Co-founder & Coach @RebootHQ
Managing Partner | Reboot Supervision
Author | The Art of Being Human at Work
Horsin' Around | @thedeeppeaceproject (on IG)
Leadership isn't just about practical skills. It's about self-discovery too! Our book The Art of Being Human at Work, written by @manifestcookies, explores the power of radical self-inquiry to unlock your full potential as a leader. Grab your copy here https://t.co/ML2My9Qjrv
"Learning to trust that it’s safe to be ourselves is a practice of affirming what we know to be true, what we feel, where we are in space, where we are in our body, what we can sense from our surroundings." @manifestcookies https://t.co/mnK5CRa7Hv
For Jungian Analyst James Hollis, the questions that push us into real adulthood in the second half of life shift from How do I survive in this world I landed in? to Who, apart from the roles I play, am I? What does the soul ask of me? https://t.co/9V8ichpDeF
Some prompts for the art of being human at work:
- What’s moving you and moving through you?
- What’s informing you in new ways?
- When do you feel most like yourself?
https://t.co/9V8ichpDeF
How often do you feel you have the right to be yourself? What factors or situations cause you to question the right to be yourself?
For more prompts and to purchase The Art of Being Human at Work: https://t.co/yZ9CFRDCZL
Development involves giving up a smaller story in order to wake up to a larger story. — Jean Houston
What part of the dream that’s flowing through you needs to come forth? How do you make room for that?
Ever felt not enough? We can push ourselves hard—to exhaustion, to depression—if we heed a harsh inner critic. What are the consequences? What would be enough? Who’s doing the measuring here?
More prompts for the work of your life: https://t.co/9V8ichpDeF
"Love is not performance; it’s presence. And it’s not based on your ROI, but on your innate worth as a human.”
From page 87 of my new book, The Art of Being Human at Work. More here: https://t.co/9V8ichpDeF
Or perhaps as Dante did, we can find a wise guide like Virgil to lead us through the Inferno. In those moments, how do we remember that who we are is neither what is happening to us nor where we happen to be?
Like any great turning in our lives, we don’t know what it is until we’re past it. It’s a thing we find our way through by feeling our way into it. By getting quiet and listening to that still, inner voice, or to the beat-beat-whisper of our heart, and trusting it.
If we listen to our inner critic, we spiral. What does your inner critic need so that it no longer robs you of your most fully lived life? Here are some questions to help you discover it: