Showing posts with label iPhone. Show all posts
Showing posts with label iPhone. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 10, 2012

Visualization How To - 30 Days To Clarity On Your Goals

In an earlier article, I wrote about the importance of dreaming and planning to the success of your personal goals. Being a dreamer is about getting in touch with your values. Dreaming is a process that allows your values guide you. Pursuing goals without knowing that they are connecting you to your fundamental self is likely to put you on a treadmill of searching. Even in the busiest analytical mind, there is a kernel waiting to be tapped, which will give insight into your goals. This is the work of the dreamer: to understand the self so that you can pursue goals that nourish you, and those around you. Some tools of the dreamer are visualization, hypnosis, values survey tools, life mapping and journaling, among others.

Here are guidelines for taking yourself through a visualization exercise. The more often you do this exercise, the more clarity you will get about the type of work and life situation that is truly right for you.

Fiction

You may choose to daydream, sit with your coffee and imagine going through your ideal day, ideal week, etc. Or you may want to write it out in a diary type of format, or even write it out as a piece of fiction. Whatever works for you is fine. Or try mixing it up, do some writing, do some daydreaming. Some people think better with a pen in their hands and find that it helps get their thoughts out of their heads. Some people find pictures that represent what their dreams are and post them all over a "vision board."

Visualization How To - 30 Days To Clarity On Your Goals

The basic exercise is to walk through a day, or a week, or even just moments of time in your ideal job. Don't worry about all the details, they will come as you repeat this exercise. Try to do this as often as possible over the next month--daily is preferable. It doesn't need to take more than 5-10 minutes a day, but the more frequently you do it, the more details your mind will add in and the more clarity you will have at the end of the month. Try not to do it while driving, though; you may miss your exit due to the hypnotic state you will be in.

Walk yourself through whatever chunk of time suits your fancy at the moment and think it through in as much detail as you can. For example, say you are visualizing your perfect career. Where are you driving to in the morning? At what time? What are you wearing? What type of office environment do you have? A cube? An office? The great outdoors? What is the first thing you do when you get to your workplace? Whom do you see on the way in? What meetings or activities are on your calendar? What issues are you tackling? How are you acknowledged by your coworkers? What are your work interactions like? What do you do for lunch? What time do you leave to go home and how do you feel when you leave the office for the day--anxious about the next day? Excited about what you've accomplished? Why? Etc., etc. Try to work through this in as much detail as you would experience in real life.

This will get easier if you do it a little bit every day, and let your subconscious drive this process as much as possible. Leave your critical mind out of it as much as possible. If you find that for some reason your dream has you wearing a suit, and that is out of the norm for you, let that happen--don't question or reject any of your dreams, just let them come out. Like a brainstorming activity, there should be no judgment while people are getting their ideas out. Just see where the visualization leads you and what that means. Pay attention to as much little detail as you can, and try to get more and more detail day by day.

If you do this every day over a month, you will get more clarity on your goals and that will help you know what direction to pursue in order to fulfill them.

Visualization How To - 30 Days To Clarity On Your Goals

Cindy Locher is a Certified Hypnotist and expert in stress reduction. Find out more about stress reduction and how hypnosis can help you live a better and more fulfilling life at http://www.MN-Hypnosis.com

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Friday, June 1, 2012

Secrets to Writing a Sad Story

My dream, from the time I developed an obsession for writing stories, has been to write one that can make people cry. Well, my stories, I hear, have moved a goodly number of compassionate souls.

But really, what are the odds that stories can move a person to tears? Has the written word got such power? The answer is a resounding yes!

Fiction

Have you ever read a story of an individual who goes through so much adversity that you are touched to the point of shedding tears? Maybe not, but I am sure that you have read something that is so touching that you feel the tears squeezing to burst out...

Secrets to Writing a Sad Story

However, compared to television, the written word seems to pale in its power to move people's emotion. Television sends a flood of information to the viewer's eyes. Vivid images of the plight of the actors and their evident anguish flash before their eyes. If you have watched a sad movie, you will agree with me that the screen can easily move someone to tears. With mournful music playing in the back ground, even the most callous of souls are sent into sniffing.

Let us borrow one or two lessons from the movie industry and use that to write moving stories.

Firstly, television sends clear and vivid images of the plight of the actors. No one needs a special education to understand what he is seeing.

The same should be true of your writing if you want it to move people. Your writing should be clear and understandable to your target audience. Furthermore, use graphic language that creates vivid images in their minds. Help them visualize what the characters are going through and their feelings. Choose the right words. Your choice of words is, ultimately, what will determine whether your story will have an effect on your readers or not.

Secondly, the movies industry appeals to the compassion that is inherent in humans. All of us have a degree of compassion to those that we care for. So the movie industry moves to make the viewers develop a certain relationship with the actors, so that in the end, the viewer not only likes them but loves them. Therefore, she feels their pain and sorrow.

Employ the same in your stories. Make your readers develop a relationship with your characters. Let them identify with them. Make them love your characters. You'll do this more effectively if you develop your characters in such a way that your reader seems them as real people with real problems. In short, develop the human side of your characters.

It is important to make your character a compassionate person too. Very few people will feel anything for a villain-unless you develop his humans side; if you show that in some situations, he loses his hard, callous side and reveals real humane emotions. People tend to love a good person, and in time, they will feel for him. So if you are writing a sad story, don't make your main character a callous villain. When he suffers adversity, your reader will be like:

"He surely got what he deserved!"

Finally, the major trick of the movie industry: a twist in fate. You are there watching, and you are quite liking where everything is going, when BLAAAAAAM! Your favourite character experiences terrible misfortune, tragic loss, or even death. And since at this point you have developed feelings for the actor, you are moved to tears.

This you should do too in your story. Just at the point when everything is going fine and your reader is quite liking it, i.e. feeling the joy and happiness the character is feeling, BOOOM! tragic and heartrending misfortune attacks. At this point, since your reader has developed a relationship and hence affection for your character, she may be moved to tears....

I hope that the lessons we have learned from the movie industry will help you write better sad stories. I can't wait to read them and be moved to tears!

Hey, happy writing!

Secrets to Writing a Sad Story

Michael Sinkolongo

http://www.writing-lovers.com

Visit my site above for great and exceptional articles on fiction and non fiction writing

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