life purpose

What My Colonoscopy Taught Me About Empathy

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You may think it asinine to write a blog post about a colonoscopy but don’t pooh-pooh the idea just yet. Here are a few lessons I learned about empathy from my first colonoscopy.

1. Receiving Empathy Recharges Your Ability to Empathize with Others

The procedure is nothing compared to the preparation. The day before you have to drink a half gallon of laxatives with four stool softener pills and have only clear liquids - that all sucked. Although, the receptionist at the  doctor’s office gave me a very helpful tip: chicken broth at meal time fills you up like a meal.

After the prep, it was time to head to the hospital. My brother-in-law was kind enough to be my taxi for the day. I’ve had nothing but positive experiences at Harrington Hospital in Southbridge, MA. and today was no no different. They checked me in quickly and I was sent up to the third floor and given a johnny and yellow ankle socks with grippy lines on the bottom. I love those things! The nurse did the IV and offered me a warm blanket while I waited for the doctor. She really calmed my nerves. Soon enough, it was time to get wheeled down to the doctor and his team. Dr. Stagias was cheery and energetic. He distracted me by asking, “Brady or Mahones?” 

The anesthesia nurse administered Propofol and I secretly enjoy the experience. I try hard to stay awake. I focus on how it washes over your mind - it’s so strong! It’s impressive. I tried to tell a quick joke but was knocked out before the punchline. Later, my son laughed saying the medical staff probably high-fived one another when I conked out before getting to my corny punchline. I regained consciousness gradually and a recovery nurse gave me a warm blueberry muffin - halved and with a pat of butter melting inside. It was the greatest thing I’ve ever tasted. 


2. Living Your Life Purpose Gives You Strength in Challenging Times 

On prep day, I worried about time spent in the bathroom but as the procedure time got closer, I began focusing on the more serious concern - what it I have polyps or colon cancer? Just a week before, a friend of mine was waiting on biopsies to return from the lab. When you go into a possibly life-altering situation, you start thinking big thoughts. If it all ends now - was I going after my purpose? How close am I in this moment to my mission and vision for my life? 


3. Stressful Experiences Can Pave the Way for Creative Breakthroughs

While propped up in a hospital bed in the on-deck area, I did started reading “Fascinate: How to Make Your Brand Impossible to Resist” by Sally Hogshead. This is one of those books that comes along at just the right time. It connects a lot of loose ends that have been flailing about for a long time. 

When I returned home from the hospital, I contemplated how kind everyone was to me through this experience. Suddenly, I had the idea for a support group for large corporations that’d be built upon the concepts in my book, “All the Hats We Wear: How Innovators and Visionaries Manage Their Time and Live Their Purpose.” Empathy will be the cornerstone of the group. I felt strongly that people would respond more to being part of a group than working individually. I scribbled notes as the ideas came. 

Next, I brainstormed another concept related to journaling. The concept is titling each day’s journal entry - as if it’s a composition. It could be a memorable quote someone said during the day. Both of these ideas were hiding beneath the surface and needed the experience I went through to crystallize.

 So, with this experience behind me, I pause to wish my friend well and I give thanks to the lessons about empathy and living one’s life purpose that I gleaned this week. I ‘m thankful to the hospital staff and my family. Before pooh-poohing this article, share an example of how empathy changed your life in the comment section!   

Scott Snow is a Certified Life Coach and Productivity Expert. For more information visit www.allthehatswewear.com

Have You Ever Allowed One of Your Passions to Get Beaten Out of You?

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Have you ever let go of something you enjoyed because of outside interference?

I’m in the process of reclaiming some things in my life that fell by the wayside, as a result of, forces outside myself that very gradually beat the passion out of me. These instances were subtle now that I reflect back.

An example is my relationship with classical and jazz music. I’ve lost my connection with those genres. I used to be so passionate about jazz, especially - it was my major in college (well, double major: music education and jazz performance).

My #1 passion used to be playing drums - I thought for sure it was my purpose. From elementary through high school, I was the king of drums. It was my whole identity. I was a hotshot. And then I got to college and learned that I wasn’t such a hotshot after all. And over the next twenty years, my passion for drumming dwindled.

I’m happy to announce I’m rekindling my connection with playing the drums. Pre-pandemic, I was playing 6-8 musicals per year. I’d play drums in the pit band for live musicals for community theater companies. I hadn’t realized how important and rewarding it was until Covid. In the last few years, I performed such classic shows as: Annie, Little Shop of Horrors, Chicago, Legally Blond, and Newsies. Last March, I was scheduled to be in Little Mermaid, Spam-a-lot, and Jesus Christ Superstar!

On a more personal note, my father decided to disconnect from the family about 25 years ago and he was always a huge Jimi Hendrix fan. For the longest time, I avoided Hendrix’s music. Now, I’m at the point where I listen to Hendrix but now I’m not entirely sure I really like his music all that much - but at least I opened the gates to embrace him in the event that I did like him. I did the work and I’m content that at least I have the awareness.

What’s a passion or interest that has dimmed in your life? What would you gain if you gave it a go again? Please share your story in the comments!

Related post:
I share my story in Episode 5 of my podcast

Ep 44 - Unleash u Now with Michael Fabber, High-Performance Success Coach 

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This episode explores how to build a tribe and serve them with constant value. Michael shares his effective approach to social media that creates outstanding engagement. Also, he describes life-changing experiences he’s had with mastermind groups. As a bonus, Michael was kind enough to share some awesome business coaching at the end of the interview that you can apply today!


Michael Fabber is the Executive Director of the Joseph Patrick Fabber Memorial Foundation. It has a mission to prevent suicide, drug addiction, and bullying. He is a High-Performance Success Coach, author, entrepreneur, speaker, and owner of several businesses. 


Related links:

www.coachmikefabber.com

www.unleashunow.com

Ep 32 - Keeping Your Passion and Career Separate: An Interview with Darrin Schenck, Professional Speaker

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Darrin Schenk is an inspiration. In this episode, he’ll share his incredible story of nearly dying in a head-on collision and how it shaped his destiny. Darrin talks about getting into a flow state of peak performance and has some powerful advice for separating career and passion.

Related link:
www.darrinchatter.com

Podcast notes:
Fly fishing and flow state

Book: River Runs Through it - Norman Maclean

Book: Never Eat Alone - Keith Ferrazzi

9:50 Near-death experience story

Separating passion and career: Don’t take something you love and turn it into a job

Being persuasive

Sales advice

Gary Vaynerchuk

Tiktok

Social media is a highlight reel not real life

Ep 30 - Purpose, Planning, and Power: An Interview with Donna Peters, Founder of The Me-Suite

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Donna Peters shares her groundbreaking idea for leading a life of purpose: applying the C-Suite mentality to our own lives. Prepare to take a deep dive into self-development with a recognized executive coach, speaker, and workshop leader with 20+ years advising senior executives and next generation leaders at the world's most admired companies. Donna challenges us to explore the following questions: Why should we identify and embody our core values? What should we know about work life balance? How do we build our own board of directors? What are ways we can use improv in business and life? What's a process for giving ourselves more options no matter how challenging the situation? What are the benefits of adopting the Me-Suite Mindset?

For more information about Donna Peters,
visit https://www.the-me-suite.com/


Ep 29 - Fill Your Cup: An Interview with Erin Engelke, Executive Director for Calm Waters

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Today's episode features Erin Engelke, Executive Director, of the Non-profit Calm Waters. She shares her unique perspectives on work life balance, productivity, purpose-driven leadership, and the biggest obstacle preventing us from living our purpose. Erin gives us actionable steps that will have a profound effect on you and those you care about. 

Related links:
www.calmwaters.org

www.beautyinthebusyness.com

Ep 28 - What is Your Everest? An Interview with Sara Safari, Mountain Climber and Advocate for Women’s Empowerment

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Sara Safari is amazing! She is an author, speaker, mountain climber, college professor, electrical engineer, and advocate for women's empowerment. In this episode, you'll hear her inspiring story as we touch upon perseverance, empowering girls and women, goalsetting, thinking big, having a vision for your life, and leading a purposeful life by helping others achieve their potential. The sky's the limit in this episode. Visit her web sites: www.sarasafari.com and www.climbyoureverest.org.

Podcast Notes:

Empower Nepali Girls Foundation

Landmark Forum

“Perfect Impossible”

You must become as big as your goal

Reconnect with your why when you face adversity

Write a why letter to yourself

Practice overcoming willpower

Goalsetting approach: divide your goal into 1,000 steps and take just one

Take the same approach in every area of your life

It’s not the goal itself that is important. It’s who you meet and what you become in the process of achieving the goal that is everything.

Ep 27 - How Spirituality and Creativity Serve Others: An Interview with Richard K. Pope

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An uplifting and entertaining conversation with Richard K. Pope, Founder of Canvas Church and Chaplain for Coca-Cola. We discuss a vital attribute that all effective leaders possess. Richard shares the creative collaboration required to design a logo for Canvas Church. And Richard delves into the beauty of cultivating passions personally so they can be expressed professionally. 

For more info about all that Richard does visit: https://www.facebook.com/richard.pope.39750121/

Podcast Notes:
Skal Sauce

Vikings tv show

Richard K. Pope’s book of poetry

His purpose for journaling

Podcast niches

Writing to improve mental health

Create products with wide appeal then niche the funnels

How the logo for Canvas Church was created

Books discussed: Dracula, Frankenstein, Moby Dick, Game of Thrones, Blue Ocean Strategy, Prince Machiavelli, Sherlock Holmes, Simon Sinek: Leaders Eat Last and Start with Why

Put people first but not at the expense of your own mental health

Love people well and you’ll get love in return

Purpose and Meaning in the Workplace: Have an Attitude of Gratitude

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Here’s a tip related to purpose and meaning in the workplace inspired by an episode of the classic Twilight Zone series. This is day 2 of my 156-day exercise streak in which I exercise while watching an episode then share an insight related to self-development.

Ep. 2 - “One for the Angels” Lou, a small-time huckster, gets a visit from Mr. Death but gets a reprieve with some smooth talking. However, Mr. Death takes a substitute - a neighborhood girl who is pals with Lou who will die at midnight. Lou convinces Mr. Death to take him instead with a pitch for the ages.

Purpose and Meaning in the Workplace

In this episode, Lou, gets the news that his time is up and appeals to Mr. Death that he still has many things to do, therefore, this can’t be the end for him. In life, we often get caught up in the daily hustle of our busy lives and forget to enjoy the great moments - enriching and painful. As John Lennon says, “Life is what happens to you while you’re busy making other plans.”

How can we smell the roses more?
* Start a journal. Jot down creative snippets and insights throughout the day and explore your thoughts each night in a journal before dinner. I use a digital recorder but you could use your phone. In five minutes a day, you can have a record of all the wonderful events of your life. It’s also a valuable record that you can refer back to when there’s a question of which day something occurred. Imagine having a recording of the top 5 moments of every day for decades. Focus on the 5 senses: touch, smell, taste, sight, and hearing. Which details should you include to capture the key moments of your day?
* Develop an attitude of gratitude. Expect good things to come your way (now I sound like one of my heroes, Brian Tracy - “I LIKE myself. I LIKE myself. I LIKE myself - lol).
* Make more thoughtful and intentional pitches at work and home. In today’s episode, Lou made a master pitch to save the life of a child. What are the pitches you make to co-workers, family members, friends, and other people in your network? What pitches SHOULD you be crafting and executing? * At first, be content with identifying moments of goodness in your life. Soon, you’ll string them together and expand them. Examples of moments of joy: coffee and paper in the morning, energizing music while you shower, sluicing an ice cold glass of water after mowing the lawn, and creating habits and winning streaks in your life - no matter how insignificant they seem.

Related resources:
Why you need to start an audio journal
The connection between creativity and purpose
Journaling makes you more creative
Start an audio journal now and enjoy more purpose and meaning in your life

“If you can tune into your purpose and really align with it, setting goals so that your vision is an expression of that purpose, then life flows much more easily.” ― Jack Canfield

3 Lessons Parasailing Can Teach You About Living a Joyful and Purposeful Life

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Last week, my family went to Cape Cod for vacation and we went parasailing - partly the result of a dare from my father-in-law. 

Lesson #1 - Be a Flyer, Not a Passenger 

As we boarded the boat with 10 other vacationers, we were separated into two groups: passengers and flyers. I have 11-year old twins and up we went - 1,000 feet above the ocean. It felt like we were in a movie and the background was a green screen - it was so vivid! We laughed the whole time. We had pangs of panic at times when we heard tiny crackling sounds from the rope - our lifeline! I’m sure being an observer was enjoyable but it paled in comparison to feeling as light as a feather as we floated far above the boat with the sound of our parachute flapping above us.

Lesson #2 - Vulnerability is a Strength

The mood was serious and perhaps that’s why I blurted out my silly statement. Maybe I said it just to make my kids laugh. Our burly, bronzed deckhand told us he’d be taking pictures of us as we flew so I asked if he could take a few tasteful nudes. Luckily, everyone laughed and it loosened the tension onboard. Afterwards, I realized it’s the moment of not knowing that is the most exciting part for me. Jerry Seinfeld described the moment when you finish delivering the joke and wait to see the audience’s reaction. It’s a moment of surrender for the joke teller. It’s putting trust in other people’s hands. And I like that. Naturally, I’m not espousing telling distasteful or hurtful jokes. 

Lesson #3 - Share Your Personality Generously

After our adventure, we walked ashore and a high-school aged girl approached us to see if we wanted to purchase the photos. She wasn’t impolite. She just showed zero personality. I suppose she wasn’t encouraged to be personable or relate in any meaningful way with customers. This only came up during the ride in the mini-van to return to the campground. My sons and I had a conversation about sharing one’s personality and friendliness with others. They accused me of saying something mean about that girl but I explained to them that wasn’t my intent. I gave my sons a few examples of things she could’ve said other than “Nope” and “Yup” to get more sales and to give us an even better experience - to put the cherry on top.  Being friendly and supportive is a muscle that needs reps every day.

Related blog posts:
The First Step in Self-Development

Most Powerful Time Management Skill You’ll Ever Learn