"If you're not living on the edge...you're taking up too much space" (Gary Young)
THAT is a great one. Says she, lying in bed, laptop computer on lap, trying to get over the Attack Of The Killer Cats. Oy.
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Building a better world...one Bond Grrl at a time!
1 comment:
Hey Grrrrl :-)
If you don't have that much to say in a blog it's OK -- sometimes you can say what you want in comments to ~other~ people's blogs (like here!) Or you might use it as a way to find your "voice" -- in other words, you could call your blog "A Quest: SBF seeking an educated SBM without baggage" and then write up what happens to you each day in your "Quest."
The thing I've found is that if you have a blog to "report to" (even if no one reads it!), you are more likely to do stuff. Like, for example, there might be a mixer you don't want to go to by yourself, but you realize that if you go and even if it's a ~disaster~, you can write it up with a funny twist for your blog.
I'm curious how you found this blog at all -- it's pretty buried :-) My website that ties to it is www.fempowerment.com if you want to check that out. You'll see that I'm just an OWB (Old White Broad (grin)).
I think life coaches are exactly like you said -- inspirational therapists. I think also you have to look at it from the sports analogy -- they really "coach" you towards where you want to go. On the other hand a mentor is someone who sort of is there for you all the time, to bounce all sorts of ideas off of and in a general way (sort of like a therapist, but more on the business side).
Believe it or not, I often get that pick-me-up from blogs :-) If people write you back that don't "know you," it's almost like what I call the "Bartender Syndrome" -- where you walk into a bar and spill your guts and the bartender just says some things back, and you feel better. But it's usually because that bartender isn't part of your "circle" so you feel "safe" to do that.
Drop by any time!
Best,
Solitaire
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