Monday, April 27, 2015

Change and the Truth...

“If we could change ourselves, the tendencies in the world would also change. As a man changes his own nature, so does the attitude of the world change towards him. ... We need not wait to see what others do.” -Gandhi
Image result for being the change
                                                                                                                                                            

I recently made a life decision that rocked my world.  Walking from the office where I resigned my steady employment I remember reaching for the sticky-note and penning the words – be the change you want to see in the world.  Without a doubt those words have been swirling in my mind with flavors of wonder, passion, fear and focus –all in degrees I have never experienced before.  The financial insecurity of it all is only a symptom, with the root cause buried deeper in who do I want to be – what is the change that I have to see in the world –where has it all gone awry?

There is an injustice in my mind.  One that others could perceive as emotional or angry.  It is really neither.  It is in our inability to bridge the gender gap.  The complexity is too deep and our lenses are too thick.  We deal in both what is real and what is perceived.  How do we know the difference?  Is there a difference when our perceptions are our realities?

Will I be the change I want to see in the world?  I learned that this saying had been bastardized from the Gandhi quote where this blog post began.  It is arrogant to think that I can solely make an impact on how the world perceives, reacts or responds.  If there is nothing more we learn from the devastation of a tornado or the pain of a child’s untimely death – we are really in control of nothing. 

I do however find comfort in Gandhi’s words – the hope in that I can work on myself and change my own nature.  Some do this as they draw boundaries in relationships, others do this as they choose to address the plank in their own eyes rather than the specks in the eyes of others.  I find the power rather in taking responsibility for both my own brokenness and greatness – and that I need not wait to see what others do.

So I am in pursuit of breaking down the barriers that would ultimately uncover the truth.  Not my truth or your truth – but that place where we coexist – feeling valued and heard.  I need to embrace the truth through your eyes and divulge my truth.  You being man or woman, employee and entrepreneur, house husband or wife – executive or individual contributor – one thought at a time…

Saturday, April 25, 2015

Exactly what are you waiting for?

How often do you stop in the middle of your day, where ever you are - at your desk, in your car, at the grocery store, in a meeting - and say to yourself, "This is exactly what I want to be doing!"

Just a random guess... not often.

I mulled over these thoughts quite a bit during a recent three day period in which I alternated between concentrated time with people I care and time alone. And it's funny - when you're around people who inspire you, who love you and who bring out the best in you, suddenly you're very aware of everything you can be. Doubts melt away. Energy smolders and sizzles. You're ready to charge ahead and embrace your present and you wholeheartedly believe you can make anything happen for your future.

Until, of course, that 5am alarm goes off and you're back to walking the dogs, brewing coffee, waking up cranky teenagers, endlessly buying groceries (for said cranky teenagers), washing dishes, dodging telemarketers, shifting uncomfortably through meaningless meetings and hunched over your laptop late at night to meet deadlines.  When 'real life' kicks in, suddenly everything you can be becomes far less important than an extra 20 minutes of sleep or someone else taking out the trash for a change.

Because that's where we lose ourselves: in the mundane of the every day.

But what if we could celebrate that?

No, really: what if, with a sticky, odiferous white 13 gallon trash bag in hand as you fumble out to the trash barrel, you could stop, swat away the pesky flies and say to yourself, "This is exactly what I want to be doing!"

It's not the taking out of trash that is quite so celebratory - though I suppose, depending on what's in your trash, it could be. It's that you're in that moment, very much aware of who you are and where you are. You are part of the world that happens to include taking out the trash. And washing dishes. And paying bills.  And it's your world. Your reality. And it's of your making.

Own it. Embrace it. Love it. Live it.

We choose our path. We create both the present and the future, and it is up to us to stop our assumptions from getting in our way.  We can't find a new job because we're too old for a career change.  We can't move to a different city because it's too hard to start over. We can't start that new relationship because it's never going to work out anyway.  We can't end this current relationship because we've invested too much time in it already. We can't let go...

Well, why not?

If you can't look around you today, no matter what mundane, boring task it is you're mired in, and say to yourself, "This is exactly what I want to be doing!" then perhaps it's time to reassess. Something is cluttering your life, your thoughts and your heart.  Think about what needs to change so that the mundane doesn't bury your soul, but is just one more action in your ability to live through your soul.

How much time do we spend thinking, "It would be nice if..." and "One day, I want to..." What is it we're waiting for in order for those things to happen? More money? More time? A different opportunity? How much will waiting actually help those things to happen? What's supposed to be happening while you're waiting? Who's making it happen?

And that is what I realized during that three day period: waiting for my goals to happen wasn't really getting me very far. I need to proactively create the life I want.  A life that includes making time for the people important to me. It includes focusing my energy on work that I love. It is dedicated to making the most of each moment. And it means occasionally washing the dishes. Buying groceries. Dealing with cranky teens. Buying more groceries. And taking out the trash.


Natalie Hahn O'Flaherty is a principal at Dirty Girls Consulting, offering special programs that coach women moving into leadership roles. Women work differently, think differently, and it is up to us to allow this difference to become our strengths. We explore breaking free of traditional standards, accomplishing professional and personal goals to create an authentic, fully loved life. Read more Dirty Girl Consulting blogs here. 

Tuesday, April 14, 2015

You're not wrong

How often do you make decisions based on what you simply seem to know, in your core, to be true? 

You can call it instinct, or intuition... or just your 'gut'.  Whatever it is, do you trust it?

If you do, you have probably been called impulsive. Unpredictable. Even crazy.

But here's the thing: you're not wrong.




A little story
When I was 20, I leaned in and kissed him.

We talked and kissed again. Made vague plans for a future date. Parted for the night.

Actually, we parted.

I had seen him a few times before that particular date.  We had met at a party of mutual friends.  We shared a love of buffalo wings. He had me in tears with laughter with stories about his brothers.  He was a grad student in engineering.  We went out a couple of times - dinner, a picnic. He was kind of perfect.

Kind of.  Until I kissed him.  And then we never went out again.

For a long time, I tried to figure it out.  What had gone sideways?  I would still occasionally see him in the student union or out with a group of friends, and he was friendly but distant.  Over and over again, I replayed the time we spent together.  I did not mistake the attraction. I did not misinterpret our connection. I did not make up the desire.

My intuition was not wrong.  But somehow, my action was not quite right.

How often do you follow your gut?
Our intuition, inner voice, gut instinct... choose the term you prefer... picks up on cues beyond our basic visual and audio data.  It picks up on micro expressions our eyes don't have time to register but our brains do.  It picks up on vocal quivers that indicate a deeper level of feeling. It reads the energy behind the words, the gestures that indicate nervousness or excitement.  Our intuition tells us when someone is repressing a strong emotion, when someone is lying - to us or to herself- or when a situation is about to go sideways.  It's that feeling you get that goes beyond your logical thoughts or the activity you see around you.

Using your intuition - respecting it and responding to it - is a powerful action. It's trusting yourself fully.

But there are times when even though your intuition is spot on, the action you take based on that may seem wrong - that is, it doesn't generate the response you expected given what you "know".  As in the case of that kiss. Was I wrong for going along with my intuition?

I was not.  Because while I questioned my ability to read a person and situation for a long time after that, I did later learn that my intuition was spot-on but there was another reason, which had nothing to do with me, that triggered the engineering student's sudden distance.

More importantly, by following my intuition, I  learned. Quite a bit. I learned that Mr. Near Perfect was not for me, nor would he ever be.  I learned that spending hours replaying scenarios and making up new ones with imaginary conversations is a colossal waste of time. I learned that I can spend many days making up 57 counter arguments to what my gut is telling me and still won't be any the wiser until I finally take action.

I gained a greater sense of trust in myself and in my observation skills.  I gained the joy of being spontaneous. I gained the pleasure of owning my reactions - emotional and logical - and not feeling the need to explain them or apologize for them. I gained the freedom to just be myself.

If you follow your gut, allow yourself to be that curious, somewhat unpredictable person who's eager to burst out, what do you have to lose?

But more importantly, what do you have to gain?


Natalie Hahn O'Flaherty is a principal at Dirty Girls Consulting, offering special programs that coach women moving into leadership roles. Women work differently, think differently, and it is up to us to allow this difference to become our strengths. We explore breaking free of traditional standards, accomplishing professional and personal goals to create an authentic, fully loved life. Read more Dirty Girl Consulting blogs here.