Handel Group

Saying “Yes”

 
Last week my blog focused on your power to say “no” to things. I mentioned that with the courage to say “no” comes a deeper commitment to that to which you say “yes.” I want to talk about the next layer of saying “yes” to things. We at the Handel Group call it “designing your life” and the main tools we use are promises and consequences.
Yup, we tell people to promise to do what they say they will do and then pay a consequence for every promise they don’t keep. For example, I promise to be on time to dinner with my family every night or else I throw $20 on the street. I also promise to stay at a certain weight or else I lose my dessert. I promise not to blame my husband for things, to be kind to my co-workers and to exercise and do yoga a certain number of times a week. The list goes on and on because even though I said, technically, we can’t “have it all” in last week’s blog, I am still trying to almost have it all. And that can never work without promises and consequences.
This system of promises and consequences works miraculously for everyone who tries it, even though most people are skeptical about it when they start. Let me address some major concerns you might be having, right off the bat.
1) Promises will limit my spontaneity.
First of all, your spontaneity may not be all it’s cracked up to be. You may think it’s the key to your creative thinking, success, even heroism, but it may not be. Until you experiment with a more plan-oriented style, you won’t know where your real gifts lie, or the height of effectiveness you can reach. Besides, your “spontaneity” had you eat that donut- remember?
Secondly, you can design freedom into your life and you will enjoy it a lot more when you know the things that are most important are taken care of because you made and kept your promises about them. For example, I take at least an hour off each night for just myself. I can do this with a clear conscience because I plan my work week by the Sunday night of the upcoming week and I always spend 6-8pm with my kids and 11pm-12 with my husband. See how I get to do all of it? I planned it and I promised it.
2) I don’t want to make promises I know I won’t keep (or that will be hard to keep), because then I will just be more disappointed when I fail.
I always laugh at this one. It’s like saying I don’t want to develop my Personal Integrity® because I don’t have Personal Integrity®, which is like saying, I don’t want to learn horseback riding because I don’t know how to ride a horse. It’s an obvious statement turned excuse that you haven’t developed a skill and therefore you don’t want to know how. Are you hearing the insanity yet? It’s true, where you have never made or kept a promise before is where you need it the most. Will it be easy to keep it? Maybe not, but that’s the game of change. You can resist and whine about the consequence, or you can let it work on your “brat” tendencies and force you to focus on how to keep that promise. The consequence, which you should really want to avoid, shuts up your “brat” voices and gets your mind into fighting for the promise to be kept. Normally, your mind is extremely busy complaining (instead) and coming up with excuses to get out of doing that which you know you should do.
Here’s my bottom line advice. Face your dreams and face your demons. Promise something you know you deeply want to do and deal with what it takes to keep the promise. You might fail, but at least you’ll finally be in the right game for your life. At least you will be telling the truth about what you want and dealing with what a brat you are about the work and attention you need to apply to get there. And, you’ll have a shot at keeping the promise, too (way better than if you left it to chance) and that will feel great; I promise.
3) Consequences sound punitive; I am more inspired by rewards.
When you promise to eat vegetables, drink water, skip soda, get out of bed without hitting snooze, or to pay undivided attention to your spouse or kids, or to go on a date each week, or to send out five resumes or to call your mother, you start bringing yourself into alignment. When you keep those promises, you are rewarded: you feel better physically, you get positive responses from people and your environment and you feel great about yourself. You do not need an artificial reward, your benefits and your integrity are the natural reward. The brat that lives in your head does not want you to keep this in mind, because then you would ignore IT.
Consequences are not punishments. You did nothing wrong, you just chose what you chose. You are always just choosing and that is what we try to show you. We try to help you understand how the mind works so you can make it work for you and your dreams. Creating artificial consequences makes it way easier for you to choose what’s best for you. These can be funny and creative, but they have to be annoying enough to keep you paying attention. For example, if I am not loving with my co-workers, I have to write a poem for them. Usually my justification for being rude is I don’t have time to be nice, so having to slow down and write a poem puts me in my place and restores the relationship.
We have a long list of types of consequences from which to choose, but none of them is a punishment (come to the teleseminar or listen to the recording to hear the whole list). Promises and consequences are not in the realm of morality, they are just a tool to use in designing your life and helping you get closer to your dreams faster.
Take notice! In the back of your head, that to which you are not attending lurks. It talks to you. It eats away at your self-esteem and sense of power in your life. Whether it is calling your mother, seeing the doctor, being on time, doing your work well, offering an apology you owe or taking care of your body with the right foods and exercise, it all adds up and it all weighs on you until you address it. Developing Personal Integrity® means living up to your own ideals in all these areas and making and keeping promises is the way to do it.
Figuring out the right promises for you that will lead you to your particular dreams at your pace and figuring out the right consequences that are annoying but not impossible, (ones that will stick in your mind and push you) is an art and a science. It is very helpful to be guided through the process of designing your “starter” promises and consequences. Once those become second nature, you can make an intermediate list. By the time you become advanced, you will have a list of maintenance promises and consequences for which you are pretty much known. After that, you will add new ones from time to time based on new areas you’ve taken on. Yes, there are challenges the whole way, no matter what phase of this Personal Integrity® development you are in, but you get to feel proud, confident and happy. That sounds nice doesn’t it?
Love,
Laurie
P.S. – Want help getting started or tweaking your current list of promises and consequences AND figure out how to fit them all into your busy days? Take advantage NOW of our two-fer deal: Register for both, Mastering Time (Wed, 7/20 at 12pm ET) and How to Keep Your Promises (Thurs, 7/28 at 8:30pm ET) for the cost of one. Use promo code:July2fer. You must register by noon on Wednesday, 7/20 to take advantage of this offer; a nice reward for those of you who read our newsletters right away!