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How to Get Rid of Your Head Trash About Money By Noah St. John

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Business
How to Get Rid of Your Head Trash About Money By Noah St. John

Whether you know it or not, your relationship with money is affecting every decision you make and everything you do. That’s why best-selling author, keynote speaker and VoiceAmerica show host Noah St. John has released his new book “Get Rid of Your Head Trash About Money.” And for a limited time, you can get a copy of Noah’s new book free at www.HeadTrashMoney.com Because inside this book, you’ll discover… * Why traditional “money-making” programs have set you up to fail. Page 70. * How an unhappy employee working 80-hour workweeks built a six-figure-per-month business using Noah’s methods. Page 83. * Where you are on the Income-Happiness Scale. Page 57. * The 5 simple steps that have generated millions of dollars for Noah’s clients. Page 65. * Why your Belief Gap is keeping you stuck and how to get unstuck now. Page 73. And that’s just the beginning… “Noah St. John’s work is about discovering within ourselves what we should have known all along – we are truly powerful beings with unlimited potential.” – Stephen Covey, The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People “Noah’s program represents one of the most significant breakthroughs in the study of success in decades.” – Jack Canfield, co-creator of Chicken Soup for the Soul Claim your free copy (just pay a small s&h fee) at www.HeadTrashMoney.com Noah St. John is a keynote speaker and bestselling author who’s famous for inventing Afformations® and helping people achieve financial freedom. He is the only author in history to have works published by Hay House, HarperCollins, Mindvalley, Nightingale-Conant, and the Chicken Soup for the Soul publisher. Noah is also the host of the new show on VoiceAmerica’s Influencers channel “Noah St. John’s Money & Mindset Mastery.” Watch Noah’s free daily training videos at www.NoahStJohn.com

Welcome To Time Share by Marie Jackson

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7th Wave
Welcome To Time Share by Marie Jackson

Jackson-player-wide

This Time Share is a bit like a vacation timeshare. You can take a time out from your schedule, take a break and a breath, and when you return to your day, you can see things differently – broader, bigger, deeper.

Weekly topics explore the subject of metaphysical spirituality, a field of study seeking to know life’s essence beyond what we recognize as physical – conversations offering perspectives to deepen our comfort with questions bridging the gap between materialist science and ideology or faith.

This first episode features just the host, Marie Jackson, introducing the format of the show, profiles of the regular contributors and some of the topics we will be exploring month by month.

February’s topic was “Ego isn’t a bad thing; it’s a tool, a vehicle transporting our character and self. We lose our way when the outer vehicle does the driving instead of the inner navigator.”

Marie begins the conversation with understanding Intention and the law of attraction.

You can listen to Time Share: Living Reality – Navigating the Dream live every Thursday at 9am PST.

 

Leverage Your Personal Power

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Empowerment
Leverage Your Personal Power

JIll KonrathPenny Roasma

Do your suggestions get taken seriously? Are you able to sell others your ideas, projects and services? There are two main skills needed and today, our two guests will give you some insider tips on how to harness your personal power. Our first guest is Jill Konrath, who is a sales expert. Sales is not just for people selling products. We also need sales to sell our ideas to others, and sometimes to our bosses to be considered for that raise or promotion. Jill will be challenging our assumptions about sales and give us proven strategies that work.  Our second guest is Penny Rosema who is an expert in the art of negotiation. The ability to negotiate is the second main skill needed to leverage our personal power. Penny will share some of the mistakes women make, how to prepare for negotiation success,  a negotiation road map and how to get more of what we want.  Penny has over 20 years of in the trenches experience and will share her tested techniques. Tune in 6/11 @ 12pm PT to ‘Today’s Inspiring Women‘.

Suffering From Burnout? Love Is The Cure! by Deborah Jane Wells (Part 3 of 3)

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Suffering From Burnout? Love Is The Cure! by Deborah Jane Wells (Part 3 of 3)

deborah wellsPicking up where we left off at the end of part 2 of this article, becoming conscious and claiming your personal power to neutralize the judge will yield immeasurable benefits. You will literally be able to redefine your world, because there is no absolute reality, only the story you tell yourself about what is happening and what it means. Every being, encounter, and experience that comes my way is filtered through a conglomeration of lenses that results in my unique perceptions.

These lenses cause me to see my world in a certain way. They are influenced by my unique and complex mix of myriad factors: the family, cultural, and societal norms I was taught; my physical and mental abilities; my personality and natural talents; my birth order; the patterns I deduced from all my past experiences; and the assumptions I’ve presumed concerning what’s likely and possible in the future. For example, the game of golf can be perceived as any or all of the following, depending on your lenses:

  • a delightful afternoon immersed in nature
  • an exhilarating and rewarding competitive event
  • a fun way to exercise with friends
  • an endless day of humiliation and torture

Let’s look at my own experience with golf to access this insight more deeply. When we lived on the East Coast, my husband and I owned a vacation home in the Blue Ridge Mountains. When my son, Matt, was eleven years old, we enrolled him in kids’ camp to help him enjoy his time there even more by spending it being active outdoors with his peers. One weekend in August, he signed up for a daylong sports camp that provided tennis instruction in the morning and golf in the afternoon. He returned home at the end of the day utterly smitten with golf.

We were so thrilled by Matt’s enthusiasm that we enrolled in a family golf clinic so the three of us could learn and play together. We were all beginners, out there to have fun and enjoy the beauty of the Blue Ridge Mountains. We passed many a delightful afternoon playing nine holes. With a tee time late in the day and no one behind us on the course, we could take our time, observing the privilege of unlimited mulligans (do-overs) and stopping to harvest lost golf balls in the woods. Advancing the little white ball down the fairway to the little white cup was always secondary to having a good time.

Until I switched to a consulting firm where golf was not a hobby but a responsibility. One of the benefits—nay, expectations—of being a partner in this firm was that I would play golf with my colleagues and clients. In fact, I would be expected to woo prospective clients on the golf course. To do that, I was expected to be a moderately good golfer, not an embarrassment to my firm and myself.

Gone were the leisurely afternoons on my beloved Blue Ridge golf course. Now my games with family became practice for the performance my partners expected me to deliver. While swearing was not the norm for me, now when I missed the first two shots off the tee, I swore. Now when I hit a shot into a sand trap, I threw my club down the fairway while swearing. When this happened, I’d explain to my companions that my father had been in the merchant marines. They’d say, “Did he swear a lot?” “No,” I’d reply, “evidently it skipped a generation.”

Because children don’t do what we say but rather do what they see us do, it’s unsurprising that, in short order, my eleven-year-old was also throwing his clubs and swearing like a sailor. That’s when I finally got a grip. Matt and I agreed that when either of us behaved badly on the course, we had to take a time-out together in the golf cart until both of us had returned to civility. As a result, Matt and I went through a period where we spent more time in the golf cart than on the course. This may have been just as well, because we were living proof that anger is not necessarily a performance enhancer.

One day, weary of swearing, throwing clubs, and spending time in the cart, the two of us sat there, arms crossed, scowling. After a few minutes of reflection, I said, “Babe, this has got to stop. Neither of us is having any fun anymore. I think I’ve figured out my problem. I’m imagining the potentially angry, ridiculing voices of my partners in my head, and I can’t relax and have fun when I’ve put them in there to beat me up. What’s going on in your head?” He looked at me with all the disgust of a kid who believes his parent has gone ’round the bend and said, “I have no idea. I don’t even know your new partners!”

However unconscious the process may feel at the time, you are always manifesting the world you choose to see. You create your reality in each moment by choosing what you will think, believe, feel, and do based on what your lenses allow. You can choose to look through the lens of fear and remain weighed down and self-imprisoned, or you can choose the lens of love and embrace a life of freedom and flow. No outside event or situation, no other person can dictate my attitude. Newsflash: in your life, you are the great decider.

The only person controlling your life is you. Turn unexplored possibilities into fulfilling realities by harnessing the transformative power of love to step into your greatness. Choose your energy and change your life!

© Copyright 2013 DJW Life Coach LLC. All rights reserved.

About the Author

What’s love got to do with minimizing stress and getting unstuck? Everything, according to empowerment coach and inspirational speaker Deborah Jane Wells, author of Choose Your Energy: Change Your Life! During her 30 years as an organization transformation consultant, Deborah served as a senior partner in four of the world’s largest, most prestigious global professional services firms. In 2005, she took a five-year sabbatical to find healing and peace because non-stop work had taken its toll. Her recovery from burnout, including a sustained 80-pound weight loss and freedom from 10 years of debilitating depression, led to finding her purpose guiding others on their journeys. Through healing and self-exploration, she discovered that loving yourself unconditionally is the key to transforming your personal life, your work, and the world. Deborah’s books, blog, radio show, and signature coaching programs help individuals and organizations harness that same transformative power of love to turn unexplored possibilities into fulfilling realities and step into their greatness. Learn more at Deborah Jane Wells.

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