Thursday, April 30, 2015

Right Expectations Inspire Greatness

I must admit I love to teach.  Maybe it was my mother’s influence watching her each morning prepare for her kindergarten classes, or having some really good elementary school teachers that even though I had learning issues, kept me believing I would/could “learn how to learn”.  When I think back now on how many years I struggled as a student, but kept trying, I realize the importance of the life-energizing role a good teacher, coach, or mentor plays.  Yesterday, at the AHA meeting someone asks me, “What has been your biggest challenge in wellness?”  I have been asked this many times, and my answer, “Teaching senior management, middle-managers, and well professionals to set the right expectations for their “big p” and “little p” programs.  Wellness exponentially grows in organizations, teams, and individuals when the right expectations are set and met.  Right expectations inspire greatness!

Wednesday, April 29, 2015

Worksite Wellness Value of Investment

As the new breed of worksite wellness programs continue to better integrate within company cultures their value to the bottom-line is so much more than the classic ROI expectations.  Senior and middle managers of these programs have added VOI or value of investment to their arsenal of evaluation tools.  ROI would be included in a VOI dashboard, but the VOI dashboard goes way beyond just equating dollars invested to the return on investment.  VOI converts the benefits of being “well” into benefits that move companies from “good to great”, and individuals to “being the best they can be”.  At MD Anderson, tailored programs for diabetics translate into individuals that have the energy to be the best they can be at work, and still have the energy to have a life after work.  VOI looks way beyond the money and into the soul or cultural variables that make a company great.  Has your company moved beyond ROI?  Why not?

Tuesday, April 28, 2015

Escape

Escape.  Some days we just want to escape for just a little while, lose the shadow that some days bring.  Yesterday, I had one of those days.  A car hit my outside cat Precious, and I cried hard as I wrapped him in one of my favorite soft t-shirts the color of his eyes, and buried him in our garden.  This morning, we talked through my tears, as I watered the wild rose bush I planted over his grave.  He loved to scratch his nose on my beard, as he sat on my chest, and purred as I gently rubbed his ears.  Yesterday was one of those days when I experienced the fragility of my life in its fullness, a fullness that this morning I celebrated with gratitude for the time I’d been given with Precious.  Whole person living is about opening your heart to the full experience of each moment – try it!  

Monday, April 27, 2015

Letting Be & Letting Go

Last week in Wichita, I spoke at the LeadingAge Kansas conference.  My cousin Peggy and her husband Tom live in Wichita, so we also celebrated a mini family reunion.  Tom and I both have active cancers treated at MD Anderson and each night Tom and I would walk and talk about life.  The first evening we walked under a blue ocean sky, silhouetted trees, and a perfectly placed rising first quarter moon and Venus.  I so wanted to say, "Toto, I've a feeling we're not in Kansas anymore."  For lately, I’ve realized how important “letting be” and “letting go” are in life.  Trusting and accepting what is and being mindful of the precious moments we share, softens our hearts.  Today, spend time with someone special and “let be and let go”.  Thanks Tom!

Friday, April 24, 2015

Episodic Memories

I slowly shift my weight again to stop the leg cramps caused by two days of walking to set up a DZ and too much lying in the bush and waiting.  But I can’t  move, and realize I am not on the DZ, but several years have passed and I am in the hospital with a broken back living past life moments through morphine drip dreams.  Feeling an inside smile I slowly wake shift my weight, and remember how lately, early morning leg cramps have been one of the side effects of my new cancer drugs and I’m 67 not 27.  Forty-five years of episodic memories jumbled together around leg cramps and living.  Life events, growth opportunities, and life choices have molded me into who I’ve become.  I close my eyes and I’m back on the DZ energized and waiting, my leg cramps are gone and first light brings the roar of planes.  

Thursday, April 23, 2015

Happiness by Life Design

Yesterday was one of my cancer care days.  At 1pm, I arrived for my blood draw at the seventh floor lab, and noticed him waiting with his wife.  They would lean into each other, smile and laugh, as she caressed his arm with her hand.  When I came back at for my 3pm appointment with my cancer care team, he was in the same spot, but with another friend, and still smiling and laughing.  Psychologists tell us that the single biggest determinant of our happiness is how we treat ourselves and how those closest to us – treat us.  Keep people in your life that truly love you, motivate you, encourage you, inspire you, enhance you, and bring happiness into your life.  

Monday, April 20, 2015

First Light Connections

Mornings, there is something special about the way mornings unfold that make me crave first light moments.  For the past few days I’ve been in Ohio staying with a friend who lives on a small lake.  My last morning the lake was covered with a thin blanket of fog as first light stretched across the horizon.  I’d taught at Lourdes University, and the last night met with a local support group of cancer caregivers and survivors.  We talked about our cancer journeys, and I told how daily wellness practices fuel the resiliency that ripples through my life energy nurturing my soul.  Joel Bennett, in his book Raw Coping Power, talks about our ability to thrive through our inner connections with ourselves, and our outer connections with support communities.  What I felt around the table that night was empathy, compassion, commitment, and love.  It stretched across the table like first light, a beacon of hope.  Today, be mindful of your inner and outer connections.