What Do You Value?

September 26th, 2011
This is a guest post written by Marilyn Edelson, MCC, CPCC, of OnTrack Coaching and Consulting, Inc, one of Boston’s leading coaches.

Every single last choice we make is based on our values. Whenever we decide between alternatives, we invariably choose the alternative what we value the most. Whether we acknowledge it or not, everything we do is a demonstration of what we consider most important at that moment.  So, knowing our values and organizing them in an order of priority is the starting point of personal strategic planning. It is only when we are clear about what we value, and in what order, that we can effectively organizing and plan our lives. Recently, in anticipating Hurricane/ tropical storm Irene, federal and state government entities all over the east coast had to choose between spending money during a time of fiscal scarcity and keeping people safe. They chose safety, no doubt with the memory of Katrina in mind. Of course, there was the inevitable media dissection afterwards but few – even the tea partyers—could deny that the value of life and safety had to be top priority.

What are Values?

Values are the principles upon which we base our actions i.e. they are an internal reference point for determining what is good, beneficial, important, useful, ethical.

Values are often lumped together with honesty and “integrity” (as in what is “right”) but can also be associated with what is personally meaningful – art, beauty, laughter.

Three accepted distinctions of values are:

  1. What you find most important
  2. Intrinsic worth
  3. Your standards for judgment and appraisal.

The opposite of values are negative drivers. . . the closely held beliefs that lead us down a negative path: resentment, control, need to get even, proving oneself, martyrdom, the desire to generate sympathy and the need to look good in the eyes of others. Since we can’t be in two places at once, finding our true values can often save us from our worst selves.

Know Your Values

There are many reasons it is helpful to know one’s own values. Values shape our choices and can guide us when we have to chose between two conflicting paths (work/family is a common one of those) . When we go against the grain of our values it erodes our self-esteem and can lead to more bad choices. Most importantly, values help us find our true purpose in life. . . what we believe in, stand for, would sacrifice for but, ultimately, what will fulfill us and make our lives truly worthwhile.

Value are typically not taught in school (although they should be!)  I, for one, never thought about mine until I became a coach even though they always influenced me from behind the scenes. Looking back, I might have made a number of different decisions in my life or, at least, not taken so long to find my true purpose.

Widely Held Values

It probably comes as no surprise that some the most commonly held values are: loving my family, compassion, making a difference and personal integrity.

Values Clarification

There are a number of ways to determine one’s top values. I usually suggest, narrowing down your list to 3-5. Usually values are captured in one word or a short phrase. Here’s a pretty complete list:

Accomplishment/ Results , Achievement, Adventure/ Excitement, Aesthetics/ Beauty, Altruism, Authenticity, Autonomy, Building things, Clarity, Commitment, Community, Compassion, Connection/ Bonding, Creativity, Developing others, Ease, Emotional health, Environment, Excellence, Family / family first, Financial freedom/ wealth, Fitness, Freedom/ Independence. Fun, Health/ Well-being, Honesty, Humor, Integrity, Intimacy, Joy, Leadership, Love, Loyalty. Making a difference, Mastery, Openness, Orderliness/ Accuracy, Partnership, Philanthropy, Power, Privacy/ Solitude, Recognition/ Acknowledgment, Religion, Risk taking, Romance, Security, Self-expression, Sensuality, Service/ Contribution, Spirituality, Success, Trust, Vitality and others we may have overlooked.

To do your Values Clarification first narrow down to 10 from this list, adding any you find missing. Then, you can choose one of the two following methods:

Method 1.  Prioritize those 10 first in order of importance to you and then according to how you actually live them.

Method 2. I call this one “Sophie’s Choice.”  For all of you familiar with the very sad movie starring Meryl Streep who had to make an impossible choice to keep only one of her two children with her in the concentration camp, this method involves prioritizing all 10 by asking yourself “if I could have one but not the other . . .” This provides an opportunity to be crystal clear about if you are ever in conflict.

Either way, once you know your values, you can take a look at your life and/ or business and see if there is a relationship between what is and isn’t working and make necessary adjustments. Don’t worry if those adjustments need some time to make . . . they just may. At least, you’ll be on your right path.

Means and End Goals

Make sure you differentiate between “means” goals and “ends” values. For instance “money” is a means to get to something else. The “end” value might be power, freedom, security or luxury/comfort. Always try to state your values as “ends” and not “means.”

You might also examine each value  to make it active, precise, and meaningful to you. For example, the value “Freedom” may mean “freedom from oppression”, “freedom to be myself”, “expanding freedom”, or some other phrase that more precisely describes your particular values. Finally, ask people close to you if the list agrees with how they know you to be.

Your Values and Goals and Choices

Values ultimately can evolve into high level goals. People may value freedom or hold freedom and social justice as “an important goal that I work to achieve”. . .

That brings us back to strategic planning. When our values and what they lead us to are clear we can then plan accordingly (This is true for individuals and for businesses.).

Copywrite 2011, Mariyln Edelson, OnTrack Coaching and Consulting, Inc, all rights reserved.

                 

Pursuing Happiness, Fulfilling Priorties

July 5th, 2011

The pursuit of happiness is a terrific right, one I am sure many of us celebrated in style over the weekend. Happiness is a wonderful, but fleeting emotion. Of course we want to feel happy- a dopamine release feels just great!  But the United States was not founded on fleeting principles or fleeting purposes. What supports our ability to be profoundly, madly, deeply, truly “happy” is flourishing in life.  One where you are fulfilled, your life is one of deepest joy because a) you feel life is entirely worth living (even the messy bits) and b) you feel you are fulfilling a greater purpose.

To flourish I have found you need to be crystal clear about 6 things:

  1. Your roles in life
  2. Your priorities
  3. Your core values
  4. Your signature strengths
  5. Your trip-ups and tolerations
  6. Your refreshers

If you are clear, absolutely “windexed-window, bird-bonking clear”, then you can more easily cultivate a flourishing, fulfilling life. You can solve lingering problems that interfere with your ability to focus on priorities and roles at work, home and play. So that you can realize goals, explore your interests and attend to your needs as well as those of people important to you. You can create a fulfilling, invigorating life where you are in control, even in the midst of chaos.

Being crystal clear about these 6 things requires you take a good long hard look in the proverbial mirror and assess what is working and what’s not in your life. You begin to identify where things are in sync and where things get wonky. Many of clues about where you are grounded, balanced and fulfilled and where you are not make themselves clear once you start really digging in.  Knowledge is power.

You can avoid the “As Soon As Trap”, the life dulling habit of planning on getting around to the joys of life and accomplishment “as soon as….” You can have a life where you are engaged. and there is meaning, serving or belonging to something you believe is bigger than you. Achievement or accomplishments are pursued for their own sake, even when there is no immediate positive emotion attached. A life with positive relationships- few things we do that are really happy are along- think about sharing a laugh, or a hard trek and how much closer that makes you feel and how much richer your life becomes.

“Freedom is nothing but a chance to be better.”  Albert Camus

Is Now Your Chance To Be Better?

Are you ready to thrive and create a life that is profoundly fulfilling?  I have an exciting new program, Priorities Fulfilled© that is designed to help you solve the lingering problems interfering with your ability to focus on priorities at work, home and play. This program is designed specifically to help people who:

  • have competing personal and professional priorities,
  • take on too much,
  • are stuck in neutral spinning their wheels,
  • and are ready to move forward and put bad habits and outdated ways of thinking behind them.

What will you get from Priorities Fulfilled©?

  • Make substantial progress towards realizing your most important priorities.
  • Develop a crystal clear picture of your core values and signature strengths these and how to best leverage them.
  • Powerful personal tools to address the mental, emotional and physical clutter that gets in the way.
  • Learn how to create and keep sacred time for you and your priorities amid the complexities of a busy modern life.
  • Cultivate an internal sense of calm control that allows you to hold your priorities front and center and take action.
  • Become skilled at making decisions in alignment with your priorities, values and strengths, with greater ease, clarity and confidence.
  • Receive real concrete help in achieving your goals.

There are three ways we can work together in the Priorities Fulfilled© program: a 3 hour super Session, a 5 week Private Intensive Series or a one day VIP Intensive. Each one is specially designed to met different needs and different timelines.

I am offering the first 5 people who commit to fulfilling their priorities special introductory pricing.  Use the code PF5711, good from July 1 – July 8, 2011.

For more information please contact me to schedule a complimentary 30 minute telephone session to discover what’s right for you.

                 

In Service

January 17th, 2011

This is Martin Luther King Day, the 25th Anniversary of Martin Luther King Jr. day. As The King Center says  “On this holiday, we commemorate the universal, unconditional love, forgiveness and nonviolence that empowered his revolutionary spirit.” Right, yes, he represented, embodied cultivated  love, forgiveness and non-violence he also lived with courage, dignity, service, and compassion.  I admire this man, his wife who as a partner in vision action, and deeply admire the conviction with which he lived.  In most simple, banal terms he walked his talk.

Dr. King said “Every man must decide whether he will walk in the light of creative altruism or in the darkness of destructive selfishness.” What is it that we do for other. Not just  doing but doing  unselfishly and in an inspired way, one that suits your abilities, talents, and resources.  That is a call to not be stymied by the “shoulds”, “can’t’s”, and “ought’s” that can block our intentions. I should volunteer every Saturday at the Boys and Girls club, maybe every Saturday does not work for your schedule, but might every third Wednesday work? “I can’t make that much of difference.” Who say you do needs to be grand, a small honest gesture is enough. “I ought to be donating more money. . . give what you can, lending your hands to a project is just fine.

Here are some examples of real world creative altruism:

  • A friend of mind is an artist, with limited financial means, but she volunteers teaching art at local transitional housing shelter.
  • A retired chef in my neighborhood creates healthy tasty meals for the local church preschool and afterschool programs.
  • A woman uses her experience of immigrating to this country after WWII as her inspiration to infuse her English as a second language tutoring with an acculturation slant.

So what are you doing for others? What will you do for others?

                 

If God doesn't judge people until after they die, why should we?

November 17th, 2010

“If God doesn’t judge people until after they die, why should we?” ~ Kathi Lynn

Wise words uttered by a dear friend. Thanks Kathi.

                 

Quiet Courage

November 15th, 2010

Courage, what exactly is it? How do we know when we have it?

  • Is it trusting in your own strength, physical or emotional?
  • Is it to act in accordance with one’s beliefs and values especially in spite of criticism?
  • Is it something a person must be able to sustain it in the face of difficulty?

I suggest it is all of these.  Courage can be big and bold like taking a stand in the face of great danger. Or it can be subtle perseverance towards an enterprising goal. Fundamentally I believe courage demands integrity, personal agency and honesty.  Honesty may not be the first associated made with the word courage, but to act authentically and aligned with core values demands a substantial amount of strength in the face of the unknown.

“Courage is the power to let go of the familiar.” ~ Raymond Lindquist

My clients are some of the most courageous people I know. Each and everyone without fail have reached that goal or a better outcome when they coupled their perseverance with personal agency. In some cases they have made long strides to overcome low self-esteem, self-efficacy as well as the discouraging pessimistic messages from others.

Their personal visions for a more compelling future laid the foundation, their will to let go of the familiar and to try again tomorrow supplied the tools and their innate abilities and creativity provided the materials to make real their aspirations.  To be a part of such a journey is an honor for which I am deeply grateful.

The zest for life they bring is sustaining and infectious.  One has ventured out to make a part-time ballroom dress design business, a big beautiful business.  Erin has rekindled the creative fires at home by literally and figuratively clearing away the clutter. An other client has pressed forward to complete her second children’s book. Emily has embraced a new sense of physically and took part in this year’s RAGBRI biking through Iowa. Dana created the sacred space in her home that nurtures her family. David made a bold decision to move back to the unexpected city with his wife and child because it was the right fit for them, even though it is far from “home.”

So how will you be courageous in service of your best life?

“Courage doesn’t always roar.  Sometimes courage is the little voice at the end of the day that says I’ll try again tomorrow.” ~Mary Anne Radmacher

 

                 

Since every man is obliged to promote happiness and virtue…

September 15th, 2010

“Since every man is obliged to promote happiness and virtue, he should be careful not to mislead unwary minds, by appearing to set too high a value upon things by which no real excellence is conferred.” ~ Samuel Johnson

Thank you Mr. Johnson for this most excellent reminder.

                 

How to Cultivate Community for Yourself

August 2nd, 2010

There can be no vulnerability without risk; there can be no community without vulnerability; there can be no peace, and ultimately no life, without community.”  ~ M. Scott Peck

A year ago I was training for several dance competitions and found myself writing about fellowship, adversity and values highlighted through dance; the sense of belonging support and community in dance, specifically ballroom dance. A year later I find myself reflecting on how we cultivate and become members of community. The word “community” is derived from the Old French communité, which is derived from the Latin communitas (cum, “with/together; munus, “gift”), a broad term for fellowship or organized society.1 To come together plus a gift, that is something shared, a pretty wonderful thing in life. To share in a gift, to give a gift to openly and wholly receive a gift we must be open and vulnerable otherwise we remain outside the fold of companionship and fully formed relationships.

A “sense of community” requires four elements: 1) membership, 2) influence, 3) integration and fulfillment of needs, and 4) shared emotional connection.2 To these four elements I would add vulnerability. Vulnerable not to expose yourself to danger, but rather to allow access to something about yourself that increases the gift shared.

Consider the critiques given to dancers, “Your technique is apparent, but your heart is not.” “Give yourself over to the feel of the movement, rather than only the steps.” “Don’t worry about the steps, just feel the music and let your body move with it.” What these comments point to is the need, really the requirement for a connection, on an emotional level, between the individual and others, the audience, the dance hall, or their immediate partner. To dance without feeling is a hollow communion. It is just technique displayed not something shared.

So how to cultivate community for yourself? Here’s an example:

You move to a new city and looking to find ways to connect with people, and explore your interests, like dance.  So you breakout the phone book, run an Internet search, ask around, look at the announcements and ads in local publications for dances, studios, and groups. Saturday night you go to the free lessons offered by the local social dance group, meeting new people out of your respective individual needs (integration and fulfillment of needs). There you learn about the different dance studios getting a sense of where you might feel most at home and then go to the group dance lessons at a studio. Next thing you know you are one of the folks taking group lessons; you and the other students and the instructor are bound by a place, membership boundaries are set (we dance at the such-and-such studio).  Spending time together learning steps, laughing over missteps, applauding the “I-finally-got-it moments”, and testing the feel of different leads and follows slowly but surely you influence each other and find yourself emotional invested. As you begin to help each other master patterns and transitions between patterns suddenly you realize you are freed up to improvise because you trust your partner and yourself to feel the moment and the music together. And then most wonderful and magical things happen, like being transported into the “MusicDance”. Others comment about how much fun looked like you were having or how they felt the tenderness in the dance, or “Can you show me that steps?” It gets started because you make yourself accessible to others and vice versa.

The fellowship experienced in dance is a thing of beauty and of strength. The gift grows with, for and because of each community member.  In my Values of Dancing post I noted Community/Fellowship as a value reflected in ballroom dancing.  When you share in a community, you have something in common with others, a shared experience, even if in only one area of life. You are connected and contribute to that shared bond of belonging to a community. People in a community celebrate together and pull together in times of need.

I know this sounds all woo-woo and frankly maybe to out there, too soft for many folks- too bad. We should all be so open to vulnerability to we live life we are playing out hearts out in a game or dancing our hearts out.  We should all be courageous enough to be with soul, knowing the scrapes, bruises and bumps that come with risk temporary, but the joys of connection and community are lasting, transferable and nurturing.

I will now get off my soapbox and back to the cha-cha-cha.

1“community, n.” OED Online. July 2009. Oxford University Press

2 McMillan, D.W., & Chavis, D.M. 1986., Sense of community: A definition and theory, Journal of Community Psychology, Vol. 14., pp 6 – 23

                 

Things only have the value that you give them.

June 23rd, 2010

Things only have the value that you give them.” ~ Moliere

How many times in our lives have we given more weight to something than it deserves? And how many times have we not seen the value in some achievement dismissed?

                 

The essence of true friendship is to make allowances for another's little lapses

June 16th, 2010

The essence of true friendship is to make allowances for another’s little lapses”. ~David Storey

Thank you to all of my friends and loved ones who have forgiven my lapses, little and big. Extending your forgiveness has always allowed me to in turn extend my own olive branches when I have been on the receiving ends of lapses. What lapse will you forgive today?

                 

Faith is taking the first step even when you don't see the staircase

June 9th, 2010

Faith is taking the first step even when you don’t see the staircase.” -Martin Luther King, Jr.