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Inspiration to Follow Your Blueprint

What If I’ve Never Had a Dream?

By Laura Berman Fortgang on February 8, 2017

“What about the people who have never had a dream about what they wanted to be when they grew up?”

I occasionally stop by the You Tube page where my TEDx Talk lives to reply to any comments. The majority are very positive. There are a couple of complete trolls who probably question and heckle everything, and then … there is this burning question repeated time after time.

Dreaming

In the talk, I mentioned people who don’t dream or can’t remember having a dream from childhood about what they wanted to grow up to be.

I mention that even those that can’t even daydream now may have come from a childhood that forced them to grow up faster than appropriate.

Kids who were scared for any reason (maybe losing a parent and fearing the other would die or go away, not being allowed to be themselves for whatever reason or fearing for their safety) will tend to be adults who don’t have a dream.

While it is possible to dream if you grew up with these circumstances, when someone can’t, I have found they typically have lived these scenarios.

I apparently left a lot of people hanging but twelve minutes only allowed one through line of solutions.

“What do I do if that is me?”, you might ask.

If this is you, here’s what you do:

Get thee to a therapist — Really. I’m not kidding. If you shut off your dreaming mechanism because it wasn’t safe to check out temporarily, you have to go back and revisit the trauma. What caused the erosion of your sense of safety?

Let’s say you’ve already been to therapy or you just won’t consider going. OK – try this:

Re-sensitize your self — The connection that seems to be missing for people who don’t or can’t dream or imagine a desirable future for themselves is the distance between the body and the mind. You may be desensitized to your own feelings.

Not the extremes like anger or elation, but the subtle ones like what you like, what you want, or even what brings you joy. If you feel like you don’t really even know what you want on a daily basis but decide things in order to avoid the pain of NOT making a decision, you are desensitized to your own body.

Your body has a lot of information for you.

How do you re-sensitize? Start or revisit a hobby that involves working with your hands or that requires full-body engagement. For example, knitting, painting, pottery wheelwork or other building/making activity is tactile and preferable.

If there is nothing like that you used to do or would like to do, think of something that engages your full body like dancing, running or cycling.

After a couple of weeks of doing one of these activities four or more times per week, notice if you are feeling more sensitive and more aware of your feelings and subtle preferences.

Practice WANT days — Whether you can devote one-hour, three hours or a whole day, take time out to have no agenda whatsoever. Don’t even carry the responsibility of walking the dog or feeding a child.

Just give yourself blank space. In that space, notice. Notice your gut. Notice what you want. In fact, keep asking yourself “What do I want?” What is the answer? What do you want?

Do you want to go for a walk? Read? Paint? Sleep? Eat a particular thing? Just practice hearing and responding to what you want. This isn’t about indulging yourself in stuff that’s not good for you. It’s not about masking your emotions with a substitute for feeling like food, alcohol, drugs or other forms of numbing yourself. Feel what you WANT!

Practice WANT days as often as you reasonably can until you can start to FEEL the difference in your body between a true want and a bad habit.

When true wants are fulfilled, you will feel a sense of satisfaction. If you’re feeding a bad habit, you’ll ultimately feel negative emotions like guilt, anxiety or anger.

NOW WHAT? — Some feeling should be restored now which means an ability to see in your mind’s eye and/or dreaming should be coming back. See if you can see yourself in a role that brings you joy when you simply think about it, whether it be a specific job, career or life role.

Can you imagine yourself in a new future? Can you daydream about other possibilities for yourself? How does it feel as you envision these possibilities?

Whether you are going to take action on them or not does not matter. What does matter is that your dreaming mechanism is now turned back on.

NOW, go back to the TEDx talk, and listen to it for the next steps. Welcome back.
Let me know how I can help you see what’s next.

Filed Under: Inspiration to Follow Your Blueprint, Life Lessons, Reinventing Yourself Tagged With: life coach, new direction, Now What Coaching, passion10 Comments

Creativity Calling? Anxiety Interfering? Keep Showing Up!

By Laura Berman Fortgang on February 1, 2017

In her Ted Talk, writer Elizabeth Gilbert helps us to see that creativity and suffering do not have to be inherently linked and artistry does not have to lead to anguish. Let’s encourage our creative minds to live so we can keep doing the work we love.

What might your creative genius have in store for you?

Your Elusive Creative Genius – Elizabeth Gilbert

Filed Under: Following Your Passion, Inspiration to Follow Your Blueprint, Lessons Learned, Life Lessons, Video Viernes Tagged With: career path, Clarity, Following your passion, life coach, passionsLeave a Comment

What Is a Fulfilling Life?

By Laura Berman Fortgang on January 18, 2017

Some people are lucky enough to “follow their passion” and find joy and abundance, but often passion alone is not enough.

What Is a Fulfilling Life? It is frequently interpreted as “interest at the moment,” and interests change over time.
Passion is part of the equation toward fulfillment, but there’s more…

There’s So Much More to a Fulfilling Career than Following Your Passion

Filed Under: Following Your Passion, Inspiration to Follow Your Blueprint, Taking Action Tagged With: Career coach, life coach, Opportunity, passion, passions, take actionLeave a Comment

Dark Days Lead to Unexpected Success

By Laura Berman Fortgang on January 13, 2017

This mom didn’t set out to create a business. Rather, she just used her natural talents to get through some really tough times. In doing so, people reached out for help, and she discovered a business waiting to take form.

What might emerge for you if you shared your natural gifts in a way that people experience what you have to offer?

Crisis Turns Mom Into Accidental Entrepreneur

Filed Under: Inspiration to Follow Your Blueprint, Life Lessons, Taking Action, Video Viernes Tagged With: life coach, Now What Coaching, take actionLeave a Comment

Shopping for More than Gifts this Season?

By Laura Berman Fortgang on December 14, 2016

If finding a new job is on your list of to-do’s this December, you may think you should skip this month and get back to it in the New Year. Not so, say these experts; January is actually the most competitive job searching month of the year.

10 Tips to Job Hunt Successfully During the Holidays

Here are some great ways to capitalize on the season to give yourself the gift of landing that job sooner rather than later.

10 Tips to Job Hunt Successfully During the Holidays

Filed Under: Inspiration to Follow Your Blueprint, Job Search Tagged With: Career Coaching, job search, Now What Coaching, OpportunityLeave a Comment

The More the Merrier

By Laura Berman Fortgang on December 5, 2016

I’m on my way home from my second annual meet up with The Super Power Sisterhood, my mastermind group of fabulous women ranging in age from 40’s-70’s.

We’re all pros in the same profession coming together for fun and focused work on each of us.

The lessons learned there, I’m putting forth to you as the holiday season and year-end is upon us. Reflection happens. Some thoughts on wants and goals come forth. ‘Tis the season for renewal.

The More the MerrierWhy go it alone? The more the merrier.

Form a group to support your career transition (or whatever you are up to):

Determine Candidates:

Who are your ideal members?

What do you want to have in common and what differences do you want?

My group has a common industry but different ages and strengths.

A career transition group would benefit from different industries, for example.

Create the Structure:

How often will you meet?

We meet once a year in person and several times by phone year round.

What will happen when you are together?

When live, we give each person 90 mins. on the “hot seat” getting everyone’s attention and resources.

Establish Ground Rules:

What do you require of your group?, are your rules about attendance?

What are your expectations for support and behavior?

Our group established that showing up and attendance is critical to staying in the group. Short of family emergencies or health issues, we expect attendance.

We put forth Commitment, Connection, and Communication as guiding principles for our group

My colleagues and I are coaches so we are good at listening, not talking over each other, and we ask a lot of questions and don’t give flat out advice.

I highly recommend that, at the very least, you avoid telling people what they “should” do. Make suggestions, offer resources and ideas but watch out for the very word “should.” It usually reveals your own agenda more than what’s good for another. And few of us hear “should” and get excited about whatever comes behind it.

Be Clear About Outcomes:

There’s no point in forming a group if you don’t get what you want out of it.

What do you want? Ideas? Connections? Guidance? Weekly check-ins? Accountability?

For us, there is renewal, clarity, focus, next steps and the surge of energy that comes from knowing you’re not alone.

Follow these guidelines and get going. The more the merrier!

P. S. The Super Power Sisterhood includes a lot of chocolate. I’m not mandating that for your group, but it couldn’t hurt.

Filed Under: Inspiration to Follow Your Blueprint, Lessons Learned, Taking Action Tagged With: Clarity, Laura Berman Fortgang, life coach, take actionLeave a Comment

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