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empathy

How Empathy Can Help You Create Big Change When You’re in the “Messy Middle”

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How Empathy Can Help You Create Big Change When You’re in the “Messy Middle”

Here we are in what Brené Brown calls “Day 2” in her Unlocking Us podcast.  She refers to it as the intense “in between.”  The time after the die has been cast - we are past the point of no return.  

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There’s a glaze that has formed again over our initial raw feelings that burst forth back in March when COVID hit and rippled shock through us all. Now I notice emotional cover-up again, like how caulking and a fresh coat of paint can close up the cracks where the foundation has shifted - both in my own emotions and what I see on Facebook and other social media.

In place of the heartfelt emotions I saw at the beginning of our pandemic when everything was raw, I now see pointing of fingers. I see how hard it is for us all to be with our own emotions.

Ironically, I see this in myself even though I spent the greater part of the summer writing about emotions.  I took a group of beta testers through this process I call Empathy Co-Creation™ - giving them tools to help unearth emotions to harness their energy and power to create more of what matters in their life. 

Brené talks about Day 2 being not only the messy middle but also where the magic happens.  She references that this is more than just what she sees in her own practice but also a theme in most storytelling, described as Act 2.  I found a great article here that describes Day 2 as “The Protagonist’s Arc.” This messy magic happens because it’s the point of transformation - when the protagonist is willing to be vulnerable and ask for help, recognizing that we can’t do it alone.  

I resonate with this so much – not only from a broader perspective due to the heaviness of COVID, racial injustice, climate issues and more, but also in the way I see creation happen time after time, project after project when going through the process. 

It corresponds to the way I have laid out the Empathy Co-Creation framework of my course – the Discover & Blend modules in the process are what I would call “the messy middle.” 

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And it’s also where I find myself now – I’ve written what I know, and I find myself in this in-between phase.  Vacillating between wanting to put it on a shelf and just push it forward, knowing there’s still more for me to uncover.  Knowing that I must be willing to dig deep myself… I must be vulnerable and ask for help to get through the middle.  I’m seeing that we, that I, can’t skip the middle. 

I have this unique vantage point of having a job where its purpose is to excavate, understand, explore, investigate and finally create from a “mess” of information.  To make it mean what it needs to mean – to create by marrying heart data with ideas and vision. I have explored what people want in depth for the purpose of creating solutions based on emotional needs.

I’ve spent thousands upon thousands of hours writing specific discussion guides, conducting focus groups, drawing templates to facilitate conversations around the emotional landscape of various categories. Whether for toilet paper, how people care for their hair, what foods they like to eat and why or how they shop for their pets.

And I began thinking a couple years ago about, if we could create products and services in mass based on people’s emotions, why can we not use the same methodology to create solutions for the good by internally reflecting on and being with our own and others’ emotions with more empathy.

My job, at least professionally, is to sit and listen with complete detachment and only curiosity to what someone’s telling me and to probe further in order to understand from their perspective what reality looks like for that person. 

And when I am tuned into who this person is and what their reality is without judgment and only curiosity, my ego, my fear, my amygdala falls to the back seat and instead, honors the prefrontal cortex with which creation occurs. I believe that if these skills can be utilized to harness our own emotions in depth and/or the emotions of others in a way that creates powerful transformation, the divisiveness, conflicts, judgment, defensiveness will rest.

It will step aside because we will be in a state of creating with and for each other. Now I know this sounds quite unreasonable considering where we are, but I also know that it works. I know it works because I am paid well to do this very thing for the purpose of creation, and I have watched the fruits of my labor manifest into extreme abundance for those who are able to create from it.

It is time that we all stop judging each other.  It is time to start getting curious. Just start listening.  For when we slow down, get curious, and listen to another’s heart, our own heart shifts, and the judgment chains we are trapped in start to loosen a little. 

I also recognize the irony it has been for me to be an “expert” in empathy interviewing and yet have been shut off to my own emotions for so many years. The life changes I’ve been through the last few years have created a new recognition about how challenging it is to be empathetic when we either believe strongly about something or we care deeply for someone. And even greater a challenge still for many of us, is to be self-empathetic. 

Ironically our beliefs we emotionally care about the most can keep us from accessing our empathy. And what is empathy? Empathy is the catalyst, the connection to compassion if you let it be. It is the tool that moves us from our mind and into our hearts. I developed an Emotional Landscape framework as a part of this course I wanted to share here. I like frameworks.  And because there is so much being written about emotions these days, I needed to create a new way to think about emotions in a context that I know works.

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This framework is through the lens of creation and control – along the horizontal axis are emotions that either keep you “stuck”(the far left side) or have “momentum” (the far right) while the vertical axis are emotions that help put you in a state of “in control” (top) or “out of control” (bottom).  When we can uncover what’s really going on inside us emotionally and why, and shift to what is desired, we can become more creative and feel more in control. 

When anyone, especially a group, comes together in a space of creative control, magic happens. Products are made. Strategy is developed. Things change in a massive way.

But back to the messy middle.  Here is some of the feedback on my course from my initial testers:

1.     My course could be possibly better served if it was pulled out of the linear framework and more into buckets or themes

2.     It would be good to have almost a recipe or cookbook so that people can utilize the different tools based on where they are in their creative process or what they are trying to create.

3.     Consider tailoring to people based on “what” they’re trying to create -  whether it’s a small or large change or a certain area of life, something specific (a new career) or general (a new attitude).  

4.     I have been focused on the “how to” (empathy) instead of the “benefits of” empathy. 

So will you help me customize my course so that it’s better suited for all of these factors?  I now have a better understanding of some of the “benefits” of empathy – how my empathy tools can actually benefit others.  And I have a link here (and below) to a survey so I can now do for myself what I’ve been doing for others – better analyze what benefits matter most and to whom?  If you’re interested in me bringing this to life, can you click the link and take the survey for me? All questions are optional – you can answer what you feel comfortable with. 

I’ve been reluctant to put these ideas out into the world until I feel more confident it will be a game changer.  So much of what I’ve done over the years - creating tools processes questions etc. have all been customized for specific project objectives.  I’m wanting to now categorize what I’ve been working on for years in a way that can help leaders in their personal and professional endeavors in a way that is the most meaningful and can create the most change.

I want successful affluent leaders to be able to dig in below the surface to harness their power, their creative energy, to help them create more of what really matters in their lives.

Here’s a link to a quick survey – if you’re interested in this idea moving forward, would you be so kind to tell me what you want to create and where you are in the creative process?

Regardless, I hope you’re keeping well in this messy middle.  That you’re finding hope – that there are moments at least where you live in the top right quadrant above and you are finding your way back on solid ground.  I believe we are going to get there, and that what we are learning along the way will stay with us when we do. 

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6 Emotional Waves from the Great COVID-19 Ocean

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6 Emotional Waves from the Great COVID-19 Ocean

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As we continue down the COVID-19 journey, I have found myself aching somedays, and rejoicing others. As a way of coping with my own emotions, I decided to do what I normally do - interview others to understand their experience as a way of processing my own.  

I talked to 11 women in-depth over Zoom webcam videos - across life stages, demographics, in the US, Peru, Italy and Argentina to better understand other’s emotional experiences and behavior changes as a result of COVID-19.  Here are a few of many key “themes” or patterns that emerged. Noted: As with all qualitative research, this is not statistically valid.  And I want to note that everyone I talked to had not been impacted by the virus (personally or experienced a loss of a loved one). However, there was a great degree of difference in the economic impact each individual was personally experiencing.

1 ~ Women are “Finally" Free to Feel - 

  • One of the most interesting commonalities we saw was the level of unashamed “feelings” they were experiencing.  Most striking to me was the rawness of feeling, ready and available, waiting to be released.  Like a faucet with a super charged nozzle.

  • Ironically, this is unlike my 17+ years of experience interviewing women, where emotions lay dormant and suppressed waiting for enough space and gentle nudging in order for emotions to surface.  

  • What time and social distancing has given to women is something unprecedented - the ability to experience the fullness of themselves - the freedom to feel their feelings.

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2 ~ Individual Preference Trumps Group Norms

  • Women are accustomed to turning to others to help “figure out the unknown.” Google, friends, family and co-workers, have previously provided answers when women embark on something new - whether a new mom, learning a new recipe, or how to start a business. 

  • But now, with no “map”, women are relying on their own self-sufficiency to “figure it out.”  The women I spoke to have been relegated to figure out a new world without a map or guidebook in every level of their lives – whether it’s home schooling, learning new technologies in record speed, working virtually with competing demands, juggling basic needs - new food, sleep, and shelter norms, elderly and/or sick parents, how to shop, interact, do social “touches”- it is all being reconfigured.

  • And there’s not an answer on Google for “how to best do it.” When they do find a source for guidance, it usually differs from another source’s best recommendation.   They are “playing by the rules put upon them” and working out new, original ways to solve their own problems.

    1. Small business owner mediating between 2 experts she hired - an attorney and a CPA - to “figure out” how to secure a loan to keep employees paid.

    2. Expat in Peru learning to “dry” clothes without a dryer while "working out" with filled water bottles.

    3. Working mom who is learning to cook for the first time without recipes using snacks and ingredients she has at home.

3 ~ Experiencing the Extreme is Creating a Space for Emotional Balance

  • Because women are beginning to experience the fullness of their emotions - what is left in the wake of the emotional waves is a space for balance, “the in between.”  

  • They spoke of so many paradoxes - beautiful gifts and horrific nightmares simultaneously, which causes extreme feelings –

    1. joyful moments I haven’t been able to sit with before

    2. Justified anger that typically I would question but now I know it’s true and I don’t have to self-blame.”  

    3. "Deep sadness because seeing the loss all around me brings me to my knees."  

All of this in such a small space of time appears to create an opening, a space, a pinhole for which to see the world in a more balanced way.  It’s creating a window to see all of it - more conceptually.  More holistically, more balanced.

4 ~ The Great Leveler is Self-Empathy

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  • These women appear to empathize at a new level – first for themselves. 

    •  I saw more compassion for others than judgment.

    • I saw more questions instead of answers. 

  • And as these women questioned everything and felt everything, their eyes seemed to open fully to OTHER’s emotions. 

  • Interestingly, those who are experiencing a greater loss of physical freedom are still wanting greater empathy. “When I see my co-workers in the US talk about how hard it is while they are taking pictures outdoors in nature with their kids, I think to myself it’s not the same as it is here where I am on permanent lockdown and can’t leave the house without permission papers and on certain days – I wish they could see that.”  

  • As they fully saw and experienced their own experience, they began to also see and feel through the eyes of other’s more deeply. 

    • “You have to embrace your own vulnerability in order to understand what other’s problems are.” 

    • “I feel for those who are in the front line, what it must be like for them.  I can hardly deal with my own prison, let alone being fearful daily of my own life.”

  • The depth they were feeling their own emotions appears to correlate with the depth they were able to feel compassion vs. judgment for others.

    • “I wish they could see what a great time this is to experience their children.” 

    Vs.

    • “I am learning to be ok to just have a little cry every day to get it out of my system vs. taking the impossible moral high grounds.”

5 ~ Time is the Great Catalyst for Women Leaders to Rise Up

We didn’t recruit leaders specifically but it’s interesting that in all the interviews, regardless of age/stage, whether they were stay at home moms, running a business, retired or laid off: They were showing up for themselves and their family as holistic leaders in a way that they normally ONLY show up for others. These women were natural leaders in this crisis. This is a crisis that for some, is giving them something they need most: time to reflect.

  1. This time appears to be giving women the ability to go inward, experience their emotions, and integrate that with their pragmatic minds in a way that solves holistically for everyone in their world.

  2. Ironically, as these women used their "extra me time" to solve first and foremost for what they need, they were also solving for bigger problems as well:

    1. A stay at home wife of an expat confined to her apartment for over 30 days created a private Facebook group allowing others to share ideas and positivity because she is needing to find connection outside her 4 walls.

    2. A C-level leader in the financial industry is pushing back to her leadership, standing up for herself and employees due to “justified anger” by creating a conversation for “more down time” and greater connection virtually outside of “work mode.”

    3. A retired veteran's wife is creating opportunities for her neighborhood by facilitating ways for neighbor kids to connect at a distance because she is fueled by her need to see her grandkids.

    4. An entrepreneur is purchasing cupcakes from a local bakery and sending “goodies” to her clients because she is marrying her own need to stay in business with hope for her fellow local business owners.

  3. These women are simultaneously finding ways to put salve on their inner emotional world while sending ripple effects into their outer world because they have more time.

6 ~ New Behaviors Emerging - Simultaneous Deeper Connection with Online & Nature

  1. Ironically, this has created both a need for deeper connection with nature along with a deeper comfort with online connection.  

  2. Those 2 things have traditionally not worked together in unison, but in this case, the need to connect online - with peers, students, teachers, friends, family, and work associates - has created a bigger need to be outside more than ever before.  

    1. “The best part of my day is walking outdoors with my kids at 3:00 when we all need a break.”  

    2. “I don’t know if I’ll ever want to meet up for happy hour again when I can do it just as easily from my living room.”  

  3. These are 2 new behaviors that will likely continue because it’s a surprise to feel so emotionally connected with nature and to connect emotionally with others via “online socializing.”   

So, these are just a few things I am digesting. I am also thinking about new ways to frame up “emotional needs” states, as well as next step implications and questions companies will need to address - both from a consumer lens as well as an organizational lens.   

Here’s the greatest learning I’m getting - who we decide to “be” (as families, communities, organizations, and countries) is going to be as or more  important going forward than what we decide to “do”.

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I Have Enough Toilet Paper but I Forgot to Breathe

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I Have Enough Toilet Paper but I Forgot to Breathe

It’s 3.14.20 and all spring break travel plans are successfully cancelled.

Ok, then breathe, I tell myself. 

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Then the fear voice inside my head speaks again: “yes I have everything - tp, water, sick meds, fresh and frozen veggies, fresh and frozen meat. Fresh and frozen fruit. Lots of shelf stable snacks and let’s see what else do I need. Sick meds, essential oils.

Oh shit I accidentally ordered paper towels, not tp.  Back to square one ....”

The “other” voice: “Breathe again, April - this nesting thing you’re doing is going a little overboard. It’s seriously worse than the last week before you gave birth. Can you calm down?” Fear voice back at me: “But what if it’s not overboard, what if I haven’t done enough to prepare?”

This is the voice of the world - my Facebook feed, news feed, neighbors, friends, everyone I talk to.

But I hear it again – “Breathe again. It’s going to be ok.”

“Yeah keep telling yourself that” fear speaks again.  "You know it’s a national emergency right and Italians are having to open their windows to sing and connect with each other. We don’t do that here!!!!" 

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“What are you going to do?” it speaks. “Stuck in the house with your high energy child, trying to work, while simultaneously attending to her needs, and keep everything afloat. Finances, bills, work, how is it all going to work. How???” Its voice growing louder.

“Breathe.  Stay present.”

 Ok – I can see now that 2 big breaths is better than one.

 Then a sudden thought, one that moves me out of fear and into curiosity?  

What is it like to be working on the front lines? To be a doctor or nurse or someone in the healthcare system who is actually making decisions and trying to help others while the rest of us are trying to make sure we can go to the bathroom in the cleanest manner for the next 7 years.  

Another thought - what is it like to be my clients working for large companies whose stock is going down daily and perhaps unclear of what will happen next? 

 What is it like to be an athlete, performer, event coordinator, participant who have paid large sums of money to attend an event, child who was attending the Houston stock show to show an animal, actor performing for months for a Broadway show - now cancelled. 

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I want to know. I shift my thinking to move out of my fear and learn, begin understanding what it’s like for everyone else out there.  

 I want to understand it from the space of creation, not from the slant of despair I often feel after watching the news.  This is the space where I thrive.  

Because I know that I can move out of my own fear by understanding another’s reality.  Empathetic listening creates relativity, which simultaneously allows me to feel my own humanity at a deeper level and could shift me from fear.

That typically works for me but will it work here? Maybe? 

 I don’t know the answer or how this should work but I do know this. I know what happens when we are willing to let go of fear at the same time we grasp onto curiosity – new possibilities happen. 

I will do something to move me from fear to curiosity.  I want to have a real conversation with those affected or infected (even if it’s only with fear or a low supply of toilet paper). I only want to hear stories that will impact others.

I will sponsor my own research study and pay incentives for 1-hour “empathy interviews.”  My goal for the research is to understand the specific impact of social distancing to everyday families, including the closures of restaurants, events, etc. etc. 

  • I’m calling it Combatting COIVD-19 via Empathy Co-Creation.

  • If you’re interested in participating in a 1-hour webcam interview with me about your experience, please click here.

  • I am also opening a private Facebook page for those who are interested in: Combatting COIVD-19 via Empathy Co-Creation.

Why? Because…

  1. I believe that when we can see outside of ourselves:

    1. Fear disappears

    2. Curiosity leads to creativity

    3. It could help create an idea in someone else’s mind who can actually do something to help

    4. That idea could lead to a creative way to change the world

  2. I believe when we hear each other’s stories, we can connect again, even if it’s virtual.

  3. I believe we create new possibilities using our creative minds rather than our fear based minds.

  4. I believe amongst the many tragedies this virus has caused - one of the greatest is the level of separation we now need to have, and I will be a catalyst for deeper connections

  5. I believe when we can find new ways to connect, we can regain hope and faith in the human spirit

  6. I believe our soul’s awakening is just around the corner of a big fat virus.  

I believe when we do this, we will stop hoarding toilet paper, and start sharing it, little by little, tissue by tissue, to those who need it most (and if we don’t, I might be one of those needing it!).

See my recent update here - How to stay sane by shifting to curiosity.

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Of Grace, Grit, Gratitude and the Gift of Giving

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Of Grace, Grit, Gratitude and the Gift of Giving

As the holiday whirlwind ensues, I find myself contemplating all that 2019 has brought, and taught me. I am coming off of a year I never thought I would have.  

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I never envisioned this last year’s events, and trust me, I’ve done a lot of visioning in the past. Now, I look back and reflect. They say your greatest pain can become your greatest gift. So, maybe that reoccurring thought has led me to the place where I am now. A place of questioning -

What is the gift:

  1. What did I learn that I want to hold onto next year?

  2. What am I going to let go of that no longer serves me?

Here’s my biggest takeaway: “Most everyone’s doing the best they can, including me.”  That one learning alone is a gift. A gift of acceptance.  

Acceptance opens my eyes to new choices, new possibilities, new ways of thinking, of being.

  1. Acceptance Gives me Grace. - grace for myself and for those who have caused me pain. I have learned this year a prayer that has kept me sane (some days). It somehow softens me. In Hawaii, they call it the Ho'oponopono Prayer. I call it the prayer of acceptance because it is one tool I have used to help me install grace into the software of my brain.

  2. Acceptance Gives me Grit. - to get back up, again. and again, and again….and again. To move forward. As Angela Duckworth puts it in GRIT - “….grit grows as we figure out our life philosophy, learn to dust ourselves off after rejection and disappointment.” Yes, I can see that acceptance makes way to resolve (“grit”) for what is important to me - growing stronger than anything else.

  3. Acceptance Gives me Gratitude. I have become painfully aware of my power to choose. The most powerful choice, I have decided, is whether to choose suffering or choose gratitude. I’ve been amazed at how often God has shown up in the deepest, darkest places to shed a bit of light. Whether it’s small miracles that are more than a coincidence, an unexpected kind gesture or just eye-opening awe, I have found God in a magical way this year, and the more I am grateful, the more of God I see.

  4. Acceptance fuels my Passion to Give. - through the lens of a full cup, my heart has become open to seeing the greater pain outside of me. By getting through to the other side of what seemed like an impossible hill to climb - gaining stability through a divorce, removing chaos, buying and moving to a new home, untangling all of my affairs, including my business, and most importantly, finding creative ways to carry my daughter through it where I can still see her smile, snuggle and connect, I see there is a gift to give.

So, that is the question “what gift can I give?” in this new learning of “most everyone is just doing the best they can?”  

 My gift is greater empathy - I now have a deep compassion for other single moms who are less fortunate than me.  I now know how difficult it is to go through a divorce - even if it is not what you wanted or planned for.  It is systemically difficult for women to find hope - to stand on their own feet on the other side of divorce.  Culturally, legally, religiously, we have systems that are built on families staying together.  

 I want to be a part of giving hope for those who find themselves in crisis, that they too can get to the other side and stabilize.  I want to help women who need it to rise up with their children on the other side of a broken marriage - to give them hope and a newfound love - love of self.

So, as divine power would have it, we are hosting our first-ever give back gathering - it will be held on December 19, 2019 from 2:30-5:30 at Her HQ (a new event space for women) in Bishop Arts District in Dallas.

We are partnering with Interfaith Housing Coalition whose mission is to empower families in crisis to break the cycle of poverty.  We will be assembling self-care gifts for 50 moms at the gathering.  It will be a gathering of elves to promote hope and “self-care”- because moms who take care of themselves can take better care of others.  Interfaith will take the gifts and deliver them to these moms on or before December 25th!

We have been so blessed with generous donations and sponsors -Jergens, Chili’s, Ban, John Frieda, Curél, Bioré, 2nd Kind, Fieldwork, and Fears Nachawati Law Firm.  

We still have a few remaining items on our wish list if you would like to donate, the link to Amazon Wish List is here.  

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How Increased Empathy Gave Me a Beautiful, Fresh Start

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How Increased Empathy Gave Me a Beautiful, Fresh Start

I have spent most of my career using empathy to help connect and translate people’s emotions for the purpose building brands. 

I love helping brands connect the dots based on the emotional desires of their consumer. It not only helps brands with their internal marketing, it also facilitates consumers to get more of what they want.

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Someone recently used the word "bridge builder” as a way to encapsulate what it is I do - yes, that’s what it is.  And “bridge building" requires empathy.  To be a successful focus group moderator, you must exude empathy.  It must pour from your pores.  You must listen with presence, curiosity, and use that curiosity to co-create new ideas.  

When you “feel” what others feel and use the power of your brain to create new questions and connections, co-creation occurs in a very meaningful way.  Whereas, if your mind is distracted and not listening, you can’t really ask relevant questions.  Both your head and your heart have to be listening in conjunction with each other in order to co-create something new with others.

While I am hyper vigilant about these things in my work, my personal life, it appears, is a different story sometimes. When I am out of this controlled “focus group" setting, I recognize it is more difficult to be empathetic because it is more difficult to be present.  

Much of the time in my personal life, I lean into wanting to change some aspect of what’s going on in the present -  I want others to show up in a different way than they are or perhaps “be" different than who they are being.  And my divorce has taught me that I can’t control anyone else’s thoughts, behaviors or ways of being…except my own.  

So, how did this increase empathy and creativity for me?  Because I am beginning to see the value of using my “focus group” skills in my own life.  

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Here are the connections I made to help transfer the automatic empathy skills I use weekly in controlled “focus group" settings to my personal life with my daughter:

  1. Creating Space Allows Presence - The reason focus groups work well for deep connection is because you purposefully create space for people to listen to each other. While I am great at creating space for others, it wasn’t until lately that I began to create some space for myself. I remember one night a few months ago when we had some spare time, I was just sitting, doing nothing except observing my daughter play. I wasn’t on my phone, or watching a movie, I was just sitting, watching, being present with her. She was talking to herself - in an imaginary scenario. As I listened to her, I started thinking about who she is becoming, what it must be like to be her. I saw her outside of me in a new way.

  2. Presence Moves you From Anxiety into Curiosity

    1. As I sat, present with her, really seeing her, seeing past my own pain, I began getting curious about my daughter’s pain. If you haven’t been through a divorce, it may be hard to empathize with what it’s like. Many people believe it’s a “choice” - and that because you didn’t “work hard enough to save the marriage", the pain and loss is undermined. But divorce is the death of something sacred, and it comes with pain.

    2. I can tell you that the pain and loss combined with the shame and guilt is so consuming that it is difficult to NOT get lost in it. And when you are lost in your own pain, it’s challenging to be present (to empathize) with your children's pain, anyone else’s pain, that is. There’s so much fear - "how am I going to make it on the other side?” "What’s wrong with me?” "How did this happen?” "What is going to happen next?” All of these fearful, anxious thoughts can have one (me, that is) spinning out of control. But this particular night, as I watched her, my curiosity grew. I became curious about who she was being in that moment, about what it must be like to be her.

    3. I realize I didn’t know what it felt like to be her because my parents didn’t go through a divorce when I was young. I never experienced living in 1 home, then moving back and forth to 2 homes. I got curious in that moment while looking at her - wondering what she was feeling, and imagining how heart wrenching it must be, on so many levels, having the world as you knew it disrupted, torn apart.

  3. Curiosity Breeds Creativity

    1. The cool thing about curiosity, though, is that it moves you from the fearful limbic part of the brain to the prefrontal cortex, which breeds creativity. With presence, listening, really listening and “feeling into” what the experience is like to be someone else, your brain shifts to creative solutioning.

    2. As I watched her, the questions I asked myself were different -

      1. From Fearful questions - “how will I survive this" TO…

      2. Presence - “How interesting that she stopped playing by herself and tried to pull me into her game"

      3. Curiosity - "I wonder what she needs from me right now?"

      4. Creativity - “What am I going to do about helping her see the beauty in having 2 homes instead of 1?” “How can I show up and be the best I can be as a co-parent in a way that helps her feel safe?”

    3. Suddenly, boom, a new thought allowed me to shift away from my own fearful questions, into solving something for her. That is empathy. That is connectivity, that is creativity. It is what brands… and a deeper connected life is built on.

    4. And the creativity can continue. Now I want to know: "How can I build more of that connection in my life?” And "How can I help my daughter move from fear to curiosity and creative grow?” Moving from surviving to thriving - that’s the problem I am now solving for….how to thrive in what is.


But what does Empathy for others you love actually require?

  1. Empathy Requires Neutrality:

    1. I realize how much I judge around me - in a focus group, I am hired, primarily because I am considered a neutral 3rd party. It’s hard for people within a company, brand, etc. to ask neutral questions to their customer audience - for example: “You do like this idea, don’t you?” 🙂. These questions don’t allow co-creation, they create stagnancy. Instead, they hire a neutral moderator to simply “be with” their customers - allowing for greater understanding, deeper emotional connection because people open up to those who give them a compassionate, neutral space to be in. When they feel judged, or that their answers will be “wrong”, they stop talking.

    2. As I sat with my daughter that night, I was just with her as she was telling me what she needed. I allowed her to speak, and I didn’t try to change or correct or shift what she was saying. I also didn’t throw myself into the more normal judgment of myself - instead of blaming myself, I allowed space for me to stay with her, without judgment. I resisted the urge to encourage her, shift her thinking, give her a new perspective, all of the things I normally do to “help” her. And I resisted the urge to self-flagellate “how could I do this to her?” “I”m the worst mom.” “She’ll never recover.” Remaining neutral created a little "magical moment for mama and daughter” for us BOTH to see that I could in fact, be neutral, and truly empathetic without having to “fix or solve” it. What a concept just to hold space for her.

  2. Empathy Requires “Being with” Strong Emotion Without Resistance:

    1. Because I stayed in the space with her, she likely felt more at ease. Suddenly she began crying, telling me how she was feeling. Instead of doing what I normally would do - try to change her feelings or solve them for her (or go further into self-shaming), I was led to just hug her, and as she calmed, say how I WAS FEELING. And because I had been present with her, I was aware of my feelings too.

    2. I could suddenly with clarity articulate all the unsaid things I had been feeling for months. "I’m so so sorry, sweet girl. I’m so sorry your parents are not able to make 1 home work so that you live with consistency. But I want you know that you are safe. I want you to understand how loved you are - by both of us. I want you to feel the beautiful unicorn creature that you are - a beautiful flower, that when opened, will change the world. You will change the world, sweet Autumn, and I will see you do it. I will sit in honor at your beauty. And we will never stop loving you. Your mom and dad are imperfect, but we love you to the moon and back. You are a masterpiece and I participated in creating you, and I am proud of it."

    3. She looked at me, silent. Without a word, she took it in. Then she dried her eyes and smiled her unicorn smile and said - “ok, I think I’m ready to do something else now - do you want to play like you’re the daughter and I’m the mom and we live in a castle, and then ….. and then… and then…..?” And I said "Yes, I am ready. I am ready to play with you.” (But only for 15 minutes…. 🙂 )


That moment was special, addictive. New.  

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Oddly, I felt more in control being present with her in that way than I do most days. The days I’m trying to gain control over her, the days we bicker or I’m "trying to get her to pick up her shoes already.”  Maybe presence is where I have the most control, for when I am (in these rare but precious moments) present with what is happening right in front of me, I feel like the world is an oyster and pearls appear. And every pearl is a fresh start.





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Self-Care Habits to Use this Fall

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Self-Care Habits to Use this Fall

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So this summer was a unique one for me. I made a commitment to myself:

  1. I was not going to take any travel work projects

  2. I would commit to taking better care of myself

  3. I would spend more quality time with Autumn.

If I were to rate myself on a scale of 1 to 10 on how well I achieved this goal I would have initially given myself a 4.

 

But I would give myself a 4 and feel happy about it. I might even give myself a 3 1/2 and feel happy about it.  Even though it wasn’t exactly what I envisioned, my attitude improved about what I DID make happen.  

Typically, I would create a scenario where I would only focus on everything I should or should not have done instead of allowing myself to feel good about what I HAD done well.  And when I do that, it sends me into a spiraling story that ends in the space between guilt and shame.

However, this summer I stayed focused on how I could create more of what I wanted. Because I was focusing on that, my brain somehow let go of what I didn’t do well.

And here are a few tricks that helped me at least make some of it happen. These are the ones I plan to keep now that the summer is over:

  1. Create Calendar Commitments: I started putting time for what I wanted to focus on in my calendar (as if it were a meeting) BEFORE letting it fill up with my many obligations to others - clients, friends, extended family, or even my own family.

    1. I literally put a calendar entry in my calendar for “April happy heart” time. This summer I was able to create 4 whole days of this. I originally wanted to do that every week but what a gift it was to have several full days where I woke up and did what my heart wanted.

    2. Now don’t get me wrong, usually about the time I was about to embark on my dreamland to do what April wants, I would inevitably get bombarded with something urgent or a fire to put out, or my computer breaking etc.

    3. So not every “full day” was dedicated completely to “April’s happy heart” but even so, I found that if I would honor the calendar commitment I made to myself, at least some space would get set aside for that purpose.

  2. Little to No Pre-Planning: Ok, so now that I had a “calendar commitment”, I felt like I needed a “plan” to ensure it was fruitful. But then, planning “free time” felt somewhat ironic. What I learned is that the biggest value of having space for myself was that I was able to get out of my normal planning mode. Instead, I:

    1. Created a “bucket list” of passions, interests, and other things I would like to do on Trello so that when my free time started, at least I wasn’t racking my brain for “what do I do now?” (ok, so maybe that counts as some planning….)

    2. On the day of my commitment to self, I would wake up, look at my Trello list and pick something that felt good in that moment.

    3. To be honest, one of my favorite ways to spend my time was to simply “rest” – I had, up until this summer, devalued the beauty and benefits of resting.

  3. Protect My Time: It’s surprising how much I (up until now) tend to value everyone else’s time over my own. I don’t know if it’s because I was taught to “put others before yourself” or if it has to do with my strength of Empathy . Who knows but regardless, I am learning that I can show up for other’s needs in a healthier way if I allow myself to have time for me. I love the way Jordan Gray puts it here. So, I am seeing the value of:

    1. Saying “no”

    2. Staying focused on my goals

    3. Treating myself like I would my clients - protecting my time as if I had a very important meeting with someone that I couldn’t miss.

  4. Take more Epson salt baths. This may sound ridiculous or overly simple, but the beauty of a bath is not to be overlooked! I got to where I was taking a bath almost 5 nights a week. It feels so indulgent and yet it really doesn’t take much to make that happen. For me, the key is to:

    1. Wait until Autumn goes down, then lock my bathroom door

    2. Put in 4 cups of Epson salt

    3. 8 drops of Serenity doterra oil

    4. Light five white candles

    5. Turn the lights off.

    6. Maybe listen to an audio book or soothing music (here are the 5 books on my Audible play list now)

      1. Girl Wash Your Face: Stop Believing the Lies About Who You Are So You Can Become Who You Were Meant to Be

      2. The Art of Empathy

      3. Kick Ass with Mel Robbins

      4. Big Magic

So, here’s the most interesting part.  The reason I initially gave myself a 4 is because I didn’t feel good about my time with Autumn.  It felt harder for me to define or qualify what was “quality time” with Autumn.

Yes, we vacationed together. Yes, we got a handful of lazy mornings together. But honestly, there were lots of camps, lots of spur of the moment changes in plans, lots of her getting to socialize and be with her friends

That was all great – but how much did that count as quality time with me? 

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I had separated quality time with myself from quality time with her. I was “measuring”, “calculating”, “analyzing” my time with her.

It wasn’t until one night the week before school started that something shifted in the way I was thinking about my time with her.  I would call it a magical moment.  When putting her to bed, I had this moment where I just laid there, noticing her beauty and listening to her as if for the first time.  I suddenly had this feeling that nothing else mattered except this moment with us.  It was like time stopped. 

And suddenly, I really got how the time with me “filling my cup” really DID translate to the connection with her. 

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I saw that time with me = more capacity to be with her.  Can I hashtag that? - don’t know if you’re supposed to do that with a blog. #timewithmeequalsmorecapacitywithher. 

Instead of anxiously worrying about whether I was doing “good enough” and being a mom who could measure up, I shifted into a space of just being grateful for the moment I had with her. 

And with that gratitude, I saw that the act of analyzing and measuring my “effectiveness as a mom” was actually taking me away from the very thing I was trying to create with her.  Special moments.

So, maybe I’ll give myself a 10!

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