5 Ways to Restore Kindness into Your Day

Kindness is a powerful tool in transforming your life and the lives of those around you. You may already be on the path of making significant progress in developing your positive mindset however, here are a few more suggestions. You are the change the world is looking for.

Here are five more ways to cultivate kindness in your life:

1. Practice empathy
You probably know that saying about walking a mile in the other person’s shoes, right? It’s true, empathy and kindness are two sides of the same coin. Remember, you can have no idea what challenges the other person is facing. They could be experiencing a joyful moment or have just received devastating news. They may be dealing with all kinds of personal struggles. And you being short-tempered or cutting in front of them might be the last straw they can bear.

2. Learn to listen
Sometimes just listening is the greatest gift you can give a person. If a friend or family member is going through a difficult time, they need to be heard. And you need to listen. You might be able to help, or you might not. To start with, they need to feel understood.

3. Nurture gratitude
So often we’re focused on achieving the next goal, always trying to stay ahead. And that can make you unavailable, or terse. It can keep you fixated on yourself instead of others. Try sitting back and looking around. Feel grateful for all that you have, and all you’ve accomplished — being grateful sets you up for a mindset of kindness. Instead of constantly craving more, you’ll want to share the love!

4. Cultivate kindness daily
Start every day by setting the intention to be kind. Consciously choosing kindness before you’ve even gotten out of bed gets you in the kindness zone and makes being kind easier. You know that habits take several weeks to ‘stick,’ right? Nurture a kindness habit now, and it will soon become just part of who you are and how you behave. Hardly any effort at all!

5. Be a role model
In a world where nastiness is common, and trolling people online is an everyday event, you can stand out by being a role model for kindness. The world is yearning for more kindness. Like positivity, kindness can be contagious. If you are consciously kind, you’ll likely set up a virtuous kindness circle – your acts and attitudes of kindness will inspire people around you to treat others more compassionately. You might even guide those who have been unkind into more considerate behavior.

5 Questions to Ask Yourself to Find Your Life’s Purpose

Some people seem to be born knowing what they want in life. They find their passions or their talents early and just know to go after them. If you’re struggling to work out what is you really want to do with your life, don’t give up.
 
There are some simple questions you can work through to discover your life’s purpose. While it’s important to give each question proper consideration, try not to agonize over your responses. Allow your spirit and your intuition to guide your answers, and don’t forget to think big! Make your starting point ‘in the best of all possible worlds.’
 
Use these questions to dig deep and find out more about yourself so you can set yourself on your true path.
 
Question 1 If Money Were No Object, What Would You Do?
If you had a never-ending magic source of money, how would you choose to spend it? Be honest – the answers are to help you, not to impress anyone else!
 
Question 2 If You Could Do Anything for A Whole Day, How Would You Spend it?
Think of your perfect day. It’s ok if it’s lying on a sun lounger by a pool or skiing in the Alps. Try and describe your ideal day in as much detail as possible.
 
Question 3 What’s Your Passion?
What energizes you? What gets your heart racing and your imagination firing? It could be political issues, connecting with people, being creative, or playing sports. Whatever your passion is, write it down!
 
Question 4 What Do You Really Love Doing?
What is something you do where you forget about eating? Do you like nothing more than to bake or learn new gourmet techniques? Maybe you love writing or analyzing or even making spreadsheets. Or being out in nature or helping other people.
 
Question 5 What Was Your Childhood Passion?
Think back to what you loved to do when you were a kid. What did your parents have to call you away from, to come to the dinner table? What was the thing you would lose hours doing?
 
Close your eyes and remember back when you were totally absorbed in some kind of activity, maybe drawing or playing make-believe games or drawing or being outdoors.
 
Once you have a good picture of what lights you up, both now and when you were a kid, you can start to see some themes emerging. Think laterally about how you can begin to focus on what’s important to you. Your life’s purpose is there in front of you.

The First Hour of Your Day – How to Start Each Day for More Productivity and Focus

What’s the first thing you do when you get started each morning? For many of us, it’s a rush to the phone to check email, which leads to immediately getting bogged down in routine and “have to do” tasks.

The problem with this is that the next thing you know, it’s lunch time and you don’t feel like you’ve gotten anything done. Each of us has our own morning routine and you should take some time to create your own so that it benefits you.

The first hour of your day is important as it sets the tone for everything that comes after. It’s a good time to deal with matters that most require our focused thinking and problem solving. Here are tips on how to make the best use of your first hour of the day.

Prayer and Meditation

Coffee is great for waking you up and helping you focus, but your spirit needs food. Schedule time to meet with God before you start your day. Suggestion, spend five minutes talking with God. The next ten minutes sit and listen to what God has to say.

Don’t Start with the Inbox

Far too many people start with their email inbox. Do you know how many messages you respond to per day? It could be well over a hundred. Your email inbox is a clutter of different conversations going on at the same time. Starting by tackling all this chatter is likely to make you feel drained by the time your first hour of work is over.

Of course, emails need your response. But rather than going through and splitting your focus and attention on whatever comes next, a better strategy is to glance at emails and decide what needs to be done fast. Then, tackle each issue by issue, when you’re dealing with that particular issue.

Look at the Big Picture

The first hour of your day is a good time for looking at the big picture before you get started on the fine details. Look at your calendar and think about what’s happening in the coming weeks or months. Review what’s most important and touch on your values and goals.

With the big picture in mind, it’s much easier to decide what needs to be done today and what should be done first.

Make a To Do List

If you really want to control your time for the day, create a to-do list with a time set for each item. Use a timer to stick to the times you set. Another way to manage your to-do list is to decide on a milestone for each task. You may have several projects going at the same time.

Choose a reasonable and productive stopping point for each so that you make sure you get the other things done.

Do Something Fun

You may want to start your day with something not at all work-related. For example, set aside 20 minutes to indulge in a hobby. This allows you to wake up and start the day in a good, relaxed mood. You may feel less harried than you would starting to work directly.

For the same reason, some people choose to start the day with some light exercise or a walk.

What Works for Your First Hour?

Try out a few different ideas for the first hour of your day and take notice of how it affects you. You might want to keep a journal or jot down some notes. Notice how your energy levels feel throughout the day and whether you have any stress. Once you find a morning routine that works to get you started and productive, put it into practice.

How to Help a Loved One Separate from an Addiction

Addictions are incredibly difficult to overcome. When a loved one is suffering from an addiction, it has a significant impact on those around them, including you.  Naturally, you don’t like to watch them suffer, and you’re searching for ways to help.

The fact is that loved ones are the best equipped to help because of their preexisting loving and trustworthy relationship.

Here is a list of tips to keep in mind when helping someone with addictions:

  1. Help Them Make Clearer Decisions. Someone in early recovery generally has cloudy thinking. If you sense concern from them, help them gather their thoughts by asking open-ended questions of who, what, where, when, and how (never why), and don’t forget to add in a suggestion as they might not have thought of that option yet. Make sure you do not talk down or judge them, encourage them on their choices, and affirm them in their independence.
  2. Love and Support is needed. Someone suffering from addiction is steeped in shame and guilt. They know what they are doing is not the way they want to live; they do not see a way out. Your love and Support may be the lifeline and hope they needed to make the sustaining change as much as you can encourage and affirm them in what they are doing and stay away from the word why, it provokes a fight or flight response.
  3. Help Them Through Cravings. Withdrawal has physical and mental cravings. The physical cravings can mimic the flu. Help them through this, and your bond will grow. The mental obsession of thinking about using can be intervened with good company as well as suggesting and participating in other things they can do besides using.
  4. Get Medical Help. Sometimes we need medical and behavioral health professionals to step in.  A professional may be necessary to address their psychological state, and in case of withdrawal, it can be life-threatening for them to detox themselves off of alcohol or benzodiazepines.
  5. Form an Intervention. The most loving thing you can do is to get the individual’s family support network together, come together in a unity of love to show an individual that they are there for them and that you love them and are willing to help them and no longer support them dying. For someone steeped in shame and guilt, this could be the moment that provides hope and courage to take the right step forward and gives them back their lives.
  6. Attend a Meeting. Develop a community. We are at our peak when we are in community with one another. There are open and closed meetings that you can attend that are geared toward those with an addiction or those who have a loved one suffering from an addiction. Open meetings are just that open to all. Closed meetings are for those that self-identify as having an addiction or knowing someone who has an addiction. Being together, we are stronger than being alone.
  7. Understand Withdrawal. It will help you to learn to identify signs of withdrawal and the reasons for them. There are symptoms of withdrawal that mimic the flu as well as difficulty sleeping. There are also withdrawal symptoms that center in the mind. These signs can come from anger outbursts and high irritability.  
  8. Avoid Boredom and Stress. Staying busy is great in early recovery. Having a plan of where you are going and what you are doing for the day or week is critical. Help your loved one with some basic routines for themselves to get to. The greatest road to help with boredom is in establishing routines. For example, getting up at the same time every day is one of the biggest game-changers in taking back control of their lives. Once up, keep moving! Participate in activities such as walking or doing push ups every hour will also help reduce stress. Come up with a list of go-to activities, dancing, reading, etc.. a body in positive motion will stay in that motion.

Remember that it’s important to make time for you. The negative impact physically, mentally, and spiritually on the health of the loved one of someone suffering from an addiction is easily understated.  You are expending a tremendous amount of energy to help your loved one, and you may not notice it.  We need to take care of ourselves because your love and support will help your loved one recover and lead a normal life. Just like following the directions of the flight attendant on an airplane, if the oxygen mask drops, make sure you put it on yourself first so that you can be helpful to those around you.

What is the best way to support a loved one with an addiction?

If you have a loved one struggling with addiction, you may be riding a rollercoaster of emotions–worry, fear, confusion and guilt. There may be shame as well. What happens if the neighbors or anyone else finds out? Consequently, you do everything you can, on your own, to help your loved one. If you are putting out fires daily, it’s difficult to think about or put in place a plan for a long-term solution, leading you to think there is no way out. The maddening thing about addiction is that no matter how much we love someone, sometimes our best intentions and best efforts may actually hurt their chances for recovery. We all need help and support in this struggle. A Step Out Of Darkness offers practical instructions on how to develop an action plan that holds your loved one accountable for their behaviors and guides them toward making the decision to enter a formal treatment program.
Once a loved one enters treatment, the most frequently asked question is, “What is the best way to support them?” This book offers practical advice on how to walk with someone through treatment and details common pitfalls awaiting a person in recovery and their families.

10% of all book sale profits will benefit The North Penn Boys and Girls Club and other local charities.

Now Available for Purchase

Simple suggestions and great tips!
“Very easy read, outlined everything step by step from what is an intervention, to what is a ‘level of care’, how to navigate insurance nightmares and advocate for loved ones. The book was to the point, Provided practical suggestions and contact information if you need more help. I’d recommend it to family and friends in need! Good resource.”

-Trish N.

Better Than a Self Help Book

“This book is truly an awesome read. It is totally comprehensive and includes an answer to every possible question someone might face in this situation. This is a very necessary book that is long overdo. It takes the reader from A to Z — where and what to do next. There is a lot of feeling from the author written behind each page.”

-Helene M.

Easy read with Love

“As a reader you can tell the author writes from his heart. This is an easy read and to the point. Recovery is not just for the addict but for all those who love the individual.”

-Janie S.