Sunday, May 3, 2015

Rituals & Routines for an optimal life


The words routine and ritual are sometimes used interchangeably. Yet there are some important differences.

Routines are repeated, predictable events that provide a foundation for the daily tasks in a person’s life.
Rituals can be defined as special actions that help us navigate emotionally important events or transitions in our lives as well as enhance aspects of our daily routines to deepen our connections and relationships.

What you do on a daily basis is what creates the life you live.

However, we often take these daily activities for granted; they become a routine that we repeat over and over again without even thinking, and we rarely take the time to reflect on these daily patterns and how they might be influencing us.

Write out a complete list of your daily routines, categorize them based on different aspects of your life, and then use this list to become more aware of your “positive” and “negative” habits. Which routines serve you well?

Here are guidelines to follow while creating an outline of your daily routines:
  • Start from the very beginning of your day. The first item on your list should be “Wake up.” Think also of your routine for getting out of bed. Do you hit that snooze button 3 times before you really get serious about getting to work on time?
  • Write out every activity, however small or insignificant it may seem. For example, the next items in your routine may be “Make my bed,” “Go to the bathroom,” “Take a shower,” “Get dressed,” etc.
  • Finish at the very end of your day. The last item on your list should be “Go to sleep.” Before that, you’ve written your routine for getting yourself “in the mood” to sleep. How do you calm your mind so that you can sink into blissful sleep? Some walk the dog, meditate, complete a hygiene routine and read something light before turning out the lamp.
  • The order doesn’t have to be perfect – we all have a little variation from day to day – but try your best to come up with a rough outline of your “average day” from start to finish.
  • Repeat activities that you do more than once per day. It’s repetitive but it makes your outline more accurate.
  • Also include activities that you may not do every single day, but at least 2-4 times a week.
  • Once you’re done, go back to each activity and categorize it based on what area of your life that activity influences:
    • Health
    • Work
    • Leisure
    • Relationships
    • Personal
    • Organisation
    • Fitness
    • Nutrition
(List two categories if you think an activity fulfills multiple areas.)

  • Next, go back to each activity and choose the type of influence you think it has on your life:
    • Positive
    • Negative
    • Neutral
  • Now, go back to each activity and decide if it’s something you want to do more, less, or the same.
    • Make a “+” next to activities you want to do more.
    • Make a “-” next to activities you want to do less.
    • Make a “=” next to activities you want to keep the same.
  • Review your complete routine and think of 2-3 activities that aren’t listed which you would like to do more of. List them below your routine with “+” next to them.

This exercise will give you a clearer idea on how you spend your time each and every day. This awareness will at least be a good first step in making some positive changes in your life.

After making a list of my own daily routine, I discovered a couple ways I can really improve:
  • There is one negative activity under “Nutrition” that I do most days that I really want to do less of.
  • My routine also needs more positive activities under the “Organisation” and “Leisure” categories. One of them is going to be "Organize one small thing every day". I could straighten a shelf, put away my seminar materials after use, cleaning the kitchen after cooking...
  • With Leisure, I need to make sure I take some!!
I love to read how authors structure their day with routines and rituals. Haruki Murakami explains:
"When I’m in writing mode for a novel, I get up at 4:00 am and work for five to six hours. In the afternoon, I run for 10km or swim for 1500m (or do both), then I read a bit and listen to some music. I go to bed at 9:00 pm. I keep to this routine every day without variation. The repetition itself becomes the important thing; it’s a form of mesmerism. I mesmerize myself to reach a deeper state of mind."

William Gibson tells the Paris Review in 2011:
“When I’m writing a book I get up at seven. I check my e-mail and do Internet ablutions, as we do these days. I have a cup of coffee. Three days a week, I go to Pilates and am back by ten or eleven. Then I sit down and try to write. If absolutely nothing is happening, I’ll give myself permission to mow the lawn. But, generally, just sitting down and really trying is enough to get it started. I break for lunch, come back, and do it some more. And then, usually, a nap. Naps are essential to my process. Not dreams, but that state adjacent to sleep, the mind on waking.
[…]
As I move through the book it becomes more demanding. At the beginning, I have a five-day workweek, and each day is roughly ten to five, with a break for lunch and a nap. At the very end, it’s a seven-day week, and it could be a twelve-hour day.
Toward the end of a book, the state of composition feels like a complex, chemically altered state that will go away if I don’t continue to give it what it needs. What it needs is simply to write all the time. Downtime other than simply sleeping becomes problematic. I’m always glad to see the back of that.”

Success is rarely an accident!

Rituals

The difference between a routine and a ritual is not necessarily the action, but the attitude behind the action.

To many, a routine is getting up every morning, eating breakfast, brushing your teeth, taking a shower, getting dressed, and going to work. It is not a meaningful part of our day, but it needs to get done so we do it. And if we do the wrong routines, our life suffers.

On the other hand, rituals are viewed as more meaningful practices. Often, there is symbolism involved, and a real sense of purpose. A big part of it is your subjective experience of the activity.

I used to have a ritual of reading to my children before they went to sleep (or were supposed to!). It created a closeness that I still feel.

My ritual of starting the day with meditation and yoga sets me up for a calm beginning. My ritual of writing this blog gives me something to think about and improve. Research from positive psychology and happiness studies have shown the value of a gratitude journal or a form of thankfulness each day.

So, what is that we need? The twin powers of routine and ritual. Nourishing and supportive routines help frame our lives. Rituals remind us of our own values, our desire to connect with what is important for us, and the feeling of being in control.

The word “routine” can seem incredibly stiff and boring, but good routines are neither.
Rather than stifling your creativity, routines are about managing your energy effectively in order to channel it toward your real desires and purpose. So you don't need to "re-invent the wheel" each day!

Our daily actions are what create our life, so by creating nourishing and supportive routines, we are choosing to fuel our days and nourish our spirits. 

We all need daily time-outs, an excuse to stop and take a moment to celebrate, connect, honor and recognize the different aspects of our lives. This is where ritual comes in.
Rituals offer us compassionate discipline where we focus our attention and energy on achieving a certain feeling. They will ground us regardless of what’s happening around us.

Extraordinary routines require minimum engagement in order to let us achieve productive results. Rituals are celebratory, meaningful, and require us to be completely engaged—even if it’s only for two minutes.

Monday, April 20, 2015

Perfect Selfmanagement in 52 Weeks: The 10-Day Tweak Challenge


Your body deserves the best!

Often we feel bogged down at the thought of change, of doing the things we know are good for us yet seem to include a huge commitment.

How about a week of thinking and doing the ‘change for the better’ challenge a bit differently? What if we just do something very small in the right direction. A tweak instead of a leap, if you will.

Recent science shows that small lifestyle changes (and a little fun doing them) are all it takes to improve your health drastically.

Day 1: AVOID THINKING OF EXERCISE AS EXERCISE
Starting today for 10 days, go for a scenic and fun walk. Lunchtime is a great time for this. Walk for about ½ mile and come back. Notice how being outside and moving relaxes your mind. This is your personal time, your reward, a celebration of life. If the sun is out, you get the additional advantage of increased Vitamin D production.

Day 2: A HANDFUL OF VEGGIES
When vegetables are in the company of other foods, they often go untouched. To get that handful of veggies, eat them before putting any other foods on your plate. This often leads to consuming fewer calories total, which is a win-win situation! Or, if you have to have a pizza, throw your handful of veggies on top before pushing it into the oven. I get my veggies by making a big pot of vegetables, coconut milk and Indian spices. Nummy!
Today, and the next 10 days, pick out the veggies you are going to enjoy today. Figure out ingenious ways to get them onto the menu. If you want to eat more, please feel free to do so!

Day 3: BEET IT
Drinking a cup of nitrate-rich beetroot juice each day significantly lowers blood pressure in people with hypertension, according to a new report. Why? The body converts nitrate to nitric oxide, which relaxes the arteries and improves blood flow.
Today, and the next 10 days, drink a cup of beet juice, alone or mixed in a smoothie. You can drink small amounts at different times during the day.

Day 4: SNOOZE YOUR WAY SLIM
Most of us suffer from a chronic sleep deficit. A little more sleep may help ease your reliance on high-calorie snacks for energy. A small study in the journal Appetite found that when people who normally slept less than six and a half hours a night got an extra 96 minutes, they were 62% less likely to crave junk food and reported feeling less hungry overall.
Data on how sleep affects the heart suggests that lack of adequate sleep (less than 6-7 hours) can increase risk of cardiac problems like heart attack and stroke.
Today, and for the next 10 days, go to bed 5 minutes earlier than the night before. Even if you don’t fall asleep immediately, remind yourself that this time is all yours to savor. Enjoy.

Day 5: BREATHE!
Breath is the power behind your life. Your breath doesn’t know how old, how rich, how successful you are; it doesn’t know what you can’t or are afraid to do. It takes care of you without you even having to work on it!
Today and for the next 10 days, take a few minutes to mindfully watch your breath come and go. Feel the cool air flow in through your nostrils and your chest expand to take it all in. Notice the body relaxing when you breathe out slowly and comfortably.

Have a nice weekend. You are still in the middle of your 10-Day-Tweak-Challenge so have a great time with it.






Friday, March 20, 2015

9 SECRETS of the super motivated

STEAL THESE TRIED-AND-TRUE MOTIVATION TIPS AND NEVER LOSE YOUR FITSPIRATION AGAIN

By Allison Young / Oxygen Magazine
Finding motivation can feel like finding your headphones in a bottomless gym bag. You blindly dig and dig — you know they’re in there somewhere — but keep coming up empty. So we asked those seemingly effortless exercisers, the ultra marathoners, trainers, dietitians and exercise physiologists, who seem to have motivation on speed dial, how to hack it, hone it and own it. Turns out, motivation is not only way easier to find than those earbuds, but it’s also easier to untangle. Read on for their advice.

EVERYONE NEEDS A KILIMANJARO

“I hit a lull in my mid-40s. I was training Jessica Biel for The A-Team movie, and she was signed up to hike Mount Kilimanjaro for her charity. I hate outdoors stuff , but I signed up. Turned out, I so needed that moment to get me back on track. It pushed me in the gym in whole new ways, and when I accomplished it, I was empowered to try more unusual things. It got me on the road traveling and doing retreats, and now everywhere I go, I try something new, whether it’s camel riding in Egypt or a dance class. If you’re really feeling like nothing’s working motivation wise, you have to step into that ‘I-could-neverdo-it-but-I-coulddo-it’ zone and amazing things will happen.”
— Ramona Braganza, celebrity trainer and creator of the 321 Training Method

SUCCESS FEEDS MOTIVATION

“I live by the motto ‘something is better than nothing.’ Yesterday was a great example: I was planning to do a long workout that ended up not happening because of meetings, but I still jumped into the gym and did 15 minutes. It counts because 15 minutes of physical activity is better than sitting. It also counts because it means I didn’t skip a workout, it means I exercised regularly this week, and it helps reinforce that habit and routine. Doing exactly what I committed to do boosts my mood and motivation to continue. I am on track, in control and making progress, and it feels good. No matter what, I can make it work if I follow this motto.”
— Chris Jordan, director of exercise physiology at the Human Performance Institute and creator of the 7-Minute Workout

THE ULTIMATE “PRESCRIPTION” FOR MOTIVATION

“No. 1, get o_ your couch. No. 2, start moving. No. 3, smile. No. 4, keep moving. No. 5, keep smiling. No. 6, repeat daily. The truth is that being active is a behavior pattern: Once you start it, you keep going and going, and then it just feels wrong to stop moving.”
— Dr. Jordan Metzl, M.D., sports medicine physician, fitness instructor, 32-time marathon runner, 12-time Ironman finisher and author of Dr. Jordan Metzl’s Running Strong: The Sports Doctor’s Complete Guide to Staying Healthy and Injury-Free for Life

SILENCE STICKING POINTS

“Bolster your willpower in tough times. A lot of research shows that if bloodsugar levels dip, willpower takes a severe nosedive. That’s why when you go too long without eating, you’ll overconsume whatever is around you. Curb this by having a piece of fruit with nut butter or Greek yogurt with fruit. The same thing has been shown with a lack of sleep. That’s why I try to get enough sleep, and on those days I don’t, I make sure I start out the day right with a proteinrich breakfast to help reduce those sweet cravings.”
— Julie Upton, MS, RD, athlete and co-author of The Real Skinny: Appetite for Health’s 101 Fat Habits & Slim Solutions

DON’T GIVE THAT NEGATIVE VOICE THE TIME OF DAY

“You have to have tunnel vision and not think sometimes. Like the other day: I really didn’t want to go to the gym, but I knew if I went through the motions, I’d eventually get there. I just have to get up, get moving and get my stuff together, and if I can make it to the car, I think I’m good. We all know how to put ourselves on autopilot, so get out and do it!”
— Toni Carey, co-creator of Black Girls Run!

GIVE YOURSELF A PEP TALK

“Some of the hardest moments for me are being out at mile 87 of 100 miles. My legs hurt and all I want to do is lay down. What gets me across the finish line? A lot of selftalk: Holly, pull it together, you can do this! Look how far you’ve come! When you believe in yourself, the motivation comes second nature.”
— Holly Miller, personal trainer, coach, yoga teacher, stationary cycli ng instructor and ultramarathoner who has completed two Ironman triathlons and has run more than 50 marathons

CHANGE YOUR STATE, CHANGE YOUR LIFE!

“When I’m unmotivated, feel bad about my body or not proud of myself, if I make myself of service to somebody else — How can I support you, how can I lift YOU up — I hear myself saying all the things I need to hear. I change my own state. Even when you feel low, if you can go and offer help to someone else, if you can be of service, that is the quickest way to change your state.”
— Kiya Knight, creator of Weightless and Air Bar, certified personal trainer and fitness instructor

CHECK MOTIVATION OFF THE LIST

“I’m a check-it off -the-list kind of girl! I write everything I’m planning to do that day in a little book: Work out, take SLT, go to yoga. That’s a great motivator because I don’t like going to bed without almost everything from the day crossed off.”
— Amanda Freeman, founder and owner of New York City boutique fitness studio SLT (Strengthen, Lengthen, Tone)

TO ERR IS HUMAN, TO FORGIVE IS MOTIVATING

“If you stray, whether it’s eating something you shouldn’t have or skipping a workout because you’re tired, be forgiving. When you start being hard on yourself, it takes the fun out of it, which is a sure way to zap motivation.”
— Katie Warner Johnson,, dancer and Physique 57 trainer and co-founder of activewear site Carbon38

Wednesday, March 18, 2015

GOAL-OVERHAUL

Four months after your vague New Year’s resolution to lose weight, where are you? By now — according to the stats — more than 60 percent of us have bailed and given up on them. Don’t be a statistic; overhaul your original goal and make it SMART: specific, measurable, attainable, realistic and timely.

Success strategy: Get specific. Here’s your new SMART goal: “I will lose 10 pounds by summer by eating clean for all my meals, doing my strength and cardio training Monday through Friday regularly, and aiming to lose a pound a week before my vacation to Hawaii.” This gives you a much better map to follow and smaller, daily goals to reach in order to achieve your ultimate goal. Write down your new SMART goal on paper and hang it where you can see it every day or have your smartphone send a reminder. Good luck!

Ignite your fire

Need a spark of inspiration? The power of positive recall can get you motivated to move.
By Karen Asp
Motivation is a funny thing. Even if you’re a certified gym rat, you might have trouble getting psyched up to exercise every now and then. Here’s a surefire way to give that motivation a good kick in the pants: Recall a positive exercise experience.
In a study from the journal Memory, about 150 college students were asked to recall either a positive or negative memory connected to exercise that would increase their motivation to exercise. Meanwhile, a control group did no recall.
In the end, those who remembered a positive memory reported higher amounts of exercise, about 15 minutes (or more) of moderate-intensity activity during a weeklong period, than the control group. Surprisingly, negative memories connected to exercise also increased study participants’ activity level over the control group, although not as much as the positive exercise memory group.
Why? Although researchers don’t have a definitive answer, they do have a few theories. “Recalling a positive exercise experience could boost one’s self-concept in terms of exercise and fitness,” says Mathew Biondolillo, lead study author from the University of New Hampshire. That, in turn, could lead to more exercise.
Other research points to specific memories serving as a directive function, meaning that they direct or guide future activities and suggest plans of action based on past experience. “A positive motivational memory might give helpful guidance and instruction for people so they know how to repeat a past positive exercise experience in the future,” he adds.
So on those days when you’re vacillating between staying in bed another 30 minutes or heading to the gym, this study suggests that recalling those positive past experiences could make you choose the latter. For instance, think about completing your first 5K and how happy you felt as a result.
Can’t think of anything positive? Then follow the lead of the second group in the study and veer the other way into negative territory. For instance, maybe you picture a race you did in which you almost couldn’t finish. The memory could ignite your fire to exercise so you’ll do better next time.

When you’re vacillating between staying in bed another 30 minutes or heading to the gym, recalling positive past experiences could make you choose the latter.

243:(calories)

NUMBER OF CALORIES IN A BASIC BROWNIE. TO BURN OFF THE CALORIES, ACCORDING TO HARVARD MEDICAL SCHOOL, A 125 - POUND WOMAN WILL HAVE TO DO ANY OF THE FOLLOWING FOR ONE HOUR OVER AND ABOVE HER DAILY ACTIVITY LEVEL: STRETCHING, HATHA YOGA, WATER AEROBICS, TAI CHI, VOLLEYBALL, BASIC GYMNASTICS, WALK 3.5 MILES, WASH A CAR.


Tuesday, March 10, 2015

Wednesday, February 25, 2015

Live in the moment

LIVE IN THE MOMENT

If there is one piece of advice I can offer, it is to get your life off autopilot. Become aware of what you do. Try to stop just going through the daily motions because you’ll never reach your potential. You are unique and authentic, and there is a purpose to your life. But if you follow all the rules blindly and follow the pack of people around you without asking yourself whether it is the right thing for you to do, chances are you’ll miss the opportunity to grow as a person. I see too many people feeling the need to just settle instead of making healthy changes.
NO MORE EXCUSES
My challenge to you is to do these action steps every day.

1 } Start your day with at least 10 minutes of “you” time. Instead of hitting the snooze button, set your alarm a bit early and spend some time reading an inspiring book, listening to a good podcast, or enjoying a cup of tea and breathing deeply. End this time with a daily affirmation such as, “Today will be a good day.”
2} Change the way you react to things that happen. For example, don’t get spun up when in traffic. Instead, work on your posture or blow bubbles out the window and watch people light up as they see them float by! We can’t always control things that happen, but we can control how we react to them.
3} Live in the moment. Practice being 100 percent present in everything that you do. Block out the full workload for 10 minutes when a loved one calls, let go of outside stresses as you walk in the park, and focus on the one task at a time and give it your all.
4 } Give to others and the environment. Giving is the best feeling in the world — even if it’s just a simple compliment. Never pass up a chance to make someone feel appreciated or loved. It will fuel your happiness.
} Spend a minimum of 30 minutes a day being active. Instead of wasting half your lunch break looking at emails or Facebook, get out and move. Skip the nighttime TV and go for a moonlit stroll. The increased blood flow will help energize you and boost your mood.
It’s your turn to create a ripple effect. Go reach your potential. I promise you won’t regret it. You’re worth it!

Monday, February 23, 2015

5 powerful questions


1.  Am I focusing on the right things?

At every moment, millions of little things compete for your attention.  All these things fall into one of two categories: things that are important and things that are not.
People never get more done by blindly working more hours on everything that comes up.  Instead, they get more done when they follow careful plans that measure and track key priorities and milestones.  So if you want to be more successful and less stressed, don’t ask how to make something more efficient until you’ve first asked, “Do I need to do this at all?”

Simply being able to do something well does not make it the right thing to do.  I think this is one of the most common problems with a lot of time-management advice; too often productivity gurus focus on how to do things quickly, but the vast majority of things people do quickly should not be done at all.  (Read Getting Things Done.)

2.  Is my mindset in the positive or the negative?

Where your mind goes, energy flows.  Which area of your life do you tend to focus on: what you have or what’s missing from your life?
If you scrutinize your habitual thoughts, what do you tend to spend more time dwelling on?  The positives or the negatives?
Rather than focusing on what you don’t have and begrudging those who are better off than you, perhaps you should acknowledge that you have lots to be thankful for. Developing a habit of appreciating what you have can create a new level of emotional well-being and strength.  But the real question is: do you take time to feel deeply grateful with your mind, body, heart and soul?  That’s where the energy to take positive action comes from.
So don’t let negativity and drama get the best of you.  Happy, successful people tune out negativity to make room for positivity.  Be wise enough to follow in their footsteps.  Walk away from the nonsense around you. 
Also, along these same lines, accept the fact that there’s a lot you can’t control.  And if you focus on what you can’t control, you’ll do nothing but create more stress for yourself.  So remember, you can influence many aspects of your life but you can’t control them entirely.  Once you fully accept and adopt this pattern of thinking, another important question must be asked:

3.  What meaning am I assigning to my challenges?

Even when we’re being positive, we all have challenges; there’s no escaping that.  But how you feel about your life has little to do with the events in it or what has (or hasn’t) happened to you.  The meaning you assign to these things controls the quality of your life.  Most of the time, however, you may be unaware of the effect of your unconscious mind in assigning meaning to life’s events.  So check-in with yourself…
  • When something happens that disrupts your life (an illness, an injury, a job loss, etc.), do you tend to think that this is the end or the beginning?
  • If someone confronts you, is that person insulting you, coaching you or trying to care for you?
  • Does a big problem mean that God is punishing you or challenging you?  Or is it possible that this problem isn’t really a problem at all, but an opportunity?
Bottom line: When something negative happens, view this circumstance as a chance to learn something you didn’t know.  Don’t wish it never happened.  Don’t try to step back in time.  Take the lessons learned and step forward.  You have to tell yourself, “It’s OK.  I’m doing OK. I can handle this.”  You need to know that it’s better to cross new lines and suffer the consequences of a lesson learned from time to time, than to just stare at the lines for the rest of your life and always wonder.
Also keep in mind that the past, even when troubled, is invaluable to your present.  It provides a solid foundation for everything you’re doing now.  Learn from it – the mistakes and the successes – and then let it go.  This process might seem easier said than done, but it depends on your focus.  The past is just training; it doesn’t define you in this moment.  Think about what went wrong, but only in terms of how it will help you make things right.
When we shift our habitual focus and meanings, there’s no limit on what life can become.  A change of focus and a shift in meaning can literally alter our biochemistry and the trajectory of our lives in a couple minutes flat. 
So take control and always remember: Meaning equals emotion and emotion equals power.  Choose wisely.  Find an empowering meaning in any event, and best will always be yours for the taking.
And that leads right in to the next question…

4.  What will I do next to progress?

While everyone else is talking about it, successful people are quietly doing it.
It doesn’t matter if you have a genius IQ and a PhD in Quantum Physics, you can’t change anything or make any sort of real-world progress without taking action.  There’s a huge difference between knowing how to do something and actually doing it.  Knowledge and intelligence are both useless without action.  It’s as simple as that.
Successful people know that a good plan executed today is better than a perfect plan executed someday (or put off indefinitely!).  They don’t wait for the “right time” or the “right day” or the “right (impossible) circumstances”, because they know these reactions are based on a fear and nothing more.  They take action here and now, today – because that’s where real progress happens. 

5.  What tangible reminders do I need to see to stay motivated?

You want to lose weight, but when you’re tired, it’s easy to rationalize that you’ll start exercising and eating right tomorrow.  You want to build a more profitable business, but when you’re caught up in the daily grind, it’s easy to just do what’s familiar instead of what’s required for growth.  You want to nurture your closest relationships, but when you’re busy, it’s easy to rationalize that you really need to work on that client proposal instead.
Few good things come easy, and when the going gets tough we often take the easy way out – even though the easy way takes us the wrong way.
To combat this, successful people create tangible reminders that pull them back from the brink of their weak impulses.  One man has a copy of his credit card balance taped to his computer monitor; it serves as a constant reminder of the debt he wants to pay off.  Another friend keeps a photo of herself when she was 90 pounds heavier on her refrigerator as a reminder of the person she never wants to be again.  And another fills his desk with family photos, both because he loves looking at them and because, when work gets really tough, these photos remind him of the people he is ultimately working for.
Think of moments when you are most likely to give in to impulses that take you farther away from your ultimate goals.  Then use tangible reminders of those goals to interrupt the impulse and keep you on track.

Afterthoughts

Now that you’re aware of the power of these five questions and their subsequent decisions, start looking for role models who are experiencing what you want out of life.  When we observe someone we want to learn from and we have a crystal clear idea of what we want to create for ourselves, it unlocks a tremendous amount of motivation.  Human beings are socially inclined, and when we get the idea that we want to join some elite circle up above us, that is what really motivates us to achieve greatness.  “Look, they did it.  I can do it too!”
And yes, you CAN!
It may sound overly simplistic, but when you spend enough days asking yourself the right questions and you spend enough evenings studying people who have been where you want to go, you’ll gradually clear a pathway to create the positive change you desire in life.