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LIVING and WORKIN' MY WAY Newsletter May 2009 Sent Tuesday, May 5, 2009 View as html
               LIVING MY WAY NEWSLETTER May 2009
 
Welcome to everyone, especially all the new subscribers this month!  

As I sit down to write I'm entranced with the snow fall of cherry
blossom petals outside my office windows.  Welcome to the growing
and blooming part of 2009 and the new Living My Way newsletter. 
This month's theme is Attitudes and I think Spring is about the
best attitude changer there is.  You can't help but feel better
this time of year. 
     
Please forward this copy of the newsletter to friends and family
who might enjoy it, and feel free to email me with any questions or
comments. 
 
       Planning Your Trip Through Transition Teleclass 

So What's Next?   Whether you are retiring, experiencing an empty
nest, changing careers, or moving to a new locale, the effects of
transition can range from terrifying to exhilarating.   Not knowing
what's next can be paralyzing to a lot of people. Others try to
pretend that nothing's going to be different.
  
To weather transitions successfully, you need to:

-	Recognize and understand all the changes that happen 
-	Know how to find information to help you make smart choices
-	Have a strategy for actually getting from point A to point
        B and beyond. 
 
 We'll discuss the effects of change, resources to help you reach
your goal, and the processes that help propel you forward to a
successful new life after 50. 
   
Successfully navigating the second half of life requires a plan. 
Start making yours!
 
Time somehow slips by   - don't wait.   Reserve your spot in the
teleclass today! 
     
      Wednesday, May  27th   8:00 -9:00PM EDT    $25.00     
                                                                   
 Email me to reserve your place today - payment accepted at Paypal.  

Questions about teleclasses?  Follow this link for more information
- they're fun!

******************************************************************

An Attitude Adjustment 
  
I was 26 years old, married and the mother of a 3 yr old.  My
husband had been transferred to Birmingham, AL and we were
temporarily living in a hotel until our moving van arrived.  

Toward the end of the first week we found a New York style deli
restaurant where we could eat some familiar food. (As a couple of
Yankees,
this move was a real culture shock.)  As we sat waiting for our
meal, I was suddenly overwhelmed with the clatter around me, the
hugeness of the move, the isolation from my friends and family up
north, and the challenges of my life right then.  

I jumped up with no explanation and ran outside.  Across the narrow
street was a small park surrounded by a three- foot high stone wall
where I sat down and began to sob quietly.
  
As I sat there feelingscared and sorry for myself, an older
gentleman came around the corner gently jogging.  He must have
noted my posture and tears because he slowed down.  About 3 paces
away from me he said in a lovely, soft southern drawl, "Isn't it a
beautiful fall evening? 
This weather is perfect. Just look up at that beautiful sky."  
Then he smiled, lightly touched me on the shoulder, and moved on.
  
The effect of this human connection was remarkable.  His kind smile
and touch, and the command to "look up" brought me out of myself
and back into the world around me.  I realized that indeed, this
was a lovely pleasant evening (it was snowing back in NJ) and that
this place, despite all its strangeness to me, was just another
city with all sorts of people and opportunities and I would find my
place in it.
  
Instead of seeing the excitement and newness of this adventure to a
new part of the country, I had focused on my challenges - trying to
be brave in the midst of all the unknowns; being supportive of my
husband and his anxiety about his new job; managing to keep a
toddler on an even keel under less than perfect conditions.
  
A stranger's caring words and personal touch immediately changed my
attitude from negative and fearful to positive and curious.   Will
Garcia said, "The first step toward change is acceptance...Change is
not something you do, it's something you allow. "   I learned a
lesson that evening that sustained me through 11 more moves. 
 
Times of transition are full of change - loss of identity, lack of
stability and structure, a whole lot of unpredictability.  The
attitude we bring to our life changes can determine how well we
move into our new roles in the second half of our lives.

One of my favorite sayings is, "What you focus on will grow, but what
you ignore withers."  We get a lot farther in life by focusing on
the positive, the adventure and the excitement of new learning.

******************************************************************

"50 is the New Fifty - Suzanne Braun Levine
  
First an apology to my male readers for reviewing a book that is
written for women over 50.  I tried to search on Amazon for a
similar book written by and for men that I could recommend but came
up pretty empty-handed.  Gail Sheehy has written one -
Understanding Men's Passages - but the reviewers indicate that her
female perspective throws it off.  You might want to check it out
of the library to see for yourself.  None of the other titles seem
to address the emotional and spiritual issues of men in their
second half of life.  Somebody out there needs to write one!
   
The subtitle of Suzanne's book is 10 Life Lessons for Women in
Second Adulthood.  Lessons like figuring out what matters; making
life-long marriages work; allowing crisis to create new standards
of "normal" in your life; and taking care of ourselves like we've
always taken care of others.  There are some messages here for men
as well. 
 
She offers anecdotal stories of women from all walks of life that
we can each relate to along with her own experiences as a
sixty-five year old woman.  It is a more personal exploration than
her earlier book and expands on many of the same topics.
  
Here's a quote from Lesson Five:  "Improvising is the name of the
game.........We can deal with loss because we are becoming familiar
with the mixed blessing - melancholy, perhaps, but also liberating
- of letting go.
  
We let go of our children; we find ourselves.
  
We let go of some body standards; we become more comfortable in our
own skin.
  
Some of us let go of driving ambition, while others let go of the
tentativeness that held us back from setting our ambition loose.  
We let go of outdated pipe dreams and we let go of material
things." (p 88-89)

We are all experiencing a change in our outlook and attitudes.  The
refreshing part is to realize that we are not the only ones feeling
as we do.   And even more refreshing is her suggestion that we can
stretch and grow beyond any and all previous limits - most of which
have been self-imposed. 
  
As you consider career changes, lifestyle decisions and new goals,
realize that you can live in the present (putting the past to rest)
and that this is a new stage of life that can be creative and
rewarding in many ways.  

Most importantly, we don't need to try to be something we are not. 
I don't know about you, but I'm finding that quite nice. 

50 is Fifty and I would add that 60 is Sixty :)  
Being who you are is the goal. Defining who you are is the task. 
 Levine provides 10 great starting points for your journey.   

******************************************************************

A little Inspiration 

Now is the time to change your attitude 
Each day may not be a good one but there's something good in every
day. 
The difference is usually our attitude. 
Look for the positive. 
You'll find then the positives will shine through. 
They will act as signposts to navigate through the dark times. 

(excerpted from Now is the Time by Patrick Lindsay  NY  MJF Books 
2009) 
 
"....everything can be taken from a man but one thing, the last of
the human freedoms- to choose one's attitude in any given set of
circumstances, to choose one's own way."   Victor Frankl


        My e-mail box is always open if you just need to chat..
                        lifeworkdesigner at me dot com