Add Rituals To Your Next Vacation

My wife and I are on vacation at an old haunt at Barnegat Light on Long Beach Island “down the Jersey shore” as you read this.

We love everything about the shore but what makes us anticipate this time together is revisiting and inventing new rituals.

Walking to the ice cream parlor near the lighthouse and waiting in a long line where we get to meet people from everywhere and around the corner.

Sitting on the beach after hours until the sun goes down.

Discovering a new walk.  Sitting by the dock of the bay would make Otis Redding happy.  (By the way, did you know Otis Redding never lived to see how big his version of “Dock of the Bay” eventually became).

Dinner with someone new.

Playing air hockey, golf and Scrabble together on our iPads.

Who knows what rituals we will conjure up this week.

A friend told me that successful relationships have one thing in common – they are embellished by seemingly little rituals that bring people closer.

A couple married 72 years recently revealed that doing things together and making decisions together makes for happier relationships.

Those decisions don’t always have to be major life decisions.

We can practice by making a late night run to Café Bacio in Beach Haven where they sell only desserts.

Followed, of course, by running on the beach to work off the calories the next day.

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Treat Your Loved Ones As “Honored Guests”

Bobby Ocean wrote to me recently to share this wisdom:

“I borrowed it from a Zen province in France where everyone yearly renews their spiritual guidelines and during that time, those wedded renew the decision they made when first living together – to treat one another as an “honored guest”.”

“Honored Guest” exceeds husband/wife or mother/father.

Often we find ourselves treating others as if they are furniture – they are there but they have no feelings.

Titles are titles but “honored guests” is a concept that changes the way we relate to those close to us whom we love.

 

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The Awesome Power of Listening

Patrolman Kevin Briggs helped save many people from jumping to their death from San Francisco’s Golden Gate Bridge.

What Briggs discovered worked best was to just listen.

He didn’t have any magic words that could save the lives of those bent on committing suicide.  In a powerful message to all of us, Briggs says listening can be the best advice.

His advice is also effective in helping people who are not yet on the brink – all of us respond positively when someone lends an ear.

Here are the three building blocks to the awesome power of listening to another person:

  1. Listen to understand.
  2. Don’t argue, blame or tell the person how they feel.
  3. Being there for them may be the turning point they need.

Isn’t it ironic that no words can accomplish what no words can do?

Officer Briggs’ short inspirational talk on the power of listening is here.

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The To-Do List That Accomplishes The Most

The To-Do list that helps us accomplish the most is the one where the majority of items are never going to get done.

Many people are great at doing to-do lists, but fewer excel at getting things accomplished in spite of all the books that have been written on the subject.

Prioritize your tasks – All to-do’s are not created equally.

Only do 20% of them each day – 80% of all productivity comes from choosing the right 20% of your tasks to work on.  Make that decision wisely and you’ll have more time and accomplish more.

Don’t use your to-do list to park things you have no intention of doing – A task list should change constantly.  It must not be static.

Some things don’t need to be done at all – and some can be delegated to others.  Knowing the difference makes all the difference.

Finishing all your tasks means you failed – Happiness and success doesn’t come from getting all your work done because you’ll simply replace completed tasks with ones in an endless vicious cycle.

Assessing what is most important is the secret to productivity.

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Dreams

Young Millennials have been born into an age of great transition and uncertainty.

Over the past decade when they graduated from college, jobs were not readily available leaving many unemployed or underemployed.

Over 40% of Millennials live with their parents because of this and the high cost of repaying college loans.

Yet Millennials are an eternally optimistic generation.

They refuse to give up on their dreams as the oldest ones from their generation exceed 31 years of age.

Dreams are the sustenance of life.

When we stop dreaming, we stop living.

We settle for whatever we’ve got and don’t aim for more.

As long as we have air to breath, it is not only appropriate but essential that we never give up on our dreams.  Even if it is never attained, the person who dreams accomplishes more and is happier.

As Amy Tan said in The Hundred Secret Senses, “Everyone must dream. We dream to give ourselves hope”.

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Anxiety Fighters

Dealing with anxiety is harder than it looks in our digital/connected world.

There are medications for some and then there are frustrations from trying to tame a fast-moving world.

I have found these anxiety fighters just as effective as medication and none of them require a co-pay:

  1. At the first sign that anxiety is building, take ten deep breaths slowly breathing in for five seconds, holding it for five seconds and then gently letting it out for five seconds.  This works.  And you can do it longer if you like.
  2. Remember this number – 99.9%.  That’s the percentage of times what we’re worried about that is making us anxious will never happen.  Focus on 99.9%.
  3. The 0.1% when what we fear does happen, it rarely occurs exactly the way we feared it would happen.  Tuck this away in your head when fear and worry makes you anxious.
  4. Key tool to keep handy:  IOUs for the many times in life when you have faced up to anxiety and succeeded.  Thinking, “I’ve done it before and I can do it again” can be preventative.
  5. We have options to walk away from anxiety without telling anyone why.  It is our right to exit tense situations because we are being kind to ourselves.
  6. When the same people tend to increase your anxiety, cut down or cut out the time you spend with them.
  7. Fear of loss is normal and healthy.  In the end we all have to say goodbye to the ones we love and have to give up the things we’ve attained in life.  Another key thought:  loss is followed by something else gained.
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Talking To a Loved One You Have Lost

I once asked a psychologist how long it takes to overcome grief from losing a loved one and he said, “It takes as long as it takes as long as your grief doesn’t interfere with going on with life”.

In other words, grief becomes loss and loss can become a permanent sad place.

But there is help.

  1. Surround yourself with happy memories – pictures, letters, cookbooks.  I have inherited my mother’s Italian recipes and I feel reunited with her again when I carry on to make Italian Sunday “gravy”.  It will never be as good as hers, but somehow I feel connected in a happy way.  We’re in the kitchen together.
  2. Make the person you lost a part of the life in which you are moving on.  My best friend died suddenly two years ago.  He was like an older brother to me, but I am not overstating it when I say there isn’t a day that I don’t say his name, quote his wisdom to those around me or marvel at his human relations. (There, I’ve done it again!)
  3. For those who had a questionable or even hurtful relationship with a loved one who is now departed, guilt is not an option.  Trek to the cemetery and have the talk you always wanted to have with that difficult person.  They can’t answer back.  It’s all about you getting your feelings out.  A good thought is that they are in a better place now and would probably be sorry for any pain they caused you in this life and wish the best for you going forward.
  4. And if you are religious, this thought from a clergyman:  now you have someone else to pray to for help and guidance.

Our time on this earth is finite.

What we do with it is infinite.

Entering this new “relationship” with a loved one who is dearly departed is a positive and loving substitute for never ending grief.

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3 Surprising Things About Love

Love is what keeps us in special relationships but novelty is what helps love continue to grow.

  1. Meet your partner every day as if you’re meeting them after 30 days.  The response will be all consuming.  Before walking in the door to greet loved ones say to yourself, “Pretend I’m coming home from a month long absence.  How eager would I be and how would I act?”
  2. Be aware of how finite life is.  When you think how many more Christmases you have together, you tend not to waste valuable time.  Children grow up and go to college when they are 17 or 18, how many family vacations together do you have?  This one thought guarantees that you will have no regrets.
  3. For the first 5 minutes when you engage with family members, don’t try to improve them.  Either improve them or enjoy them.  You can’t do both.
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  • BobbyOcean I love that.  What a great way to “honor” important relationships.

  • The practices you suggest are very powerful, Jerry. I’d like to share another that has me amazed with it’s success. 
    I borrowed it from a Zen province in France where everyone yearly renews their spiritual guidelines and during that time, those wedded renew the decision they made when first living together – to treat one another as an “honored guest.” 
    Great phrase, loaded with the recognition of higher graces. Those words, together, trump “wife/husband,” or even “mother/father.” Those and all labels get tired and lose meaning. But “honored guest” is of much higher spiritual status and purity, and renews itself. 
    Try it. It’s the kind of energy that moves mountains.

    –Bobby Ocean

Do This Before Spending Another Year In Your Job

Enter free agency just like pro athletes.

They rent themselves out for relatively short periods of time – one to seven years at the best price they can get.

But it works for the rest of us, too.

Here’s what I do.

In a few weeks, I’ll reconvene at the Jersey Shore to decide how I want to spend the next year.  I like one-year arrangements because I own the company, but I have done longer deals with employers.

Should I continue writing my websites?  Change the model?  Launch short form video projects?  Do more speaking and seminars?  Write another book?

I factor in things like compensation, family and personal happiness and location.

I clear my mind of any prejudices I might have about what I did last year and face any fears of doing something completely unknown.

Within days I have a digital device full of notes and ideas and before the week is out I will either recommit to what I am doing, change some of it, change all of it or disrupt my career.

Avoiding getting stuck in a career and a life that has become monotonous is the goal.  I feel like I am actually taking charge of my life by going through this quite pleasant process every summer while vacationing.

Even for those of us with careers that are hard to leave – medicine or law come to mind – going through this process reinvigorates you when you consciously re-up for another year as your best chosen option.

I have more details on how to become a free agent in my book Out of Bad Comes Good – The Advantages of Disadvantages in Chapter 10 (Career Chaos).

I’ve made the chapter available free for those interested – read it here.

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  • I have been self employed for a number of years and now find myself in a position of going back to work. I have gotten mixed responses on this question. Should I include references on my resume ? I used to always include them but have been told it is no longer in vogue to do so.

The Only Proven Way to Improve a Marriage

Don’t try to change your partner.

It cannot be done no matter how hard you try.  So the best alternative is to accept the person you love unconditionally.

This does not mean that certain accommodations can be for the happiness of both parties.

  1. Listen and learn – most people in life are more than content if they can get someone – anyone – to actually listen to them.  Often, listening is enough.  You can imagine why spouses and partners grow angry at their mates when they feel they are not being heard.
  2. Better yet, reinforce what the other person is saying – meaning, if your spouse says we never have dinner together, work always interferes.  When you plan a dinner together, reinforce that you liked dining earlier with the person you love.  Don’t say, “You wanted me to come home early, so I did, are you happy?”
  3. Give up control – controlling people ruins the lives of those around them and their own lives as well.  Try to just let go and see if it kills you.  It won’t, but you may feel a lot better.  Relationships thrive when they are free to grow.

Lots of books have been written and money spent on counseling to help couples improve their marriages.

Who knew that the free advice is the best advice?

Accept each other the way you are – no changes required.

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