Archive for August, 2006

Why Piglet Paper?

Monday, August 28th, 2006

Since the launch of this site, several people have asked us why the name Piglet Paper?  So here’s the story:

Both Ronn and I have submitted to the fact that Pulchritude is really the boss of this site and that it really revolves around her.  She is a Harley and, as you may know, Harley’s are commonly referred to as Hogs, following suit with H.O.G. (Harley Owners Group).  So in case you have ever wondered why people call a Harley a Hog, that’s why!

Well, Pulchritude is a Sportster, and is the smallest bike that Harley makes.  We just didn’t think she was big enough to be a Hog, so we refer to her as a Piglet.  And her name Pulchritude (pronounced pul kri tyood) means amazing beauty.

Hence, the story of how Pulchritude got her name and how our site came to be named Piglet Paper.

You can read more about her, us, and our crazy logic in the Who Are We? section of our site.

Rules for Being Human

Thursday, August 24th, 2006

I received this from a colleague of mine in Virginia and thought it was so powerful that I had a duty to pay it forward.

This piece speaks to me on so many different levels, reminding me of the power of the present moment and that I get to keep repeating a lesson until I learn it. The choice is mine how many times it takes and truthfully, I can often be a slow learner.

I hope you find as many morsels in it as I did!

Rules for Being Human

You will receive a body. You may like it or hate it, but it will be yours for as long as you live. How you take care of it or fail to take care of it can make an enormous difference in the quality of your life.

You will learn lessons. You are enrolled in a full-time school called Life. Each day, you will be presented with opportunities to learn what you need to know. The lessons presented are often completely different from those you think you need.

There are no mistakes—only lessons. Growth is a process of trial and error and experimentation. You can learn as much from failure as you can from success.

A lesson is repeated until it is learned. A lesson will be presented to you in various forms until you have learned it. When you have learned it (as evidenced by a change in your attitude and behavior), then you can go on to the next lesson.

Leaning lessons does not end. There is no stage of life that does not contain some lessons. As long as you live, there will be something more to learn.

“There” is no better than “here.” When your “there” has become “here,” you will obtain another “there” that will again look better than your “here.” Don’t be fooled by believing that “there” is always better than what you now have “here.”

Others are often merely mirrors of you. When you love or hate something about another person, it is often a reflection of something you love or hate about yourself. When tempted to criticize others, ask yourself why you feel so strongly.

What you make of your life is up to you. You have all the tools and resources you need. Remember that through desire, goal-setting, and unflagging effort, you can have anything you want. Persistence is the key to success.

The answers lie within you. The solution to all of life’s problems lie within your grasp. All you need to do is ask, look, listen and trust.

You will forget all this unless you consistently stay focused on the goals you have set for yourself.

My commentary is that I recently learned you don’t set goals to achieve the goal, you set goals to change your behavior. Intuitively, this made sense to me because I know that you can only Act your way into right thinking, but you cannot Think your way into right acting.

And if all of our choices, decisions and behaviors are made in accordance with our beliefs, then it probably pays to have beliefs in accordance with the way we want to act. Sort of funny how that works that way. The illusion is that it is paradoxical, but the reality is that is how it works.

And as a coach, I have witnessed in my life and in the lives of my clients that we already have the answers within us. Sometimes we just need a little help finding them.

I know about myself that I am a forget artist, so gentle reminders like these are always wise. There is serenity in consistency despite however yucky it may feel at the time. Once again, I am reminded that everything, absolutely everything is a temporary condition.

Lonely Outside

Thursday, August 17th, 2006

So I don’t write very often. It’s sort of hard to type with pistons. Kinda clunky, ya know. But when I get really inspired, I can clunk out some writing. And today, I am really inspired.

I am inspired because I want to go and I can’t. I think I understand why Ronn and Lisa don’t want to ride in the rain, but I have to admit that I am getting a little jealous of those cars because they are getting more attention than me. For the first day or two, it was a nice change to smell the rain, but now it is just impeding my “learning about the world” time.

I learn all kinds of new things when Ronn and Lisa take me out for a cruise. Like, for example, did you know that the faster you go, the less distance it looks like there is between those stripes on the road? I am still trying to figure out exactly what those stripes are for and the best I can tell they are for keeping everyone heading in a good orderly direction and not running over each other. One thing I do know for sure. If you find yourself riding along and all the sudden realize there are yellow lines on your right side, that means you are going the wrong direction!

Well, anyway, I am just blabbing and I am getting kinda tired. This is a lot of work ya know. I have to sneak into the house when no one is here, because any other time all the computers are taken and I can’t write. The other thing is I take up a lot of space indoors, so I have learned it’s better to do this sort of thing when they are out. All except for the dog, Cleopatra, but she is fun. She is always happy to see me! I just have to remember not to drip any oil on the floor. That tends to make Ronn sort of upset.

Apparently, though, once I get started and get into a groove, I really do have alot to say. After all, no one is taking me out for rides, so I have nothing but time on my pistons. Why not write? Wouldn’t that be the right thing to do?

But I guess I have said enough. I’m tired. And lonely. And bored. Please help! Go away rain! Just for a bit. So I can ride!

Lonely outside,

Pulchritude

Downsized-The shaft? Or a gift?

Thursday, August 10th, 2006

There are many schools of feeling on this, but it is my contention that our feelings are not always reality. More specifically, our feelings about a situation do not always accurately align with the reality of the situation. And in my own personal experience, I have found that sometimes they are exactly opposite. Of course, that only becomes apparent in hindsight, never in the moment when it would be really useful.

So as the story goes, I got laid off in July 2001. Actually, I specifically remember it was Friday the 13th. Go figure! There had been two rounds of lay-off’s already and as a result we were down to a skeleton crew, which meant I was working some crazily long hours. Even before the lay-offs started, I had been pulling all-nighters, so the lay-offs just made things worse.

I guess back then I thought I was doing the right thing and being loyal, not to mention banking brownie points. Today I know, that going to that length was a symptom of a sickness I call work-a-holism, for which the only known cure is to stop working so much. But this is a hard pill for a work-a-holic to swallow! Do you see the trap? All a work-a-holic knows how to do is work. And so you tell a work-a-holic to stop doing the only thing they know how to do well?!?!? Oops, that doesn’t make sense!

Well, sometimes circumstances happen such that they do for me what I cannot do for myself. For example, this work-a-holic didn’t know how to do other “normal-people” stuff like have a relationship with someone that I didn’t work with or to go on vacation and not take business calls. I believed I had a duty. Today it is amazing to me, after having been an Entrepreneur, that I could have deluded myself into giving up so much of my life for someone else. But, of course, my feelings told me that work WAS my life. Perfect case in point how my feelings about a situation were polar opposite the reality of the situation.

So finally on the morning of Friday, July 13, 2001, someone else did for me what I could not do for myself. I recall walking into my office and not being able to log in. Instinctively, I suppose because of the previous two rounds of lay-offs, I knew what was coming. But yet, still deluded, I marched down to the IT department, found one of the guys I knew and said “Hey, what’s the deal? I can’t log-in. Am I getting the axe?” Without missing a beat, he pulled up my profile on his server, said “Hmmm, I am not sure what happened, but for some reason you have been disabled. It should be working now. Let me know if it gives you any more trouble.” And with one click, I was back in business. Ha!

My relief was short-lived because once I got back to my office, I read the emails from HR that apparently I was not supposed to see. I sat there dumbfounded still reeling at what was about to happen. How could this happen to me?!?!? I remember vacillating between doing nothing and packing up my stuff, because I knew they would be by soon to deliver the news. And in pretty short order, I was right. The CFO appeared in my doorway and I knew it was my turn.

I haven’t been back to Corporate America since and really the rest is history. After exiting the building and getting over the initial shock, I do recall feeling a sense of deep relief that the insanity of was over. I did not have a clue what I was going to do, but for the first time probably in my whole life, I felt, for a brief instant, that feeling of knowing it was going to be OK. I knew then that being laid-off was a gift; it just took my mind a while to catch up.

I think Ronn’s comment to the effect that some people have to be forced to give themselves a gift is right on the money. Looking back at my actions, I really don’t think I thought I was worthy of a gift—of any kind. Today, I know that ALL of our actions are driven by our beliefs—the computer program in our head that is totally void of any emotion and does not know the feeling of insanity of doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results. It just knows to “run the loop”.

So if I am not getting the results I would like, I need to look at my part in them. When I take an honest inventory of my part, I always realize that I was doing the only thing I knew how to do—what my program is telling me to do. If I want different results, I have to have a different program—a new belief. Sometimes, though, I discover that I just have a syntax error. I have a “No” where there should be a “Yes”, or a “black” where there should be a “white”. Those are the easier ones to fix because they just require minor tweaks, not major overhauls.

So if actions are always an indicator of beliefs, looking back my actions tell me that I believed work was the only thing that made me whole. Work was my GOD. I prided my self on what I labeled as good work ethic, never realizing that anything without boundaries is never good. I was guilty of over-indulging in work. And on deeper examination, I realize that much of that supposed “work-ethic” really wasn’t bona-fide work ethic as much as it was a “program-driven” need to meet other people’s expectations in return for accolades. Today I know that was a symptom of a lack of confidence in my own self, cleverly disguised as loyalty.

Today, I am incredibly grateful for that lay-off because it set me on a course that even my wildest imagination could not have conjured up. At the time it made no sense and I just couldn’t see how it would all work out. In hindsight, though, as I reflect on how the threads of my life were woven, I can see that it makes perfect sense.

While there have many rough times since becoming an Entrepreneur, my worst day as an Entrepreneur has always been better than my best day working for someone else. Because deep down I know that I am taking responsibility of my own success.

Quite frankly, I don’t understand why everybody is not an Entrepreneur, but I also recognize that we are always exactly where we are supposed to be. There was a time when I didn’t know what I didn’t know, either. Despite my inner dreams of one day being an Entrepreneur, I know today that “one day” would have never arrived because I was sowing seeds of being someone’s employee, so that is what I would have continued to reap.

For those of you that have that Entrepreneur seed inside of you that you are too scared to water, Willingness is the key. Willingness doesn’t cost you anything, but gains you everything. Don’t let details of the “How” keep you from doing the “Do”. The “How” is what you find in the “Do”.

What personal stories do you have to share?

Are you Willing to do the “Do”?

Write us with your comments, feedback or questions.

For more reading along these same lines, I have found Escape from Cubicle Nation to be a great blog site with a wealth of info.

Also you can click here to download a related article “Happy People Never Retire”. It offers a thought-provoking look at why we are all doing what we are doing.

Giving Yourself a Gift

Friday, August 4th, 2006

There was an interesting post yesterday by Kathy Sierra on her site, Creating Passionate Users. The post, Silver lining on Sun layoffs?, discusses the current reduction in staff happening at Sun’s Colorado Campus and the effect it is having on those involved.

That post inspired the following question.

What do those who get laid off receive? A. the shaft B. a ‘gift’

Now remember your answer.

As an aside, Lisa has first hand experience with this. As such, I fully expect her to have a post on this subject soon and, therefore, I won’t to go into those details here. Suffice it to say that she once made it to the third round of layoffs at her former dot com employer before she was ‘ushered out the door’.

Now back to our regularly scheduled program….

What I find interesting in Kathy’s post (and something Lisa has confirmed with me previously) is that it seems that the earlier one gets the ‘axe’, the happier they ultimately seem to be. They don’t have to deal with the anxiety of constantly wondering if they will be next. And they don’t have to compound that with thoughts of how they will make it if they loose their paycheck. (See my previous post on the false security a paycheck provides here). They just seem to be able to move on much quicker.

So why is it that they are able to move on quicker you may ask? Well, I believe it is because they receive an incredible ‘gift’. The ‘gift’ of giving yourself permission to do the thing or things you always wanted to do. This comes easy to some. But some people have to be ‘forced’, by means of a layoff, to give themselves this ‘gift’.

So what is holding you back from giving yourself this ‘gift’? Or are you happy, TRULY happy, right where you are, right now? If not, why not give yourself permission to try something new?