049: July Q&A

 

This month’s Q&A questions come from Brit and Dave. In this episode of Love Always, Jo I actually didn’t get any questions for me so I thought it’d be fun to have my husband Mike answer some questions for me. In this episode, Mike answers questions about what it’s like to be married to a life coach, how to stay positive, and choosing a job that makes you happy.

 

Links:

 

Quotes:

  • Things don’t always have to be the way you were taught that they should be – Mike
  • If you numb one feeling you numb all the feelings — Brene Brown
  • May everyone find something in their life that makes them feel the way the Eagles winning the Super Bowl makes Mike feel — Joanna
  • Do what makes you happy and not what you think you should be doing – Mike

 

Journal Prompts:

  • What does resistance sound like in your head?
  • When things aren’t going great in life what are things that you can look at and say yeah but look at ____.
  • What parts of Mikes story do you relate to
  • Where can you be more supportive of yourself
  • What checkboxes are you working toward that you don’t feel aligned with

 

Follow Mike:

Instagram

 

What is it like being married to a life coach?

You get the full range of emotions pretty much every day it’s really good Joanna’s helped me get through a lot of stuff that I don’t think another partner would be able to do. I’m really grateful it’s your superpower.

 

Assuming that you feel resistance to feeling your feelings, what does your resistance “sound like” in your head? What does it say when you’re edging up against emotions you don’t necessarily want to deal with? And then what helps you push past those thoughts and face your emotions? — Brit, @jammarketinggroup

 

(Mike) We talk a lot about numbing and there’s a distance to feeling things you don’t want to feel turns into numbing and that’s doing something mindless or grasping for something you don’t need but feels comfortable to help deflect some of those feelings and feel like you’re in a safer space. It’s like when I turn on the news and just veg out it’s distracting me from stress or anxiety about work.

 

Resistance in my head sounds like avoidance— ‘you can deal with it later’ but not really believing it because it’s still weighing on you. So using things like turning on the news to distract from stress or going out to eat so I’m not sitting at home stuck in my head.

 

What helps me to push past it is time, there’s only so long you can numb out for before you realize you have to face it and just do it. Sometimes things at work stress me out so when I come home I tend to resist thinking about what’s going on the next day or the things on my to do list I have to do. It turns me into a procrastinator which I’m not which is something I really hate the idea of.

 

(Joanna) I took Brit’s new online test to determine what your marketing personality is and through that I learned I’m a P (which is super free flowing) and Mike is a J (which is structure and routine) which makes sense as to why you’re not (or don’t want to be) a procrastinator.

 

You recently made a career move that was pretty brave, can you tell us about how you made that choice?

 

(Mike) The deeper thing for me would be that I have a fear and hatred of being wrong or not knowing how to do something when people expect that I know how to do it. That’s what would give me stress at work; I’ve always been really good at my job and as I started moving up in positions I’d get around more and more people who were older than me and had more experience which would cause me to feel partially like the weak link. And that would exacerbate the things that would cause the anxiety of “I don’t know what I’m doing” and those feelings would lead to the daily numbing out because I didn’t want to be in the situation again.

 

In my last job from day one, I felt that I didn’t know what I was doing and then it essentially bottomed out/came to the surface and I started to have breakdowns feeling that the weight of the company was on my shoulders. It started because there was the daily numbing and escapism of looking at jobs that weren’t in DC anymore. Once I started to face it head on I hired a life coach (Kristen of Clarity on Fire) and it helped give me outlets and come up with solutions to mitigate the intense feelings and help me get through the days and weeks. It helped me get clarity on what I wanted to do next. Part of what I did was write down my core desired feelings— that was the start of figuring out what I wanted and was something I used to help evaluate future job opportunities I was having.

 

How do you stay positive all the time and how are you supportive of Joanna and others. Do you have tips about how others can be as supportive to others? — Dave – @dclands

 

(Mike) I think I’ve always been a generally optimistic person, so I think the positivity and stuff come naturally to me. Being able to be so supportive of what Joanna’s doing now is a result of our relationship and I think she’s taught me that there’s a different path to life than what we’ve been told. Things don’t always have to be the way you were taught that they should be. Or the way that is “normal”. The idea of Joanna being a life coach isn’t anything we were exposed to growing up; dads went off to work at a 9-5, moms stayed home, very middle-class upbringing. You assume you’ll grow up, go to college, get a job, buy a house, and have kids. I think in our relationship Joanna taught me you don’t have to do that, you can do things intentionally and it doesn’t have to fit the mold that everyone else is doing. If it’s right for you then it’s the right thing.

 

(Joanna) You have a very live and let live attitude which I think also helps with that.

 

(Mike) When you’re numbing out that’s not a time to be supportive. If you’re numbing yourself out then its much harder to be optimistic, fun, and supportive of someone else because you don’t want to deal with anything. A tip would be to be conscious of when you’re numbing out and then try to get yourself out of it so you can have the bandwidth to hear what’s going on with someone else.

 

(Joanna) When you’re in a constant battle with your inner critic believing that you have to live your life a certain way, you’re also putting that lens on everyone else. So one thing you can do to be more supportive of others is to be supportive and compassionate with yourself. That will help you be more present and shift you out of the numbness/judgmental feeling.

 

I think it was really brave of you to make the change in your job. Can you share how you had the courage to make the change?

 

(Mike) I started my new job a month ago and for the first 10 years of my career it was straight out of college and I just wanted to keep moving up and was very focused on titles and feeling like I was working for the right company or organization. I had the umbrella that I wanted to do public service, which is why I worked where I did. And in the past 5 years when I was at my last job I had the opportunity to get promoted and became a manager for the first time in a high-profile job in our CEO’s office. Through that, I got the opportunity to join a leadership development program which is all about developing me and the others in my cohort for future VP roles in the company. You move through different jobs in the company so that when the time comes you’re ready to be a VP in the company. In the last few years, I started having a push-pull feeling realizing that I didn’t want to work. I work because I need money to do things outside of work, which isn’t something I’d felt until a few years ago. It boils down to the fact that I had a literal plan of where I was going and what I needed to do to get to the next position and I didn’t enjoy the process. Probably because I wasn’t doing anything anymore it was more strategy/big picture. So I started looking for a new job outside the organization and I started thinking if I don’t want to work but I have to do something, what do I actually want to do? The work I always got the most satisfaction out of when I sat down at my desk was task-oriented work, like administrative work. I’d rather have a dozen small things to do a day rather than one big thing to do each day. I put things on to do lists just to mark them off sometimes.

 

So I reached out to a recruiting firm that specialized in that type of work and started going down the path of an executive assistant. For me it was what I liked doing and I get satisfaction from the work I’d do. An opportunity came up at rapid speed (less than 3 weeks from interview to hire) and since I made the move my quality of life has improved greatly. I feel like I’m back in the right place for me. I don’t feel like the weight of the company is on my shoulders anymore and at the end of the day I can look at my to do list and feel satisfied that I completed something. It feels natural, like it’s what I’m supposed to be doing.

 

(Joanna) How’d you get there internally?

 

(Mike) While it didn’t feel like a risk, it did feel like a big decision but knowing how stressed I was and how much it was impacting me I knew it wasn’t sustainable. I finally feel like I can actually enjoy my weekend, not dreading Monday and having to go back to work.

 

Love Always, Jo is about lighting you up and relishing your joy—so Mike, what is making you glow from the inside out?

(Mike) The Eagles won the SuperBowl—I still can’t believe it actually happened. From watching the Eagles play 20+ years you get to a point where you don’t think it’s ever going to happen and to see the way they won it. The reason why I’m beaming when talking about it is that I’m really interested and passionate about sports. It’s such a part of who I am and being a fan of those teams is such a part of my identity and the identity of Philadelphia sports is not one of winning a lot, so the pure joy of the thing you’ve put so much time and emotions into that you have no control over and have come to fruition after 25 years is pretty amazing. It’s perspective changing.

 

What have you done recently that changed your morning workout game?

(Mike) I used to force myself on a morning workout routine because I don’t like working out in general and knew I wouldn’t do it at the end of the day. But a morning routine wasn’t working for me because I need time to wake up. One day I realized what if I flipped my morning routine and allowed myself to wake up, have coffee and then go workout? Since flipping that I’ve been able to keep that routine for about 6 weeks.

 

048: Tenderness, Receiving, and Intuition

Tenderness, Receiving, and Intuition with Kristen Kalp

 

In this episode of Love Always, Jo, I interview Kristen Kalp, a poet, business coach, and podcaster. Kristen is also a longtime friend of Love Always, Jo and one of our most popular guests to date. She offers practical-yet-soulful business direction in her books, helps clear emotional residue and blocks through breathwork, and make space to usher in whole-life transformation through coaching. Listen to this episode to hear more about tenderness, receiving and intuition.

Today we have Kristen Kalp joining us. Kristen is a longtime friend of Love Always, Jo and one of our most popular guests to date. Kristen offers practical-yet-soulful business direction in her books, helps clear emotional residue and blocks through breathwork, and make space to usher in whole-life transformation through coaching. (And action. Lots and lots of action.)

 

In this episode Kristen and I discuss…

  • What Kristen has learned about joy and bravery since she was last on the show – listen to her first episode on Joy and Bravery here
  • How to find the balance between being informed but not getting caught up in drama
  • What tenderness means, why we might resist it and how to not resist it
  • Kristen’s theory on receiving, why it’s so important and why we aren’t doing it
  • Making decisions that don’t make sense on paper but that feel good to your soul
  • How to practice and know when it’s your intuition
  • What is breathwork and how it can help with tenderness, receiving and intuition
  • When to do breathwork (especially at what point during your menstrual cycle) and how long

Follow Kristen:

Recommended Books:

Quotes:

  • Joy is something you fight for – Kristen
  • Being joyful is a brave thing – Joanna
  • Treat yourself internally as you would someone you adore and treat externally – Kristen
  • Monitor your interior thoughts as well as you do with the ones you have with others – Kristen
  • Just because your brain says it’s true doesn’t mean it is – Kristen
  • When you stop judging yourself internally you stop judging people externally and vice versa – Kristen
  • The less you judge yourself the more you can express yourself – Kristen
  • You don’t get to choose the gifts you’re given but you get the choice to express them or not – Kristen
  • Recognize that your gifts are gifts – Joanna
  • Receiving is a spectrum – Kristen
  • You can’t selectively numb emotions – Brene Brown
  • The act of receiving will change the way you perceive things – Kristen
  • Follow your sparkle

Journal Prompts:

  • What are you going to do with the knowledge you have about things going on in the world
  • What gifts do you have that you need to start expressing?
  • What do you have a hard time receiving in your life?

 

Tenderness, Receiving, and Intuition with Kristen Kalp

047: A Heart to Heart on Burnout

How to avoid burnout #lifecoach #relationshipcoach #selfhelp #selflove #personaldevelopment #findingbalance #findbalance #worklifebalance

 

In this episode of Love Always, Jo, I’ll be talking about what’s been going on with me lately. If you’re feeling burned out about summer and everything going on in your life right now, know that you’re not alone. Listen to this episode to hear my heart to heart chat.

 

In this episode I talk about…

  • My breakdown during the month of June – from traveling every weekend to lots of personal transitions
  • How morning pages helped me through this season – listen to the episode here
  • How to preserve space in your calendar so you don’t end up exhausted
  • Ways to steal a few minutes for yourself and step away from the pressures you’re feeling

 

Quotes:

  • Give yourself permission to clear your calendar
  • Sometimes you just need to get through it and know it will be better soon
  • Don’t get too down on yourself
  • Do what you can to lift the pressures off of you that you can
  • Take a step back and survey what you’ve done in the meantime
  • Just show up and be there

 

Journal:

  • Where did you show up well in your life this month?
  • Where can you steal a few minutes for yourself?
  • How can you soak up a simple joy today?
  • What are some things you could do today that would make you feel like life is in order?

 

Are you a high achiever and tired of being burnt out?

I would love to hop on a 30-minute coffee chat with you about something new that I’m working on. If you see yourself as a high achiever and don’t want to continue the cycle of burnout. If you want to move from a place of people pleasing to someone who’s shining in the world, owning who you are, and treating yourself to simple pleasures. If you want to have a calendar that is both full and spacious, I’d love to hear your thoughts and get your input on what I’m working on!

To schedule a coffee chat you can either email me (Joanna@joanna-platt.com) or book your chat here.

P.S. Let me know in the email/form that you’d like to hop on the coffee chat mentioned in Episode 47.

 

How to avoid burnout #lifecoach #relationshipcoach #selfhelp #selflove #personaldevelopment #findingbalance #findbalance #worklifebalance

046: June Q&A

 

This month’s Q&A questions come from my husband, Mike, and Leigh. In this episode of Love Always, Jo, I’ll be answering questions about gratitude practices and transitioning from college to 9-5 life.

 

Quotes:

  • Gratitude practices are good way to redirect energy and inner critic
  • When you approach your life with gratitude you’ll start to see more ways to be grateful.
  • Happy / thank you / more please

 

Journal Prompts:

  • How do you cultivate gratitude in your life?
  • What made you smile today?
  • Who was kind or helpful today?
  • What was good today?
  • What did you enjoy today?
  • What did you do well today?

 

As someone transitioning into a new work phase and likely new routine, what are some gratitude practices you’d recommend on a daily or weekly basis?

 

At the beginning or end of the day, make a list of 3 things you’re grateful for. If you have anxiety in the morning, then you’ll want to do this list then; if you have anxiety at night, then the evening is the best time to write this list. You can also share what you’re grateful for at the end of the day with your spouse as a great conversation starter.

 

When you approach your life with gratitude you’ll start to see more ways to be grateful.

 

Here are some questions to help you find things you’re grateful for:

  • What made you smile today?
  • Who was kind or helpful today?
  • What was good today?
  • What did you enjoy today?
  • What did you do well today?
  • What past experiences led you to where you are or prepare you to be successful in this new role or moment?

 

You can also post on Instagram a list of the things you’re grateful for — Brit of JAM Marketing does this over on her Instagram.

 

How do you manage the transition from college life to cubicle life?

 

The biggest difference between college life and cubicle life is that there isn’t much movement. College life is very social—everyone is on the same schedule and in the same phase of life and it’s very on the go, there’s a lot of freedom and flexibility available to you. Whereas in the cubicle or 9-5 life, there isn’t as much variety in your day, not as many people that you interact with, or literal movement in your day.

 

Start with grieving the end of the chapter that has just finished; it’s okay to be sad and wish you could be with your friends all the time and have that freedom and flexibility you used to have. It’s okay to mourn what was.

 

Things you can do to ease that transition:

  1. Make plans with friends so you can still have that check in; from happy hour to long weekends away.
  2. Find ways that will make your day come alive—take a lunch break, go for a quick walk. Check out this post about how to make your day less ‘beige’.
  3. Find a hobby

 

The transition from college to adult life can be jarring so give yourself time to process. Check out this post about giving yourself time to process transitions.

 

045: The Wisdom of the Body with Jenny Bork

Wisdom of the Body  #massagetherapy #massagetherapist #bodyhealth #podcast #healthandwellness #chronicpain #chronicillness #relationshipcoach
Wisdom of the Body #massagetherapy #massagetherapist #bodyhealth #podcast #healthandwellness #chronicpain #chronicillness #relationshipcoach

 

 

In this episode of Love Always, Jo, I interview Jenny Bork, a licensed massage therapist. Her work is based off of the belief that chronic pain, tension, and general dis-ease in the mind and body are merely red flags that show up as a result of a disconnection from your true self. Listen to this episode to hear more about the wisdom of the body and hear Jenny coach me about something that’s been going on with my body recently.

Jenny Bork is a licensed massage therapist in Grand Rapids, MI. Her work is based on the belief that chronic pain, tension, and general dis-ease in the mind and body are merely red flags that show up as a result of a disconnection from your true self. She uses her intuition, John F. Barnes Myofascial Release, holistic counseling, movement and posture education, energy work, bodywork, and mindfulness to meet you where you’re at, uncover unconscious belief systems and embodied patterning, and discover the root cause of your condition. With new awareness, you will reconnect to your own deepest personal truth, wisdom, and innate freedom.

 

In this episode Jenny and I discuss…

  • How to get curious about what you’re feeling to uncover the root cause
  • Overcompensating/compensating
  • What is myofascial release
  • Limiting belief systems and how they show up in the body
  • How to work with your body and not against or for it
  • Jenny’s take on ‘the breath’
  • Personality Patterns

Follow Jenny online:

Links:

Recommended Books:

Quotes:

  • Have curiosity by asking what it feels like – Jenny
  • Your body knows at all times what it needs to heal – Jenny
  • Follow your curiosity – Joanna
  • The advice you give to people close to you is often advice you want to give yourself – Jenny
  • Take up space in your calendar that you want to take up rather than sticking yourself in the margins
  • Work with your body – Jenny
  • Feel what you’re feeling and express what you’re feeling – Jenny

Journal Prompt:

  • What would it be like to just be in the month you want to get through and feel all the things that come up?
  • What would feel worse, enduring the month or choosing to show up and be in every moment every day?

 

Wisdom of the Body  #massagetherapy #massagetherapist #bodyhealth #podcast #healthandwellness #chronicpain #chronicillness #relationshipcoach
Wisdom of the Body #massagetherapy #massagetherapist #bodyhealth #podcast #healthandwellness #chronicpain #chronicillness #relationshipcoach

044: Allowing Time for Transition

In this episode of Love Always, Jo, I share from the heart about making time for transition. Listen to this episode to hear more about making time for transition.

 

In this episode I share about…

  • My very first blog post “allow time for transition”
  • Transitioning from a full-time job to being a coach and running my business

 

Links:

 

Quotes:

  • Go with your intuition
  • Allow time for transitions
  • Focus on the certainty anchors in your life
  • It’s okay to feel all the things
  • Give yourself grace

 

Journal Prompts:

  • When you’re in transition what anchors are there for you to rely on?
  • How do you handle transitions in your life?
  • How can you give yourself grace during transition?

 

043: May Q&A

 

This month’s Q&A questions come from Brit and Miranda. In this episode of Love Always, Jo I’ll be answering questions about your inner child, making the workday more mindful, and starting new habits.

 

Quotes:

  • The needs of our inner child can be simple yet profound.
  • Being mindful is about consciously choosing what you’re doing and focusing on and reacting less
  • Being happy doesn’t have to threaten your relationships

 

Journal Prompts:

  • Think back to when you were 5, 8, 10, 12. What was going on in your life then? What did you need? What did you wish for?
  • What was the biggest threat to your well being and happiness when you were little?
  • What do you wish you had when you were little?
  • What type of experiences, relationships, material things?
  • What did you do for fun?
  • What did you want to be when you grew up?
  • When did you lose track of time?
  • What’s your happiest childhood memory?
  • What was your biggest fear?
  • What was your biggest unmet need?
  • What did you need more of?
  • What did you need less of?

 

How can I reconnect with my inner child and get to know her better?

 

Your inner child is there, just under the surface, always. In a lot of ways, she’s running the show of your life—from your big life goals to your smallest desires to your biggest and smallest triggers.

 

Your big girl dreams and your big girl worries are all tied up in the dreams, desires, worries, and wants of your little girl self. They’re the same.

 

If you get triggered by something and you have really really strong negative feelings about something and you’re not sure why it’s likely that your inner child is having a reaction and your inner critic has jumped in to protect your inner child from feeling that pain again.

 

Ask yourself: what does this remind me of? When have I felt this feeling before? Chances are there is a scared, hurt version of you as a child hidden under there.

 

A client and I were recently talking about dating. She said that she went on a lot of dates and some that were even good, but they ended up not going anywhere. When we dug into this a bit, she remembered a time in 8th grade when she told a boy she liked him and in science class, this news got out and she was embarrassed publicly for it. At that moment, a protector was born, an inner critic that would pull her back anytime she liked a guy and prevented her from expressing her feelings for him. Clearly, this would hold a person back in a relationship.

 

The needs of our inner child can be simple yet profound. One of the most powerful experiences I’ve had with my inner child was a walk around the tidal basin and Jefferson Memorial. I was listening to a workshop, ironically about the inner child. At first, I sat and listened. Then I started walking and listening. Then I stopped walking and paused the recording to just stop and be for a little bit. I continued at this pace, walking a little, stopping a little, just as it felt natural to me. This was an important experience for me and my inner child because one of my unmet needs as a kid was quality time with my parents, a quiet uninterrupted time to just go with the flow.

 

Here are some questions to explore — Think back to when you were 5, 8, 10, 12…

  • What was going on in your life then? What did you need? What did you wish for?
  • What was the biggest threat to your well being and happiness when you were little?
  • What do you wish you had when you were little?
  • What type of experiences, relationships, material things?
  • What did you do for fun?
  • What did you want to be when you grew up?
  • When did you lose track of time?
  • What’s your happiest childhood memory?
  • What was your biggest fear?
  • What was your biggest unmet need?
  • What did you need more of?
  • What did you need less of?

 

Want to explore this topic more with me? Schedule a free call here.

 

Do you have any tips for making the workday more mindful?

 

Take breaks — Instead of going through the click routine of checking emails, texts, social media, etc. between tasks, do a lap up and down the stairs to get your blood flowing, take your lunch break away from your workspace, take colorful plates/bowls to work to put your lunch on, take a break to go for a short walk, stare out the window/outside for a few minutes.

Check in with your body — Do stretches every little bit or take a few minutes between tasks to do some deep breathing exercises.

Watch the number of tabs you have open on your screen and mentally

Turn off notifications — Put your phone in a drawer and turn your notifications off, also think about turning off any notifications that are on your computer so you can focus more on the tasks you’re doing. Give yourself permission to reply to emails at specific intervals rather than in between tasks.

 

How do you implement new and better habits into your life if you fear judgment from your friends and family?

 

Acknowledge the fear you have and that it’s the inner critic. Worrying what your friends and family think are your inner critics tactics of keeping you safe and small. It does it because it works. It projects your fears onto your friends and family so that you won’t reach new heights and be better. Your inner critic does this to avoid being shunned or damage relationships.

 

Think about this — by you changing your habits may actually make your friends and family happy…and they may even want to join you. Usually when we make changes, no one even notices for a while, because a lot of the changes we make (setting more boundaries, eating better, going to the gym) are inner changes first and outer changes second.

 

If your friends and family do have a reaction to the changes you’re making, realize that it’s their inner critic popping up in their life keeping them safe. Some things you can do:

  1. Don’t get defensive, just reiterate what you’re doing and remind them their relationship with you isn’t changing just because you’re going to the gym 3 times a week.
  2. Remind yourself why you are making the change.
  3. Find some cheerleaders to help you keep the change going.

 

If you want to talk about change and have someone to keep you accountable to the changes you want to make I’d love to hop on a call with you!

 

042: Style as Self Care with Lana Jackson

How to use style as self care with Lana Jackson #syleblogger #whattowear #stylist #podcast

 

In this episode of Love Always, Jo, Joanna interviews Lana Jackson, a stylist and the creative director of Narrative Styling. Lana founded Narrative Styling to give women back their power; using style as storytelling tool they can leverage. Through Narrative Styling, Lana partners with busy professionals to build versatile and effective wardrobes that work from day to night and every occasion in between. Listen to this episode to hear more about style as self-care.

 

Lana Jackson is a Stylist and Creative Director of Narrative Styling. Lana believes if women could bypass the insecurity and self-consciousness that comes from wearing clothes that don’t fit or suit their personality and lifestyle, they’d be able to focus and get so much more done. We can limit our power as women when we’re distracted by our own self-consciousness. There is a certain power that emanates from a woman who knows she looks good. And there is a void of power when we’re uncomfortable and fidgeting. The clothes we wear and how we care for ourselves sends a message about us and our personal brand to everyone we meet. The way you style yourself can give you power over the story you present to the world. Style can change the narrative of how you feel about yourself and how you want others to feel about you. Lana founded Narrative Styling to give women back their power; using style as storytelling tool they can leverage. Through Narrative Styling, Lana partners with busy professionals to build versatile and effective wardrobes that work from day to night and every occasion in between.

 

In this episode Lana Jackson and I discuss…

  • Lana’s journey to launching her business
  • What is personal style vs fashion
  • How to use personal style as self-care practice
  • 3 tips for people who want to hire a stylist
  • Why you should budget/shop seasonally rather than monthly
  • How to tell a story through personal style

 

Follow Lana Online:

 

Recommended Books:

 

Quotes:

  • Personal style isn’t about being on trend, it’s about putting together outfits that fit your lifestyle and needs – Lana
  • As women we want to do things that have an actual impact – Lana
  • Women care for communities – Lana
  • We want to feel like our inner self on the outside – Lana
  • Find clothes that give rather than take your energy – Lana
  • When you feel comfortable in what you’re wearing you can be fully present in your life – Lana
  • You can’t be too busy for yourself – Lana
  • Life is strung together by moments you need to show up in – Lana
  • Personal style allows you to be present in your life – Joanna
  • Make an investment in yourself – Lana
  • You can’t change culture until you make culture – Lana
  • Build a life that makes sense to you – Lana

 

Journal Prompts:

  • Do you have what you need to live the life you’re living
  • When you get dressed do you feel like you
  • What story are you telling with the clothes you have

 

How to use style as self care with Lana Jackson #syleblogger #whattowear #stylist #podcast

041: Give Yourself a Break

 

I had two ideas in mind for today’s episode: Managing Your Energy and How to Avoid Burnout. Today’s episode is neither of those, but it fits perfectly with those themes.

This episode is more a show than tell. A practice what you preach kind of thing.

This is my last week at my full-time job. Since I gave my notice two weeks ago, there’s been a LOT going on. One of my direct reports got a new job and his last day happened, our fiscal year ended (I’m a fundraiser so this is a big deal), and I was out of the office for two days serving as a judge for an industry award competition, and I had my period last week which requires a big slow down in energy.

This week’s top priority is finishing out my full-time job, closing this chapter, and processing all of the emotions that come with that. And there will be a lot.

Frankly, I don’t have the bandwidth, physically, emotionally, and mentally to do the episodes I mentioned earlier. So I need to give myself a break. I need to give myself permission to do what I can and acknowledge what I can’t and not push. And let that be OK.

Sometimes in life, we’ve got to let ourselves put all of our energy in one basket for a little while.

Sometimes in life, we need to give ourselves a break. Sometimes we have to acknowledge when the lift is too great and choose to let that be OK.

So that’s what I’m doing with this episode this week. And it does tie in to managing your energy and avoiding burnout. Giving yourself a break, recognizing your limits and living accordingly is one way to manage your energy and avoid burnout.

Where might you need a break this week? How can you give yourself permission to take that break?

Quotes:

  • Recognize your limits and adjust your output accordingly
  • Give yourself permission to take a break
  • There’s power in the pause

Journal prompt:

  • Where can you give yourself a break?

If you want to discuss self-care and how to avoid burnout, book a free discovery call with me at joannaplattcoaching.acuityscheduling.com.

Do you know someone who would appreciate this episode, or another Love Always, Jo episode? Send it her way.

 

040: April Q&A

 

This month’s Q&A questions come from a friend and from one of my coaching clients. In this episode of Love Always, Jo I’ll be answering questions about resources on people pleasing and worrying thoughts and anxiety.

 

Links:

Recommended Books:

Quotes:

  • Start setting boundaries in your life
  • Empaths have people-pleasing tendencies because they can feel other people’s energy like it’s their own
  • Allow yourself time to process your day

Journal Prompts:

  • Where might you need stronger boundaries?
  • If you were to give your inner worrier a name, what would she be called?

 

Do you have any book recommendations about people pleasing?

 

A friend texted me this question recently and I thought it might be helpful for you too.

 

I replied: “You mean like this?” With a wink emoji and a picture of the book “The Disease to Please, Curing the People Pleasing Syndrome

 

And then, for good measure, I added “Boundaries” by Henry Cloud.

 

People pleasing is an inner critic thing, and often people with an inner critic who wants them to focus on other people before themselves lack boundaries and it’s good to be reminded what boundaries are and how they can serve you.

 

I also added “Become the most important person in the room” by Rose Rosetree. This is a book for empaths. Empaths are people who can feel other people’s energy like it’s their own.

 

These three topics, people-pleasing, boundaries, and empaths are very closely related. Empaths have people-pleasing tendencies because they can feel other people’s energy like it’s their own. So, if they can make the people around them happy, they’ll feel happy, because the other person’s energy is merged with their own and it’s hard to tell the difference. But, after too much of this, you will get exhausted. Because even though it doesn’t feel like you have needs, you do. And you can only give so much, you can only take on so much of other people’s energy before your energetic bubble is ready to burst.

 

One way you can prevent this is by having boundaries. Both energetic boundaries where you keep your energy unmerged from other people’s and by having other boundaries…by stating what you need, what is and is not OK with you.

 

As empaths, our energies are outside ourselves, whereas non-empaths energies are focused more on themselves.

 

What small things can I do to just stop my brain from overthinking?

 

The second question came in an email from a coaching client who asked:

 

I’m visiting my parents for the next few days and my anxiety has been high. I went to bed thinking bad thoughts and woke up thinking bad thoughts. I think being home just makes things real for me and all the worries I can push away in D.C. come back when I’m home.

What small things can I do to just stop my brain from overthinking?

 

It’s very very common for anxiety and worry to come in when we slow down. When we’re busy we feel like we can outrun it (that’s why we stay addicted to busyness) and when we slow down, the worried thoughts come in big time. Some of my worst cases of anxiety have come on vacation. This doesn’t seem to make sense because we “should” be relaxed and enjoying ourselves.

 

I so get this. Some of my worst anxiety comes when I should be relaxing or having fun.

 

The worst anxiety I’ve had in my life…and I’ve had a LOT…came when my husband and I went on our first vacation after our honeymoon. We went to Nashville for a week and I could hardly enjoy myself I was so anxious. I remember we were riding bikes through a park and I literally had to stop and put my headphones in so I could listen to a podcast to distract myself. My inner critic was SO loud. It was like a broken record going through all the parts of my life where I was failing as a person, as a friend, as a sister. It felt awful. I was so embarrassed. I should’ve been having fun with my husband. I was miserable when I should’ve been enjoying riding a bike outside, feeling the wind in my hair and pedaling with joy. But I couldn’t.

 

Sometimes we use busyness to avoid being alone with our inner critic and anxiety. We tend to put so much on our plate so we don’t have to deal with our worries, which is why when we do slow down we get an onslaught of anxiety and inner critic thoughts.

 

I heard a great episode on the Daring to Rest podcast about dream deprivation and sleepand he gave a great analogy. Planes fly above the weather. When they come down to land, they go through the weather and through the turbulence. Similarly, we fly above the weather as we’re going about our day and when we come down at night, relaxing/resting/watching tv/before bed, we go through the turbulence as our brain tries to digest and process all of the things we experienced that day. But we often don’t want to go through the turbulence. And that’s when things build up.

 

What you can do to avoid the onslaught of anxiety/worry when you’re trying to have fun

  1. Can you name your worrier? I like the term the article used “hyper-vigilant brain.” If you give the voice/thoughts a name it’s easier to identify and detach from the voice. You are not the voice, you are hearing the voice.
  2. Recognize that this is the normal process of your brain and it’s gotta run through this process to get back to its baseline. Try to detach from the thoughts. You don’t have to indulge the thoughts but you don’t have to push them away either. Fighting them will only make it worse/louder. Try imagining placing your thoughts on a cloud and let them float by, letting them go.
  3. Give your brain more time to process and rest. Try scheduling in time more regularly throughout the day for your brain to run through this process to make it a little more manageable. You can start with something as little as two minutes between meetings, 20 minutes at lunch to walk around the block, 3 minutes in the afternoon. Set a timer on your phone, like “OK brain…go ahead.” Work on doing this processing before you get in bed, that way when you go to bed you can actually go to bed without staying up going through these processes.
  4. Download the Calm app and do short meditations throughout the day. Here’s a podcast called Mini-Meditations that looks good.

 

Here are two podcast episodes I did about the inner critic that might be helpful too:

 

If you want to discuss how to prevent people pleasing or push past overthinking and anxiety or your inner critic, book a free discovery call with me at joannaplattcoaching.acuityscheduling.com.

 

Do you know someone who would appreciate this episode, or another Love Always, Jo episode? Send it her way.

 

Have a question for a future Q&A session? Follow me on Instagram and send me a DM or leave a comment on my next post when I put the call out for questions.