my book could launch); securing a new job (the first of my career where I’m totally aligned and loving what I do); and doing my best to “keep it together” while all of this was spinning in my life.  I reference it as good shit, because I learned so much, and even better shit because I kept fairly peaceful through the two-year period.

The process of self-publishing was also unreal and it taught me a ton too.  Spending time editing, re-reading, and contemplating the messages from 100’s and 1000’s of journal entries that had been created over a 10-year period and then to see your words in bound print for the first time… um nom nom… it was life altering.  I was able to relive what my life was like over a decade (2008-2018) and I could see the growth and the change (how fucking cool is that)?  I was also able to garner a short list of “take aways” and I would like to share them with the world (or at least 1500 of you who might see this article after I pay $12.00-$15.00 to Facebook to boost the post that will follow this writing).

“Happiness is Over There” is a memoir style snap shot into my 10-year journey of finding solutions and new behaviors that lifted me from being anxiety ridden and depressed to peaceful and productive.  I share the story because I believe in vulnerability and dialogue (the two undertones of my life that when embraced, totally changed how I was living).  I want others to have access to this information, in case they might be in a similar spot.  Here is what I learned from 2008-2018:

1.       It’s Okay- everything that happens, every choice you make, every relationship you’re in or out of, every financial situation…it’s all going to be okay.  This is a very simple, yet profound way to view life and it has eliminated my anxiety and depression.  Believing that my life was NOT going to be okay or worst yet, up to someone else to define, is where my challenges rooted.  Most of my anxiety was self-inflicted, and that self-infliction felt so real that I began believing the illusion that life was falling apart, it wasn’t.  Everything is going to be okay and I was learning every day.

2.       Don’t wait to do – So many examples of life abruptly ending and those left living wondering what we waited for?  That visit to another country, that exploration of the soul, that relationship we wanted, that business we thought of starting, that parachuting adventure, that first book authored.  Please don’t wait…

3.       Taking a test and learning its result doesn’t define you – I carried TONS of baggage from a self-imposed belief that because I was a terrible test taker, I wasn’t going to amount to much.  And…not being a martyr, our society is pretty good and classifying someone’s future success on a series of tests.  Fuck standardized tests, I think they are the devil.  And for those who are great at them, I LOVE YOU and for those of you who aren’t great at them, I LOVE YOU, and…your work ethic and your professional alignment to the things you value about yourself will determine your peace, not your grades or your test scores.  Let go of that shit if you are holding it like I was. (holding it almost ate me alive).

4.       Be Introspective – it’s an art form, takes vulnerability, yet when done…will teach you so much.

5.       Love – be willing to love yourself and then love everyone else on the planet (even when they don’t believe in it or you).

6.       Align your actions with your words – Doing this will support clarity and this clarity will make life easier for you and for anyone else you encounter.

7.       Add value – wake each day and look to support someone in achieving what they want (as long as it is moral, ethical, and possible for you to support).  When you support them in achieving their want, it just feels good and adds value into the world.

8.       Be Curious – Ask more questions than you make statements (I’m still working on this).  If you want to understand something, go experience it, don’t lean on others to define what feels good and what doesn’t.

9.       Everything in life ties back to decisions we make – Be personally accountable for those choices.  Be willing to apologize and be willing to celebrate, yet at no time do I invite or support you with blaming anyone else for your life’s outcome.

10.   I don’t owe you shit – and you don’t owe me shit.  Entitlement is rooted in believing that someone else owes you something.  They don’t.  This was one of the most debilitating belief systems that I carried and as I’ve squashed it, life feels way more open and free.

 

Thanks for reading- buy my book if you want more of this topic AND…I love each of you.

 

Trav

Action, Love, Vulnerability, Transparency, and Resilience

I wrote this as an invocation for the Dearborn Rotary Club.  Thanks for the inspiration Candy Hipple & Lynne Hughes  and for becoming partners in a journey to support shifting perspectives on how the world is viewed.

Action, Love, Vulnerability, Transparency, and Resilience.

Action is energy that powers growth, learning, and experiences- How many ways could we “BE” ACTIVE?

Love is the energy that binds each of us- How many ways could we “BE” LOVING?

Vulnerability is the courage to speak and act with humility about topics that you may feel only impact a few, when in fact, they impact the masses. – How many ways could we “BE” VULNERABLE?

Transparency is the willingness to open your life’s book and speak from the experiences you have had and how they make you feel, so others may benefit. – How many ways could we “BE” TRANSPARENT?

Resilience is the energy that supports ACTION when Love, Vulnerability, and Transparency all seem to fall on deaf ears. – How many ways could we “BE” RESILIENT?

School Shootings, Unemployment, Missing Children, Political Adversity, Economic Challenges… we have so many reasons to consider giving up on the world.  Today, I stand here with the intention of reminding everyone I can reach that beauty still exists: the friends we have around us; the students I encounter daily and their energy for life; the support we are blessed to offer the world; the 49 degrees in the month of February (in Michigan); and the ability for each of us to choose Action, Love, Vulnerability, Transparency, and Resilience, daily! 

 

A ten-year journey to my first book and business...

Paperclip Thinking:  A ten-year journey to my first book and business…

In October of 2008 I began journaling.  I journaled as a coping mechanism at first, and as my journaling became more frequent, I began writing as a means to share and express how I was feeling about life (secretly searching for others who might have felt the same way).  In 2009 I realized that the content I was sharing was adding value in my life and to the lives of others, and that felt good.

Writing became a way to clear my head after spending too much of my life listening to that voice that told me, “I wasn’t enough” and “I wasn’t adding value in the world”.  At that time in my life, the only way I knew to quiet that noise was to choose behaviors that numbed the voice.  This subsequently moved me farther and farther from any recognizable chance for peace in my life.

My health (physically and mentally) was deteriorating and yet, I was able to keep a fairly strong outward appearance and I became a master at camouflaging my own misery, by wrapping it in bravado, know it all attitudes, party guy fun, and this most certainly did not feel good.

Trying to look good, not feel good led to a painful process of me losing myself and then choosing to mask that pain.  It was at this time in my life (2009) that the universe introduced me to something that I hadn’t expected, my coach.  We met through a work function and I chose to partner with her as she had lived similar challenges in her life and she had embraced different ways and perspectives of seeing life.

As I embarked on the early stages of my coaching process (2010-2012), I noticed something about my writing.  The journaling was showing growth and change and I was finding an intense solace with my perceived evolution.  The pain from decades of living in fear didn’t simply vanish, although I was able to see life differently and adjust some of my behaviors, so I could be more impactful as a father, husband, employee, and citizen.  This process led me to answer the most important question I’ve ever answered… “What do I value of myself?” and the answers to that question supported what I valued, so I could begin choosing what I wanted for my life.  I value:

·         My willingness to be vulnerable

·         My willingness to be transparent

·         My enjoyment from seeing opportunities to add value and connecting people to those opportunities

·         My enjoyment of the process of introspection and how introspection can impact lives and businesses.

·         My compassion for people

·         My love of storytelling

 

These are the elements of “me” and what I value of myself.  They now fuel me to ask others what they value of themselves and this question has empowered some amazing discussions.

With all of this energy, in December of 2016 I declared that I was a coach and that Paperclip Thinking (the business shell for my services) was launched.  And then…nothing happened.  Shit!  Where were all of the clients?  Why wasn’t this message being spread?  How much money would I make?

I had become very attached to the idea of this business and I wasn’t really doing anything with the business.  I became nervous and scared about whether this message would add value.  I couldn’t answer people’s questions (as recent as January 2017) about who I was coaching and how that coaching added value to other people.  I was being impatient and I was being fear based.  All of this negative energy led me to hide out and talk about coaching, but not live the principles I coach.  That didn’t work well.

I was starting to panic in the middle of 2017 and I found myself withdrawing from some of my own principles.  I decided to do something different.  I detached from all of it.  I detached from the idea that in order to be a coach, I must have a business.  I detached from the idea that having a business meant I must have hundreds of thousands of dollars, every year.  I acknowledged the fact that I didn’t create these principles, they were shared with me and I have a responsibility to share them with other people.

I detached from the idea that a coach must charge thousands of dollars per hour to be a coach and I returned to the principles I coach.  If I wanted to be a coach:

·         What did I value of myself and do those things align with my coaching? – Yes.

·         Was I willing to explore why I was feeling so attached (fear of failure)?  – Yes.

·         Was I willing to be vulnerable and transparent? – Yes.

·         Was I willing to be intentional with the messages I send out to the universe about my health, my peace, my wants, and my care for those I come in contact with, so I could live what I was coaching? - Yes.

 

This detachment from the look good, supported me in doing the very thing I wanted.  I answered the questions above and then, something cool happened.  The first paying client appeared, then the first referral.  Clients two, three, and four followed, and my first corporate client came to fruition (last week).  Paperclip Thinking was launched in December of 2016, but it became a reality in November of 2017 because I let go of caring about how the business looked and I focused on supporting others with how they impact change in their lives.  I’ve become a coach.

This process, which began in 2008, has sparked my interest in creating my first book.  I’ve utilized the information and stories from my journals as the content and the book, Happiness is Over There, is scheduled to launch by the end of the year.  What I’ve learned this year is very simple.  Instead of talking about being a writer, I wrote.  Instead of talking about being a coach, I coached.

Recognizing intentions for life and realizing change is a choice and it’s rooted in action.  I’m excited about how I can support others with the change they want and I’ll do more with the blog to keep readers updated through 2018.  I’m feeling blessed to do something I love, each day, so thanks to all of you who played a part in supporting this journey. 

Cheeseburgers and Coaching

If you were heading out for a quick dinner and couldn’t decide on what you wanted to eat and you stumbled across a small dive bar, which advertised a killer cheeseburger, what would you do?  I know what I would do…my curiosity (and Pavlovian response) would be raised and I would find myself trying something that I hadn’t expected to try when I left my house on the quest for dinner.

I pop into the bar, grab a seat and notice that everyone is eating burgers, so “when in Rome” is applied, and I would decide to indulge the house specialty, “the burger”.  One bite and I soon realize that this is the most delicious ½ pound, mac and cheese covered, bacon infused, grilled bun heaven that you have ever consumed.  After dinner, I might bump into some friends and what would kick off the small talk? That burger!  I would want to tell everyone about this culinary creation, wouldn’t you? 

This burger experience is my attempt at metaphorically discussing how I feel about coaching.  Coaching and cheeseburgers!  Coaching, to me, is akin to the most delicious cheeseburger I’ve ever consumed and I want people to know how much fun I had with it.  This doesn’t mean you will enjoy it as much as I did (and that’s cool), or you might not frequent that burger bar as regularly as I might (that’s cool, too), but nonetheless, I want to share how delicious that burger was, just like I want to share what coaching’s impact, has been, on me.

As I continue to grow, as a coach, I recognize that I get really excited about what I’ve been working on and am so inspired by what I’ve experienced that I have fallen prey to crossing the “preachy” line with respect to my coaching.  I’m asking the universe for a “do over” and I’m resetting my intention to be very simple- I intend to share one person’s story, mine, so anyone who has curiosity about personal perspective changes, they will have access to the information I’ve been blessed to garner.  And if coaching isn't right for someone, that's cool by me, too.

I began my coaching journey in 2008, and I’ve been documenting and defining my experiences, distilling them into a series of principles that supported me and they are now the cornerstone of what I share with others. 

What I learned, embraced, and now live by, were experiences, exercises, and discussions that were intended to be shared and they were passed from my coach to me and from her coach to her, so I’d like to keep this sharing alive and pass some of my experiences and principles to others who might have curiosity.  Back to the burger for a minute-  I didn’t make that burger, but I loved the experience, so I share and I didn’t make these principles, but I love them and the experiences they’ve afforded, so I share.

The belief systems and some of the exercises that tie to the principles of the coaching, have been around for hundreds, if not thousands of years, and they will be around for hundreds and thousands of years, to come.  I feel fortunate to have been introduced to them and I have applied these principles to support being more peaceful, more mindful, healthier, more compassionate, and more loving with those I encounter.

My engagement with my children has increased, I’ve been able to succinctly define what I value of myself (and how those values could support others), I have a deeper connection with my wife, the elimination of personal financial debt became a reality, and I’ve re-ignited my health and physical well-being.  I’ve noticed a deeper mindfulness through daily meditation and an increase in the quality of my sleep.  I’m enjoying the lens I use to view life and I’m wondering if these results could add value to others, too? 

I’ve included a snapshot of the principles I coach and support:

  • ·         The Want Wheel- defining what we value of ourselves and aligning those values into adding value for others.
  • ·         Keeping a Clean Front Porch- embracing personal accountability, so that accountability can translate into powerful choices & agreements.
  • ·         Looking in the Mirror- engaging vulnerability and introspection to deepen relationships.
  • ·         Thinking Like a 5 year Old - creativity & innovation exercises for productivity and wellness.
  • ·         Power Intentions – building and recognizing intentions that support the manifestation of your wants.

If you are curious (or hungry)- don’t be a stranger!  #trytheburger

Step-Through NOT Breakthrough

Let’s rename breakthroughs and call them step-throughs!  If you are anything like me, you’ve experienced tons of these beautiful moments in life, so I’m curious to understand why we continue to call them breakthroughs?

The idea of breaking something feels accidental, unintentional, and the idea also feels heavy and frustrating- I don’t like to break things.  I have broken things in my home, broken things in stores, and I’ve even broken relationships and partnerships, and none of the “breaking” felt good, so during a recent coaching conversation, I made the decision to refrain from using breakthroughs and I’m re-purposing them to step-throughs, here’s why:

Step-throughs feel purpose driven and in my experiences, these moments of stepping through to a new way of thinking can be frequent and they are rooted in action.  Step throughs are a choice!  Inviting someone to share in a powerful conversation, bringing a new idea to a team, or coming to an agreement on a new way to solve a business or life challenge are all examples of ways to generate a step-through.

What sits on the other side of a step-through?

I continue to realize balance, health, innovation, revenue, income and fun through my step-throughs and the most beautiful part is that everyone has access to this way of thinking & living, so let’s choose to step-through versus breakthrough, together.

Look in the Mirror: I was creating the CEO of Mom & Dad's Basement

Most of my readers know that I started my career as a recruiter, so I am in a business rooted in exploring, learning and understanding other people’s perspectives and pairing them with an organization who compliments and enhances their passions, interests and skills.  We interview thousands of candidates and hiring managers and most of us have some funny stories about the things we’ve heard or what we’ve seen during the interview process.  Another area of discussion, inside our industry, is the “cross generational” leadership and how 4 generations will survive in the current world of work.  Boomers, X’rs, GenY and now GenZ (birth years in the late 90’s-current) are either in the workforce now or will be entering in a few years and I have been fascinated by the discussion around how each of the generations think, act and lead.  Summary from my experiences; boomer=work ethic & worth ethic, X’rs= the original impatient professional, GenY= why do we have to do that, and GenZ (the iGeneration who only know information gathered at the speed of light).  Lots of talk about GenY and GenZ regarding their perceived disenchantment, work ethic and incessant questioning.  Where does that come from?

Over the last year, I’ve had a surprising number of interactions with parents.  Yes.  I said “parents”, as in… the parents of the candidates who I am interviewing and hiring for the business I support.  I thought calls from Mom or Dad asking why their child did or didn’t get a job were an isolated incident or two, so I reached out to friends in the business and have confirmed with a number of colleagues that this behavior is occurring more frequently.  My coaching business, Paperclip Thinking (www.paperclipthinking.com), has a foundational component that I call, “looking in the mirror”, and it is our way of supporting the ability to look inward and own our behaviors, so we can work toward a change in life that we’ve intended to achieve.  When I received my first call from a parent, I judged.  Then I laughed at the absurdity of a call like that and then I had a minor panic attack.  Was I supporting my kids to be the CEO of Mom or Dad’s basement?  How will GenY or more personal to me, GenZ, ever add value and prosper if Mom or Dad were still calling and checking in with their children’s potential employers at 23 or 24 years of age?  I would never do that, would I?  Well...

About a year ago - one of my children looked like he was about to “break down” and cry as I came downstairs from a conference call (I work from home) and I asked if everything was OK?  He quickly snapped, “I’m hungry”, which we’ve all heard from our children, so I didn’t think anything of it.  As additional context, my fridge was full and the bread was on the counter, so I did what any engaged and connected parent would do; I jumped in, ran to the fridge, and busted out a sweet ham and colby jack sandwich to satiate his hunger.  He was fed, he seemed happy and I felt like I was doing a adding value.  

Now we “flash back” to my “looking in the mirror” after receiving a call from a parent and then judging the parent who was calling me for interview feedback about their child.

I wondered if my child, who was sitting hungry and somewhat helpless, waiting for someone to “feed him” (btw- he was 12 at the time), was any different than a young man or woman sitting at home, wanting a job and waiting for their parent to call the recruiter for feedback?  Where would this behavior come from?  Was I playing a part in creating the very behavior I was judging?  Could this be the start of a behavior trail that leads to me picking up the phone and calling one of his prospective employers in 10 years, while he sits on my couch?  

As parents, we’ve worked so diligently to support our children, so when does that support cross the line and become fostered enablement?  Flash forward a few years… my oldest will be preparing for college, four years later - graduation, and then interviews for his first career.  My wife and I decided to make a change with baby steps toward supporting them by teaching and empowering them to own the behaviors and skills that will support them long term.  We’ve balanced the scale with regard to “doing for them” and “teaching them to do” and it started with simple tasks; scrambling eggs, making a sandwich and cleaning up the disaster zone that typically follows our cooking.  We morphed into laundry (carrying clothes from the basement to returning their clothes to their rooms) and now we are supporting them with holding their own conversations with teachers, friends and other adults, so they are comfortable with the process.  By the way- this exercise has drastically reduced the amount of laundry I have to do, because they were shocked at how many times they had to hump up stairs when they wear something once and dump it in the dirty clothes pile.

I realized that my behaviors, as a parent, were setting up a belief system with my kids that could have led to me being the one calling a recruiter or hiring leader and asking why my son or daughter did or didn’t get hired.  What we’ve learned, so far...is that teaching these tasks was almost as fun as watching the kids learn.  My resentment levels (feeling like we have to do everything) dropped and the time we all gain back from partnering on running our household has been reinvested in “us” time.

Our children will be candidates for career professions in 5, 10, or maybe 15 years and as a coach and recruiter, if I’m frustrated with the behaviors of any of the generations behind me (Millennial, Gen Z, etc.) - it makes sense to look in the mirror and realize that I had a role in shaping some of these behaviors, so as a parent, I can adjust my thoughts and behaviors and support a new way of thinking and behaving, so we don’t end up with a generation of “CEO’s of Mom & Dad’s Basement”.

In September, Paperclip Thinking LLC will be partnering with KD Innovate (another innovative coaching business) on a monthly series where parents and children can come together and be introduced to healthy conversations and exercises, which have added value to our families, so please be on the lookout for more information and leave a comment if you have a perspective you’d like to share.

Fordson High School (Dearborn, Mi.) has Paperclip Thinkers

I have recently joined Rotary in an effort to meet people who have a passion for supporting others  and maintaining a focus on doing their part to make the world more peaceful.  During our meeting, a group of 16-17 year old Juniors from Fordson High School, in Dearborn, Michigan,  presented their findings about a recent adventure they experienced.  This group of high school students have re-ignited a high school club of ‘Junior Rotarians’ through the program, INTERACT.

 

This club of young men and women decided to raise funds to travel to a remote village in the Dominican Republic and spend a number of days supporting the construction of a new school, delivering basic necessities for personal care and hygiene to the village and they interacted with the local villagers, orphanages and embraced a number of powerful experiences.

As one of the presenters shared his experiences through the trip, he had a tone in his discussion that made me think.  He talked about how he’ll impact the world when he “grows up” and that the work he may do as “an adult” could add value.  It made me think because he had an almost apologetic tone in his voice, as if he wasn’t truly adding value yet, but maybe the value would be more impactful as he became more adult’esque in his 20’s, 30’s, or 40’s.

To this young man (and his friends) - I say you are amazing, right now!  He (and his classmates) are the definition of ‘paperclip thinkers’, as they were inspired to add value and they found a solution to support what others wanted and they did it by collaboration with their friends, families and community.  Tip of the hat to all of you!  They have done more “humanitarian” work at 16 & 17 than I have at 44, so again, to this group at Fordson...please remain on your course (you are inspiring, to me).

Equally inspiring were the lessons I took from hearing their experience:

Happiness is a choice: no technology, no clean water, no paved roads, no air conditioning, no luxuries and what the students from Fordson noticed, the people they encountered were genuinely peaceful, smiling and loving.  They were choosing to love and be happy.  How many ways could we choose to be happy?

Creativity supports happiness:  no Toys’R’Us, no Gamestop, no Pistons/Lions/Red Wings games and certainly, no apps.  The students noticed the children of the village and orphanage they supported finding ways to play outside with rocks, sticks (and each other) and again, they smiled, were peaceful and showed love, to everyone, while creating and innovating games and fun.  How many times, today, could we be more creative?

It makes me smile (inside and out) when I experience the energy that people create.  It is an inspiration, which can be used in our daily lives, with our careers, with our friends & family.  The choices we make shape the energy we generate and these young men and women are shaping some magical energy!  #paperclipthinkers

Apologetic Humility

I have been guilty of using humor and apologies to glaze over fear & insecurity.  If I pick on myself with witty one liners, no one can laugh at me - they’ll be laughing at my one liner.  The apologies have been used when insecurity about an idea or concept surfaces and it goes like this, “so sorry that this may not be a great idea…” or “let me apologize in advance that I’m…”.  I think you get the idea and I believe most of us have done this before, right?

I find it common for our insecurities or fears to provoke all sorts of time wasting thoughts in our head.  I was in a recent discussion about my latest web-redesign with the CEO of a Detroit based digital company, Whim-Detroit, and I received some powerful insight on the topic.

Lori McColl is brave and powerful.  She is building her business from the ground up and the work she has completed in support of Paperclip Thinking LLC (www.paperclipthinking.com) has been amazing.  We were talking about the fear and insecurity that can rear up when you are starting something new and she looked at me and said, “the fear or insecurity we all face when we embark on a new journey, isn’t “glazed” over when you’re self-deprecating or inauthentically apologizing, the fear seems magnified to the people you’re talking to, so I stopped doing that!”

Her quote inspired me to think about the ways I work to prevent that fear and insecurity from getting too loud in my head and triggering that “let’s joke or apologize” button, so for anyone who has experienced this, here are a few ideas that may support you in approaching these situations differently:

de- “label” - innovation and creativity are rooted in idea generation.  I don’t subscribe to “good” ideas or “bad” ideas, they are simply ideas.  Some will add value and some might not and that is a beautiful thing.  I invite you to keep the ideas flowing and when you take the labels away, idea generation becomes less fearful and those amazing ideas are ready to share.

agendas -  I have been guilty of beating around the bush and then losing my idea and confusing the hell out of the person who is talking with me.  I’m working, diligently, to create agenda points for my crucial conversations, so when I’m on the phone I remain on point and this mini-agenda process has afforded me the ability to be more crisp and succinct and that has eliminated the fear and insecurity from my discussions.

Enjoy your week and thanks for reading!.

Coaching Curiosity- what do you do?

I was recently introduced to a potential coachee and she asked, “is being a coach just corporate speak for being a therapist?” and then she posed a follow up question, “and...what certifies you to be a coach?”  Both questions were powerful and both questions continue to inspire introspection.  

No- I am not a therapist.  Therapy is based in the past and I’m focused on supporting people with the present and their intentions for the future.  The person who was questioning me also referenced coaching as a way to “fix” people.  She shared her past experiences with coaches and these coaches were people who had been assigned by HR as a “corrective action” for a perceived faltering performance.  That makes me sad- both for her and for the reputation of the coaching process.  I’m not in the business of “fixing” people, because I don’t believe that anyone is broken and I won’t support coaching as a “fix it” endeavor.  I believe anything we experience in life is tied back to choices we make, plain and simple.  This belief is where my coaching is rooted and it is the cornerstone of how I’m coached, today.  When I support people, I coach them by sharing some of the experiences I’ve had and the results from those experiences (some healthy, some not- I share it all) because sharing can transition into invitations for my coachees to consider the results I gathered and then they can make their choice regarding whether or not applying those invitations may add value to their current situation (s).  Through 8 years of experience as a coachee, I’ve embraced choosing a new way to live, lead and support the people I encounter.  I’ve become comfortable with Paperclip Thinking™ and I have embraced a more divergent way to create value.  My energy levels are high, I’m taking care of my health (have shed 55 pounds), my discussions are more creative, my debt has gone away, income has increased and my wife and children share a deeper relationship with me than we had in the past.  These are the results that I chose to achieve and the coaching process supported me, so now I’m focused on learning what others want from life and I can support them in achieving their wants, too.  That’s what a coach is, from my perspective.  

The second question.  Am I certified?  No- I’m qualified.  Our society LOVES certifications, don’t we?  In the past, I’ve bought into the corporate dogma that states, “because someone is certified they must be qualified” and I’m no longer buying it!  When I selected my coach, it was important for me that the person was living life in a way that was inspiring to me (not whether they paid for a test and a certification) and as I sought coaching for my own reasons; embrace health, let go of fear, choose balance, experience career growth, and remain strong as a parent and husband, these were ultimately my wants and if I would have placed my wants into the hands of a coach who was certified, but not living in inspiration, creativity, innovation and growth, then it didn’t feel worth my time.

Am I certified, no.  Will I ever be, no!  Am I qualified, yes.  Forty-four years on this planet, a wife of 19 years, 3 children, 7 jobs, 2 careers, 8 years of coaching and a laundry list of experiences and the data that comes from them.  Through all of this, I’ve achieved the ability and willingness to choose peace.  So...what’s a coach, you ask?  A coach is someone who is passionate about sharing their experiences and offering the knowledge they’ve gained, so the coachee can benefit from a different perspective and work to achieve what they want from life.  I love to coach and I couldn’t ask for a better way to add value to those I come in contact with, daily.

What is Paperclip Thinking?

What is Paperclip Thinking?

**Warning shot** - high levels of introspection and emotion are discussed in the following paragraphs, so if an intense level of “Dr. Phil’esque” content creates nausea or headaches, I’m recommending that you move on to a more emotionally stable article!  If not, then sit down and enjoy the read.

I have a voice inside of my head that likes to ask, “why?”.  The voice, almost every time I hear an idea or a suggestion, asks me, “why do they do it that way?”, “why are you feeling anxious about that?”, “why would someone suggest that information?”  Yes, some people close to me have been concerned on my behalf and asked me, “why” haven’t you sought professional help for this voice, but TRUST me, there’s no need to fear the voice- embrace it, because when embraced, the question “why?” can evolve into something really powerful.

Sir Kenneth Robinson is a British author, speaker and international advisor on education.  He is a well known academic who has focused his interests on the subject of creativity and MILLIONS of people have heard him speak and reviewed his opinions & research.  Sir Kenneth inspired me to think a bit differently about creativity, education, divergent thinking and all of this inspiration came from a 30 second clip from one of his videos.  I saw the video and a light bulb went off.  My inspiration for divergent thinking was a seed that had been planted years ago, as I was coached to embrace freedom-based versus fear-based thought.  I loved the idea of multiple ways to add value, in life, so my mind raced during Sir Kenneth’s discussion because he was sharing details about a longitudinal study, done years ago, that tracked kindergarten children and their ability to be divergent thinkers.  This information hit home- as it was so applicable, personally, and to the recruiting industry I support.  The study asked these children how many ways they could use a paperclip.  They were asked as kindergartners, then as middle schoolers and finally, as young adults.

The kindergarten children came up with 100’s of ways to use a paperclip - part and parcel to the fact that they hadn’t learned that a paperclip shouldn’t be made of foam rubber and stand 100 feet tall.  But as time marched on… their ability to remain divergent in thought, diminished.  That’s no fun and who wants convergent business partners?  I don’t.  As these kids entered their late teens, it was commonly expected that their lists of ways to use a paperclip would shrink from 100+ to a mere 15-20.  When I heard this section of the video that voice in my head screamed, “why can’t we regain some of that divergent thinking and how do we do it?”  The question is a good one and I, for one, would like to believe that being divergent in thought is a good thing in all aspects of life, so as I mentioned, earlier, I embarked on being a coachee (2009-present) and for years I have been immersed in a process of introspection.  I’ve dedicated my life to working to become a more benevolent leader of people, an innovative partner in business and a balanced father-husband-friend-employee.  In general, I want to be a more peaceful person.  I was a real grumpy, fake and angry person (all hidden on the inside, so for all of you who thought everything was cool- nope).  My life changed, more peacefully, after I began mastering the concepts my coach supported me to embrace.  It is no coincidence that when I hear about people being “squeezed” into convergent thought, it makes me edgy and is why I felt an ever present frustration and refused to buy into “this is the way we do it” as a strategy.  In 2016 I started documenting the process steps followed to free myself from the way things “are supposed to be” and this process became the core to Paperclip Thinking LLC.  For those who embrace this path, the coaching supports different, productive, innovative and peaceful results.

‘Paperclip Thinking’ is comprised of 5 process steps:

1) Look in the Mirror- the process begins with us.  A willingness to accept that our behaviors, no one else's, fuel life.

2) Keep a Clean Front Porch- metaphorically used to describe the power of keeping focused on our behaviors and not being distracted by the behaviors of our neighbors.  If you want a clean neighborhood, starting with a clean front porch is a logical step.  Keep your porch clean and others may choose to follow.

3) The Want Wheel- defining what we “want” for our lives (business, personal, etc.) is a simple concept, with very complex applications.

4) #thinklikea5yearold - let’s have fun and be willing to ask the questions and state the feelings that our kindergarten brothers & sisters would regularly use.

5) Intentional Thought- creating intentions is a powerful process and these intentions bring clarity and action into your life, daily.

I’ve dedicated 8 years of my life to this process and I support others who are interested in a good look in the mirror, keeping a clean front porch, defining their “wants”, thinking like a 5 year old (immaturity has finally paid off) and being focused on creating intentions.  The discussions, exercises and content are used with my client partnerships, individual coachees and have fostered stronger communication, leadership, productivity and unprecedented results.  This is ‘paperclip thinking’, so if you have questions or curiosity, don’t hesitate to reach out.  I’m always up for a chat!