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You are here: Home / Archives for personal development

Women-Only Stress-Buster: Create Spaces to Tend and Befriend

June 10, 2013 by Linda Varone

Create Spaces for Stress-Busting Time with Friends

No doubt about it, we are living in stressful times. A UCLA study, coauthored by Laura Cousino Klein, Ph.D, describes the unique ways women respond to stress. Women have a larger behavioral repertoire than just “fight or flight.” When women are stressed their brains produce oxytocin, which calms and creates an urge to “tend and befriend.” When women are able to care for others or spend time with their friends this response is increased. While estrogen enhances this effect, the testosterone that men produce hinders this response; unfortunately this is a woman-only phenomenon. Women! set-up Stress-buster spaces in your home for girls-only time for support and fun.

four diverse women laughing together, stress-buster
When stressed, women reach out to their female friends. Create a welcoming feng shui space for sharing and mutual stress busting.

Interestingly, more and more people are networking for new jobs, new contacts and mutual support. Many women are online networking, face-to-face networking at professional events, and “getting together with the girls” for informal social support and relaxation.
 
 
 
 

Here are three ways you can improve your home to support these activities:

Create a Calm and Focused Workspace

Whether you are using your computer for a job search, social media contacts (LinkedIn or Facebook), or simply emailing friends and colleagues to keep in touch and your ear to the ground, you need a designated space for you and your computer. If you have your own home office – Great! If not, claim your space – you deserve it – you need it. Too often my women clients “make do.” Set up a desk in an underused guest room or dining room.  Wherever you are working should be reasonably organized. Aim for ease and order, not perfection. Minimize distractions. Put up a “Woman at Work” sign if need be. Studies show that when distracted, people are 50% less efficient and make 50% more errors. This means, working on your laptop while watching TV is counter-productive. Make sure you have good lighting for your desk – ceiling mounted lights are inadequate – you need a lamp on your work surface with a “warm white” light bulb.

Assess, Organize and Play with Your Wardrobe

If you are going to any professional networking events the unspoken standard is “professional dress.” Suits or other professional wear will have you looking your best and feel confident. Confidence about your looks is a powerful stress-buster. Now is a great time to go through your wardrobe and find those things that make you feel fabulous when you are wearing them. Check clothes and accessories for fit, needed repairs, and if the style expresses who you are now. Doing a deep decluttering of your closet and bureau, you will rediscover some lost treasures as well as things you can let go. Now the fun part: play around with different combinations of clothes and accessories to see if you can create new looks. Add a belt to an outfit you have never belted before. A different pair of shoes can jazz-up an ensemble. Try things on and mentally plan what you can wear before an event. Now, when you walk into a roomful of new people, you know you look smashing.

“Every time we get overly busy with work and family, the first thing we do is let go of friendships with other women. We push them right to the back burner. That’s really a mistake because women are such a source of strength to each other. We nurture one another. And we need to have un-pressured space in which we can do the special kind of talk that women do when they’re with other women. It’s a very healing experience. ” – Ruthellen Josselson, Ph.D., co-author of “Best Friends: The Pleasures and Perils of Girls and Women’s Friendships” (Three Rivers Press, 1998).

Make a Stress-Buster Space for Girls’ Night-In

Girls’ night-out is fun, but can stress your budget. How about a pot luck girls’ night-in, or simply coffee and tea with a sweet, or wine and something savory. Keep the menu simple. The focus is time with friends, not the food. If it is a potluck, kick your family out of the kitchen for the duration. If it is coffee or drinks with simple nibbles then commander the living room, or a sunroom or patio. Claim a space and make it comfortable: to kick back and share and laugh and have fun. An architectural psychology tip: to create connection choose cozy over formal, crowded over spread out.

One of the key concepts of both Feng Shui and Architectural Psychology is that creating space for a task, activity or goal supports your intentions, both energetically and psychologically. Create space to make your life and your goals easier.

photo by Bee Wolf Ray

Filed Under: Stress Tagged With: personal development

Feng Shui Home Analysis: Recognizing the Good in Your Home and in Yourself

May 10, 2013 by Linda Varone

A young family asked me to do a pre-purchase Feng Shui home analysis.. It was a beautiful Arts and Crafts home on a partially wooded lot. I noted some Feng Shui vulnerabilities. But what struck me most was how good the energy of the house was. Here was a house that had been truly loved.

arts and crafts house with blooming trees in front, feng shui home analysis
A Blooming Arts and Crafts House

Some Feng Shui books focus on what is wrong with a home rather that what is good about a home. This approach increases readers’ anxiety that if something isn’t perfect bad things will happen. I was fortunate that some of my early teachers showed me not only how to correct the vulnerabilities in a home, but strengthen what is good in a feng shui home analysis. In strengthening what is good in your home you support and strengthen what is good in you and your loved ones.

 “When you recognize the good in something it will blossom. This is especially true about your home.”  – Denise Linn

Denise also writes about the “Spirit of the House.” When a house is neglected or unloved its energy sags. When a house is well maintained and well-loved its energy lifts. House love makes a huge difference in the energy of a building – more than mere maintenance – and makes a house a home. No house is perfect. Most are a work-in-progress.

Feng Shui Home Analysis: What do you love about your home?

  • Is there a place where everyone hangs out and feels comfortable and connected?
  • Is there a space that catches the morning light?
  • Is there a quiet corner where you can relax alone, or snuggle with one of your kids…or your sweetie?
  • Do you have a space outside where you can bask in the sun or catch cooling breezes?
  • Do you have a place where you can display your personal treasures: the objects that remind you of the people, places and events you love most?

Take a look around and identify what you love about your house. If you don’t have one, then create it.

Metaphysical Bonus for You:

Feng Shui is about your house as a mirror of yourself. Most of this thinking is focused on decluttering and the Ba-Gua. If your house is a mirror of yourself and you have a hard time loving it, warts and all; then maybe you have difficulty loving yourself, warts and all. (Damn that inner critic). Working on something concrete outside of yourself paves the way for the work of inner growth. Ask your house what kind of love it needs. And then take care of your home’s need for nurturance. As you do so you will practice nurturing and loving yourself.

Happy Ending/New Beginning

: This family had already fallen in love with the house. The Feng Shui vulnerabilities where easy to remedy. Their offer on the house was accepted.

  • Fall in love with your house again.
  • Identifying the good in your house.
  • Create a home that you love,

Contact me for a consultation.

photo by rictor and david (Note: This is not my clients’ house. I protect the privacy of all my clients. The home in this photo is a Charles Greene-designed house in Pasadena.)

Filed Under: Feng Shui Tagged With: ba-gua, personal development, spiritual, views of nature

Feng Shui and Self Help Books in the Bedroom, or a “Bookcase Filled with Nuns”

December 18, 2011 by Linda Varone

Your bedroom is your sanctuary; your place to escape stress. Feng Shui recommends that you not have too many books in your bedroom, because lots of books make it harder to get deep, restful sleep.

book shelf filled with self-help books
The kind of books you have in your bedroom subconsciously influence the quality of your sleep.

Over the years I have noticed what kind of books people keep in their bedroom. I have also observed there is a gender difference in books at men and women’s bedsides. Men tend to have histories, biographies and books about their professional fields. Women tend to have self-help books.  What a horrible message to give yourself as you try to relax and have a good night sleep: “You are not a good enough person.”, “You need to improve yourself.”

I pointed out a bookcase of self-help books to a recent client, with the suggestion she go through them and decide what books she really wanted in her bedroom. During our follow-up phone call a week later, she said she moved most of her self-help books out of her bedroom. “It was like having a bunch of nuns hanging out in the bookcase. Telling you what you haven’t done, or haven’t done good enough.”  Now, without those books in her bedroom, she sleeps much better.

You may not have a “bookshelf full of nuns” in your bedroom, but your critical-self needs only the slightest nudge to relentlessly badger you, instead of letting you sleep.

Check out your stack of bed time reading. Weed–out the self-help, diet, exercise and “guilt “books – those books that were given to you, but which you have no real interest in reading. Move the ones that are truly useful to another room and donate the rest to your local library. Curl up with an intelligent mystery, novel or biography; or maybe some poetry.  The really good ones teach you about the larger world. You never out-grow the need for a good bed-time story.

photo by “Evelyn Giggles“

Filed Under: Feng Shui Tagged With: bedroom, personal development

Feng Shui New Years: Discover Your Potentials, Let Go of Your “Shoulds”

November 25, 2011 by Linda Varone

 “We spend January 1 walking through our lives, room by room, drawing up a list of work to be done, cracks to be patched. Maybe this year, to balance the list, we ought to walk through the rooms of our lives…not looking for flaws, but for potential.” —Ellen Goodman

New Year’s resolutions tend to be lists of new or re-newed efforts to improve the perceived flaws in ourselves and our lives. You know that intentions work best when they are positively stated. Wouldn’t it be interesting to have a year of positive intentions to make the most of who we are and what we want (not should) to do.

group exercising
Keep Fit; Be Happy

Instead of resolving to loose weight – how about a goal of having more energy to be able to dance, hike, keep up with your kids/grandkids. To do those enjoyable activities you know you need to exercise regularly for more stamina and eat healthy to maintain a healthy body. Do you have a place for exercise? Hint: your stationary bicycle is not meant to be a clothes rack. Declutter your kitchen. Get rid or those tempting fattening foods (Give them to a local food pantry.) Make room for the healthy foods that make you feel good. Isn’t that much better than the mind set of deprivation for the goal of seeing a lower number on your scale?

Instead of a goal of reading all the books you got in the last year. Declutter your bookshelves. Let go of the books you feel obligated to read because they were a gift, will improve you as a human being or are supposed to improve your work skills/knowledge. Reading is a pleasure, not a duty.  Now you can focus on the books you want to read.

Is your hobby or craft space cluttered with projects you are no longer interested in? Instead of gritting your teeth and getting it done, or not doing it and feeling guilty Donate it to a charity. Make the space support what you are interested in now.

Make room for what you want to do. Make room for your potential in your thinking and in your home.

Best wishes for your potential, for growth and fun in the new year.

picture by Kevin Dooley

Filed Under: Organize & Declutter Tagged With: New Year, personal development

Cultivating the Seed of Happiness

November 2, 2011 by Linda Varone

“In Buddhist texts, consciousness is said to be a field, a plot of land in which every kind of seed has been planted – seeds of suffering, happiness, joy, sorrow, fear, anger, and hope. The quality of our life depends on which of these seeds we water. The practice of mindfulness is to recognize each seed as it sprouts and to water the most wholesome seeds whenever possible.”  – Thich Nhat Hanh

The Seed of Happiness
The Seed of Happiness

I came across this quote recently. It has stuck in my mind so much that I just have to write about it this month. You don’t have to be a Buddhist to know that focusing on happiness, joy and hope is better than focusing on sorrow, fear and anger. But as Americans we add our own twist on this positive outlook. We want bigger, better and faster or we won’t be happy. And if we work really hard, we will have this kind of happiness – in the future. What happens is many of us overlook the blessings of the present moment while we are straining to see into the future.

As a Feng Shui consultant, I encourage my clients to have images and symbols of what they are striving for in the appropriate area of the Ba-Gua. This is best balanced with connections to the present.

  • I encourage you to have reminders of what you are grateful for in the present around you.
  • Are you grateful for family and friends? Have photos of them nearby. (I suggest that you have current photos as well as older ones.)
  • Are you grateful for good health? Place a plant where you can enjoy one of the miracles of life.
  • Are you blessed with your faith or a spiritual teacher? Have a photo, statue or written blessing where you can see it.

One of my teachers, Denise Linn, suggests the best place for these mementos is on your bedside table or near your bed. Place them so they are the first thing you see in the morning – to create a positive and mindful mindset for the day – and see the last thing at night – to set the stage for sweet dreams.

I have photos of my family near my bed. Recently I added a picture of my late mother taken on a hot air balloon ride we did on her 80th birthday. Her joy in that moment radiates from the picture.

What kinds of reminders of your blessings do you have around you? Let me know and I will share them with my readers next month.

photo by the yes man

Filed Under: Feng Shui Tagged With: art and personal treasures, personal development

The Home Altar: A Place to Re-Connect to Your Spiritual Self

October 29, 2011 by Linda Varone

An altar is a place for spiritual reflection, a focal point for remembrance or gratitude.

I often see altars of one kind or another in client’s homes. They may be as simple as a cluster of family photos, a statue or picture of a deity or religious teacher, a devotional book on a small table, or a vase of flowers. I am always touched how much these spaces mean to my clients. I would like to share some thoughts about how you can create an altar in your home or garden that reflects the deepest part of you.

Angel figurine and two candles home altar by  Denise Linn

In China altars to the family gods or ancestors were often placed in the kitchen – the heart of the home. Today, it is not unusual to see an altar in a place of honor in Asian restaurants.

“…the primary function of altars and shrines has been to provide sacred and holy places amid ordinary life.”  – Denise Linn.

A wonderful book that will inspire you to explore having an altar or special place in your home is Altars: Bringing Sacred Shrines into Your Everyday Life by Denise Linn.  Denise is a woman of deep connection to heaven and earth who draws on many spiritual traditions. She is one of my favorite teachers. Her book is filled with beautiful color photos of altars and dedicated spaces and many creative ideas on how to create and use a home altar.

Denise Lin writes about “subliminal altars.” This may be a grouping of personal treasures that remind you of the people, places and events that you love most. It can be family photos, both old and new; heirlooms to remind us of where we come from and who came before us; or beautiful objects, natural and manmade, that touch our souls.

Conscious altars are for meditation or spiritual exercises. It is a sacred space in the midst of our everyday lives. It is a reminder to connect with the sacred within and around us. It is a site for celebration and manifestation. When an altar is consciously created with love and attention it can be a reminder of what we are seeking.

The objects on an altar “give form to the formless” according to Denise Linn. The images on the altar and their personal meaning are imprinted on your subconscious which has a powerful influence on our feelings. The physical objects represent a belief, idea or relationship. They touch the inner knowing, the inner spirit within us all.

When time is spent at your altar meditating, praying, lighting a candle or incense or simply touching the objects placed there, that space accumulates positive energy. Any ritual you may do at your altar connects you with all the beings, past and present, who have done similar rituals. You are not alone.

Denise Linn writes about many kinds of altars, among them are altars for healing – physically, emotionally and spiritually; life-transition altars – recognizing that life change is not a single event, but a process that needs time to unfold; and manifestation altars – a space to seek deeper clarity on your dreams. Once you have this clarity, then you can place objects and pictures on the altar that represent your wishes.

Where to put your altar?  It can be in a quiet place where you can be undisturbed. One client had her altar in an emptied closet. Another had hers in the bedroom overlooking a still lake. The altar itself can be a small table, shelf, or a desk or bureau top.

A funny thing happened on the way to finishing this article. I inspired myself!  I jumped up from my computer and rearranged some photos in my bedroom and added a few new things. Grouping together images of those I love the most and making that collection a conscious altar gives a whole new meaning to those objects for me.

Although Denise’s book Altars: Bringing Sacred Shrines into Your Everyday Life is out of print, it is available at Amazon.com.

Be a friend and share this article with a friend.

Filed Under: Stress Tagged With: personal development

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