Tuesday, September 22, 2009

Personal Development Seminars Can Change Your Life

No matter who you are, chances are that there is some area in your life that you want to change, some aspect that leaves room for improvement. Whether the change that you are looking for is related to money, relationships or career, a personal development seminar can help. A personal development seminar can help you target the area you would like to change, and offer help with changing them. Personal development seminars can help you to understand how why the changes are good for your situation.

At personal development seminars you will meet people who are trying to make changes to their lives as you are, and who can sympathize with you. It is like working on a team, each participant has some insight to offer that will assist the rest of the people in the seminar. If you have a busy schedule, and do not have the time to attend these seminars, try doing a google search. There are millions of online links to classes that are built around your schedule.

Personal development seminars help you to acquire an attitude of accepting or overcoming the limitations that you have set for yourself. It will also assist you in dealing with other people on a daily basis. It can help you to overcome any obstacles that are in your path.

A personal development seminar assist you in changing the way you feel about yourself, thus changing the way you feel about others. It can help you to identify the purpose of your life, clearly defining who and what you want to be. In more clear words, a personal development seminar can help you to achieve anything that you want to be or do with your life.

There are several self-help books on the market, and they may have some very useful information, but a personal development seminar has a big advantage that the self help books do not.

When you attend a personal development seminar, you have the benefit of talking to a trained counselor that can answer any questions that you may have and chances are they have been exactly where you are. They know how you feel and can offer empathy for your situation. They have turned their life around, and have dedicated themselves to helping others do the same. As with all personal development seminars, the main message that they want to get across is that we all have the power within us to change our lives. We all choose the method in which we live our lives. We are the only ones who can change our lives in whatever manner we choose. We are the ones who have to live with the changes we make.

No matter what changes you want to make, a personal development seminar can assist you on so many levels. You remember the methods taught in the personal development seminar when you leave and go through rough times. You will carry what you learned at a personal development seminar throughout your life and use it when it is necessary.

Free Self Improvement http://freeselfimprovement.com/ examines all aspects of self improvement: hypnosis, meditation, motivation, personal development, stress reduction.

Making Personal Development Personal

We've written before about Impact Factory's brand of Professional Personal Development (Professional Personal Development What is it?), but we're just going to take a little side step here to talk about the broader issue of Personal Development.

This is because there's an awful lot of talk about personal development and for some people, they're not quite sure how it relates to them. Often when we become adults, learn new skills, have a job, a relationship (or not), friends, colleagues, we're pretty much set in who we are, how we think and behave and what the nature of our emotional selves is.

Personal Development can sometimes seem like a pretty daunting 'task' rather than something to be desired or pursued. Do I have to change everything about me? Won't it be painful and emotionally wrenching? Do I have to change everything about me? I'll lose my friends if I change too much.

Common myths. And myths they are if you look at the gentler, more humane way to approach personal development. It shouldn't be wrenching; you don't need to have an 'epiphany' and change your ways forever; it should be a natural evolution of who you already are, not a tearing apart and a putting back together again.

Although Impact Factory primarily works with people in the workplace, the issues surrounding personal development are the same in any area of your life.

And here are a few reasons why:

Reverting to type and dealing with the feelings

What is very clear to anyone that works with people is that under pressure, people will 'revert to type'. In normal circumstances, when there’s no pressure, everyone knows how they would like to deal with things differently. However, when decisions need to be made quickly, when things aren't working as you would wish, when others become more demanding, most people under stress will behave as they always have. They will not have the time, nor will they make the time to weigh and measure their options.

What they will do is react to the current situation and do what they've always done to get a speedy result. What they have always done may not - often is not - the most appropriate choice to make; but it seems to be the only one available to them at the time. It is in hindsight that other options become clear.

People cannot help reverting to type. It is how the species has survived: when a mastodon came into view, people didn't take time to ponder their options; they acted immediately. That vital mechanism is within us all: under threat we will react without conscious thought in order to survive.

However, without well-developed people skills, pressurised communication in all areas of our lives can look like bullying or blaming where it’s easier to accuse or order someone around rather than encourage. It can mean that people will avoid conflict and back down from useful confrontation where differences could get resolved. People will make incorrect assumptions and then act on them. Reverting to type can also mean avoiding getting support from others because you feel you have to do everything yourself.

When people revert to type, they are usually driven by their feelings, and it will usually be feelings that get in the way of being able to change behaviour constructively. Most people know how they would like to behave, so teaching the ‘how to’ is not at issue here.

Feelings that can get in the way of effectiveness can be anything from nervousness about presenting, to fear of humiliation for saying something stupid, to being intimidated by a particular person who seems to wrong-foot you all the time. Feelings can make you shy away from handling tricky situations from saying no to Christmas dinner with the parents to asking for a raise or communicating more honestly with a colleague.

At Impact Factory we address the fact that at times (more often than not) uncomfortable feelings will make it difficult, if not impossible, to create the outcome you want. Otherwise, people are trying to cope with new information and new techniques without acknowledging that their emotions can, at times, stop them making any change whatsoever.

That's not personal development, and trying to learn new things without that essential acknowledgement usually means the learning won't stick.

Changing yourself to change others

We hear over and over again in people's personal and work lives that things would be much better if only someone else would change the way they do things. "If my sister wasn't so stubborn, we'd have a much easier relationship." “I’d get on much better if only my line manager would give me more time to get things done.” “My job would be easier if only my secretary was more efficient.” “My parents are so frustrating; if only they would start treating me like an adult.”

In these and many other examples, the solution seems to rest with someone else. Therefore, the responsibility for moving things forward rests with others as well. There will always be situations where life would be far better if someone else would just shape up and do things the way we think they ought to be done! However, that attitude puts all the power and influence into someone else’s hands and leaves us feeling impotent and often inadequate. You can have a good moan, but nothing changes.

Changing what you do, changing the way you speak to others, changing your attitude towards recurring difficulties will change the normally predictable outcome.

When we talk about change, we are looking for simple changes; tweaks, adjustments, small alterations, rather than looking to change everything about a person. At Impact Factory we talk about the least amount of change for the greatest impact. Striving for small but effective changes rather than complete transformation.

That’s' how true personal development needs to happen: not massive life-changing upheaval, but easily manageable, incremental changes that don't require you to change everything about yourself (or expect everyone else to change as well).

When we work with people's personal development on our workshops we make it easy and enjoyable and filled with variety, so that there is ‘something for everyone’. What works for one person, won’t necessarily work for others. We believe that the way forward is to find a few things that you know you’ll be able to do, to have fun doing them and to experience enough small wins as you practise them. These are the things you’ll be able to remember in the heat of a difficult situation. You will revert to a new type that feels familiar because it's developed from who you already are, not about becoming someone you'll never be!

Real life, not make believe

Here's one way that we do that: we use real-life, everyday situations that people encounter on the job or in their personal lives, rather than giving people made up, textbook scenarios they then have to ‘act out’. Working with real issues helps people recognise and understand their feelings rather than ignoring them or wishing they would go away.

We know that if you spend time learning and developing new skills on a course there needs to be a realistic bridge between the workshop room and real life.

We always ask people to bring in their own experiences - a challenging presenting situation, a recurring difficult person or problem, an upcoming meeting, etc. Within those real-life scenarios, we use some of the tools and techniques that the individual has practised during the training and has already found works for them.

By letting people work on their specific issues and then incorporating their favourite techniques into the re-enactments, they get to choose what they feel able to do, rather than ones they ought to do.

And if we could sum up our entire philosophy in one word it would be: choice.

When people feel they have choice, they feel more confident and better able to deal with the ordinary and the extraordinary of work and personal life.

And that's how we make personal development personal as well!

Jo Ellen and Robin run Impact Factory who specialise in Professional Personal Development, Presentation Skills, Communications Training, Leadership Development and Executive Coaching for Individuals.

Stress & Personal Development: When Navel-Gazing Turns Nasty!

Generally speaking, the more we develop ourselves personally, the lower our long-term stress levels. After all, discovering our life purpose helps avoid the stress of pointlessness. Developing better communication skills avoids many relationship problems. Improving time management helps avoid feeling overcommitted in day-to-day work. On the surface, stress management and personal development seem to fit together perfectly.

There are times, however, when personal development itself can get a little out of control – when it starts adding to your stress, rather than helping manage it. When that happens, you can start to find yourself showing more of the signs of stress (for more information on these, ask for a copy of our free stress audit questionnaire), instead of less.

So should we totally avoid personal development altogether if we want to keep a handle on stress? Not necessarily, but we may need to look at what development we’re doing and how it’s affecting our stress levels.

SO HOW CAN PERSONAL DEVELOPMENT INCREASE STRESS?

All personal development involves change on some level, and change is a major source of stress for many people. This means that, even if you’re trying to improve something that will eventually lower your stress level (e.g. time management or communication skills), it can sometimes act as a short-term.

There are four main reasons for personal development work causing, rather than curing stress:

- Too Many Areas

- Lack of Balance

- Unrealistic Expectations

- Going it Alone

TOO MANY AREAS

Personal development can be addictive - who wouldn’t want to be the best person they can in every area of their lives? With so many areas we could work on, we often try to improve in multiple areas at once. For some people, this isn’t an issue. For others, however, the old adage “chase two rabbits, catch neither” applies.

If you’re working on improving two or more areas of your life and your stress levels rise, consider asking yourself, “Which area is most important right now?”, or, “Which area would improving make the most difference for me right now?” and then focussing on that area. Everything else will still be there waiting for you when you’re finished with the first one!

LACK OF OVERALL BALANCE

Personal development takes commitment and willingness to act. Sometimes, however, we exaggerate the importance of a particular improvement to the point that nothing else matters, and other areas get neglected. For example, if you want to develop spiritually, you need to take time out to do this. If you start ignoring friends or work demands so you can meditate to for hours each day, it may start causing stress.

Note that you’re the only one who can say what the right balance of “personal development time”. Some people might want to take weeks, months, or years out from the world for self-improvement. Most of us, however, want to integrate our development with our current lifestyles. If that’s the case for you, examine how much time you spend on personal development, and consider cutting back if appropriate.

UNREALISTIC EXPECTATIONS

It can be hard to create a mental image of how we want to be, then acknowledge how far we are from it now without blaming or getting angry with ourselves. In the same vein, once we have that clear image, it’s easy to believe that we’ll suddenly be able to act in accordance with it. If only it were that easy!

In reality, that habits take time to change, new skills take practice to implement, and little that happens overnight will last. If you’re frustrated because you’re not seeing progress (or not seeing it fast enough), remember self-improvement is a little like building a house. The first part of the work always happens beneath ground level – digging and then laying foundations. On the surface, it would seem absolutely nothing was happening. Yet if those foundations aren’t laid properly, the house itself will collapse. Personal development can be a lot like that.

If you’re frustrated by an apparent lack of progress, take a step back and ask yourself how realistic your expectations are. Talk to others who’ve made the same change – how long did it take them? What stages did they go through? While everyone’s journey is unique, you may find that hearing from others helps put things into perspective for you.

DOING IT ALL ON YOUR OWN

Of course, personal development is personal – no-one can do it for you. But you don’t need to deal with it alone. There’s enough support out there – in the form of communities, mailing lists, forums, and trained experts – that no-one should feel alone. Type “personal development” or “self improvement” into your search engine of choice and see what comes up. Alternatively, consider consulting a stress management coach.

© Tanja Gardner, Optimum Life Ltd.

Tanja is a team leader with the Internet’s #1 personal development website, http://optimumlife.successuniversity.com

For a free 30-min consultation on how we could help you live your optimum life, please visit http://optimumlife.co.nz Or, for a copy of our free Stress Audit Questionnaire, please e-mail mailto:tanja@optimumlife.co.nz with 'Stress Audit Questionnaire' in the subject line.