2022-11-02 - Your Resiliency GPS by Eileen McDargh ================================================== I enjoyed the hiking metaphors in this book. The title refers to GPS, short-term goals are referred to as temporary camp sites, and faith is referred to as a hiking pole to help steady your course. I like that the homework is organized into specific, step-by-step actions, providing a ready-made framework or method to follow in order to cultivate resiliency skills. It is peppered with good humor and optimism. Many of the worst choices are a result of not knowing better, or abdicating and failing to truly make a choice. In my opinion the value of this book is that it raises awareness, showing that there is a way to be stronger and more capable of weathering the storms of life. If one is willing to "listen," to believe that this way could possibly work, and to sincerely desire more vitality in day-to-day living, then these should be enough to get started. Knowing better, how can we help but make improved choices? What follows are exercises and excerpts from the book. Dump The Dictionary =================== In short, human resiliency is far deeper and more encompassing than how the dictionary defines "resilience." Resilience is seriously hard work, requires body, mind, and spirit to be engaged. It requires learning from errors and that takes humility. It can take collaboration and connecting with others an that takes interpersonal skills. Some parts might be easier than others, but all adjustment requires effort. Resiliency is about sustaining an organization, a life, a relationship. Resiliency is complex, multidimensional, personal as well as professional. It's about growing through the dark night of the soul and finding sunrise on the other side. Presilience is practicing it now, building pre-emptive resources within yourself, your organization, your world. [In other words, being pro-active.] Chapter 2, Nature or Nurture? ============================= In [Bonnie] Bernard's work, she concludes that we have an inborn capacity for transformation and change. Fast-forward to 2012. Dr. Steven Southwick and Dr. Dennis Charney amass twenty years of research for their book Resilience: The Science of Mastering Life's Greatest Challenges. ... they discover that resiliency is common and can be seen everywhere. More importantly, they learned that many people can be trained to become more resilient. Lost Is A Place --------------- Growing through opportunity or challenge always brings loss. Even if the move is self-selected and wanted. What we accepted as our work, our loves, our life, will shift. There is no going back. Grief over loss has no timetable or automatic end. Setting Your GPS ---------------- Let's set your GPS by defining your destination. * Where are you starting from? * Where do you want to go? * What do you want to have happen? [If] You are not clear exactly where you want to end up. [Then] think of incremental destinations--rather like temporary campsites on a hiking trip. GPS Action ---------- 1. Decide if [whether] you want to explore a personal or professional challenge/opportunity. 2. In your presilience logbook, write your responses to the recalculating questions. Find someone with whom to have a conversation. Recalculating Questions ----------------------- 1. What does your situation look like? Define it for your personal or professional situation. 2. What adjectives best describe where you find yourself? 3. What strengths do you have? If you can't think of any, ask someone who knows you well. 4. What people, besides you, are in a similar situation? Do any of them have an interest in growing? Have you asked them? 5. What short-term results do you seek? 6. What long-term results do you seek? 7. How would you recognize forward movement? Fueling Your Tank ================= Energy is the result of meaningful connections that add the spark of potential and possibility--the catalyst for forward momentum. In 2008, psychologists Salvatore Maddi and Suzanne Kobasa coined the term "psychological hardiness." Their research said that individuals could improve their physical and emotional health if they practiced three dimensions: * commitment: finding purpose in what you do * control: focusing on what is within your control instead of trying to change something outside of your control * challenge: believing that you can handle whatever comes your way and even if mistakes are inevitable, there is a reason and learning to be had. This means you are change-receptive versus change-adverse. In order to develop a resilient spirit, we need to identify actions that drain our energy and those which maintain or boost our energy. GPS Action ---------- 1. Identify energy drainers. 2. In your presilience logbook keep track of those events, people, and beliefs that just suck the air right out of you. 3. Ask for help at work or home with an energy-drainer. Be specific with your request--for space, delegation, advice, or suggestions. Maybe even asking someone to [be] available to listen. 4. Identify energy-maintainers. 5. What gives you life in your step and a sparkle in your eye? ... what renews your energy? 6. Sometimes, handling our energy-drainer creates an energy-boost. Sometimes it IS the small actions that make a big difference. 7. In your presilience logbook, write your responses to the recalculating questions. Find someone with whom to have a conversation. Recalculating Questions ----------------------- 1. If you can't change "the event," identify how you can choose to respond to it. Can you amend it? Can you avoid it? Or perhaps you have to accept it. 2. Who has been in this situation before and how can you ask for help? 3. Who can mentor you in the best way? 4. Have you listened to your inner voice? 5. How would a person whom you admire most (living or dead) handle this? 6. What steps does your inner voice of wisdom say you must take? 7. How many items can you list that give you energy? 8. When was the last time you did any of these? 9. What do they cost? Chances are that most activities that give us energy have little to no cost. Four Resiliency Skills ====================== Skill 1: Adaptability --------------------- Adaptability is predicated on finding multiple responses to any given situation. It is foundational for resilience and literally rests upon our ability to challenge old ways of doing things, to actively seek different viewpoints, to be aware of sacred cows, and to know that solutions can come from anywhere or anyone. Adaptability is about thinking and feeling. Skill 2: Agility ---------------- Agility is the ability to move quickly and easily. Rewards center on the willingness to act, to take risks, and to share results. Skill 3: Laugh-ability ---------------------- [Laughter is] the shortest distance between your brain and your body. The ability to find humor and generate a sense of playfulness actually increases creativity. Free-form play and improvisation not only break barriers but open up a world of potential ways to handle situations. Skill 4: Alignment ------------------ To remain standing, humans too need bedrock. Resilient people and individuals have a reason greater than themselves for keeping on. ... there is a sense that someone or something matters. Adaptability ============ ... seven options to consider when developing the skill of adaptability. Option 1: Unstick Your Thinking ------------------------------- What we think matters. How we act counts. Where do you find yourself today--this place called your current location? In studying why some leaders and their organizations are not sustainable, I realized there is a possible unwillingness or an inability to clearly define one's current reality. Think of your current location as patterned and formulaic. In a 24/7 world where surprises are the new normal, where work and life can shift in a nanosecond, there's a great need to challenge current reality and common knowledge. In biological terms, the word is requisite variety. Simply stated: The organism with the greatest number of responses to any given situation is the one that will survive. We want to leave this current location and venture outward, thinking and creating as many options for ourselves as possible. Professional GPS Action ----------------------- 1. Define as much as you can about your current professional situation, process, and product. 2. In your presilience logbook, write your responses to the recalculating questions. Find someone with whom to have a conversation. Professional Recalculating Questions ------------------------------------ 1. Do you operate under the premise: "The devil I know is better than the one I don't?" 2. Test the status quo. What is going on? 3. Why not change? Who says you can't? 4. What would happen if? Are you SURE? 5. What are the sacred cows that might bind your hands? [Maybe they are sacred for a reason. Maybe the represent the values and spiritual foundation that made it worthwhile in the first place.] 6. Can you practice "joyous anarchy" and explore other options? 7. Are you paying attention to core tasks in-house and contracting out other tasks? 8. What are the things you are doing today that if you were not already doing, you would not start doing? Why? Why not? 9. Was anything discarded that shouldn't have been? Was anything discarded which now is relevant? 10. Are you stuck in that uncomfortable "comfort" zone? Might you find being a victim more rewarding than being a victor? Let's face it... sympathy and consolation have their own rewards. Your energy will be depleted living in that zone and colleagues and friends will move away. It's too energy-draining to be with "sad-sacks" over the long haul. Personal GPS Action ------------------- 1. Do you operate under the premise: "The devil I know is better than the one I don't?" 2. Define as much as you can about your current personal situation. 3. In your presilience logbook, write your responses to the recalculating questions. Find someone with whom to have a conversation. Personal Recalculating Questions -------------------------------- 1. Define as much as you can about your current situation. 2. What are the challenges? What are the opportunities? 3. What resources are on hand? Resources are not only financial or material, but also support people. 4. What is the worst thing that could happen? The best thing? 5. Ask "why" at least five times--fascinating exercise but each "why" brings you closer to reality. 6. How shall you divide up the information gathering? If there are others involved, who takes the lead? 7. How many options can you create for yourself? Even if you don't like all of them, listing them out carries great benefits. 8. Are you stuck in that uncomfortable "comfort zone?" Might you find being a victim more rewarding than being a victor? Let's face it... sympathy and consolation have their own rewards. Your energy will be depleted living in that zone and colleagues and friends will move away. It's too energy-draining to be with "sad-sacks" over the long haul. If you are like the majority of humans, you might have looked at the answers you wrote... and proceeded to [invalidate them]. You know the drill. Our monkey mind just chatters away, producing what researchers say is approximately sixty thousand thoughts per day! It's that internal, infernal chatter that can so easily build up a wall of resistance. Amazingly, scientists also tell us that 95% of those thoughts are the same as yesterday! Here's the kicker: 80% of those thoughts are negative! No wonder resiliency is hard work. We need help filling the black hole of negativity. Option 2: Beware of Red Ants ---------------------------- ANTS = Automatic Negative Thoughts GPS Action ---------- 1. Take steps against negativity. 2. Catch yourself when a negative thought or expression comes flying in your brain or out of your mouth. What did you say or think? 3. Can you flip it around into something positive? It's not easy to do it and it often helps to have an optimistic partner who can help you alter the thought. 4. Just say it. Write it. Repeat it. You don't even have to believe it. What's fascinating is that our brains don't know the difference between fact and fiction. The more I feed my brain positive thoughts, the more I create a different roadway in my brain. I begin to behave differently. 5. In your presilience logbook, write your responses to the recalculating questions. Find someone with whom to have a conversation. Recalculating Questions ----------------------- 1. Where are you envisioning the worst? 2. What are the REAL chances the "worst" will happen? 3. What can you tell yourself--even if you don't believe it--that could give you a more positive outcome? I am not naïve. Affirmations can only take you so far. Consider that research shows willpower outperforms academic performance by a factor of two. What you desire to create can potentially overcome a lack of skill. [And it can also be brutally difficult and come at great personal cost.] Option 3: Practice Intelligent Optimism --------------------------------------- Thanks to Dr. Martin Seligman, director of the Penn State Positive Psychology Center... we now know that optimism can be learned. Intelligent optimism is reframing an event, looking for other ways to describe what is happening. Think of this as looking for the "gift" in the "garbage." GPS Action ---------- 1. Get help from a trusted friend or family member if you need it. I'd love to know what you write. Email me eileen@eileenmcdarch.com 2. In your presilience logbook, write your responses to the recalculating questions. Find someone with whom to have a conversation. Recalculating Questions ----------------------- 1. Have you ever seen or heard of a similar situation what [sic] was successfully resolved? 2. What conditions made that possible and how could you re-create them? 3. Is your current situation permanent? Pervasive? Personal? [My life is not permanent. Since it is mine, all of my situations are personal. Since it is impermanent, all of my situations are impermanent.] Option 4: Turn The Page ----------------------- There's a tendency to want things to "go back the way they were." Turning the page is both a mantra as well as physical gesture that I teach to my audiences. It anchors the point in our brains and begins to create a new mental pattern. Every time you hear yourself say "things aren't the way they used to be," "there's too much change," or some such statement, take your dominant hand and gesture turning the page while you mutter the words, "TURN THE PAGE!" GPS Action ---------- 1. Seek a turn-the-page buddy. Ask your buddy to call you on it whenever you moan for the past. 2. In your presilience logbook, write your responses to the recalculating questions. Find someone with whom to have a conversation. Recalculating Questions ----------------------- 1. What are you holding onto and does it serve you now? 2. What do you value about the past and how can you bring it into the present? Option 5: Seek Others' Wisdom ----------------------------- Our willingness to ask for information and help exponentially increases our adaptability--as long as we are willing to listen to other voices. GPS Action ---------- 1. Design a method for getting input from others. Face-to-face is always the best. Go to the people closest to and most impacted by the event. 2. Decide whose input matters to the health of the organization. Who will you ask? 3. In your presilience logbook, write your responses to the recalculating questions. Find someone with whom to have a conversation. Recalculating Questions ----------------------- 1. Whose input do we resist and why? Might it be that cognitive dissonance is operating? 2. Seek what others know. What possibilities could result as a way of accepting some or all of this information? 3. Ask: What might be true? How can I most effectively respond to this feedback? What needs to be changed based upon this information? What am I/we resisting and why? Option 6: Serve Orange Juice ---------------------------- Years ago, I had the opportunity to meet Tom Kilpatrick, the then head of training for USS POSCO, a steel operation in Northern California. Tom told me of being sent to replace the commander of a Navy ship in the South Seas. The commander had been removed "for cause." The ship had the highest number of pending disciplinary cases for that class of ship in the Navy AND the lowest rates of retention. Yikes. What a tough assignment. But at the end of two years, those numbers were reverse. I asked Tom what he did. "I served orange juice," he said with a smile. I asked him to explain. He said that in the first week of his command, he was in his bunk at night pondering how to turn the men around. Tom thought... "What is the most miserable place to be on this ship, in the middle of the night, in the South Seas? The engine room!" He got up. Went to the galley, got glasses, and orange juice and went into the engine room. "Hey guys. I thought you'd need something cool. Now tell me... what do we need to do down here to make this the best engine room in the Navy?" Think about it. He showed up where he was least expected. He came as a servant leader bearing a gift. He asked a question and he listened intently. By morning, that story had spread like wildfire. He said it brought him more loyalty than any action he might have taken. Think about it. He couldn't grow the command if he didn't know. He constantly sought input. He actively listened. He responded. GPS Action ---------- 1. In your presilience logbook, make a list of people to whom you might "serve orange juice." 2. In your presilience logbook, write your responses to the recalculating questions. Find someone with whom to have a conversation. Recalculating Questions ----------------------- 1. What open-ended question might supply you with insights you might never have [otherwise]? Begin your questions with these words: who, what, when, where, why, and how. 2. When will you contact them? How will you do that? I suggest that if face-to-face is not possible, at least make telephone contact. Email is never conducive to fully fleshed conversation. Option 7: Seek A Wisdom Circle ------------------------------ Consider forming a Wisdom Circle. To form a Wisdom Circle, gather a number of trusted friends around you. Briefly state what you are grappling with. Then be quiet. You are NOT there to respond one way or another. It's up to you what you do with that information or input [from the Wisdom Circle]. Master activist teacher Parker Palmer calls this a "Clearness Committee." Look at: The Clearness Committee: A Communal Approach To Discernment Video: Clearness Committee Video: Clearness Committee in Greater Detail Started in the 1600's by Quakers, the Clearness Committee is a practice that believes each of us has an inner wisdom, a teacher, a voice of truth that can offer guidance. However, that voice is often garbled by our insecurities, confusions, fears, or critical others. A Clearness Committee helps you uncover answers within yourself. GPS Action ---------- 1. Ask yourself who has been in a similar situation and if you'd feel comfortable asking their advice. Just because you ask doesn't mean you are compelled to use their input. Write their names and contact information in your logbook. 2. Decide which people you would like to call first--perhaps for a cup of coffee or a meal. 3. In conversation, empty your mind of preconceived answers. Take in without judgment. 4. Follow up later with not only a thank you but what you did with their input. People like to know they have helped, even in some small way. 5. Seek professional help from a counselor, a member of your clergy, or a trusted physician. 6. Read books related to your current state. [To help give you options and understanding.] 7. In your presilience logbook, write your responses to the recalculating questions. Find someone with whom to have a conversation. Recalculating Questions ----------------------- 1. What is the situation for which would you like clarity? 2. What specifically would make this Wisdom Committee most valuable? Agility ======= So far everything we've explored has to do with identifying what your current location looks like (current reality, common knowledge, "NOW") and finding multiple options. Now it is time to take a risk. Action is the antidote for anxiety. Here are seven actions to consider when developing the skill of agility. Action 1: Control The Uncontrollable ------------------------------------ We lose our way and become discouraged when we attempt to "take on more than we can chew." We attempt to control something that is truly out of our control. I call this the Earthquake Litmus Test. I live in California. Earthquakes will occur. I can't control an earthquake BUT I do have actions I can take: * Move from the state. * I can make sure I have all the emergency supplies ready. * I can have a detailed "plan" for all family members so we know what to do. * I can take first aid classes. GPS Action ---------- 1. Clearly write or talk about the desired outcome and then ask for volunteers to be involved in crafting action. Why volunteers? When faced with challenge or opportunity, you want people who are already committed to moving forward. This is no time to have nay-sayers. 2. Break actions into small pieces. 3. Create a short feedback loop. Nothing will sap your resilient spirit [more] than proceeding full steam ahead and finding out six months later that it did not work. 4. Reward effort. If an action did not work, cheer on the person who at least tried and then sought out alternatives if it did not work. 5. Create an action plan that begins with some of the easier things to accomplish. Being able to see results--even if small--boosts your spirit. 6. In your presilience logbook, write your responses to the recalculating questions. Find someone with whom to have a conversation. Recalculating Questions ----------------------- 1. What are you trying to control? 2. Do you really have the power? The authority? The resources? 3. What can you REALLY control? 4. What are three easy steps you can take now, beginning today, to grow your resiliency? 5. Who could be your action buddy--someone who will check in with you to see if you did the one or two things you set out to do? 6. What are you afraid of? Face what you fear and lean into it! Remember: ACT is more powerful than re-act. Action 2: Celebrate Small Wins ============================== GPS Action ---------- 1. Make it a daily practice to find someone to reward. It can be as simple as saying "Thank you." 2. In your presilience logbook, write your responses to the recalculating questions. Find someone with whom to have a conversation. Recalculating Questions ----------------------- 1. What small wins can you reward yourself for accomplishing? 2. What have others done that you need to reward? 3. Can you make your reward something YOU see on a daily basis so you are reminded of progress? Action 3: Exercise to Energize ============================== When work and life seem to spin out of control, the fastest way to know that aliens haven't hijacked you is to take control of your physical body. Aerobic activity of ANY intensity sends blood coursing through your body, firing off synapses in your nervous system and brain. Such activity actually lowers stress levels and ... those stress levels stay down longer. Exercise improves your mood. Regular exercise can increase self-confidence and lower the symptoms associated with mild depression and anxiety. GPS Action ---------- 1. Write down at least two physical exercises you believe you can commit to doing. 2. In your presilience logbook, write your responses to the recalculating questions. Find someone with whom to have a conversation. Recalculating Questions ----------------------- 1. What would help you keep this commitment to exercise? 2. How will you reward yourself for each time your [sic] exercised? 3. Do you need an exercise buddy? If so, who will you ask? Action 4: Practice Mindfulness ============================== Mindfulness is basically slowing down, breathing deeply, and maintaining a moment-by-moment awareness of thoughts, feelings, bodily sensations, and surrounding environment. Study after study has shown the physical and mental benefits of mindfulness in general... Give yourself five minutes to breathe in to the count of four and out to the count of six. Just pay attention to the moment. That's all. Make mindfulness a practice in the morning before jumping out of bed. Breathe. You have been given the gift of a new day. End your day with mindfulness. Again, just breathe. Calm down. You are entering a time of rest. Don't fill your mind with activity. To read more: Mindfulness definition at greatergood.berkeley.edu GPS Action ---------- 1. Make a commitment to begin and end each day with at least three minutes of mindfulness--deep breathing. No talking. Just breathe. 2. In your presilience logbook, write your responses to the recalculating questions. Find someone with whom to have a conversation. Recalculating Questions ----------------------- 1. What will you need to do to keep this commitment? 2. How will you learn more about mindfulness? Action 5: Consider Faith ======================== Along the resiliency journey, faith serves as a hiking pole to steady the course. It has been described as a belief in things yet unseen. Despite all evidence to the contrary, the resilient spirit KNOWS that "this too shall pass." The resilient person KNOWS that despite the gloom of challenges or the trepidation of major events, the dawn eventually breaks through. GPS Action ---------- 1. Look at a book, a video, or some article about an individual who thrived despite all odds. What can it teach you about faith? By the way, faith does not necessarily mean religion. 2. In your presilience logbook, write your responses to the recalculating questions. Find someone with whom to have a conversation. Recalculating Questions ----------------------- 1. What is one action you could take now--a small one--that you know would be an act of faith? 2. What is the best thing that can happen? The worst thing? Action 6: Practice Forgiveness ============================== There's a gift somewhere in every relationship and event. Find it and then say, I forgive. GPS Action ---------- 1. Determine if you are holding on to a grudge or anger and what that feeling does for your spirit. 2. Write a letter (which you will NOT send) to this person and get the emotion out of your head/heart and on to paper. 3. Have a ritual and burn or bury that paper. Turn the page. Done. Next. 4. In your presilience logbook, write your responses to the recalculating questions. Find someone with whom to have a conversation. Recalculating Questions ----------------------- 1. How would you feel if this event would vanish like smoke. 2. Does it serve you to hold onto this anger or grudge? Could it be holding you back? 3. What lessons in how you behave might be learned from this? 4. Do you think the other person is holding onto resentment? 5. What would it mean to you to take a higher road? Action 7: Nurture Your Pit Crew =============================== Who cheers you on at the finish line? Particularly if you come in last? How strengthening it is to tell your pit crew how much their steadfast faith in you means everything. GPS Action ---------- 1. In your presilience logbook, write your responses [to the recalculating questions]. Find someone with whom to have a conversation. Recalculating Questions ----------------------- 1. What are the names of your pit crew? 2. If you don't have one, how will you get one? 3. Whom do you want in it? Sometimes, your crew might even include someone who is no longer living but in your imagination. You KNOW what they would say to help you. Action 8: Improvise To Strategize ================================= I am a firm believer that at some point we all must go to the college MSU--Making Stuff Up. When you can't figure out what action to take try something--ANYTHING. As long as you keep the action on a short leash with a short feedback loop and it's neither illegal nor immoral... proceed! GPS Action ---------- 1. Think of a situation that confounds you now. What can you do that is radically different? You might need some creative brains on this one. 2. In your presilience logbook, write your responses to the recalculating questions. Find someone with whom to have a conversation. Recalculating Questions ----------------------- 1. What is humorous about about the situation? How can you expand on it, exaggerate, and make it even funnier? 2. What type of story would you tell about this situation: drama, western, comedy, adventure? 3. Who can you involve in your improvisation? How will you introduce the "scene" and then invite your partners to jump in and be spontaneous? The first rule of improvisation is "accept what is given." This means you don't correct or alter what your partner says. Stay open to new idea. Laughability ============ "Laugh-ability" is my made-up word for the good sense to try and find some way to spin an event so that you find something to laugh about--no matter how small. Resiliency requires energy. Laughter is high wattage and better than gas! GPS Action ---------- 1. In your presilience logbook, feel free to plug in anything that makes you laugh: one-liners, cartoons, jokes. Whatever. 2. Task yourself and possibly those around you to share one humorous thing. 3. In your presilience logbook, write your responses to the recalculating questions. Find someone with whom to have a conversation. Recalculating Questions ----------------------- 1. What is funny about your current situation? 2. Where might others find humor? 3. What can you (or someone else) do to lighten the mood? Enter The World of Play: A Kissing Cousin To Laughability --------------------------------------------------------- The opposite of play is not work. It's depression. So states psychologist Stuart Brown in his new book, Play: How It Shapes the Brain, Opens the Imagination, and Invigorates the Soul. Anacharsis, a sixth BCE philosopher insisted that we are to Play so that you may be serious. ... play becomes the non-chemical stimulant for channeling stress into productive outputs. Play takes many forms. The trick is to find one that resonates with you. ... note that play is as much as [sic] state of mind as it is an activity. GPS Action ---------- 1. Give yourself permission to play. Put a play date with yourself on the calendar and treat it as sacred, like meeting with your most important client. Remind yourself that you'll be refreshed and thinking more clearly if you play. 2. Find the play that best suits you. Start a Play Diary, writing down moments of well-being. It might be times you remember. ... Whatever it is--in the doing, you feel a sense of contentment and joy. 3. Pass play along. Encourage others. 4. Martin Buber, German Jewish biblical scholar, believed that, Play is the exultation of the possible. Isn't that what we are all looking for now--what is possible? 5. In your presilience logbook, write your responses to the recalculating questions. Find someone with whom to have a conversation. Recalculating Questions ----------------------- 1. When was the last time you played? 2. What is keeping you from it? Does someone need to give you permission? 3. Can you memorize this line? Don't take life so seriously. Nobody comes out of it alive. Know What Stitches Your Soul ============================ Along the journey to cultivating resiliency skills, rest and renewal are balm to your spirit. GPS Action ---------- 1. Determine what stitches your soul. 2. Look on the Internet to find people who have used humor to deal with challenge. Don't be afraid to share one (not hundreds) with colleagues. 3. In your presilience logbook, write your responses to the recalculating questions. Find someone with whom to have a conversation. Recalculating Questions ----------------------- 1. What can you do to bring a smile or a laugh to customers, clients, family members, and/or neighbors? 2. What is stopping you? What might be the benefit to you? Alignment ========= The clearer you become on your values and purpose, the more likely you are to grow through challenges or opportunity. GPS Action ---------- 1. Write a personal mission statement. Even if you are reading this for organizational reasons, a personal mission statement becomes a litmus test for many actions and decisions. It lets you monitor your life's course, acting like an internal GPS. There's a corporate mission but equally important, you have a personal mission. 2. In your presilience logbook, write your responses to the recalculating questions. Find someone with whom to have a conversation. Recalculating Questions ----------------------- 1. Imagine that your soul has left your body but you can still hear what people are saying about you. What do you hear? What do you want to hear? IF you have children, what do they say? 2. Think of two people whom you admire and who inspire you. What about them inspires you? What traits do you admire? 3. If money were no object, after you had all the fun you wanted and payed whatever you wanted in bills, what would you do? 4. How would you know, each day, if [whether] you were living your mission? Remember, this isn't the Ten Commandments and chiseled in stone. It can grow and change as you grow and change. Putting It All Together ======================= My desire is that this small book [offers hope.] With positivity, energy, and purpose, may you open doors to discover more ways to be adaptable, to find ideas and encouragement from others, to respond with agility as you try new actions, and ultimately to continue to create a future that brings you alive with laughter and alignment. Remember the word CULTIVATE. Resiliency requires cultivation.## Recalculating Questions 1. Imagine that your soul has left your body but you can still hear what people are saying about you. What do you hear? What do you want to hear? IF you have children, what do they say? 2. Think of two people whom you admire and who inspire you. What about them inspires you? What traits do you admire? 3. If money were no object, after you had all the fun you wanted and payed whatever you wanted in bills, what would you do? 4. How would you know, each day, if [whether] you were living your mission? Remember, this isn't the Ten Commandments and chiseled in stone. It can grow and change as you grow and change. Putting It All Together ======================= My desire is that this small book [offers hope.] With positivity, energy, and purpose, may you open doors to discover more ways to be adaptable, to find ideas and encouragement from others, to respond with agility as you try new actions, and ultimately to continue to create a future that brings you alive with laughter and alignment. Remember the word CULTIVATE. Resiliency requires cultivation. No garden grows without tilling the soil, weeding, watering, and finding what plants grow in your garden. Effort always precedes reward--even in the dictionary. Resources: The Energizer: Resilient Insights for Work & Life Personal Resiliency Assessment ============================== What is your personal RQ--Resiliency Quotient Using the following scale put a numerical value by each statement. Numerical scale: 1. Never 2. A few times 3. Frequently 4. Without a doubt 1. ___ I believe in my ability to influence my attitude. 2. ___ I've handled challenges before, and I can do it again. 3. ___ I can look at a problem from many angles. 4. ___ I have work that is meaningful. 5. ___ I have a strong support network. 6. ___ I exercise on a regular basis. 7. ___ I clearly communicate my ideas. 8. ___ I am appreciated for what I do. 9. ___ People say I have a good sense of humor. 10. ___ I can see more than one option in a given situation. 11. ___ I am generally an optimistic person. 12. ___ By my own definition, I believe in a "Higher Power." 13. ___ I easily express gratitude. 14. ___ I ask for help when I need it. 15. ___ I am willing to try new things, to risk. Score: * 52-60: What a Rock! You're on a hero's journey! * 42-51: Good resilience intentions. See what areas might need improvement? * 32-41: Time to get some help. In what areas can you get the fastest, most visible results? Build from there. You might consider hiring a coach. * 15-31: Remember the dinosaurs? They did NOT grow forward. And they did NOT GROW through. Look at the low scoring responses for growth opportunities. Go back through the book and see what strategies you can find. Organizational Resiliency Assessment ==================================== What is your organizational RQ--Resiliency Quotient Using the following scale put a numerical value by each statement. Numerical scale: 1. Never 2. A few times 3. Frequently 4. Without a doubt 1. ___ Employees readily talk about how much they like working here. 2. ___ Management is known for asking employees their opinions. 3. ___ Management is known for listening to employees' opinions. 4. ___ Training is available for all employees on a regular basis. 5. ___ Managers are acknowledged for helping employees advance in skill level. 6. ___ The organization has flexible work hours. 7. ___ People are treated as "whole people" with lives outside of work. 8. ___ Management is willing to try new things. 9. ___ Management readily shares current information about the health of the company. 10. ___ Managers have superb communication skills. 11. ___ The organization walks its talk. 12. ___ Managers encourage innovation and creativity. 13. ___ We trust senior management to act in the best interest of all stakeholders. 14. ___ We are told bad news as well as good news. 15. ___ Our company's product/service is meaningful and valuable in the marketplace. 16. ___ We are known for carefully listening to the marketplace, the customers, trends, and the competition. Score: * 52-64: What a Rock! It's an organization of heroes! * 42-51: Good resiliency intentions. She what areas might need improvement. What can YOU do? * 32-41: The organization needs help. Who needs to be involved? In what areas can you get the fastest, most visible results? Is this a training issue? Where is your sphere of influence? Build from there. You might need some outside help. * 15-31: Remember the dinosaurs? Grow forward they did NOT. Nor did they GROW through! Time to get serious. Are there too many changes? Does the culture need to have a serious adjustment? What is in your sphere of influence? Look at low scoring responses for growth opportunities. Do you see a theme? Go back through the book and see what strategies you can find. If all else fails call me 949-496-8640. Optional Exercises ================== The Cost of Cheer ----------------- Write down five things that make you happy--whether walking in the woods, calling an old friend, whatever. Take the first five that come to your mind. Next to each item, estimate the cost. Estimate how much time it takes. What do you discover? What's stopping you? Inner Resilience: Your Past Is A Prologue ----------------------------------------- Jot down three of the most devastating experiences you have had. Next to them, list the corresponding insights or lessons you gained as a result. What does this tell you? What strengths did you use? Do you still have those strengths? Accentuate The Positive ----------------------- Notice your surroundings. What might be good about the current situation? What are three positive things? According to Dr. Barbara Frederickson, it takes three positives to overcome a negative and can actually serve as a catalyst to bring more of what you WANT in your life. From Scarcity To Abundance -------------------------- List ten things you thought there wouldn't be enough of and you survived. List ten areas where you have too much, not too little. List 20-1000 wonderful things that entered your life at the right time with no effort on your part. Start with air, sun, rain, and more. Keep A Gratitude Logbook ------------------------ This is one of the most powerful tools. I've done it on and off for years. Life is much better when I write! Get a blank book, different from the presilience logbook. Every night, write at least three things you are grateful for. Some days, it might be as simple as air and clean sheets. Don't stop. There's more! Develop A Want List And A Have-To-Do List ----------------------------------------- Are you living the life you REALLY want? So often, we make changes because we feel like we HAVE to do it or we consume irreplaceable time doing "have to do" things. Make a list of ALL the things you have to do. Then, go back and honestly ask if the heavens will fall and your life implode if you crossed some off? Now, create a list of things you really want to do. Put down everything, even those as crazy as swim with alligators (ugh--maybe you are doing that now), take a world cruise, whatever. Think wide. Think deep. Put a star by those things that are really deeply-felt desires. What steps can you take to move toward them? Remember, small steps matter. Celebrate small wins. Find out who can help you. And grow through this opportunity! author: McDargh, Eileen detail: tags: book,self-help title: Your Resiliency GPS Tags ==== book self-help