The Courage To Be Yourself

I’ve liked myself the best when I have been true to myself.

When I think with my head.

Feel with my heart.

And not the other way around.

When my life is not the “overnight Nielsen ratings” in an attempt to make more friends, curry more favor to ingratiate myself to others, make more money and accrue more power by being someone who I am not.

I start each day in front of the mirror while shaving by being grateful for the people in my life, looking deep into my own eyes to remind myself of who I really am and who I want to be and by dreaming of what my life could be with the day ahead that I am fortunate enough to have.

Sometimes it is difficult to be yourself.  God knows, there are pressures all around to be the employee the boss wants, the partner your spouse wants and the “success” society expects.

Everything we do to be a better person should be directly tied to everything we do to be the fine person we already are.

It takes courage to become the person you really are.  When we make it part of our daily routine, it is not only possible, but probable.

“Do your thing and don’t care if they don’t like it” – Tina Fey

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The Easiest Way to Say “I Love You”

Let’s face it.  People are often funny about saying those three words.

But there is no need to let that stop you from expressing love to a spouse, a friend, a child or a parent. 

Maybe we just don’t do soap opera I love you’s very well.

Not a problem from now on.

The words are nice but the deeds are nicer.

A dinner with a card that says it for you is just as much a winner as the words without dinner.

A USC student told me that most of his friends have credit cards from mom and pop and to him that meant spend anything but don’t ask me to come visit.  So, when it comes to expressing love, actions do speak louder than words.  Money isn’t love.

Consider this as a father Paul Harvey once talked about on his radio show how he slipped a note into the glove compartment of his daughter’s car in case of an accident.  Well, she had that accident and read the note which said something like don’t worry about the car, you are safe and that is all that matters.

And remember, even people where I love you’s freely roll off of their lips have no advantage over the rest of us.

Food is love.

The gift of time is love.

Funny thing.

Sometimes when the action speaks louder than the words, the words find a way of coming out more easily – in that order.

Let’s get lovin’.

If you liked this thought, tell a friend and I’ll keep them coming

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Banish Shame Forever

When I was a Dale Carnegie instructor, I once heard a student who, as part of her speaking assignment about a childhood experience, told the class that her father removed all doors from their house including the bathroom.

What a dramatic reminder of the power of shame.

But shame isn’t limited to bizarre situations like removing the doors in a house.  Shame happens every day even in subtle ways.

Sometimes we are the shamers who tell another: “you should be ashamed of yourself” and sometimes we are the recipients of shame.

Marilyn Sorenson, author of Breaking the Chain of Low Self-Esteem says “unlike guilt – which is the feeling of doing something wrong, shame is the feeling of being something wrong”.

There are four effective ways to deal with shame:

  1. Accept your faults as long as you can name an equal number of good virtues.  The French poet Jean de La Fontaine said:  “Everyone has the faults which he continually repeats, neither fear nor shame can cure them”.  We are less vulnerable to shame when we feel good about ourselves.
  2. Avoid becoming codependent to another person because codependent people rely on others to validate them and they are subject to shameful feelings.
  3. No one – like in no one – gets your permission to act in an abusive way.
  4. Love in self is the antidote for shame. 

Shame kills self-esteem.

But love of self kills shame.

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Lou Reed’s Gift To You

The brilliant underground artist Lou Reed who died over the weekend at the age of 71 pleased audiences and performers alike.

But perhaps his best contribution was to remind us that our lives have a certain order – a type of continuity – that should be on our minds throughout our lives.

Reed told Rolling Stone in a 1987 interview that he considered all of his albums as chapters of a book in his life:

“All through this, I’ve always thought that if you thought of all of it as a book then you have the Great American Novel, every record as a chapter … They’re all in chronological order. You take the whole thing, stack it and listen to it in order, there’s my Great American Novel.”

Life with a purpose, not an accident.

The chapters are things that we actively dream, plan and accomplish using our God-given gifts.

You never complete it, nor do you stop writing new chapters until the day you die.

Reed pioneered lyrical honesty and paved the way for punk and alternative rock with his life’s work.

How is your very own Great American Novel shaping up – now is a great time to plan and write the next chapter.

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The Best New Management Skill

Look at it like this.

When you start your car, you can’t use your house key.

When you open your office, you can’t gain entrance with your desk key.

What lets you into a safe deposit box doesn’t open your luggage.

But somehow we miss the most valuable tool we could ever use to bring the best out of others – it takes a different key for everyone to unlock their value.

Bosses have one set of rules – but why?  Everyone is not the same.  This doesn’t mean every employee gets to make their own rules, it means not everyone responds the same way to one approach.

Why email memos to “the staff” or “the team” are a waste of time.

And “rules” will increasingly get you no cooperation in a world that hates rules.

The best new management skill is to create a mental key for everyone you deal with – by the way, this works at home as well.  From now on, one key doesn’t fit all. 

The key to unlocking the talents of Megan is not necessarily the same key that unlocks the skills of Josh.  Know this and you will increase your effectiveness as long as you do it.

Be prepared to carry around a mental keychain with all the knowledge you have of dealing for each individual in your life.

The greatest achievers already have this in their DNA. 

We can add it today.

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Even a Seal Gets the Fish

Thank you is two powerful words.

If you ask people what is eating them, a lack of appreciation is near the top of the list.  In fact, for decades, workplace studies confirm that the number one thing employee’s want in their career is appreciation.

Even above money!

Money often ranks fourth or lower.

Appreciation is free – we humans have the capability of manufacturing as much appreciation as we need every day.  And yet, too frequently we don’t do it.

Everyone knows how to show appreciation – a word, a note, a handshake, a compliment in front of others – the ways are endless.

But first we must make generating constant appreciation a more significant part of our daily routine.

May I share with you what got my attention the very first time I heard it?

Even a seal is thrown a fish for listening to its trainer.

What an image.

What a great way to remember to walk around and hand out the “food” that makes people happy, cooperative and motivated – sincere and honest appreciation.

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Mobile Stress Relief

You don’t have to be a monk to meditate.

Sometimes life is too intense.  Too much going on.  Not enough ah ha moments.

Brain scans done on people who meditate prove that the body pushes more blood to the brain creating more happiness and calm.

For those having difficulty mediating, here’s the workaround:

  1. Ten minutes a day – set an alarm.
  2. Phone off.
  3. Find a place to be undisturbed but it can be done anywhere
  4. One deep breath through the nose and out through the mouth, close your eyes, feel the weight of your body and mentally scan down from the head to foot to discover how your body feels.

For some reason we think we have to take meditation classes to get the proven medical benefits of just 10 minutes of stress relief per day.

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Pay It Forward

A friend of mine named Wynn Etter used to pay the bridge toll for the car behind him when he crossed from New Jersey into Pennsylvania.

He loved to do it and to watch the reaction of many grateful drivers over the years who sped up to try to pull up beside his car and wave a gesture of thanks.

In Sunday’s New York Times, the journalist Kate Murphy wrote that Americans are being spontaneously generous these days – perhaps due to the discouraging things that are happening in our nation right now.

So in many cities in the U.S. and Canada fast food drive-thrus are seeing an unprecedented number of customers who are paying for the person’s meal in the car behind them.  There have been “pay it forward” incidents involving between 4 and 24 cars at Wendy’s, McDonald’s, Starbucks, Del Taco, Taco Bell, KFC and Dunkin’ Donuts in many states according to the author.

The payer pulls away before the person behind gets a chance to say thanks.  And because it is anonymous it’s not creepy because nothing is asked for in return.

Imagine if this “pay it forward” movement expanded to helping people get ahead in life with the understanding that they, too, would then one day have to give a helping hand to others.

“Pay It Forward” is not a government program, it’s not mandated, and it’s all about doing good during troubling times.

They say one person can’t change the world, but they can buy them a burger. 

“For it is in giving that we receive”  — St. Francis of Assisi

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  • Jerry, It was nice to read the “Pay It Forward” article. This is a program that we have been doing for nearly 8 years in the Riverside-San Bernardino and Palm Springs marketst  on 89.7 KSGN.. We call it  “The Drive Through Difference” and even have a pre-written note people can print from our website  www.ksgn.com . The note explains the concept and points people to the radio station to hopefully share their feelings about what just happened. Whenever we get those calls we use them to promote the fact that you can change a person’s day just by buying for them at the drive through.
    Bryan O’Neal / PD / Mornings
    89.7 KSGN
    bryan@ksgn.com

  • Jerry, 
    I have been doing a regular feature on my radio station for over 15 years called Random Acts of Kindness. I take 100 bucks ( i either pay it my self or have donors ) and ask a listener to call, who is willing to do a random act. They have to accept it before I tell them what they need to do . Then I come up a way that they have to give away the 100 dollar bill.  I have done hundreds over the years , many are moving and it always makes great radio.
    Brent@KZST.com

Dislike the Deed Not the Person

Why waste the energy to hate a person who is at odds with us?

That includes people who are evil, selfish, hurtful or ignorant.

Expending positive energy on disliking people who are not nice is tantamount to a boomerang coming right back at us.

But forgiving is not forgetting.

We must find a way to forgive our enemies as difficult as it can be.  Sometimes they are family and often they are people we know well so it can be very difficult.

We don’t have to expose ourselves to continued hurt and disappointment.  Cut it off and move on.

But no one has ever found justice by doing the exact same thing to others who wish hurt onto them.

Let it go, move on and rid yourself of the negative energy of others.

“Never waste a minute thinking about people you don’t like” – Dwight D. Eisenhower

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  • LOVE the Dwight quote. Definitely saving that one. Thanks!

How To Make People Insanely Happy

Almost no one can remain unhappy if you do this.

Try to say yes.

Among the things that make people angry and upset is when they feel no one is listening.  Worse yet, not responding to them in a positive way.

On a recent flight from Philadelphia to Phoenix a US Airways gate agent seemed to look for ways to say “no”. 

To be fair, these airline employees are often hamstrung by company policy.  Can’t find you a seat.  Can’t sell you an upgrade so you can sit together until just before boarding.  Can’t stand in line an hour in advance to be first to board. 

Can’t. Can’t. Can’t.

The airlines are famous for this but unfortunately in today’s world, no is the new yes.

Let’s get beyond no.

1.  Find ways – and that means really look for them – to say yes to others at work, at home and even in occasional contact with people you don’t know or see very often.  Even if policy prohibits you from doing exactly what others want, we can often find another way to say yes and deliver the message we’re listening and responding.

2.  In personal relationships – you can do this one today if you want – give a spouse, child or friend your say in making a choice or decision if you can be comfortable with it.  Stand back and watch happiness like you’ve never seen.

3.  Be sincere.  Nothing is worse than an insincere attempt to manipulate another person by fooling them into thinking you’re listening and responding.

There are lots of things we cannot control in life, but saying, “yes” to others is not one of them.

Say yes to impress.

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Intention Deficit Disorder

Advocates of the mind/body connection say you don’t have to go to church to practice gratitude. 

And adopting an attitude of gratitude has been proven to make those willing to do it happier.

What I thought was useful was the term “Intention Deficit Disorder” that I heard Dr. Oz use – that is, the ability to start each day with a positive intention as opposed to rehashing or ruminating on the negative things in our lives.

What is your intention to be happier today? 

To be blunt, if we start the day without a specific intention to be happy then we are at the mercy of luck to find happiness.  Those are bad odds.  We can do better.

  1. On your phone or iPad or on a simple piece of paper, wake up, take a moment and isolate one positive specific thing you intend to do to be happier today.
  2. You will have 365 of them for each year – 366 in a Leap Year.
  3. You may repeat the same intention on purpose or not because this simple log will tell you a lot about your intentions.
  4. Before closing out the note or putting away the paper, rate how yesterday’s intention worked.  Did you have a good day or bad – rate from 1-10 (10 being a spectacularly happy day).

Most of us want to be happier and only need to make a positive daily affirmation part of our routine to rid our minds of negative thoughts that haunt us so we have a chance for happiness.

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Care More About Happiness Than Money

When I graduated from college, call me stupid, but I never once said I wanted to make a lot of money.

Yes, I wanted a nice car and a house some day – and that takes money.  But money as a goal is something I have never pursued.

Many of my classmates took a more direct path seeking riches over even happiness.  And a half-time report would indicate that those of us who sought to work in jobs that made us happy instead of rich actually did pretty well in both ways.

Millennials care more about happiness than money and their older friends and family often think they are misguided.

But …

1.  Psychologist and psychiatrist offices are filled with not just the poor but the rich which helps explain why so many rich people have shrinks.

2.  Nothing is worth working in a job that doesn’t make you happy no matter what the price.  Note how Yahoo CEO Marissa Mayer was recruited from Google for her high-powered job that is built around her new child and family.  She got what she wanted because she knew what she wanted.

3.  Money doesn’t buy friends, it buys the illusion of friends.

4.  Now, when our friends are happy or sad it influences us.  When people do things that make them happy, it spreads instantly through social media and picks up momentum.

5.  Choose who you work fore carefully.  Millennials are not easily pushed around and they know what they want.  A 2010 poll showed they actually like their bosses more than Baby Boomers.

6.  Dreams and optimism are mood enhancers.  Dreamers are really happier.  We all have dreams, but we must give ourselves permission to pursue them in our personal and family lives and at work.

“What can be added to the happiness of a man who is in health, out of debt, and has a clear conscience?” -Adam Smith

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The Key To Stop Giving Up

As long as we don’t give up, we can never, ever fail.

Think of that.

Do everything wrong, get every bad break, have everyone turn against you, compete against the more talented, get beaten down every day and it is still impossible to fail if you absolutely refuse to give up.

The one thing about giving up is that it is for losers.

Winners never give up no matter how bad things get.

When England was bombed night after night by Nazi planes in World War II, Prime Minister Winston Churchill could not afford to mince words to his beleaguered people.

Remember, by day the British had to walk over the rubble, tend to the injured and dead and then prepare to get battered again at night.

It doesn’t get any worse than that.

Keep that in mind and repeat the powerful phrase Churchill told his people:

“Never, never, never give up”.

It’s in our power to will our way to success because you can’t fail unless you stop trying.

“Fall down seven times, get up eight” – Japanese proverb

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The Way To Be Well Liked

This is valuable advice for anyone and particularly for young people in the developmental stages.

You can have more people like you today by being authentic.

Advertising used to be accepted for being cute or cutting edge and now it seems like lying.  Facebook and social media make people say and do things that seem hard to believe or at best disingenuous.  We try too hard to be perfect when being real would do just fine.  The standards are set high in a society that boasts the number of friends it has in social media.

Here is a short course on being well liked:

  1. The more you try, the more you stand for nothing or as Margaret Thatcher said, “If you set out to be liked, you would be prepared to compromise on anything at any time, and you would achieve nothing”.
  2. Work hard at pleasing others.  That’s saying a lot in the current climate of self-absorption.  Steve Martin made the point:  “Bad psychoanalysis would say I enjoyed pleasing people, working really hard and pleasing people, which is probably related to my father in some way. But I really liked working hard. When I worked at Disneyland, I’d do 12 hours straight and go home thrilled”.
  3. Be an original not a copy.  If you try to be someone else who is great, you will still only be an imitation.
  4. Be open to all kinds of people.  As I used to tell my USC students, as we age we largely rely on our established network of friends and acquaintances.  Engage different cliques.
  5. Be approachable.  A smile or a kind word let’s others know you are available to be a friend.

Being authentic means being real – admitting to making mistakes and not being perfect and always be willing to cherish your new found ability to be happy with yourself as you are.

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How To Start Over

The most exciting times are when we leave the past and try something new.

Do new things. 

Find new careers. 

Meet new people. 

Discover new things.

But too often we have to be forced into starting over.  It is a residue of something unfortunate that compels us to take action.  We eventually buck up and tackle the job of starting over because we have to.  And the results are almost always the best of times that follow no matter how things started.

What would happen if we didn’t wait for misfortune to descend upon us before starting over again?

Sports teams somehow need to hit rock bottom before they really shake things up to compete again.  In corporate America companies cling to their traditional streams of profit even if their revenue is consistently heading down.  Even in our personal lives we frequently overstay relationships that are without feeling due to fear of having nothing in its place.

The next time you’re ready to change the status quo and start over, let this inspire you:

  1. Live in the future not the past.  As Carl Bard says, “Although no one can go back and make a brand new start, anyone can start from now and make a brand new ending.”
  2. Welcome failure because it is going to take a few failures to arrive at success.  There is no way around it.  Lee Iacocca saved Chrysler Corporation by trying things (and yes, failing) and he says, “So what do we do?  Anything.  Something.  So long as we just don’t sit there.  If we screw it up, start over.  Try something else.  If we wait until we’ve satisfied all the uncertainties, it may be too late.”
  3. Use a new canvass every day.  When we paint a picture you don’t keep throwing paint on the same canvas.  We actually get a new canvass every single day.  Think of it like that.  How many empty canvasses do you have?
  4. It’s never too late to start over.  If that’s our excuse, what we’re really saying is I’m not ready.  Today – even now – is a good time to start especially if you remember that the sooner we begin, the sooner things get better.  Guaranteed.

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  • Jerry, if you don’t reach your peak and then want to reach a new goal.  You have not set goals.  I reached my peak of launching a News/Talk station and working in a top 3 market.  Now after a successful run, I made a choice to do something new.  It is exciting, scary, fun all at the same time.  I did this on my timetable.  I took 2 years to choose where I would live and slowly developed what I would do.  I am slowly making the adaptation to my new life with my new goals.  It is wonderful!  Peter  PS.  Thanks for being here for me!

Recharge Your Life

Lu Ann Cahn, a longtime TV reporter in Philadelphia and a longtime cancer survivor believes she has found a way to eliminate the blahs, the depression that hits us when things go wrong.

In 2010, she felt a funk coming on and decided to try a novel change.  She would do something new every day.

She walked across the 8,300-foot span of a bridge one day and although a suspicious police officer stopped her fearing that she was going to jump, she was never more in the moment in a positive way.

Lu Ann Cahn survived three major health problems that began early when she was 33.  She’s now 53 and writes about how she recharges her life by doing something positive every day.

She’s serious about trying new things.

On one January 1st, Lu Ann jumped into the icy Atlantic Ocean in nothing but a bathing suit.

She can’t skate very well, but she auditioned for being one of The Philly Roller girls.

She slid down the stairs of the art museum after a snowstorm.

But not all her new things were challenging and wild.  Some days she pushed herself to meet new people.

It’s free.  It works.  And it turns a disadvantage into an advantage.

Here is Lu Ann Cahn’s inspirational story.

And a link to her book and blog.

“I dare me” – Lu Ann Cahn

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Winning Enthusiastic Cooperation

A co-worker always seems to oppose your ideas and suggestions.

A spouse hates it when you get your way all the time – or so they think.

A child refuses to do that which you ask them and has to be forced to do it.

These things have never happened to you, right?

Of course they have unless you know the formula for winning the enthusiastic cooperation of others.

1.  Create a win-win by responding to ideas and suggestions instead of reacting to them.  Reacting can be more emotional.  Responding is a means of first letting the other party know you’re first listening.  Great with co-workers.

2.  Make the other person think the idea is his or hers.  Believe it or not, when you give up control of “idea” ownership, others buy in to what you are suggesting.  Effective with everybody especially those close to us.

3.  Begin by asking the other person for their ideas and suggestions before asking them to respond to your call to action.  Try this with a child next time you ask them to clean their room or do something for you.

People don’t just hand us their cooperation.  We have to earn it.

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When Others Don’t Follow Rules

Rules exist to be broken.

But responsibility — the ability to make decisions without prior authorization – is forever.

We hate rules — that’s why we break them.

And if you think society needs rules to avoid chaos what it really needs is more people taking responsibility to do, that which is right and just to others and ourselves.

Decades ago in a less independent world, folks submitted to a set of rules for society, in relationships and to employers.  Today, the emerging Millennial generation is leading the way to dismantle rigid societal rules and proffer for personal responsibility instead.

As a professor I asked my classes to help me design a way to test what they know about the subject matter of the course they were taking.  The rules of academia called for a test, a paper, and an exam.  But when you ask students to take responsibility for developing the yardstick upon which their learning progress is to be judged, you gain enthusiastic cooperation and compliance.

Replace hard and fast rules with reasonable responsibility if you want to get things done.

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The Fear of Being Fired

Sports coaches are hired to be fired.

It happened yesterday again when the Philadelphia Flyers hockey team parted ways with their coach of almost 5 years Peter Laviolette after just three games into the season (all losses). And that is after a vote of confidence a few weeks earlier from the owner AND general manager – that dreaded vote of confidence.

Some of the most successful people have been fired. 

Yet we fear being fired for all sorts of reasons from needing the income to the debilitating effects on the ego.  No one wants to be fired.

But it is a fear worth thinking about in a new way.

Scotty Bowman, one of the two most successful hockey coaches ever with 9 Stanley Cup rings was fired – an NHL record.  Hey the Beatles were rejected initially by their record label, too.  We all make mistakes.

Time for a little attitude adjustment.

1.  Whether you’re flying high or fearing termination, work for pride.  Pride in what we do makes people successful.

2.  Even certainty is uncertain – Coach Laviolette won a two-year contract extension only a year ago.  In life we never know and we shouldn’t be concerned.

3.  Disruption in an industry usually means success so think of it this way:  disruption of your career most certainly will bring good things because it will force positive change that might not ordinarily occur in the same job.

4.  My motto:  suffering is transformational.  Firing can’t hurt us.  The fear of being no one or having nothing could.  And in reality those fears are without merit.

Put this quote on your wall:

“I didn’t see it then, but it turned out that getting fired from Apple was the best thing that could have ever happened to me. The heaviness of being successful was replaced by the lightness of being a beginner again, less sure about everything. It freed me to enter one of the most creative periods of my life”.

That’s Steve Jobs!

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Rude People With Cell Phones — The Cure

“Leave your phone on”.

That’s how I started ever new semester with my USC students.

I said, I’m leaving my phone on and you can leave yours on, too.  But I’m not going to take calls or answer a lot of texts while I am with you teaching and you should do the same as you are learning.

Rules don’t work.

Responsibility does.

Keeping the phone in your pocket or purse during dinner, establishing a “no screen zone” a few hours before bed actually helps relationships and helps us get better sleep.

It also leads by example.

For those of us with children, it’s a bad example to scream at them when we should be taking ourselves to task.

I’m not giving up my smartphone any time soon and I’ll bet you aren’t either.

We must learn to integrate their advantages into our lives instead of let them take over.

In all my classes ever, not once did a student visibly abuse the privilege of being trusted to manage their own phones.  When it becomes a burden, we all know what to do.

It’s in our hands.

Control that which we can control – how we use our smartphones.

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  • Never let your phone ring at a Gallegher concert, unless you want to be a surprise guest.