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Hi ! Thanks for asking! She's great! Such a sweetie pie!

I'm totally lame at techno stuff so I'll hound my hubby for a digipic for you

all.

We took so many of -2- when she was little and I think Greg is worn

out and we haven't taken as many with Olivia. was his first, my 5th.

Isn't that the way it goes? I gotta hassle him.

How are you doing?

Hugs,

LeAnn

Visit my online store!

http://www.watkinsonline.com/kirsch

Re: LeAnn

Hi LeAnn... How is that 8 week little bundle of love doing? Are

we going to get a pic soon?

Hugs

Live Long....Laugh Hard....Email Often

On Thu, 30 Sep 2004 16:16:35 -0700, LeAnn Kirsch

wrote:

Hi ! Welcome to a great group! I'm just outside San

Diego. Are you close by?

I'm 44, 6 kids including an 8 week old! Greg and I are both

self-employed too.

Take care,

LeAnn

Work from home!

http://www.zestybiz.com

Visit our online store!

http://www.watkinsonline.com/kirsch

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Share on other sites

Hi LeAnn....I'm so glad to hear she's doing great. I bet she is

just a sweetheart...Give her biggggg hugs and kisses for me.

I'm doing okay :)

Well you hassle him for a pic of Olivia and of course we have

to see too.

Sending Love and Hugs

Hi ! Thanks for asking! She's great! Such a sweetie

pie!

I'm totally lame at techno stuff so I'll hound my hubby for a

digipic for you all.

We took so many of -2- when she was little and I think

Greg is worn

out and we haven't taken as many with Olivia. was his

first, my 5th.

Isn't that the way it goes? I gotta hassle him.

How are you doing?

Hugs,

LeAnn

Visit my online store!

http://www.watkinsonline.com/kirsch

Re: LeAnn

Hi LeAnn... How is that 8 week little bundle of love doing?

Are

we going to get a pic soon?

Hugs

Live Long....Laugh Hard....Email Often

On Thu, 30 Sep 2004 16:16:35 -0700, LeAnn Kirsch

wrote:

Hi ! Welcome to a great group! I'm just outside San

Diego. Are you close by?

I'm 44, 6 kids including an 8 week old! Greg and I are both

self-employed too.

Take care,

LeAnn

Work from home!

http://www.zestybiz.com

Visit our online store!

http://www.watkinsonline.com/kirsch

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Will do ! She's asleep at the moment........sshhhhhhhhhhhhh.........! :-)

looks exactly like Greg! You'd think he had her by himself and she's so

bonded to

her dad that I tease him that he's mom and dad in one.

LeAnn in San Diego

http://www.watkinsonline.com/kirsch

Re: LeAnn

Hi LeAnn... How is that 8 week little bundle of love doing?

Are

we going to get a pic soon?

Hugs

Live Long....Laugh Hard....Email Often

On Thu, 30 Sep 2004 16:16:35 -0700, LeAnn Kirsch

wrote:

Hi ! Welcome to a great group! I'm just outside San

Diego. Are you close by?

I'm 44, 6 kids including an 8 week old! Greg and I are both

self-employed too.

Take care,

LeAnn

Work from home!

http://www.zestybiz.com

Visit our online store!

http://www.watkinsonline.com/kirsch

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Is Your Life Run by " Should " ?

by Maggie Craddock

Our most deeply held values and beliefs are nothing more than our most

emotionally saturated thoughts. Thus, when we get down to the serious business

of working through limiting beliefs that may be retarding our professional

growth, we will need to deal with some powerful feelings that have been fueling

these beliefs for some time. Changing the belief system behind our perspective

of reality can be as painful emotionally as severing a limb is physically. One

of the ways we avoid the pain of examining our most familiar beliefs is by

convincing ourselves that we " should " operate according to this belief system.

Whenever we say to ourselves, " I should ... " we are speaking out of an

internalized belief system that reflects our inability to trust ourselves. The

bummer about " shoulds " is that when we are dominated by them, we are also

dominated by the fear of being rejected or abandoned in some way, because that's

the core emotional fear that activates many of them. These ongoing fears leave

many of us drained and exhausted.

Part of the work in this stage is to take a deeper look not only at what the

thoughts swirling just below the surface of our consciousness are but also at

what they are doing to us daily. Those pesky little shoulds " I should lose

weight... I should stop smoking... I should have a bigger house... I should

spend more time with my kids... I should be making as much money as my sister...

" - that keep nipping away at our psyches are the psychic equivalent of Chinese

water torture. Every time we use the word should, either mentally or verbally,

not only are we giving our power away, we are also losing energy that is vital

to our ability to take creative ownership of our careers and our lives.

The trick to releasing the shoulds is realizing that they have an emotional

component as well as an intellectual one. You can make a list of the shoulds

that you need to release, but you will be making this list over and over unless

you deal with the feelings that keep them clinging to your psyche like Velcro.

Obviously, listing them is just going to remind you of ways you are falling

short of the glorious role you are playing to prove you are " good enough. " You

need to try something more strategic.

The following two exercises are designed to help you begin to release your

litany of shoulds and identify your authentic priorities. Many people feel a

tremendous surge of energy while doing this work. When you release your shoulds

you finally stop giving yourself those messages that drain you of the energy you

need to move forward.

WEEDING THE " SHOULDS "

I got the name for this exercise from a client who told me that when she became

discouraged, she often realized that she was having a " should attack. " To help

retrain her thought process, she actually got down on her knees and pulled the

weeds out of her flowerbed. She visualized herself pulling the " shoulds " out of

her psyche as she pulled the weeds out of the ground. This client developed a

physical ritual that got to the heart of the work for her. Likewise, we need to

physically release the emotions connected to our shoulds if we are going to make

meaningful progress in thinning these " mental weeds. "

Find a picture of yourself as a small child. Next, take your journal, notebook,

or laptop and find a place where you can be around children.

" Kids!? " I've had incredulous clients thunder (these are usually the ones who

are not parents; parents get this exercise before I'm through describing it).

" I'm a busy person, " I had one client respond in a huff. " I don't have time for

this! I have important career decisions to make and I'm on a deadline! "

The reason it's important to do this exercise around kids is that they reawaken

an energy that has been dormant in many of us for far too long - the energy of

gentleness. Spending time with children reminds you that a vital part of getting

in touch with your authentic self is learning to be gentle with yourself.

Phrases such as " Get that client meeting or you can get a new job! Are you an

idiot? Didn't you hear me tell you? " are the types of harsh messages that too

many of us have become accustomed to in our jobs. What's worse, since the way we

speak to others is a direct reflection of the way we speak to ourselves, the

mean-spirited behavior and verbal abuse that takes place in many workplaces

reflects a growing problem - we are suffering from a gentleness deficiency.

The limiting beliefs and self-doubts that plague most of us are formidable

opponents. One of the most effective ways of dealing with these harsh internal

messages is to learn to question every single should and limiting belief with

the gentle innocence of children. It was only when we were children that our

psyches were malleable enough to absorb these beliefs without questioning them.

By acknowledging our limiting beliefs and honoring the way they may have served

us in the past, we align mentally with what's going on inside us. Telling

our-elves that we are " wrong " to hold the beliefs we do or denying them

altogether just keeps us fighting a losing battle. Now that I've explained why

you need to be around children to do this exercise (spending some time in a

public park is a great way to do this), let me be a bit more specific about how

this exercise works.

While you need to be around a bunch of kids, you're also going to need some

privacy for part of this exercise to do a bit of written reflection. This means

that whether you are spending time with a friend's kids or your own, you are

going to need a buddy who helps you take a " time-out " in the corner of your room

while you write in your journal.

The first part of this exercise is easy - just get a feel for the kids. If you

are in a public park, notice how they run and play and interact with each other.

If you are with some kids you know, get right down there on the floor and play

with them. Notice how they react when they want something, how they recover

after a fall, and how much they trust their caregivers to take care of them.

When you are ready, take a time-out and take out the picture of yourself as a

child. It's time to reflect on what you imagine you were like when you were

about the age of the children around you. Now, from the perspective of that

child you were in the past, take out your journal or laptop and start listing

your shoulds. Just write them all down as fast as you can. For example:

a.. I should make more money.

b.. I should have a better car.

c.. I should get married.

d.. I should lose weight so my favorite jeans fit.

List as many as you can as fast as you can; don't bother making sense of them

yet. Please be sure to include your thoughts about the professional role you

" should " play in life:

a.. I should stay at my current firm.

b.. I should start my own business.

c.. I should learn a second language.

d.. I should be teaching more classes.

Once you start winding down, take a look at this list from the perspective you

would have had as a child. As vividly as possible, try to imagine yourself as a

small child sitting next to you reviewing each item on this list and asking with

the innocence that only kids possess why you should do all these things. If you

can't explain why a particular goal is on your list, you might consider weeding

it out. Bear in mind that a child is likely to ask why doing a particular thing

will be fun for you and how it will make you happy. If any of your shoulds can't

pass that test, it's time to weed them out!

Take your time with Weeding the " Shoulds. " Some people can do this exercise in

an afternoon. However, other clients have reported that they kept coming up with

new and subtler shoulds over the course of a week. Getting through this exercise

successfully is critical to building the self-acceptance necessary to proceed to

the next stage, Emotional Ownership.

HAVING IT ALL!

Let's face it - we all want it all! Wealth, power, flexibility... with as little

effort on our part as possible, please. Ask most people what their ideal

lifestyle would be, and frequently you will hear something along the lines of,

" I'd like to earn enough money to set my own work schedule... to have a

beautiful home... to spend time with my children ... to travel whenever I

want.... " The list goes on.

One of the issues that many of us have to confront as we integrate our diverse

desires is how to prioritize. When we have a clear picture of what our authentic

goals are, as opposed to what we believe we " should " pursue in life, we are able

to make temporary sacrifices in the interest of our long-term success without

having our energy drained by self-doubt. This is particularly vital in a culture

in which we are presented with so many choices and where the media encourages us

to " have it all. "

One of the first steps in achieving your goals is deciding how much you really

want them. When our desire for something is a reflection of our authentic sense

of self, we can focus on achieving this goal in a way that maximizes our ability

to achieve it. One of the main impediments to success is that many of us have

been taught to suppress our passion in favor of the logical arguments we hear

from others about what we " should " do. Because of this, many of us become

confused trying to separate what we really want from what we have been taught we

should want.

Now that you have some experience listing your shoulds, you are ready for the

next exercise, which is designed to help you identify the genuine desires that

you may have suppressed while making choices based on the values you have

internalized from others.

UNCOVERING YOUR AUTHENTIC PRIORITIES

This exercise consists of three parts: reviewing your shoulds, describing your

authentic self, and ranking your priorities.

1.. Reviewing your shoulds. Basically, your shoulds are a (sometimes harsh)

list of beliefs about how you aren't measuring up. The good news here is that

all these negative beliefs can be transformed into positive goals that reflect

your authentic self. For example, if one of your shoulds takes the form of " I

should trust my own judgment " this can be transformed into the realization that

if you were operating from your authentic self, you would be confident about

your decisions and not driven by the need to constantly solicit others'

opinions. When you are being your authentic self, you are guided by your genuine

values and highest ideals. Go through your list of shoulds, and pick out those

that you can transform into characteristics that you feel describe you when you

are at your best.

2.. Describing your authentic self. After reworking your shoulds into a list

of characteristics that define your authentic self, write a description of this

self in the third person. Your job here is to write as if your authentic self

were a good friend whom you know intimately. Write as much detail as you can

about how your authentic self relates to others. What kind of life does he or

she have? What are the priorities of your ideal self? As you describe the inner

world and the life choices of your authentic self, remember that this

description, however genuine, is related in many ways to your concept of your

ideal self. Bear in mind that your ideals and desires will constantly change as

the world changes.

3.. Ranking your priorities. After describing your authentic self, answer the

following questions:

a.. What are the three most important things in your life right now?

b.. Do you have mixed feelings about any of these priorities?

c.. Does the way you are living reflect these priorities? If not, why not?

The only way you can make a mistake with this exercise is if you answer it the

way you feel you should. One of the main reasons that it is vital to weed out

the shoulds is that these negative messages have the ring of internal commands

rather than suggestions and keep us so rigidly focused on what we " should "

become that we are no longer enjoying the process of getting there.

Shoulds are sneaky. Our psyches can fool us by allowing the rigid roles we play

to mutate, so we may think we've gotten in touch with our true selves but all

we've really done is switch masks at the costume ball of life. One of the key

areas where some of the self-help systems fall down on the job is in preaching

that all we have to do is think happy thoughts, and we will reconnect with our

true selves while our troubles dissolve into the light. Promises like these are

the philosophical equivalent of popping a pill to feel better so you don't have

to learn from life's challenges. Both our negative and our positive feelings and

experiences are vital parts of reality. Getting in touch with your authentic

self will help you make good use of both the negative and the positive forces in

your life in a gentle and transformative way.

This article was excerpted from The Authentic Career, ©2004, by Maggie Craddock.

Reprinted with permission of the publisher, New World Library.

www.newworldlibrary.com

About the Author

MAGGIE CRADDOCK is an executive coach with clients across the professional

spectrum. Formerly a Lipper Award-winning fund manager on Wall Street, Maggie

now helps people find career happiness and success. Her work has been featured

in publications ranging from the Wall Street Journal to 0: The Oprah Magazine.

Based in New York City, she speaks throughout the world on workplace issues.

Visit her website at: www.workplacerelationships.com

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Share on other sites

Nachi,

What an excellent article!! Thanks so very much for sharing this one

with us -- I found it very insightful and helpful. Hugs, PJ

nachiketan wrote:

Is Your Life Run by " Should " ?

by Maggie Craddock

Our most deeply held values and beliefs are nothing more than our most

emotionally saturated thoughts. Thus, when we get down to the serious business

of working through limiting beliefs that may be retarding our professional

growth, we will need to deal with some powerful feelings that have been fueling

these beliefs for some time. Changing the belief system behind our perspective

of reality can be as painful emotionally as severing a limb is physically. One

of the ways we avoid the pain of examining our most familiar beliefs is by

convincing ourselves that we " should " operate according to this belief system.

Whenever we say to ourselves, " I should ... " we are speaking out of an

internalized belief system that reflects our inability to trust ourselves. The

bummer about " shoulds " is that when we are dominated by them, we are also

dominated by the fear of being rejected or abandoned in some way, because that's

the core emotional fear that activates many of them. These ongoing fears leave

many of us drained and exhausted.

Part of the work in this stage is to take a deeper look not only at what the

thoughts swirling just below the surface of our consciousness are but also at

what they are doing to us daily. Those pesky little shoulds " I should lose

weight... I should stop smoking... I should have a bigger house... I should

spend more time with my kids... I should be making as much money as my sister...

" - that keep nipping away at our psyches are the psychic equivalent of Chinese

water torture. Every time we use the word should, either mentally or verbally,

not only are we giving our power away, we are also losing energy that is vital

to our ability to take creative ownership of our careers and our lives.

The trick to releasing the shoulds is realizing that they have an emotional

component as well as an intellectual one. You can make a list of the shoulds

that you need to release, but you will be making this list over and over unless

you deal with the feelings that keep them clinging to your psyche like Velcro.

Obviously, listing them is just going to remind you of ways you are falling

short of the glorious role you are playing to prove you are " good enough. " You

need to try something more strategic.

The following two exercises are designed to help you begin to release your

litany of shoulds and identify your authentic priorities. Many people feel a

tremendous surge of energy while doing this work. When you release your shoulds

you finally stop giving yourself those messages that drain you of the energy you

need to move forward.

WEEDING THE " SHOULDS "

I got the name for this exercise from a client who told me that when she became

discouraged, she often realized that she was having a " should attack. " To help

retrain her thought process, she actually got down on her knees and pulled the

weeds out of her flowerbed. She visualized herself pulling the " shoulds " out of

her psyche as she pulled the weeds out of the ground. This client developed a

physical ritual that got to the heart of the work for her. Likewise, we need to

physically release the emotions connected to our shoulds if we are going to make

meaningful progress in thinning these " mental weeds. "

Find a picture of yourself as a small child. Next, take your journal, notebook,

or laptop and find a place where you can be around children.

" Kids!? " I've had incredulous clients thunder (these are usually the ones who

are not parents; parents get this exercise before I'm through describing it).

" I'm a busy person, " I had one client respond in a huff. " I don't have time for

this! I have important career decisions to make and I'm on a deadline! "

The reason it's important to do this exercise around kids is that they reawaken

an energy that has been dormant in many of us for far too long - the energy of

gentleness. Spending time with children reminds you that a vital part of getting

in touch with your authentic self is learning to be gentle with yourself.

Phrases such as " Get that client meeting or you can get a new job! Are you an

idiot? Didn't you hear me tell you? " are the types of harsh messages that too

many of us have become accustomed to in our jobs. What's worse, since the way we

speak to others is a direct reflection of the way we speak to ourselves, the

mean-spirited behavior and verbal abuse that takes place in many workplaces

reflects a growing problem - we are suffering from a gentleness deficiency.

The limiting beliefs and self-doubts that plague most of us are formidable

opponents. One of the most effective ways of dealing with these harsh internal

messages is to learn to question every single should and limiting belief with

the gentle innocence of children. It was only when we were children that our

psyches were malleable enough to absorb these beliefs without questioning them.

By acknowledging our limiting beliefs and honoring the way they may have served

us in the past, we align mentally with what's going on inside us. Telling

our-elves that we are " wrong " to hold the beliefs we do or denying them

altogether just keeps us fighting a losing battle. Now that I've explained why

you need to be around children to do this exercise (spending some time in a

public park is a great way to do this), let me be a bit more specific about how

this exercise works.

While you need to be around a bunch of kids, you're also going to need some

privacy for part of this exercise to do a bit of written reflection. This means

that whether you are spending time with a friend's kids or your own, you are

going to need a buddy who helps you take a " time-out " in the corner of your room

while you write in your journal.

The first part of this exercise is easy - just get a feel for the kids. If you

are in a public park, notice how they run and play and interact with each other.

If you are with some kids you know, get right down there on the floor and play

with them. Notice how they react when they want something, how they recover

after a fall, and how much they trust their caregivers to take care of them.

When you are ready, take a time-out and take out the picture of yourself as a

child. It's time to reflect on what you imagine you were like when you were

about the age of the children around you. Now, from the perspective of that

child you were in the past, take out your journal or laptop and start listing

your shoulds. Just write them all down as fast as you can. For example:

a.. I should make more money.

b.. I should have a better car.

c.. I should get married.

d.. I should lose weight so my favorite jeans fit.

List as many as you can as fast as you can; don't bother making sense of them

yet. Please be sure to include your thoughts about the professional role you

" should " play in life:

a.. I should stay at my current firm.

b.. I should start my own business.

c.. I should learn a second language.

d.. I should be teaching more classes.

Once you start winding down, take a look at this list from the perspective you

would have had as a child. As vividly as possible, try to imagine yourself as a

small child sitting next to you reviewing each item on this list and asking with

the innocence that only kids possess why you should do all these things. If you

can't explain why a particular goal is on your list, you might consider weeding

it out. Bear in mind that a child is likely to ask why doing a particular thing

will be fun for you and how it will make you happy. If any of your shoulds can't

pass that test, it's time to weed them out!

Take your time with Weeding the " Shoulds. " Some people can do this exercise in

an afternoon. However, other clients have reported that they kept coming up with

new and subtler shoulds over the course of a week. Getting through this exercise

successfully is critical to building the self-acceptance necessary to proceed to

the next stage, Emotional Ownership.

HAVING IT ALL!

Let's face it - we all want it all! Wealth, power, flexibility... with as little

effort on our part as possible, please. Ask most people what their ideal

lifestyle would be, and frequently you will hear something along the lines of,

" I'd like to earn enough money to set my own work schedule... to have a

beautiful home... to spend time with my children ... to travel whenever I

want.... " The list goes on.

One of the issues that many of us have to confront as we integrate our diverse

desires is how to prioritize. When we have a clear picture of what our authentic

goals are, as opposed to what we believe we " should " pursue in life, we are able

to make temporary sacrifices in the interest of our long-term success without

having our energy drained by self-doubt. This is particularly vital in a culture

in which we are presented with so many choices and where the media encourages us

to " have it all. "

One of the first steps in achieving your goals is deciding how much you really

want them. When our desire for something is a reflection of our authentic sense

of self, we can focus on achieving this goal in a way that maximizes our ability

to achieve it. One of the main impediments to success is that many of us have

been taught to suppress our passion in favor of the logical arguments we hear

from others about what we " should " do. Because of this, many of us become

confused trying to separate what we really want from what we have been taught we

should want.

Now that you have some experience listing your shoulds, you are ready for the

next exercise, which is designed to help you identify the genuine desires that

you may have suppressed while making choices based on the values you have

internalized from others.

UNCOVERING YOUR AUTHENTIC PRIORITIES

This exercise consists of three parts: reviewing your shoulds, describing your

authentic self, and ranking your priorities.

1.. Reviewing your shoulds. Basically, your shoulds are a (sometimes harsh)

list of beliefs about how you aren't measuring up. The good news here is that

all these negative beliefs can be transformed into positive goals that reflect

your authentic self. For example, if one of your shoulds takes the form of " I

should trust my own judgment " this can be transformed into the realization that

if you were operating from your authentic self, you would be confident about

your decisions and not driven by the need to constantly solicit others'

opinions. When you are being your authentic self, you are guided by your genuine

values and highest ideals. Go through your list of shoulds, and pick out those

that you can transform into characteristics that you feel describe you when you

are at your best.

2.. Describing your authentic self. After reworking your shoulds into a list

of characteristics that define your authentic self, write a description of this

self in the third person. Your job here is to write as if your authentic self

were a good friend whom you know intimately. Write as much detail as you can

about how your authentic self relates to others. What kind of life does he or

she have? What are the priorities of your ideal self? As you describe the inner

world and the life choices of your authentic self, remember that this

description, however genuine, is related in many ways to your concept of your

ideal self. Bear in mind that your ideals and desires will constantly change as

the world changes.

3.. Ranking your priorities. After describing your authentic self, answer the

following questions:

a.. What are the three most important things in your life right now?

b.. Do you have mixed feelings about any of these priorities?

c.. Does the way you are living reflect these priorities? If not, why not?

The only way you can make a mistake with this exercise is if you answer it the

way you feel you should. One of the main reasons that it is vital to weed out

the shoulds is that these negative messages have the ring of internal commands

rather than suggestions and keep us so rigidly focused on what we " should "

become that we are no longer enjoying the process of getting there.

Shoulds are sneaky. Our psyches can fool us by allowing the rigid roles we play

to mutate, so we may think we've gotten in touch with our true selves but all

we've really done is switch masks at the costume ball of life. One of the key

areas where some of the self-help systems fall down on the job is in preaching

that all we have to do is think happy thoughts, and we will reconnect with our

true selves while our troubles dissolve into the light. Promises like these are

the philosophical equivalent of popping a pill to feel better so you don't have

to learn from life's challenges. Both our negative and our positive feelings and

experiences are vital parts of reality. Getting in touch with your authentic

self will help you make good use of both the negative and the positive forces in

your life in a gentle and transformative way.

This article was excerpted from The Authentic Career, ©2004, by Maggie Craddock.

Reprinted with permission of the publisher, New World Library.

www.newworldlibrary.com

About the Author

MAGGIE CRADDOCK is an executive coach with clients across the professional

spectrum. Formerly a Lipper Award-winning fund manager on Wall Street, Maggie

now helps people find career happiness and success. Her work has been featured

in publications ranging from the Wall Street Journal to 0: The Oprah Magazine.

Based in New York City, she speaks throughout the world on workplace issues.

Visit her website at: www.workplacerelationships.com

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