Sherry Reaves Sherry Reaves

Three Things I Know About Trust

1.     Most of the time being trusted is on us.  We set ourselves up for not being trusted when we put ourselves in a QUESTIONABLE situation. 

 For example:  If I’m married or in a committed relationship and while at my job, with no intent of wrongdoing on the part of myself or my co-worker who happens to be of the opposite sex, we decide to go out to eat lunch together.  I’m innocent, but I have placed myself in a questionable situation. My significant other just might happen to ask what I did for lunch today or maybe someone tells them they saw me with another woman/man.  Now I could find myself in a position of being questioned and possibly not trusted.  This could have been avoided with a strong boundary. An example might be to always include a third person when heading to lunch with someone that may cause questions to arise.

 2.     Blind Trust is Risky

 Forgiving those who have betrayed us absolutely does not mean forgetting.  There is no magic eraser for our brain.  There’s a good reason…. we need our experiences to teach us.  We need to be aware of red flags that indicate questionable behaviors. 

 This does not mean, once wronged, we keep questioning the person who wronged us.  We leave it in the past unless there is questionable behavior.  If so, validate your suspicions or proceed with caution.

 3.     Not trusting someone based on your past experiences with others will create conflict and possibly destroy the relationship.  No one likes being falsely accused, having to prove their innocence, or walking on eggshells about being questioned.    Remember, to ask yourself…is the suspicion there because the person has created a questionable situation or is the suspicion a “what-if” in your mind, which may be out of your own anxiety?

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Sherry Reaves Sherry Reaves

Three Things I Know About Starting Off Your New Year Right

  1. New Year’s Day is my favorite holiday because I devote it to reflection on the past year’s goals and focus on what I want to see different in the new year.  It’s a feeling of hope for a restart or in some cases, a do-over.  This reflection gives me the foundation for establishing my goals for the year and for writing a plan to reach them.  

    There’s the tradition of making New Year’s resolutions.  We are currently on day 10 of the month of January and I’d be willing to guess that many have already reached some disappointment in themselves because they have not been able to keep their resolution(s).  What I know is that resolutions are usually affirmations with no clear plan of action.


  2. Goals are specific and, in a way, they are an affirmation. Having a goal isn’t enough though.  You must know how you are going to reach it, and this must be as detailed as possible.  As Zig Ziglar and others have said, a goal that is not written is a wish.  


  3. Even written goals if not in your daily sight aren’t likely to be achieved. Create a habit this year of reading over your goals along with the action steps each morning before you get the day started. When you check off the action steps you’ve completed, you’ll be inspired to keep going toward the finish line. What a feeling of accomplishment you’ll start the day with! If you are interested in a digital means for writing goals and staying on track all year, I highly recommend Laurel Studio Planners. They are LIFE CHANGING. https://laurelstudio.co If you want some guidance, schedule a consultation with me at www.lastingbt.com. I love seeing others achieve their goals.

    - Sherry

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Sherry Reaves Sherry Reaves

Three important points about living your passion:

It all begins with an idea.

I often feel a deep sense of empathy and some sadness for clients who are unhappy in their job or bored in their life.  Somewhere along the way, usually out of the need to just get a job and meet the needs of life, they got caught up in the day-to-day routine of making a living or just moving through life as it comes.  This can be a set-up for depression.

I believe that everyone has passion within them for something and it’s either known and tapped, untapped, or not yet discovered.  If it’s truly within everyone, then why miss out on it?

Sometimes, we can’t live our passion fully until we’ve worked our way there.  This can be the case when we are working on a degree or toward a promotion, but even the ride to the goal should bring about a feeling of excitement because we are moving toward what we love.

If you aren’t living your passion, consider these three places to start:

  1.  Do I know what I’m passionate about and if I do, am I fully engaging in it to the degree I would like?  

    Not everyone works in their area of passion.  Sometimes it’s about being an advocate for a cause, volunteering, growing a garden, traveling, etc.  But it is active.  What do you want the world to know?  What change do you want to make in the world?  What do you want to give the world?  

    I often tell people to think back to childhood and try to remember what they loved to do, got excited about and maybe, in their then imaginary world, wanted to be.  To find your passion, it’s not necessary to think in terms of career or work. First find what you love and then if desired, figure out how to turn that into a job.

  2. Now that you know what you love, it’s time to WRITE the plan.  Start at the bottom.  Did you always want to work with animals?  You don’t just jump right into veterinary school.  First you make a list of what it would take to get there.  Feel like you don’t want to go back to college at this point in your life?  Why not volunteer for an animal rescue?  There are many ways to get involved, all of which would likely inspire you as you feel the passion, to take whatever steps you need to get even more involved.  That’s what happens….you just start by getting your feet wet in your dream world and the rest begins to fall into place.

  3. Take one action step today!  Talk to someone doing what you would love to do or google your interest.  Learning and insight about your topic is at your fingertips.  Take a class.  Read a book.  Just get started.  Begin with the end in mind, but don’t be overwhelmed by how far away the end may be.  Every day you will be a day closer than you would have been if you didn’t start.

So if you wake up and say to yourself ..…”well another day of the same ole thing” or “I dread going to work”, then you are wasting precious life.  Just do it!

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Sherry Reaves Sherry Reaves

Three ways to feel peace…

It all begins with an idea.

1.  Seek 30 minutes of solitude everyday

Even if you think this is not possible due to kids, schedule, etc. and even if you think it’s not something you need, try it for a week.  You’ll never give it up.  Solitude means just that…no TV, electronics or internet.  You must sit with you. What are you afraid of?  You?

2.  Remember that you have survived every moment so far

No matter what is happening right now in your life, no matter what you are anxious about, think about the fact that there have been other times in your life when you were just as scared about the future.  You didn’t see how it was going to work out.  Those times prove that it is more likely that you will survive than that you won’t.  This too shall pass.

3.  Let it go

Can holding on to it, regretting it, being emotionally controlled by it, fearing it or anything else change it?  If you can’t change it, let go.  If it is changeable, then create a plan or solution.  Where there is no solution, let it go.

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Sherry Reaves Sherry Reaves

3 Important considerations when looking for Mr. or Mrs. Right:

It all begins with an idea.

Before you head out the door to look for a life-long companion, ask yourself these questions:

  1.  What is the most important, deal-breaking, attribute that you are not willing to compromise on?     

  2.  How do you want this person to deal with and respond to your mistakes, weaknesses, forgetfulness, and opposing behaviors?

  3. What three activities do you imagine this person enjoying and participating in throughout your time together?

It is now time to ask yourself the same questions about yourself:

  1. Do you possess that important attribute that you have decided could not be compromised on in your companion?  Hoping someone stronger in that area can make you stronger is risky.  You must own the behavior in order to truly attract it.

  2. If you are unable to treat the other person’s weaknesses, etc. in the exact way you would want them to treat yours, you are less likely to have what you really desire in that area.  Go ahead and admit that neither of you will live up to the other’s expectations all the time.  We are human. Practice the Golden Rule.

  3. If you want someone who enjoys attending musical events or is physically active, are you?  If you are looking for a mate in a bar, you may end up with someone who turns to the bar scene when things get tough. Is that the activity you will enjoy together for a lifetime?  If you want someone who plays golf, runs marathons, attends church, or goes to opera, have you tried doing those things and meeting someone on common ground?  Align yourself with someone doing at least three things you hope to enjoy together for a lifetime.

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Sherry Reaves Sherry Reaves

Three parenting tips:

So, you’d like to run but you don’t think you can and if you join a group, you feel like you won’t be fast enough or able to go the distance?

  1. If you want to stop the power struggles, reasoning and justification which usually doesn’t end in success, then give up attempts to control the child/teen in the moment and instead, determine to control the outcome of the child’s choices.  

  2. You must only provide consequences you have 100% control over.  Ex:  Does insisting they turn over their cell phone to you end up in a battle or attempts to sneak the phone back?  Instead you could temporarily suspend their service.  

  3. Let your child know that you acknowledge they are in control of their choices and you are in control of the outcome of their choices.  They’ll love the fact you aren’t arguing with them or trying to convince them.  The outcome will do the speaking for you!

If you’d like more help with discipline issues, reach out to schedule an appointment. I’ll help you learn more ways to have more control and less frustration within your household.   

 
 

I also highly recommend following John Rosemond, parenting expert.

John is on Facebook, Twitter, and I recommend his website: www.rosemond.com

 
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