Motivation

  • Career,  Everyday Life,  Motivation

    Sunday Scaries and Morning Routines

    Happy Sunday from the icy tundra. We had freezing rain overnight which has turned our roads and streets into the equivalent of a skating rink. Which has meant that I’m working hard to not leave my house today!  Let’s talk about Mondays. Do you get the Sunday afternoon scaries? Are you one of the people that loves or loathes Mondays?  I fall firmly into the second camp but am working on my attitude towards Monday.   I’ll let you know how that goes. 


    I mentioned in a previous post, 2020 Goals and Dreams, that I’ve been focused on habits over the past year.  Really over the past two years.  As a part of that, I’ve focused on my morning routine.  On what sets me up for a great day, or at least a great start to the day, and allows me to feel more in control of my day.   


    I’ll share below what my ideal morning routine is.  I don’t always make this happen, because of well, life.  Sometimes I hit the snooze button (although not as often as I did before hearing Rachel Hollis say that every time you hit snooze, you are breaking a promise to yourself before you are even out of bed)  And sometimes I need to start my work day earlier but don’t want to get up that much earlier to ensure my morning routine happens.  That’s why this is my ideal morning routine.  Also, the wake up time is what works most consistently for me.  I’m a morning person – love the quiet morning hours.  And I need to wake up fairly early because I am a SLOW mover in the morning.  I like to take my time, ease into the day.  Moral of the story – craft a morning routine that works for YOU. 


    4:45- 5:00 – Wake up, let dogs out, make coffee ( I know I could program the coffee.  Unfortunately I can’t program the dogs, and I like the flavor of my French press coffee, so I craft that while they do their business)
    5:00 – 5:20 – Meditate (I use either the headspace or calm app), enjoy my coffee, write in my Start Today journal
    5:20 – 6:00 – Read, create, write – something that pushes me closer to my goals.  
    6:00 – 6:45 – Shower and get ready
    6:45 – 7:15 – Breakfast 
    7:15 – 7:45 – Head to work and get settled in. 

    Again, this is my ideal routine.  Quite often, I hit snooze and only get to making coffee, meditation and my Start Today Journal.    Sometimes, I add movement into my morning routine, and it would consistently be in my ideal morning routine if I didn’t need to be to the office around 8.  Instead, I have found that I prefer to fit in the things I listed above in the morning and then go to a yoga class or do a yoga video in the evening. One thing I used to do EVERY morning that I am trying to break the habit of is checking email or social media. I used to start every morning by checking my work email while I made coffee.  Then on to Facebook and Instagram.  I’d waste the best hours of my day with mindless scrolling.   


    When I get serious about my morning routine I’m able to handle the unknowns of each day better.  I’m calmer, more centered and more focused because I’ve already taken time for myself before the day even started.  Do you have a morning routine that you follow?

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  • Career,  Motivation,  Personality

    My Top 5 CliftonStrengths

    Hey there! Get your cup of coffee, pull your chair up to the fire and join me as we chat about CliftonStrengths.  If you’ve never heard of it before, I’ll give you the low down.  CliftonStrengths is an assessment tool created by Don Clifton and Gallup.   Don Clifton is known as the father of Strengths based psychology and asked the question ‘what will happen when we think about what is right with people rather than fixating on what is wrong with them.’  This philosophy ultimately led to his life’s research and the birth of the CliftonStrengths assessment. 


    When you sit down to take the assessment, you’ll be asked to chose your instinctive reaction (no overthinking) to 177 paired statements.  Then after you submit your answers (or the time has ran out), you will receive your top 5 strengths.  There are a total of 34 strengths which fall into 4 domains, Executing, Influencing, Relationship Building and Strategic Thinking.  

    I was first introduced to CliftonStrengths 10 years ago.  I vaguely remember taking the assessment, but vividly remember getting my results.  When I read the standard description for my top 5, I wasn’t sold (I’m naturally a bit skeptical).  Then, I read the description on my Strengths Insight Guide.  And I wondered how they had gotten in my head.  And this was before we knew Google was listening to us.  #creepy.    After reading those paragraphs, I was sold…except for, there were two of my strengths I wasn’t sure were truly me.  I just didn’t see Futuristic or Ideation in myself.  Then I had my husband read the descriptions and told him, I don’t think those ones fit me. He laughed and said something like, “sure they do, you’re always dreaming up a new plan, or thinking about the future.  Every time you say, Honey, I was thinking… the rest of your sentence is likely a dream for our future, or a business you want to open.”  Keep this in mind as we move forward as I’m guessing you may have one or two that show up that way for you too.


    Now that you have a little history and your coffee has gone cold, my top 5 CliftonStrengths are;  Futuristic, Learner, Adaptability, Relator and Ideation.    As I mentioned above, Futuristic and Ideation were the two that I didn’t think fit me when I first took the assessment.  Anyone reading this that knows me well would likely laugh at that statement.  What I didn’t realize then was, they are such a part of who I am that I had a hard time seeing them.  Up until that point, I didn’t realize not every dreams. I just thought that was part of everyone’s reality.  You mean you didn’t write complete stories in your head during Algebra in High School?  Or while painting the trim on the garage while you were a teenager?  Or while commuting long distance across the open prairie in your 30’s and 40’s?   That’s so much a part of me that I didn’t realize it was a talent.  Sure, my algebra grade reflected that dreaming, but then so did my creative writing and english grades.  And don’t tell my teenager, but creative writing and english have been WAY more useful to me over my career than algebra. *winks*

    This painting is evidence of my dreamer at a young age. I think this was taken at our county fair. I had found hay bales to sit on and dream. My mom’s cousin, who is extremely talented with the camera, captured this without me knowing. Then, my grandma Ellie painted it. It hangs in my studio today – a reminder to dream, and in honor of these creative women that helped shape me.

    I have always had a head full of ideas, mostly ideas of how my future could look.  I pair that with a strong need to learn, especially about topics that may help me navigate to that future I can so clearly see in my head (see how three of my top five are working together here?)


    Do I always use these as strengths?  No, they have to be honed, just like any other talent.  Just because someone is naturally gifted at basketball doesn’t mean they always play well.  But if they practice, and practice and practice some more, their talent turns into a strength.  Something they can do with nearly perfect consistency over and over.  I think of it  like muscle memory for any of you that have learned an instrument, or to paint or draw.  It’s likely you weren’t born just innately knowing how to do those things.  You found you liked to do them, or your parents made you take hours upon hours of lessons and you discovered you enjoyed it.   Then you practiced until, through muscle memory, it was something you made look so easy people would say you were naturally gifted, or so very talented.   But they didn’t see the hours upon hours you put in.


    It’s really the same with strengths.   I can be naturally talented in these areas, but what am I doing with them.  How am I honing them?   Or am I allowing them to trip me up?  Talents are neutral, but strengths can either be operating from the basement or the balcony.   When they are on the balcony, you are using them to their full potential, you are leaning fully into them and are putting in the time to truly develop them.  For example, my futuristic can either help me live into my fullest potential, or it can be the thing that is holding me back, depending on how I use it.  I can get really caught up in what the future version of my life looks like.  So caught up that I forget to be present in my current life, or end up being super dissatisfied with where I am today.  And to deal with that dissatisfaction, instead of putting on my imaginary work boots and figuring out how to get to that future version, I curl up on the couch with a blanket and wallow.   Which of course is not futuristic at it’s best.


    As you can tell, I’m pretty passionate about this topic.  Strengths have helped me understand how I operate and have helped me better navigate certain conversations and relationships.  If you are curious and want to learn about your Strengths, check out Gallup’s website.


    This is not a sponsored post.  I just believe in it so much I like to shout it from the rooftops, or from my computer…whichever is closer.  


    Let me know if you’ve taken CliftonStrengths and what your top five are! 

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  • Career,  Motivation

    My Favorite Podcasts

    Happy Monday! Do you listen to podcasts?  I can’t remember how I learned about them, or when I started listening, but I love them.  My current role as a HR manager  requires me to travel quite a bit either by air to locations in other states, or by car to locations 3 hours from my home in the same state.  If I don’t have a co-worker with me, I like to pass the time with a podcast.  I also often listen to them while I’m getting ready in the morning, and traveling from my house to the office (about a 20 minute drive).  Some I like because they inspire me, others for the detail they share and still others because of the skill of the narrator.  Here are my current fav’s and a recent favorite episode. 

    1. The Rise Podcast – by Rachel Hollis
    2. Ed Mylett Show with Ed Mylett
    3. Don’t Keep your Day Job with Cathy Heller
    4. Do it for the Process with Emily Jeffords
    5. The Good Life Project
    6. Lead to Win with Michael Hyatt and Megan Hyatt Miller
    7. Gallup Called to Coach

    Have a listen – you might find something that inspires you this week!

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