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	<title>Jad Research Blog &#187; Spiritual Resources</title>
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		<title>Trust Yourself &#8211; The Hero&#8217;s Way!</title>
		<link>http://jad-research.com/trust-yourself-the-heros-way/</link>
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		<pubDate>Sun, 10 May 2009 15:11:12 +0000</pubDate>
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				<category><![CDATA[Spiritual Resources]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Buying a VCR may not seem like a noteworthy purchase in a high-tech world yet it proved to be a worthy blessing offering much learning. Boxes filled with VHS recordings were unearthed from dark recesses where they had hidden for over a decade.
Replaying some old home videos for the first time in fourteen years eerily [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Buying a VCR may not seem like a noteworthy purchase in a high-tech world yet it proved to be a worthy blessing offering much learning. Boxes filled with VHS recordings were unearthed from dark recesses where they had hidden for over a decade.</p>
<p>Replaying some old home videos for the first time in fourteen years eerily pulled us back to witness a much younger self &#8211; long ago left behind. One of our time-travels took us back to 1991 to perhaps the first workshop I publicly presented called &#8220;Being Your Best, Inside and Out.&#8221;</p>
<p>There I stood, so very polished, professional, all-knowing; assuredly directing people how to think and present themselves correctly in order to have successful lives. Barely a chink showed in that professional armor.</p>
<p><B><center>Self-Help Sledge Hammer</center></B></p>
<p>I shuddered to hear myself assuredly espouse the latest personal development philosophies without fully evaluating how those words might affect others. I had not considered how people might feel after being told &#8220;You must do this/do that, strive for more, set the right goals, live with passion, avoid mediocrity, change your thinking, be a peak performer etc&#8230; to be successful.&#8221;</p>
<p>How carelessly back then I said, &#8220;If you think you have a comfortable life, are comfortable with your job, home, family this is the death rattle. To be comfortable is a death. We must always be reaching for more&#8230;&#8221;</p>
<p>Now, through living a much kinder approach to life I know this endless striving for more is often a compensation for feeling inadequate &#8211; not good enough. Now I know that calling anything short of peak performance &#8211; mediocrity &#8211; hurts us. This &#8220;self-help hammer&#8221; devalues our human journey.</p>
<p>The same night we were reviewing my past &#8220;self-help&#8221; seminars we were called to pick up our fifteen year old boy from a Friday night party. The parents wanted us to know they had found bottles of vodka and some kids had been drinking.</p>
<p>We managed to handle that volatile situation with enough love and understanding to hear the entire truth from our teen. (Quite a different story from the cover-up being told at the party!)</p>
<p><B><center>The Heroic Journey</center></B></p>
<p>Doing our best to be good human beings; loving our children, spouses, making a decent home and livelihood is a heroic journey! Any philosophy that intimates we are failures or are living lives of mediocrity if we work in a job that is not our passion is the antithesis of self-help. Perhaps the job is not our greatest love but often we do it out of love for our homes and families and in this, there is great honor and humility.</p>
<p>Of course, this excludes forcing ourselves to work somewhere that is toxic or making us sick. Nor am I advocating ignoring our dreams or the changes we long for. Rather, I am suggesting we put more trust in ourselves and our God for our answers than in latest &#8220;How to Achieve&#8221; philosophies or shallow societal values.</p>
<p><B><center>Grow Self-Trust</center></B></p>
<p>Our self trust grows the more we notice how we are feeling after hearing, reading or watching something. Do we feel a little bigger and better about ourselves? Or do we feel less-than if we do not comply with the message?</p>
<p>We need to look inside for our truth rather than blindly striving to follow the latest guru of the day. As our teenage son remarked about my canned &#8220;self-help&#8221; video given so long ago, &#8220;I didn&#8217;t know you were one of those phony people who go around telling people what to do!&#8221;</p>
<p>To be fair to myself those workshops back then were an excellent experience for me, offered with good intention and some pearls. However, at that time I had not come to realize how damaging this continual striving and pushing to do more, be more, change more, is to our precious selves. Back then, I worked over-time to hide my feelings of inadequacy and mostly commandeered my world from my head.</p>
<p>Now, I do my best to live and speak from my heart&#8230; to live a much kinder life philosophy. So my heroic friends be kind to yourselves, trust your own inner wisdom, and know you ARE worthy just by being!</p>
<div style="float: left; padding: 0px; margin: 0px; border-width: 1px 1px 1px 1px; border-style: solid; border-color: white; background-color: white"><img height="60" width="87" src="http://ezinearticles.com/members/mem_pics/Teresa-Proudlove_383.jpg" border="0" alt="EzineArticles Expert Author Teresa Proudlove"></div>
<p>Teresa Proudlove has been inspiring, supporting, and guiding over 3000 people upon their career and life work path for over fourteen years &#8211; with compassion and heart. Teresa&#8217;s workshops and writing, offer a deeper understanding and respect for ourselves, for others, and for our lifework path. This entrepreneurial woman also owned and successfully operated two women&#8217;s retail boutiques for ten years. For over twelve years, Teresa was a well-read newspaper columnist. Visit Teresa at <a href="http://www.yourlifework.com;" rel="nofollow">http://www.yourlifework.com;</a> listen to your inner guidance and navigate through life and work with more meaning, acceptance and peace.</p>
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