Recipe for Optimal Living

Recipe for Optimal Living

Bring Some Laughter into Your Life

Remember the old saying that laughter is the best medicine? While it may not always seem appropriate or what we need—especially at a time when the world is so filled with chaos, pain, and hardship—balancing the grief with the distraction of humor can make things more bearable, something to which I can personally attest. Over these past months, if I find myself feeling low, or when I’ve hit my limit from the constant barrage of disheartening news, I give myself some relief by re-directing my mind to a funny memory or story, or by putting on an uplifting comedy to provide a couple of hours of laughter. Using comedies to shift my focus and emotions has been one of my favorite self-care tools over the years.

Self-Care in Challenging Times

Self-Care in Challenging Times

Many people don’t treat themselves very well as their default. And in times of stress—in a global pandemic, for example—even those who are normally self-disciplined may find their self-care practices waning. They break promises to themselves, eat poorly, don’t get enough sleep, are self-critical, or fail to take good physical care of their bodies.

A great technique for treating yourself better is by developing what I call your Inner Nurturing Parent. Imagine you had a little child in your care. You’d make every effort to keep her healthy and safe; to support her; to be forgiving of her mistakes, to make sure she gets healthy food and exercise; and to let her know how loved and cared for she is. That’s what a loving parent does. Only, in this case, you’re the parent and the child. Below are some practical ways to strengthen your own Inner Nurturing Parent, and turn the goal of treating yourself better into daily, living action in 2020 and beyond.

Recipe for Optimal Living

Recipe for Optimal Living

Planning meals in advance has many benefits. Planning helps you optimize your time, reduce stress, and improve your health. Spending less than an hour a day on food prep leads to eating more fast food, while spending more time promotes better dietary habits, like eating more fruits and vegetables. A fabulous resource that cuts through the thicket of confusing—and often downright wrong—advice on nutrition and gives you easy-to-digest, scientific information to discover which foods your body needs to thrive, is the book The PlantPlus Diet Solution: Personalized Nutrition for Life, by Dr. Joan Borysenko a dear friend and fellow Hay House author.

The Work You're Born to Do Webinar

The Work You're Born to Do Webinar

Do you long for a more fulfilling career but don’t know what or how to make it happen? People often end up in dissatisfying jobs because they never identified the “work they were born to do”—work that leverages their skills, strengths and passions, and brings purpose to their lives. As in many crises, the pandemic has, for many people, brought with it the opportunity to re-evaluate their current work, and consider new possibilities.

Breaking the Anger Addiction

Breaking the Anger Addiction

Anger is a normal and very human emotion. But few people have been taught how to effectively express and manage anger. Instead we learn how to deal with anger by our parents’ role modeling, and by how our parents reacted to our own anger growing up. We may have been taught to rationalize our anger away, blame or verbally attack the person who’s made us angry, or withdraw and avoid the other person—and our anger—altogether.

Managing Change in a Radically Changed World

Managing Change in a Radically Changed World

While some people thrive on change, many respond with feelings of helplessness, fear, inertia, or anxiety. These reactions are especially prevalent as we are exposed daily to news relating to the pandemic, societal events, the economy, and individual and collective loss. In this online Zoom webinar, renowned coach, psychotherapist, CNN commentator, and author of international bestseller Solemate: Master the Art of Aloneness and Transform Your Life, Lauren Mackler, will address common coping mechanisms to adversity, embracing versus resisting change, inner and outer support systems, and practical tools for developing greater resiliency, reducing stress, and reframing today’s crises as opportunities to induce positive change.

5 Ways to Quit Guilt Tripping

5 Ways to Quit Guilt Tripping

In a Zoom coaching session a few weeks ago, a forty-something years old client referred several times to feelings of guilt. Not only had it been a familiar feeling since about the age of five, it had been a driving force throughout his personal life and career.

While guilt often gets a bad rap, in certain situations it can be helpful. For example, if you pay for coffee with a ten-dollar bill and the cashier gives you change for a twenty and you don’t say anything, you might feel pangs of guilt. Why? Because a part of you holds a belief that stealing is wrong, so you return the extra cash. In this case, the guilt motivated you to change your behavior in accordance with your belief that stealing is wrong.

Or you might choose to remain silent and keep the money. To relieve yourself of the “pain” of the guilt, you might tell yourself, “This is a big corporation; a little less profit won’t matter”, thereby changing the belief that stealing is wrong, allowing you to keep the money, lessen the guilt, and still feel like you’re a good person.

Guilt is a barometer that alerts us to behaviors that violate the “truths” of our conscious and unconscious belief systems. And while some of those beliefs are reflective of our authentic values, others are self-limiting ones that we learned and adopted from others.

Mother

Mother

Tomorrow will be my sixteenth motherless Mother’s Day. And while it had gotten easier over time, the absence of my mother feels now like a wound opened anew. Exacerbating these feelings are the demise of my fourteen-year-old dog seven weeks ago, day seventy of coronavirus social distancing, and the loss of intimate family relationships—all in the midst of an unprecedented transfiguration of life as we knew it.

With both parents gone, I currently reside full-time on the other side of the parent-child equation. Among other things, this includes my being on the receiving end of behaviors I once directed toward my own parents. As a family-systems-trained psychotherapist and coach, I have seen these types of multi-generational pattern replications frequently in my practice, as well as being an active participant of their playing out in my personal life.

Living solely on the parenting side of the parent-child dynamic has taught me a lot about myself as a child to my own parents. This is especially true regarding my mother, with whom I shared a life-long relationship riddled with mutual disappointment, judgment, and resentment. Despite my unsuccessful attempt to achieve closure with her when she was dying, it wasn’t until the roles had flipped with my own children that I was able to release the hurt and anger I carried toward my mother, replacing them with compassion, forgiveness, and love.

Illumineering Coaching & Psychotherapy

Illumineering Coaching & Psychotherapy

Illumineering Coaching and Psychotherapy (via Skype or Zoom)

This is a challenging time for everyone. If you or someone you know needs support, please reach out. For those facing financial challenges, I’m offering a sliding scale and fee assistance. Services are for individuals, couples, adult family members, executives, and entrepreneurs. To read more information about my services on Psychology Today, click here. To visit my web site, click here.

Crisis = Opportunity

Crisis = Opportunity

Today I’ve been reflecting on how, as in nearly all crises, there are opportunities inherent in the current global and massive pattern break from life as we knew it. We can experience deeper compassion for ourselves and each other, strengthen our individual and collective resiliency, re-evaluate priorities and lifestyle, live more mindfully, simplify daily life, define who we want to be as a nation and world, and enable our precious Mother Earth to catch her breath.

Breaking the Anger Addiction

Breaking the Anger Addiction

Anger is a normal and very human emotion. But few people have been taught how to effectively express and manage anger. Instead we learn how to deal with anger by our parents’ role modeling, and by how our parents reacted to our own anger growing up. We may have been taught to rationalize our anger away, blame or verbally attack the person who’s made us angry, or withdraw and avoid the other person—and our anger—altogether.

Upcoming Events

Upcoming Events

Manage Your Emotions So They Don’t Manage You 3/18/20, 7pm-8:15pm - Whether your emotional “addiction” is to anger, depression, fear, insecurity, or some other emotional pattern, renowned coach and bestselling author of Solemate: Master the Art of Aloneness & Transform Your Life, Lauren Mackler, will help you better understand the chronic emotions limiting your life, and how to transform them to ones that create a more joyful inner and outer environment.

Upcoming Events

Upcoming Events

Boundaries: A Key to Healthy Relationships, 2/19/20, 7pm-8:15pm - THE OPTIMAL LIVING SERIES is a monthly event every 3rd Wednesday, 7pm-8:15pm in Natick, MA. Lauren Mackler and other guest experts share practical tools to enhance your personal life, health, relationships, and career, followed by discussion and networking (each month has a different topic). For people 20s to 80s who aspire to optimal living. Event topic for 2/19/20: Boundaries: A Key to Healthy Relationships.

Be Your Own Valentine!

Be Your Own Valentine!

Valentine’s Day is, for many singles, a holiday to dread instead of one to celebrate. I experienced my own loneliness on more than one Valentine’s Day. Then, many years ago, I had a revelation. I could be my own Valentine!

I know, being your own Valentine might sound like a desperate attempt to soothe the sting of single life. I thought so, too—until I actually experienced it. The first year of becoming my own Valentine, I organized a dinner at a nice restaurant for a group of single men and women. On the invitation, I wrote a request: “buy, have gift-wrapped, and bring to dinner a gift for yourself in recognition of the magnificent person you are.” 

It was one of my favorite Valentine’s Day celebrations! We took turns opening our gifts and sharing what we admired about ourselves. Some people were moved to tears, as they realized how hard they usually were on themselves.

Recipe for Optimal Living

Recipe for Optimal Living

Eat Your Chocolate! - Valentine’s Day is nearly here and I have some great news: eating dark chocolate on a regular basis may help reduce your likelihood of developing heart disease. Some of the compounds in dark chocolate, called flavanols, affect two major risk factors for heart disease: high cholesterol and blood pressure. Dark chocolate may also help reduce body inflammation, which is part of the body's natural immune response to germs and other harmful elements. However, chronic inflammation can damage tissues and cells, and can even increase the risk of some health conditions, including arthritis, type two diabetes, and some types of cancer.

Upcoming Events

Upcoming Events

SOLEMATE: MASTERING THE ART OF ALONENESS

2/1/20 Introductory Sampler - 3/28/20  9am-6pm One-Day Intensive Workshop 

Many people wait for a soul mate to complete them, or settle for unfulfilling relationships out of fear of being alone. In this life-changing, day-long workshop, renowned coach, CNN commentator, bestselling author of “Solemate” and co-author of “Speaking of Success” with Stephen Covey and Jack Canfield, Lauren Mackler, presents her groundbreaking roadmap to achieve mastery of your life, and greater wholeness alone or in relationship. In Natick, MA. Participant number is limited and your spot is confirmed only upon advanced payment of tuition. For those interested in this workshop, a mini sampler is 2/1/20 in Cambridge, MA. 

Recipe for Optimal Living

Recipe for Optimal Living

Schedule Some “Me” Time - Open your planner and book a date with yourself. Carving out time for yourself is not selfish. It’s impossible to have good relationships with others if you don’t have a good relationship with yourself. After work or on the weekend spend time doing a hobby you enjoy or taking a walk in nature. Reflect on your goals, assess your needs, or do something that makes you feel good. Spend Friday night in your favorite PJ’s with a good movie. Scheduling “me” time is an important part of maintaining healthy physical and mental balance. Making it part of your weekly schedule is a great way to bring self-nurturance and self-care into your life on an on-going basis.