Coaching Quote of the Day 10th January 2015
“Failure is the opportunity to begin again more intelligently.”
(Henry Ford)
“Failure is the opportunity to begin again more intelligently.”
(Henry Ford)
In this weeks guest post Charlotta Hughes shares some of her expertise and knowledge.
January can be a busy time of year for us coaches, as people seek out the best support to make sure the New Year becomes the best it can be.
We, who work in the coaching profession, know just how much more likely it is that those who use coaching to support them, succeed in actually seeing things through, break down real or perceived barriers and implement the improvements they desire.
When given the opportunity, it’s such a joy to see the positive changes unfold and just how possible it is to defy the February blues kicking in.
However, we do need to be given the opportunity and despite the known and visible benefits, for many coaches it’s pretty hard to find the clients. Even in January.
And for many individuals desiring positive changes, they don’t make the leap and commit to a coaching process, reducing their chances of success significantly.
This is a conundrum that I’ve pondered for some time and I’ve come to realize that there are two main reservations about coaching that I hear and read about:
1. Coaching is too fluffy and unscientific.
2. Coaching is a luxury!
They’ve fascinated me for some time and I’ve spent some time reflecting on them over the holidays.
In doing so, I’ve been considering where these criticisms may stem from and I’ve also scrutinised my own thoughts on whether they bear any real weight or not.
Thankfully, I’ve landed in a strong conviction that neither are true for great coaching. Like all professions, of course, there are good and bad coaches. So, for the sake of this piece, I’ll only consider great coaching. Which, of course, is what we all endeavor to provide!
When the coaching is great, the criticisms just don’t stand up and there are strong arguments around why they don’t. Rather helpful when the skeptics turn up!
Truthfully there is a lot of science behind great coaching.
This is not always obvious, as the philosophy of great coaching is to not bamboozle people with science and facts but rather to deliver it in a way that is accessible to everyone. That’s part of its power – no one feels daunted or overwhelmed and can simply enjoy the process and its benefits.
A great coach never puts themselves in the ‘I know best’, ‘my word is law’ or ‘I’m right and don’t need to explain how or why’ bracket. This allows the clients to listen to and trust themselves and, with the guidance of the coach, instill the scientifically proven benefits in ways that suit and work for them.
Of course it’s true that we must be able to afford whatever we chose to spend money on.
However, how we prioritise and make decisions around what we can afford is influenced about what feels like a luxury and what doesn’t.
And I really disagree that great coaching is a luxury.
We only have one life, and the main player in each of our individual scenarios is ourselves. That is (or should be) true for all of us.
This doesn’t make us selfish and it doesn’t mean we shouldn’t ever priorities those around us. What it does mean however, is that if we forget to value and look after ourselves, we reduce the quality of our one and only life. And in doing so, we probably become less of a value or positive addition to others’ lives too.
The mindset that such self prioritisation and development is a luxury is anything but helpful. To ourselves and those we love.
1. Developing and growing as a person is fundamental to you being the best that you can be.
2. Learning how to take control of your life underpins your success, happiness and motivation.
3. Understanding your motivators and what drives you is vital for knowing yourself; who you are and what you really want from life.
4. Liberating yourself from limiting beliefs and fears is the secret to kick start action, eliminate inertia and achieve great things.
This is why I don’t regard great coaching a luxury, and not even a ‘cost’ but rather a serious investment in ourselves and our future happiness. One worth prioritising whenever possible.
These are the messages that I convey wherever and whenever I get a chance and slowly but surely, it’s a joy to see the skeptics won over and more and more individuals allowing themselves the great joy that comes with coaching. Good luck in getting your positive messages out there and in helping more and more people take the leap and make that commitment to themselves and their dreams!
Charlotta has been coaching professionally for over 12 years and in March 2013 she won UK Life Coach of the Year, awarded by the national body Association of Professional Coaches, Trainers and Consultants. She specialises in coach mentoring, confidence, direction and entrepreneur coaching.
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Charlotta’s background is within Human Resources and she started her busy coaching practice, be me life coaching, in January 2007.
“Small opportunities are often the beginning of great enterprises.”
(Demosthenes)
Each Thursday I share the most RT’d quote(s) from the blogs twitter account over the previous week.
Last week the most RT’d tweet was:
“Your present circumstances don’t determine where you can go; they merely determine where you start.”
(Nido Qubein)
Tweeted on 30th December
The quote with the next highest amount of RT’s was a tie between:
“Believe you can and you’re halfway there.”
(Theodore Roosevelt)
Tweeted on 30th December
“There are no traffic jams along the extra mile.”
(Roger Staubach)
Tweeted on 1st January
and
“Twenty years from now you will be more disappointed by the things that you didn’t do than by the ones you did do.”
(Mark Twain)
Tweeted on 2nd January
Many thanks to everyone who shared the quotes above and the other quotes from last week. I know that there are various aspects that can influence if a quote attracts your attention – if you saw the tweet, personal style, if it speaks to something happening in your life at that moment etc.
(For those of you as geeky as I am and wondering what tool I’m using to measure individual RT’s this week I’ve been playing with www.twitonomy.com)
“Almost everything comes from nothing.”
(Henry F. Amiel)
“In the dim background of our mind, we know what we ought to be doing but somehow we cannot start.”
(William James)
This week’s TED Talk clip is from an independent TEDx event: Why I Teach My Children to Fail | Jim Harshaw | TEDxCharlottesville
Clip length: 6 mins 43 secs Prefer to watch on TED.com? In that case you’ll need to click here.
“I have always been delighted at the prospect of a new day, a fresh try, one more start, with perhaps a bit of magic waiting somewhere behind the morning.”
(J. B. Priestly)