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Home » goals / goal setting » Page 2

How to Get a Good Night’s Sleep and Why You Really Need It

Girl sleeping on feathers

When I was a kid, I did not really understand the importance of sleep. For years, I considered sleep a waste of time. I wanted to do so many things that I did not sleep much. My oldest daughter, Eden, never slept much either. She is 27 now and although she understands the importance of sleep in her mind, she sleeps very little.

It took me a long time to understand that we need to sleep because our body uses this time to rejuvenate, clear out toxins and recharge our batteries. Over the years, I also learned that the hours of sleep is not the only important thing. More important is who you are taking to bed with you every night and what happens in the minutes before you fall asleep.

I am sure you have heard the importance of starting the day on the right foot many times. Whatever happens in the morning will determine the rest of the day. Your day can be calm, organized, happy and cheerful, or angry, rushed, stressed, chaotic, sad and grumpy, depending on how you get out of bed.

Well, same thing happens when you get into bed, when you prepare for another big part of your every day – sleep. We spend a third of our life sleeping. If you live to be 90 years old, you will have slept 30 years of it. So you might as well make sure you get the most of this time.

Read How to Get a Good Night’s Sleep and Why You Really Need It »

Published: August 2, 2016 by Ronit Baras
Last modified: August 14, 2023In: Personal Development, Health / Wellbeing Tags: relaxation, sleep, imagination, tips, health / wellbeing, personal development / personal growth / personality development / self improvement, creative / creativity, gratitude, goals / goal setting, how to, happiness

Everyday Resolution: How to Rub Your Genie the Right Way

The Genie of the Lamp can grant your everyday resolutions

As a life coach , I believe in new-year resolutions and having targets for the new year. People often create resolutions on their birthday or on New Year’s Eve. The difference between that and being a life coach is that I believe every day is an opportunity to set new year’s resolutions. Every day is a new opportunity to want more, to ask more, to be more, to have more, to love more and enjoy life more, to tune ourselves for more happiness and joy. Happiness is never ending. Every day, when we get up in the morning, we can start fresh. Every day can be the start of a new year. That’s why it’s better to create “everyday resolutions”.

Many of my clients ask me how come some people’s New Year resolutions seem to fall flat, while others seem to be very successful at making their resolutions come true. This question always makes me think of the genie who grants wishes. Some people know how to rub the lamp the right way and other don’t.

Golden lamp with vapour escaping from the spoutI didn’t always know how to rub the lamp right. I remember myself on my birthday, every year, making lists of what I wanted the next year to be like. For many years, nothing happened. At the age of 16, I learned that I had been rubbing the lamp the wrong way and that my genie wanted to be rubbed differently. From that point on, I suddenly felt kind of lucky. Things seemed to flow. I felt happy, successful and protected, as if my genie would take care of me, as long as I took care of him, the right way.

Everyone has a genie that sits in their subconscious and waits for instructions. If you speak his language, he will lead you to where you want go. If not, he will steer you in the opposite direction to your dreams.

Read Everyday Resolution: How to Rub Your Genie the Right Way »

Published: July 30, 2015 by Ronit Baras
Last modified: December 26, 2019In: Personal Development, Life Coaching Tags: tips, personal development / personal growth / personality development / self improvement, birthdays, focus, list, skills, goals / goal setting, success, how to, action, change, happiness, Life Coaching

The Stress Pill: Seeing Shadows of Lions

Pill with a smiley face on it

I have written a lot about happiness over the years. I think happiness (in all its variations) is what everyone wants in life. For example, researchers found that parents name happiness as the ultimate goal of their parenting role. Happy parents = happy parenting = happy kids.

Happiness is not only the goal of parenting, it is also a most basic human goal. We are here to be happy, to find happiness and to enjoy it. We want to be happy with our relationships, with our families, at work, with our health, with money. We want to be happy with our friends and hobbies, with our achievements, with our homes. We want to be happy with what we have and we also want to be happy about some things we don’t have. For example, if I don’t have sick kids, that makes me externally happy.

One small thing that gets taken away from us helps us feel happy about what we have in our lives. For example, it’s only when you get a muscle cramp from lifting too much that you learn to appreciate the simple ability to raise your hand to the steering wheel or to take off your shirt. That is basic human nature, to define happiness by comparing it to unhappy times.

The most common obstacle to happiness is stress. In reality, stress is fear. It is fear that manifests in tensions that drive us into primal behavior (fight or flight). In the old days, it was what made us freeze in the face of a lion. While in the past, it was very obvious that lions, snakes and other scary animals were the enemy, today, the enemy is inside of us. We get anxious and stressed just thinking about a possible scary future.

Read The Stress Pill: Seeing Shadows of Lions »

Published: April 7, 2015 by Ronit Baras
Last modified: December 25, 2019In: Personal Development Tags: emotional intelligence, anxiety, how to, fear, happiness, Life Coaching, stress / pressure, personal development / personal growth / personality development / self improvement, feeling, goals / goal setting

Family Matters Wishes You Happy Holidays and a Happy 2015

Be Happy family wishing you happy holidays

The end of the year is fast approaching. It has been another full year and it looks like it is going to end with some great changes for us. My family and I are going on a fantastic holiday just before Eden, my eldest, moves in with her fiancé and begins preparations for their wedding in 2015.

As at the end of every year, I am writing a summary of our adventures for the year. Here is my summary for 2014.

2014 has been a very full and active year for the Be Happy in LIFE family. Our children have enjoyed a great year and we had lots of opportunities for “pride therapy”.

Read Family Matters Wishes You Happy Holidays and a Happy 2015 »

Published: December 4, 2014 by Ronit Baras
Last modified: March 19, 2021In: Success / Wealth, Personal Development Tags: books, holidays, change, happiness, motivation, family matters, personal development / personal growth / personality development / self improvement, list, goals / goal setting, success

Goal Setting and Long Life

Set a goal

I was officially introduced to goal setting for the first time in my life when I was 18. I was doing a course at university, and goal setting was a very small component in it. I never realized how significantly it would impact the rest of my life.

Research published in Psychological Science says that setting goals, at any age, can add years to your life. I like to think of it in the opposite way as well: goals add life to your years. The study followed 6,000 people aged 20 to 75 for 14 years. The researchers where looking at three components:

1. If participants were goal oriented
2. If participants had more positive or negative relationships
3. If participants had more positive or negative feelings

Throughout the study, 569 participants died (about 9%). The researchers found that those who still lived had more goals and better relationships than those who died. The most surprising thing about the study was that it found that this was true for young participants as much as the elderly. Having goals led to better outcomes. Goals were an advantage for people who worked as well as for those who were retired. So goals get added to the formula for long life.

Read Goal Setting and Long Life »

Published: August 14, 2014 by Ronit Baras
Last modified: August 14, 2014In: Personal Development, Life Coaching, Parenting Tags: Life Coaching, hope, academic performance, kids / children, personal development / personal growth / personality development / self improvement, focus, feeling, success, emotional development, how to, practical parenting / parents, failure, goals / goal setting, research, empowerment

The Adler Philosophy: Empwering Parents

Alfred Adler Philosophy: The only normal people are the ones you don't know very well

Alfred Adler (1870-1937), was a philosopher and psychiatrist who believed that humans have two basic needs: to belong and to feel significant. In the early 1900’s, he started looking into parenting quality and the importance of parent education. To empower parents, he developed The Adler Philosophy.

Adler developed a theory that was holistic at its core. He believed that when we are encouraged, we feel capable and appreciated. This contributes to a feeling of connectedness and we are more likely to be cooperative. When we are discouraged, we withdraw, give up and feel depressed.

Adler’s philosophy was very much relevant to parenting because he believed that our lifelong coping strategies depend on how connected we were to our parents and how significant we felt in our family. Based on Adler’s theory, every person is an individual who was created in early childhood, by his or her early life experiences, which are made up of his or her relationships within the family. Adler thought that a misbehaving child is a discouraged child. Instead of trying to put pressure on the child to change their undesired behavior, you should help them feel valued, competent and special.

Read The Adler Philosophy: Empwering Parents »

Published: April 17, 2014 by Ronit Baras
Last modified: September 22, 2025In: Parenting Tags: practical parenting / parents, early childhood, environment, goals / goal setting, school, needs, values, attitude, men, kids / children, art, acceptance / judgment / tolerance, success, behavior / discipline, emotional intelligence, personal development / personal growth / personality development / self improvement, depression, emotions, empowerment, feeling, change, emotional development, focus, conflict

Start Your Happiness Journey

Happiness sign on the beach

My dad always said that the process of anything in life depends highly on how your start it. A good start will set us up for a nice and easy process, while challenging starts will set the tone for struggle. I think happiness is a lifelong quest. I chose to adopt my dad’s philosophy and tried to instill this belief in my children.

Here are my A to Z rules for having good starts and continuing the happiness journey. I hope you will find them successful and encouraging.

Act on your goals rather than waiting for things to happen to you. If you want to start feeling happy, make it happen. Act on it. Waiting for that “one day” when your life will be they way you want it to be will only reinforce the fact that you are far away from it. Moving slowly, by taking action, towards your goal, will make you feel like you are just that tiny bit closer.

Read Start Your Happiness Journey »

Published: March 13, 2014 by Ronit Baras
Last modified: December 25, 2019In: Personal Development Tags: happiness, motivation, hope, positive, tips, success, personal development / personal growth / personality development / self improvement, emotional intelligence, list, negative, failure, goals / goal setting, action, change

How to Test Your Stress

Man relaxing in a beach chair

Stress is the new era’s worst disease. It is estimated that over 90% of all illnesses are caused or worsened by stress. In the future, you may find yourself dedicating most of your energy to overcoming stress. Stress management is a lifelong journey and everything little thing you do can help.

There are many ways to test your stress level. I personally like rating it on a scale of 1 to 10. For any of my coaching clients, I recommend a stress review every three month to make. This helps them make sure they are progressing (or at least helps them find out if their situation is getting worse). The issue with stress is that you start noticing it when it gets out of control. Regular monitoring when things are going well can be critical. It allows you to find a benchmark that you can compare to. If things go a little sour, you can do something straight away before you find yourself in a mental health ward with a nervous breakdown.

Read How to Test Your Stress »

Published: February 27, 2014 by Ronit Baras
Last modified: December 25, 2019In: Personal Development, Health / Wellbeing Tags: stress / pressure, focus, personal development / personal growth / personality development / self improvement, money, goals / goal setting, emotional intelligence, change, happiness, relaxation, sleep, positive, tips

How to Be a Great Teacher (A to K)

Love teaching written on a board

As teachers, our teaching ability is an art form that we keep developing throughout our careers. One of the best parts of any professional development courses I run for teachers, is the discussion about our philosophy and tips we can share with others about teaching. Establishing a good teaching philosophy and adopting useful tips from experienced teachers are essential tools for effective teaching.

Here is a guide that has informed my teaching over the years. I hope the teachers reading this blog will find it useful.

Affirmations are very important in education. Things you repeat over and over again become the thoughts and beliefs of your students. Make sure to plant good affirmations in their minds, ones that they will be able to use long after you are not there. “I can do it!” for example, is a great affirmation that will benefit them more in life than an A in math. Watch what you are repeating.

Read How to Be a Great Teacher (A to K) »

Published: January 30, 2014 by Ronit Baras
Last modified: December 25, 2019In: Personal Development, Education / Learning Tags: success experience, responsibility, k-12 education, skills, career, success, kids / children, how to, personal development / personal growth / personality development / self improvement, role model, education / learning, beliefs, expectation, purpose, emotional development, motivation, teaching / teachers, work life balance, focus, determination, goals / goal setting, school

Self Regulation: Research

Overwhelmed emoticon

In my last post I wrote about the difference between parents who try to control their kids and those who are self controlled. It all depends on the “self regulation muscle”, which has three levels of strength: weak, medium and strong.

This week, I would like to share some research on self regulation that might help you on your parenting adventure. It may even help prevent conflict and disagreement in your other relationships.

Remember, it is called “self” regulation for a reason. It is not something you can do to someone else. You have to do it for yourself. This is what most parents do not understand. They try to enforce regulations, but they are an external force so it does not work as well.

Read Self Regulation: Research »

Published: October 28, 2013 by Ronit Baras
Last modified: December 25, 2019In: Personal Development, Parenting Tags: role model, kids / children, choice, personal development / personal growth / personality development / self improvement, research, planning, empowerment, emotional development, control, practical parenting / parents, relationships / marriage, conflict, goals / goal setting, time management, positive attitude tips, attitude, focus, imagination

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