Monday, December 25, 2023

Leap

“Sometimes we think there is so much bad happening in the world we don’t think doing a small amount of good will make a difference. But, it does!” – Eliseo Medina

Leap

Once in a while you meet people that make you want to be better. Today I met such people. They’re named Eliseo, Chelsea and Ramona Medina.

Sometimes such people aren’t conspicuous, until you look deeper. It can be like looking at one of those dot-to-dot puzzles, before you connect the numbers with lines. It takes a while before you begin to get the whole picture. That’s what it’s like when meeting the Medina’s.

Eliseo and his wife Chelsea own Medina’s Tri Tip Company, a small, nondescript eatery. In fact, thousands of people drive past it without notice. Yet, once you meet the Medinas and taste their food, your vision of this little operation changes instantly.

“My mom, Ramona, moved us here ten years ago.” Eliseo said.

His mother was willing to move across the country, to a place where she had no work lined up, and didn’t know anyone just to change Eliseo’s life. She knew Eliseo needed a change of place, people and environment.

“I was getting into trouble constantly. The environment made it impossible for me to live the kind of life my mother hoped for me.” He explained.

Ramona wanted to live with people who shared her own core values. Gladly, their move facilitated the change Ramona yearned for.

“It hasn’t always been easy for us. In fact, recently my wife and I came to a cross roads where we didn’t know how to best provide for our family. Then, I thought of my mom and her wonderful food. So, I said to Chelsea, let’s open a restaurant, use my mom’s recipes and bring our family’s homemade taste here.”

They did. It was the second huge leap of faith in Eliseo’s life. Little did they know that the third leap was just ahead for them.

When COVID arrived, their customers started telling them that they couldn’t come in because they weren’t working. In fact, they didn’t have money to buy groceries either. So, the Medina’s began to give food to people in need.

“It was a hard time, because our own business was so far off.” Eliseo said.

Eliseo knew they needed to increase their own income so they could help more. So, he developed a new beef jerky business using their restaurant kitchen.

“Now, we have a new kitchen across the way from our restaurant. It’s solely dedicated to making beef jerky while growing our revenue, just as we’d hoped.” Eliseo said of their growing business and philanthropy.

Today, Christmas gifts were flowing out of the restaurant door, carried and delivered by local firefighters who had themselves volunteered to help. 

“Sometimes we think there is so much bad happening in the world we don’t think doing a small amount of good will make a difference. But, it does!” Eliseo said.

Will leap with the Medinas?

Monday, December 18, 2023

Newly Curious


“Never say never, because limits, like fears, are often just an illusion.” – Michael Jordan

Newly Curious

“I wonder where this emotion is coming from?” Tien Lin said to himself.

Then he felt an uncomfortable gurgling in his lower abdomen. It was that all too familiar unhappy gut feeling. He’d had it as long as he could remember. And apparently, he’d had it his whole life, even before he could remember. His mother, God rest her soul, told him about her struggles to have him keep, even the blandest food inside and digesting.

“I wonder where this gurgling gut is coming from?” He asked, as a follow up question.

That’s when he remembered the conversation he’s had with his counselor Dave earlier that day.

“When you feel this physical manifestation make sure to go to your curiosity,” Dave had said. “The physical symptom is in set membership with an emotion.”

“STOP!” Tien cried out, just as Deepak Chopra had taught him. 

Then, he broke the letters apart and rehearsed the acronym steps he’s been given by Deepak.f

S is for stop. He remembered.

“Yes. I need to stop right now, at the moment I recognize that set membership with my body and emotion,” Tien recited to himself.

T. Take three deep breaths. “Deepak, said it will shift my mind to the four questions,” Tien breathed as the words echoed inside his head.

O. Observe your breath. So, Tien took the time to observe what was happening in his heart, mind and body.

P. Proceed with awareness and compassion.

Dave’s words, again, danced through Tien’s now calmed thoughts. “Treat yourself with compassion,” Dave had reminded him. After all, sometimes the holiday season isn’t always joyous for everyone.

Some of us spend the entire holiday season grieving and yearning for a return to what we consider to be “normal life,” so we can start to find meaning and purpose once again.

“What are those four questions of curiosity?” Tien asked himself. “Oh, yes: Who am I? What do I want? What is my purpose? What am I grateful for?”

These are questions of curiosity. They are the questions you could ask yourself every morning. They are, I wonder questions.

After all, sometimes the wonder of the holiday season leaves many to wonder differently.

“Why am I alone?”

“When will I find love?”

“Will I ever feel happy again?”

If you’re asking yourself such questions, let your curiosity offer you hope.  Remember to STOP every morning and ask yourself the four questions of curiosity.

Have you begun to wonder? Then, think about what Michael Jordan once said, “Never say never, because limits, like fears, are often just an illusion.”

Let your new year begin, curiously.

Monday, December 11, 2023

Keys to the Sleigh

“Success is liking yourself, liking what you do, and liking how you do it.” – Maya Angelou

Keys to the Sleigh

It was early in the afternoon, on an early in December day. The Christmas decorations were everywhere. The atmosphere was festive. Perhaps most importantly, Santa was there. We weren’t there just to see Santa, but he was the main event for my grandkids for sure. You’ve been there too, I’m sure.

The kids line up to take their turn. Once their turn arrives, each child, often tentatively, walks the last few steps to the man dressed in red and white. Some are shy and some are open and talkative. The parents and grandparents mostly stand in the background, with hope painted on their faces. They hope for continued belief in Santa.

There are some who have lost their belief. And, that’s a sad thing. It’s a sad because rather than believing in the truth Santa, they have traded that truth for myth. Yet, the truth of Santa is, perhaps best expressed by Mya Angelou who said, “Success is liking yourself, liking what you do, and liking how you do it.” 

And, during this particular visit with Santa, he shared six additional keys which create the successful magic of his sleigh.

Santa, lives and works in the moment. Just watch Santa as he works, surrounded by kids. He focuses on each child individually, completely absorbed in each moment with each person. Sure, there is commotion all around, but he is never distracted by any of it. And, it leads each child to feel special and loved right up to the time his public time is over.

Santa, taps into restorative resilience. Santa doesn’t continually live in public. He makes sure to go home, after spending time with the kids, where he enjoys companionship from his spouse, eats delicious cookies and drinks cocoa to warm his heart. This naturally reduces his stress and allows him to thrive even during his busiest and most demanding time of the year.

Santa, manages his energy. Santa doesn’t continually engage in exhausting thoughts and emotions. He’s learned to manage his stamina by remaining calm and centered. It allows him to save his precious mental energy for tasks where he needs it most. Like listening to and caring for all the kids he comes into contact with.

Santa, does nothing, regularly. Santa doesn’t spend all of his time being intently focused on his work. He makes time for idleness, fun and irrelevant interests. This time gives him the ability to be continually creative and come up with breakthrough ideas.

Santa, is good to himself. Instead of always focusing only on his strengths and being self-critical, Santa understands that his brain is built to learn new things. Can you believe the range of new gifts he comes up with each year as a result?

Santa, shows compassion to others. Perhaps, Santa’s greatest strength is his ability to focus on others and maintain his supportive relationship with others over a lifetime. At least he’s done so for you year after year. After all, you believe in him, don’t you?

If you do, or don’t, accept these six magical sleigh keys as a gift from Santa. Use his keys! And, dramatically increase your joy personally, as well as in others. Just like Santa.


Watch my latest episode of American Dream TV

https://drive.google.com/file/d/1VrtKwVnGHVODrj4B6cP5IbPCjEJfM5NZ/view?usp=sharing

Monday, December 4, 2023

Chain Reaction


“Our acts of compassion uplift others and make them happy. We may not know it, but by uplifting others we are also helping ourselves.” – Emma Seppala

Chain Reaction

I was sitting in her kitchen. She was standing and talking. When suddenly, her breath became halted.

“He’s just dealing with his demons,” she said while explaining why her husband, of more than twenty years, was away from their family. “I know he’ll figure it out. He’s back where we went to high school and is visiting as many people as he can. He was supposed to come back a week ago. Now I don’t know when he’ll be coming back.”

She took one very deep breath and then she shut her eyes, squeezing them, in their shut position, in an effort to stop the inevitable tears. He breath halted two or three more times as she continued to squeeze her eyes shut.

“It’s just that; he’s the love of my life,” she blurted, as if a hiccup.

Then, she turned tightly and walked out of the room. She had lost control of her the once held-back-tears. I simply watched, listened, waited and thought about what I’d been learning.

I contemplation what Emma Seppala has been teaching me about how compassion is often confused with empathy. Because it seemed to fit in this circumstance. Dr. Seppala says that empathy is the process related to experiencing another person’s feelings. It’s like automatically mirroring another person’s emotion, yet that was not what I saw as my friend teared up at the thought of her husband’s sadness, because It’s not identical to compassion. 

Compassion often happens as you notice another person’s suffering and it involves a genuine desire to help alleviate that suffering. That’s what my friend was experiencing, as demonstrated by her halted breath and hiccup-laden-tears. She wanted to help her loved one in some way. And, this desire walked back into the kitchen with her seconds later.

“He’ll work it all out. It will just take him some time. But, I know he’ll get there. He’s really a good person,” she explained.

Her kindness likely reminds you of how one act of goodness has the ability to produce more generosity in a chain reaction of goodness. You may have seen a news report about how such a chain reaction occurred after someone paid for the diners who come after them at a restaurant, or for drivers behind them at a tollbooth. It’s natural for people to keep generous behavior going. Acts of compassion uplift others and make the giver happy as well. And, my friend was immediately uplifted because of the compassion she was offering to her husband. 

“You may not know it, but by uplifting others we are also helping ourselves,” Dr. Seppala explains. Happiness spreads! if the people around you are happy, you become happier.

I was still sitting on a chair in my friend’s kitchen. She walked back toward me. Her breathing had changed. It had become soft, calm and healing, because of her expressed compassion.

Let the chain reaction of goodness begin!