Reflection

"The Infinite Now"

Below is a great article written by my dear friend, Bryan Yates. It explores Bryan’s personal journey with addiction, recovery, and mindset.

“An endurance mindset is about agency. It’s about being actively and thoughtfully engaged to build mindful stamina, focus, and perseverance. We often think of flexibility, mobility, agility and adaptability as athletic traits — but they can also be applied to how we relate to internal and external forces. It turns out that all these “grit credits” are bankable. And when we harness them to navigate something like the current crisis, those credits can alchemize our vulnerability and uncertainty into calm acceptance.” Bryan Yates

An Endurance Mindset for Chaotic Times

And here is a great song about the construct of “home”. For many of us missing the familiar, this may resonate…

Joy Box

Many of my clients build Joy Boxes. They decorate and fill a container with an assortment of paper scraps. Each scrap lists a small activity, sensation, or experience that brings joy, comfort, solace, etc.

For many, food and drink are default joy sources, but like anything, too much of something is never a good thing. Training your brain to reach for other comfort sources is an integral part of changing behavior. So here is my current “Quarantine Joy Box”. Hopefully something inspires you!

  • Play with watercolors

  • Sketch yourself

Create a magazine collage

Create a magazine collage

fullsizeoutput_91f7.jpeg

EROS

In honor of V-Day, here are some practical relationship tips from Kyle Benson. Kyle works with the Gottman Institute , which researches the understanding of relationships and adds to the development of interventions that have been carefully evaluated.


“Valentine's Day is a reminder to cherish, emotionally connect, and romance our lover. While buying chocolate, roses, and teddy bears is cute, I think what our partner wants most is to know that we cherish who they are and the way they enhance our lives.

Here are four tips for helping your partner feel cherished today:

1. Ask open-ended questions about your "Story of Us" such as: "What was your first impression of me?" Then share your first impression of your partner. Talk about what you found exciting or how you felt nervous to talk to them. Then ask your significant other, "What is your favorite memory of us?" and "What were your top three highlights in our relationship from this past year?" Share about ways you think your relationship has grown and how you two have overcome challenges together.

2. Tell your partner five things you cherish about them and give an example. For example, "I love how playful you are. During our last date, you made things extra playful by starting that guessing game during dinner. I really cherish that about you because it makes my life so fun."

3. Go through any photos you took during the past year and share what you loved about those photos or the experiences you captured in the photo. One of my favorite photos is one of me and my partner snorkeling as it reminds me of how adventurous we are during our vacations.

Bringing up playful and enjoyable memories can help invite more closeness and connection.

4. Romance your partner. Tell your partner what you find attractive about them. Kiss them. Hold their hand. Flirt. Do all the things you did when you first started dating to impress them.” Kyle Benson

Vitally, the human race is dying. It is like a great uprooted tree, with its roots in the air. We must plant ourselves again in the universe.” ― D.H. Lawrence



The Mamba, The Man

Most recognize the baller

Most recognize the glare

His talent and his work ethic

You knew he showed he cared

With the cold stare of the Mamba

With the will to get it done

He never quit when on the court

He fought until he won

This Laker played for twenty years

He made L.A. so proud

Opposing teams hated guarding him

Their frustration often loud

We all know about the Mamba

We marvel at his stats

His legacy, though, is so much more

In Life, he wore more hats

Husband, father, and a son

He loved his family

He made himself available

To his community

He coached his daughter on the court

Together they did die

So now in heaven they both play

While we all wonder “Why?”

A family they leave behind

Vanessa and three girls

Who now must love each other more

With love from all the world

The Mamba was a champion

To me he was the best

Amazing was his fadeaway

I hope in peace he rests.

In memorial to Kobe Bryant by Robert Cohen

kobe-bryant-gianna-bryant-2019-u-billboard-1548.jpg

Martin Luther King Jr.

“Do not be dismayed by the brokenness of the world. All things break. And all things can be mended. Not with time, as they say, but with intention. So go. Love intentionally, extravagantly, unconditionally. The broken world waits in darkness for the light that is you.”
― L.R. Knost

This picture speaks for itself. Taliesin Myrddin Namkai Meche was a good Samaritan who was stabbed to death on a Portland train defending two young girls. Taliesin’s mother, Asha Deliverance, can be seen below with one of the young girls from the train.

Love fiercely.

19113920_10213142965632409_474869715038426355_n (1).jpg

Coaching with Sarah Lynn: 7 Big Takeaways

I’ve made some of the largest changes in my life over the last 1.5 years and Sarah’s insights and positive coaching have played a large supportive role in encouraging my personal growth and taking risks I didn’t think possible.


Here are the major areas in which she’s helped me: 

  • Big Rocks and Small Rocks: Sarah’s analogy of a jar, big rocks, and small rocks helps me identify how to carve out time for passion projects alongside necessary work. She asked me to think of my life and time as a glass jar, and the things in my life as rocks. Big rocks represent things most important to me (writing, exercise, gardening, dating, friends + family), while small rocks represent all of the other stuff that is necessary but which I deem as less important (read: day job, chores + errands, etc). If I place big rocks in the jar, I’ve prioritized them and have room in the jar for small rocks. But if I fill the jar up first with lots of small rocks, I block myself from having room for the big rocks. 

  • Reminding me to slow down and acknowledge every win - from the smallest to the largest. So often perfectionists/ Type As like me can blow right past their own accomplishments and achievements without pausing to soak them in, to recognize their own magnificence and progress. Taking time to acknowledge these wins has helped me amplify self-love, self-compassion and self-worth.

  • She’s informed me and coached me on tools like meditation, mindfulness and self compassion that have helped ground me when my anxiety was so rampant I felt like my heart was going to leap out of my chest. I recently left the dependability of the best paying job I’ve ever had to move in a new direction (starting all over in certain ways), and her insight about riding the wave of an emotion in all its discomfort (usually lasting 90 seconds or less) versus ruminating on it and “making a story”, has opened up ways in my life of how to manage anxiety and stress. 

  • The importance of decreasing sugar from my diet.

    • Providing eye-opening information on how toxic sugar is to the body; she’s helped me limit sugar intake while still eating some fruits, enjoying good meals and even desserts. It’s all about smarter alternatives and being intentional when using sugar.

  • Coaching me how to advocate for myself at work and speak my truth in sensitive situations. 

  • She’s emphasized to me that my worth, my value in this world is beyond and so much more than a number on a scale, my age, or the number of inches I’ve lost or gained. 

  • Speaking of inches, she’s helped me implement a lower carb/ higher fat diet into my life, which resulted in me losing five pounds of fat. Not muscle, but fat, at a time when I’d plateaued even amidst working out consistently. 


Carolyn Neuhausen is a freelance writer , covering gardening, farming, arts and events in Los Angeles for Curbed LA, Sunset Magazine and other publications. Here is her portfolio and LinkedIn profile. When she’s not writing, you can find her hiking a trail, or ankle deep in a gardening bed.


Identity and Suicide

In the aftermath of Kelly Caitlin’s suicide, I have been musing on identity and the pressure to perform. I couldn’t even bring myself to list Caitlin’s accolades as a reference- somehow writing, “Caitlin, Olympic silver medalist and graduate student in computational mathematics at Stanford” indites me in her death. That may sound hyperbolic, but we have a responsibility as a culture to think critically about the values we perpetuate.

Reports cite that Caitlin has a recent concussion and cardiac drift, which prevented her from training and limited her mental execution. Her frustration with her inability to “do everything well” drove her to taking her own life. Yes- there is likely deep psychological pain and a myriad of other factors that pushed her to that point, but I think we can all agree that our culture of achievement and perfectionism played a role.

This week I also learned of a young local engineer who took her own life at 22. I heard this information from a colleague and after some investigation, I read that the family never reported suicide as the cause of death. It was deemed “accidental” in written reports- likely out of a need to keep her “honor”, but this isn’t what made my stomach curl … When I read her obituary, it read like a college resume. All of her accolades and accomplishments were listed as her identity. Tears rolled down my face as I thought of this young woman who felt disconnected, lonely, and hopeless enough to take her own life.

“You arrive at the top- where everyone thought you should be- and then you look around and think, “now what?”

Yesterday a beloved friend and fireman took his own life with a gun. He suffered a stroke a few months ago and was out of the hospital on the road to recovery. No one really knows the factors that played into his decision to end his life, but we do know his identity was deeply rooted in his profession and strength as a provider. The stroke threatened both of these identities- he would never work as a fireman again and he would need help to get back on his feet…He left behind a wife and kids.

No one really knows the intricacy of the whys in the above stories, but there is a theme. Where do we place our identity? Is it in what we own; our position in society; our skin quality; how many degrees we have; where we attended school, etc.? Each of us needs to take inventory of what really matters in our life and prioritize our time and systems around those values.

Over the last six years, I have coached many clients who roll in after 30-50 years of working 80+ hours/week in high profile/high stress jobs. Most are very accomplished and usually in poor health- harnessing a simple desire to care for themselves better in their last decades of life. Any lament is often buried deep, because questioning if you spent the bulk of your years doing the “right thing” can be debilitating. All of us need to believe we did the best we could- and we can't change what was- we can only move forward with intention…

If you are reading this, you have a forward trajectory- there are still decisions to be made and the map is open… I encourage each of you to think about what really matters to you and ask the question, “what are my priorities and does my time and resource allocation reflect those values?” If they do have synergy, march on and breath deep….If they don’t, what can you do to move yourself closer to congruency?

Here is a great blog I came across on PsychCentral: “You Are Not One Thing”. I also strongly recommend watching the documentary, Race to Nowhere.

Warmly,

Sarah Lynn

jJe0olqGRjKLODYp45Tt%g.jpg

Welcome Message

Welcome to our Nerd-trition blog! We wanted to create a weekly package that highlighted recipes, research, and positive energy! Speaking of positive energy, I would like to formally welcome Karen Hames to our team. She grew up obese and after reaching almost 300 lbs at twelve, she embarked on a deep journey to understand how to transform her health. When I met Karen as a client, we both had our hands in similar wells.

We both believed that maintaining/transforming body composition is not as simple as "calories in/calories out". There are a host of other variables that affect how our bodies use and store energy! Here are some of our shared wells: 

Dr. Peter Attia/TED Talk: Is the Obesity Crisis Hiding a Bigger Problem?

Brian Johnson's Philosopher's Notes: Gary Taubes - 'Why We Get Fat' Book Summary

Dr. Sarah Hallberg: TEDX Purdue - 'Ignoring the Dietary Guidelines'

Coach Karen and Coach Sarah Lynn

Coach Karen and Coach Sarah Lynn


QUOTE

"Concern yourself more with accepting responsibility than with assigning blame. Let the possibilities inspire you more than the obstacles discourage you." Ralph Marston

RECIPE

This was a hit! As summer approaches, some of our nostalgic picnic foods can be upgraded. Remember: making your own mayo is ideal and using an olive-oil or avocado-oil based mayo is great! Avoid any product with canola oil, if possible!

Low Carb "Potato Salad" Made With Cauliflower

FOOD PRODUCT

Ideally, we would be making all of our own food from whole ingredients, but sometimes, we need a "better" choice not the "ideal" choice. Here is a mayo I love: Primal Kitchen Mayo with avocado oil. It is available at Whole Foods ;)

Primal Kitchen Mayo made with Avocado Oil

Primal Kitchen Mayo made with Avocado Oil

MUSINGS

We are currently reading 'Mindset' by Dr. Carol Dweck, Ph.D.

There is so much wisdom in this book, but as a parent in a culture that generally tries to protect children from failure,  I was struck by the chapter on messages we communicate about failure through our action/words. By avoiding our child's immediate disappointment, we often cause more harm in the long run. 

If your child is participating in an individual tournament and does not place or receive a "prize" and you communicate, "well - I thought you were the best...you did amazing - you should have won"... you run the risk of insincere messaging.

Your motive may be encouragement, but the child knows that he/she was not the 'best' and so your words are empty. The message is not, "how can you improve?" or how can I validate your feelings of disappointment? The message is denial and ultimately communicates that YOU are not comfortable with disappointment/failure and imperfections/not being on top/not being #1 is not Ok...

I apply these teachings in our the office. There is a fine line between insincere praise and shame. If a client does not prioritize all of their health goals (for any reason), our job is to both celebrate the positives and look honestly at the hurdles to come up with easy scaffolded steps to change the behavior/outcomes without getting stuck in the shame cycle, "I am so unworthy." "I suck." "I should move to Mars..."

Can we stay objective and observational without the inner critic casting hard blame and shame- throwing mud balls;)

Here is what positive self-talk looks like, "Ok self - you did not prioritize your health goals. What mindset or habit got in the way of executing? You had the intention of carrying a water bottle at work to increase daily hydration but you did not carry one at work. Do you need to read more about the importance of hydration to value the behavior? Can you schedule a water bottle fill-up in the morning at work on your task list? Do you need an app to track water?

This may seem like a trite example, but habit change is HARD. We have patterns and behaviors that are deeply ingrained in our psyche and many of us avoid change because we fear failure!  Changing behavior starts with intention and mindset. We are here to provide accountability but ultimately, you will only change habits when you ready. Part of being ready is embracing discomfort and the risk of falling and failing and having to get-up and try...try again!

If you are comfortable – you are not growing/expanding. Please know that we understand the difficulty of the journey and we are here to hold you up! You can not fail if you show up. If you have ever canceled an appointment out of fear of "not succeeding," you have missed the point of what we do! Please see us when you are down – we are here primarily to help you find your feet again!! 

- Coach Sarah Lynn