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ChangingCourse.com, Find Your Life Mission and Live It

Issue 117

May 26, 2005

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Compass

Changing Course is dedicated to helping you:

~Live Life on Purpose
~Work at What You Love
~Follow Your Own Road

Inside Today's Issue

Featured Article

Dreams Can Come True

Featured Resource

Work At What You Love Workshop

Guest Article

5 Essentials to Pack for a Major Life Change

Upcoming Workshops & Teleclasses

Resources for A Change


Procrastination is the fear of success. Rationalization is the fear of failure.
~ Denis Waitley

Dreams Can Come True:

The 5 Key Lessons to Turning Dreams into Reality

By Valerie YoungValerie and her dog, Cokie

Early on in his career, college football coaching legend Lou Holtz made a list of 107 things he wanted to accomplish in his life. Among them were to go white water rafting, see the pyramids, meet the Pope, have dinner at the White House with a sitting president and be on the Tonight Show with Johnny Carson. It took Holtz and his wife 25 years but together they’ve accomplished 99 of those original goals.

My own dreams list includes attending a national political convention (okay I’m weird), witnessing the opening ceremony at the Olympics, spending at least a month on every continent, studying with a master antique book restorer, learning to water paint, taking swimming lessons, taking a year-long sabbatical and routinely having summers off.

A big dream that’s been on the front burner for about three years now has been finding a house with a view. I work at home so where I live is really important to me. I have this thing about wanting to live in the country. Not in the woods though. I need space. Rolling hills, fields, maybe some cows in the background (I love cows!). Think pastoral, bucolic, peaceful, private.

I’ve been doing a fair amount of reflecting on the evolution of this dream and what I’ve learned in the process. What I’ve discovered is that there are seven key lessons to realizing a dream.

Lesson #1: Listen to Your Inner Voices

My obsession with a view began five years ago when I started vacationing on a small peaceful lake in central New Hampshire. There’s nothing much to do there but sit out on the deck and gaze on the reflection of the mountains reflected in the lake and listen for the enchantingly eerie call of the loons.

Despite carting up dozens of books I found I rarely picked them up because it would mean taking my eyes off the view. I found it utterly mesmerizing. This little voice inside kept whispering, “Pay attention Valerie, pay attention.” Like most people I ignored these inner callings.

As the voice grew louder, it became clear that while everyone enjoys a view, I craved one. I needed the experience of having a view not for just one week out of the year but every day. I didn’t know quite how I was going to pull it off but I knew I had to listen.

Lesson #2: Put Your Dreams Out There

Few people reach their dreams alone. You never know who might help you get where you want to be. It could be a casual acquaintance, your dentist, a neighbor, a coworker… But one thing is for sure, if you keep your dreams to yourself, you’ll never find out.

Throughout the last presidential election, I shared my dream of one day attending a national political convention with anyone who would listen. One such person was a seminar attendee who happened to be very high up at NBC news. Realizing an opportunity when I saw one, I pitched myself as an over-qualified but very eager intern willing to do whatever needed to be done… from making coffee, to making copies to doing van runs to the airport. He handed me his business card and told me he’d see what he could do.

Despite my champion’s best efforts, he wasn’t able to get me in. While witnessing the democratic process in action didn’t pan out, deliberately putting my dream out there got me closer than ever before. And, hey there’s always 2008!

Lesson #3: Be Selective About Who You Talk to About Your Dream

While making your dreams known is the key to finding champions, teachers, and other supporters, you also need to mindful of where NOT to look.

Take my friend Carol. She’s a great person, but she’s a bit of a cynic. When I told Carol that I wanted a house with a view, her response was, “Wouldn’t we all?” While walking my dog along a roaring stream I realized how healing I find the sound of moving water. So I added a bubbling brook to my wish list, to which Carol replied, “Well, you can’t always get what you want.”

Carol is right of course. You can’t always get what you want. But does the risk of not reaching a goal mean you just throw up your hands in defeat? As opera diva Beverly Sills once reminds us, “You may be disappointed if we fail, but you are doomed if we don’t try.”

Anyone can develop a sense of optimism – even natural cynics. If you’re prone to negative thinking, read my article If You Think You Can’t Change Course – You’re Right available at ChangingCourse.com/articles/changecourse.htm

Lesson #4: Believe You Can

Henry Ford once said, “If you think you can, or if you think you can’t, you’re right.” As trite as this last lesson may sound, believing your dream is attainable is fundamental to its success.

I need to be inspired as much as the next person. One place both Barbara Winter and I both go to when we need a boost of inspiration are the Making Dreams Happen CDs of which we are both a part. Listening once again to one of Barbara Sher’s presentations reminded me of the powerful link between passion and belief.

Barbara was telling the group how deep down inside we all know what we want. “When someone says they don’t know what they want,” she says, “what they really mean is they don’t think that what they want is possible.” In other words, the reason most people never even attempt to go after their dream is because they don’t think they can.

I knew getting my dream house with a view wouldn’t be easy. First I’d have to do all the painting, repairing, and landscaping required to get my current house in shape to sell. Then I’d have to put the house on the market, which, since I planned to sell it myself meant taking photos, placing ads for open houses, and learning about all the legal hoops involved in selling real estate. I’d also need to spend countless hours scouring real estate listings, going to open houses and doing drive bys. I got so desperate at one point that I wrote to homeowners to see if they’d like to sell.

By far though I knew the most daunting task would be packing. You see I come from a long line of pack rats which meant confronting the monumental task of sorting through and packing 12 years of accumulated stuff, only to begin the unpacking all over again on the other end.

Between my travel schedule and my work commitments, I knew that achieving my dream would not be easy… but I always new it was possible. As Louisa May Alcott once wrote, “We all have our own life to pursue, our own kind of dream to be weaving… And we all have the power to make wishes come true, as long as we keep believing.”

Lesson #5: Take the Long View

Every so often I get a call for a career consultation from someone who is having one of those “job from hell” days. The desire for immediate relief is understandable. After all when your job is toxic job you just want o-u-t, NOW!

Like these clients, you probably don’t want to hear this, but deep down you already know that making any real change takes time. At the same time you have to start somewhere. And the fact of the matter is that the next two years or five years or ten years are going to come and go as quickly as the last ones did – whether you do anything about your dream or not.

So where would you rather be when that time arrives – in the same place you are now or where you want to be? Yes, change takes time but it’s the small steps that will get you to that better future. Which leads us to our next lesson…

Lesson #6: Start Where You Are

The key to achieving any goal is to simply start. Start somewhere… anywhere. If you’re so up to your ears in debt, then start by making a plan to become debt free. If your life is so busy that you haven’t taken the time to even know what your dreams are, take some time this very week to find a quiet space and tune into your inner callings. If you need information about becoming an equine massage therapist, or bringing your product idea to market, or getting paid for your home design finesse – then get busy by finding and then learning from those who have already done it. The bottom line here – do what you can, but do something!

If you’re having trouble getting started, click here for six tips that can help ChangingCourse.com/articles/getstarted.htm

Lesson #7: Live in the Now

In an interview with Charlie Rose, Helen Hunt talked about how she got the career she always wanted. Although she wasn’t offering it as a tip, Hunt’s own experience of being grateful for what she had is informative. You see, for Hunt the four Emmys, the five Golden Globes, the Oscar and all of the rest were but icing on an already rich cake. Reflecting on her years as part of the Mad About You television show’s creative team, Hunt told Rose, “If none of these other things had happened and I'd had only that, I would have been a very, very lucky actress.” (To read all of Helen Hunt’s success tips go to ChangingCourse.com/articles/helenhunt.htm)

It would have been easy to focus on what I didn’t like about the house I already had – it was a busy street, the houses were too close together, one of my neighbors drove me up the wall. And yet, despite aggressively pursing my dream house, I never lost sight of what I already had.

On the most basic level, I had more than millions of people around the world – a roof over my head, a bed to sleep in, heat, safety. It was also a warm, inviting, and aesthetically pleasing home. If I’d lived in that home for the rest of my life, I would have still been very lucky indeed.

The lesson here is to not focus so much on what lies ahead that you fail to appreciate past and present blessings. Taking stock of how rich your life is right now will make any future success all the sweeter.

A Room With a View

It took three years, but here I sit one month into my fabulous new home in the country. Perched on a hill, the house offers views on all four sides… cows in the east pasture, grand sunsets over the hills to the west, woods outside my office window to the north, and I was happy to report to Carol, a bubbling brook to my south.

Valerie's View“Well that’s nice for her,” you may be thinking, “but I don’t have that kind of money.” I understand what it’s like to be strapped. When I left my high paying corporate job eleven years ago my income dipped nearly in half. There have been times I’ve wondered how I’d pay the bills. Over time I’ve managed to build my income up to more than my previous salary. Still, I didn’t buy a “starter mansion” and I’m not a wealthy person.

Money, or the lack of money, is not necessarily a prerequisite to realizing a dream. True, if I hadn’t had the good fortune to have had a starter home to sell I could not have afforded the house I got. But that doesn’t mean I couldn’t have found another way to get my view.

For example, I could have found a lower priced fixer upper. Or, I could have rented. Even better, I probably could have lived rent free as a property caretaker. (For true tales of people living the caretaker life visit ChangingCourse.com/lifeinparadise.htm)

My new dream? Summers off! I can’t swing it this year, but I’m seriously looking at taking off for at least a portion of the summer of ‘06.

So what are your dreams? Which one is speaking to you loudest right now? Where can you find support for your dream? Who do you need to make a conscious effort not to share your dream with? What are you grateful for right now?

Whether it’s finding the cure for cancer, or improving the schools in your community, or finding your dream job, there may be many steps, but there is only one next action. What small step can you take not tomorrow, not next week, but literally this very day in the service of your dream?

About the Author

Off the beaten path career counselor, Valerie Young, abandoned her corporate cubicle to become the Dreamer in Residence at ChangingCourse.com, offering free resources to help you discover your life mission and live it. An expert on the Imposter Syndrome, she's presented her How to Feel as Bright and Capable as Everyone Seems to Think You Are program to over 30,000 people.

Find more articles written by Valerie at ChangingCourse.com/articles/

Nothing will ever be attempted if all possible objections must first be overcome.  
~ Dr. Samuel Johnson

Featured Resource

This Summer, Discover How to Replace
Your Job With Work You Really Love…
and Gain the Freedom, Flexibility,
and Quality of Life You Deserve

  • Find out how you can escape the J-O-B box… and uncover a whole new world of possibilities.

  • Tap your wildest dreams...  and create a step-by-step plan to make them happen right now...

  • Discover the powerful secret to turning almost anything into an alternative to a job...  

  • Highly successful entrepreneurs do it instinctively. Now you can, too. Learn powerful, proven techniques for transforming ideas into bankable income.

Work at What You Love:
The Life-Changing Workshop for
People Who Want to Quit Their Jobs and Get a Life

August 19-20, 2005
Northampton, Massachusetts

ChangingCourse.com/workshop.htm

You can't base your life on other people's expectations. ~ Unknown

Compass

The Changing Course Newsletter
Copyright 2004
Lisa Tarrant, Editor
Valerie Young, Publisher
info@changingcourse.com
www.ChangingCourse.com
7 Ripley Road
Montague, MA 01351

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Uncertainty will always be part of the taking charge process. ~ Harold Geneen

Guest Article

If It's Worth Dreaming,
It's Worth Writing Down

By Josh Hinds

You have the idea so therefore you have within you the ability to make it a reality. Such is one of life's great truths. This may not always appear to be the case, but rest assured deep down you've got all the ability it takes.

The problem is that far to often we don't lay a foundation so that we have in place what it will take to make our idea a reality. First of all, we have to understand that things often don't just happen. They are the result of following out carefully planned steps and taking daily action until we have reached our intended destination.

Say for example you wanted to take a trip. Most likely you'd chart your course wouldn't you? You'd at least take the time to know where you were headed and write out the directions. This is the same idea behind achieving our goals, yet you'd be amazed by how many people choose to go day in and day out without having a basic plan of where they're headed.

The main thing to keep in mind is that your goals should be committed to paper. This is the same as having a map. Each time you begin to feel as though you're drifting away from what you want, you can refer back to your written goals. Sounds pretty simple doesn't it? Well that my friend is because it is!

Yet as easy as this is to implement the fact still remains that most people simply lack the determination to make this an ongoing process.

I won't lie to you here it's going to take an ongoing commitment. It takes the understanding that all things are changing. Life is about change. The better we become at adapting to life's changes the better prepared we will be. Amidst all the changes, keeping a written plan will do wonders for keeping you heading in the direction of your dreams.

Here's to your success, Josh Hinds

About the Author

Josh Hinds of GetMotivation.com specializes in helping people to achieve maximum success and live the life of their dreams. He is also the co-founder of AudioMotivation.com

We know what we are, but know not what we may be.  ~ Shakespeare

Upcoming Workshops & Teleclasses

How to Feel As Bright and Capable As Everyone Seems to Think You Are: What Every Woman (and Man) Needs to Know About Competence, the Impostor Syndrome, and the Art of Winging It

Are You An “Impostor”? Take the Quiz

  • Do you secretly worry others will find out you’re not as intelligent and competent as they seem to think you are?

  • Do you often dismiss your accomplishments as a “fluke” or “no big deal?”

  • Are you convinced that “responsible people” in “responsible jobs” are a lot more “adult” than you?

  • Do you sometimes shy away from challenges because of nagging self-doubt?

  • Are you crushed by even constructive criticism, taking it as evidence of your ineptness? Is your definition of competence: perfection with ease?

  • Does the thought of not knowing 150% strike fear in your heart?

If so, join the club. Over 20,000 people have attended this enlightening workshop. And now you can too.

You CAN feel like the smart, talented, self-assured person everyone else seems to think you are. Join me to learn why so many intelligent, capable people suffer from the so-called Impostor Syndrome and what it takes to overcome it!

Tuesday, June 14th from 8:00 pm - 9:30 pm EST
ChangingCourse.com/impteleclass.htm

Not sure how a Teleclass works? Click here to find out

Miracle-Grow Your Business in Las Vegas!

You're invited to join Barbara Winter and Nick Williams for four action-packed, life-changing days. You know that you need something more ... an added dimension to your business that will claim its extraordinary potential. You just need some help with where to look. We're making it easy for you. A veritable entrepreneurial greenhouse, an oasis of creativity in the desert — join us in Las Vegas. There's no place like it. Its creative genius reaches far beyond the obvious glitz. And it can teach us a lot about winning ways.

The place fairly sings with vibrant energy. In fact, when your creative vision gets fine-tuned in Las Vegas, it'll be a permanent adjustment. One that will impact how you see the rest of your world, and how quickly you can grow your business.

Monday, June 6 - Thursday, June 9
ChangingCourse.com/courses.htm

Compass

Quick Tip: Stop Wishing and Start Dreaming

Is there really a difference between a wish and a dream? You bet there is.

Wishing is passive. We wish for things over which we are powerless. We wish we’d win the lottery. We wish we were taller or thinner. We wish the waiter would hurry up.

Many wishes are tinged with regrets about past decisions. We wish we’d ordered the fish instead of the chicken. That we’d taken the other job. That we hadn’t let the love of our lives get away.

Dreaming, though, is different. A dream is active. It’s positive. And it’s speaks to the future.

But that’s not all. Unlike “wishful thinking” – which has everything to do with hopelessness and the supposed impracticality of achieving a goal – “dreamful thinking” speaks to exciting prospect of a goal realized. Dreamful thinking invites possibilities into our life.

Still not convinced? Close your eyes and imagine the voice of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. as he thunders
“I have a wish!” Not exactly inspiring is it? That’s because unlike a wish, you can see a dream. And as the U.S. Civil Rights Movement reminds us, when others share a common vision of a dream, the motivation it inspires is contagious.

Quick tip: Find quotes, photos, anything that will remind you of your future dream. Then find a way to keep your dream in view. Why? Because as comedian Drew Carew reminds us, “If it’s not in writing and in your face all the time – on the refrigerator, your bathroom mirror – it’s not a goal. It’s a wish.”

Compass

 

Resources for a Change

BackDoorJobs.com

Are you looking for opportunities to work, play, learn, help, create, experience and grow worldwide? Backdoorjobs.com is simply about discovering life's options and finding your place in the world (and that's real exciting stuff). If so, visit BackDoorJobs.com or pick up the latest version of The Back Door Guide to Short-Term Job Adventures in the Changing Course Bookstore at ChangingCourse.com/bookstore.htm

The USA Songwriting Competition

USA Songwriting Competition, the world's leading international songwriting event honors songwriters, composers, bands, recording artists everywhere. Winners will be selected by a Blue Ribbon committee of music industry judges including record label publishers, producers from Sony Music, Universal Music, Warner, etc. This is a chance to be discovered by the biggest names in the music business. A shot at the big time for songwriters and original solo artists and bands everywhere around the world. A contest that might just open the right doors, make the right connections and get your songs heard. Also, winning songs will receive radio airplay (the first for any songwriting competition!). This is not American Idol, this is a songwriting competition that gives you the clout it takes to make it! Learn more at Songwriting.net

Calling all Pet Lovers:
Pet Related Businesses are Booming

From gourmet and organic pet food to spas complete with hot oil massage even frequent flyer miles for pets, business is booming for pet products. And according to a recent article in Business Week, the trend shows no signs of slowing down. Read all about it at http://tinyurl.com/8tmr2

What If You Could Make a Living Telling Stories?

Lots of people do… and the National Storytellers Network (StoryNet.org) can help. If you’re really serious about exploring this fascinating career consider attending their national conference coming up this July 13-17th in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. Here’s how the association describes the event:

Oklahomans have a long tradition of movin' on and startin' over. Indian Nations forced here from their original homes; cowboys and settlers seeking a new life; oilies striking it rich and going bust; farmers losing their land to dust, tornado and flood – we reach out to each other and start over.

When “terror came to the heartland” in 1995, Oklahomans flocked to the Murrah Federal Building bearing supplies. The Oklahoma City National Memorial & Museum (which conference attendees will visit) now continues our tradition, telling stories of heart and hope for the future.

Our 2005 conference will resonate with that tradition. General Sessions, Workshops, Presentations, Showcases, and Intensives show how stories can help all of us bring the tales of heart & hope to new generations, move on in our art and craft, take our work beyond the comfort zone, and apply storytelling to issues of social and global concern. Come hear how storytellers are "movin' on" in storytelling.