TED talks you've got to watch

So here at LRW, we're always up for an inspired, motivating, authentic lecture. Or grilled cheese, but that's neither here nor there. One of our favorite places to grab some inspiration is ted.com where you can search a veritable smorgasbord of intelligent, creative visionaries speak about their research and experiences. It's easy to get lost for hours in it.

Since we know you have a lot to do - we pulled our favorite talks of the moment and quoted some of the zingers that got our minds racing during each talk as a mini-preview. Listen, watch, take notes, let it sink in, and most of all, enjoy. Have at it:

DIANE NYAD - NEVER, EVER GIVE UP

"How much life is there left?"

"This year the mantra is: Find a way."

"The point is and the point was, every day of our life is epic."

[ted id=1896]

ANDREW SOLOMON - DEPRESSION, THE SECRET WE SHARE

"The opposite of depression is not happiness, but vitality."

"You know it’s ridiculous while you’re experiencing it...and yet you are nonetheless in its grip."

"Shutting out the depression strengthens it, while you hide from it, it grows."

"Our needs are our greatest assets, it turns out I learned to give all the things I need."

[ted id=1894]

JILL BOLTE TAYLOR - MY STROKE OF INSIGHT

"Just like a balloon with just the last little bit of air, I felt my energy lift and felt my spirit surrender."

"I felt enormous and expansive."

"I remember thinking there was no way I could squeeze the enormousness of myself back into this tiny little body."

[ted id=229]

DREW DUDLEY - EVERYDAY LEADERSHIP

"We treat the title of leader as something that one day we’re going to deserve."

"Maybe the biggest impact I ever had on anybody’s life was a moment I didn’t even remember."

"It can be frightening to think we can matter that much to other people."

[ted id=1355]

SALLY KOHN - LET'S TRY EMOTIONAL CORRECTNESS

"We can be politically right, but emotionally wrong."

"We spend so much time talking past each other, and not enough time talking through our disagreements."

"Our challenge is to find the compassion for others that we want them to have for us."

[ted id=1883]

What TED talks or other lectures have inspired you lately?

a little push

With Court's post from yesterday still fresh in my mind, I wanted to quickly talk about my my own take on New Year's resolutions. I hate them.

Unknown

Alright, hate is a strong word.  Safe to say I'm a little intimidated by them, and every year I like to roll my eyes and pretend I'm above all of the goal making and no-rule-breaking shenanigans.  Because really I'm just terrible at following through with goals.

I was that girl who, if the teacher asked her to sit still in class, she HAD to fidget.  Had to.  Be quiet?  Insta-giggles. Don't, to me, is like a mini invitation to DO.  And vice versa.  So for me, a challenge is something that I not only shy away from, I usually head for the mother freakin' hills.

Processed with VSCOcam

Why, you ask?  Well, let's break down this phrase.  NEW.  Oh, that's not scary. Change is not scary at all.  Year.  That's an entire 365 days of time.  That's a lot, especially for our 6-second attention span, multi-tasking, smartphone wielding selves.  Resolution- a course of action determined or decided on.  That sounds a lot like "no take backs" to me.  INTIMIDATING, SCARY THINGS.

Or...

f533cd489851104c8a4efa48fd75d0e4

New. A fresh start. Year. 525,600 minutes that are mine oh mine to do with what I choose.  Resolution.  What if I decide the course?

I decided that this year, committing to something new was a little less scary to me than staying the same.  A challenge isn't something to roll my eyes at; it's not scary, it's empowering and it's mine.  So in January I decided I wanted to do yoga every single day. To many people this is a silly, teeny goal, but to me, it's a lot. I don't do much physical activity every day other than walks with Raven and Charlie and the occasional workout.  So to get up and move every day- to move with a goal of bettering the entire Allie, not just the physical Allie- isn't just a challenge, it's a welcome push.

Courtney took me to my first yoga class a few years ago, when I was going through a really rough time at work, and that one class took me elsewhere for an hour.  It was kind of magical.  Here's hoping the next 31 days feel the same.

Processed with VSCOcam

I'll be doing some recaps here and there to check in, so feel free to follow along!

Do you have any resolutions, goals or little pushes for the New Year?

pictures via Pinterest and my iPhone.

keeping (or not keeping) our new year's resolutions

This week, our Facebook newsfeeds will be flooded with links to New Year’s Resolution Lists. The Top 187 things that we’re leaving behind in 2013, that we’re bringing into 2014. New mantras, old habits, and promises of effective and immediate change.

IMG_0976If I’m honest with myself, I have a laundry list of personality traits I’d like to dispose of, or reinvigorate, or kind of ignore for another year. I could tell you that I am wanting to be more honest, drink more water, be more vulnerable with my family and friends, take more risks, love more deeply, speak up more, set healthier boundaries, decrease the cheese intake. I really want to do and be all of those things. But there’s this little nagging voice inside my head that says: you have too much on your plate, you’re going to forget half of these things, you’ll be good for a week and then BAM you’ll be knee deep in a Stouffer’s Family Size Mac’n’Cheese.

I can recognize this voice as the voice of my Resistance. Steven Pressfield in his masterpiece, The War of Art, writes:

There’s a secret that real writers know that wannabe writers don’t, and the secret is this: It’s not the writing part that’s hard. What’s hard is sitting down to write. What keeps us from sitting down is Resistance.

Obviously Resistance doesn’t just strike writers, Pressfield goes on to name the most common times it will creep up. He calls them Resistance’s Greatest Hits:

the war of art1. The pursuit of any calling in writing, painting, music, film, dance or any creative art, however marginal or unconventional.

2. The launching of any entrepreneurial venture or enterprise, for profit or otherwise.

3. Any diet or health regimen.

4. Any program of spiritual advancement.

5. Any activity whose aim is tighter abdominals.

6. Any course of program designed to overcome an unwholesome habit or addiction.

7. Education of every kind.

8. Any act of political, moral, or ethical courage, including the decision to change for the better some unworthy pattern of thought or conduct in ourselves.

9. The undertaking of any enterprise or endeavor whose aim is to help others.

10. Any act that entails commitment of the heart. The decision to get married, to have a child, to weather a rocky patch in a relationship.

So knowing we have all these goals and all of this Resistance, what does it really take to change? How do we actually release the habits that have kept us anchored for years? How do we know when we’re truly ready for something new? Basically, how do we sit down to write?

Change is uncomfortable. It can hurt. Sometimes, it makes us feel ashamed like we should have been doing this better all along. Sometimes, it feels futile because we don’t think anyone else notices our progress. Sometimes, it gets us angry because we think we're changing so much and everyone else is at a standstill. All of these discomforts are strong enough to make us want to hide. Cover. Lie. Resist.

But here’s what I know for sure: when we decide we’ve had enough, we get to work.

Real change requires no effort. Not that you won’t stumble into Resistance, not that we won’t have our doubts, not that we won’t run into roadblocks - we will. But the pain of staying the same will be far greater than the pain of changing.

We need to have had enough.

Enough of the relationships that don’t feed us. Enough of the food that drags our energy down. Enough of the work schedule that leaves no room for play. Enough of the hateful self-talk that steers us into depression. Enough of being surprised when someone we shouldn’t depend on in the first place lets us down. Enough of lying to ourselves.

how the light gets inPerhaps the biggest step I’ve ever made to effective and immediate change has been telling myself the truth first. “Hey Court, guess what? That is not the person you want to marry. / That friendship makes you sour and mean and gossipy. / You are bored out of your mind when you’re doing _______. / You are operating out of perfectionism and not passion.” All truths. All painful at the time. All followed by swift decision-making that led me to immediately enact change.

Maybe choosing New Year's Resolutions based on what we've had enough of is the surest way to keep them. But we won't know what that is until we get really honest with ourselves. Painfully honest. Until the pain of lying to ourselves becomes greater than the pain we might feel by switching it the hell up, change will feel like a boulder we shove and shove but can't move. And listen, if you don’t want to change bad habits - if you want to stay friends with downers, or hold onto a love that isn’t going anywhere, or stay stuck at a job you hate, that’s fine, too. Just be awake enough to realize you’re choosing it. Understand you just haven't had enough yet.

It's true that having had enough means things can get messy. And it makes sense that we’re afraid of cracking, of breaking open, of being so totally exposed that we can’t protect our one and fragile heart. But the crack, the brokenness, the exposure is exactly what cleans up the mess. The perfectionism and denial cocktail won’t keep bad things from happening to us, it won’t keep everything in its place, it won’t even keep us from dying. What it will keep us from is knowing every inch of our imperfect, resilient hearts. And when we practice honesty, get fed up, and start letting go of that which diminishes our spirit, we realize just how resilient our hearts can be.

Ring the bells that still can ring

Forget your perfect offering

There is a crack in everything

That’s how the light gets in.

- Leonard Cohen

What is the biggest, scariest, most worth it change you've ever made?

FIVER: non-fiction books to get you all pumped up. seriously.

When it comes down to it, you'll most likely find me at my most captivated when I have a non-fiction book in hand. I realize that sentence seriously downgrades my cool factor, but it had to be said. And don't get me wrong, I love a good and hearty fictional story just as much as the next nerd, but my internal fascination antenna comes to attention when I'm reading something true. Facts. Knowledge. Anecdotes. Lessons. Bottom Line. All of these get me riled up. I'll collect these little snapshots of the world to use as my personal benchmarks. Guides for the journey. Context. And practically, since it's the holiday season, they work as great conversation starters when you're around a bunch of people with which you have little in common.

Here are my top five most coveted non-fiction books of the moment. Drumroll please...

this is how1. This Is How: Surviving What You Think You Can't, by Augusten Burroughs. No one told me that my kindred spirit was the same man who wrote Running with Scissors, A Wolf at the Table, and Dry. I want to have lunch with this man. And dinner. And every meal because he is funny, honest, no bullshit, and lovingly imperfect. It's the exact person who I'd want to talk me through the most difficult moments in life and that's exactly what he does in this book. You need to get this book now. Yesterday. Go.

 

 

deepak

2. What Are You Hungry For?: The Chopra Solution to Permanent Weight Loss, Well-Being, and Lightness of Soul, by Deepak Chopra. I am so intrigued by this book. We all have a relationship to food, we all have deeply habitual patterns of how we choose and consume food. I'm really interested in the idea that eating habits can teach us about our wellness and not just our waistline. I think we're all past that "I'm on a diet" phase that was just so super fun in the 90s, and now we're all onto "It's a lifestyle." I think this book could illuminate more than just what to put on my plate. I'm into it.

 

brene brown3. Daring Greatly: How the Courage to be Vulnerable Transforms the Way We Live, Love, Parent, and Lead, by Brene Brown. Did you guys see Brene Brown's TED talk? If you didn't, get your butt over there. She describes through research and personal experiences how the courage to be vulnerable actually leads us to be stronger. The thesis could be grossly paraphrased as: The constant pressure to have your shit together can take a backseat. Be real, tap into your emotions, change the world. She had me at not having your shit together.

 

 

flow4. Flow: The Psychology of Optimal Experience, by Mihaly Csikszentimihalyi. There are a few times in my life where I've really been caught in flow. They usually all happen during rehearsals. The stage manager says it's the end of the day and I'm disappointed, bummed, and surprised because where the hell did the time go? Through research, experiments, philosophy, and science, Csikszentimihalyi investigates what this state actually is and how it can work for us. Sign. Me. Up.

 

 

 

charles duhigg

5. The Power of Habit: Why We Do What We Do in Life and Business, by Charles Duhigg. If you read my post on 3 new ways to think about your brain, then you'll understand why this book gets my synapses all hot and bothered. Not only does Duhigg discuss how to change your own habits, but he uncovers how companies can actually predict what we'll buy based on these very predictable behaviors. This is fascinating from every standpoint, but to be able to look at my predictable consumerism seems provocative and bank account-altering.

 

 
Have you read any of these titles? What's on your book wish list?

putting some health in your holiday

Do not get it twisted. The holidays should be enjoyed with full bellies, hearts, and arms. It is arguably necessary to indulge in the abundance of this season, and that includes indulgence in your own health. After all, aren’t we celebrating health? A healthy spirit, healthy relationships, healthy outlooks on a new year? So instead of going down that path where you forget to nurture yourself and feel more burnt out than built up, here’s how to keep the health in your holidays:

Write down your workouts in advance. The holidays are always busy. Take 3-5 hours a week to yourself to just connect with your own body. Sign up for classes in advance so you feel accountable. Include workouts in your planner just like you include holiday parties. Carve out the time you need in advance so you aren’t forced to choose when you are strapped for time and inspiration.

bari class

Simplify your cooking. I love food. My mom is the best chef I know (even her sandwiches have a way of making me reconsider why I ever moved out), and you can bet your cannoli that my dad makes the best pasta and gravy Sunday dinner this side of the Atlantic. But for all of those in between days, post-turkey and pre-pasta, I like to keep it simple. Just buying the necessities. Keeping it lean and delicious with proteins, vegetables, legumes. Simplifying means two things: a budget you can maintain now, and guilt-free indulging later. You’ll get enough food excitement from parties and family functions, so why not keep your list succinct and sustainable. Here’s a sample of what Craig and I are buying right now:

chicken breast

tofu

eggs

spinach

salsa

avocado

tomato

black beans

lentils

onion

turkey bacon

I can make three or four meals a day with that list:

Hearty Breakfast: scrambled eggs, fried tomato, avocado slices, turkey bacon and black beans

Breakfast on the go or snack: hard boiled eggs, salsa, spinach

Lunch: Salad with spinach, tofu, avocado, tomato, onion, turkey bacon

Dinner: grilled chicken, lentils or black beans with onions, sauteed spinach

That menu costs around $50 a week for two people. That's a lot of savings. That means more money for Christmas gifts. Like, say, I don’t know, this… asos jacketMeditate, pray, write. Do one or all three of these things depending on your disposition. I’ve taken to meditating first thing in the morning for a mere ten minutes. Clearing your mind, allowing yourself to start your day on your terms is going to give you the juice you need to celebrate with family and friends without burning out. You can’t just hustle to each and every holiday engagement. You’ve got to fill up and recharge so that you have something to give once you’re there.

therabandGet yourself some travel weights. Or resistance bands. Keep it lightweight so that you can pack it easily. This way, no matter where you are you can do a little something. Even if all you’re doing is a set of crunches with weights in your hands, you’re going to raise that heart rate up faster and burn a few more calories in a shorter amount of time. Slipping in a few sets here and there throughout your day when you’re visiting family will make sure you’re not stuck at a gym while trying to hold all those newborn babies.

Like this guy:

photo 1-1photo 2-1

Be honest and gentle. I think the best gift we can give each other during the holidays is the acknowledgement of truth via the gentleness of love. So often we don’t say what we feel, and mostly that happens with the people who need to hear it the most. Open up and stop hiding from those you love. I'll admit it, I have a short temper. Sometimes when I’m on the subway and people are starting to irritate me, I will imagine what they looked like as children. I try to see innocence, wonder, potential. If we can do that with strangers, we certainly should do that with our families. It’s the best time of the year to remember that everyone struggles in their own silent way from time to time, and exposing your honest and gentle self gives everyone else permission to do the same.

What other ways do you give your health a boost over the holidays?