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Home » positive » Page 10

The Art of Misery (Advanced)

Two years ago, I wrote about choosing to be miserable in the The Art of Misery. It is amazing how many people in the world qualify for the Certificate of Misery and have mastered this art. For some strange reason, it is easier to master misery than happiness. I do not know exactly why that is, but for most people, the definition of happiness is so hard to achieve they can never be happy. Even when they have a happy moment, it does not last long enough to get them to the next happy moment.

In The Art of Misery, I gave 10 lessons in misery with clear instructions on how to pass each test and gradually move on to the next level. Although I wrote that only those who completed the program would be entitled to the certificate, I have discovered it is enough for people to master some of the lessons to declare themselves eligible.

In the last two years, I have had many requests to extend the misery course and I believe the time has finally come. After two years of practicing and holding your misery certificate, you are ready for the next level. Today, in the second part of the Misery Mastery “training program”, I will improve, refine and help you upgrade your skills. I will add 10 more things you can do if being just miserable is not enough and you really, really want to be extremely miserable.

This post is part 2 of 2 in the series The Art of Misery

Read The Art of Misery (Advanced) »

Published: April 12, 2010 by Ronit Baras
Last modified: October 6, 2021In: Personal Development Tags: beliefs, self confidence / self esteem / self worth, happiness, personal development / personal growth / personality development / self improvement, motivation, goals / goal setting, relationships / marriage, focus, dreams, values, lifestyle, success, relaxation, emotional intelligence, positive, how to, fear, stress / pressure, negative, acceptance / judgment / tolerance

May "I Can’t" Rest in Peace

This week, I got phone calls from two teachers who had been through my life coaching and professional development programs, where I told them a story about another teacher. Each of them told me, “Ronit, I did it! The whole funeral, it was fantastic!”

After the first call, I was very happy, but since I am not a strong believer in coincidence, I said to myself that the universe was trying to tell me something after the second call. Translating from “universe” language to “Ronit” language, this meant I needed to write about that funeral – one of the most wonderful funerals everyone should take part in.

Read May "I Can’t" Rest in Peace »

Published: March 8, 2010 by Ronit Baras
Last modified: November 29, 2022In: Parenting, Personal Development Tags: self confidence / self esteem / self worth, personal development / personal growth / personality development / self improvement, inspiration, practical parenting / parents, success, emotional intelligence, choice, negative, change, motivation, optimism, positive

How to break bad beliefs with doubt

Muslim Baby

A year ago, I became the Queensland state coordinator for Together for Humanity Foundation. The foundation works in schools with grade 4 to 12 kids to fight racism and inspire cultural openness. It turns out that, out of 50,000 kids in Australia who have participated in the program, over 90% have had racist attitudes towards other cultures.

It may be hard for you to accept, but most kids are racist because they live in a racist society, in which stereotyping is a survival mechanism. It is not surprising to read their surveys and discover they think “Muslims are scary” and “Asians sell drugs”, mainly because they are exposed to this type of information at home or in the media.

Whenever I ask the kids, “Have you ever personally met a scary Muslim or seen an Asian selling drugs?” their answer is “No”.

Read How to break bad beliefs with doubt »

Published: January 18, 2010 by Ronit Baras
Last modified: November 24, 2022In: Parenting Tags: emotional intelligence, how to, negative, beliefs, change, society, k-12 education, positive, acceptance / judgment / tolerance, focus, practical parenting / parents, projection

Make a list: Good Parenting Qualities

Every one of my parent coaching clients needs one important component of parenting – an appreciation of his or her qualities as a parent. They know very well what does not work and where they fall short, but cannot see what they already have that makes them good parents already.

If you think about it, realizing what they have is a problem for most people, but these qualities are the ingredients kids are made of.

My mom was a chef. She was a simple woman with limited academic education but with a lot of wisdom from years of working in big kitchens and making food for thousands of people.

She taught me it is impossible to go to the market with a list. You never know what the weekly specials are. “You do the best with what you have”, she told me. My mom has made an art out of it. If she went to the market and found a fruit of vegetable for next to nothing, she would buy a whole box of it (there were 7 people in our house). She was very proud of herself for making many different dishes with it and freezing some for a season when that fruit or vegetable was not available.

Parenting is the same – you do the best you can with what you have and when I say “what you have”, I mean the mix of who you are, who your kids are and what your circumstances are. In the Be Happy in LIFE parent coaching program, the parents’ skills, abilities and character traits are the basic ingredients for raising wonderful, happy kids.

This post is part 24 of 49 in the series Make a List

Read Make a list: Good Parenting Qualities »

Published: October 23, 2009 by Ronit Baras
Last modified: December 24, 2019In: Personal Development, Parenting Tags: beliefs, parent coaching, positive, acceptance / judgment / tolerance, self confidence / self esteem / self worth, personal development / personal growth / personality development / self improvement, focus, practical parenting / parents, emotional intelligence, how to, negative

Feelings are Things

Woman feeling hurt

As a partner, a parent and a person, it is likely you find yourself in familiar situations, feeling the same familiar feeling and wondering how you got there. It may be as you walk in the door after a long day at work. It may be when some misunderstanding with your partner or your (teenage) child quickly escalates to an unpleasant exchange of verbal blows. It may just be when you look in the mirror.

All negative feelings are some form of fear and that fear is a defensive feeling aimed at protecting our self from being hurt. Some part of us recognizes certain words or behaviors as a form of attack raises the alert by creating this protective feeling.

The thing is, the “attack” pattern may have been saved in our mind when we were little and certainly in a particular context, both of which are longer in effect. However, our reaction is a subconscious one, which means there is no time for logic, but also that to get rid of this type of reaction we must “talk” directly with our subconscious (this is called Neurolinguistic Programming or NLP).

Read Feelings are Things »

Published: September 30, 2009 by Gal Baras
Last modified: March 18, 2021In: Personal Development Tags: imagination, emotional intelligence, stress / pressure, how to, personal development / personal growth / personality development / self improvement, fear, practical parenting / parents, negative, beliefs, change, happiness, neurolinguistic programmiing / NLP, relaxation, positive

Popularity Counts

Though many parents tell their teens that popularity is not the only thing that matters, not wanting them to compromise more important things in life to fit in and be subject to peer pressure, I think in a way they are deceiving themselves.

If popularity is not that important to us as parents,
where did our teens get this idea?

Grownups compromise a lot to gain popularity at home, at work and among their friends and family. Most extended family struggles runs around popularity. Siblings fight to be the most popular kids and the most popular grandchildren. When a couple divorces, there is an immediate struggle for being the most popular parent and most couples, unfortunately, compromise many of their values and much of the wellbeing of their precious kids just to gain imaginary popularity over their partners. Whether you like to admit it or not, you compromise a lot and are subject to social pressure yourself.

I think popularity counts, not because I think it should, but because it just does.

Read Popularity Counts »

Published: September 29, 2009 by Ronit Baras
Last modified: December 24, 2019In: Parenting, Teens / Teenagers Tags: choice, negative, safety, beliefs, motivation, lifestyle, focus, academic performance, success, positive, emotional intelligence, kids / children, how to, behavior / discipline, role model, practical parenting / parents

Make a list: Mistakes (and what I can learn from them)

If you are familiar with my writing in over 500 posts already, you know I do not use the word “mistake” often, because I think it has a negative connotation for most people. Personally, I do not think we make mistakes. We do the best we can and only think of our actions as mistakes when we realize they did not get us the results we expected.

We always do the best we can, because as humans, we do not have the capacity to do anything else. Can you imagine yourself looking around for options and saying to yourself, “This is the most horrible option I have, so let me choose it”?

I did not think so!

Before you continue with this activity, remember it is not meant for you to find out ways to beat yourself up for things you have done wrong. Kicking yourself hurts and it is not very productive. You can do much better feeling good about yourself.

This post is part 20 of 49 in the series Make a List

Read Make a list: Mistakes (and what I can learn from them) »

Published: September 25, 2009 by Ronit Baras
Last modified: December 24, 2019In: Personal Development Tags: emotional intelligence, behavior / discipline, how to, personal development / personal growth / personality development / self improvement, choice, education / learning, negative, beliefs, change, happiness, motivation, positive, focus, success, acceptance / judgment / tolerance

Get in Trouble

I do not know if this phrase is used a lot where you live, but in several places where we have lived, kids often say they are afraid to “get in trouble”. They typically use this expression in relation to their teacher, principal or some other adult who is responsible for them.

For example, we are on our way to school and Tsoof remembers he has forgotten part of his rehearsal uniform or some school play accessory. He stresses over it in the car and says, “[Word snipped]! Now I’m going to get in trouble”.

Embarrassing as this may be, I find this type of statement very annoying and frustrating. To me, doing (or not doing) something to avoid “getting in trouble” reflects negative external motivation. Not just negative, not just external, both!

And this is precisely the opposite of how I want my kids to be motivated, which means that some other adult in my kids’ life has managed to ruin my hard work (OK, Ronit helps too) and cause my little darlings to be motivated by some external threat. How dare they?!

Read Get in Trouble »

Published: September 16, 2009 by Gal Baras
Last modified: December 24, 2019In: Parenting Tags: motivation, k-12 education, focus, positive, projection, kids / children, school, teens / teenagers, responsibility, stress / pressure, emotional intelligence, self confidence / self esteem / self worth, how to, practical parenting / parents, fear, negative, beliefs

Make a list: Ways to be kind

In 1991, Allan Luks (former executive director of The Institute for the Advancement of Health and executive director of the Big Brothers and Big Sisters program in New York City) documented a study about kindness in a book called “The healing power of doing good: The health and spiritual benefits of helping others”.

In a survey he conducted among 3,000 people of all ages from 20 organizations around the USA, he found clearly that “Helping contributes to the maintenance of good health and it can diminish the effect of diseases and disorders both serious and minor, psychological and physical”. So there you have it – if you want to be happy and healthy, help others!

In his research, Luks found that helping others and being kind resulted in a sharp reduction of stress and increased the release of endorphins (the body’s natural feel-good drugs). Over 90% of participants in his research reported that regular volunteering lowered their stress level and contributed to their health and wellbeing.

This post is part 18 of 49 in the series Make a List

Read Make a list: Ways to be kind »

Published: September 11, 2009 by Ronit Baras
Last modified: December 24, 2019In: Personal Development Tags: happiness, relationships / marriage, social skills, community, lifestyle, focus, free hugs, projection, positive, emotional intelligence, how to, health / wellbeing, choice, friends / friendship, change, personal development / personal growth / personality development / self improvement

Make a list: Beliefs about Kids

I thought that as parents, making a list of thoughts and beliefs about kids is highly appropriate, because reading such a list can be a wonderful reflection on our parenting and a chance to do things even better.

In my parenting workshops, where parents get the tools to raise happy kids, we take stock of our beliefs to find empowering or limiting beliefs. It is amazing for people to discover how closely their beliefs about parenting or about kids match the challenges and the happy experiences in their life. Although we believe in things due to our life experiences, once we have those beliefs, they start to drive our experiences instead.

Buddha has said this beautifully, “All that we are is the result of what we have thought”. So if you are a confident parent, it is a result of what you have in your mind and if you are not confident in your parenting, you can be, just change your thoughts.

This post is part 15 of 49 in the series Make a List

Read Make a list: Beliefs about Kids »

Published: August 21, 2009 by Ronit Baras
Last modified: December 24, 2019In: Personal Development, Parenting Tags: projection, behavior / discipline, emotional intelligence, personal development / personal growth / personality development / self improvement, how to, practical parenting / parents, negative, beliefs, change, lifestyle, self-fulfilling prophecy, positive, kids / children, focus

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