Michele Woodward Executive Life Coach
Powerful Coaching. Powerful Results.
June 7, 2009
What's Up With That? Edition
Michele Woodward
Greetings!

I've been thinking about story telling as I continue work on my forthcoming book. Stories are such powerful things. People certainly love listening to stories being told and telling stories themselves.

Most of all, folks seem to adore telling stories about themselves, which I find very revealing.

When someone tells me a story that goes something like this: "I can't _____ because _____," or "I'm not _____ because _____," I know they're stuck. They're probably telling a story about themselves that once may have been true but no longer really works. The old story holds them back, yet a new story seems unwritten and, perhaps, unwritable.

Hey, want to look at your personal narrative and figure out if the story you're telling about yourself is actually moving you toward something, or holding you back?

I sure do. Ready?

So what is the story you tell about yourself? [reader does a spewing spit take] "I don't tell a story, I just live my life," the reader says with indignation.

Uh-huh.

Take out a piece of paper and make two columns. Title the first column: Now Words. In that column write words to describe your life as it is right now.

Bored

Stressed

Stuck

Routine

Honest

Kind

Generous

Write as many describing words as you'd like. Then, title the second column, "Future Words" and start writing words that describe the life you want to have. You may carry Now Words into the Future Words column. For instance:

Honest

Kind

Generous

Happy

Fun

Loving

Creative

Now, here's where you change your personal narrative. Start consciously using your Future Words in your day-to-day life, and start taking actions that bring those words to life. So, if "creative" is a part of your future, what can you do today to create? Be very specific: "I can write 10 pages. I can solve a problem. I can work in my garden. I can throw a pot. I can paint." Name your creative thing, then go ahead and do it.

We can all make lists, friends. But not all of us are adept at putting our energy in the game and actually doing. All it takes to re-write your personal narrative is awareness of what you want, backed up by purposeful action.

When you pair that up, you'll find -- pretty soon -- that you're telling a new, happier story. I promise you, it will be one you'll enjoy telling so much more than the old version. Oh, and you'll be living a happier, more successful life.

That's my story, and I'm... well, you know the rest.

I cannot believe I started writing a blog in 2006! Seems like yesterday. Want to walk thru the past? Click here.

UPCOMING EVENTS
MTW Logo

Friday, June 12th is turning out to be a great day -- first, look for me at 9am on WUSA Channel 9 here in Washington, DC, talking about careers.

Then, at noon, if you're a coach, you'll want to listen in to a free class I'm giving called, "How To Not Be Eaten Alive By Your Practice (and Still Make $)", noon (EDT) Friday, June 12th. Dial 712/941-0216 PIN 987411.

Speaking of free calls, my monthly free call has to shift to noon, Friday, June 19th due to mom-has-to-pick-up-a-kid-at-camp duties. Call in to hear more about how to re-frame your personal narrative and create a strategy to get more of what you want in your life. Dial 712/941-0216 PIN 987411.

Koelle Simpson's wonderful horse-whispering workshop has been moved to July 10-12th at the Marriott Ranch in Hume, VA. More information on this life-changing event can be found here.

SOMETHING TO READ
The Help by Kathryn Stockett
The Help

Life is not always one way or the other. All Yankees fans don't hate all Red Sox fans. All men aren't jerks and all women aren't gold diggers.

And all white Southern women who employed black maids in Mississippi in the early 60s weren't cruel and all black maids employed by white women weren't abused. Yes, some were. But some women were able to rise above time, and norms, and do what it is women do best -- connect on a deep and intimate level with one another, based on mutuality. That's what the book The Help by Kathryn Stockett is all about.

Set in Mississippi at the height of the civil rights movement, the book chronicles the lives of black maids and white women -- what separates them, and what divides them. Stockett writes like a Southerner should, and her use of idiom and phrase was spot on.

I enjoyed The Help and found myself, once again, marveling at the love that can grow in the most unlikely places among the most unlikely of people.


Michele Woodward
Michele Woodward Consulting, Inc.
phone: 703/598-3100