Announcements
Conscious Dating Tele-Seminar Series
First Thursday of each month, f`ree to our subscribers.
If you've received this from a friend and wish to join us register
here. It's f`ree!
Thursday, September
6, 6:30pm pacific/9:30pm eastern
 Conscious Dating: Managing
the Internal Conversation between Inner Critic and Inner Voice
With Frankie Doiron and David Steele
Internal dialogue is the real-time conversation you have with yourself
about everything that's happening in your life and the world around
you. It can be positive and encouraging, or negative and sabotaging.
Have you ever wondered why your inner dialogue is sometimes supportive,
and at other times disruptive and upsetting?
The truth is, the thoughts you have that form these inner conversations
come from two distinct sources: One - your “Inner Voice”
- provides unerring guidance to help keep you on track with your goals
and dreams, while the other – your “Inner Critic”
- presents obstacles and limiting beliefs that will keep you from those
dreams.
Unfortunately for most people, the Inner Critic’s strong, negative
voice is so overpowering, it prevents them from taking action and achieving
their goals.
This Tele-Seminar will reveal how you can take control of your internal
conversations and create the life you want.
In this program you will learn:
• The origins and workings of the Inner Critic and the Inner
Voice;
• Why one will never lie to you, while the other will always
mislead you;
• How you can easily identify which one is in charge of the
conversation;
• Why habitual behavior is a key to retraining the Inner Critic,
eliminating your limiting beliefs and accelerating the Law of Attraction;
• The 5 step process for controlling your internal conversations
and your life.
• And more!
Join Frankie and David as we reveal the secrets and strategies
for successful Conscious Dating.
Mark your calendar right now. You WILL want to
attend this outstanding program!
Can't make it? No problem! Each program
in recorded and you can get the MP3 audio file for playing on
your computer, MP3 player (iPod or other), or burning onto a CD, a complete
written transcript for following along and making notes and immediate
access to the recorded program via telephone replay line and link to
presenter's notes and other supplementary information here.
Conscious Relationship Tele-Seminar Series
Each month we strive to bring you the best relationship
information from top experts F`REE to our subscribers!
Thursday, September 13, 5:30pm
pacific/8:30pm eastern
Addressing
Relationship Energy Drainers
With Ilene Dillon,
MSW, MFT, LCSW
Do you know that "the way a relationship starts off, it tends
to continue"?
Too often we spend weeks or months in a relationship, only to find
it is not working for us because we feel drained, guilty, very angry,
or used in the relationship.
You can save yourself time, energy, and pain by learning to recognize
immediately when your energy is being drained and what you can do
about it. Whether you have a penchant for attracting energy
draining individuals or you experience energy draining only occasionally,
you'll appreciate having readily-available tools for dealing with
this all-too-common relationship challenge.
In this program you will learn:
- How and why energy draining occurs
- 6 ways to immediately recognize when your energy is being drained.
- Two prominent patterns of energy draining.
- Three actions you can take to neutralize energy draining from
others.
- How to utilize the 72-Hour Rule to strengthen yourself in relationships.
- The D.E.S.C. Plus-A-Step method for communicating powerfully.
No need to register! To access this seminar use this link-
www.ConsciousRelationshipSeminar.com
As a subscriber you will receive reminders a few days prior and the
day of the seminar.
Can't attend? No problem. The recordings of all our programs are available
f`ree at www.consciousrelationshippodcast.com
Ask
Our Coaches:
How Do You Know When You’re
Ready to Date Again?
...How do you know when you’re ready to date again?
What should I do to avoid getting into something that just isn’t
right?
This column answers questions submitted by our readers. Submit your
questions to Tara@RelationshipCoachingInstitute.com who will forward them to
our coaches all over the world. Each issue, we'll publish a few answers
from our RCI coaches.
Dear Coaches,
I’m 36 and broke up with my fiancée 3 months ago –
her decision. In retrospect, I’m glad things turned out this way
because I really don’t think she was right for me. We were together
for 2 years. I haven’t dated anyone since then, but instead have
focused on my job and spending time with my friends. I think I’m
ready to date again – tired of being alone and miss being close
with someone. I want to get married and start a family, but when I think
about starting over again, it seems like too much work.
I don’t want to get dragged through all of the emotions and “stuff”
again. I guess it seems like one big daunting task. While not typically
my style, I thought I would ask for some advice. How do you know when
you’re ready to date again? What should I do to avoid getting
into something that just isn’t right? I just don’t have
the bandwidth to go down a wrong path – again. What do you think?
Roberto from Raleigh
Geoff responds …
Ending a relationship is difficult and can
shake your confidence. I
applaud you for asking for support as you take your first steps to get
back into the game. You’ll know that you’re ready when:
* You’ve developed a strong network of friends and aren’t
looking for someone who’ll provide all your emotional support,
* You’ve taken a thoughtful inventory of your needs and values
and know what’s most important to you in a relationship and
in life,
* You’re willing to do some recreational dating to get to know
people and to have fun without automatic exclusivity. Stay conscious
and test the waters before diving in, and
* You’ve gotten clear about what a sexual relationship means
to you and you’re willing to discuss it with a potential partner.
If either of you regard it as something you do only when you’re
a “couple,” skip it! Even though people may say
it’s purely recreational, sex can stir emotions that signal
something totally different.
While discovering and learning about yourself may seem daunting, it’s
a whole lot easier than entering another relationship that isn’t
“right” for you and going through the drama and disappointment
again. Good luck!
Geoff Farnsworth | Single To Soul Mate
coachgf@mac.com | 856-371-4704
Anna responds …
Let’s play with the future for a moment. It’s one year from
today, and you’ve been in the happiest relationship ever-
- What did you do to create this relationship?
- What did you do to find out what your partner needed and wanted
from you?
- How did you tell your partner what you wanted and needed from her?
- What strategies did you have in place to deal with conflicts?
- Did those strategies work?
- How much time did you spend getting to know your partner before
you became emotionally attached?
And the biggest question of all: What did you learn from all your
past relationships, and how did you incorporate these new skills in
this relationship?
A relationship is an invitation to get to know ourselves better. To
avoid a relationship is to avoid our own growth. To resist this is painful.
To embrace this is bliss.
Anna Manning, MBA, MS | anna@annamanning.com | 830.964.4037
Jack responds …
WOW! – HOO-RAH and WOW! First, you looked for the positive
in your break-up and the positive has set you free. Taking time
for yourself with work and family is a great way to recover yourself.
Second, and this is the really great news, you didn’t run out
and jump into a new relationship.
You have given yourself a wonderful gift – THE POWER OF CHOICE!
The next step is to put your power of being the chooser to work. The
best way I can think of doing this is to employ a Relationship Coach.
Immerse yourself in the Conscious Dating Relationship Success Training
for Singles program and move forward with a sense of confidence, and
optimism. Get to know yourself and who and what you want in a relationship
and GO FOR IT!
How will you know when it’s time to date again? Roberto, it may
not be so much a matter of timing as it is being present to your
emotional health and feelings. You have taken steps to heal the past.
You are asking questions, looking for a new and better way to re-enter
the dating arena.
You have earned my admiration (and I suspect that of many others) through
writing your letter, and by your willingness to express your pain and
misgivings about starting over once more. You’ve proved that men
hurt, too. More important, you’ve set a path for other men to
follow. Lead on! Be Blessed and Know Peace.
Jack Cook |jack@coachjackcook.com | 904.725.6044
Cynthia responds …
Prior to pursuing another relationship, I would spend some time looking
inward. I suggest taking some time and defining your life
vision. Do you really know what you want your life to be like
now – or in five years, ten years, or at retirement? Once
you have discovered the life that you want, I recommend taking some
time to realize what your requirements, needs and wants are for
a relationship. Until you understand what those are, you are unable
to see the type of partner you should be seeking.
Your partner needs to be aligned with your life vision and anyone short
of that simply would not be a healthy choice. Once those pieces
are put together, then I suggest dating. The process becomes easier
when you understand the type of person who will be compatible with you.
You’ll waste less energy and dating will not seem like such a
chore.
Cynthia Simpson | cynthia@lhcoach.com|www.lhcoach.com | 281.464.8836
Michelle responds
…
Good for you, Roberto, that you see where your previous relationship
was not right for you. Have you looked at the positive and negative
patterns that often show up in your significant relationships? Are you
confident in knowing the purpose for which you were created and where
you are going with your life?
If you are unable to answer “yes” to these questions, I
would highly recommend working with a relationship coach and the Conscious
Dating Relationship Success Training for Singles program. This program
will help you to answer these questions for yourself while you become
more confident and conscious in your future choices for relationship.
I have found another very important key indicator to relationship readiness
is when you are ready to think about what you are able to give to your
next relationship. If you are only focused on what you will get and
your happiness, you can be sure you are still healing. When you are
able to reach out to another in unselfish love, then you will know you
are ready for relationship.
I wish you a productive recovery period and the relationship you have
been waiting and working for.
Michelle Blacksher | m.blacksher@att.net|
503.504.7052
Brenda responds …
While relationships do require work, it doesn't have to FEEL like a
daunting task. Having and maintaining a relationship can be inspiring
and enjoyable. I recommend you work with a relationship
coach to become clear about the areas where you are ready and where
you aren't. When singles aren't totally ready for relationship,
they head down the same old road and end up with the same old results.
With coaching, you'll see where you are right on top of things and where
you need to do some work. The more completely ready you can be, the
better your chances of having the relationship you desire.
Start living your life as a successful single while you work
on becoming ready for that special person. Once you are clear about
who you are, what you want and how you are going to attain that, it
will be so much easier to avoid investing in a relationship that
isn't right for you. Your bandwidth will widen and you'll be able to
see dating prospects with a clearer mind and a more knowing heart.
Finding the right person for you will be well worth the work you put
into it!
Brenda Zeller | www.VitalLifeCoaching.com
Brenda@VitalLifeCoaching.com | 610.966.7947
Feature
Article:
Dating on the Rebound
by Sandra Rohr M.A.
After a breakup, whether from divorce or another relationship, we
all experience loss. We need time to heal, we need time to re-orient
our lives, and then we need to learn how to take the steps to move
forward once again.
What is dating on the rebound? What are the dangers of dating too
soon? How can we get through the pain? RCI Coach Sandra Rohr explores
these and other questions in this month’s special interview
with Editor Tara Kachaturoff:
Question: What exactly is dating on the rebound?
Sandra: My American Heritage Dictionary defines
rebound as, among other things: “A quick recovery from or reaction
to disappointment or depression.” The emphasis here is on
the word quick. In the dating sense, this refers to someone who
very quickly after a romantic breakup starts dating and seeking another
new relationship.
Question: Many singles hate to be alone; they
never have any "space" between relationships. They break up
with someone one week, and they're already back out there dating someone
new the next. What are your thoughts on this?
Sandra: It’s easy to understand why anyone
would want to rush into a new relationship. With any breakup,
there is a great sense of loss and pain. There is the loss of
the relationship itself, with all the joys that attended it. For
the partner who did not initiate the breakup, there is a loss of self-esteem,
with accompanying questions of personal worthiness and doubt of ever
having a satisfying, lasting relationship. And even for the partner
who initiated the breakup, there is pain and loss. As soon as
you start a new relationship, all the pain seems to magically disappear
with the excitement of being with someone new.
Question: So what could possibly be wrong with
this picture?
Sandra: Lots. The first issue is fairness
to the new partner. When you are still attached to or grieving
for the last partner, you are only able to give a part of yourself to
the new relationship. You simply are not free to be wholly present,
which shortchanges the new partner. It’s just unfair to
that person.
The greater issue, however, is that when you immediately enter a new
relationship, you do not have the chance to do the necessary soul-searching
and personal growth that can keep you from a continued round of short-lived
relationships. A part of the rebound mentality is looking over
and over for the “right” person, rather than taking the
responsibility to clean up your own act and to become the “right”
person yourself.
Question: What's the best way to get through
that painful time after a breakup?
Sandra: The first thing is to accept that breakups
are painful. The only constructive response is to allow the pain.
Grief counselors tell us that the only way out of pain is through.
Pain comes in waves. When a wave of pain comes, you should not
fight it or try to dull it in any way. Rather, allow it to fill
you; let it in. Don’t fight the tears; they are therapeutic.
Always, when the pain reaches a high point, it then drains away.
Eventually, it becomes less and less, until one day, you will find yourself
happy again.
Next, begin a gratitude journal. As counter-intuitive as this
is, it’s a truly powerful way of working through your grief and
taking control of your life. Simply make a daily list of 5 things
for which you are grateful—even on the days when you just don’t
feel like it.
This is a perfect time to create a new life and a new approach to relationships,
an approach that will serve you well. Here is where a trained
relationship coach can be invaluable. Your first task is to look
for patterns in your past failed relationships.
Your relationship coach can help you analyze your patterns and help
you discover what your bottom-line requirements for a relationship are
so that you can make better choices in the future. At the same time,
your coach will help you explore your own passions so that you can begin
to live your ideal life immediately. Then when a new love appears,
you will be ready to enter your new relationship whole-heartedly —and
successfully.
Question: What are the top 3 things you would suggest
singles NEVER do after a breakup?
Sandra: First, don’t fight the pain.
Pain can teach important life lessons that can’t be learned any
other way. Second, don’t immediately start dating seriously
again. This is a good time to socialize with friends and family
and use their support to help you. When you do begin dating, keep
it on a friendly basis only, and be upfront with your date that you
are not yet available for a committed relationship. Finally, don’t
give up hope. There is someone for you, and when you have done
the deep work of healing, you will be ready to establish a wonderful,
satisfying new relationship.
Sandra Rohr, M.A., is a certified Life Purpose Coach
and relationship coach, who specializes in helping singles to connect
with their life partners, and couples to establish and maintain strong
relationships. Hear Sandy's workshop on How to Be Irresistibly
Attractive to the Opposite Sex at
www.yourpersonallovecoach.com
Copyright © 2007 by Sandra Rohr. All rights reserved in all
media.
Bonus
Article:
How Singles Can Create Community
by David Steele, Founder and CEO
Relationship Coaching Institute
The most common lament I hear from today's singles is their difficulty
meeting potential partners. This problem did not occur in past generations
when we lived and worked in a community of family, friends, neighbors,
and co-workers, all of who would typically help introduce singles to
each other.
Without this support system, today's singles increasingly rely upon
dating services and personal ads to solve the problem of meeting potential
partners, and then wonder why they have so little in common with the
people they meet through these services.
Want to find your life partner? Expand your meaningful relationships!
If you are becoming frustrated in finding potential partners, remember
that relationships are about connection, and start by asking yourself
how you can improve the quality and quantity of ALL your relationships.
Isolated singles often find each other and become isolated couples.
When they have children, they become isolated families. Whether the
family remains intact or not, the legacy of isolation continues. If
relationships survive and thrive in community, they tend to shrivel
and die in isolation. Could this contribute to the high failure rate
of relationships today?
Without a built-in community, today's singles must intentionally create
their own support system. While most singles have friends and family,
this is not a large enough support community. Building a network of
close, mutually beneficial relationships requires time, effort, and
intention.
In today's society, the closest example of this kind of support system
is the community that exists in most church or temple environments.
Characteristics include:
* Geographical proximity
* Shared values, beliefs, and goals
* Inter-generational
* On-going shared activities
* All members contribute time and resources
* Mobilization in times of crisis and need
* Supportive of all members' needs and accomplishments
A community with the above characteristics can be found or created
outside of religious institutions. It can be as close as on your block
or in your neighborhood.
The members of a community contribute what they can and receive the
support they need. A single male member of the community might volunteer
to fix the plumbing of an elderly female member, who happens to think
of a friend of her granddaughter that might be good for him to meet.
Only in a community does this kind of spontaneous, mutually supportive
relationship develop. A typical, isolated single male wouldn't have
much reason to interact with a typical, isolated elderly female, and
when she calls a plumber to fix her problem, he misses the opportunity
to meet her granddaughter's friend, and they both miss the opportunity
to be in a mutually beneficial relationship that enriches each other's
lives.
So, where can singles meet potential partners? In my experience the
singles asking this question are too isolated in their everyday life,
and need to first focus on building their community before finding a
partner.
How can singles build a community for themselves? Here are some suggestions:
* Research existing communities aligned with your values and interests-
charitable, service, recreational, etc
* Explore personal growth and spiritual organizations
* Check out men's or women's organizations
* Deepen your connection with your existing friends, co-workers, family,
and neighbors by getting together more often
* Start "People Collecting;" gather cool people into your
life of a variety of ages, genders, etc., that you want to spend time
with.
A great relationship is brought together by, and thrives in community.
By deepening your connection with others and expanding the circle of
people you connect with, you improve the quality of your life and relationships.
You can then allow your community to support you in finding and having
a successful life partnership.
Copyright ©2007 by David Steele. All rights reserved.
David Steele, MA, LMFT
Founder and CEO, The Relationship Coaching Institute
www.RelationshipCoachingInstitute.com
Conscious Dating Resources
F`ree monthy Conscious
Dating Tele-seminars
F`ree monthy Conscious
Dating Tele-Clinic
New! Conscious Dating Audio Programs
Visit our website at www.ConsciousDating.org for FREE cutting-edge information and tools for finding the love of
your life, including:
" Register for our 5-Day e-Program for Singles, "How To
Find Your Life Partner"
" Take our proprietary Relationship Readiness Quiz
" Listen to outstanding audio programs such as "Find the
Love of Your Life AND The Life That You Love" and "Conscious
Dating for Relationship Success"
" Access our Knowledge Bank for innovative relationship tools,
strategies and concepts
" Check out our talented RCI-trained Relationship Coaches at www.ConsciousDating.org/coach
For
More Information
ConsciousDating.org, a resource for singles offered by
Relationship Coaching Institute, is a worldwide relationship coaching
organization dedicated to helping you 'find the love of your life AND
the life that you love'. For more information about us, please visit
our web site at www.consciousdating.org
________________________________________
Tired of being alone? Get a Relationship Coach! Check out our coaches
at: www.ConsciousDating.org/coach
________________________________________
NEW RELATIONSHIP? Congratulations in moving forward in your life partner
quest! WHAT NOW?
Visit www.ConsciousMating.org for cutting-edge information and resources for couples. You will be
glad you did! Please share this with new couples that you care about.
________________________________________
Are you a coach or other helping professional who works with singles
and couples? If you want to know more about adding the Conscious Dating
Relationship Coaching tools to your professional toolbox, visit www.RelationshipCoachingInstitute.com
________________________________________
Please share this newsletter with your single friends, family, and co-workers,
and you can be a partner in their success, too!
Links
to Us
Contact
Tara Alexandra Kachaturoff | Editor, Conscious Dating Newsletter
for Singles tara@RelationshipCoachingInstitute.com
________________________________________
Visit our website for singles at www.ConsciousDating.org
Relationship Coaching Institute
Free introductory training! www.RelationshipCoachingInstitute.com
Members of Relationship Coaching Network
Free resources for singles and couples www.RelationshipCoachingNetwork.org
To subscribe to this newsletter and join our f`ree Conscious
Dating Online Community click
here
Please refer singles your care about to www.ConsciousDating.org
BuildingYourIdealPractice.com
Free monthly tele-seminars! www.BuildingYourIdealPractice.com
Copyright 2007 by ConsciousDating.org. All rights reserved. Feel free
to share this with others as long as our contact information and authorship
is included.
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