Blog
Intention: Statements of Action
In the river towards our vision, the journey will require many action steps. These steps arise from statements made in present time that will ultimately serve your vision.
Synchronicity: Where’s Your Attention?
Training our attention on the good takes practice and a few environmental adjustments. Refocus your attention to your vision, while you stay tuned into synchronistic clues.
Synchronicity; Hope, Faith, Trust
Think of all the successes your life has come to know, then follow the steps backwards to the beginning. Likely, you’ll find the path sprinkled with generous amounts of synchronicity.
Setting Intention
Get Clarity encourages clients to move forward with intention. We call this progressive movement a bridge plan. It merely means thinking ahead.
Intention: Life Is A Continuous Bridge Plan
Having a bridge plan means taking steps towards our vision. Bridges serve as ushers delivering us closer to our ultimate goal.
Intention: I Am.
Positive self talk allows an individual to invest in their vision, their dream. Play around with these sentence starters as a way to focus the investment in yourself.
Intention: Think Ahead vs. Worry Ahead
Ralph Waldo Emerson summed it up best, “We become what we think about all day long.” The more attention you give something, the more it grows.
You’re Magnetic!
With a keen sense of curiosity, it’s sometimes fun to take personal inventory of the energy fields surrounding us. Energy fields contain that flow or current of ideas from which we experience life.
Taking Up Space Part 3: Distant Energy Field
Of your three energy fields, busiest by far is the remote or distant field. It holds all the world’s activities and events, even those you’ve heard nothing about.
Taking Up Space Part 2: Near Energy Field
“My mom really wanted me to be a nurse,” Holly recalls, “but it just didn’t interest me.” Holly’s experience demonstrates how near energy fields function. “It felt like a struggle. Mom was insistent and felt the medical field was best. My whole senior year became a balancing act between subduing my mom, while figuring out what I really wanted to do.”