Wednesday, July 17, 2019

Friendship

"Well they sure became fast friends." Our neighbor gesturing to his two kiddos and our two girls where only a chain link fence separates them.
Anytime we go to the park and a kid shows kindness to Penny (including her in tag, letting her go down the slide first, saying "hi my name is...") she instantly tells me she made a new friend and hopes they're there the next time we come to the park.
We have multiple books on the subject of friends/friendship.
A lot of little kid tv shows focus around being a good friend.
So when and why do the fast friendships of childhood end?
What is the turning point where we start putting a criteria on people that we're going to allow into our inner circle?
Why do we form cliques and start excluding humans who are just as desperate for love and friendly affection as we are?

We all have our stories or theories of when and why friendships became more complicated.
"Positive adult friendships were never modeled well for me."
"I tried for years but I've been backstabbed/gossiped about/betrayed/left out/etc so I choose to distance myself."
"I'm scared they won't like the real me, so why bother."
"I'm always the one to pour into them, no one pours into me. It's time to focus on me."
It boils down to two factors : laziness and fear.
Relationships take work and take stepping out of our comfort zones.
So how can I be a great friend?
Awesome question! I'm so glad you asked!

Here is a quick tip to get you started, people are primarily interested in themselves.

Our actions are dominated by self-thought and self-interest.
So ask questions like :
"How is your family?"
"Did you enjoy your vacation?"
"Any fun plans for the weekend/upcoming holiday/season/etc?"
Other ways to show interest in conversation:
Applaud and compliment them.
Use their name as often as possible.
Use "you" and "your."
Admit when you're wrong.
Look at the person who is talking.
Lean toward them.
Don't interrupt.
Remember that a great friend is : loyal, understanding, trustworthy, sharing.
Someone who is genuinely happy for others when things go well and tries to cheer them up when things don't go well.
Start with these basics.
Use these tips week to engage with anyone you've been hoping to start a new friendship with.
Grow well, friends!
Nicole


"Friendship cannot be built on small talk alone. Yes, there is a time and a place for it, but it isn't the heart of true connection - genuine conversation is." 
Horchow


"Do not save your loving speeches
For your friends till they are dead;
Do not write them on their tombstones,
Speak them rather now instead."
Anna Cummins

"Wishing to be friends is quick work, but friendship is a slow-ripening fruit." 
Aristotle

“We need others physically, emotionally, intellectually; we need them if we are to know anything, even ourselves.” 
C.S. Lewis

“Friendship arises out of mere companionship when two or more companions discover that they have in common some insight or interest or even taste which the others do not share and which, till that moment, each believed to be his own unique treasure (or burden).” 
C.S. Lewis

"Blessed are they who have the gift of making friends, for it is one  of God's best gifts. It involves many things, but above all, the power of getting out of one's self and appreciating whatever is noble and loving in another." Thomas Hughes

"It's a fact of life, women need other women. Whether it's sharing dessert or lending a listening ear, a good girlfriend is indispensable. Chaos and stress seem much more bearable when shared with a friend. There are some things understood only by women." Unknown

“Share your story here...”

"Share your story here..." doesn't know what it's asking of me.
"Share your story here..." could be a quick blip about friendship or it could mean me pouring out my deepest thoughts.
When my friend Sara asked, "would you like to share your story?" I couldn't help but scream inside, "what I just shared with you is not my whole story!" Instead I said, "yes, I would love to share."
Each of us has a story, and a story within a story, and stories within those stories. The sum of all of these makes up our whole life.

The more I talk with people and I listen to their story, I have begun to realize that our story is never just our own. It’s intertwined with others. The moments of victory for one are the moments of defeat for another. Moments of freedom by telling a truth that’s been lied about for years for one is the moment of complete and utter destruction of their world as they knew it for another. A moment of shame for one is a moment of shame for another. And this is where I want to focus. Some of the things we go through are similar to what others go through and there is so much power in sharing so that others feel less alone in their own story.
I once read, "Think of the most attractive person you know. Even that person, at one point, has had raging diarrhea."
Let that serve as a reminder that you are never alone in anything you face!
Someone out there relates to you.
You won't have the same exact experience, but they can at least relate.
When you're trying to say "I relate to you" or "I get the struggle is real" just tell that person, I get it. I don't know your whole situation or what led you to the place you're in now, but I freaking get it. I've been through or am currently dealing with anxiety, depression, parenting 1 or more children, dark circles under your eyes that no filter can erase, the ups and downs of marriage, puberty, stretch marks, turning bright red, desperately wanting everyone to like you all the time and beating yourself up for knowing that is impossible, stunted emotional growth, tension between people, shame, financial crisis, drinking too much, sleeping too much, gossiping and wanting to stop, lack of motivation to work out, never wanting to mow the lawn again, asking myself how the *cussword* did my groceries just cost that much?!? And so on and so forth.
If you related to even one of those things, then you proved my point. And if you didn't relate to one of those things you are a liar...which I've also done once or twice in my life...so there..
You've been through puberty and if you haven't you definitely should never read one of my posts, ever.
You might be asking what the heck have I even just read?! And I’m going to take this opportunity to sum it all up.
SHARE YOUR STORY!!
You have bits and pieces that others need to hear so they don't feel so alone in their struggle.
I think misery loves company because gosh, it's so difficult to think you're the only one who's gone through x, y, and/or z, OR that no one has ever had a positive experience making it out of x, y, and/or z.
Knowing you're not alone can help you feel empowered to embrace it all even more!

SHARE YOUR STORY!!

Lovingly + with great urge,
Nicole

Seeking Reconciliation

In February of 2017 I decided to share some of my story that really (the use of 'really' is a massive understatement) hurt some family.
I apologized immediately - eager to move forward and seek healing together.
Unfortunately not all apologies are immediately accepted.
Or sometimes the apology is accepted but the work that goes into the healing is stunted.
It felt as though we were all traveling through life on a train and this new information caused one car (the one that held these family members) to derail, while the rest of the train continued moving on down the track.
For the following year there wasn't much communication past the first apologies I made. We had moved to a new state so face-to-face conversations were no longer possible. I mourned the loss of relationships as I continued to pour my heart out through text and email only to be met with what felt like rejection after rejection.
A year passed.
We moved back.
Reconciliation is still a desire, I’m just not sure how or when to continue approaching each person.
I read 'I Thought We’d Never Speak Again : the road from estrangement to reconciliation' by Laura Davis.
The rest of this post will be everything that stood out to me from that book.
•••••••••••
•Four possible outcomes in reconciliation :
1. Deep and transformative where both people experience closeness, satisfaction, and renewed growth in the relationship.
2. One person changes their frame of reference and expectations to open up whether or not the other person makes significant changes.
3. Much remains unresolved and ambivalent feelings persist, yet both agree to disagree and establish ground rules that enable a limited but cordial relationship.
4. No viable relationship is possible, so you find resolution within yourself.
•Reconciliation stories are works in progress. Within human relationships, nothing is ever final. We cannot be sure how things will end until both people are dead.
•The events you recount may be murky, but the feelings you both felt are real.
•Estrangements often start because we lack the communication skills to prevent them: we don’t know how to apologize, listen, or cool off and talk again tomorrow. Instead, a harsh word gets set in stone. Small slights are whipped up into unforgivable injuries. Jealousy festers. Misunderstandings are never discussed or resolved. An ultimatum, made in anger, comes due.
•People aren’t all bad, or all good. People may do monstrous things, but they can still have good qualities.
•In order to mature, we need the grounding life offers, the nourishment of people we love, and the wisdom only time and distance can provide. By cultivating the qualities that help us grow sweeter, rather than bitter, we can grow receptive to deep healing within ourselves and with the important people in our lives.
•When a relationship is damaged to the breaking point, it is natural to blame the other person. Most of the time, both parties contribute to the dynamics that end a relationship. While our role may not be apparent at first, with reflection and distance, we can usually recognize how our actions, lack of awareness, miscommunication, or insensitivity played a part in the relationship’s demise. As we dig beneath our defensive reactions and initial perceptions, new truths and perspectives often emerge.
•In clarifying how you want to respond to an estrangement, it is important to honestly asses your hopes, expectations, and reasons for seeking reconciliation. If you are seeking an apology that will never come, hoping for a personality change that would require a miracle, or trying to find a way out of facing irretrievable losses, your attempts at reconciliation will most likely lead to disappointment and further estrangement. Until you can approach an estranged relationship realistically, your hopes will probably be dashed again and again.
•What is the importance of this relationship in my life?
•Do I share enough history or common ground with this person to accept the difficult aspects of the relationship?
•Have I worked through my own pain and anger sufficiently to approach this relationship in a new way?
•Is there potential for this relationship to evolve into something new?
•Would the relationship be worth it to me even if it didn’t change?
•Can I be in this relationship and still feel good about myself?
•Do I have the time, energy, and resources necessary to rebuild this relationship?
•What result do I want from this interaction?
•What are the risks involved in confronting this particular situation at this time?
•If this goes badly, what is the worst thing that can happen?
•Do I have the inner resources to handle a disappointment if things turn out the way I want them to?
•Is this really the best time to do this?
•If I wait, might feelings or circumstances change?
•Reconciliation rarely occurs in one smooth upward spiral. There are breakthroughs, setbacks, moments of grace, and times of sheer grit and determination.
•Reconciliation is ongoing. You have to keep working at the relationships. You have to keep listening and being aware of the impact of your behavior.
•True listening is at the heart of reconciliation. Listening is the willingness to take in what another person is saying, even when it’s painful to hear. It is the acknowledgment of truth as it is, rather than as we wish it to be.
•Listening entails slowing down enough to discern the deep rhythms that resonate under the surface of what another human being is saying. It means stopping our mind long enough to take in another person’s truth, without judgment, defense, or rebuttal.
•Deep listening leads to an opening of doors. When our objective is to get to know another person, rather than to win, listening can lead to increased compassion, understanding, and kindness.
•Reconciliation requires both honesty and kindness. Kindness without honesty is not enough, and honesty without tempering if compassion, is not sufficient either. It is the marriage of the two that makes deep healing possible.
•When we accept another person’s inadequacies, compassion arises. Rather than see their weaknesses as something malicious directed at us, we begin to recognize them for what they are - human frailties.
•Sometimes just a little is enough. Cultivating a sense of gratitude can make it possible to appreciate, rather than resent, a limited relationship.
•When we honestly inventory our own intentions, actions, and motives, we sometimes realize that we behaved honorably and did the best we could under the circumstances. Other times, our self-assessment leads us to face painful faults. Sometimes the mistakes we made have less to do with what we did at the time of an estrangement and more to do with how we have responded since then.
•The words ‘reconciliation,’ ‘forgiveness,’ ‘compassion,’ and ‘acceptance’ are often used interchangeably, when in fact they are not at all synonyms.
•The perpetrator must show the five R’s : recognition, remorse, repentance, restitution, and reform.
•We live in a “feel-good” culture that encourages us to search for easy answers, speedy solutions, and the immediate cessation of pain. Because of this, in-depth healing from deep emotional wounds has fallen into disrepute. As a result, what passes as forgiveness is people flossing over their grief, anger, and pain, in an attempt to generate false sense of forgiving.
•The motivation to forgive prematurely often comes from a desire to avoid the pain of facing the harm that was done.
•Reestablishing trust after it has been broken is a gutsy, difficult challenge, and those who accomplish it are rewarded with a deeper sense of compassion, restored faith in human decency, and renewed bonds of love.
•••••••••••
I hope you found encouragement in your own process of reconciliation.

Grow + heal + love well,
Nicole

Let's Play 20 Questions!

Do you consider yourself a fantastic or awkward conversationalist?
I am definitely of the latter.
This is my biggest struggle in my head when it comes to talking with people : don't talk about myself too much, don't talk about other people because I don't want to be a gossip, don't be lame and talk about the weather, don't be too nosy, so what is there left to talk about?!?
If you find yourself in the same boat, try using one or two of these questions to get the conversation going.

1. What’s one of your earliest memories?
2. What’s the most trouble you’ve ever gotten in?
3. What is your relationship with your parents like?
4. What’s something you always wanted to do but haven’t ― and why haven’t you?
5. What was your hardest breakup like?
6. Growing up, what did you think you wanted to do for a living?
7. Who is the last person you said "thank you" to? What were you thanking them for?
8. Who are your role models?
9. What’s the best trip you’ve ever taken?
10. What's the worst way someone has hurt you?
11. What is your biggest frustration?
12. What is your favorite photo of yourself? Describe it, and explain why it's your favorite.
13. What do you want your funeral to be like?
14. What were some of your biggest struggles or insecurities in high school?
15. What would your perfect day be like? Describe it.
16. What advice would you give to your younger self in only 3 words?
17. Have you ever been fired from a job? If yes, why?
18. If you could say 'thank you' to one deceased person who would you choose and what would you thank them for?
19. Do you have quiet time every day? If so, what does that ritual look like? If not, why don't you give yourself at least five minutes of quiet time a day?
20. Do you agree that people are primarily interested in themselves and not in others? Why or why not?


What was your least favorite question on there? What question intrigued you the most?


Get curious - ask questions,
Nicole

Do You Feel Busy?

"How have you been lately?" An acquaintance asks in passing.
"Busy." Is the typical response.
You say it, I say it, we all say it! We are busy!

We jam pack our schedules with breakfast, lunch, dinner, exercise, work, play, scrolling through phones, catching our favorite shows, chatting with friends, checking in on parents, giving attention to spouses, kids, and animals. I mean, oofta! I was exhausted just typing some common 'time-fillers' out and that's leaving out tons of other things we all have going on day after day.

How was work? Busy!
How was your week? Busy!
How was your day? Busy!
How was...BUSY!

Busy : having a great deal to do, occupied, engaged, involved, immersed, engrossed.

It's common to feel "busy" is a negative.
"I have so much going on!"
"I don't have time to accomplish everything."
"I am constantly doing something."
As a response, everyone throws "solutions" around.

Quit saying yes to everything, carve out alone time, take a deep breath, focus on one thing at a time, declutter, become a minimalist, pay off debt, take one thing off your plate, cancel your tv subscription, give your friends + family firm boundaries on when you are available to chat, etc, etc, etc.
If you are sick of the busyness and tired of always feeling so drained, try those solutions listed above.

If none of them work, then try this...
Just be grateful for the busyness.

Having to go to work means you have a job! Having to talk with friends means you actually have friends! Giving attention to a spouse, kids, and/or animal means that you have someone to love and someone who loves you! Eating a meal means you are fueling your body.
Be thankful for all that you have, all that you are, and all that the future holds!

That's all, folks!

Wishing you health, wealth + joy,
Nicole

Consistency Is Key

Consistency is key!
You've heard it before. It's encouragement I've given you all on Instagram, it's what I read in every article about growing your blog, it's what I heard from every class I took on how to monetize your blog/social media/podcast/etc., and it's really true!
Your readers want consistency. 
They want to know when and how often they can expect to find your new blog post.
For me, that's Monday's.
For a while I had 8 posts sitting in purgatory just waiting to be released. A couple weeks ago I posted the last one. Last week I had a moment of panic as I realized it was Sunday and I had no content for the next day. I picked up a book hoping to share a concept from it and then ended up using a compilation of really great quotes from it instead. If you missed that, read it here.
This past week filled up with sales calls, my husband coming home after 13 days away, spending time with my parents, daily devotionals, taking my girls to the park since we value and take full advantage of any sunshine moments here in northwest Montana, going to church, hanging out with friends, coffee dates, meetings, mindlessly scrolling through social media, eating way too much fast food, and sleeping (probably too much sleeping).
Today I had an online meeting, took husband to haircut, went to a coffee date/meeting, had lunch, picked up a kindergarten packet [insert hysterical crying face at the fact that my baby is somehow heading to kindergarten this fall?!], shopped for work pants for hubby, made sales calls and booked appointments, and here I've sat for over an hour racking my brain with how do I share something to keep up consistency but not just post for the sake of posting?!
This is my life.
I've chosen to umbrella my eclectic, multi-passionate, hodgepodge interests under a lifestyle blog.
You would think not strictly writing about fashion, parenting, marriage, personal development, or any one specific niche would allow my creative juices to flow because of the vast array of topics to choose from. You would think that, and you would be correct on most days.
When you choose to busy yourself and put your passion on the back-burner you find yourself overwhelmed while scrambling at the last minute to produce quality content.
It's a blog post about nothing. I could choose any one thing to write about and today I'm writing about nothing. [Anyone watch Seinfeld - that's a nod to their show - "It's a show about nothing."]
Yesterday, I tried to take a nap and instead listened to my husband snore away and asked myself, "what am I doing with my life?" Where do I want to go? What do I want to do? How can I earn money quickly? What can I sell? Did I talk to everyone I wanted to this past week? What do I need to focus on this week? What is God teaching me? What value am I adding to the world? How can I fit in daily exercise? Will it all get so much better once we move back into our own home or am I just wishful thinking once again? Why did we make such and such financial decision? Am I a good mother? Am I a good wife? Am I a good friend? Should I really apologize again? (By the way, that answer is yes, always yes!) What could I do to be a little less selfish today? What should I write a blog about??? And so many more questions.
I am a planner and prepping keeps me sane. I like to schedule things out in advance, and pray there are no punches to roll with. I do not thrive in chaos. I prefer a script while making a sales pitch and if the person asks a question that I don't have a written answer for, my brain goes a little haywire and I stumble over words. Actually, that's not even exclusive to a sales pitch. If I'm having conversation and think of a relevant article, quote, scripture, or the like and I can't think of the exact wording I get so darn frazzled. That's why I enjoy writing blog posts. A blog post allows time for me to google the definition of a word, look up that aforementioned relevant thing, or research a bit in order to fluff or put backing behind my own thoughts on the matter. A face-to-face conversation gets real awkward with me. You may have experienced this, and for that I'm sort of sorry, but then again, I'm not sorry at all. It's a quirk that I'm not ashamed to own. It's partly due to my introverted tendencies, and partly insecurities, and partly my desire of my opinion to be heard and my voice to be valued and my whole being to be loved.
I took on another job recently. As if my plate weren't already full, I added appointment setter for a local Rainbow vacuum rep to my resume. [Truly the keyword here is trying because I haven't made one sale BUT I know that is going to change because I have faith that I can sell websites!] I figured I've already been trying to sell websites, so this is very similar, just not cold calling and not selling the product, so really it's not similar in any way except I talk to people on the phone. HAHA!
I actually LOVE this product and know what a difference it's made in my parents home and my dad uses them for his commercial cleaning so I'm very familiar with and have used the vacuums, which makes it really easy to encourage others that they should at least sit through the demo!
My boss went to his first appointment that I had scheduled him and it ended in a sale! Woohoo!! He called me to congratulate me and said, "they said they loved you. You were very kind and articulate on the phone." Honestly, what an incredibly kind compliment!
Articulate : having or showing the ability to speak fluently and coherently.
I thought that's what it meant but I had to google it so I figured I'd throw it on here in case anyone else needed the definition.
Anyway, my whole point in sharing is because that compliment not only lifted my spirits, but it reassured me that it's totally okay that I need to use a script while making these phone calls. I feel more secure and come across more coherent than if I were to "wing it" and in some scenarios it's more important to admit a weakness than to substitute false confidence in an area that's lacking.
As time goes on, and I practice more, sure..I'll probably be able to recite it without second thought, but for now I'm sticking to the script!
Well, my hubby's telling me dinner is ready so I'm posting this bad boy!
May your week be filled with things that make you happy!
May any chaos find peace!
May any plans go well!
May you be consistent!

Enjoy your week,
Nicole

28 Quotes Used In The Book "The 4-Hour Workweek" By Timothy Ferriss

Are you doing everything in your power to create an enjoyable + meaningful life?
Or are you getting caught up in "problems" and negativity?
During our weekly conference call for work, my boss [Debbie] said, "something we tell our kids often is that every problem has a solution."
How TRUE is that!?
And then, as if it was total confirmation to post this blog today, Debbie says, "and now I'll share with you a quote from Tim Ferriss..."
"The stars will never align and the traffic lights of life will never all be green at the same time. The universe doesn't conspire against you, but it doesn't go out of its way to line up the pins either. Conditions are never perfect. "Someday" is a disease that will take your dreams to the grave with you. Pro and con lists are just as bad. If it's important to you and you want to do it "eventually," just do it and correct course along the way." Timothy Ferriss
There's a reason I picked up this book this past week. There's a reason I opened it and was instantly drawn to the quotes he chose to use.
I'm so glad I listened to that inner-voice.
Take a deep breath, prepare to be gobsmacked with wisdom, be encouraged, and soak in every quote you are about to read.

28 Quotes Used In The Book "The 4-Hour Workweek" By Timothy Ferriss

1. An expert is a person who has made all the mistakes that can be made in a very narrow field. -Niels Bohr


2. Reality is merely an illusion albeit a very persistent one. -Albert Einstein


3. I also have in mind that seemingly wealthy, but most terribly impoverished class of all, who have accumulated dross, but know not how to use it, or get rid of it, and thus have forged their own golden or silver fetters. -Henry David Thoreau

4. The first principle is that you must not fool yourself, and you are the easiest person to fool. -Richard P. Feynman


5. I can't give you a surefire formula for success, but I can give you a formula for failure: try to please everybody all the time. -Herbert Bayard Swope


6. Many a false step was made by standing still. -Unknown


7. Named must your fear be before banish it you can. -Yoda


8. Action may not always bring happiness, but there is no happiness without action. -Benjamin Disraeli


9. There's no difference between a pessimist who says, "Oh, it's hopeless, so don't bother doing anything," and an optimist who says, "Don't bother doing anything, it's going to turn out fine anyway." Either way, nothing happens. -Yvon Chouinard


10. You have comfort. You don't have luxury. And don't tell me that money plays a part. The luxury I advocate has nothing to do with money. It cannot be bought. It is the reward of those who have no fear of discomfort. -Jean Cocteau


11. The reasonable man adapts himself to the world; the unreasonable one persists in trying to adapt the world to himself. Therefore all progress depends on the unreasonable man. -George Bernard Shaw


12. The existential vacuum manifests itself mainly in a state of boredom. -Viktor Frankl


13. Life is too short to be small. -Benjamin Disraeli


14. One does not accumulate but eliminate. It is not daily increase but daily decrease. The height of cultivation always runs to simplicity. -Bruce Lee


15. It is vain to do with more what can be done with less. -William of Occam


16. We create stress for ourselves because you feel like you have to do it. You HAVE to. I don't feel that anymore. -Oprah Winfrey


17. There are many things of which a wise man might wish to be ignorant. -Ralph Waldo Emerson


18. Learning to ignore things is one of the great paths to inner peace. -Robert J. Sawyer


19. Do your own thinking independently. Be the chess player, not the chess piece. -Ralph Charell


20. People think it must be fun to be a super genius, but they don't realize how hard it is to put up with all the idiots in the world. -Calvin (of Calvin and Hobbes)


21. As to methods there may be a million and then some, but principles are few. The man who grasps principles can successfully select his own methods. The man who tries methods, ignoring principles, is sure to have trouble. -Ralph Waldo Emerson


22. I not only use all the brains that I have, but all that I can borrow. -Woodrow Wilson


23. Creation is a better means of self-expression than possession; it is through creating, not possessing, that life is revealed. -Vida D. Scudder


24. Liberty means responsibility. That is why most men dread it. -George Bernard Shaw


25. Only those who sleep make no mistakes. -Ingvar Kamprad [founder of IKEA]


26. Adults are always asking kids what they want to be when they grow up because they are looking for ideas. -Paula Poundstone


27. If you don't make mistakes, you're not working on hard enough problems. And that's a big mistake. -Frank Wilczek


28. I've learned that nothing is impossible, and that almost nothing is easy. -Articolo 31



So ask yourself friends, what steps can you take to live your best life?
What areas can you take a small step toward progress?
Where should you 
prune in order to blossom?

Grow well,
Nicole

Questions To Ask Yourself To Help Blossom Your Marriage

Would you admit that you started out thinking marriage was going to have very few difficult moments and overall your vision was much bliss and fairytale vibes?!
I'll admit it. I honestly thought marriage would be so much easier than dating.
With four years of dating behind us, I pictured our foundation being unshakeable, and secure enough to carry us through anything, especially any difficult time.
Although a solid foundation of friendship IS great, my vision of marriage didn't require so much effort. But it's like Levi Lusko says, "marriage is spelled w-o-r-k."
At 20, I was immature and selfish when we vowed forever.
Reality smacked me in the face and I had a big pity party. [I'm a recovering narcissist.]
Four years in, there was a wake up call; which is a story for another time.
It pushed me to put in the effort required to flourish our marriage.
I read books and articles, put advice to practice, and made the conscious choice to make my husband a priority.
Seven and a half years in we were rebuilding from scratch; another story for another time.
I vowed to put in even more effort.
Over a year later, there are still days I fail. There are full weeks I fail.
But my encouragement to you is the same encouragement I repeat over and over to myself : progress not perfection.
In all my progress I've come across plenty of articles and books with all sorts of advice on 'how to make your marriage better than ever.'
In this post, I've gathered a compilation of some encouragement I've found through my research and own desire for a flourishing marriage.
Is it possible to make your marriage better than ever? Absolutely!
It's all up to you and the efforts you're willing to put in.
Proceed with understanding that personal pruning is involved.
The pruning process is not to harm you, but to blossom the fruit of your labor.
Let's get started...

Why am I married to my spouse?

A lot of times we forget our why.
Why did we marry them?
Why are we still married to them?
Take some time and remember your why.
Write it down.
Now, let's think about the basic concept of marriage for a second.
According to Merriam-Webster's dictionary definition marriage is :
The legally or formally recognized union of two people as partners in a personal relationship.
Some synonyms : alliance, fusion, or partnership.
A quick google search for 'the purpose of marriage' pops up hundreds of articles, mostly stating "The primary purpose for marriage is fellowship, companionship, and a mutual help and comfort."
After reading those definitions, go back to your why.
Is your why complicated or pretty basic?
Are the expectations you have on your spouse on par with companionship and a mutual help and comfort? Or are you expecting more?
Let's look at a few people's personal definitions of marriage :
"Marriage is the adventure of discovering one another so you can share body, mind, and spirit intimacy." Linda Dillow
""You don't marry to make yourself happy, you marry to make someone else happy."
My father’s advice was both shocking and revelatory. It went against the grain of today’s “Walmart philosophy”, which is if it doesn’t make you happy, you can take it back and get a new one.
No, a true marriage (and true love) is never about you. It’s about the person you love—their wants, their needs, their hopes, and their dreams.
Selfishness demands, “What’s in it for me?”, while Love asks, “What can I give?”"
Seth Adam Smith - Marriage Isn't For You 
"The whole point of marriage is to encourage your partner's development and have them encourage yours." Carol Dweck
Go back to your why.
Rewrite it if you need to.
Let your spouse know you've been putting unrealistic expectations on them and you're getting back to the basics of why you married in the first place, and why you LOVE being married to them still.

What's it like to be married to me?

Last year I read the book "What's It Like To Be Married To Me? - and other dangerous questions" by Linda Dillow.
Take an honest glance at yourself and ask, what's it like being married to me?
What's it like to wake up next to me?
What's it like to fight with me?
What's it like to travel with me?
What's it like to have sex with me?
What's it like to not enjoy the dinner I made?
What's it like to parent with me?
Write it all down.
Honestly, what do you think it's like to be married to you?
Have you ever asked your spouse, "How can I make your day better?"
According to this article, asking that simple question every day 'saved' this couples marriage.
Have you ever asked your spouse, "When do you feel the most loved by me?" "How am I doing at being your spouse lately?" "What areas of our marriage do you feel could use improvement?"
Don't ask those questions unless you're willing to hear an honest answer and are willing to start or continue the process of growing, learning, adapting, and changing.
Prune, ya'll.
If you're ready, ask away.
And do it without proposing you want to tell your spouse your answers.
It's not about you right now.

What areas of our marriage could we improve?

What's been going on recently that makes you say, this particular part of our marriage is not going so great?
Relationships ebb and flow.
We grow through seasons of good and difficult.
Anyone who has talked to me in the past year about marriage has most definitely heard me mention The Gottman Institute.
John and Julie Gottman have wisdom up the wazoo pertaining to marital stability and how to avoid certain behaviors that harm these relationships.
In his book The Seven Principles For Making Marriage Work, Dr. John Gottman states the signs for divorce are :
1. harsh start-up
2. four horsemen (criticism, contempt, defensiveness, and stonewalling)
3. flooding
4. body language
5. failed repair attempts
6. bad memories
The end draws near in these four final stages
1. You see your marital problems as severe.
2. Talking things over seems useless. You try to solve problems on your own.
3. You start leading parallel lives.
4. Loneliness sets in.
The HOPE is found in these seven principles for making your marriage work ::
1. Enhance your love maps
2. Nurture fondness and admiration
3. Turn toward each other instead of away
4. Let your partner influence you
5. Solve your solvable problems
6. Overcome gridlock
7. Create shared meaning

Do you feel you're on the same team as your spouse?
Do you work through fights together and not against each other?
Do you create solutions where you both win - compromise?
What have you put in place to prevent negativity from escalating out of control?

How are you taking care of yourself?

In order to be a good spouse, you must first take care of yourself.
I came across a cute image that's titled, "Bucket Filling Family" and thought I need to create a "Bucket Filling Self" because you cannot pour out anything when your bucket is empty.
So what things fill you up?
What could you speak over yourself or do for yourself that would ultimately help you be a better version of yourself?
Visit here to get to know yourself better.

If my spouse were to treat me the way I treat them, would I be happy?

Marriage is constant work. There are no vacation days, no sick leave, no clocking out at 5pm. And when you hit a groove where everything is going great, you still need to maintain that work. Marriage is the most difficult and most rewarding relationship to maintain. Prune what needs pruning, and then patiently wait to bloom, flourish, and blossom!

Love well,
Nicole

Chronic Quitter To Goal Smasher In 5 Steps Anyone Can Accomplish

Do you find yourself constantly moving on to the next thing without finishing what you first set out to accomplish?
You could be in a habit of giving up on : fitness goals, your job, growing your social media presence, a new hobby, keeping up on housework, finishing books, or anything else you set out to achieve.
In order to go from chronic quitter to goal smasher I've provided five simple steps to inspire you!

5 Steps To Becoming A Goal Smasher

1. Believe In Yourself
Are the words you speak over yourself degrading, negative, and discouraging?
That might be your worst problem.
If you take pointers from highly successful people I would bet most of them tell you success starts with the thought of thinking you will conquer the task at hand, or accomplish your goal, or finish what you set out to.
Have faith in your ability to be triumphant!
Take pointers from the classic "Little Engine That Could" that teaches the value of optimism and hard work.
Bestselling author Jon Gordon says, "talk to yourself more than you listen to yourself." Matt Mayberry, a contributor to Entrepreneur, took this quote further and said, "Just for one week, try talking to yourself like a champion instead of listening to yourself as a victim."

According to Dr. Branch Coslett, "self-talk is more than a confidence booster. From a neuroscience perspective it might be more like internal remodeling."
Rhett Powerwrote, "Believing in yourself is the first step to success whether it means your life, your career, or simply your confidence, and in that lies your power."
After reading multiple articles it seems that it all boils down to this simple concept, believe in yourself!
Put it to practice : every morning, afternoon, and evening look in the mirror and speak a positive mantra. 

2. Be SMART
SMART is an acronym for specific, measurable, attainable, relevant, time-bound.

Be smart with your goals.
In the same way you don't run before you walk, you can't achieve success immediately, so use baby steps.
If you have a large goal - break it down into 5 steps to get there.
Example
Big Goal : I want to write 8 blog posts in the month of April.
Five steps to get there :
  1. Map out two blogs per week with subjects and/or titles
  2. Give each blog post roughly three days to be written
  3. Spend the first of those three days gathering inspiration, quotes, research
  4. Spend the second day writing out the rough draft.
  5. Spend the 3rd day adding the finishing touches.
*For each of the 8 blog posts I would check off #'s 3-5 until finished.
By breaking it down it's a lot less overwhelming and therefore seems much more attainable!
Also, part of being smart is knowing your why.
Ask yourself, 'why do I want to achieve this goal?'
Put it to practice : Write down your goal(s) and put it in a place you'll come across it often.

3. Reassess
Write your goals down and check them off, scratch them off, or put a line through it when you've accomplished what you set out to.
If you didn't smash your goal, don't scratch it off forever.

Success takes perseverance.
If you didn't reach your goal, evaluate if it's even realistic and then adjust if need be. Push the timeline out a little further. Realize you didn't give it your all and retry with a more positive attitude. Or, accept failure for what it is; an opportunity to learn.
Have you ever heard of post-mortem? I hadn't until I read an article written by Shawn Lim where he explained a post-mortem is "an analysis or discussion of an event soon after it has occurred, especially in order to determine why it was a failure."
Put it to practice : reassess your goal(s) and continue moving forward accordingly.

4. . Get An Accountability Partner
The definition of accountability partner is, according to wikipedia (which is a super reliable source according to Michael Scott on The Office), a person who coaches another person in terms of helping the other person keep a commitment.

By buddying up you'll be able to bounce motivation and encouragement back-and-forth. By talking about your goals you are more likely to accomplish them because we are driven by the desire to be successful.
When you have someone you have to tell, "I failed" you are more likely to do anything and everything you can to not make that a reality.
Put it to practice : call up a trustworthy person and tell them you have a goal and you would like their help encouraging you and checking in with you to keep you moving toward success.

5. Treat Yo' Self
Celebrate the small successes! Celebrate the large successes!
I'm taking Bill Carmody's thought and changing it up just a bit to make it relevant to what I'm trying to get across here.
"Your Celebrations Position You Correctly As A Winner And Attracts More Success : Success begets more success, so it's only natural to build upon existing momentum. As you look to grow in your goals, celebratory events not only reinforce the positive aspects of what you are doing, but position yourself as a desirable person whom others would like to associate."
According to Mark Deterding, there are 7 benefits to celebrating : 1-releases stress 2-provides motivation 3-recognizes excellence 4-shows appreciation and acceptance 5-builds energy 6-provides a time of reflection 7-is a moment in time to be remembered.
Put it to practice : pop a bottle of champagne, go out to dessert, high five your accountability partner, set up a relaxing evening at home, eat a piece of chocolate, pat yourself on the back, or do a happy dance! 


After putting this all to practice and you still find yourself saying :
"I didn't smash my goal and am not willing to accept failure."
Take the advice of author F. Scott Fitzgerald, "never confuse a single defeat with a final defeat."
Focus on any progress you DID make!

Happy goal smashing to you,
Nicole

33 Quotes That Every Writer Will Appreciate

Are you looking for inspiration, writing tips, or curious if your favorite author made the list?

Check out these 33 quotes that any writer will appreciate :

1. "Put it in writing!" Unknown

2. "The difference between the right word and almost the right word is the difference between lightning and the lightening bug." Mark Twain

3. "...look in thy heart and write." Sir Philip Sydney

4. "But all the fun's in how you say a thing." Robert Frost

5. "Good writing is a kind of skating which carries off the performer where he would not go." Ralph Waldo Emerson

6. "If you would not be forgotten, as soon as you are dead and rotten, either write things worth reading, or do things worth the writing." Benjamin Franklin

7. "The difficulty is not to write, but to write what you mean; not to affect your reader, but to affect him precisely as you wish." Robert Louis Stevenson

8. "Sound judgment is the ground of writing well: and when philosophy directs your choices to proper subjects rightly understood, words from your pen will naturally flow." Quintus Horatius Flaccus

9. "Knowledge is the foundation and source of good writing." Quintus Horatius Flaccus

10. "Seize the subject and the words will follow." Cato The Elder

11. "It is not every question that deserves an answer." Publilius Syrus

12. "Two sorts of writers possess genius: those who think and those who cause others to think." Joseph Roux

13. "A man of letters, and of manners too!" William Cowper

14. "Writing, when properly managed (as you may be sure I think mine is), is but a different name for conversation." Laurence Sterne

15. "The strongest memory is weaker than the palest ink." Proverb

16. "It takes two to speak the truth - one to speak, and another to hear." Henry David Thoreau

17. "There is no greater agony than bearing an untold story inside you." Maya Angelou

18. "Writers are like baseball pitchers. Both have their moments. The intervals are the tough times." Robert Frost

19. "Gather and pass on what comes from the depths." Paul Klee

20. "Devise, wit; write, pen." William Shakespeare

21. "I love a natural, simple and unaffected speech, written as it is spoken and such upon the paper as it is in the mouth, a pithy, sinewy, full, strong, compendious and material speech." Montaigne

22. "Writing good sentences means no dependent clauses, no dangling things, no flashbacks, and keeping the subject near the predicate. We throw in as many fresh words as we can get away with. Simple, short sentences don't always work. You have to do tricks with pacing, alternate long sentences with short, to keep it vital and alive." Theodore Geisel (Dr. Seuss)

23. "The more a man writes, the more he can write." William Hazlitt

24. "Everybody walks past a thousand story ideas every day. The good writers are the ones who see five or six of them. Most people don't see any." Orson Scott Card

25. "It's the little details that are vital. Little things make big things happen." John Wooden

26. "When you write to people you know very well, you can add personal touches like doodles or drawings." Unknown

27. "Dialogue is a little bit jazz, a little bit hand-to-hand combat." Chuck Wendig

28. "The unread story is not a story, it is little black marks on wood pulp. The reader, reading it, makes it live: a live thing, a story." Ursula K. Le Guin

29. "I write a story as if it were a letter to someone, and essentially that's what you do." Theodore Sturgeon

30. "Exercise the writing muscle every day, even if it's only a letter, a note, a title, a list, a character sketch, a journal entry. Writers are like dancers. Without that exercise, the muscles seize up." Jane Yolen

31. "Business, love, and friendship all demand a ready pen." The Universal Letter-Writer 1850

32. "They want to tell each other what they want to tell themselves. But what is bumping like a helium balloon at the ceiling of their brain never finds its way out. It bubbles and rises, it gurgles in the throat, it rolls across the surface of the tongue, and erupts from the lips - a belch." Sandra Cisneros

33. "There is nothing I like better than writing." Unknown

Happy writing,
Nicole

Anxiety + Panic Attacks : Their Cause and Cure

My first memory of anxiety was the classic grocery store experience, around 5 years old, where you think you're standing next to your mom and then you realize she's no where to be seen.
As life progressed other things caused the panic attacks : any sort of presentation for school, giving a maid of honor speech, a friend drinking alcohol and then demanding they drive because it was their car, the thought of anyone close to me dying, getting pulled over, seeing an acquaintance and having to 'small talk' with them, lying, covering up lies with more lies, the thought of 'messing my kids up' or failing them, my girls throwing tantrums in public, a memory of something fearful, flying in airplanes, reading about all of the horrible and terrible things going on in this world, writing about what makes me anxious, and the list goes on and on - kind of like this run on sentence!
The crazy part about my anxiety was I didn't realize I had it until a family member was medically diagnosed. I thought that was just life. She described some symptoms and I thought, "well shoot, that sounds like a lot of my symptoms. Maybe I should research it more." So I had this 'aha' moment at the age of 27 that all those aforementioned experiences were connected to anxiety.
I read books, blogs, articles, and anything I could get my eyes on to figure out how to conquer this demon. I talked with my doctor whose only offer was medication. I talked with my counselor, and honestly made the most breakthroughs and leaps forward in healing using tools she gave me.
Unfortunately, after two years of actively utilizing tips and tricks, I haven't reached what I call fully cured status.
Which brings us to today. Today I sat down to read my 10cent thrift store book entitled Anxiety & Panic Attacks : Their Cause and Cure by Robert Handly (with Pauline Neff). Described in his book is a holistic approach to recovery (without medication).
Below I'll share my notes on the book in hopes you and I both find our cure.


DO YOU:
  • panic before you board an airplane?
  • freak out before a presentation?
  • hyperventilate when you have to leave the house?
  • get the shakes before a date?
  • want to scream when you enter an elevator?
  • feel your stomach drop when your boss asks to see you?
  • stay up all night tossing and turning?
  • obsess about people, things and places?
  • tense up reading the previous questions?

It can come in the form of:
  • not being able to concentrate on what's being said to you
  • feeling faint
  • queasy stomach
  • chronic diarrhea
  • heart racing
  • thinking all eyes are on you
  • migraines
  • depression
  • sweaty palms
  • lightheadedness that prevents you from thinking clearly
  • trying to spot problems before they happen so you can "plan" for them
Or in terrifying attacks :
  • your heart pounds so hard you fear cardiac arrest
  • your breathing turns into hyperventilating
  • your mind goes haywire with the awful thought that you are about to lose control
As your anxiety continues, you feel worse and worse. Eventually you try coping mechanisms. A painkiller, a pack of cigarettes, a stiff drink or two, screaming at your kids or spouse, eating everything in sight, or sleeping twelve hours a day to try and escape all the bad feelings. You might even develop the most serious panic disorder, a fear of fear itself - at its most severe a phobia that keeps you imprisoned in your home, afraid that if you go outside you will have another panic attack.
But you cope. You go to the doctor and get a prescription. Why try to fight it? That's just the way life is.
The dictionary definition of panic is "a sudden overpowering fright, especially a sudden terror often inspired by a trifling cause or misapprehension of danger and accompanied by unreasoning or frantic efforts to secure safety."
When you worry, think negatively, or have improper attitudes toward stress, you produce vivid mental pictures of the situation you fear. Your body becomes aroused just as if the situation you imagine is actually happening. Then it releases adrenaline, which brings on the physical anxiety symptoms. Therefore; if you can eliminate worry, negative thinking, and improper attitudes toward stress in your mind, you can overcome much of the anxiety that brings on the panic attack.
"A panic attack is a normal reaction of the body to danger. You need to learn to depend on the deepest level of your mind - not will and determination - to control the circumstances in life that are in fact controlling you. And lastly, you need to use both your mind and body to desensitize yourself to the fear of leaving your "safe place."" Dr. Jim Wilson
Another kind of panic attack is associated with Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD). PTSD is mostly associated with veteran's of war, however; it can occur with rape victims, children who have been emotionally, physically or sexually abused, anyone who has witnessed a violent crime or bloody accident, and even patients who have undergone disfiguring surgery.
His panic disorder forced him to learn how to use the Five Basic Principles to eliminate negative thinking, build self-confidence, and use the extraordinary powers of his unconscious to eliminate anxiety and panic.
In his opinion, everyone who has a panic disorder can recover as completely as he did. The first step is simply to understand thoroughly how your body and mind work together to produce the fear that causes the terrifying physical symptoms.
"A panic attack is no more than a fight or flight response to sudden danger." Dr. Jim Wilson
Negative thinking is a culprit.
Poor self-image builds anxiety.

The Five Basic Principles :

1. Use the creative powers of your unconscious mind to help you change yourself.
The unconscious mind stores up information obtained from your feelings.
He refers to the unconscious mind as "the boss."
The key point to grasp about the boss that nobody ever told you about is that both feelings and behavior are a result of the thoughts you entertain. Furthermore, thoughts are simply ideas, not reality. They are programmed into you at an early age because of your parents' actions, the environment in which you lived and matured, and circumstances you now face in your life. If you choose with the conscious part of your mind to take control over the unconscious, you can completely change those thoughts and reprogram your life. Use alpha stateto send a message to the boss.
Reaching alpha state involves learning how to fully relax and lowering your brain wave cycle rhythm.
For the alpha script click here.
Once you start seeing some results of programming yourself as you use the script, you will know that you reached alpha even though you didn't feel any different. After becoming convinced, you will then begin to recognize that the feeling of passive calmness that comes to you while listening to the script is the same feeling you have when you first wake up and are in alpha naturally.

2. Use visualizations and affirmations to change your self-image so that you feel confidence rather than fear.
Affirmations are statements to yourself that you are at this very moment the way you want to be. If you are feeling anxious and depressed, you should affirm the fact that you are perfectly calm, lovable, and worthy.
Visualizations are the mental pictures you create of yourself accomplishing whatever you want to do or be.
Using the alpha script has made you somewhat familiar with the tools of visualization and affirmation. You visualized your secret resting place and used at least one strong affirmation when you said, "I am awake, feeling fine, and in perfect health."
Visualize scenes that have not yet happened and affirm that you are already different from the way you are now.
You have been using visualizations and affirmations to send commands to your unconscious all your life. If your mental pictures are positive and happy, then you feel upbeat and able to achieve much more than you normally can.
The mental pictures and mind chatter we create can affect our emotional health as much as our actions and physical well-being.
A few examples of good general affirmations that would help anyone subject to anxiety:
  • I am a loving, caring person who deserves success.
  • Every day, in every way, I am becoming the person I want to be.
  • I am perfectly confident, calm, and happy.
  • My body is perfectly healthy and normal.
  • My mind is functioning perfectly, and I am finding new creative ways to live.
Make your visualizations and affirmations positive, vivid and detailed, incorporate emotions, and use them frequently.

3. Use rational and positive thinking to see yourself and events as they really are and also to visualize how you want them to be.
Discern when you are thinking negatively and irrationally.
Replace those distorted thoughts with positive, rational ones so that Mr. Negative will leave you alone.
He likes to break this goal into what he calls The Five R's
  • Realize that Mr. Negative is part of your consciousness
  • Recognize when Mr. Negative is calling.
  • Refuse to answer.
  • Replace negative and irrational thoughts with reality.
  • Relax and reprogram the unconscious mind.
A list of the Big Ten cognitive distortions that affect most anxious people :
1. perfectionism
2. rejectionitis
3. negative focus
4. refusing the positives
5. the white-is-black phenomenon
6. stretch-or-shrink thinking
7. creating fictional fantasies
8. "should" and "ought" legalisms
9. mistaken identity
10. saying "my fault"

4. Act as if you are already the way you want to be.
This principle basically teaches how not to play the role of victim.
Acting as if is living as you intend to live. It is creating a game plan for changing the destructive behaviors that cause you the anxiety and then taking responsibility for living as if the game plan is already fulfilled. If you are depressed, it could mean reading a joke book to find funny stories you can tell others - even when you don't find the jokes amusing yourself. Why? Because you know that by acting as if you are happy, you are training your unconscious to stop being depressed. You are no longer allowing yourself to be the victim of fictional fantasy thinking.
When you visualize and affirm that you are calm, you are fooling your unconscious into believing that you are already that way. Acting as if the hammer that nails the positive message in so firmly that it sticks for good.
Intention (visualizing and affirming) -> positive reinforcement (acting as if) -> changed brain response -> calm feelings
Why most people don't act as if : fear of change, belief they can't break a bad habit, and ignorance of how to go about it.

5. Set goals to become the person you want to be.
This principle teaches how to draw your own treasure map.
Set goals? Is that all?
Have you ever set goals for the specific purpose of overcoming anxiety? Have you ever coupled goal-setting with other techniques for using the unconscious which will make goal-achieving easy?
Before you sit down to write out your goals, look at this criteria for succeeding in achieving them.
1. You must have a burning desire to succeed in the goal.
2. Your goal must be believable.
3. Make your goals positive.
4. Set goals in all areas of your life.
Now, create your goal book.
Divide it into three areas - mental (habits to break, family relationships), physical (health), and spiritual (learning about spiritual practices).
First go into alpha and then ask yourself what you truly desire.
After identifying your burning desires in the areas of mental, physical, and spiritual well-being, select the one you consider most important. Write this goal on a separate piece of paper along with all the directions you will need to reach the treasure. Here is what you should record :
1. The goal, stated in a positive manner.
2. Specific visualizations and affirmations of yourself as if you already achieved that goal.
3. The cognitive restructuring you believe necessary to help you achieve the goal.
4. The increments of the goal that reflect how you will act as ifyou have already reached this goal.
Example Goal :
Goal: I see myself as a more loving, self-confident person.
Visualization: I will picture myself smiling as I give compliments to five other people each day.
Affirmations: I am loving and self-confident and I am worthy of the love of other people.
Cognitive Restructuring: I will use blue dots to discern when I am doing stretch-or-shrink thinking and I will stop exaggerating my weaknesses and quit putting myself down.
Acting As If: I will pass out five compliments to other each day and I will use Emotional Transfusion each day to better my relationships with ___________.
Feedback :
Date
Person Complimented - Their reaction
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
Add new goals.


Now it's up to you to take the information and put it to practice.


Take great care,
Nicole

15 Classic Friendship Quotes

Hello friend (whether you're mine or someone else's),
One of the most powerful quotes, packed with what it means to be friend, starts this collection. It's longer, but a must-read.
As tempting as it is to stop there, continue on reading the rest of these awesome musings about friendship.

1. "The Art of Friendship
The first step in the art of friendship is to be a friend; then making friends takes care of itself. To be a friend a man should start by being a friend to himself, by being true to his highest and best and by aligning himself with the enduring values of human life that make for growth and progress.
To be a friend a man should strive to be like the shadow of a great rock in a weary land, to be a source of refuge and strength to those who walk in darkness.
To be a friend a man should believe in the inherent goodness of men and in their potential greatness; he should treat men in a big spirit, expectant of a noble response.
To be a friend a man should strive to lift people up, not cast them down; to encourage, not discourage; to set an example that will be an inspiration to others.
To be a friend a man should be sensitively responsive to the dreams and aims of others and should show sincere appreciation for the contributions others make to the enrichment of his life.
To be a friend a man should practice the companionship of silence and the magic of words that his speech may build and not destroy, help and not hinder.
To be a friend a man should not attempt to reform or reprimand, but should strive only to make others happy if he can.
To be a friend a man should be himself, he should be done with hypocrisy, artificiality, and pretense, he should meet and mingle with people in quiet simplicity and humility.
To be a friend a man should be tolerant, he should have an understanding heart and a forgiving nature, knowing that all men stumble now and then, and that he who never made a mistake never accomplished anything.
To be a friend a man should join hands with all people who are working for great principles, great purposes and great causes; he should put his shoulder to the wheel to help achieve common goals.
To be a friend a man should go more than halfway with his fellow men; he should greet others first and not wait to be greeted; he should radiate a spirit of overwhelming good will.
To be a friend a man should remember that we are human magnets; that like attracts like, and that what we give we get.
To be a friend a man should recognize that no one knows all the answers, and that he should add each day to his knowledge of how to live the friendly way."
Wilfred A. Peterson


2. "The warmth of  a friend's presence brings joy to our hearts, sunlight to our souls, and pleasure to all of life." Unknown


3. "What is friendship? One soul in two bodies." Aristotle


4. "Make new friends, but keep the old;
Those are silver, these are gold.
New-made friendships, like new wine,
Age will mellow and refine.
Friendships that have stood the test -
Time and change - are surely best;
Brow may wrinkle, hair grow gray;
Friendship never knows decay.
For 'mid old friends, tried and true,
Once more we our youth renew.
But old friends, alas! May die;
New friends must their place supply.
Cherish friendship in your breast -
New is good, but old is best;
Make new friends, but keep the old;
Those are silver, these are gold."
Joseph Parry


5. "Congeniality, when once established between two kindred spirits or in a group, is the most carefree of human relationships. It is effortless, like purring. It is a basic theme in friendship..." Frances Lester Warner


6. "When someone is going through a storm, your silent presence is more powerful than a million empty words." Thelma Davis


7. "Laughing is one of the best exercises, it's like running for your mind. You can do it almost anywhere, and it's even better with a friend." Unknown


8. "A friend knows the song in my heart and sings it to me when my memory fails." Donna Roberts


9. "The most beautiful discovery true friends make is that they can grow separately without ever growing apart." Elizabeth Foley


10. "A good friend is cheaper than therapy." Unknown


11. "The only way to have a friend is to be one." Ralph Waldo Emerson


12. "There are friendships imprinted in our hearts that will never be diminished by time and distance." Dodinsky


13. "Rare as is true love, true friendship is rarer." Jean de La Fontaine


14. "My best friend is the one who brings out the best in me." Henry Ford


15. "A true friend is someone who is there for you when he'd rather be anywhere else." Len Wein


Cheers to mutual affection between people,
Nicole

My Notes On "The 7 Habits Of Highly Effective People"

Do you ever read a book and write notes to keep for future reference?
That's how I read most books.
Here are the treasures I want to tuck into my heart and brain from :

The 7 Habits Of Highly Effective People by Stephen R. Covey

Common human challenges we face :
  • Fear and insecurity
  • "I want it now"
  • Blame and victimism
  • Hopelessness
  • Lack of life balance
  • "What's in it for me?"
  • The hunger to be understood
  • conflict and differences
  • personal stagnation
    • body
      cultural tendency: maintain lifestyle; treat health problems with surgery and medication
      principle: prevent diseases and problems by aligning lifestyle to be in harmony with principles of health
    • mind
      cultural: watch television, entertain me
      principle: read broadly and deeply, continuous education
    • heart
      cultural: use relationships with others to forward your personal, selfish interests.
      principle: deep, respectful listening and serving others brings greatest fulfillment and joy
    • spirit
      culture : succumb to growing secularism and cynicism
      principle: recognize that the source of our basic need for meaning and of the positive things we seek in life is principles - which natural laws I personally believe have their source in God.
Constantly pose this question: How many on their deathbeds wished they'd spent more time at the office, or watching tv? The answer is, no one.
When people see good things happening in others lives they immediately request "How do you do it? Teach me the techniques." What they're really saying is, "Give me some quick fix advice or solution that will relieve the pain in my own situation."
They will find people who will meet their wants and teach these things; and for a short time, skills and techniques may appear to work. They may eliminate some of the cosmetic or acute problems through social aspirin and band-aids.
But the underlying chronic condition remains, and eventually new acute symptoms will appear. The more people are into quick fix and focus on the acute problems and pain, the more that very approach contributes to the underlying chronic condition.
The way we see the problem is the problem.
We will define a habit as the intersection of knowledge, skill, and desire.
Knowledge is the theoretical paradigm, the what to do and the why. Skill is the how to do. And the desire is the motivation, the want to do. In order to make something a habit in our lives, we have to have all three.
Marilyn Ferguson observed, "no one can persuade another to change. Each of us guards a gate of change that can only be opened from the inside. We cannot open the gate of another, either by argument or by emotional appeal."

Habit 1 : Be Proactive

We are not our feelings. We are not our moods. We are not even our thoughts.
Don't let others projections of you define you. "You're never on time." "You eat like a horse." "This is so simple. Why can't you understand?"
Use proactive language...
I can - I control - I will - I choose - I prefer
We all have a circle of concern --our health, our children, problems at work, the national debt, nuclear war.
As we look at our circle of concern, it becomes apparent that there are some things we have no real control and others that we can do something about.
The things we can do something about can be described as the circle of influence, which is where proactive people put their focus.
Reactive people put their focus on the circle of concern which results in blaming and accusing attitudes, reactive language, and increased feelings of victimization.
When you focus on the circle of influence you use "be's" such as I can be more patient, be wise, be loving. It's character focus. I can be more resourceful, I can be more diligent, I can be more creative, I can be more cooperative.
If you have problems in your marriage focus on the thing you have control over - yourself!

Habit 2 : Begin With The End In Mind

Think about your funeral and what you want people to say about you.
In developing our own self-awareness many of us discover ineffective scripts, deeply embedded habits that are totally unworthy of us, totally incongruent with the things we really value in life.
A personal mission statement :
Securityrepresents your sense of worth, your identity, your emotional anchorage, your self-esteem, your basic personal strength or lack of it.
Guidancemeans your source of direction in life. Encompassed by your map, your internal frame of reference that interprets for you what is happening out there, are standards or principles or implicit criteria that govern moment by moment decision-making and doing.
Wisdomis your perspective on life, your sense of balance, your understanding of how the various parts and principles apply and relate to each other. It embraces judgement, discernment, comprehension. It is a gestalt or oneness, an integrated wholeness.
Poweris the faculty or capacity to act, the strength and potency to accomplish something. It is the vital energy to make choices and decisions. It also includes the capacity to overcome deeply embedded habits and to cultivate higher, more effective ones.
These four factors are interdependent.
Each of us has a center that the sum of life flows from. Common ones include :
  • spouse centeredness
  • family centeredness
  • money centeredness
  • work centeredness
  • possession centeredness
  • pleasure centeredness
  • friend/enemy centeredness
  • church centeredness
  • self-centeredness
Using your whole brain
Our self-awareness empowers us to examine our own thoughts. This is particularly helpful in creating a personal mission statement because the two unique human endowments that enable us to practice Habit 2 - imagination and conscience - are primarily functions of the right side of the brain. Understanding how to tap into that right brain capacity greatly increases our first creation ability.
Expand perspective
Visualize and affirmation
An affirmation has five basic ingredients : it's personal, positive, present tense, visual, and emotional.
EX: "It is deeply satisfying (emotional) that I (personal) respond (present tense) with wisdom, love, firmness, and self-control (positive) when my children misbehave.

Habit 3 : Put First Things First

Organize and execute around priorities.
Effective people are not problem-minded; they're opportunity minded. They feed opportunities and starve problems.
Identify your roles.
Schedule time to achieve goals.
Some people say you have to like yourself before you can like others. I think the idea has merit, but if you don't know yourself, if you don't control yourself, if you don't have mastery over yourself, it's very hard to like yourself, except in some short-term, psych-up, superficial way.
Real self respect comes from dominion over self, from true independence...independence is achievement. Interdependence is a choice only independent people can make. Unless we are willing to achieve real independence, it's foolish to try to develop human relations skills. We might try. We might even have some degree of success when the sun is shining. But when the difficult times come - and they will - we won't have the foundation to keep things together.
Six Major Deposits Into The Emotional Bank Account :
  • Understanding The individual 
  • Attending To The Little Things
  • Keeping Commitments
  • Clarifying Expectations
  • Showing Personal Integrity
  • Apologizing Sincerely When You Make A Withdrawal

Habit 4 : Think Win/Win

Six Paradigms of Human Interaction
  1. win/win : it's not your way or my way; it's a better way, a higher way
  2. win/lose : I win, you lose
  3. lose/win : I lose, you win
  4. lose/lose : both lose
  5. win : only matters that I get what I want
  6. win/win or no deal : if we can't find a solution that would benefit us both, we agree to disagree agreeably

Habit 5 : Seek First To Understand, Then To Be Understood

Principles of Empathetic Communication
Listen empathetically.
Diagnose before you prescribe.
  • evaluate
  • probe
  • advise
  • interpret

Habit 6 : Synergize

When properly understood, synergy is the highest activity in all life - the true test and manifestation of all the other habits put together.
The highest forms of synergy focus the four unique human endowments, the motive of win/win, and the skills of empathetic communication on the toughest challenges we face in life. What results is almost miraculous. We create new alternatives - something that wasn't there before.
Synergy is the essence of principle-centered leadership. It is the essence of principle-centered parenting. It catalyzes, unifies, and unleashes the greatest powers within people. All the habits we have covered prepare us to create the miracle of synergy.
What is synergy? Simply defined, it means that the whole is greater than the sum of its parts. It means that the relationship which the parts have to each other is a part in and of itself.
"Our mission is to empower people and organizations to significantly increase their performance capability in order to achieve worthwhile purposes through understanding and living principle-centered leadership."

Habit 7 : Sharpen The Saw

Principles of Balanced Self-Renewal
Habit 7 is preserving and enhancing the greatest asset you have - you. It's renewing the four dimensions of your nature - physical (exercise, nutrition, stress management), spiritual (value clarification + commitment, study + meditation), mental (reading, visualizing, planning, writing), and social/emotional (service, empathy, synergy, intrinsic security).


Take great care,
Nicole

20 Quotes To Encourage + Inspire You To Live Your Most Enjoyable Life

Every once in a while you find yourself needing extra inspiration.
Feeding your mind with daily encouragement is a great way to boost overall positivity in your life.
Here is a list of quotes to help encourage and inspire you to live your most enjoyable life!

1. "The first step towards getting somewhere is to decide that you are not going to stay where you are." J. Pierpont Morgan

2. "That it will never come again is what makes life so sweet." Emily Dickinson

3. "Do not delay; the golden moments fly!" Henry Wadsworth Longfellow


4. "Because of our routines we forget that life is an ongoing adventure." Maya Angelou


5. "Live to shed joy on others." Henry Ward Beecher


6. "You have a unique message to deliver; a unique song to sing, a unique act of love to bestow. This message, this song, and this act of love have been entrusted exclusively to the one and only you." John Powell, S.J.


7. "You win some and you learn some." Barry Johnson


8. "It is not how much we have, but how much we enjoy, that makes us happy." Charles Spurgeon


9. "If you don't prioritize your life, someone else will." Greg Mckeown


10. "Of course we all have limits, but how can you possibly find your boundaries unless you explore as far and wide as you can?" A.E. Hotchner


11. "Learn from the mistakes of others. You can never live long enough to make them all yourself." John Luther


12. "Nobody is bored when he is trying to make something that is beautiful or to discover something that is true." William Inge


13. "When you are everywhere, you are nowhere. When you are somewhere, you are everywhere." Rumi


14. "Life is pure adventure, and the sooner we realize that, the quicker we will be able to treat life as art." Maya Angelou


15. "A true friend is someone who thinks you are a good egg even though he knows you are slightly cracked." Bernard Meltzer


16. "This is the true joy in life - that being used for a purpose recognized by yourself as a mighty one. That being a force of nature, instead of a feverish, selfish little clod of ailments and grievances complaining to the world will not devote itself to making you happy. I am of the opinion that my life belongs to the whole community and as long as I live it is my privilege to do for it whatever I can. I want to be thoroughly used up when I die. For the harder I work the more I live. I rejoice in life for it's own sake. Life is no brief candle to me. It's a sort of splendid torch which I've got to hold up for the moment and I want to make it burn as brightly as possible before handing it on to future generations." George Bernard Shaw


17. "You cannot play with the animal in you without becoming wholly animal, play with falsehood without forfeiting your right to truth, play with cruelty without losing your sensitivity of mind. He who wants to keep his garden tidy doesn't reserve a plot for weeds." Dag Hammarskjold


18. "There is a gap or a space between stimulus and response, and the key to both our growth and happiness is how we use that space." Stephen R. Covey


19. "We must not cease from exploration. And the end of all our exploring will be to arrive where we began and to know the place for the first time." T. S. Eliot


20. "If we are able to make the best sense of our lives - if we persist in trying to do so and truly commit ourselves to this task - perhaps we can even affect the course of history and change the flow of events. Who knows?" Malcolm Boyd



Hoping you are inspired and encouraged,
Nicole

100 Questions To Prompt The Setting Of Your Scene

Hello writer!

While asking yourself these questions, don't feel obligated to add each answer to every question. Don't over explain for the sake of word count. Just add enough meaningful details to establish the setting. Create plenty of depth that the reader could put themselves in your character's shoes.

At the beginning, as best you can, tell the era, age, century, or year.

1. What is the season?
2. What time of day is it?
3. What is the climate?
4. What do you notice about the weather?
5. What is the temperature?
6. What physical sensations result from the weather?
7. Are there any sounds associated with it?
8. Can you smell anything?
9. Does the weather arouse any feelings?
10. Does the continent, country, or region change?
11. Describe the terrain.
12. What is the ground like?
13. What color is it?
14. What is the texture?
15. When you pick up the dirt in your hands, how does it feel?
16. How does it smell?
17. How much of the bare dirt can you see?
18. What limits your range of vision?
19. If you look out and turn all around, what are the land's distinguishing characteristics?
20. What indicators demonstrate wild or civilized aspects of the landscape?
21. What indicators demonstrate the care or carelessness of human presence?
22. How productive is the land?
23. What is growing?
24. In this landscape, what kind of work is possible or required?
25. What kind of play fits into the setting?
26. If you look from the ground up to the sky, does the sky seem near or far?
27. Is the sky illuminated in any way?
28. Is there any movement in the sky?
29. How broad is your view of the sky? What, if anything, constricts your view?
30. What's the farthest you can see?
Change your point of view. If you are aware of height, imagine being much lower; if you are very low, place yourself higher.
Now describe the setting from a new vantage point :
31. What do you see when you turn around?
32. Has the temperature changed?
33. Can you hear something you didn't hear before?
34. Are there any new scents?
35. When you extend your hands, can you touch anything?
36. Can you touch anything that was out of reach before?
37. What kinds of animals live here?
  • Wild
  • Domesticated
  • Pets
38. How do they feature in the story?
39. List any subtle or obvious threats to survival.
40. If a character were going to move within this landscape to a place where they would feel more safe, where would that be?
41. Why would it seem more safe there?
42. Which characters would feel safe in this place?
Move toward man-made shelters or buildings. What can you tell about this era or this age from the architecture.
43. Are there many buildings or just a few?
44. What is the style of architecture?
45. What building materials are used?
  • color
  • texture
  • design elements
46. Do the buildings blend in with the landscape or do they seem forced upon it?
47. Is the placement of the buildings useful?
48. How harmonious are the structures?
49. Energies created by environments influence the way we feel in them. At its best, the word "home" conjures up images of belonging, affection, warmth, and security: refuge from the elements and emotional protection with intimate ties to family and community. When a character enters his or her home, or an important building in the story, what is noticeable about the transition from outside to inside?
50. What is the primary purpose of this building?
51. How simple or complex is the layout of the building?
52. What seems to be valued here?
53. Is there a change in temperature?
  • Humidity
54. What noise can be heard?
55. What texture does the silence have?
56. What does the air smell like?
57. Enter a room. How is it separated from the rest of the structure?
58. What is the first impression?
59. How cluttered or spare is the room?
60. How colorful is it?
61. Is the room warm and welcoming, or off-putting in some way?
62. What seems to be valued in the room?
63. How important are artifacts of status, social position, and material wealth?
64. What in this room connects its occupants to the natural environment?
65. Has the light changed?
66. What can be heard?
67. Is there a new scent?
68. Has the temperature changed?
69. Describe the furnishings.
70. Consider the level of comfort offered, in terms of size, proportion, color, texture.
71. Are the furnishings artificially contrived or natural for local conditions?
72. Is anything on the walls?
73. How is the room heated?
74. How is the room ventilated?
75. How fresh does the air feel?
76. What are the primary and secondary sources of light?
77. What reaction do the characters have to the dimness or brightness of the light?
78. Do the floors enhance the comfort of the room?
79. If there are coverings on the floor, what are they made of?
80. Where is food prepared?
81. How is it prepared?
82. What is being cooked?
83. How is food served?
84. How pleasant is the whole experience of cooking, serving, and eating a meal in this setting?
85. From walking around - both outside and within a dwelling - what can you surmise about the economics of the area?
86. What indicators of wealth and poverty are apparent outside and in?
87. What, if any, class distinctions are apparent?
88. How much time literally elapses during the story?
89. Metaphorically, how much time, in terms of growth and change, passes?
Language in a story indicates details of time and place. To become aware of this, retell the story through any stereotypical character, like a California "Valley Girl," and you'll hear where words or speech patterns collide.
90. What indicators of time and place are noticeable in the words and style of narrative sections?
91. What indicators are noticeable in the characters' speech?
92. Overall, how formal/colloquial is the language used?
93. What group distinctions are reinforced in the way characters speak to one another?
94. What can you surmise about secular and religious values of this time and place?
95. During the process, have your assessments of the fundamental values changed?
96. How does setting function in your story?
97. What indicators of era and locale would appear in a mural of the story?
98. What about the time and place binds the characters together?
99. What is important historically about the time and place of your story?
100. What about this time and place makes you want to return to it repeatedly?

Best wishes in your story-telling,
Nicole


Pulled from The Whole Story Handbook by Carol L. Birch - using imagery to complete the story experience.

65+ Questions to Prompt Creating Your Character(s)

Hello writer!

While asking yourself these questions and statements, don't feel obligated to add each answer to your description. Don't over explain for the sake of word count. Just add enough meaningful details to establish your character(s). Create plenty of depth so your reader feels they've seen/met your character(s) before.


  1. Imagine a character standing and facing you, so you easily see her from head to foot. Notice:
  • Height
  • Weight
2. Proportions of
  • Head
  • Torso (neck, shoulders, chest, waist, stomach, hips)
  • Arms and legs
  • Hand and feet
3. Anything in their stance indicative of their personality?
  • shyness/forthrightness
  • self-confidence/insecurity
  • warmth/coolness
  • agitation/calmness
4. To a great extent, clothing is a response to the natural environment and social world in which a person lives. What we choose to wear and how we wear it also expresses personality. A character's clothing can tell us about the following:
  • Physical features of environment
    • Climate
      • Season
      • Weather
      • Time of Day
    • Social Constraints
      • Era
      • Status
      • Wealth
      • Is the character dressed for work, recreation, religious observance?
5. From looking at the attire, would you say this person unconsciously got dressed, or did they consciously "dress" in the morning?
6. What decorative elements are visible in their appearance?
  • Jewelry
  • Piercings
  • Painting/tattoos
7. Does anything about their clothing restrict their movement?
  • How they stand?
  • Sit?
  • Moves?
Just as you noticed the general proportions of the body, as you walk closer; notice how their head and face are proportioned:
8. Size and shape of the head, forehead, cheekbones, eyes, nose, mouth, chin, jaws, ears
  • Is it balanced?
  • What is pleasing?
  • What is remarkable?
9. Look at the skin on the face:
  • Color
  • Complexion
  • Texture : smoothness, scars, finely lined or creased from frowning, squinting, or smiling
  • Tone, especially eyelids and jawline
10. Eyes:
  • Color
  • Shape
  • Distance between the eyes
  • How deeply set are they?
  • Are the outer corners higher than, even with, or lower than the inner corners?
11. The muscles around the eyes reveal most about a character. Some people literally look at the world wide-eyed, while others narrow their vision. For most people the two sides of the face are very different indeed, one far more open or alert than the other.
  • Does the character look happy?
  • What other word would be more precise?
  • How does the character look at the world?
  • How much tension is apparent around their eyes?
  • How expressive are the eyes?
  • Are differences in the two eyes subtle or not?
  • Does the character see clearly?
    • Do they distort their face to see better?
    • Wear any kind of corrective lenses?
12. Look at the mouth. Does the mouth relax into a Mona Lisa smile, a straight line, or a frown?
  • How much tension is apparent in their jaw?
13. When you consider the following emotions, see which of them play over the character's face readily, slightly, fleetingly, or not at all:
  • fear
  • anger
  • joy
  • sorrow
  • love
14. Repeat the emotions and notice how the feeling was made evident. Which muscles moved?
If you extend your hands with the palms up, imagine the palms of the character's hands resting on yours.
15. How do their hands feel?
  • Heavy/light
  • dry/damp
  • smooth/rough
16. How large are their hands?
17. Do they have any rings on their fingers?
18. Do they have any scars anywhere on their hands?
19. Look at the backs of her hands:
20. Shape and length of her fingers
21. Shape and length of nails
22. Care of nails and cuticles
23. Turn over their hands.
  • When you look at the palms, what do you notice?
24. What assumptions can you make about this person's life based on their hands?
  • How much manual labor have they done?
  • How pampered have they been?
  • What care do they take of them?
25. In the end, what is the most noticeable about their hands?
26. Let go of their hands and look down at their feet:
  • What, if anything, are they wearing on their feet?
    • How are the shoes fastened:
      woven straps, ties, buckles, velcro?
    • What material are they made of?
    • How stylish are the shoes?
    • How comfortable are the shoes?
    • How well are they cared for?
    • Are they polished?
    • Worn down on the heels? Soles?
27. As the character continues to face forward, slowly step around to look at their profile.
  • How do they stand?
    • rigid/relaxed
    • erect/slouched
    • Is their body in basic alignment?
    • If out of alignment, which part is thrust forward - head, shoulders, hips, or feet?
    • Is there anything obvious from the side that you missed looking straight at them?
28. As you continue walking behind the character, how are the hips and shoulders proportioned?
29. From the back, take a closer look at the character's hair:
  • color
  • texture
  • body
  • cleanliness/shine
  • styling
  • a person may take great care fixing the hair around the face, but is the back of it a mess?
30. Continue walking around the character. Is one profile remarkable in any way from the other?
31. What odors or scents emanate from the character?
  • How pleasant are these smells?
  • Do they relate to work or play?
32. As you face the character again, imagine you see an aura of energy about her. What kind of energy does she give off?
33. Some people are calm and cool; others are calm and warm. Some people radiate anger that is like dry ice - so cold it burns; another's anger is explosive but short-lived, like dry kindling; anger in others smolders for unbelievably long periods of time. The energy contained in - and radiating out from - love, joy, fear, anger, and sorrow can be just as dramatic. These five emotions are not the only ones, but they are the primary ones.
  • Which of those primary emotions demonstrate and energize this character, even in repose?
34. If you ask the character to walk with you, how do they walk?
  • Head, shoulders, hips, or feet first?
  • How large are their steps?
  • How graceful are their movements?
  • How fast do they walk?
  • Where do they look while walking?
35. How would you describe how this person walks through life?
36. How willing are they to dance?
  • What kind of dancing do they do?
  • How well do they dance?
37. If you ask a question and the character answers, what qualities do you hear?
  • Rate at which they speak
  • pitch
  • volume
  • tone
38. How comfortable are they when talking?
39. How much silence is in their speech?
40. How comfortable are they with silence?
41. How comfortable are they with singing?
42. How well do they sing?
The next series of questions focuses on a character in a setting. The same prompts could be used for different setting in the story. Imagine walking with a character as they enter a building or room in the story:
43. Does the character pause before entering? Why?
44. How carefully does the character enter the space?
45. Do they seem to fill or be dwarfed by the space?
46. Do they dominate or fit in with the other characters in the space?
47. Do they seem comfortable in this place?
48. What is the first thing they do?
49. What do they seem to value here?
What follows are more general questions about the character's role and growth in the story and their relationship with others. 
50. Is the character a seeker or a victim at the beginning of the story?
51. Does this change during the course of the story?
52. What goals does the character have?
  • Do these goals change during the story?
53. What has the character gained by the end?
54. How has the character dealt with obstacles along the way?
55. Which traits have been most balanced? Most imbalanced?
  • courage
  • compassion
  • sense of humor
  • common sense
  • love
56. What does the character say about themselves?
  • Are they reliable?
  • How do you know this?
57. What are their best characteristics?
58. What are their weaknesses?
59. Do they have any special talents?
60. What is their relationship with others in the tale?
61. A character's speech can reveal the relationship between themselves and the person to whom they are speaking.
  • How does the character speak to other characters in the story?
  • What do we know about them from this behavior?
62. Who does this character love?
  • How do their actions convey support and care for those they love?
63. What do others say about this character?
  • Are they reliable?
  • How do we know this?
64. Think of ways in which the character is the same as others in the story.
  • In what ways are they different?
65. How would they argue with another character, using words, sounds, and space?
66. How would they express their affection for another character using words, sounds, and space?
67. How do relationships alter between this character and others during the story?
68. Visualize how the character would stand in proximity to all the other characters in the story.
  • when the story begins
  • during the height of the action in the middle of the story
  • by the end of the story

Best wishes in your story-telling,
Nicole


Pulled from The Whole Story Handbook by Carol L. Birch - using imagery to complete the story experience.