Friday, July 1, 2016

Pushing Past the Dark Days of Your Life


"What is the hardest thing you can possibly do?" she said
when I went to her for advice on the darkest day of the first half of my life."

"Why must I do what is hardest?"

"Because you are an instrument of God.
Don't leave the instrument sitting in its case. Play!
Leave no part of your instrument unexplored.
Why settle for 'Three Blind Mice' when you can play the 'Gloria'?"

Abraham Verghese, Cutting For Stone





Dealing with the Dark Days of our Lives

We all have our dark days when faced with loss, adversity or defeat when we question if anything we've ever done--or will do--is worthwhile. Perhaps you're having one of those times now.

Maybe when you look around, you see others looking healthy and happy--seemingly flying past obstacles and meeting with success--while you alone sit in solitude and pain. You want to take a step but you're not sure how to pull out of the darkness that has invaded your life.

As Johann Wolfgang von Goethe wrote in the 1800s:
"To think is easy. To act is difficult. To act as one thinks is the most difficult."
 
To pull out of the dark days of your life, as Verghese says you must do what is hardest, and as Goethe says, the hardest is to take action--in ways you believe are right for you. 
  • What do you believe you are destined to do?
  • What do you think is the right thing for you to do at this moment?
  • Where do your interests take you?
  • What do you wish someone would ask you to do?
  • What is your 'Three Blind Mice' way to play life? What is your 'Gloria'?




 "Everybody wants to be somebody but nobody wants to grow." Goethe

Is it Time to Ask for Help?

When the dark days hit it IS difficult to take action. That is the time to reach out to others who can help you find your dreams, and nudge you to act on them. We all need help at times re-discovering our dreams and gaining the courage to act on them.

Who are the one to two people in your life you can call on? Contact one of them and ask for a chat today.

Don't just sit in darkness--reach out to one person--and let that be the action that gets you off your 'three blind mice' track onto the path to playing your Gloria. 


"Dream no small dreams for they have no power to move the hearts of men."  Johann Wolfgang von Goethe


P. S. If you have never read Abraham Verghese's 'Cutting For Stone' I highly recommend it. It is a rich and unique story that will keep you riveted .



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For more than 35 years, Susan Meyerott has been helping people lighten up and step over invisible barriers to change one step at a time. She speaks to your heart, puts you at ease, and makes changing easier than ever before.

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Wednesday, June 29, 2016

Peter Drucker: Are You an Effective Manager of People and Resources?



"Most of what we call management consists of making it difficult for people to get their work done." Peter Drucker

Asking the Right Questions

'Are you a good manager of people and resources? Do you make it easy or difficult for people to get things done in an effective and satisfying manner?'

These are the questions management giant Peter Drucker asked of leaders to help us think about what we were doing so we could better see and act on the obvious. His was a rational voice calling us to take a more practical, thoughtful approach to managing resources and leading people. He understood people are our greatest resource.

As an 'ENFP' on the Myers-Briggs, I gravitated towards Drucker's leading with questions to determine how to be more effective, rather than just efficient--a way of thinking that lead me through most of my work life.

Drucker  greatly influenced my thinking about how to properly manage people and resources--helping me be more effective by considering where to place my focus and how to best manage my time--by dividing my attention between an external customer focus 2/3 of the time and internal issues only 1/3 of the time. I quickly learned you can spend all your time perfecting internal systems and dealing with internal conflict, or you can refocus your attention on better ways to attract and maintain customers, and build the business.
For me, the two most important questions became 'how do you free people up to do their best work, and how do you keep the focus on the things that matter?'


"The purpose of a business is to create a customer." Peter Drucker

What Problem are you trying to Solve?

"Efficiency is doing things right; effectiveness is doing the right things." Peter Drucker

Too often in the workplace managers lead people down a path without knowing what problem they're trying to solve or even IF it is the right problem to solve. The goal quickly becomes to LOOK PRODUCTIVE rather than to be productive. This waste of time leads to frustration and apathy for the team, and people working on the wrong things without actually accomplishing anything. Nothing dissipates enthusiasm faster than wasting people's time.

If you want to be an effective manager, you need to constantly evaluate your effectiveness. To be effective you must know what problem you're trying to solve...and then you need to question if it is the right problem to be solving.

Looking over the past week, how effective were you? 

  • Are you straightening chairs on the titanic?
  • Are you  doing the right things or just keeping busy?
  • Are you productive or just busy?
  • Do you know what problem you're trying to solve? Is it the right one?




ShutUpImTalking.com

Are you focusing too much on the internal workings of the 
organization to the detriment of  the outside customer view?

Do you or your Organization Suffer from Internal Think?

How much time do you spend solving problems or perfecting systems inside the organization vs getting your name and product or services promoted outside the organization?

'2/3 of the organization's time and effort should be devoted to looking outside the organization and only 1/3 to internal issues.'  Peter Drucker
Internal Time Traps--What to Look For

 "There is nothing so useless as doing efficiently that which should not be done at all."  Peter Drucker

  • Do you constantly redo your website frustrating customers or readers who can't see what they need through all the stuff on the page? Too much change is exhausting. "I need to be able to see how to get into my account and pay my bill"
  • Do you spend more time on internal communication and systems than you do on delivering services or goods?
  • Do you lose sight of the true goal in your quest to be right?
  • Are you so focused on being efficient you're ineffective because you're efficiently doing the wrong things?
  • Are you wasting time perfecting efficient systems that should never be done at all?
  • Do you spend more time thinking about how to impress the stakeholders or how to best your colleague than on how to deliver excellent products and services?



 In 1967, in his classic book, The Effective Executive, management expert Peter Drucker wrote:

 "The effective executive makes strengths productive. To achieve results one has to use all the available strengths — the strengths of associates, the strength of the superior, and one's own strengths. These strengths are the true opportunities. To make strength productive is the unique purpose of the organization. It cannot overcome the weaknesses with which each of us is endowed, but it can make them irrelevant."

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For more than 35 years, Susan Meyerott has been helping people lighten up and step over invisible barriers to change one step at a time. She speaks to your heart, puts you at ease, and makes changing easier than ever before.


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Wednesday, June 22, 2016

Stuck? Afraid to Make a Mistake? Get Over Yourself!




'Doing one fool thing after another is not so terrible when you consider the human proclivity to do several fool things at once'   Robert Brault


Stress is who you think you should be--Relaxation is who you are

Are you so afraid of making a mistake or looking stupid you fail to take the 1st step toward your heart's desire? Lighten up! Get out there and mess up. 


As Bertrand Russell said, 'The trouble with the world is that the stupid are cocksure and the intelligent are full of doubt.'  

Rather than being a sign you're about to do something foolish--your fear of looking stupid is a sure sign you're on the threshold of courageously stepping in the right direction to fulfill a dream or to solve a problem of importance. Your self-doubt is an intelligent way to pause to reflect before you jump in, not a cause to abandon your direction.

Step into Life Courageously

We are wired to learn from our mistakes. The key to moving your life forward is to continually take a step--any step--that has the potential for a positive outcome

'Don't belittle yourself be BIG yourself', says Corita Kent. It takes a big person to get out there, be foolish, and make mistakes in the course of living life. Set your sights on what you want -- a good job, a healthy relationship, a healthy body--and continually take small steps in the direction of that goal. Sometimes playing the fool isn't so foolish after all.

'One is more apt to become wise by doing fool things than by reading wise sayings.'  Robert Brault


The Foolish Factor: Face What Makes You Feel Foolish Despite the Fear

Ask someone out.
Let others know you're looking for a relationship.
Let others know you're looking for a job.
Let others know you've been on unemployment long enough and you really want a job.
Apply for a job you know 100 others applied for.
Speak up in a meeting.
Say 'I Love You'.
Admit you made a mistake.
Ask for help.
Admit you feel foolish.

Go on--choose to look foolish pursuing your dreams. Fail big; fall on your face; embarrass yourself big time--just stay involved experimenting with life.



'It is one of the blessings of old friends that you can afford to be stupid with them.' Ralph Waldo Emerson
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For more than 35 years, Susan Meyerott has been helping people lighten up and step over invisible barriers to change one step at a time. She speaks to your heart, puts you at ease, and makes changing easier than ever before.


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Friday, June 10, 2016

The Saving Grace of Denial



Denial--A Soft Cushion Against the Harsh Realities of Life

Sometimes life throws us a curve ball we didn't see coming that overwhelms us on impact. In that moment--when we need time to garner our inner strength and resources before meeting an issue head on--a shroud of denial envelopes us.

Being in denial isn't a bad thing. Denial is a wonderful coping mechanism, born out of the body's wisdom, designed to protect us when we're overwhelmed and frightened.

The saving grace of denial is it provides us a soft cushion against the onslaught of the harsh realities of life and gives us time to wrap our minds around something we just aren't ready to deal with.

Denial allows us to sit in the situation awhile as our brains work off-line preparing us to come to terms with our need to acknowledge what's caught our attention and what we're going to do about it if we are to move on with our lives.



Welcome Denial like a Compassionate Friend

Treat denial like a good friend, acknowledging and welcoming it when it comes to visit--instead of chastising yourself for letting it stay. Let it rest undisturbed awhile before engaging in conversation with yourself about the secrets you've sequestered from view.

Understand the time you sit in denial does not weaken you. You are merely idling while you're feeling vulnerable and afraid. Your strength and courage are still there ready to emerge when the time is right for you to competently handle the issues that initially overwhelmed you.

Turning Fear into Faith

Moving Beyond Soul-Crushing Experiences

Sometimes you can live in a state of denial for years--too bruised by major soul-crushing experiences to do anything but push the horrifying experience deeper out of consciousness sometimes with the use of drugs or alcohol. Physical, sexual, and emotional abuse or other life trauma--especially in childhood can have you living a life of denial.

Yet when you're ready, these things that happened to you--leaving you feeling weak, vulnerable, hopeless and helpless--can be moved beyond with the assistance from others to help you rediscover your courage, strength and personal power.




Unwrap the Gift of Knowledge Lurking Behind Denial

When you're ready, allow yourself a quick peek behind the curtain of denial to see what you're hiding from yourself.  No worries if it's dark back there and you can't see anything when you 1st look. Close the curtain, acknowledge your wisdom in letting it sit awhile longer, and get back to doing what you were doing. Don't give it another thought.

If you find you're now ready to apply your strength and resources to dealing with the issue at hand, allow the veil of denial to slip open and look at what you were previously afraid you were unable to handle. Consider whose counsel you might seek to help you find your strength and courage to move you from the fear you can't handle the truth to having faith in your ability to handle life--and emerge healthier and stronger.

When you peek behind the veil of denial:
  • What little niggling thoughts rise to the surface of your consciousness? 
  • What gems of knowing come through that you can now act on?
  • What inkling of issues too-big-to-handle yourself emerged?
  • Who comes to mind to help you create a bridge from denial to acknowledgement to action?
  • What is one thing you can do this week to move yourself toward unloading the burden you've been denying?

Seek support from family and friends, and if necessary, professionals, to help you find your way forward.




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For more than 35 years, Susan Meyerott has been helping people lighten up and step over invisible barriers to change one step at a time. She speaks to your heart, puts you at ease, and makes changing easier than ever before.

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Tuesday, June 7, 2016

5 Life-Changing Habits to Blast Your Life Wide Open!



'Most people spend their entire life indefinitely preparing to live.'  Paul Tournier

Small Daily Decisions Over a Lifetime Add Up

Who doesn't want to love their life? So what stops us from jumping in with both feet to fully engage in the life we want NOW? What we decide to do on a daily basis--those small daily decisions--adds up to the life we live.

As Swiss Psychologist Paul Tournier said most of us spend our entire life indefinitely preparing to live. If  you don't want to be one of those people who fails to jump-start your life, learn to change how you think. Choose to create life-changing habits that blast your life wide open NOW. Here are 5 simple habits to guide you.

'What you are is what you have been; what you will be is what you do now.' The Buddha


Habit # 1: Start with the End in Mind

'If you can imagine it, you can achieve it. If you can dream it, you can become it.'

Consolidate your thinking and focus your actions by considering what you want to build in your lifetime. How do you want to contribute? Who do you want to share your life with? What would make you feel safe financially? What would a satisfying life look like to you?

Without being morbid, estimate how long you'll live--then use the total years left to help you focus. You are never too old or too young to focus your thinking in this way!

Me? Based on my age, life satisfaction, and family genes I'm guessing I have 35 more years to pack a lot of living into!

Unscientific Chart for your use

Age
Years Left
20
67
30
57
40
47
50
37
65
22
70
20
80
10



Keep a dream journal and at least once a year revisit 3 questions to use as measuring sticks to guide your journey.


  • When you get to the end of your life and look back what do you want your life to be about?
  • When you look 20 years down the road, what do you want your life to look like?
  • Where would you like to be in 5 years? What have you achieved? What have you built? 



Habit #2: Start each day asking 'What problem am I trying to solve today?'

Our brains like to solve problems and I've found it useful to think of life as a series of problems or puzzles to solve.

Every morning I wake and let my mind freely scan my inner and outer world until something captures my interest and I begin the free-flowing experience of discovering and naming what problem I'm trying to solve.

Approaching your days by determining the puzzles you want to solve can help you zero in on and act on the things that add meaning and impact to your life. This helps you see yourself as a problem solver who has the ability to handle whatever life throws at you.

Solving daily life puzzles lets you see yourself as a problem solver who has the ability to handle whatever life throws at you.




Habit # 3: Do Weekly Wellness Checks

Only a mediocre person is always at his best.W. Somerset Maugham

Be growth oriented and strive to be the best you can be. Get in the habit of doing weekly non-judgmental wellness check ins.

To stay on a healthy growth track, ask yourself  3 questions each week:


  • What went well?
  • What could I do better?
  • What's the most important thing I think I could do this week to improve my life or move  closer to my desired lifestyle?



Habit # 4: Practice Changing Your Thoughts through Taking Action

There are two good things in life - freedom of thought and freedom of action. W. Somerset Maugham

 Did you know that if you create a discrepancy between what you believe and how you act, your beliefs will change to align with your actions? That's why taking positive action is so powerful.

For example, if you sit in the thought 'I can't get a job' it can lead to a self fulfilling prophecy. But  cut off thinking and take actions you know can lead to getting a job despite your 'non-belief'--networking, distributing resumes, volunteering to gain skills, upgrading your resume--you see yourself taking actions that can lead to a job. Taking action changes your thoughts and increases your chances of success.

Or if you sit in the thought 'I can't find a partner' it can lead to a self fulfilling prophecy.
When you cut off this thinking and instead focus on engaging in actions that increase the probability you'll meet people your mindset will alter.

Give yourself the opportunity to create a positive belief about your ability to create a great life by taking positive steps without concern for the outcome. Keep taking steps in the direction of the life you want NOW.




Habit #5: Set Aside Money for Retirement 

You rarely feel like you have enough money to put some away for retirement when you're young. Do it anyway.

Before you fritter your money away on impulse purchases, commit to putting money into your future.

Feeling safe financially will give you a solid foundation for fully exploring life on your terms. When you create financial freedom by paying yourself 1st,  you'll give yourself a gift that grows over time. Don't put off contributing to a retirement fund. Strive to contribute to your retirement with money from each pay check.

If you work for a company that matches your retirement contribution, find a way to contribute the maximum amount to get the maximum matching. If you don't know much about investing seek out someone you trust to help you.

Feeling safe financially will provide you a solid foundation for fully exploring life on your terms. Small daily decisions over a lifetime add up--decide to save for your future.

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For more than 35 years, Susan Meyerott has been helping people lighten up and step over invisible barriers to change one step at a time. She speaks to your heart, puts you at ease, and makes changing easier than ever before.


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Saturday, May 28, 2016

Overwhelmed? Slow Down~GET YOURSELF FREE!


BEE FREE
Lee Bryant, all rights reserved

Experience life without trying to make it happen

Sometimes when life picks up speed--and chaos and uncertainty loom large--that is the moment you need to slow it down and just BE.

Provide yourself a respite from worry--a time FREE from focusing on your 'all important' future--a focus sure to keep your anxiety level high and you on constant fear-danger alert. 
Relax and enjoy where you are and what you have NOW. Experience your blessings--don't count them.


JUST BEE
Photography by Sean Royce

Allow yourself worry-free moments of wonder

Get Yourself Free!
  • Take a walk to enjoy the beauty in nature. Stop pushing yourself to pick up speed to get your heart rate up so you can hurry up and get back to work to make it through another day. Let nature suck you in.
  • Make a photo or art journal of your discoveries. Take a camera or sketch pad with you to capture in-the-moment treasures to help you stay present as you look for gems in your environment that tickle your curiosity. 
  • Seek ways to waste your time creating delicious meals to share with family and friends. Let your creativity and taste buds lead you on a journey to slow you down and enhance your social life. 
  • Enjoy that cup of coffee or tea in the garden while listening to the hum of the birds and bees and the soft rustle of trees while doing nothing. Stop pushing yourself to be productive.

 'Be content with what you have; rejoice in the way things are. When you realize there is nothing lacking, the whole world belongs to you'. Lao Tzu


Capturing a moment of childish wonder
Baby Grayson communes with fledgling great horned owl  
Patrick Gibbons, Photographer


Enjoy 3 minutes of worry-free wonder NOW

Click on the link for 'Oliver's Ultimate Show' to enjoy a most wondrous peacock dance.  This is a calming treasure I come back to often.



Video by Baskaran.tts
Dhaliyur Hill Valley / Coimbatore
South India

** Note from Baskaran Tts: 'Feel free to LIKE & SHARE this video to your loved ones'



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For more than 35 years, Susan Meyerott has been helping people lighten up and step over invisible barriers to change one step at a time. She speaks to your heart, puts you at ease, and makes changing easier than ever before.


If you're interested in learning more about closing the gap between where you are now and where you want to be, sign up for free e-mail subscription.

Thursday, May 26, 2016

A Message for the Weary: Welcome Home



Welcome Home

You've been away for a time that seemed so long—

Now you're back where you belong.

Welcome home where you're loved and safe.

Let it all go.....



'After wandering across the night sky

The pale moon pauses 

Above the windswept sea 

To ponder the thin cover offered by 

Waning clouds and slips of canyon fog

And to wait for the

Rising sun’s glow and warmth

Before making its descent.'

Judith L Smith-Foote




No matter where you've been,

No matter the past,

You are loved,

and you are safe.

Sunday, May 22, 2016

The Procrastination Cure: How to Stop Over-thinking

'We can't all, and some of us don't. That's all there is to it.'  Winnie the Pooh 
 
Curing a Bad Case of Over-thinking
Okay, come clean. What's the thing you've been thinking you need to do you just haven't gotten around to doing?

Come on, you know what it is! It's the very thing that if you did it you could finally relax and feel good about just taking care of it.  It's that thing your mind has been working on overtime--over-thinking it or avoiding thinking about it. Either way the results are the same: You're left feeling antsy about something hanging over you.

The Anticipation is Killing Me!

The thing is, you know there is something on your mind that continues to show up for brief visits every morning, weekend or evening before it disappears as you return to your work, or other such distractions. And you also know, until you take care of it, it will continue to irritate you.

Years ago a cartoon featured the lovable cat, Garfield, considering the task of getting out to exercise. He thinks, "I probably should get up and exercise, but my feet will start to hurt and my heart will pound. I'll get out of breath, start to sweat, and I won't be able to make it back home. Exercise isn't so bad," he says, "But the anticipation is killing me!"

Like Garfield, the thing you need to do probably isn't so bad, but the anticipation is killing you! 
'The problem is that small first step could potentially have a large impact on your life so you over-think it. The anticipation leads to procrastination, killing your motivation to take a step.'

Begin Simply, and Simply Begin

To overcome the inertia to taking the first step, begin simply, and simply begin! Consider Mark Twain's philosophy:
'Eat a live frog first thing in the morning and nothing worse will happen to you the rest of the day.'
Brian Tracy in his book, 'Eat That Frog!', plays off Twain's quirky quip to create 21 ways to stop procrastinating. Tracy equates your 'frog' to your biggest, most important task, the one likeliest to have the greatest positive impact on your life---yes, the very THING we've been talking about!

Tracy goes on to lay down the first two rules of 'frog eating' :
'If you have to eat two frogs, eat the ugliest one first.'
'If you have to eat a live frog at all, it doesn't pay to sit and look at it for very long.'
To Cure Procrastination: Apply the Rule of Frog

Basically, the rule of frog says stop anticipating, and start each day by doing the most important thing that needs doing before you do anything else. Don't sit around thinking about taking that first bite of frog. Bite into the hardest, ugliest task you've been avoiding first thing in the morning -- and do it every morning. 


Leap Frog Your Way to a Satisfying, Productive Life

Begin simply: make a short list of 'frogs'. Then simply begin to jump through those self-imposed hoops, leap frogging your way each and every morning to a more satisfying and productive life.

And don't leap over the obvious---sometimes the thing you're avoiding doing is NOTHING! Sometimes when you're life has been filled with hyperactivity doing nothing is the most difficult activity of all.

Why wait to get started? Jump in NOW. 


Frogs to Eat First Thing in the Morning
Make a list of your frogs. Choose an ugly one.

Don't miss these ugly frogs:
  • Taking time just for you.
  • Practice the 'DO NOTHING' exercise.
Putting your self-care first can be a very ugly frog:
  • Make that phone call
  • Organize your office or home
  • Start that school application
  • Ask for Help
  • Organize your taxes
  • Make that doctor appointment 
  • Start a letter to that person in need
  • Start contributing  or increase the amount contributed to your retirement savings account.
  • Exercise
  • Find a new job
  • Research colleges
  • Make contact with a good friend



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For more than 35 years, Susan Meyerott has been helping people lighten up and step over invisible barriers to change one step at a time. She speaks to your heart, puts you at ease, and makes changing easier than ever before.

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Saturday, May 21, 2016

Never Try to Teach a Pig to Sing


Ducunt fata volentem, nolentem trahunt
The Fates guide those who go willingly. All others they drag.

Are You Trying to Teach a Pig to Sing?

It's a drag--that person who does things so differently from you really irritates and annoys you. So you take it upon yourself to fix him and show him how to do it your way--the right way. It works, right? Wrong.

Just as Rocky said to Bullwinkle (at the beginning of each cartoon when Bullwinkle said 'watch me pull a rabbit out of my hat'):

"That trick never works."

That trick doesn't even work if you attempt to fix yourself so you can fit your square or squiggly self into that round hole to please others.


 Stop wasting your time trying to make you or others into something you're not. As Robert Heinlein said:

 "Never try to teach a pig how to sing, it wastes your time and annoys the pig."

Does this mean people can't grow and change? No. It means there are many ways to accomplish things and we need to accept the differing gifts in ourselves and others with grace, compassion, and understanding. A pig can easily learn how to hunt for truffles but try as they might--they can't learn to sing.

It never works to attempt to make people over to be like you. It always works to encourage others become their own best selves.

"Never try to teach a pig how to sing, it wastes your time and annoys the pig," means we need to accept the realities of life. You can't make a pig sing no matter how hard you try--and no matter how annoyed the pig gets.

So the next time you try to take on another person as your make-over project, know 'that  little piggy' doesn't want to learn how to sing your tune or dance in step with your timing--so stop wasting your time and annoying her!  Let her learn her own dance and tune.



Stop Wasting Your Time and Annoying Others

We all have 100% natural, healthy, effective ways we prefer to deal with the world around us--and all of them are perfectly sound ways to get things done. You can stop wasting your time and annoying others by acknowledging these differences and learning how to make a constructive use of them.

  • Where in your life are you trying to teach a pig to sing?
  • Who are you annoying most--you or another person?
  • Do you want to continue wasting your time or being annoyed?
  • Are the Fates guiding you? Or are you being dragged to the obvious conclusions?

I am fond of pigs. Dogs look up to us. Cats look down on us. Pigs treat us as equals.Winston Churchill

**A special thank you to Vicki Brown, a member of Linkedin MBTI discussion group for sharing "Ducunt fata volentem, nolentem trahunt"




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For more than 35 years, Susan Meyerott has been helping people lighten up and step over invisible barriers to change one step at a time. She speaks to your heart, puts you at ease, and makes changing easier than ever before.


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