personal development

Be inspired, no matter what the situation

Now you’re graduating/finishing the year/on your way to uni after the summer, I thought I’d give you some purposefully broad, positive points for you to think about over the weekend.

Enquire Within Upon Everything (photo by adactio)

From the image above, we can gain inspiration from many things.  Just the title of the book in the photo should be enough to spur you on:

Enquire Within Upon Everything

Adactio on Flickr (who took the photo and who kindly places it under a Creative Commons license) says that the book is a Victorian guide to life.

“When Tim Berners-Lee invented the World Wide Web, he briefly toyed with the idea of calling it Enquire Within Upon Everything”

I can fully understand why.  However, I’m not sure we’d like putting ‘EWUE’ in front of web addresses, as opposed to ‘WWW’…

Anyway, here are 10 more actions to help inspire you, wherever you currently stand:

  1. Enjoy every moment, naturally.
  2. Dare to do it.
  3. Focus on your whole life’s achievements, not just the courses you study.  Your future is based on you, not on a piece of paper.
  4. If you’re not doing it yet, start right now!  Leave your excuses for yesterday and you’ll never see them again.
  5. Think ‘people’, not ‘job’.  Think ‘community’, not ‘task’.
  6. Embrace the here and now.  Look forward to the future, but don’t get bogged down in plans.  The only place you’re ever at is RIGHT NOW.
  7. Develop your skills on a rolling basis…unless you’re plain lucky, you’re not going to hit the top at the start, so enjoy every task you put your mind to and always focus on your personal and professional development.
  8. Network in creative ways.  Even if you’re not from Oxbridge or similar, who’s to say you can’t easily build a powerful set of contacts?
  9. Read.  Properly read.  And that includes books.  We’re evolving to the point of becoming skim-readers and gluttons for potted-histories.  When was the last time you casually sat down and read something totally stimulating?
  10. The sky may be the limit, but why not also focus around the immediate area and realise all the things that you hadn’t even noticed before?  With this attitude you can never get bored.

I hope you find something here to get you thinking and keep you going.  Would you like me to expand on any of the broad points I’ve raised here?  Let me know.  And what experiences have you had in the past that sent you into a positive frenzy?

Here comes the son…

It’s been a while. My apologies for not putting up a note of explanation.

My wife was pregnant and went into labour a week early, so everything stopped for that (obviously!). I’ve barely been at the computer since.

After about 26 hours of labour, my wife gave birth to a beautiful baby boy. I am now a daddy. Rowan was born (eventually) on 7 May 2008, weighing 6lbs7oz.

A Newborn Rowan

Of the 26 hours labour, I think only 20 minutes were officially classified as ‘labour’…my wife’s intense pain apparently didn’t make it official, although she would definitely argue that point!

I had a LOT of catching up to do on the Internet, blogging, higher ed, reading, etc, over this weekend. Weeks of backlog compressed into a short space of time. Fortunately, I’m nearly back up to speed. And I’ve even written a related post for the blog about the things I’ve learned from my newborn son. That’s coming right up.

Obviously the next few weeks are going to be interesting, opening another new chapter of my life. Exciting stuff! For the blog, I’ve got lots of short pieces written, so I hope to be right back to the posting, whatever gets thrown at me (virtually, as well as literally!) over the weeks.

Hello again!

5 Qualities to Successful Leadership Through NOT Leading

I’m sure by now you’ve noticed those people in life who seem to achieve whatever they like with total ease and confidence.  It’s as if they were born leaders.

When you watch someone like this in action, it’s clear that they don’t need to boss people around, they don’t need to labour the point, and they don’t show desperation in trying to persuade others.  It just comes naturally.

What’s so striking about these individuals, however, is their approach to leadership.  A successful leader DOES NOT act like a leader.  Their success can be attributed to an open and friendly approach.

Follow the leader... (photo by Marloes*)

Others feel truly valued and respected, which encourages them to follow.  Leading is not about managing others; instead, leading opens up the possibilities for all involved.

Five common qualities of leaders stand out in particular.  As you’ll see, they look outward to the wants and needs of others, rather than inwardly to their own, private goals.  Yet through this approach, a leader can achieve their private goals with an enviable ease.

With these five qualities, you could be on the way to greater achievement too.  They are:

(more…)

Beat anxiety before it beats you

Whether it’s a night out, a new module, starting the next academic year, or planning to make a romantic move on someone, we all get anxious about things from time to time.

photo by Pulpolux

As soon as you begin to worry about possible problems surrounding your actions, anxiety is taking over. When you begin to question things, ask these questions instead:

1. Is it worth worrying about?

Minds like to take a minor problem and explode it into chaos. It doesn’t matter how calm a person is, they are still susceptible.

When you lose control of your own thoughts and the anxiety sets in, think about how important the issue really is. You may be anxious, but are you taking it out of proportion?

2. Have I considered what other people go through?

Another great trick of the mind is how we convince ourselves that our experiences are unique. But most people share similar anxieties. You’re not alone in feeling uncomfortable about doing something for the first time, or coping with a new task. When you realise that, it’s not half as bad to think about.

How do other people manage? Probably in just the same way you will; with a mixture of difficulty, daring and open-mindedness.

3. Am I being too stubborn to accept help?

Many people tell me they like to go it alone for one reason or another. To them, assistance is a sign of failure, or a show of weakness. To me, it’s a valid source of getting to a winning position. I rarely turn down help. I’d need a good reason to not accept it.

What are your real reasons for not wanting the help?

4. Have I considered asking for help at all?

The pressure of something new can result in clamming up. Instead of considering the possibilities, the fear closes the outside world down. Before long, you’re way out of your depth and haven’t even stopped to think that it might just take another pair of hands to get you out of an anxious fix.

5. Am I listening to others too much?

On the flipside of not asking for advice, you’ve got listening to too much of it. Worse still, you may listen to students who want to make a point with a little less than the truth.

Maybe everyone around you says their work is so easy. If you’re finding it difficult, don’t believe what they’re saying. A lot of words are just for effect. It’s the same if they say they did no work and still got good grades. It’s all a show.

Don’t let other people’s words turn into your anxieties…

6. Am I wading through a disorganised mess?

Without proper plans, it’s easy to become overwhelmed with life in general. Get a diary, get a wall planner, start writing lists, work out how long you need on tasks, set your priorities out, do all you can to become organised.

Without clear goals and priorities, you’re basically treating everything with the same importance. Since you’re unlikely to be sitting in your room in silence 24 hours a day, doing nothing whatsoever, a lack of priorities is a step toward disaster. So get planning and watch the anxiety melt away.

7. Do I tend to do only the things I want to do?

Ignore something and it won’t go away. Bury your head in the sand and what do you get? Nothing more than a sandy head.

The longer you put a difficult or uncomfortable task off, the worse you’ll feel about it as time goes on. As a double blow, your list of difficult tasks will only increase in number, leaving you unhappy and under even more pressure.

Eventually you’ll have to complete these tasks anyway, so why let the anxiety build when you can get it out of the way quickly? You may still be anxious about it, but nothing like the amount you’d feel if you left it until the last minute.

8. Can I put myself in someone else’s shoes?

Be someone else! Depending on the situation, you may want to take on some of the personality traits from various people you know:

– a friend who is always confident…pluck up the courage to do what you want;
– a lecturer…give yourself a critical mind, think deeply about your study, and imagine already having in-depth knowledge and a confidence about your subject;
– an artist…get your creative juices flowing if you’re not already doing an arts based subject.
– a scientist…look clinically at the books, poems, films, that you’re studying. See how they stand up to questioning;
– a person who has already succeeded where your anxieties lie…see the after-effects of success. Feel the exhilaration of the event itself. Rejoice at the outcome and see it as all in a day’s work. Now you’ve lived more than the worry, banish that anxiety and lead yourself to where you want to be.

You’ve probably heard the saying ‘Carpe Diem‘, or ‘seize the day’. Look to seize all those opportunities available to you when they present themselves. Anxiety tells you to hold back. Hold back for too long and it could be too late to seize the day.

At the start of each day, it’s great to welcome it with a smile and a knowing nod of the head. “I can do it!”

photo by emsef