Category Archives: Uncategorized

Top Habits Of A Purposeful, Successful YOU

Christi Hegstad March 28th, 2022

I just conducted a one-second search for ‘habits of successful people’ and here’s what Google informed me:

“About 1,850,000,000 results.”

Now I just to need to read about and adopt all of these habits, right? Then I’ll be successful?

The short answer: No. Which is good news since most of us likely won’t live to be a bazillion years old.

The even better news? Your own personalized answers are actually close at hand. You may just need to start asking some different questions.

 

Defining Success

Not only does a ‘one size fits all’ approach rarely work in life, a list attempting to share what successful people do misses the mark in one important, all-permeating way:

We each define ‘success’ differently.

For one person, success might mean a certain dollar amount in the bank.

For someone else, it might be falling asleep each night knowing they made a difference in someone’s life.

Someone else might define success in terms of health or courage or a job done well.

Consider what success means to you, personally. The next section offers some practical, purposeful ways to do just this.

 

You, At Your Best

When I coach my clients to set goals, we begin with their values. The fact of the matter is, if you’re striving for something from a ‘success list’ that doesn’t align with your values, you likely won’t feel successful even if you do reach the metric.

You might begin by asking yourself a few questions, such as:

What are my core values?

What does success mean to me? What does it look like or feel like?

At my 99th birthday party, what do I most want people to be celebrating about me?

You can also look to your own personal history for clues. Find a quiet space, pull out a journal, and jot down a few times in your past when you operated at your very best. For each ‘peak experience,’ ask yourself a few additional questions, like:

Why does this moment stand out for me?

What habits or factors contributed to this successful moment?

What’s happening in various life areas – mind, body, spirit, etc. – when I am at my very best?

List your responses and look for patterns.

I recently gave ASPIRE Success Club members a similar exercise, which I posed this way:

If you were to write an article titled, “The Most Important Habits For A Purposeful, Successful __[insert your name]__,” what would your list include?

Give these exercises a try, and add your own along the way. You’ll soon have your own customized list of values-based, purposeful success habits – which I believe you’ll find much more useful than a generic list based on someone else’s version of success!

Christi Hegstad, PhD, PCC, is the Practical + Purposeful Coach for Achievers!  Join our email community for coaching tips, book recommendations, tools, resources, and more!

Spring Cleaning Space, Mind, Work, + Life

Christi Hegstad March 13th, 2022
Around this time of year, many of us (at least here in the midwest) find ourselves in spring cleaning mode.
Clearing away clutter, tidying up spaces, opening the windows with a flourish.
Do you breathe a little easier after a bit of cleaning up and clearing out?
This week, ‘spring clean’ one area of your life.
This might be a physical space: a desk piled high with papers, a closet overflowing with clothes, a catch-all drawer that no longer fully closes.
It could also be a not-so-easily-seen area, too. Consider your schedule, mind, obligations, and more.
Choose one area, make a plan, secure any help needed, and begin. Time to let in some fresh air – and its accompanying fresh thoughts + ideas, too!
Ready to explore coaching? Contact my office to discuss possibilities!

Monthly Review – February ’22 Lessons Learned

Christi Hegstad March 1st, 2022

February. A short month that packs a powerful punch! Here are a few of the many lessons that rose to the surface for me in the past month:

1. Systems liberate you! And also help tremendously with decision fatigue. (Systematize for greater simplicity.)

2. Mindset work is worth the effort. (Keep giving it the time and attention it takes.)

3. Half-finished projects/tasks are a mental weight. (Develop a habit of completion whenever possible.)

4. When it comes to habits, be consistent but not constrictive. (They’re often more sustainable that way.)

5. 19 years as a business owner = approximately 137,529,864 lessons. (And counting!)

Can you relate to any of these? What lessons came your way in February? Feel free to share them below.

And if you’d like more details around how I conduct my monthly reviews, let me know that in the comments below as well! I’d be happy to share my process in an upcoming post or newsletter.

Christi Hegstad, PhD, PCC, is the Practical + Purposeful Coach for Achievers!  Join our email community for coaching tips, book recommendations, tools, resources, and more!

Grocery Carts + Purposeful Success

Christi Hegstad February 27th, 2022
“I’ve never seen a successful person leave their grocery cart in the middle of the parking lot.” – Unknown
I recently saw this statement floating around the internet. It spoke to me for two specific reasons:
First, it’s a reminder that success isn’t defined by a dollar amount in the bank, a cover photo on a magazine, a particular number of internet followers. We can each define success for ourselves, and respectful actions – like returning a grocery cart to the rack – definitely fits into my definition.
Second, it also reminds us that small actions make a big difference.
This week, take an action – no matter how small.
What would you like to see different in the world? What do you value most?
Consider a monetary donation. A few dollars is more than zero.
Consider giving your time. An hour is more than nothing.
Consider returning your grocery cart to the rack, complimenting a coworker for their meaningful contribution, or acting in another way that aligns with your values.
Here’s to your purposeful success this week!

Christi Hegstad, PhD, PCC, is the Practical + Purposeful Coach for Achievers!  Join our email community for coaching tips, book recommendations, and more!

Ask Me Anything – MAPiversary Edition!

Christi Hegstad February 20th, 2022
This month, my coaching firm celebrates 19 years in business!
And as I shared the other day on LinkedIn, 20 years ago – just one year before opening the doors to MAP Professional Development Inc – starting a business wasn’t even on my radar.
Life sure offers a lot of interesting lessons, doesn’t it?!
In honor of our 19th MAPiversary, I am here to answer your questions! Whether about coaching, meaning + purpose, books, goals, time + priorities, my entrepreneurial journey … ask away!
You can share your question through this Wednesday, 2/23, and I will answer as many as possible on my blog, LinkedIn, and/or an upcoming newsletter.
So, is there something I can help you with? Something you’d like to know about my path? If we were sitting together in the chairs pictured above, what would you love to ask? Post your question in the comments below or via email (click here and put QUESTION in the subject line).
And if you don’t have a question, feel free to say hello via these routes as well. I appreciate you and am thankful for your support all these years!
Happy MAPiversary!
Christi
Christi Hegstad, PhD, PCC, is the Practical + Purposeful Coach for Achievers!  Join our email community for coaching tips, book recommendations, and more!

How Do You Want To Be Known?

Christi Hegstad February 13th, 2022
Think of someone important to you. If a stranger asked that person to describe you in five words, what words do you hope they would choose?
Those words can begin to clue you into your purpose.
They can also help you live your legacy in the here and now.
This week, live in accordance with how you want to be known.
Make note of those five words you generated.
Pay attention throughout the week to how you live them out, and look for new opportunities to live them out even more fully.
How cool that we get to purposefully choose our legacy by choosing how we live, work, lead, and connect each and every day!
Christi Hegstad, PhD, PCC, is the Practical + Purposeful Coach for Achievers!  Join our email community for coaching tips, book recommendations, and more!

Four Thousand Weeks: Book Review + Takeaways

Christi Hegstad February 10th, 2022

“The average human lifespan is absurdly, insultingly brief. Assuming you live to be eighty, you have just over four thousand weeks.” – Oliver Burkeman

And so reads the opening line, inside front cover, of Burkeman’s newest book, Four Thousand Weeks. Talk about starting with a bang!

I often think about how we have just 24 hours in any given day, or the 168 hours we are given each week. I’ve never, however, thought to calculate how many weeks we’ll likely have in our lifetime.

Just four thousand?

That does sound absurdly brief!

But I also take this as a wakeup call to ensure I embrace that time in the most meaningful, purposeful ways possible. Burkeman devotes his insightful book to offering tips, examples, and ideas to help us do just that; below are a few that really stood out for me.

1. Live Deep

Rather than simply doing the most we can, Burkeman reminds us to focus on being, experiencing, truly living – regardless of what we’re doing. He refers to Richard Rohr’s beautiful phrase of “living in deep time” to accentuate this concept, encouraging us to align our time with our life activities rather than thinking of it as something abstract or separate.

As an example, Burkeman offers the act of milking cows. If you’re a farmer, you milk the cows when they need milking; you wouldn’t try “doing a month’s milking in a single day to get it out of the way.”

This is particularly helpful for my often all-or-nothing brain to hear. As much as I love checking things off the list – often aiming for a bunch of things in a short amount of time – I wouldn’t benefit from structuring my whole life in this way. Life offers rhythms and seasons. Some things simply take more time.

Pacing, or even slowing down, are not synonymous with failing.

 

2. Let Go and Focus In

The most counterintuitive point for me in the book – and ultimately the most refreshing – focuses on what Burkeman calls ‘existential overwhelm’:

“[T]he modern world provides an inexhaustible supply of things that seem worth doing, and so there arises an inevitable and unbridgeable gap between what you’d ideally like to do and what you actually can do.” (p45)

My mind said, “Exactly!” as I took in this line, then excitedly read on for his solution.

Which, at first glance, excited me less. Much, much less.

But upon further thought, actually felt like a weight lifting.

Basically, Burkeman suggests we start with the understanding that we absolutely won’t have time for everything we want to do. When we let go of that expectation, and the self-judgment that can often accompany it, we can then focus on deciding what’s truly worth doing.

Just because we have a lot of options doesn’t mean they’re all equally meaningful.

Which leads directly to my third takeaway:

 

3. Practice ‘Meaningful Productivity’

First, can we just take a moment to celebrate this phrase? Can’t you just feel the difference between ‘meaningful productivity’ and ‘the ultimate time hacks’ or ‘do more in less time’?

Essentially, I took two big pointers from this concept.

First, not everything needs to lead to a measurable, productive outcome.

Burkeman gives the example of a leisurely country walk: We might think of this as mundane, or perhaps something we just don’t have time for (especially during a workday afternoon), or even pointless if we don’t measure the mileage or go faster than we did last time.

But there is great value in doing things we enjoy simply for the sake of doing them.

There’s definitely a time and place for striving and improving. But they don’t have to be all the time and in all places, as our modern-day culture may try to have us believe.

Second, and in all honesty a bit more difficult for me to embrace: Things take the time they take.

That ridiculous idea of trying to do a month’s worth of milking in a day? I know that’s not possible or desirable in that particular instance, but I often try to pack in as much as possible at one time in order to free up more time at some elusive point in the future (see aforementioned ‘all-or-nothing brain’). Burkeman has me noticing – and rethinking – that tendency more readily.

 

When I read the opening line of Four Thousand Weeks, I’ll admit I felt a bit anxious. That’s so little time! I have so much yet to do! But as I continued through the book, I started to feel like a soft, warm blanket was gently being placed over me. When we focus on our values and priorities, when we decide what matters most and honor it, when we intentionally choose to live with as much meaning and purpose as possible, we can actually expand our sense of time.

As Burkeman writes, “Why treat four thousand weeks as a very small number, because it’s so tiny compared with infinity, rather than treating it as a huge number, because it’s so many more weeks than if you had never been born?”

Ahhh. Warm blanket, deep breath, and the renewed decision to be truly intentional with my time.

I can’t think of a better way to start off the new year!

I’ll share more takeaways, as well as other books I’m reading, in my upcoming newsletters – subscribe here!

Christi Hegstad, PhD, PCC, is the Practical + Purposeful Coach for Achievers!  Join our email community for coaching tips, book recommendations, and more!

Reducing The Overwhelm of Long-Term Goals

Christi Hegstad February 6th, 2022
I’ve set three Bold Goals for 2022. If you ask me what they are, however, I might not exactly remember.
Not because they’re not important to me – they definitely are.
But because I’ve broken the goals down into smaller pieces, and I focus my energy on where I want to be this month + this week.
I know that if I reach those milestones, I am on track with my year-end goals. This reduces my overwhelm tremendously.
This week, break your goals into manageable pieces.
With your year-end goal, you might wonder, “What do I need to do today, in early February, to achieve it?”
The answer may evade you.
Much easier to answer, “What do I need to do today to achieve this week’s milestone?”
If you need help creating the action plan for your Bold Goal, contact me – I’ve guided countless people to design theirs in a one-time coaching session!
Christi Hegstad, PhD, PCC, is the Practical + Purposeful Coach for Achievers!  Join our email community for coaching tips, book recommendations, and more!

Monthly Review – January ’22 Lessons Learned

Christi Hegstad February 3rd, 2022

January brought with it a lot of lessons! As I look at my month in review, here are five that rise to the surface for me:

1. Go where the energy flows.

2. A fresh start can begin on any day, at any moment.

3. Fuel yourself with inspiring ideas + surround yourself with inspiring people.

4. Simplify, simplify: “What would make this easier?”

5. Sometimes we have to take a step away in order to fully see the solution.

Does one of these resonate with you, too? What’s something you learned, or were reminded of, in January?

Wishing you a February filled with meaning + purpose!

Christi Hegstad, PhD, PCC, is the Practical + Purposeful Coach for Achievers!  Join our email community for coaching tips, book recommendations, tools, resources, and more!

You’ve Set The Goal – Now What?

Christi Hegstad January 26th, 2022

Setting a clear + meaningful goal gets you off to an excellent start. But what do you do once the goal is set? These ten actions will begin moving you from goal-setting to goal-achieving:

1. Envision Success.

Close your eyes and place yourself at the successful achievement of your goal. What got you there? How do you feel? Engage all of your senses and capture as many details as possible, then revisit this vision for continued motivation along the way.

2. Break Your Goal Down.

Chances are if you saw ‘Finish the unfinished basement’ on your Thursday to-do list, you would also see it move from Thursday to Friday to next month to next year – it’s too large to complete in an afternoon. Break that large goal down into small, manageable pieces. Seeing “Pick up paint samples” on that Thursday list is much more doable!

3. Schedule Time For Your Goal.

We all know what ‘I’ll do it when I have the time’ tends to lead to, right? Don’t leave your top-priority goal up to chance or circumstance. Block time on your weekly calendar and honor it as you would a key appointment.

4. Track Your Progress.

I am a firm believer that we attract what we track. Whether you use an online tracking tool, a paper calendar, or (like me) a bullet journal, gain satisfaction and build momentum by marking your progress as you go.

5. Revisit Your Purpose.

What is your reason for setting this goal? How will your life, and/or the lives of others, change as a result? Why does this goal matter to you? In my experience, our purpose typically serves as our top motivator – particularly when the going gets tough.

6. Secure Accountability.

Depending on your goal, you might consider hiring a coach, joining an accountability group, or partnering with someone also working toward a goal. We tend to follow through on our commitments when others are checking in on them!

7. Choose Your Mindset.

Decide, in advance + with intention, how you will approach your goal.  Whether you take every action with doubt + dread or you move with confidence + optimism  + resilience, you get to choose.

8. Find a Visual Anchor.

Create a vision board. Place an item of personal significance on your desk. Make your goal statement your computer screensaver or phone wallpaper. Have something outside of your own head to remind you what you’re moving toward.

9. Stay Curious and Open.

While a goal provides our desired destination, we don’t want to put on blinders + avoid all scenery – and perhaps even some interesting detours – along the way. I often advise clients to add a phrase like “This or something better” to the end of their goals as a reminder to stay open to possibility.

10. Assess and Celebrate.

Too many people proceed with an if/then lifestyle: “IF I achieve the goal, THEN I will be happy.” Celebrate your progress every step of the way! Like Dan Sullivan reminds us, don’t just measure the gap between where you are and where you want to be; measure the gains you’ve made since you started, too.

What is your top-priority goal this quarter? What is the next inspired action you will take to move it forward? Share your plans below!

Christi Hegstad, PhD, PCC, is the Practical + Purposeful Coach for Achievers!  Join our email community for coaching tips, book recommendations, and more!

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