When I think of all the ways I've struggled in life and how often I've hoped that someone would help me out, I wonder why would anyone go through so much suffering when easier way exists. Simply, get a coach. When athletes want to win, they get coaches. When executives want to improve performance, they get coaches. When you get stuck in life, you tough it out, muck around, curse, cry, and feel sorry for yourself. I know I did. In my teens, I had a coach and made it to Olympic team. In my thirties, I lived alone and didn't know coaches existed for things other than sports and suffered terribly because of it. Now I am a coach and I give you sound reasons why you should have one too.
1) Coaches are people who can help you reach your goals, personally, professionally, relationally, etc.
2) Coaching can be a perk to employees, but employers can greatly benefit from paying for their coaching. Professional coaching can drive sales, employee engagement, creativity, workplace satisfaction, and bottom line results. According to a Manchester Consulting Group study of Fortune 100 executives, the Economic Times reports "coaching resulted in a ROI of almost six times the program cost as well as a 77% improvement in relationships, 67% improvement in teamwork, 61% improvement in job satisfaction and 48% improvement in quality." Additionally, a study of Fortune 500 telecommunications companies by MatrixGlobal found executive coaching resulted in a 529% ROI. The CIPD concludes "coaching is not just perceived as a nice-to-have intervention." (2011, CBS Interactive Inc.)
3) A good coach can help you create positive change in whatever area of your life you need it. Change is difficult. Doing it alone can be even more so. With a coach to keep you motivated, focused, and to support you, change will feel more like transformation and less like a root canal.
4) Good coaching focuses on your strengths. They empower you and help you be yourself. Coaches advocate for you. They are the outside observers who love to see you succeed! Good coaches don't tell you what to do, or what you should do. They help you find your way.
5) Coaching produces rewards far beyond the cost. Psychologically, coaching can keep you balanced, clear-headed, focused, and motivated. Professionally, coaching can help you reach your career goals and improve your financial situation beyond the few dollars you spend on getting help. A thriving relationship is more than worth the investment in coaching. However you look at it, coaching more than pays for itself.
As one of my clients said: "Everything gets better with coaching, even the parts of your life you didn't know you could make better."
Do yourself a favor. Stop struggling and get a coach. Better yet, get me :)
info@thisfulfillinglife.com / 804-242-3181
Tuesday, June 16, 2015
Tuesday, May 26, 2015
What do you really want?
I can't help but notice how happiness seems to be everyone's
highest priority. Lately, I've been considering the possibility that what
people actually want is not happiness. The elusiveness and ambiguity of
happiness causes suffering as we strive to find it. Meanwhile, people who live
meaningful and purposeful lives seem to be better off than the happiness
seekers. Perhaps, what we really want is fulfillment--the feeling of fullness
we get when we look around and things seem to make sense, someone needs us, we
contribute and surround ourselves with what matters most to us.
If this rings true, than you need to look into several
distinct areas in your life and evaluate yourself on your situation there.
1) Your physical body. You can't get too far in life without
a healthy body. If the body is not healthy your time and energy is spent
driving to and from the doctor's office, worrying, complaining, and paying Big
Pharma for questionable cures. You also deny yourself tons of experience
because you simply can't do them. With a healthy body you can participate in
life to the fullest. Clearly yoga is one of the best ways to get a healthy
body.
2) Your emotional body. What good is a life full of
awesomeness if you can't count your blessings? Seriously, an attitude of
gratitude goes a long way! Working on the scars past experiences have left on
your psyche goes even further. Mental health is in crisis in this country. How
can this be when we have so many resources? Take advantage of them. Yoga can
help develop mindfulness and help you identify where you are stuck.
3) Your relationships. Yep, if your relationships suck,
everything sucks. Evaluate your relations and make a decision who to keep in
your life and who to let go of so you can move on. You are the average of the
five people you hang out with the most...find some good people to hang out
with.
4) Your work. What you do should not be just a way to make a
pay check so you can pay your bills. If you spend at least 40 hours per week
working, plus commute time, you are spending a huge portion of your life! A pay
check is necessary and you may have to do anything you can to get it, but being
selective in your work will pay you in a sense of growth, fulfillment, and
motivation to continue. Choose wisely.
5) Your finances. If you can't balance your check book, if
you have to borrow money constantly, if you have no savings, you are living on
the thin edge of instability and insecurity. It takes a toll on you. It makes
you do things you otherwise would not - like take meaningless jobs just to pay
the rent, or get mixed up with the wrong crowd all together. Financial health,
on the other hand, gives you space to breathe and room to be creative, choosy,
and take care of your needs. It gives you independence.
6) What you contribute. If you are not giving, you are not
living. You have to find a place where you can be useful beyond your own
pleasure and convenience. To live for yourself only is a very small life. To live
for others, to make a difference in another's life, to offer of yourself makes
you feel bigger than your problems and your little world. It expands your
capacity for compassion. It opens you up to new experiences, more gratitude,
more humility, more life.
And that's that... It's what i do--help people find
fulfillment through addressing what needs improvement from the areas above.
Ever feel like you need me, just contact me at (805) 242-3181, info@thisfulfillinglife.com.
Follow this blog and keep in touch!
Follow this blog and keep in touch!
Wednesday, March 11, 2015
Body, mind, heart….the many definitions of yoga.
The usual article about yoga tends to start by defining what
yoga is. The usual definition of yoga is a dry intellectual explanation that
goes something like this: “Yoga is the cessation of the fluctuations of the
mind,” or “Yoga comes from the Sanskrit word to yoke, which means…” and usually a description of what gets yoked
follows. Sometimes it sounds like this: “Yoga is a physical, mental, and spiritual
discipline originating in ancient India and found in Hinduism, Buddhism,
Jainism and ...”
There is this misperception that yoga is a practice of physical movements peppered with a mixed seasoning of new age ideas
and ancient wisdom. It is supposed to be your highway to health and a fountain
of youth, cheaper and more fun than constant visits to the doctor or your cosmetic surgeon.
For a lot of people that is exactly what yoga is. Generally
whatever your expectations are from the practice, that’s what you are going to
find in it and get from it. If you are coming to the practice for great abs and
butt, you will be the person seeking ever more challenging workouts and you
will be the person pushing the limits of your body in a yoga class until you
are sweating profusely, exhausted and “feel the burn.” If you are the kind of
person looking for connection, you will find yourself in classes where other
students like to chat and hang out with each other, and find yourself in kirtans (devotional gatherings with music and chanting). If you are the kind of person who’s
looking for transformation, you will have a giant library of yoga books, attend workshops, and notice how every yoga class you take makes you feel – physically,
mentally and emotionally.
That’s why each one of us have a different definition
of what yoga is. If you sit and think for a moment what yoga is for you, you
will find your own definition, and if you stick with the practice
long enough, you may find that your definition is changing. Hopefully, if you
are in the yoga abs and butt category, you will indeed change your definition
over time, or else, you will be missing out on most of the practice.
My first experience with yoga, even before I knew what yoga
was, or that it even existed, was when I was ten years old and sitting under a
blackberry bush being quiet so I can see the Universe "out there" reflected in
me, "in here." I was having a mystical experience without knowing it. This goes to
show you that mystical experiences are available to anyone regardless of
training, age, gender, affiliation, or location. Children like me, who were
pretty much left to figure things out on their own and before their heads got
full with experiences, impressions, and definitions (samskaras), and who didn’t
have to struggle to physically survive, are probably more open and likely to
stumble upon something profound than adults who are already molded into a
worldview, stuck in life's responsibilities, and generally more skeptical. I
don’t think, I am special. It took me years to realize I was having a mystical
experience and I was only able to appreciate it when I grew up enough to learn
a few things, get a few definitions, and realize that I have built a few walls
of my own.
Later in my teens, I acquired my fist misunderstanding of
yoga to be a strange undertaking of a few people who live in India and sleep on
beds of nails, walk around naked, try to hold their breath for too long ,and
show off contortionist skills to amazed bystanders. I have no idea where that
came from! Perhaps I saw it on Bulgarian TV. My grandmother, years later, when she
found out that I was doing yoga, puzzled and openly disappointed asked my
mother “Why would Valentina want to do this? What is the future of someone sleeping
on a bed of nails?” My own mother, when she found out that I had become
a yoga teacher lamented: “You spent all this time and sacrificed so much to
get a real education (referring to my economics degree)! Why would you want to
throw it all away?”
Over the years, my definition of yoga has changed
dramatically. I have come to realize that my child mystical experience has more
to do with who I have become than what my family tried to imprint on me, or
what I planned on becoming. It left me
with an insatiable yarning to find meaning beyond what meets the eye. It stuck
inside and made me evaluate my
undertakings as “sukha” or “dukha” (wholesome/happy vs unfitting/suffering). Sometimes
willing, sometimes kicking and screaming, I managed to follow the instinct
created by that mystical experience into a journey of self-discovery which has
paid off with experiential understanding of human nature and the nature of
reality. This, in turn, has brought about tenderness, appreciation, and
compassion in someone like me who’s not that tender, appreciative, and
compassionate to begin with. It's made me a Self-reliant optimist, even in times of funk and hardship.
My definition of yoga is: “A personal practice of
transformation that tames the mind and reveals its limitless creative
potential, purifies and shapes the body into the most amazing instrument of
action through with creativity can manifest, and opens the heart to universal
connectedness that humbles, challenges, and further transforms anyone willing
to withstand it.”
Yes, I love me a challenging physical practice and always look
forward to one. But my definition of yoga expands beyond that and infuses that
with meaning beyond shape and form. I find my asana practice to be one of the
best opportunities to practice mindfulness of my psychological tenancies. I
notice the impulses of the ego to push the limits, the tenderness of the heart
reminding me to listen deeply into the body, the passing of life and vitality
which brings sadness and utmost gratitude for that which is still present now,
the emotional reactions to the thoughts that arise, the reactivity and at the
same time the vastness of speciousness and deep silence within which everything
is born, takes shape and returns to. An asana practice for me is one of the
best places to experience the multidimensionality of humanness because it is a
safe container for vulnerability.
Ultimately, our intentions determine our actions and the
outcomes of these actions end up serving our intentions, even
though the outcome may be something we didn't expect or plan for. My
intention has been to grow, explore, and fulfill the potential within me. I’ve
been many places I didn't expect to find myself and each and
every place, person, situation, and event had something to show me about me. That’s karma, the law of causality, and interconnectedness of events. One is
liberated by solving the riddles karma delivers your way and transcending the samskaras, the unconscious mental habits and conditioning that lay at the bottom of every karmic occurrence.
Yes, it’s an
ongoing process, because we make more karma as we are going along – sometimes
out of ignorance, other times because we can’t see the connections between
things. Sometimes, we make decisions out of ego which is unable to let go of its usual way of
seeing and doing things just yet. Other
times, our attachments and aversions run so deep we don’t know they are there.
Sometimes, it’s just dumb luck and reactivity towards it from deeply ingrained conditioning… Basically, it’s safe to assume that for as
long as we are on this planet and have a body, we all are going to have plenty
to do in the karma department.
Beliefs usually are at the basis of our intentions. We
intend for something we believe we want, deserve or need, something that we
consider good. Something we believe is worth our
time and effort. We don’t set intentions to suffer unreasonably, to be
dishonest whenever possible, to cause others to suffer, and to feel miserable
pretty much all the time. But sometimes
we actually believe that we don’t deserve love, connection, and prosperity. We
actually believe we are incompetent and unable to get from where we are to
where we intend to be. If intention and beliefs misalign we find trouble
because we find no fulfillment and prove to ourselves that “this stuff just
doesn’t work. “ By examining our beliefs
we learn massive amounts about ourselves. We find all our samskaras. As we unearth them, than we have an
opportunity to transform them, thus transforming our beliefs and setting
intentions that match our deepest convictions, our highest visions, and our most
sincere aspirations.
So, what is your intention for your yoga? Does your yoga
serve your intentions and how? Are these questions you even think about? There
are no wrong answers, only sincere answers and pretend answers. If your answers
are sincere, your practice will be a good start on the
endless road of transformation. If your answers are wishful thinking, or
parroting things you’ve heard or read somewhere, than your practice will give you
something just for practicing – like numerous health benefits that are
attributed to yoga, but those will be temporary, limited, and not that
different from other forms of exercise, because that’s all you are doing –
exercising. Yes, exercising is better
than not exercising, but there are a lot of unhappy people who are exercising
every day. There are a lot of people with broken relationships, who are exercising every day. There are a lot of mean and selfish people, who are exercising every days.
If you want to know if your yoga is “working” take a look at
your relationships. What is your relationship with yourself, with your partner,
or children, or co-workers….all of your relationships? If you find
things you can improve upon, go back to the mat, to the books, to meditation,
and contemplation. The Greek Olympics used to have a slogan, or perhaps they
still do… “Healthy mind, healthy body, healthy spirit.” That’s not too far from
what Yoga is all about, is it?
Heal your mind, transform your body, open your heart. A mind that sees clearly and is free of
obstructions envisions the future. A body that’s healthy, energized and agile
creates the future. A heart that’s open and wise, shares the future with all
others.
Ultimately, yoga is really not about you, is it? But without
you it won’t happen.
Take a class or one of my workshops, and you will see what I mean. If you are on journey and need guidance and support, consider my coaching services. It's always a pleasure and an honor to help people along their unique paths. info@thisfulfillinglife.com / www.ThisFulfillingLife.com
Tuesday, May 20, 2014
Starting Over..
Starting something is a lot of fun. Starting a new book promises a new time alone. Starting a new diet promises a dream body. Starting a new TV shows promises new drama. A new date promises new flirtation. New friends promise new fun. Starting a new chapter in life, holds the potential for renewal, growth and new adventures. Basically, most people have stared new things more times than they can count - hopeful, excited, nervous, scared, expectant or reluctant.
The question i have then is, why do we not like re-starting something as much as we like starting it in first place. I've read books more than once and found them to be more meaningful the second or third time around. I've tried to learn Italian 3 or 4 times and everytime I restarted, I learned a little more. Once I tried to make eclairs and went through some 36 eggs for multiple unsuccessful trials. It was fun nevertheless and the dog had a lot of flat eclairs to enjoy.
I've met other people like me, starters and restarters. But I've also met many folks who start and never finish but instead of restarting, they just give up, whatever it is. Some give up on their dream bodies. Others give up on their dream marriages. And others give up on stopping bad habits, on learning new things and on working on their lives. For some, to restart something is to admit that you failed once. If that's how you think, i feel sorry for you. A prominent social psychologist from Stanford University, Carol Dweck, had done some interesting research concluding that there are really just two kinds of mindsets out there. The folks with the fixed mindset seem to think that they are born with everything they've got and change is something that happens to others. They stick to their opinions, the way they do things and how they think of themselves. As a result of that they spend all their lives trying to prove to others how good they are, how special they are and how important they are. They start things up and they don't restart if it doesn't work out the first time because it would mean that the first time around the results they got did not match their expectations of themselves and it would be mighty difficult to try to prove how great you are if you just bombed your first trial.
Meanwhile, other folks, with what she calls a growth mindset, spent their time learning and growing. They don't mind restarting again and again, relearning, retrying. They are open to change and welcome it with open arms, no matter how difficult it may be. They never fail because everything is a learning opportunity and because every endeavor is a stepping stone to the next one. There's nothing to lose but a little ego skin in the process, so why not dive right in!
I am just restarting my blog. As you can see, my last post was in November. All this time i was looking for a platform to do everything for me - website, blog, and drive my car. I kept trying and testing and at the end I came back to what I already had....and restarted my blog.
I also just restarted juicing. After a cheese rich and pastry bountiful vacation to Paris, I, not only forgot how to use my juicer, I even forgot how good it felt to have a fresh squeezed juice daily, and went on eating chocolate and bread even at home. My first restarted juice was orange, carrot and apple and it was absolutely delicious!
I also restart my mediation practice every Friday because I quit every Thursday due to my travel schedule which keeps me working and traveling from 5:45 am - 11:30 pm.
I can think of a million other things I restart or should restart and will restart. I wonder what could you restart today that would make a huge difference in your life! Just one thing! Common, you know you have it!
Be brave!
The question i have then is, why do we not like re-starting something as much as we like starting it in first place. I've read books more than once and found them to be more meaningful the second or third time around. I've tried to learn Italian 3 or 4 times and everytime I restarted, I learned a little more. Once I tried to make eclairs and went through some 36 eggs for multiple unsuccessful trials. It was fun nevertheless and the dog had a lot of flat eclairs to enjoy.
I've met other people like me, starters and restarters. But I've also met many folks who start and never finish but instead of restarting, they just give up, whatever it is. Some give up on their dream bodies. Others give up on their dream marriages. And others give up on stopping bad habits, on learning new things and on working on their lives. For some, to restart something is to admit that you failed once. If that's how you think, i feel sorry for you. A prominent social psychologist from Stanford University, Carol Dweck, had done some interesting research concluding that there are really just two kinds of mindsets out there. The folks with the fixed mindset seem to think that they are born with everything they've got and change is something that happens to others. They stick to their opinions, the way they do things and how they think of themselves. As a result of that they spend all their lives trying to prove to others how good they are, how special they are and how important they are. They start things up and they don't restart if it doesn't work out the first time because it would mean that the first time around the results they got did not match their expectations of themselves and it would be mighty difficult to try to prove how great you are if you just bombed your first trial.
Meanwhile, other folks, with what she calls a growth mindset, spent their time learning and growing. They don't mind restarting again and again, relearning, retrying. They are open to change and welcome it with open arms, no matter how difficult it may be. They never fail because everything is a learning opportunity and because every endeavor is a stepping stone to the next one. There's nothing to lose but a little ego skin in the process, so why not dive right in!
I am just restarting my blog. As you can see, my last post was in November. All this time i was looking for a platform to do everything for me - website, blog, and drive my car. I kept trying and testing and at the end I came back to what I already had....and restarted my blog.
I also just restarted juicing. After a cheese rich and pastry bountiful vacation to Paris, I, not only forgot how to use my juicer, I even forgot how good it felt to have a fresh squeezed juice daily, and went on eating chocolate and bread even at home. My first restarted juice was orange, carrot and apple and it was absolutely delicious!
I also restart my mediation practice every Friday because I quit every Thursday due to my travel schedule which keeps me working and traveling from 5:45 am - 11:30 pm.
I can think of a million other things I restart or should restart and will restart. I wonder what could you restart today that would make a huge difference in your life! Just one thing! Common, you know you have it!
Be brave!
Monday, November 04, 2013
Peas in a pod
Jim Rohn said that you are the average of the 5 people you hang out with the most. You may wonder who Jim Rohn is. He is best known for his personal rags to riches story and his 40 years of personal development seminars, founded on well crafted philosophy and psychology of living. When a person like that says something, the rest of us better listen.
If you want to amuse yourself, put pen to paper and write down the names and qualities of the 5 people you hang out with the most and take the average. See if you still like yourself. You may love yourself. You may decide it’s time to re-arrange your friends’ list. No need to wonder if your grandmother knew Jim Rohn, just because she told you “Tell me who your friends are, and I'll tell you who you are.” It’s more likely that Jim listened to his grandmother, and look what that got him and countless others.
It is interesting to wonder about our hidden potentials and secret dreams. In her very influential book The Artist’s Way, Julia Cameron warns all of us that creativity is the electricity of life and a God given gift, a responsibility which if left unrealized, leaves us feeling unfulfilled, jealous of others and generally stuck with flat lives. You may wonder what does an artist, an entrepreneur, a housewife, a teacher, an engineer, or a bartender have in common, and you may conclude like most out there, that they have nothing in common. Like most others, you will be wrong.
Creativity is what we all have in common as we are the very expression of creativity – from the moment of our conception and even before. Creativity is what is needed in every aspect of our lives, from solving problems, to writing a play, to painting a room, to starting and running a business, to cooking dinner. If we approach life like a series of tasks on a to-do list, we end up waiting in line at the pharmacy for the next refill of antidepressants.
The other commonality is that we all have friends. Even the introverted types like me, who prefer the company of books and keeping the bluffs trail in Montana De Oro all for my own self. The friends we have will either help or hinder our creative expression. I young lady came to see me and told me in all seriousness “No one wants me to succeed!” I was shocked and hurt to hear this. How is she to live in a world where she felt like being herself and aspiring to become what she wants to become will be met by people who are not interested in her growth. I told her that it was simply not true - “It's just that you have not yet met the people who will want you to succeed.”
To have friends that in some way inspire your creativity, stimulate your self-expression, and support you in whatever way they can on your journey of life, are the kind of friends you should be surrounding yourself with. At the same time, you should consider being this kind of friend too, because you are also needed in realizing other’s dreams. Without your heartfelt participation, someone else’s life will be flat. Without your honest self expression, a piece of the mystery of the Universe will have to be left unrealized. Without your willingness to rise above your fears and limitations, the only faith that awaits you is the well worn out spot on your couch… and then you die.
Where would you like to start today? What area of your life needs a creative infusion?
Valentina Petrova is the person to go to when you need help sorting yourself out and enjoying a fulfilling life. She is a strategic interventionist, life & transitions coach and so much more, once you get to know her. info@thisfulfillinglife.com /805-242-3181/ Facebook – CoachValentina.
This piece was originally published in Indulge SLO Volume 1 / Issue 6
Wednesday, October 09, 2013
Yoga As Self Transformation
An article everyone doing yoga should read. It's old and timeless and absolutely awesome.
YogaAsSelfTransformation.pdf
Feel free to comment on the impression this article has made on you.
It's interesting for me personally to remember how the article felt when i first read it some 15 years ago. Then to read it again from time to time and see how it has shaped my practice and my teaching.
Happy reading.
YogaAsSelfTransformation.pdf
Feel free to comment on the impression this article has made on you.
It's interesting for me personally to remember how the article felt when i first read it some 15 years ago. Then to read it again from time to time and see how it has shaped my practice and my teaching.
Happy reading.
Tuesday, September 03, 2013
The F Word
Fun, freedom, fulfillment—“F” words abound. Friendship, family, future. Fancy this, we really need to “F” ourselves and others, if we are to enjoy the other “F” words.
Continue reading... http://www.elephantjournal.com/2013/08/the-f-word-valentina-petrova/
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