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Getting to a good level of communication with my kids took some self reflection and has had it’s growing pains. As with anything worthwhile, we get to the next level in our own thinking by re-examining our existing thought patterns, gathering new knowledge, and some basic hard work.

Whack A Mole

In my own personal growth, many times I feel like an unwilling participant in a flurried session of Whack-A-Mole! The arcade game.

This player is an expert and whacking moles is what he does! Getting whacked over and over does three things well; it makes your head hurt, gives you a renewed sense of urgency, and instills a strong conviction not to do this again!

Properly motivated now, the story moves on…

I did what I always do when life gets rough and I feel a little whacked.

I went to the local Barnes and Noble bookstore - with the connected Starbucks cafe. A girls gotta get a good cup of coffee and unwind sometimes!

Books

I walk in, find the section that has the kind of book I want, and I start scanning. I look at the books, pulling a couple out so I can read the inner sleeve and back cover.


Interesting?

Goes in the pile to the right.

Boring?

Goes back on the shelf.

This goes on until I have a pile of books — the maximum I can carry across
the bookstore to the Barnes & Noble cafe.

In the cafe, I get a large cup of coffee as I prepare to read the first three pages of each of the fifteen books I just carted across the bookstore like a true geek.

The total time spent on this expedition? Usually about three hours.

Information

Yes, I could talk to a friend or family, but many times it’s just easier to go find your own answers!

I like books when I want to get another person’s perspective, preferably someone who a) is not a crazy and b) someone who knows the subject matter. It’s not easy to find a good author with something meaningful to say when you need it!

I was searching for a book that would help motivate me and not a bull-sh*t filled book that would make me feel warm and fuzzy. I need someone to tell me like it is, not someone telling me what I want to hear in five easy steps.

Life Strategies

A book that really helped me change my thinking was “Life Strategies: Doing What Works, Doing What Matters” by Phillip C. McGraw, Ph.D. If you’re thinking, “Is that Dr. Phil”? You are right, it is Dr. Phil. I’ve heard several people say they don’t like him and his tv show, I don’t get a chance to watch it, so I don’t know. I will say however that I found a ton of value in this particular book!

———————————————————————————-

Phillip M: “Most people cheat themselves by not asking themselves the hard questions, not facing their true personality and behavior, and therefore not addressing the nitty-gritty issues undermining their efforts to succeed.”

Vicky H: Ouch! Hate it when people do that.

Phillip M: “You are accountable for your life. Good or bad, successful or unsuccessful, happy or sad, fair of unfair, you own your life! If you are not happy, you are accountable. Acknowledge and accept accountability for your life. Understand your role in creating the results that are your life. Lean how to choose better so you have better.”

Vicky H: Ouch! This was almost worse then participating in a whack-a-mole game.

Phillip M: “Whatever your life circumstances, accept that you can no longer dodge the responsibility for how and why your life is the way it is.

Taking responsibility doesn’t just mean giving “lip service” to being accountable by saying “Okay, I’m accountable”. If you don’t accept accountability, you will misdiagnose every problem you have. If you misdiagnose, you will mistreat. If you mistreat, you won’t get better, plain and simple.”

Vicky H: [ I keep reading...]


Phillip M: “Adopt an attitude of questioning and challenging everything in your life that you can identify as being accepted on blind faith or as having been adopted out of tradition or history. Consider patterns in your personal, professional, family, and social areas.

You will be surprised at how much of your life involves patterns where you do things in a certain way simply because someone else who didn’t know any more than you, did them that way. You will, of course, find certain things that withstand the challenge and therefore should be embraced. You will also identity things that do not withstand the challenge and therefore should be modified or abandoned.”

———————————————————————————-

Our brains love micro-processing. Our brain wants to be efficient. It wants to find the answer, file the thought away and move on to the next thought.

Reusing our previous decisions over and over is quick, but does it serve us well? In my personal case, no. After spending the better part of a year giving my thoughts and their patterns a makeover, I think I made a huge leap forward — and from that point I’ve never looked back.

Ways I Have Changed

After learning this, I don’t take as many things for granted and I try to put myself in the other persons shoes more. Thinking differently is now getting me different results. I can now see many of these patterns in advance and I consciously re-evaluate their need to exist.

In the pre-teen and teen years children start the transformation towards defining their individuality. Reevaluating my own values and choices makes me realize how much I have changed over the years.

This has helped me to understand my kids changing and to appreciate, love, and embrace their uniqueness for both their god given gifts, as well as their shortcomings.

Sensible pondering is much more zen than being whacked like a mole.

**

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Table of contents for Life Strategies

  1. Life Strategy: Finding What Works (Part 1)
  2. Life Strategy: R U Really Living Or Merely Existing (Part 2)


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21 Responses to “Life Strategy: Finding What Works (Part 1)”

  1. AmyL on May 30, 2008 6:56 pm

    Hey Vicki, you did it again! The second post is sometimes harder than the first. :) Keep going girl. Glad to have you online.

  2. Pat on May 31, 2008 3:54 pm

    First, I have to say I love the whack a mole game! Second, I don’t like Dr. Phil but he sure does make some good points. Third, I enjoyed reading this post because it gave great info and was very entertaining. I will add this to my google reader so I don’t miss any updates!

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  4. Chris Garrett on June 1, 2008 4:28 am

    Oh I know that whack a mole feeling, but like those moles we have to keep popping our heads back up! Another great post Vicky

  5. Vicky H on June 2, 2008 8:21 pm

    @AmyL Thanks for your support.

    @Pat I love whack-a-mole too, which is probably why it so easily came to mind.

    @chrisgarrett Yes, popping our heads back up is definatly the important part! :)

  6. Mother Earth on June 5, 2008 3:52 pm

    today we celebrated the end of my daughter’s last day of junior year of HS, she had a full, emotional and at some level a tough year. My daughter is a wise old soul,she thinks things through, she’s compassionate and she’s an absolute gas to be with. I don’t say this as her mother. As we rehashed the good, the bad and the ugly of the year past I found myself thinking - wow I really like her. Not in a mom way - but a person way. I found this thought rather remarkable.

  7. Kay on June 5, 2008 5:53 pm

    Yea. and they have another life stratagies for teens that my mother decided to make me read. I was actually very enlightened by the way they were able to reach me, as a teen, with real situations. good post mom!!!

  8. Coffee Cup Sleeves on June 6, 2008 3:03 am

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  9. Vicky H on June 6, 2008 5:27 am

    @motherearth Isn’t it wonderful when we are crazy about our kids not because their our kids, but because of the wonderful human beings they’ve become.

    You should be very proud. :)

    @Kay I love you baby! You are the sun, moon, and my very OWN star!

  10. Stephen Hopson on June 6, 2008 5:54 am

    Vicki:

    Like you, I inhale books! Oh yes. And I love it.

    You have a very gracious, smooth style of writing. I like it very much!

    I never heard of Whack-a-Mole but it sure sounds funny.

    And as for Dr. Phil - well, I could take him or leave him. I’m not particuarly drawn to him but he sure has some good points. Like taking responsibility for your life - stop complaining and just get with it.

    I’m not sure why I don’t care for him much but now you have me curious about his book - maybe I ought to become a geek for the day and go over to the bookstore and drag his book to the cafe for a few hours of “inspection.” Who knows, maybe I’ll add his book to my growing collection?

    Thanks for sharing - again, I love your writing. You really write from the heart - it’s obvious. It’s like there are no energy blockages leaping off the page/screen. Know what I’m talking about?

    Keep it up!

  11. Vanessa Van Petten on June 6, 2008 6:23 pm

    Vicki

    This is a great post! Thanks for sharing

    Vanessa

  12. Daniel on June 9, 2008 7:53 pm

    Congratulations

    Your blog looks nice and I am looking forward to see how things are progressing.

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About Vicky H
Vicky

Raising great children is one of the most important things parents will ever do!

As parents, we often fly by the seat of our pants.

We learn as we go.

We can and should learn from each other!