Posts Tagged ‘love’

The Art of Appreciation

Thursday, May 6th, 2010

This week is my anniversary – a celebration of finding the most incredible person among the 7 billion people on the planet, and choosing to build a life together. Things are happy for us because we both believe we have the ability and responsibility to invent our lives – it is our choice how excited, fired up and passionate we live. So we choose large. We choose exceptional. And this first starts by appreciating each other and our world.

This week, I ask you to join me in using the phrase have I told you how much I appreciate you? with the people in your life. A simple phrase that reminds us to value, honor and acknowledge the greatness we see in others.

Say “Have I told you how much I appreciate you…” with the following (or, add your own) – and use it with as many people as you can:
o For the way your smile can remind me I have everything I need – in you.

o For the things of beauty you add to my day.

o For your humor, love, sincerity and honesty.

o For making the best food on the planet.

o For watching out for me when I get too busy to do it for myself.

o For letting me screw up and not rubbing my nose in it, and forgiving me for it.

o For giving me a hug when it was exactly what I needed.
o For greeting me every morning with “Happy Anniversary” because every day is an anniversary of choosing to be together.
o For making an “event” out of the little things to make them great things.

o For saying ‘no’ to something you want so I can say ‘yes’ to something I want, and never bringing it up.

o For always doing your best – at everything.

o For choosing me to go through life with you.

Appreciation is the glue that keeps people together. Never miss an opportunity to notice each other’s greatness and appreciate it.

Make today the first day of your year of appreciative living. Then next year, on this date (your appreciative anniversary), commit to another year…and another. Soon, appreciative living will be your standard. And it all starts with “Have I told you how much I appreciate you for….?”

Please forward this to someone who can benefit from it and contact me for help in learning the art of appreciation.

Life Is Not A Rental Car

Thursday, November 12th, 2009

How many of you wash and vacuum a rental car before returning it to the rental office? Not many I imagine. The reason is – it is not yours.

You always take better care of things that belong to you.

Okay, life. After all it is yours and don’t we take better care of things that belong to us? If so, I have a couple of questions for you – and be honest:

Do you exercise often and eat well to treat your body right?
Do you connect to a higher source or appreciate the planet to treat your spirit right?
Do you read, think and learn to treat your brain right?
Do you choose your friends and loved ones carefully and honestly to treat your heart right?
Do you know your talents and strengths to treat your job and life right?

You are not in a rental here – this life is yours.

Take Action: Spend some time with yourself to see if you treat yourself like an owner or a renter. How you live today sets you up for the quality of life you will have later. You own it, so treat it right.

Monday Point of View – Family Wisdom

Sunday, October 18th, 2009

I just spent an amazingly fun day with three of my five siblings. We laughed, ate, complained and ate again – that is what an Italian family does. But we had a great time with each other. Sure, we had our squabbles as kids – six of us all about a year apart in age – but we were always close and have gotten closer as we aged. Time and careers have moved several of us far from the others (I now live the greatest distance away) but when I come home to New England, it is as if I never left. We are emotionally connected to each other…and this connection is never interrupted by time or distance.

So as I watched and participated in the antics of a large, opinionated, but loving and committed family, I was reminded of the power of our emotional connection and its lessons for work and life:
Everyone is different and those who are the happiest are those who know themselves, and work in areas and live in ways that play to what they are good at and what activates their passions. My siblings are all very different. But each knows what he or she is great at and has built lives around what each is good at and what each loves to do. This activates our emotional connection to work and life helping us become more intrinsically happy (in life) and higher performing (in the workplace).
• Those who have married into the family are quickly and warmly received and accepted; they are as much a part of the family as my siblings and are emotionally invested in the family from the first day. Businesses that quickly and warmly welcome their new members win their respect and loyalty. Great businesses determine their new employees’ talents, values and interests to help them fit into the workplace right away, and to feel emotionally connected to their work and workplace. We all want to feel like we belong.
We laugh, have a good time and have learned to keep things in perspective. We are serious when we need to be but not afraid to have fun. Workplaces and lives that build in fun and maintain perspective are not only more enjoyable but also are more productive. Many employees think work is a four-letter word. Great managers build fun wherever possible because it activates the emotional connection of employees to their work; employees contribute more, the emotion bonds between employees and the organization improve and performance increases. Always remember to laugh and have fun.

A Sunday with family was not only a moment to reconnect with family, but it was a lesson and reminder of how to work strong and live stronger. Many times, wisdom and lessons come from others; today it came again in the faces and voices of my siblings. Know yourself. Own your life. Love your work. Care. Love. Trust, Learn. Commit. Allora, tutti a tavola a mangiare.

Own your work and life

Sunday, August 23rd, 2009

I was reading The Traveler’s Gift (by Andy Andrews) this week while I was on the road. It is a story of accountability – of being fully responsible for our decisions, the quality of our life and the impact we make. It is a story of owning our lives and our work.

In the book, the traveler is introduced to seven historic figures, including Harry Truman, Ann Frank, Abraham Lincoln and others. Each historical person has some particular piece of wisdom to share to help the traveler realign and own his life. Though all seven lessons presented are important, the first lesson is most critical – “the buck stops here” – in other words, you own your life, your decisions, your success or failure. There is no blaming others, no wishing things were different. You have choices and your choices direct your work and life. It is about being fully accountable. It is about owning your life and everything in it.

In today’s blaming world, it always seems to be someone else’s fault. Today, step up and own you life and work. If job seeking, find out what you are good at and apply for jobs in which you are competitive. Take charge of your process and own it. In life, review your choices and be clear about what you want for your life. Live your life, not the life others require or expect of you. Work in roles that activate your passions and talents. Love what you do. Your past does not dictate your future. The buck stops with you. Your life, your work. Own it.

ps – check out the entire book; it is empowering and engaging. Share its lessons with people you care about.