Friday, August 7, 2009

Last Post

This will be my last post on this blog. The reasons are myriad, but the main reason is very simple: I don't know enough. I am not an expert, or even above average, in this field. I have very little unique knowledge to give, and in the end, it showed. There's a difference between truly knowing what you're talking about and flying by the seat of your pants, and I have a new blog where I genuinely DO know what I'm talking about. If you happen to play Magic: The Gathering, visit www.mtgsalivanth.blogspot.com. If not, you won't be interested. Really.

I'd like to give thanks for everyone who has commented on the blog. I really appreciate all the feedback and support I have received. Perhaps in a few years, when I know more about personal growth, I will be able to write a much better blog. However, for now, I must learn. The difference between this blog, where I've only been into the field for 6 months, and the new blog where I have 3-4 years of accrued knowledge to share are astounding.

Thanks for reading, everyone!

Until your time, may you grow and learn, and never leave the path you started.

Monday, August 3, 2009

101 in 1001 Update

It's been a while since my last update, since I've been busy writing a series about the styles of personal growth. Work on the list has been fairly slow recently, I admit, but here's what I've done:

Started playing Spyro 4. It is, to be kind, godawful. The handling is terrible, but I will finish the game. Unlike in the first 3 Spyro games however, I don't think I'll attempt to 100% the game.

I reached a significant milestone: 100 blog posts! It's incredible that I've come so far in such a short time. To a thousand more posts!

I was going to wait for three months to complete this item, but my mindset has changed so much that I believe I can cross it off now: I am now a vegetarian. If I ever go back to meat (unlikely) I'll put it back on the list. Thus, list item 23. Become a vegetarian permanently can now be crossed off. I've never felt better!

Completing the trial was also something I was told I would fail at, so that's another item to tick off for number 58.

I'll be starting a new group of 30-day trials soon, related to productivity. Stay tuned!

Sunday, August 2, 2009

The 4 Styles of Personal Growth: The One True Style

Welcome back to my series on the 4 styles of personal growth. This is the final article in the series, and I'll be moving on tomorrow. For those who have missed part of it, you can find the series here:


The One True Style

If there's a fifth style, the one true style, you may wonder why I've spent 5,000 words talking about the other ones. The answer is simple, and if you take nothing else away from this article, take this one sentence.

The One True Style is combining all four styles.

The best path of personal growth is being able to call upon any and all of them: to master all four so you can use them as you see fit for any situation. Every one of the paths I've described has a weakness, but together they are whole.

Everyone has a little bit of each path inside them. The One True Path simply brings them out and gives them all attention.

Growth:

The One True Style is adept at all forms of personal growth. First, you use a combination of intuition and self-trust to narrow down the area, then research what you need to know before setting an exact goal if possible. During the trial you can continue to use a combination of facts, feelings and intuition to remain on the right path. The One True Style allows for any situation to be handled. Very few ever truly master the One True Style but it's an excellent goal to strive for by strengthening your weaker paths every time you set a new goal.

Subtypes:

Most masters of the One True Style have a bias towards one path. It's almost impossible to achieve truly perfect balance, so here's a paragraph on each of the paths when dominant in the One True Path.

Progressive-Dominant: This person will almost always set exact goals and back them up with logic. They'll generally use research to support their logic, and let their intuition find the goal. As long as their gut reaction and the facts say it's fine, he's on board.

Intuition-Dominant: This person will generally define the goal, then the parameters, rather than the parameters and goal at the same time. They'll also use their intuiton to find the goal they're after, and support it with facts. Generally their self-trust acts as a hot / cold meter rather than an exact instrument.

Research-Dominant: This person will generally narrow down the basic area of the goal with intuition and self-trust, then research several different possibilities until they find the most likely one. Then they'll set an exact goal.

Self-Trust-Dominant: This person will generally do what an Intuition-Dominant person does, only with more weight to their feelings. If their feelings are strongly oriented toward the goal, it goes ahead. If there's no reaction, generally the goal isn't good enough.


All people use the One True Style to some degree. The difference between student and adept is that the adept can consciously make the choice to use each branch, and can shift their dominance based on the goal. It's like a carpenter's toolbox: it's not as efficient if it only has hammers, no matter how many hammers they have. They need all kinds of tools, and need to be proficient at all of them. Translated to personal growth, that's the One True Style.

And that brings our series to a close. I hope this series has taught you more about the nature of personal growth, helped you understand your own path, and how to become better at it, as well as what to strive for.

Until next time, may you use whatever tool the job requires.

Saturday, August 1, 2009

The 4 Styles of Personal Growth: Self-Trust

Welcome back to my series on the 4 styles of personal growth. This will be the penultimate article in the series. For those who have missed part of it, you can find the fifth part of the series here, the fourth part here, the third part here, the second part here, and the first part here.

Summing Up:

To recap, the self-trust path involves listening to one's own feelings and reactions as the main guide to determing whether or not you are on the correct path. If it feels wrong, a self-trust grower is very unlikely to do it. However, if it feels good to the person, they are more likely to attempt it.

As an example, my mother has recently decided to go vegetarian. However, last night she had a very tough day, and got my stepfather to pick up KFC (I just had chips). The next day, however, she admitted to me that she will probably go back to vegetarianism because she felt rotten when eating the KFC. She's also an admitted follower of the self-trust path.

Many of the people I know are on this path.

Growth:

The paths that are best suited for a follower of this path vary from person to person. Generally a follower of this path will feel drawn towards certain areas, but while some may feel an affinity for health, others may feel an affinity for money, socialising or any other aspect of personal growth. The important thing is to identify your own strengths.

You'll also have weaknesses, but you probably won't know what they are unless you make a mistake and go against your self-trust. With this path you'll naturally steer clear of your weak points.

Subtypes:

Self-Trust / Progressive (S/P): This is a good combination, since it allows for measurable goals to be set that the person feels good about. Generally the S/P will be drawn to a field, and then will choose a specific goal. Assuming they don't feel blocked about it, they'll go through with it, and they'll know when they've achieved it. A good blend of intuitive guidance and precise goal-setting.

Self-Trust / Intutive (S/I): Common for self-trusters, this combination focuses on using both external and internal forces as a guide. They may not always know exactly what they're doing, but they will have a lot of trouble going down the wrong path. If you're on this path, check out the fourth post in this series, which explains the difference between self-guidance and intuitive guidance.

Self-Trust / Research (S/R): An S/R will generally research whatever takes their fancy, and during the research process will use their feelings as a barometer to gauge the information. Generally if an S/R is on the right path, the research will encourage him or her to proceed. If the research is providing mixed feelings, it's not recommended to continue. You'll probably end up sabotaging yourself. I recommend choosing another path.

Shifting:

If you feel that self-trust isn't going to help you with your next goal, you can't figure out what to go after, or just feel like a change, this section is for you. Personal growth is malleable, and a good growth expert will be able to call upon all paths in varying degrees of expertise. Here's what you may need to do if:

Nothing feels quite 'right'.

You're not really feeling too good about your goals, no matter what you pick. You need to go to Intuition. Most likely you're on the wrong track, and intuition can help get you back on the right one. Once you've done that, your feelings should start pointing you in the right direction. This isn't too hard a shift, since you're not entrenched in cold information giving you your guidance.

You have mixed feelings: part of you wants to proceed but you're holding back.

You can't decide whether to do it or not. We've all had this feeling, when you're on the brink of committing to something but hold back from truly doing so. You need to become a Researcher. Research the topic you're not sure about, and focus on how that information makes you feel. If it makes you feel more confident, go for it. If it makes you feel less excited or confident, bin the idea and pick another one. You're free to go back to Self-Trust after just a few hours, making this the briefest shift you can have and still experience it properly.

You don't seem to be getting anywhere.

You're confident you're on the right path, but you're not too much further along than you were two or three months ago. You need to go Progressive. Knowing the path you need to be on is worthless if you're just dawdling along. You need to set out with long, confident strides, and progression will help you do that. Set goals that make you feel inspired and confident, and your progress should improve dramatically.

Conclusion:

In conclusion, the self-trust path is excellent for deciding the general area you should focus on, but it's not as exact in results as some might like. Most people who practice personal growth use self-trust unconsciously, since the more trust you have in yourself, the more you channel this path, and growers have more trust in themselves than people who remain stagnant. In order to supplement this path, you should set definite aims to make sure you're getting somewhere.

Until next time, may you know what this message should say:)