Wednesday, November 7, 2018

Move Theory: Taking the First Step Toward Change

By Diane Coleman



Change is hard. It’s understandable why a lot of people might view change as negative, but it doesn’t always have to be. A huge reason why change is so difficult is because we’re all creatures of habit. Every single one of us would probably choose the familiar over something new and different. Choosing the familiar does make some sense in a way. In the past, on many levels, changing a routine might have been very dangerous. It’s nice for some things to stay familiar to us. Especially the things that make us happy, but what if the familiar is making us miserable? Sometimes we can be so deep in the familiar we don’t even realize how miserable we really are. The good thing is that we’ve all been blessed with intuition, or you can call it that gut feeling.  It nudges at us even when we don’t want to listen. Some people might choose to ignore a feeling that there’s something better out there for them for years, maybe decades. I did. I think for me; it was more because I thought the change I wanted to happen was just too big, so it wasn’t possible to achieve. What I found out is that you have to start somewhere, and once I took the first step toward change things actually began to fall into place.

In my life, the biggest decisions I’ve made so far have been about continuing to move forward despite obstacles. It’s true that sometimes change doesn’t turn out the exact way we plan, but I’d take it any day over where I started. I don’t have any regrets about my decisions, but honestly I’m dealing with the regrets that I do have about taking so long to decide to move toward change. I can’t come up with any other reason for the delay except my fear of the unknown. For a long time, I let uncertainty and doubt drag me down like an anchor on my spirit. Today I thank God that it got to a point where I had to do something. It wasn’t easy of course. The biggest lesson from it all is that I came to realize failure does happen along the way, but failure is not my identity. Movement is my identity.  No matter what, I choose to remain fixed on moving forward. I now realize, for the most part; that failure is just an adjustment to the original plan. I won't ever let what others may see as an end warp my perception of this journey.  I’ve learned that I can always respawn, get up and figure out another route to my blessed life.

For a lot of us, the first step toward change has to do with stepping away from those imaginary boundaries set by childhood. Childhood is a time when adults are usually responsible for our care, and they also have the power to form our beliefs and expectations about life. It doesn’t matter whether the beliefs are right or wrong. What should matter to you, more than anything now, is deciding if that belief system inspires your best, happiest and your most productive life, the life you really want. Now that you’re blessed with the opportunity to be all grown up, you can make the decision to go beyond those childhood limits and bounce right past any part of your reality that makes you miserable. You can now put in the effort to grow, but you have to decide to take your first step. Your thoughts play a huge role in moving you toward achieving your goals. That being said, it’s true that you’ll get from life exactly what you believe you deserve.  For some of us, it’s hard to imagine something bigger. Many of us were raised by a belief system of low expectations making us think that we don’t deserve much. The good news is that belief systems can always be overwritten. You just have to decide and then, once you move, don’t look back.

You’ll need to plan for change.  Especially if it seems way beyond your reach, so write down your goals. Even if the change you want seems so far away from anything you’ve ever known that doesn’t matter now. As long as you know in your heart change will lead to a better life for you and also those in your care. Change is hardly ever like walking a straight path. Sometimes there are false starts. There will likely be detours, so you have to stay disciplined about keeping the destination in mind. You also have to be willing to leave stuff behind. You have to recognize that in order to move through change some behaviors, ideas and even people might need to be let go. It’s your call, but if you’re not willing to do the sifting, then you’re not really ready to take that first step. That’s just the way life is. You can’t take everybody with you on your journey. After all, it is your journey. Start by being honest when you’re pinpointing unnecessary distractions from the change you want. Opportunities and people to help you through the process can only arrive if you take the first step toward removing the things blocking your path. You have to be ready and willing to grow because without growth, you won’t be able to move forward.

If you’re reading this and it makes sense to you, there may be signs in your life calling you to move. Yes, God is trying to tell you something. It’s been my experience that being disobedient to that inner voice will make you more and more miserable as the days go by. I learned that all I needed to do was let go. Once I grew strong in my faith, I believed, in my heart, that it would work out. I just needed to let go of the outcome and step out on faith. Now making a move toward change is like standing at the tip of the threshold inside a helicopter at 5000 feet aboveground. I’m all geared up and ready. I’m at that moment where I just can’t turn around. It would be foolish to do so and probably cause regrets for the rest of my life.

All I can do, the only thing I know in my heart to do at that moment is to take that leap. I’ve learned to let go of the uncertainty, to jump and then glide down on a cloud of faith. When we view decisions to change in a positive way, we learn to anticipate change instead of avoiding it. We become more adaptable when it comes to life in general. Moving toward change with high expectations can give meaning and purpose to our lives.

I don’t believe having faith means you’re supposed to sit around and wait for change to happen. I think that movement is very necessary. If you believe that all you need to do is just sit and wait on change without any action on your part, you’re probably letting fear control your decisions.  The power of faith is activated when WE act. You ain’t seen nothing about the power of faith until you MOVE. You won’t know about the greatness waiting for you until you decide to step outside your familiar and comfortable box. When your faith is unwavering, then you’ll know that you have the power to be the change. Our lives are always changing, so why not take some control over how it all turns out? Step out on faith each day. Just jump. Even if you never get to the destination, at least you’ll be much better off than if you remained where you started.

Move Theory is dedicated to the change process because change is what we need today more than ever. It’s about helping others get to their personal next level and then even beyond. We should all stand on the belief that we can do better. No doubt change is difficult, but staying in a place where you’re miserable can be devastating in so many ways. Remaining in a space where you’re not happy, a space where you’re not sharing your gifts, a space where you’re not growing and expanding your territory can damage you mentally, spiritually and physically. The healing can start when you decide to move. Move Theory is about movement toward your best in all these areas of your life. Your best is waiting for you up ahead.

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Why should you want to journal your journey?
Because you’ll always be able to look back and reflect on how much you’ve grown, and life is all about the journey.

© 2018 Diane Coleman. No part of this work, written by the author, may be reproduced, reposted for any website, or print publication, without prior permission.


Saturday, October 6, 2018

Through The Storm: Having the Courage to Keep it Moving


By Diane Coleman


In my humble opinion, Aretha Franklin was the greatest female vocalist of any time.  No singer, living or dead, comes close to Aretha in her prime.  She was the original crossover artist. She didn’t just crossover music genres, but love for her music crossed over generation to generation.  She blazed up her path, as an artist, where no one could ever follow.  If you look into her entire body of work, as well as her performances, you’ll find few genres where she hasn’t left her mark.  She was a multi-talent, a musician, singer and songwriter.  She entertained, giving us her all, almost right up to the end of her life.  A discerning eye might have seen she had a hidden shame, no doubt mixed with the genuine pain from losing her mother at such a young age.  Of course, I don’t know about her shame in detail, but I do know that having sex at 12 (maybe even younger) and a baby at the age of 13,  before you know about how the world works, or even less about where you fit into it, can put a load of shame on your spirit.  I believe here is an opportunity for a conversation that a lot of us need to have.


By now, we should know about the after-effects of sexual trauma.  Many people don’t have to look at the life of a celebrity for proof of the damages because they can find it in their own family history.  This kind of abuse often becomes a family secret where the perpetrator is never, in any way, charged.  Because the person who commits the abuse isn't confronted, the victim might be left to deal with the shame with no support.  Sexual abuse can even become a disturbed and secret family legacy.  In our culture, we seem to spend a lot of time examining the attacker, often more so than we do trying to understand the emotional toll on the victim right before, during and after the assault.  Most of the time, we leave that to the professionals maybe because the horror is too much for us to wrap our mind around, especially when it comes to children?  Any kind of sexual assault is not just an attack on the body, but also on the mind and spirit.  Imagine yourself as a child and you have an adult in your life, or someone who you admire.  You believe, simply because of your innocent admiration that this person has your best interest at heart and would never hurt you.  Then out of nowhere everything changes.  Your child brain is hit with a brick of reality that you can’t even begin to process.  All the special attention this person was showering you with was leading up to this…but who can you tell?  You surely, don’t want to disrupt adult relationships.  Especially since, with your child brain, you believe it’s your fault.  In your mind, you’re sure you’ll be blamed in some way, either for seducing your attacker, or for causing chaos in your family for telling.  Though you may not fully understand the meaning of the word, your imagination sets up a scenario for the deepest of all human fears--rejection.  So you convince yourself, it’s better to go on as if nothing happened, and silence becomes both your enemy and friend.  Research has found that when a person is sexually abused, and doesn’t receive support, they may pass the trauma down through future generations in their genes in the form of depression, anxiety and other mental illness.  Surely, what’s done in the dark will manifest in a number of ways, most obviously in the way the victim will make life decisions as an adult.

When sexual abuse happens to children, it typically happens when there’s a lack of adult supervision. Parents may think that it’s safe to leave their kids with a certain relative or friend of the family. I became a parent a little late in life, so I got to learn some things first. I learned that a lot of the women I knew had experienced some type of sexual abuse at a young age usually committed by someone they considered a friend, a friend of the family or relative. Call me paranoid, but by the time I got to the point of having my own children, I came to the conclusion that they would only really be safe when they were in my company. I always believed it was my first duty to shield them, sometimes at a cost. I understand what’s taken away from the spirit when a child is sexually abused. I understood the long-term effects enough that I did everything I could to prevent it from being a burden my own children would have to carry.

In the times we live in, we want to believe that sex is no big deal.  Kids learn it’s so unimportant that they might as well just go ahead and get their first time over with as soon as possible.   There’s a mental and spiritual component that seems to be missing from a lot of conversations we have with young people about sex.  Though they’re important topics, it’s not just about STDs and possibly getting pregnant.  Frankly, what I’ve learned over the years is that immature sex can make your life messy in all kinds of ways.  It is true that more women, in particular younger women, might be prone to expect a commitment after sex.  Unfortunately, the choice we make when we choose a partner may not be grounded in reality.  That’s because from a very young age, we get caught up in the fantasy of falling head over heels, finding our knight in shining armor, or living happily ever after, though it hardly if ever really works out that way.


I don’t believe that any child has enough knowledge and wisdom about sex, or life to consent.   I suppose we can take a look at the life of the Queen of Soul for consideration, but we really don’t need to.  All we need to do is look around us and count how many of the women (and men) we know who’ve been victims of sexual abuse and consider the aftermath.  If you don’t find any, then you are in the minority.  So, to young people of a consenting age, I might say that sex can be the most intense of our experiences, but that’s really no mystery.  For all intents and purposes sex can be life affirming.  Of course, if it weren’t all the above, most of us wouldn’t even be here, but sex is not everything.  If you think sex is everything, maybe it’s time to take a good look at what else you have going on in your life.  Many adult regrets come from having sex under the wrong circumstances.  Those few minutes of pleasure can cost you in ways I’m sure you won’t consider once you’re caught up in the moment.  So before you do, while your head is still clear, you might want to ask yourself if you really want to be tied to the person in the long-term.  Of course, in the case of a pregnancy, it could be in the very long-term.  Don’t limit yourself by believing the hype fed to you by the media and other outside forces.  Getcha mind right.  You have a lot more to give besides your body.  Don’t allow yourself to be distracted by something that has always, and will always be around when the opportunities for you to achieve your goals might not.  Set your life goals and try taking a step toward each one every day.  If you do this, then there’s a strong possibility that you’ll be led to the person who can make you truly happy.  Sometimes we have to get to where we’re going on our own first, before we can find the soul mate that can really make us feel good about ourselves in every way.



Aretha’s life demonstrated that someone can bring forth their gifts and still bless the world in spite of their own trauma.  Despite what happens to us, we all still have a personal story and an assignment to complete, so we have to keep moving forward.   As adults, we do all carry around some pain.  I suppose how we deal with it makes all the difference.  We can seek professional help; find a way to express ourselves through our gifts or both.  In Willow Weep For Me: A Black Woman’s Journey Through Depression, author Meri Danquah reflects on getting through the storm of sexual abuse and depression “Having lived with the pain having felt/heard/seen and tasted it, I know now that when you pass through it, there is beauty on the other side.”
 
Aretha wrapped her gifts with her story and what came out will live on in not just music history, but history period.  Who she would have been, without the trauma, doesn’t really matter.  Some might argue that it may have been all part of God’s plan.  On that idea, I have no opinion, but I do have an observation that it's crazy how one person’s trauma can end up blessing the lives of others, sometimes in ways we’ll never fully know or understand.  What she did with her pain pushed her forward to a place where she could touch the lives of others in such an inspiring and extraordinary way, but for many that may not be the case.  Through the storm she was blessed.  I think what matters most is that she didn’t let whatever was done to her as a child keep her from sharing her gifts.  It takes a lot to walk away from sexual abuse in shame, or in power or both, and continue on.  Better still, it takes courage to live like whatever happened then, though it may shape your now in some very personal ways, it’s still not the end of your story.


I think what matters most is that she didn’t let whatever was done to her as a child keep her from sharing her gifts and that takes an awful lot of courage.



For more information about protecting our children against childhood sexual abuse or sexual molestation you can go to KidsLiveSafe.com.  They also have a free Child Safety e-book.

For a scientific look at the aftermath of sexual assault read
The Psychological Consequences of Sexual Trauma
or go to VAWnet.org

I started out writing a top 5 list of my favorite Aretha Franklin songs, but once I started I realized that there just ain’t no way…so here’s a list of my TOP 10 plus my favorite album.  Yes indeed, I do lean toward Vintage Aretha.  She kills it on the piano on most of these songs.  What’s your favorite?  Feel free to comment below.

  1. Oh Me Oh My
  2. Share Your Love With Me
  3. Evil Gal Blues
  4. Muddy Water
  5. Bridge Over Troubled Water
  6. Rock Steady (this one just never gets old)
  7. Do Right Woman
  8. Don’t Play That Song
  9. Call Me
  10. Mary Don’t You Weep (when she calls Lazarus I get chills)

© 2018 Diane Coleman. No part of this work, written by the author, may be reproduced, reposted for any website, or print publication, without prior permission.

Saturday, June 30, 2018

Have the Audacity to be an Autodidact


I wasn’t a great student in high school.  In fact, I wasn’t even a good student.  It really had nothing to do with my ability.  I just didn’t show up.  It should be noted that my high school was no different than many today that teach, mostly, from a curriculum created decades ago.  When I did attend classes, I was somewhere between an A and B student, without really trying.  It was just too boring.

Because we didn’t spend much time in school my friends and I did get into some mischief.  I guess you can say that the importance of a quality education was lost on us.  The environment we were raised in may have had an impact on our feelings about school.  More than anything, the schools we attended didn’t really fall into the category of quality education, at least not for us.  Being a home schooling advocate, as well as a student of organizational psychology, I tend to believe many schools don’t make a good enough effort to be a fit for all students.  I also believe that school culture includes teachers, students, administrators and even board members, and that they all play a part in the success or failure of every single student.  I don't just believe they can influence the potential for success in school, but also success in life.

I chose to write for teens and young adults because I never forgot how it felt to be that age, to be curious about life.  Yet with school being, for the most part, ill-equipped to keep a kid like me really interested, sometimes I wonder what it would have been like for my friends and me if the internet came along when we were teenagers.  With all the resources it has, I’d like to believe it would have had a positive effect on us. We didn’t go to school, like we should have, but most of us read and had strong opinions.  You can say that we were a bunch of budding autodidacts, and that maybe we were just a little ahead of our time.   An autodidact is someone who's self-taught. They want to learn, not because somebody comes along and says, “this is what you need to know.”  Autodidacts don’t, necessarily, pursue knowledge because they have to.  They're the opposite of passive learners.

It’s been okay to be a passive learner for a long time.  Since the internet took hold, we’ve been in a knowledge economy that has shifted everything and is putting a squeeze on passive learners.  Everybody is expected to be up to speed on most things.  More and more, they’re expected to find most of the knowledge they need on their own.  Now, you have to know, not just about issues of general conversation like politics and business (or sometimes even celebrity gossip) but especially anything having to do with your career.  Because there’s so much information out there, more people will assume you’re up to speed.  Some of those people may be less important, in the scheme of things, and others might be crucial to your career, education, and even your finances.

Of course, being an autodidact makes you a better student because you're always building on your stored knowledge.  As an autodidact, you don’t have anyone telling you how to process what you’re thinking, mainly because you’re getting information from a variety of sources and not just school. You have the freedom of taking in that information, figuring out how it all makes sense, and from there you’re able to go on to look at the bigger picture.  Most autodidacts, eventually, grow to become critical thinkers and that's a good thing.  Your path to success, however you choose to define it may, likely, be different from that of someone having the privilege of access to an elite education, or other solid resources, from the start.  Like millions of other people, the internet was a game changer for me.  I suppose, had I been more willing to conform to what people expected of me, at best; I would have ended up limited to teaching in a certain style, using a one-dimensional curriculum. I might not be able to tell my story, and to share knowledge, in such a diverse way and so freely.  I wouldn’t have unlimited opportunity, as I do today, to reach people all over the world with my ideas.

Thanks to the internet we can all, pretty much, learn almost anything for free.  If you’re leery, or downright afraid, of student-loan debt, then it’s time to think for yourself, and have the audacity to be an autodidact.  Realistically, you can work for less, and live on less, if you don’t have student loan debt hanging over your head.  To help you start, there’s a list of massive open online courses (MOOC’s) at mooc-list.com. You can find free online courses offered by well-known universities at oedb.org (Open Education Database).  Oedb.org can also help with school ranking statistics, identifying the best college fit for your interests, and give advice about transferring credits you’ve already earned.  There are also other providers, like Udemy and edX, that offer courses for free, or for much less than you’d pay at college.  Or you can just pick a college, and see if they offer free lectures on YouTube.  Coursera was started by a group of Stanford professors and it offers free online courses at Ivy League schools.  You can even get direct access to groups online if you want to talk about what you’re learning.  There are study note sharing websites such as Open Study (Brainly), Course Hero and Chegg.  You can download any of their apps to your device.

The audacity of the autodidact, definitely, works for the entrepreneur spirit.  You no longer need to spend hours in a classroom learning how to start and run a successful business.  You can build your business day-by-day, watching video-by-video online.Of course, for some jobs and careers you might need formal training, or a degree, but mind your rear view mirror.  Technology is moving up so fast behind you that the same job or career you may be banking a lifetime of student debt on might not even exist by the time you graduate. Things are changing that fast.  It seems everyone needs to get on the autodidact bandwagon.  Parents need to get their kids on it now.  Yes, its fine if parents choose not to home school, but not training children to be autodidactic from this point on could, likely, cause them to be left behind.  Either way, I’ve always believed that public school education, especially, needs to be subsidized at home by parents.  Come on, we have to take some responsibility about how and what our children learn and, more importantly how they think.

Education, for most people, means someone is telling you what to think.  You’re encouraged to color inside the lines and not go beyond the scope of the instructor.  An autodidact enjoys the challenge of stretching beyond a narrow scope.  Of course, education is okay.  Believe me, I know it can be really nice to have a degree or two hanging on the wall.  For all the time I've gone to college, I never felt I was paying to be taught as much as it was an opportunity to be in the company of people, who were somewhat like-minded and wanted to talk about ideas.  Now, of course, I have an option to do the same without adding onto the student loan debt.

The best part about being an autodidact is feeling confident that no one can dictate what I’ll contribute to the world.  I control how much I can grow.  If you don’t feel appreciated professionally, you have access to enough knowledge to build an enterprise.  You can, in fact, shape your own destiny.  Have the audacity to turn down spoon-fed information.  Have the audacity to prove them wrong when anyone tries to tell you that your potential is limited, for whatever reason.  Now, if you’re behind on anything you honestly have no one to blame but yourself.  It’s on you. The information is there at your fingertips. So, take hold of the future now.

© 2018 Diane Coleman. No part of this work, written by the author, may be reproduced, reposted for any website, or print publication, without prior permission.

Monday, April 2, 2018

The Things I Wish I Had Known About Money…I Could Write a Book


I don’t come from a background where the people around me were prone to always make good decisions about money. I guess one can easily draw the conclusion that I also wasn’t born into a wealth legacy. In my environment, there was only the occasional windfall. I had to learn the rules of money the hard way. The windfall mentality has a strange effect on your beliefs about money. As you get older, and start to earn, your paycheck becomes the windfall and it tends to burn a hole in your pocket. You spend, and you really don’t feel satisfied until all of your disposable income is gone. Most of us spend on things associated with the desires of our group, culture, or both. A good deal of our need references come from a variety of media sources, but then again, don’t we choose our media programs based on the groups we identify with? It’s a vicious cycle.


Without a doubt, television has always been a great tool for the banking, and credit, industry. In particular, I have to give a shout-out to Edward Bernays, the inventor of public relations. I don’t want to go into a retrospective on the culture of television, but I will say that once it was in every household, it was easy for corporations, along with the banking industry, to help the average American go for broke. Television taught us how important it is to keep up with the Joneses/Kardashians. I know it's hard to admit, but we do spend an awful lot of time and money competing with one another. Sometimes the competition is subtle, and other times not so much. Not paying attention to the source of our desire to spend may lead us down a path to financial chaos, miserable, dead-end jobs, and unhappy relationships. Most of us don’t consider the impact our relationship with money has on our relationship with others, but it does. Our beliefs about money set a standard for how we value ourselves, and also how we’ll make relationship choices.

One of the most important things I wish I had known about money is that banks are in business to make it, and they make most of it by taking mine and yours. I’ve also learned that, despite their charming and witty commercials, banks are not your friend. Your association with them is strictly a business transaction. The primary goal is to lend you money, and have you pay that back plus interest for the privilege of borrowing. Don’t let me get started on student loans. That’s a topic for a whole other blog post. I don’t really have anything against banks. I will even go as far to say that, without student loans, it would have been difficult, if not impossible, for me to go on past an undergraduate degree. I’m sure many would agree that banks are a necessary evil. My perspective has changed, though, and I now understand how important it is to figure out the most strategic (and of course legal) way to profit from the amount you’re borrowing, especially if your goal is to build long-term wealth.

For too many years, I thought I was on the road to building wealth while I spent myself into debt. The economic downturn, and my research into the psychology of groups, caused me to take a look at the motivating factors of my own spending and why I believed it was okay to be in debt. Most of my adult life I had an income that could, potentially, put me on the road to building wealth, yet I avoided those deep money questions, the primary one being: Why do I buy?  If I could go back and do it all over again, I would come out of the gate with a very different mindset.  Starting with my first job, my number-one priority would be to lay the groundwork for a wealth legacy. I would pay more attention to economic news, and commentary, including their relevance to domestic and foreign policy. I would pay attention to the movement of money and investing on a global scale because I would be clear on how these things all tie into my future earning prospects and financial security.

I would take serious stock of the money decisions made by the adults around me as I grew up. I would then make a conscious decision to do something different. If I chose to have credit, I would use it strategically. I would try to pay my balances off every month, or apply as much to the outstanding balances as possible until it was all paid off. I would pay attention to every dime the bank made from me in interest.  I would start out with an understanding that money represents freedom in a very real sense, but that freedom can only occur if the money you earn is used with intent. Not being born into wealth doesn’t make you financially handicapped. It simply changes the starting point. In that respect, there are rules in the game of wealth. I know now that it's important to have a game plan or, instead of gaining freedom, you’ll sentence yourself to a life of slavery to debt.  I would consider looking outside of my general environment for those who’ve accomplished what I’d like to financially. I would also try to stay aware and prepared to act on solid investment opportunities when they present themselves.

The internet made the concept of buying low and selling high clearer for the average person to wrap their financial mind around.  Before I buy a particular item now, I pause to reflect on its resale value. More often than not, it doesn’t even matter if I’m buying it for personal use. The potential of this idea has been, for the most part, exclusive to people with big money to invest, but the online marketplace has been a game changer.  More than ever, now people understand that wealth legacies can be built by investing in a variety of tangible items, having appreciative value, such as collectibles, precious metals, and fine art.

If I could go back, owning a home wouldn’t be the priority investment. For generations, we’ve been fed the idea that home ownership should be the jewel in the crown of our investment portfolio. There may have been times when this was the case. I do know of several people who bought and sold, within a year or two, during the last real estate boom, and profited $100,000 or more, but I think it’s fair to say that we’ve come to the end of the phenomenon.  Realistically, when you factor in the cost of repair, taxes, location and then, of course, project what might be the cost of living when you finally sell, you’ll probably find that the best way to view your home is as an investment in your family’s future in terms of community, school district, and a sense of comfort, and not a monetary gain.  Today, the decision to own or rent should be considered with long-term goals in mind.

Knowing what I do now, I would offer to anyone seeking advice about money not to take the journey backward. Don’t end up trying to use your talents to earn a living after you’ve worked for years at a job or profession you hate. Try to figure out what you're good at early on.  Identify the thing you like to do that excites you and gives you a reason to really look forward to getting out of bed in the morning, and then figure out if there's a way to earn a living doing it, even if you have to do it part-time at first. That way, even if you don’t reach your wealth goal, at least you can say that the journey meant something to you on a very personal level, and that you had a good time.


Related Reading

Related Video Links
In Debt We Trust: A Documentary
How Money and Credit Control Your Life


Frontline:  The Untouchables
Frontline investigates why Wall Street's leaders have escaped prosecution for any fraud related to the sale of bad mortgages.

Frontline:  The Retirement Gamble
The Retirement Gamble raises troubling questions about how America’s financial institutions protect our retirement savings.




© 2018 Diane Coleman. No part of this work, written by the author, may be reproduced, reposted for any website, or print publication, without prior permission.




Tuesday, February 20, 2018

There's Power In Deciding Your Story Is Not Over



I love Miles Davis' music.  I can’t say that I love the man he was because Miles had some issues, but I do love his artistry.  People will, probably, share dialogue, and critiques, on his music, for the rest of time.  One of the things I love most about Miles, the musician, is his drive to reinvent himself and his fearlessness about doing so over and over again.  It’s true this could have been ego on his part, but I think if we look deeper we might find some meaning in the way he lived his artistic life.

Let’s face it changing from anything you’re used to doing, when you’ve been doing it one way for years, is a hard thing to do; and it really doesn’t matter what it is.  But sometimes, when things aren’t working out, you may need to push the reset button on life.  When we make personal and professional decisions we can feel they’re really right for us, at the time.  We think the stars have aligned to make it all happen, so we might be shocked when things don’t turn out the way we thought they would.  The reality that we were wrong can shake us to the core.  Of course, there’s also those decisions we make, based solely on emotion, where we haven’t paid attention to the tiny details, but that’s still not the worst mistake.  We make the worst mistake when we decide, because of the failure; we’re just going to give up trying. 

Yes, life can be complicated.  Life can be a bit messy.  Sometimes, things fall into a person's lap, I suppose.  I’m just one of those people who never had it that easy.  To reach any goal, I’ve always had to do some intense strategizing, and sometimes things still didn’t work out the way I planned.  I’ve, certainly, had my share of do-overs.  I wasn’t brought up in an atmosphere that might guarantee success like some people who have the right contacts from birth.  As far as college was concerned, I had to choose one I could afford, and all of it still ended up costing too much.  In fact, my personal saga of student loan debt continues to unfold.  Of course, the biggest drawback of having to find your own way is that you’ll probably make a mistake, or two, or three before you’re even close to getting it right.  Bestselling author Robert Green writes, in his book on mastery, that “repeated failure will toughen your spirit and show with absolute clarity how things must be done”.  I agree because I have lived that truth.  I’ve made some bad decisions.  I do thank God the good far outweighs the bad.  Of course, through the ups and downs, I’ve had my moments of self-doubt.  As I got older, and the fact that time is running out got real, I then understood what happened yesterday is not, hardly, the end of my story.

Just like the name of a Miles Davis favorite of mine, So What?, what defines me has nothing to do with the neighborhoods I’ve lived in, the schools I attended or the right connections my family has.   I know that even my right now doesn’t really define me.  Now only defines me in the context of what I’m planning for tomorrow.  In the final analysis, what I decide to give to the world will define my life both now and when I’m gone.  I’ve been to a lot of funerals in my lifetime, I would say, probably, more than an average person, and what I’ve learned is that the measure of a good legacy isn’t really based on the things a person kept to themselves, but more on what they gave away.  It’s, certainly, not based on the amount of mistakes they’ve made, of course, as long as they keep trying.  If things never work out, it’s my belief in the end; the worst people can say is, “Well at least she tried.”

Though I wasn’t raised in wealthy surroundings (most days) I still feel rich.  My Dad passed down a giving spirit and my mom, a teaching spirit with a simple dedication to helping others.  Things may not have come easy for you either …but so what?  You may just have to reinvent yourself a time or two, and start from scratch.   So what?  I can attest to the fact that having to reinvent yourself makes life interesting.  If we look at the life of artists like Miles, who always seemed to bring something new to the table, just when you think they’re done, we can see that your best is actually fluid if you decide to keep moving forward. 

Movement is life.

There will be disappointments.  Life is harder the Miles Davis way.  You’re constantly progressing and pushing your own envelope into new territory.  You’re striving to be better because you want to leave behind something that has meaning.  Miles always had a laser focus when it came to his art, which surely rubbed some people the wrong way, but I get it.  You’re so driven to move through your story, and to not give up because you instinctively know that there’s much more of it to be told.  Of course, there will always be more of your story to be told--right up to the end.


Links to more Miles...

Kind of Blue some say the definitive jazz album of all time and Miles' best.
The Official Miles Davis Website

Books
Miles Davis:  The Collected Artwork



Notable Movies and Documentaries
Miles Ahead (Don Cheadle 2016) The Miles Davis Story
© 2017 Diane Coleman No part of this work, written by the author, may be reproduced, reposted for any website, or print publication, without prior permission



© 2018 Diane Coleman No part of this work, written by the author, may be reproduced, reposted for any website, or print publication, without prior permission.