Live Your Dream - PDF Room
Live Your Dream - PDF Room
Your
DREAM
second edition
By
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Chapman, Joyce.
Live your dream : discover and achieve your life purpose / by Joyce Chapman.— 2nd ed.
p. cm.
Includes index.
ISBN 1-56414-532-8 (pbk.)
1. Self-actualization (Psychology) I. Title.
I want to thank all the wonderful authors and teachers whose ideas
have helped me to learn and grow. I invite all those who benefit from read-
ing this book to share their experiences with me by writing and helping to
advance this work. Thank you also to all the “Live Your Dream” workshop
participants and clients who with open hearts shared their own growth to
enrich this book. Thanks especially to my family for their unfailing encour-
agement and for helping to make it possible for me to live my dream of
creating this book.
I also want to thank Eva Ditler and Nancy Reid-Edwards for the time,
efforts, and amazing talents that they expended as members of my dream
team. With their support I have been empowered to live my dream of the
revision of this book.
My special appreciation goes to Diane Chalfant, whose knowledge and
expertise in the fields of human potential work, New Thought, psychology,
writing, and editing have molded my ideas and years of experience into the
form of the first edition of this book.
Names and other identifying features have been altered to respect the
confidentiality of shared life stories. Some of the character examples and
situations represent composites drawn from several individuals who expe-
rienced and shared similar stories.
Welcome to the realization of your dream !
Contents
Preface 13
Foreword 15
Chapter 1: 17
Defining the Dream
Steps to Prepare 25
Visualize Your Dream 27
Zero In 33
Your Dream in a Nutshell 36
Dreamwork Checklist 38
Ask Joyce! 39
Chapter 2: 43
Clearing Away Obstructions to Be Clear About Your Dream
What Stands in Your Way? 43
A New Point of View 48
Give Your Dream Priority Time 50
Put Your Dream into Pictures 57
Dreamwork Checklist 63
Ask Joyce! 64
Chapter 3: 67
A Winning Attitude
Be Accountable 67
The Child as Pure, Unrestricted Energy 69
No More Unfinished Business 71
Your Attitude Sets You Up to Succeed 81
Be Committed 82
Strive for Excellence in All You Do 82
Affirmations Empower Your Dream 85
Dreamwork Checklist 88
Ask Joyce! 89
Chapter 4: 91
Taking Inventory and Taking Charge
Crystallize Your Progress 91
Your Values 92
Staying Motivated: Take Charge Now! 100
Pinpoint Your Natural Gifts and Talents 106
Put Your Values, Motivators, and Talents to Work for You 110
Dreamwork Checklist 116
Ask Joyce! 117
Chapter 5: 119
Your Power to Turn Negatives into Positives
Look Beyond the Struggle 120
The Power of Your Dream to Weather the Storm 122
Finding the Elusive Gift 123
What’s the Payoff? 127
Choose Healthy Payoffs 128
No More Problems. Now What? 130
The Power of Your Word 133
Turn Your Weaknesses Into Strengths 135
Dreamwork Checklist 139
Ask Joyce! 140
Chapter 6: 143
Dare to Stretch and Expand
Reinforce Your Learning—It’s Getting Fun Now! 144
The Next Shift in Consciousness 146
Expand Your Energy 147
Find Your Hidden Agendas 149
Fine-Tune Your Environment 149
Your Major Life Shift 151
Your Dream Workshop 152
Act As If 155
I Did It 156
Dreamwork Checklist 157
Ask Joyce! 158
Chapter 7: 163
Keeping the Dream Alive
Staying on Track 165
Writing in Your Dream Journal Is the Answer—
What Is Your Question? 166
Choose Your Topic—and Write to Keep Your Dream Alive 167
My Dream’s So Big. Where Do I Start? 168
Is There a Way to Do/Have All I Want? 169
Why Is It Important to Me to Live My Dream? 169
How Can I Be Sure What My True Gifts Are? 169
What Do I Mean My Responsibilities Are
Dragging Me Down? 171
How Will I Handle Fear? 172
Is It Always Going to Be This Hard? 172
How Can I Get Rid of My Anger? 173
How Can I Go to Sleep with These Upsetting
Thoughts on My Mind? 174
When You Don’t Like the Way Things Are 175
When You Feel Dissatisfied 175
What If My Present Reality Doesn’t Match What I Want? 175
How Do I Fit My New Self into My Existing Reality? 176
Why Is My Past So Important? 176
When You Want to Heal Past Pain 177
When You’re Ready to Come to Peace with Your Past 177
When You Have Strong Feelings 178
How Can I Be Powerful Without Being Overpowering? 179
How Can I Be Nurturing Without Being Taken Advantage of? 179
Am I Deceiving Myself? 180
What About the Side of Myself I Just Can’t Stand? 180
I’m Living My Dream, but I Can’t Pay My Bills 181
How Do I Get Out of This Slump? 182
How Can I Get Someone to Change? 182
Will I Have to Leave My Present Relationship? 183
When You Could Use Some Praise 184
If Your Dream Grows Faint 184
How Long Do I Have to Keep Working on My Dream? 185
Your Dream Come True 185
Index 199
A re you living your dream? What would your life be like if you were
doing the exact thing that would make you completely happy? What if you
spent most of your time doing what you enjoy and love doing the most?
What skills would you develop to fully express your natural creative abil-
ity? What parts of your life might be left behind if you moved into a fuller
expression of your true potential? What, exactly, is your dream? What would
it look like? How would you feel, look, and act?
Are you living five out of seven days of each week of your life waiting
to say, “Thank God it’s Friday!” Are you putting up with less than you
deserve? Do you feel you deserve less than complete happiness and self-
fulfillment? Have you put a dream on hold? Have you given up your dream?
Do you remember having one? Is your dream an “impossible dream”? How
do you reconcile your dream with what our life is like right now?
Where do we learn to live our dream? Who teaches that class? What
are the requirements? How do you discover what your own unique dream
really is? What steps must be taken to get there from where you are now?
This book has been created to guide you in answering these questions.
You will discover that you have the answers within your grasp. As you read
the exercises and examples you will likely begin your journey toward real-
izing your dream.
You will be invited to take a close look at yourself. You can explore
what it is you really want, what is important to you, and write your answers
in your Dream Journal and The Live Your Dream Workbook to bring the
learning into your life. You can design a map and a create a guide for your-
self as you begin living your dream, as well as gain tools and techniques for
realizing it.
Since the first edition of Live Your Dream, I have been privileged to
receive many calls, letters, and e-mails from readers who have asked ques-
tions to gain clarification or inspiration. Some of the questions, and answers,
are included in the first six chapters of this revised second edition.
13
14 Live Your Dream
As you live your dream, your radiance will energize everything around
you. Your shift in consciousness will empower both yourself and others.
Your dream path will feel natural and right for you, and your experience
of love and joy will expand exponentially.
What if you really did everything it takes? Could you actually dare to
live true to yourself and achieve all your dreams? Could you have what you
say you want? Is it scary? Are you willing to give it a try? Then let’s begin!
—Joyce Chapman
Foreword
I t’s easy to get lost these days in the complex jungle of modern life, to
become confused, to not know where you’re going or even if you’re going
in the right direction. Are you doing what you really want to do, or doing
what you’ve been told to do, or doing what you think you should do?
Live Your Dream is a book that assists you in defining your life, your
vision, and your goals. It teaches what you need to do to make your hidden
aims possible and how to actually make your secret dreams come true.
Through this thorough, step-by-step process you are shown how to re-
move obstacles, conflicts, and resistance. To establish new values, habits,
abilities, and possibilities. To get the results, support, and satisfaction you
have always craved. To let go of being a powerless victim of the past and
become a powerful successful victor in the present.
This book was lovingly and compassionately put together by a master
teacher who has created a comprehensive learning system that covers all
the bases and leaves nothing to chance. It will require effort, commitment,
and discipline, but if you practice her directions, results are sure to fol-
low.
Joseph Campbell said, “Follow your bliss.” In this book, Joyce
Chapman shows you how.
—Bernard Gunther, Ph.D.
Author, Sense Relaxation and Energy Ecstasy
15
T E R
P
A O N E
H
Defining the
C
Dream
H ow will you express who you are, in this lifetime? What is the great-
est achievement you can imagine yourself accomplishing? What is the
greatest contribution you could possibly make? What is the mark you
would make on the world if you were in charge of your life—if there were
no reasons or excuses why not? What is the greatest you can imagine be-
ing? The purpose of this book is to assist you in actively being the person
you want to be and in acquiring the tools and mastering the skills to achieve
your ultimate potential.
If someone walked up to you and told you, “You can have your life only
if you take a step toward living your dream today,” how would you respond?
Well, life is saying just that—each and every moment—to you. If you’re
not busy living to your fullest potential, parts of you are busy fading away.
In his famous “I Have a Dream” speech in 1963, Martin Luther King,
Jr. moved an entire nation to aspire to his vision of freedom and equality
for all. Albert Schweitzer and Mother Teresa have inspired the world with
their selfless commitment to care for the poor and the sick. Throughout
history, great artists, musicians, poets, scientists, inventors, writers, think-
ers, and leaders have left us the legacy of their dreams for making the world
a better place in which to live. Enough dreams remain for you to assume
your rightful place among the dreamers—and doers—of the world.
Here are some of the comments made by people in my “Live Your
Dream” workshops as they began to explore the implications of living their
dreams.
17
18 Live Your Dream
I don’t know what my dream is. I’d love to discover it. That would be
juicy for me!
G
With a husband and three small children, house, Little League, ballet
lessons, PTA, and all the rest, putting myself last just became so easy
and natural—last on the long list of things to do that I never got to the
bottom of. I need to get back in touch with my feelings, my dreams. I
want to have time to work on me, so what I give back to my family is
quality—the best I can be.
G
I want the magical to be real. I want more than I feel is actually pos-
sible in real life. You see I live this responsible, organized, but all
too boring existence, with one eye always on the lookout for Prince
Charming to come along and sweep me off my feet. So I’m naturally
attracted to people with the thrill of great, momentous drama going
on in their lives. It’s as if I want to adopt their drama in place of my
own missing one—a real, rich, fully lived life of my own.
G
I thought I could find more fulfillment if I gave up teaching and went
into business for myself. I thought if I made it to the top of my field,
developing a successful practice and becoming a prestigious execu-
tive, that would satisfy me. Having accomplished this, I realize that
through it all, I’ve been aware of this little nagging doubt telling me,
“There has to be more.” Now I’m at an age where I thought I would
just curl up on the sofa, take life easy, and enjoy it all. But how dull!
My life is not over yet. I’ve just discovered I have a bigger dream than
ever, now. I’m planning to open my own school for entrepreneurs.
G
It seemed as if there was really nothing I wanted. My house is just the
way I like it. My marriage may not be pure enchantment, but it’s pretty
good. My career is satisfactory—or so I thought. Then I realized, as
long as I pretended everything was okay, I would never have to stretch.
I keep lots of “saviors” in my life— comfortable people who shield
me from having to stretch. But when I finally stopped to listen to the
stillness of what my life has settled into, I heard a much lower roar
than what I’d like.
G
Don’t talk to me about being happy and prosperous. I have all I can
do just to pay my bills.
G
Defining the Dream 19
“I’m so busy living your nightmare, I have no room for any dream of
my own!” The moment I heard myself say this to my husband, I knew
I must take the “Live Your Dream” workshop. But what an incongru-
ent time! My marriage was breaking up; I was being wrenched apart
by conflict and fear, and the desolation of loss seemed all the future
had to hold for me. Yet those words jarred me into realizing that for
16 years of our marriage, my dreams were not my dreams, but his
dreams. I raced around frantically supporting my husband in every
rash decision he seemed compelled to make, picking up all the loose
ends, trying to make it work somehow, providing the backup to make
his every wish possible. I finally saw that it was my dream, from now
on, that would give me the vision to move forward and make a life for
myself. I must move beyond the nightmare and into the dream.
GFG
If you don’t have a dream, your life will be about your problems. The
matters of “greatest consequence,” claiming your attention during most of
your waking hours, will revolve around what to worry about next. You can
exist and subsist, and you may be tempted to deceive yourself into believing
that that’s enough to satisfy you. Have a party; play a game; play dress-up;
the television is always there to hand out a vicarious existence—more glam-
orous and exciting than the lonely living room or the battling kids. But in
the space where the burning desire and the passion for living belong, there
is a black hole of desolation, drawing you down into oblivion. Your life
force is draining away, as your energy and your aliveness and your vitality
discover no other viable outlet for expression.
Once you have defined your dream, everything else in your life becomes
just things to handle. The overflowing sink, the spilled milk, and the rush to
get off to work in the morning all assume a different perspective in the
light of your dream. They become mere situations to take care of so you
can get on with the more important work of your dream. They are no longer
matters of utmost significance—your dream is!
People who are following their dreams live their everyday lives differ-
ently. They walk differently. They buy flowers differently—with the intent
to be their best. When your life is about your dream, you are always living
true to yourself and your dreams. You’re constantly striving to go further,
to make the most of the present moment. Each problem becomes just a
challenge to be overcome, an opportunity made for learning. You will do
whatever it takes to get to where you need to be.
When I was a child, I dreamed of being a teacher. I would teach the
world from the top of the doghouse in my backyard. At seven, I taught my
5-year-old neighbor to read. And I did, in fact, go on to enjoy a successful
teaching career for 20 years. I loved finding a way to draw out that creative
spark from within each individual.
20 Live Your Dream
Once that dream had been fully expressed, I found myself asking,
“What’s the greatest teaching I have to offer?” A new, bigger dream began
to take form. I began to ask, “What would be necessary to assist people in
completely fulfilling themselves?” At first I didn’t realize that the “people”
I was talking about was really myself.
I began teaching a journaling workshop, guiding people to listen to
their inner truth and know themselves from the inside out. Soon a further
need became apparent: What comes next? How do you move from self-
knowing to expressing yourself in the world? How do you move beyond all
the barriers and learn to be the person you want to be? I didn’t have a
manual for that. Thus, “Live Your Dream” was born.
Then one day I noticed a billboard that said, “To Be Rich & Famous.”
That’s it! I thought. To be rich and famous,by being exactly who I am! “But
that’s silly and egotistical,” my rational mind said, as it set to work to
cancel the idea. However, I had learned by now to honor the messages that
come from within.
Gradually, the dream of teaching others how to be exactly who they
are unfolded. Let the farmers be great farmers. Let the artists create great
art. Let the builders construct masterful cathedrals. Let the parents create
wonderful children and the singers sing beautiful songs, with all individuals
following their own inner guidance and expressing their unique talents in
the way they love most, all free to live their own truth. People who are
expressing themselves creatively have no need to fight. My dream was about
bringing peace on Earth.
The dream took on gigantic proportions. To follow it, I decided to go
back to school, at the age of 51, for more information and a master’s de-
gree in counseling psychology. Balancing career, family, school (“Can I really
go back to school now?”), and a dream—could I do it? It was no longer a
choice for me. Accomplishing and living my dream was my life.
Everywhere I offered my “Live Your Dream” workshops, people were
hungry for more. They responded as if they had just been awakened from a
heavy sleep, to see before them all their brightest dreams as a reality. They
leapt at the invitation to simply “live true to who you are.” As they com-
pleted the homework, they began to come back to life—their life.
As this work continues, my life has expanded beyond my wildest imagi-
nation. I’ve reached heights I never considered possible. I feel more alive
than I ever have before. Living true to my dream touches every aspect of
my life. My husband and children have encouraged me and have supported
this work by sharing their own experiences of the “Live Your Dream” prin-
ciples with me. My work vitalizes and revitalizes me.
Your dream can do the same for you. But its possibilities should come
with a prominent warning: This work could be hazardous to your status
quo. The changes you make may be difficult, even painful, at times. You
Defining the Dream 21
G
My dream was to raise two wonderful kids. Now that that’s done, I
have nowhere else to go. What’s going to be my reason for getting up
in the morning and feeling good? I have to have a dream.
G
Denise had been an editor for seven years. Her intermittent, heavy
sighs punctuated the air with her despair and disinterest in her job. In
every free minute, she could be overheard on the phone, cheering up
the sick and troubled members of her church. “What would I ever tell
my dad, if I wanted to leave a respected position like this, and go
become ‘just’ a secretary for the church?” she agonized.
G
Austin has established a successful medical practice, but over the years
his work has come to hold less and less appeal for him. “Whose dream
was it that I should become a doctor?” he begins to ponder. “Surely
not mine! I think I’d be happiest making beautiful furniture in my
own woodworking shop.”
GFG
22 Live Your Dream
G
My dreams? So many have come and gone. But they never seem to
get beyond the “terrific idea” stage. Maybe I give up too easily or I
don’t try hard enough. There’s definitely a gap, for me, between dream-
ing the dream and actually living it—knowing how to get from here to
there.
G
My dream is to make millions as a trial lawyer. But the truth is, I wear
a uniform that says I’m a bell captain.
GFG
Still others have doggedly pursued yesterday’s dream, neglecting to
see that it has died and should have been peacefully buried long ago.
I don’t like what I do, but it’s the only thing I know.
G
Only 15 years to go ‘till retirement. I’ll just bide my time and build up
the benefits. I’d lose too much if I considered changing jobs now.
G
I still keep hoping someday my husband will change and become the
person who can make me happy.
GFG
If you’re still hanging on to a dead dream of yesterday, laying flowers
on its grave by the hour, you cannot be planting the seeds for a new dream
to grow today. So take a look at whatever blocks you from doing what you
really want to do. Write them down, and study each one. Is it worth sell-
ing your soul for? Really consider what’s at stake. It’s your life, and you
choose it, minute to minute to minute.
Unlike goals, which are set in place fairly logically, your dream can
only come from deep within. When I was teaching small children, I would
Defining the Dream 23
make a point of asking, “What do you think is the best way for you to
learn this?” The child would always tell me. Inside themselves, all chil-
dren naturally have direction. We are not born without direction. All we
have to do is bring it forth. You can let that direction and that dream
surface, take shape and attain clarity in your mind’s eye. The exercises in
this chapter are designed to trigger associations and guide you to your
inner knowing of exactly what your dream is.
Your dream may peek shyly through a crack in your awareness at
first, or it may present itself boldly and dramatically. Your challenge will
be to pay attention to the messages you receive from your inner guidance.
Kathy, who attended one of my first “Live Your Dream” workshops,
shared:
“There’s a tiny thought inside me—you’d probably laugh—I see my-
self on the cover of Vogue magazine!” When she explored the idea
further, she came to this realization: “The times I feel really alive are
when I’m right down in the arena. I thrive on being a participant. It
pushes me to be my best, in a way that sitting up in the stands as a
spectator can never do.”
The exercises here will help you picture the many facets of your dream
clearly and in detail. You can go on from there to plant the beliefs in your
subconscious mind that will flower into the realization of your dream. Sub-
sequent exercises will guide you, step by step, to take the actions necessary
to bring your dream into being.
As you work through these exercises, it is important to follow some
basic guidelines:
F Be gentle with yourself and others. The place where you are
right now is perfect for you! Look how far you’ve come—and
how well you have been prepared to take your next big step.
F As you become certain of the path you’re on, and the person
you are, begin to appreciate other people’s gifts, as well as your
own. Each of us is exactly where we need to be and is no better
or worse off than anyone else.
F When you don’t live true to your dream, just notice what hap-
pened, learn from it, congratulate yourself on what you’ve
learned, and move on.
F Your rate of progress will be fastest if you don’t allow yourself
to spend time focusing on limiting or negative thoughts. Keep
choosing the positive point of view.
F One concrete step taken in the right direction will take you far.
Keep your attention focused on realizing your dream, and avoid
becoming distracted or going off on tangents.
F Practice makes permanent. Practice continually asking your-
self, “Am I living my dream in this moment? What more could
I be doing?”
STEPS TO PREPARE
The following steps will prepare you for beginning your dreamwork:
Get Ready
Purchase The Live Your Dream Workbook and a loose-leaf notebook
or bound journal to use for your Dream Journal. You will be recording
many of your thoughts and feelings during the coming weeks, so be certain
to select a journal that you will enjoy writing in.
Also, purchase a daily schedule book. Look for one that can be used to
record and plan your days hour by hour.
26 Live Your Dream
Get Set
Starting now, do the following every day:
F Visualize. At the beginning of each day, spend a few minutes
previewing your day. What do you want out of your day? Pic-
ture yourself going through the day. What will you accomplish?
What needs to be taken care of? What will you do for yourself?
Visualize yourself living true to your dream. See that dream as if
it were manifested already. What will you do today to advance
your dream?
F Schedule your day. At the top of your daily schedule write, “The
dream steps I want to focus on today are….” Write all the dream
steps you intend to achieve. Then set up a schedule for your
time that will enable you to accomplish these steps.
At the end of each day before you go to bed, look over your
schedule. Write in your Dream Journal to evaluate and dis-
cover, “What I learned today is….” You become the person
you want to be by first saying what you will do, then observing
whether you did it or not. Your major discovery or accomplish-
ment for one day may be simply noting that you did not follow
through with what you had intended. Be sure to write that down.
Do you want to put it on tomorrow’s list?
F Start your Dream Journal. Write to yourself in it every day. Use
it to keep track of your assignments and your progress. Get
into the habit of using it as a daily log of “where I am today.”
You never need to show your Dream Journal to anyone, so
don’t worry about people criticizing or evaluating what you
write. Just write for yourself alone. Always date your work.
When you complete each entry, reread it and write a short sum-
mary statement.
F Start writing in The Live Your Dream Workbook. The exercises
in the workbook will reinforce and enhance your learning. By
simply giving honest answers to the workbook questions, you
will be gaining clarity as well as having a tangible record of the
journey you have undertaken. By documenting and defining
your dream, you are able to look back and reflect on your
progress, identify where you wandered off tract in addition to
the changes to your dream as you grow, become more aware
and evolve.
F Team up with a dream partner. I highly recommend teaming
up with a partner to work with through the process of “Live
Your Dream” discovery. Your partner will also be working in-
dependently on his or her own dream, and you can support and
Defining the Dream 27
Using these tools on a regular and consistent basis, you will notice your
life becoming an adventure, with you in charge of creating it. You will be-
come your own teacher, your own life planner, and your own masterful
leader.
Now, begin!
Find a comfortable and quiet place to sit and start visualizing your
dream. (Pause.) What is your dream? Begin to picture some ideas
about it. Allow vivid images to flow into your imagination. Create
your ideal scene, no matter how crazy or unrealistic it might seem.
You can sort out and evaluate your ideas later. For now, just let them
flow freely.
Suppose that, for the first time in your life, you have been given
the opportunity to start anew, knowing everything in your life from
now on will support you in living your dream. See yourself walking
down a narrow path lined on both sides by flowers and hanging vines.
You are enchanted by the beauty all around you. Floral fragrances
fill the air and brilliant-colored birds swoop and sing. Breathe in deeply
and soak up the warm, soothing rays of the sun.
Continue along the path until you come upon a scene that you
recognize as your ideal place to be in all of nature. Here you are free
of all distractions and responsibilities. Take a good look around you.
What do you see? Are there mountains, trees, water, flowers, grassy
fields, the desert, the ocean, birds, and is there sunshine or rain? Note
the colors and details of this place, as an artist would.
Where are you? What is it you love about the particular place
you find yourself in? How does it feel to be there? What is the one
quality of the scene you would want to take with you wherever you
go? Relax, and soak up enough of this feeling to last for a lifetime.
Now, you feel eager to know what lies just ahead. Gather your-
self up and turn your eyes toward a sparkling light not far away. With
a springing step, start out across the short stretch to find out what
could be reflecting in the sunbeams so brightly.
And just look! There it is: your dream house, perfect in every
way. It is in the exact location you would choose. Walk slowly up to it,
noticing every exterior detail. What kind of house is it? Embrace and
enjoy what you see.
Now walk up to the front door, open it, and walk into your dream
home environment. Here are all the features in a house that make
you happiest. Look all around, walking from room to room, exploring
each space. Go ahead—open some of the cupboards and sit on the
furniture
Stop for a moment to picture and relish what you see. What is
important to you in this home? Where will you spend most of your
time? What kinds of experiences will you choose to have there? How
do these surroundings accommodate these purposes? What does the
dreamer in you say you aspire to? Dream…and relax. Know as you
imagine your dream home you are bringing the possibility to attract
into your life any reality you are willing to commit and work to achieve.
What are some of the possessions you desire? What personal things
energize the dreamer in you?
Defining the Dream 29
Your work brings you many rewards now, since you began living
your dream. Remember the feelings you always wanted to have as you
worked? What were they? Listen as I read this list of feeling words and
remember those you want to experience in your work environment.
Imagine yourself gaining the rich recognition you deserve for liv-
ing true to yourself and your dreams. You know you are living a life
of contribution and making a difference. What forms of acknowledg-
ment do you receive for the valuable work you do? Imagine the one
person you most want to appreciate your value. Who is this person?
What is it you want him or her to know? How will you experience his
or her acknowledgement?
Now imagine you have returned to your dream house. You find
yourself settling into your dreaming chair again, feeling still more re-
laxed yet expectant. You look down and see something in your hand;
you bring it up to take a closer look and see what appears to be a
paycheck. You take a good look at this check. You smile as you note
who issued it to you and see the dollar amount. This is truly a dream
come true! You know you’ll want to make a photocopy of this dream
paycheck later to insert it in your Dream Journal. What fun it will be
to have as a reminder of your commitment and to be receiving finan-
cial rewards for following your dreams.
All at once you realize you now need and want to create a new
business card that represents the special qualities your dream work
has to offer. You close your eyes to picture the design for your ulti-
mate business card. You know the message must represent the new
(dreamer) you. You ask yourself, What colors, graphics, paper, do I
want? You know that later you’ll want to draw a visual representa-
tion of it.
You look up and see the plaque hanging on the wall that you had
made to signify your dream. You smile as you recall the process of
deciding to make up a quote of your very own to hang on your wall.
You knew that visitors would see it and instantly know what you’re all
about and would be enrolled to support you in living your dream.
You walk out into your garden and immediately become peace-
ful. You now know, beyond your work life, what feeling states you
most treasure. You value love, enthusiasm, thrills, comfort, pride,
peace, suspense, laughter, romance, awe, fantasy, relaxation, and spon-
taneity. You also realize that as you grow, change and become more
aware some of these may alter and change. You may want to ask
Defining the Dream 31
yourself which three words from your list are the most important to
you. Then use these words to form a statement that captures your
dream—one that will energize and inspire you each time you re-
member it.
You realize that you have been imagining your life and your fu-
ture for so long that the sun has gone down. The first stars have come
out to tease the darkness into laughter. Viewing the night sky with the
same sense of wonder you had as a child, you declare your wish upon
the first star, pausing to say, “Later, I’ll write this wish down.” Alone
but not lonely, you feel a deep sense of satisfaction with your own
identity. Finally, you have found the ideal relationship you always
longed for—not in the form of a friend or a lover; rather, it is the
relationship you have with yourself.
Imagine and hear beautiful music. As the melody enters through
to your body and the rhythm starts your toes to tapping, you begin to
sway and flow into a magical, carefree dance—fully feeling the whole-
ness of yourself.
It feels good to love and celebrate yourself in this marvelous way.
You are certain you are the person who can make you happy. You are
the one who will love and honor you always, unconditionally, no
matter what. The person who knows how wonderful you are, how
beautiful you are inside. This person thinks only the highest thoughts
about you, knowing that you are worthy of nothing less. This person
knows all your dark corners and hidden secrets, smiles tenderly and
forgivingly at each lesson you have learned, and even embraces those
that remain for you to learn.
Sitting down again, take a few moments to consider what you
appreciate and like about yourself. What are your best qualities?
What have you learned? Pretend you are being introduced as an
honored guest at an intimate gathering of close friends. This person
will sum up your most admirable qualities and character traits. Delight
in this experience and know that you will recall hearing this introduc-
tion and smile at the memory.
Imagine loving and appreciating yourself in the way you wish a
trusted companion would love you. Picture it: What would this per-
son do and say? Imagine loving yourself in these ways. You treat
yourself as something special. You do special things for yourself. You
give yourself gifts. You anticipate your needs and provide for them,
taking care of yourself with loving concern and affection. You love
doing things to make you happy—not in a selfish way, but simply
honoring yourself as an important and valuable being, worthy of the
best you have to give. You have a new certainty that “My taking care
of myself is best for others, too.” You know that as you are well cared
for, you are able to give generously out of your fullness, not reluc-
tantly out of your emptiness. Pause to define the ways you now take
loving care of your physical and mental well-being.
32 Live Your Dream
Who else is present? What sensations appeal to you? Are you quiet,
active, working up a sweat, or reflecting? Do you laugh hard and play
hard, or do you smile contentedly and calmly amuse yourself? How
much time do you want to spend here? How often do you want to
come to this place? Imagine returning home and displaying photo-
graphs of yourself pursuing your favorite leisure activities in a place
where you can remember the value of recreation, rejuvenation, and
relaxation in your life.
You have just spent time on a magical visit to renew your wishes,
hopes, and dreams, and you know that you can return to this experi-
ence any time you’d like. Take a moment now and return to the room
where you began. Take a deep breath and as you exhale begin to
sense your body in the chair you are sitting in. Slowly open your eyes
and look around you to once again return to the reality of your newly
claimed self and to the adventure of living your dream.
GFG
Remember that the previous exercise is designed to stimulate you to
visualize what living your dream would be like. Take all the time you need
to write at length in your Dream Journal and workbook. Review all the
thoughts and feelings that the visualization evoked by the questions in each
area. Let your words create the stage for a vivid scene of you living your
dream. Let your life’s innermost desires arise to your conscious attention
and form word-images on the paper before you. Truly allow that inner
dream to come forth fully, projected into every dimension of your experi-
ence. See yourself learning, discovering, and celebrating every dream step
taken. See yourself becoming your dream.
Ask yourself once again, What is my dream? What do I want to accom-
plish in this lifetime? What do I want to be remembered for? What truly makes
my heart sing? If I could do anything in the world I wanted, what would that
be? For now, set aside concerns about how impossible it might seem. Set
aside the fear. You don’t have to wait! You know what all your wishes,
hopes, and dreams are! The time is now!
ZERO I N
When you decide to create a new dish, you have to know if you’re
going to make a cake or spaghetti. You have to decide what you want.
You have to find out what the ingredients are, and then you have to get
them and set everything up so you can make it successfully. You can’t put
in all flour and no eggs, and you probably can’t bake it in the bathroom.
You have to prepare the right set of conditions for making a cake. Other-
wise, you might just turn up with soup or spaghetti instead!
Let’s do some more direct, open-eye investigations into your dream
to define it even more.
34 Live Your Dream
First, consider some questions. What did you dream of being, doing,
and having when you were young? What was it about that idea that was so
appealing? What were the experiences you dreamed of having?
What prize, award, or trophy won as a child meant the most to you?
Why? What prize, award, or trophy would mean the most to you if you won
it today? What would it mean, that you would value so much? Fame, suc-
cess, applause, accomplishment—which is most important to you? What
rewards do you find the most energizing?
Who do you admire? What qualities in that person do you value: cha-
risma, courage, stamina, integrity? In what ways does this person represent
your ideal?
One of the most powerful tools for coming to understand who you really
are, underneath all the “shoulds” and “buts” and external influences, is
paying conscious attention to what you do and think. Read the following
list and, for the next three days, notice what is true for you:
F Notice what your first thought is upon waking.
F Notice, as you prepare for your day, whether you are excited
about this day. Do you dread it? Is it “just another day”?
F Notice your thinking. Are you a positive or a negative
thinker? Do you look for the good or focus on the problem
and whose fault it is?
F Notice what the most important part of your day is.
F Notice what it is that you willingly set aside everything else
to do.
F Notice whether money is a problem or a joy for you.
F Notice whether your day is organized in a way that will
lead you to feel satisfied at its end.
F Notice the kinds of people you spend time with. Do you
feel more alive around them? Or do you feel bored or
drained?
F Notice whom you’re attracted to, and for what reasons.
F Notice your surroundings. Do they support you in being
your best?
F Notice how you feel when someone asks you what work
you do.
F Notice whether you are most interested in money, security, or
satisfaction. What do you work for?
Defining the Dream 35
Notice if you notice, from one moment to the next. Do you pay atten-
tion to the feedback your feelings give you about what you are doing? What
causes you to stop paying conscious attention?
A man from one of my workshops said, “I realized from noticing the
way I felt about work that I had been blind to how deadening my job is. It
was something I hadn’t wanted to see, but my body had been telling me
all along. It was so hard to get up in the morning! I don’t want to feel this
way for 25 more years, so I know I have to make a change. I want to feel
warm and human in my work, as I do when I’m reading bedtime stories to
the kids.”
Another woman reported, “I thought I had no choice but to deny my
feelings. It’s the modern way—tough, but a necessity. But leaving my 2-year-
old screaming, ‘Mommy! Mommy!’ as I drove off every morning felt wrench-
ing. I knew in my heart I belonged at home with her, for now. Once I began
really letting myself feel what I feel, I saw clearly that it’s more important
for me to be with my child than anything else! I’ll find a way to live more
cheaply and make that possible.”
Until you notice what’s real, you’re stuck with it simmering below your
level of awareness. Once you notice, the possibility of doing something about
36 Live Your Dream
it becomes available to you. Use your Dream Journal to write about in-
sights that dawn on you as you practice the habit of noticing in your life.
What have you noticed? What does it mean? What now? Just as you keep
important legal and academic records, this personal account will provide
you with a record of your developing awareness. Important insights often
slip away in time, lost forever. Your self-awareness will be enhanced as you
look back over your writing and understand the progression of your evolv-
ing self.
I Would
Imagine you are looking back on your own life, nearing its end. Write a
list called “I would.” Are the simplest joys and pleasures missing from your
life as it is today? What changes need to be made before it is too late? Write
about this in your Dream Journal and workbook to summarize and cap-
ture your learning.
Dreamwork Checklist
Before you go on, review your writing in your Dream Journal and The
Live Your Dream Workbook. To summarize your progress so far, write an-
swers to the following questions:
❑ What have you learned from noticing?
❑ Are you living parts of your dream already? How do you feel
about your life in relation to your dream now?
❑ What have you learned from your reading and writing so far?
❑ What impact did the writing of your “I would” list have on you?
What are your thoughts about what you wrote?
A SK J OYCE !
Having a guide along when you are about to travel to new place is
always reassuring, and often he or she can provide the needed informa-
tion that will allow you to explore and adventure into new or unknown
territories.
I am an expert guide and am inspired by questions, so I’m including a
sampling at the end of the first six chapters I also highly recommend and
encourage you to reach out to many experts as you live your dream.
Q: I have many dreams and wonder how many dreams should I concen-
trate on at one time?
A: The reason I gave my book Live Your Dream the subtitle Discover and
Achieve Your Live Purpose is because I believe that once an individual
identifies his or her life purpose a question such as yours is then answered.
To begin to discover and rediscover your life purpose, I recom-
mend that you make a list of everything you want to be, do, and have in
this lifetime. After you gain more clarity, choose the dream that will
enable you to realize not only your life purpose but also help you to
create your plan to live true to yourself and your dreams.
Q: I have never considered myself to be a creative person. Can a person
be creative and not know it?
A: Certainly! Just for fun, start saying an affirmative statement to your-
self, such as:
G I am a very creative person.
G I fully embrace my creative self.
G I love solving my problems creatively.
G I awaken the creative genius that has been asleep
within me.
Q: The idea that I could have feelings of passion for a dream seems far
away from reality for me. What sort of suggestions do you have to re-
kindle this for the very non-passionate type person that I am?
A: To know the definition of the word passion will help you ignite your
own. Passion is that feeling or emotion that is powerful and that can
replace all other emotions and acts as a catalyst to empower you to
seize upon and focus to realize a specific dream.
Now, ask yourself, What do I feel passionate about? Do I choose
to take action to follow and live my dream?
Q: I am blocked. I feel as though I am surrounded by brick walls instead of
free open spaces in which to explore. What can I do?
A: One of the reasons that I recommend teaming up with a dream partner
is to have the needed support when these “blocks” seem to appear.
40 Live Your Dream
I f you were inviting your best friend to come from far away and stay
with you for a month, you would need to clear out a room and make space
in your home. You might want to free up some time in your schedule.
Previously important items and activities would be willingly set aside as
you excitedly prepared to welcome your friend. Your friend’s arrival might
occupy a central place in your attention, as you formulated plans for your
time together.
Your new dream requires adjustments in your old patterns in much
the same way. In order to make room for a new dream in your life, the first
step is to identify whatever interferes with your being able to live the way
you really want to. You probably have some bad habits, such as worry or
self-condemnation, that get in the way. On top of that, your spouse, your
kids, the bills, the housework, or a broken-down car might make your dream
seem unachievable. You may also have some beliefs that stop you. For
example, your dream is to be a millionaire philanthropist, but you’ve never
met a millionaire who wasn’t an obsessed tyrant. With a belief such as that
lurking in your mind, how could you become a millionaire yourself?
sentence at the top. Read over this sample list, then, quickly and without
pausing to evaluate your thoughts, write at least 20 different endings that
apply to you.
Close your eyes and take a few minutes to consider your habits. When
you’re ready, begin writing.
so what chance do I have?” you probably aren’t actively looking for every
chance that might come along. If you see yourself as a failure, you probably
aren’t focusing on the possibility of being wildly successful. On the other
hand, if you believe it is your destiny and your right to be tremendously
successful, you have your eye set on that dream. We all choose our beliefs,
consciously or unconsciously, and then give them the power to allow or
prevent our dreams.
What beliefs do you have that get in the way of living your dream?
Number another page from one to 20, and make a list of beliefs that stand
in your way. Here are some examples:
A belief I allow to stand in the way of living my dream is that:
1. I’m not qualified; I don’t know how; I’d have to have a
college education.
2. It’s too hard; I’d never have any fun if I worked as hard as my
dream would require. I need to relax.
3. I have to wait until .
4. Someone else should take care of me.
5. I don’t have what I need to get started.
6. I don’t have a sharp-enough mind or memory.
7. It’s too late to start all over; I’m too old.
8. I have to wait for inspiration to strike.
9. I can’t afford it.
10. Something or someone else has to come first, before my
dream.
11. I’m terrified of making the needed changes; I might
jeopardize my marriage/other relationship.
12. I don’t deserve to be that happy.
13. I might fail; I probably couldn’t succeed anyway.
14. I can’t do it in this weather.
15. I’m waiting to be “discovered.”
16. If I had too much, I’d feel guilty about others who don’t have
enough.
17. I need to take a nap/get a snack/make a phone call first.
18. It’s not what my parents want me to do.
19. I couldn’t make as much money doing it.
20. I am a victim, and I can’t change what others do to me.
46 Live Your Dream
Close your eyes and take a few minutes to consider your beliefs.
When you’re ready, begin writing.
17. My counselor.
18. My doctor.
19. The teacher who keeps giving me bad grades.
20. The mechanic who says my car needs expensive work.
Close your eyes and take a few minutes to consider your relation-
ships. When you’re ready, begin writing.
Mindcleaning—Distractions
“It’s too expensive.” “I had a flat tire.” “I’m too tired.” Things often
seem to become insurmountable obstacles that prevent people from living
their dream. List the things that stand in your way, such as the following:
A thing I allow to stand in the way of living my dream is:
1. Housework.
2. Taxes.
3. A lack of money.
4. The government.
5. No computer/exercise machine/other equipment.
6. Lead feet.
7. My past.
8. Debt.
9. Not having the right clothes.
10. My weight.
11. Fear.
12. Bad luck.
13. Health problems.
14. The weather.
15. Watching my favorite shows on television.
16. The ball game.
17. My body isn’t in good enough shape.
18. A lack of opportunity.
19. An unreceptive market.
20. Feeling tired and overwhelmed.
48 Live Your Dream
Close your eyes and take a few minutes to consider the distractions
you have identified. When you are ready, begin writing.
Congratulations! You are now the one who is aware and in charge of
what stops your dream. You have just reclaimed the power to allow things
to stand in your way—or not to allow them! You can now choose. Read
over your answers. What common threads or themes do you notice? What
does this suggest to you? What new decisions will you make?
GFG
You now have an outline of what you can do to clear away to make
room for your dream. Review this information often to remind yourself
to continue making the changes you pinpointed. Note that more than
anything else, the most important things to clear away are those old, self-
limiting ideas that inhibit your growth and the full expression of your mag-
nificence. By changing those ideas, you change your relation to the habits,
beliefs, people, and things you used to think were holding you back. When
it comes right down to it, you and you alone hold the power to choose your
life by choosing the ideas on which your actions are based. Don’t give that
power away! Ultimately, there’s only one answer to the question of what’s
standing in my way: me, myself, and I.
50 Live Your Dream
Sleep
Personal Care
Home Care
Socializing
Exercising
Leisure
Work/Job
Shopping
Family Time
Eating
Unproductive Time
Renewal of Spirit
Financial Planning
Journaling
Reading
Dreamwork
Other
52 Live Your Dream
Decide which activities you want to accomplish each day. Begin by allo-
cating set periods of time to work on your dream—periods that are un-
likely to be interrupted by other demands. Many people find that rising
earlier in the morning serves this purpose. One man, who had difficulty
sleeping, decided to work on his dream every time he woke up at 2:00 a.m.!
He was able to turn a problem into an opportunity. Once you have set
aside times for pursuing your dream, list your other activities in time seg-
ments to represent the way you intend to spend your day. Combine opti-
mal productivity with spaces for relaxation and rejuvenation. Plan a way to
fit it all in. For an example, see the “Time Segments for an Ideal Day”
chart that follows.
This single mother, whose dream is to be an interior designer, felt
trapped by the many responsibilities of work and family. As she begins to
plan an ideal schedule for herself, she writes her dream at the top of the
list, and first fills in the hours her coursework and homework will require.
Morning preparations
Recreation/leisure
Sleep
Clearing Away Obstructions to Be Clear About Your Dream 53
She knows she will have to do some juggling and creatively manage
her time, so she thinks of starting her workday early and combining tasks
that can be handled simultaneously. Writing in her Dream Journal, read-
ing and keeping up an exercise routine are all important to her, so she
schedules time for these activities, knowing that her success will depend on
maintaining her personal well-being. Of course, she wants to assure that
her children receive the attention they need from her, and her plan accom-
modates this also. She realizes at this time she will have less leisure time,
but already her mind is racing to figure new ways of saving minutes and
consolidating tasks.
When you have drawn your chart and filled it in, experiment with it
for a few days to see what adjustments are needed. The woman in the
previous example may realize she has forgotten to allow time for driving
her son to his dance class one afternoon a week. She may then decide to
have dinner out that day or let her older child prepare the meal. Keep
changing your chart until you have a plan that works.
Note that this approach is opposite from the one we typically use in
our everyday lives. Cognizant of the day’s requirements, we begin tack-
ling one job after another, often in whatever order the most pressing prob-
lems appear. We hope eventually to get around to those inner priorities
that we keep a secret, often even from ourselves—but somehow the day
fills up with so many other things. Or perhaps our personal style is to do
what we feel like doing first, leaving our obligations to be dealt with later.
Our dream boils away on the back burner and is never handled in a re-
sponsible manner on a day-to-day basis. The planned approach, on the
other hand, emphasizes putting first things—your dream—first.
SCHEDULING MY DREAM
HOUR OF DAY MON TUES WED THURS FRI SAT SUN
5:00–6:00 a.m.
6:00–7:00
7:00–8:00
8:00–9:00
9:00–10:00
10:00–11:00
12:00–1:00 p.m.
1:00–2:00
2:00–3:00
3:00–4:00
4:00–5:00
5:00–6:00
6:00–7:00
7:00–8:00
8:00–9:00
9:00–10:00
10:00–11:00
12:00–1:00
1:00–2:00
2:00–3:00
3:00–4:00
4:00–5:00
Clearing Away Obstructions to Be Clear About Your Dream 55
SAMPLE KEY
COLOR ACTIVITY
Green Garden/home
Gold Socializing
Rose Exercising
Gray Leisure/recreation
Pink Work/job
Black Shopping
Orange Eating
Brown Journaling
Fuchsia Reading
GFG
Recently, I noticed I was becoming increasingly exasperated at my
own seeming lack of time to do the things I wanted to do. Having taught
the systematic inventory of time allocation for several years, I decided
once again to begin using it myself. I was doing a job that required many
phone calls and the management of complicated arrangements. I was be-
ing paid to do it, so why was I feeling so frustrated? I was not too aston-
ished to learn that the job was taking far more time than I had thought.
56 Live Your Dream
“If I focused that much time on things I love and things I want to
bring into reality,” I reasoned, “I would be loving each day and bringing
those things into reality.” With this information in hand, I immediately
made a choice: to resign from the position.
Others have also received valuable insights:
I can see that quality time with my husband is almost nonexistent.
G
I am faced with the reality that a large part of my time is spent doing favors
for friends and relatives—things I didn’t really want to be involved in at
all. But I rationalized that they wouldn’t take that much time!
G
I was just sitting down to watch television when I realized, “How can I
let myself get away with watching television for six hours when I say I
want to be a famous writer?”
G
I realized how little time I’m actually putting into living my dream.
G
There’s no time for play and fun here! No wonder I’m beginning to
feel burned out.
G
I became much more conscious about the choices I make that affect
the way my time is distributed.
G
Part of my dream is to be an excellent parent. Before, I had felt a little
resentful of all the time I spent helping the kids with their homework,
cooking good meals, even going for counseling. But when I began to
categorize these activities as part of my dream, I realized how much
fulfillment they offer. It brings me great pleasure to be succeeding at
what I have declared I want.
G
I found out I fool myself about my “work efficiency.”
G
I’ve been neglecting to set aside any time for myself!
GFG
Clearing Away Obstructions to Be Clear About Your Dream 57
The idea was always so valuable with these students that I adapted it
as an inspirational aid for adults who wanted to live their dreams. Dream
Boards soon became a vital part of the “Live Your Dream” process. This is
an extremely valuable project. As it takes form, you will begin to treasure
the clarity you are gaining and take into your consciousness what your
newly claimed dream life will be! Your Dream Board will take you one
step further, beyond who you are now to what you could become.
Look through magazines and cut out pictures and words that portray
your dream. (You may prefer to do your own drawings and designs.) As
you begin, ask yourself questions to help you decide what to include. Do
you want to “picture” your entire dream life or start off with a dream step
you know want to achieve? When it’s time to arrange these, be as imagina-
tive and creative as you want to be! Participants in the workshops have had
great fun by covering up boxes, which then became works of art in their
living rooms and offices. Some preferred to glue onto a piece of poster
board to create a representation of their dreams to pin up on their bulletin
board and then made a smaller version to insert into their Dream Journal.
Just imagine Dream mobiles, posters of all sizes and shapes, and so forth
decorating every home, office, and classroom around the world. Dreams
would be one of the topics of the day! What fun, what joy! So be sure to
include all the aspects of your life: your accomplishments, ideal body,
family, friends, relationship, home, car, work, finances, leisure activities,
vacations—anything and everything that’s important to you.
All around us, ads and commercials lure us to identify ourselves with
slender, fit bodies leaning against newly purchased sports cars, reclining in
fantasy dream homes, and lounging with adoring partners on luxury ocean
liners or pristine tropical beaches. Commercial advertising is predicated
on the powerful effectiveness of such images to get us to bring these desir-
able experiences into our lives. In creating your Dream Board, you are
designing your own ad and picturing your own perfect life. Be as creative
as you like, but follow one rule: You can only paste in a picture when you
are willing to take the action required to make it a reality. Be sure that the
images you select belong to you—don’t borrow ideas from someone whose
dreams and values differ from yours. Many popular phrases from advertis-
ing can be adapted to serve your purposes. One person used an ad for dog
food: “It’s time for Fit & Trim.” Another chose the army slogan: “Be all
that you can be.” Yet another added, “The sky’s the limit,” but someone
else in the class responded, “That’s too limiting for me!”
During a workshop, a woman named Anna reported that she had
started to attach a photo of a “picture-perfect model house.” Then she
stopped. “That’s something other people want,” she realized. “It’s not im-
portant to me. I like the house I have.”
Clearing Away Obstructions to Be Clear About Your Dream 59
Talk to Yourself
In addition, begin having conversations with yourself in the mirror.
Imagine your dream as a reality, and talk to yourself about it. If it feels silly
to do this, note that part of what you are working through is the sense of
separation between where you are now and where you see yourself in your
dream. Practice this daily as you are brushing your teeth, combing your
hair, and preparing for a day of living your dream.
Dreamwork Checklist
❑ Visualize your dream.
❑ Repeat and register for your partner what you heard. Use
phrases such as, “I heard...”; “I’m not sure…”; and “Did you
say . . .?”
A SK J OYCE !
Q: I read your suggestion about talking into a mirror, but honestly, I feel
like a fool. Will I really get results from doing this exercise? I keep
hearing my mother in the back of my mind (“Stop looking at yourself in
the mirror”) and it seems a little unfocused to talk myself.
A: In Chapter 1, I encouraged you to begin noticing both yourself and
your surroundings. This method/exercise is to invite you to learn and
practice the habit of what I call the art of observation. Through notic-
ing and the awareness the act of projecting who you are and can be
begin.
You may feel self-conscious—which is not feeling foolish—but
that will pass. Notice how you look and what feelings surface when
you say your dream statement. When you begin, you may say your
dream statement with little conviction or trepidation. Try putting
some power behind it and then look at yourself.
Q: When I read Chapter 2, I laughed and said to myself, “This may be
what stops me.” My entire life will have to be blown apart. Where do
I start? Please don’t tell me to start by clearing out and cleaning my
garage. That will take a minimum of a year’s work and I want to get
started on my dream now.
A: Get a dream partner—right now—if you haven’t already. Remember
the saying “misery loves company”? Well, lighten the load (and your
dream) by changing it to “dreamers love company.” This will also be an
excellent reminder to adapt your thinking and attitude to your ever-
changing life.
I am very sympathetic to the reaction my phrase “clearing out” has
on people. It is a big one but a necessary one. Get started by clearing
out a drawer or two, and write to me as you check items off your list.
Q: It was fairly easy for me to do the mindcleaning but I am having trouble
reframing the old and coming out with new habits, beliefs, and so forth.
What do you suggest?
A: You are not the first to face this dilemma, and it is a good dilemma to
face. I have always liked the notion of “change your mind, change your
life.” And I have plenty of folks come back with “easy to say, hard to do.”
Yes, it may be hard at first, but the results are so rewarding you
will be glad you did the work. Why not practice a fun exercise I rec-
ommend? Catch yourself living congruently with your newly claimed
beliefs, habits, etc. Enroll everyone around you to join in the fun and
laugh when you catch yourself not practicing and change quickly.
Record all these times in your Dream Journal for lasting results.
Clearing Away Obstructions to Be Clear About Your Dream 65
A Winning Attitude
H ave you ever found yourself in situations where you look around and
wonder, How did I ever get here? The simple truth is that we participate,
either knowingly or unknowingly, in the process of getting where we are.
The more we observe that and pay attention, the more aware we become.
At times we all want to say, “Who, me? I had nothing to do with creating
this mess! It just happened!” or “It was so-and-so’s fault. There’s nothing
I could have done!” We feel absolutely powerless over the situation—as
if we’re helpless victims. The last thing we want to hear when we’re all
caught up in our “victim story” is anything about being accountable and
responsible!
Yet it is assuming accountability that gives us power over our lives. The
more we practice the habit of acting from a position of responsibility, the
more effective we become as human beings, and the more successful we
become as managers of our lives.
BE ACCOUNTABLE
Let’s assume, just for the moment, that you are able to see yourself as
responsible and accountable. This doesn’t mean, of course, that you’re in
control of anyone else’s experience. But for your own experience, no matter
what the situation, let’s assume that you take responsibility (not blame, not
fault, but responsibility!). Now let’s try a switch in perspective. For example,
instead of saying, “You really hurt my feelings when you criticized me like
67
68 Live Your Dream
that,” I could say, “I chose to let your criticism hurt me. I allowed you to be
in charge of my feelings for a moment. I recognize your right to your
opinions—I can either agree and learn from your criticism, or appreciate
that your view may differ from mine. It’s interesting that once again I notice
that I’ve put someone else in charge of my feelings. I see what I can learn
from this!”
That husband of mine! He’s got to Well, if the truth were known, the
go and buy whatever he wants, now! things we’ve bought had their appeal
We haven’t been able to save for me, too. I could have put my foot
anything for the future. I’m at my down and just said “no.” Perhaps I
wit’s end! could work with him to develop a
plan for saving.
Those earaches I had when I was Did I ever think of going to ask for
little were so painful! I would be in help? Gosh, I think I was determined
my bed, crying and crying but no one to keep my pain a secret—just so I
came to see what was the matter. My could feel sorry for myself, or what?
parents never really cared. I was so My parents probably had no idea.
alone whenever I hurt! Even today I hesitate to ask for help.
I need to work on this some more.
A Winning Attitude 69
Now, go ahead and write your victim stories in your Dream Journal.
You may find it valuable to summarize by writing in The Live Your Dream
Workbook and repeating this exercise whenever you catch yourself feeling
victimized, until there’s no more victim left in you. When you’re finished,
reread your entries, and then go on to the next exercise.
Which side do you want to be on: the cops or the robbers; the good
guys or the bad guys, the peasants or the royalty, the caregivers or the
children? Imagine you are there right now, playing the games you used to
play. How do you feel? What costumes do you put on? What part do you
play with other kids? What are your most pleasurable roles? And what is it
about the experience that you relish so much? Recall a time when you felt:
F Powerful.
F Loving.
F Playful.
F Fully self-expressive.
F Productive.
F Fully nourished.
F Passionately alive.
F Responsible and important.
F Joyful.
for your dream, turn your attention to things in your life that are incomplete.
If you haven’t balanced your checkbook in three months or your garage is
stacked with clutter from floor to ceiling, you may be unaware that your
mental energy is tied up in those things. You simply put them out of your
mind, and they don’t bother you—although one of these days you do plan
to do something about them.
The fact of the matter is that every situation left hanging subconsciously
reduces the reserves of your mental energy. We often don’t realize this
until we clear out and handle the mess. Then how light and free we feel!
This phase of “Live Your Dream” was critical to the life changes a
woman named Sara decided to make. Here is her story:
I started in my garage, going through boxes and boxes of stuff. I would
take everything out, consider where I could put it, and end up
cramming it all back into the box. How do you unpack a box of stuff
you don’t even want? There were my ex-husband’s trophies; after
carrying them with me through four moves, I finally realized he must
not want them!
But what really hit me was looking through my house. I had
accumulated generations of family heirlooms and hundreds of valuable
antiques. All these things needed a home! I realized I had designed
my life around having a place for all this stuff. It was not part of my
dream. But I had made it a part of my reality.
What I really want, after all these years of respectable
responsibility, is to be a free spirit. Now that I can do whatever I like,
I want to be a gypsy! I want to pick up and go on impulse to new
places. I want to travel all over the world, without a schedule or a
return reservation home.
I knew I had to let the stuff go. You can’t be a gypsy with an
antique hutch. It just won’t fit into a backpack!
GFG
Sara proceeded to invite everyone in the workshop to a garage sale to
end all garage sales. She sold everything she had and set off to live her
dream. Now I never know where her next phone call will come from, because
Sara is happily on her dream journey traveling all over the world.
Your clearing out may not be quite so comprehensive as Sara’s, but
your results, like hers, are sure to move you closer to living your dream. As
you eliminate excess possessions, take care to remain true to yourself. If
you love your old, threadbare bathrobe, you may choose to keep it and get
rid of that newer one you never really cared for. Just keep your focus on
identifying whatever stands in the way of living your dream—that’s what
needs to go.
A Winning Attitude 73
Cleaning Centers
Here’s an exercise to free all that powerful creative energy. Imagine
that you are dividing your life into the following areas: work, leisure, physical
body, home, relationships, finances, and self-development. Write each of
these categories, spread around a blank page in your Dream Journal. Circle
each in this way:
Work Leisure
Self-Development
Physical Body
Home
Finances
Relationships
Rose
Ian
Grandma
Aunt Jane
Steve RELATIONSHIPS
Diet
Timmy
Terry Exercise
Dad
Mom PHYSICAL BODY
Health Hair
Clothing
Investments
Income Savings
Bills Checkbook
FINANCES Remodeling
Cleaning
Insurance
Debts
Records Taxes
HOME
Yard
Financial planning
Garage Projects
Reading
Games
LEISURE
Counseling
Vacation plans Hammock Classes
SELF-IMPROVEMENT
Relationships
Desk
Reading Travel
Journaling
WORK
Projects Equipment
Plans
A Winning Attitude 75
Continue expanding your diagram until each area of your life is represented.
Next, use the cluster diagram to create a “list” of all the things that
need to be done to free you to live your dream. For each item on your
diagram ask yourself, What is incomplete in this area? What have I been
intending to get done? What have I been putting off? In your Dream Journal,
write a to-do list for each of the seven categories in your cluster diagram.
Write in your workbook to further integrate and enhance your learning.
Things to Complete
Be thorough and unflinching, now. Your lists may seem impossible to
accomplish at first, but avoid the temptation to turn back, quit, or omit
difficult items. Just pause to write candidly in your Dream Journal and
workbook about what you are learning from your lists. Are you willing to
complete things?
Here are some additional questions to guide you for each category.
Use them to scrutinize each area of your life. Add to your To-Do lists and
workbook whatever suggestions these questions bring to mind.
Now is the time to schedule it! Have you considered using a personal image
consultant or having a make-up makeover? What about video feedback on
your personal presentation? What personal and professional growth
workshops and courses do you want to take?
Is it time to further your education? How about going back to school
for a degree? Remember those other areas you always wanted to learn
more about and skills you’d like to perfect. A class in swimming, guitar,
tennis, drama, marketing, computer skills, Web site design, speech, cooking,
religious instruction, and so forth might broaden your horizons.
What are the books you’ve been wanting to read? Have you made a list
of them and gotten started yet? Plan a reading schedule. What about
CDs, DVDs, and videos you want to rent or buy?
will work best when you stick to a routine maintenance schedule, so get in
the habit of handling and completing each task and each communication
right on the spot. Review and update your completion lists regularly at the
beginning of each month. Then when you sit down to design your schedule,
you will be in charge.
As a participant in one of my workshops said, “Managing completions
is like putting the tail on the kite: You’re getting your dream ready to fly.”
People have achieved impressive results through identifying needed
completions and freeing their time and energies to follow their dream. I
joined in the learning and shared in the joy as I heard some of the following
statements:
I found things I thought I’d lost.
G
I made plenty of space to organize my stuff.
G
I have the things I need at my fingertips.
G
I can’t believe how much better I look. The worry lines are gone!
G
I’m not waking up in the middle of the night.
G
I’m keeping my word and it feels just great.
G
I freed my attention to focus on what I really want to do.
G
I am healthier than I’ve ever been.
G
I stopped berating myself for all the things I hadn’t done.
G
I let go of excess baggage I’d been dragging around.
G
80 Live Your Dream
G
I restored my faith in myself. I am confident.
G
I can look forward to new things.
G
I have a ton of energy—more than I ever thought possible!
G
I feel free and in charge.
G
I am actually getting along better with everyone. It’s amazing!
G
I laugh more.
G
I am living my dream!
GFG
Beca, a workshop participant, achieved remarkable results through
clearing out and completing things. Confronting the aspects of her life that
were inconsistent with her dream was frightening to her, because it meant
eliminating much of what she had grown comfortable with. Having been a
successful financial planner and seminar leader for years, she had
established herself in a predictable and orderly lifestyle. The only missing
ingredient was the life.
When Beca examined where her real energy and enthusiasm lay, she
found them in her love for dance and choreography! She finally understood
why she was unable to tolerate music playing in her house: She had to deny
that part of herself to remain a financial planner. Beca left her job, her old
house, and many former relationships behind to start out anew. Now her
teenage daughters complain that she is playing the music too loud. Beca is
fully committed to making a new career for herself in the field she loves—
a choice made possible only by her willingness to let go and clear out her
attachments to a past that no longer suited her.
A Winning Attitude 81
BE COMMITTED
Do whatever you say you’re going to do. You can’t believe in yourself if
you don’t honor your own word! Your integrity is all important to one person
in particular: you. You need to be able to trust that your resolve is not
going to falter when the going gets tough and that you are determined to
do whatever it takes to reach your wishes, hopes, and dreams.
painstakingly took out and redid each seam until it was perfect. It may be
that you took on the job of refinishing some furniture, sanding and staining
the piece until it looked as you envisioned it would. Have you ever gone
over each crevice and corner of your home and office with a toothbrush
until no speck of dirt remained? This is an assignment I sometimes give to
enhance a person’s awareness of excellence.
One man in a workshop shared his personal experience to elaborate
upon this idea:
“Excellence is what you learn when you study the piano as a child.
When you’re first learning to play, you know just three notes, and all
your pieces use only those notes. They are all in the key of C. Before
long, you’ve learned the rest of the notes and you can play in several
different time signatures as well. You learn the keys of F and C.
Then one day you’re playing along, and it occurs to you that it’s not
the struggle it used to be. You’re playing well, and you feel good
about it.
“Your pieces grow progressively more complex. You practice and
practice, until you get every note just perfect—even the sharps or
flats. Your teacher says, ‘Good! Now let me hear it again with a
crescendo here, and a slight ritardando in this measure.’ It’s a little
difficult at first, thinking of all those things at once, but you manage.
She says, ‘Much better! Now you’re ready to add the pedal here, and
here, and notice these phrase markings? Try it like this!’
“You keep working, learning more and more complexities. You
study stylistic variations, practice arpeggios and scales in five octaves
and three kinds of minor keys. You build a repertory of sonatas and
fugues, preludes and polonaises.
“One day, you sit down to play the concerto you’ve been working
so hard on, and you forget about all those years of details—the music
just flows forth from your heart through your fingers. You have
transcended mastery and gone beyond to the ultimate point of it all—
sheer, uninhibited, creative expression. The discipline was necessary;
all that work had to be done first, to bring you to that point of pure
excellence.”
GFG
You may be fortunate enough to have had such an experience of
excellence, too—maybe in one of the arts or in a field of sports. But I find
it rare to meet someone who has actually pursued excellence to the extent
of knowing it as an intimate friend. Yet, if your dream is a big dream, and
if you want your life to work on the high level that you say you do, there’s
no way around doing the work it takes to get you there. Dreams are not
about mediocrity.
84 Live Your Dream
With your newly claimed winning attitude, you will become your own
best motivator and your own dream coach. Your winning attitude can and
will very likely make the difference between feeling overwhelmed and rising
confidently to meet the challenges and greet the opportunities you must
face along the road to your dream.
So have fun as you catch yourself living congruently with a winning
attitude!
88 Live Your Dream
Dreamwork Checklist
❑ Teach the “victim” to take responsibility.
❑ Celebrate completion!
❑ Each day when you call your partner, reinforce each other’s
progress and completions. Share your accomplishments and
whether you carried through with your scheduled plan.
ASK JOYCE!
Q: After reading the section about being accountable versus being a victim
I realized I have rarely taken responsibility and almost always blamed
others. I did the writing assignment you suggested and filled in the blanks
in the workbook. What further suggestions can you give me to get rid
of my victim-self forever?
A: Tell everyone around you that you want to rid yourself of your victim-
self. Then ask them to lovingly suggest when the victim-self is showing
up. I encourage my clients to give their victim-selves a playful title/
name so it makes this change become more visible and heightens one’s
awareness. It often helps to lighten up the transition!
Q: You make it sound so easy to revisit the playful, joyful child within me.
I don’t really have a question; I just wanted to write and thank you. I
did the visualization and the writing you suggested, and I am truly
revitalized. Do you think people will notice this change in me?
A: Yes. My guess is that people will notice, and I am certain you will bring
your child self out more often now. Enjoy the joy!
Q: I love the story about John and his puppets. Did you suggest he use
puppets to awaken his “childlike energies”?
A: I sure did! When I was a teacher I used puppets a lot in my teaching. I
found I had a “voice” inside of me that only came out when I had a
puppet in my hand. My puppet could bring the children in my classes to
a quick, silent space swiftly and hold their rapt attention for much longer
that I could alone. It is a lovely memory I enjoy revisiting.
One dreamwork assignment that I have used for workshop
participants has been to purchase a puppet that represents an aspect
of themselves that they would like to develop or bring forth.
I have many wonderful memories of magicians, ducks, bears,
eagles, frogs, clowns, and other “characters” talking and singing and
performing.
You may enjoy having a puppet of your own to join you as you live
your dream.
Q: I have written out 10 affirmations, as you suggested. Every time I read
them I can hear a little voice saying, “Oh sure!” Should I change the
wording to be more realistic? Some of my affirmations seem a little far
out in comparison to my real life.
A: Do keep reading your affirmations and don’t worry how “out there”
they may appear. Your affirmations are just that—yours—no one else’s.
Write down in your Dream Journal every time you feel the slightest
“sign” that your inner voice is quieter or more accepting. If writing,
90 Live Your Dream
Taking Charge
T he ground has been prepared, the seed sown, and germinating just
beneath the surface lies the beginning of your future. As the farmer, you
are continuing to water that seed, nourish it, and protect it from distur-
bance or invasion in the vulnerable stages of its early development to en-
sure its hardy growth. You are cultivating your dream.
91
92 Live Your Dream
YOUR VALUES
You behave in the world as your values. Your values are not some-
thing you can lie about. Your values are probably obvious to those around
you, even if they remain undefined in your mind. They are the premise
from which you operate. They are inherent in how you present yourself
and in that which you aspire to and actually do.
be in meetings where I was told to sit down and shut up. I could not
operate in an oppressive system. I could not be around people who didn’t
appreciate my spontaneity.
By identifying self-expression as a top value, I saw that I would have to
go back to school to learn to express myself in the best way possible. If I
anticipated expressing myself on television, that would mean I’d want to
present a thin, healthy image. So I’d have to get to work on that, too. If I
woke up in the morning and thought, I’m tired. Let’s take the day off, I might
consult my values and receive in response, “You may not be able to do
that, if you want to be out there expressing yourself—just press through
the tiredness and keep going.” So more and more, I make my choices out
of my values. I monitor myself according to my values. Our values establish
for us a strong, unwavering course to sail.
the end of the week, review what you have written and write a summary
statement about what you learned. Have you crossed any values off your
list? What work is needed to bring yourself into alignment with your values?
Are you excited yet? This work is powerful in its potential effects.
You may be moved to question some very basic aspects of the life you
have created for yourself. It may raise some discomfort, or even outright
fear. If that happens, pay attention to it. What does it mean? What mes-
sage is there for you? What will you choose to do?
Meaningful changes often come out of this work. A characteristic
realization is, “My values haven’t changed in years—maybe since I was
born. I had never consciously sorted through them and made my own
independent choices.”
Only by living true to your values can you live true to yourself. With-
out values, your life will lack focus and clarity—as if you’re lobbing a
tennis ball back and forth across the net but not really playing tennis.
With your values clearly in place, your tennis game has boundaries and
rules, and you can score points and be penalized for faults. Hitting the
ball assumes purpose and intention. You have an investment in the well-
placed serve and the skillful return. You know when you’re winning.
Socrates drank the hemlock to remain true to his values. Gandhi went
to prison. Martin Luther King, Jr. died in the service of his values. Mother
Teresa chose a life in poverty to honor her values. Perhaps the measure of
our greatness lies in conforming our lives to the values we espouse.
The exercises that follow can help you discover more about the values
that are most important to you.
I value:
Integrity Beauty Companionship Comfort
Meaningful Security Balance Service to
work Freedom Power others
Nature Inner peace Self-discipline Love
Intelligence Spirituality Wisdom Money
Learning Fitness Humor Power
Spontaneity Competence Order Exercise
Simplicity Creativity Excellence Spirit
Relationships Self-expression Honesty Dreams
Health Economy
96 Live Your Dream
Now go over your list and select the five most important values in
your life as it is right now. Then, write to summarize in your workbook,
explaining how you chose those five.
Next, consider what top five values you would choose if your most im-
portant priority were to bring your dream into reality. What would you need
to value most highly to make your dream possible? Write another paragraph
explaining these choices and discussing what changes you would make in
your current lifestyle. When you have completed this work, review what you
have recorded every day as you return to your regular daily activities.
Strengthen a Value
This exercise can provide valuable input whenever you begin to feel off
balance and out of harmony with yourself. Simply select one value to focus
on, post your blank page, and begin listing what you do. Here’s an example
from a day’s entries written by Nick, a young man who wanted to build his
self-confidence by learning to manage everyday tasks and business oppor-
tunities more competently.
Competence
F Cleaned every speck of corrosion from around the bathroom
faucets when I shaved—ultra-perfectionism!
F Read the camera manual, so I can feel competent about oper-
ating all the adjustments and know how to take the best picture
under any circumstance.
Taking Inventory and Taking Charge 97
F Took extra care changing the baby. No need to feel any doubt
about my competence to do simple chores like that!
F Asked my client for a more detailed description of exactly
what he wanted, then checked its availability through several
outlets. Drew-up an exacting proposal outlining how we could
optimally meet the client’s needs at a competitive price.
F Cleaned off my desk. I’m on top of everything now.
F Fit in a brisk walk after lunch, so I would feel alert in the staff
conference.
You can imagine that Nick’s list, and putting his focus on the value of
humor, helped him to feel less serious and laugh.
health, honesty, and service among her top values. She placed these fore-
most in her mind as she went through an entire week. The first thing she
noticed was how often she entertained thoughts she was unwilling to share
with her husband and how rarely she was open enough to tell him how she
really felt. She began watching herself go through the rituals of play-act-
ing intimacy, while simultaneously being aware that her mind was still
revolving around the previous evening’s conflict.
At this point, Gloria stopped to ask herself squarely, “Is intimacy
really one of my top values? From what I’m doing, I wonder if it’s not just
the appearance of intimacy that I seek. Maybe I’ve been fooling myself
about intimacy all along. Should I select another, truer value and stop
pretending?”
Finally, she decided that intimacy really was important to her, and that
she would have to be more honest with herself, as well as with her hus-
band. Rather than censoring her ill-intentioned thoughts, then, Gloria
began using their appearance to indicate moments when she needed to be
more honest. She also realized that she had to respect her own feelings
before she could be intimate with anyone else, and that sharing worries
and angry feelings brings real intimacy—not play-acting the “perfect wife.”
Simultaneously, her health improved and her blood pressure went down.
She found herself offering her service to the community in a lighter, more
joyful spirit as well.
Kristina began to select values that would support her success as a writer.
She decided that to be self-employed she would have to value her own
time at least as highly as any other employer would. As her own employer,
she would expect herself to produce a reasonable quantity and quality of
work. She would hold herself accountable for a specified number of hours
per week on the job and a committed level of performance. Self-discipline
would be important, along with assertiveness and improved communication
with her husband. At the same time, she would need to value responsible
management of her time, so that she could ensure at least one hour daily
for reading and research, four hours a week for sending out manuscript
queries, and at least two hours a day of quiet, uninterrupted solitude dedi-
cated to pure creative thought.
Kristina was surprised to discover that her husband could get along
quite well without her hovering solicitous attention and that he also was
excited about helping her live her dream.
Deanne, another workshop participant, reported, “I’ve been saying
all along that I value money, but I have resisted doing everything that
would bring in money. I guess I wanted to believe I could value spending
money without having to be responsible for earning it! Today, I got the
usual invitations—‘How about going to lunch?’ etc., and you know what I
said? I set aside my impulsive self that has been getting me in trouble and
replied, ‘I’d love to, but I’ve decided to start taking my value of making
money more seriously. This work’s got to get done. Thanks, anyway.’ And
I went right back to the job without a backward look!”
Bill had a successful law practice that he described modestly as “what I
do for my income.” Every spare minute he devoted to tending his exquisite
orchid collection and to traveling. When he settled into defining what his
values were, Bill began by exclaiming, “I’m a total hypocrite!” He was over-
whelmed by the guilt he felt about the time he “wasted,” “puttering around”
in his garden.
In probing what he actually valued, Bill discovered, “I know what it is!
It’s balance. Gardening represents my creativity—the side of myself that I
have to suppress during the long hours of poring over volumes of legal
precedents and carrying out routine legal proceedings. It makes sense to
incorporate balance into my life.”
When you decide to go the full distance for your dream, know that your
shift may take time. It may mean going back to school or going for personal
counseling to clear away the blocks from your past. It may take setting three
different alarm clocks around your house or buying an answering machine
to screen your telephone calls. There is no easy way around the work that
has to be done. What are the steps you need to take? Begin by defining them.
Have you ever started down a cafeteria line knowing what you felt
like eating, but then after you saw the special for the day and that super-
appealing dessert, you ended up buying a meal that wasn’t what you wanted
at all? Did you notice how unsatisfying it was? The afterthought probably
occurred to you, Why didn’t I trust my own intuition in the first place?
When you go shopping for clothes, do you get a clear picture of what
you want first, or do you find yourself purchasing whatever you see that is
appealing or on sale and getting home without having found the one thing
you especially needed? Do you keep your house clean because you like it
clean, or because of someone else’s opinions or expectations? Accomplish-
ing the same task can bring, on the one hand, satisfaction and fulfillment
or, on the other hand, powerlessness and resentment.
Outer-directed motivation is based on the need to be right, to gain
approval, reward, or recognition from someone else, or on the fear of
punishment or of commitment. Inner-directed motivation is based on a
love for self and others, desire for the highest good for everyone concerned,
a satisfaction in one’s own accomplishments and learning, making a contri-
bution for the sake of giving without expecting direct returns, and willingly
assuming responsibility for creating the outcome you desire.
myself about what I really wanted: approval. And I have been asking men
to give me something I could not give to myself: a sense of being ap-
proved of, physically. This actually counteracts my value of freedom, as
well, because I could never feel really free as long as I was always out to
buy approval with my body!” Louise decided to choose approval as an inner
motivator, instead, and to direct her energy into actions that made her feel
good about herself.
The big day has finally arrived. You know that these last five years of
training are about to pay off, as you are a top-ranked contender in the
Boston Marathon today. Your training has been relentless, and you
are completely ready now, eager for the race to begin. There it is—
the call for the line-up! Events proceed from then on in a blur, with
every cell in your body and brain focused on making the best move to
keep on going strong, concentrating on the course, flying toward the
finish line. Suddenly, in a roar of applause and a flash of bright lights
and colors, it’s over. You won! You put your ability to the supreme
test, and victory is yours. As if in a dream, you move around through
the crowd receiving congratulations. You drink in the rewards; you
revel in the glory of success.
What you love most about the whole thing is ______________ .
What you can hardly wait to have now is __________________ .
What makes it all worthwhile is _________________________ .
GFG
As you replay this scene in your mind, allow the full-blown feelings and
sensations of the event to emerge, and see what motivates you. When you
are ready, begin to write a list of “What Motivates Me Most.”
Here’s another scenario for you to imagine:
willow trees bend over the clear, lightly rippled water. “This is the life,”
you muse. “Everything I’ve ever wanted to experience is mine now.
I have ________________________________________________ .
I love ________________________________________________ .
_________________________________________ feels so good!”
GFG
Again, allow the pleasurable and enjoyable feelings of this scene to
remind you of rewards that are motivating for you. Recall the experience
of feelings that you prize, sensations you would travel to the ends of the
Earth to claim as your own. Write about your insights in your Dream Jour-
nal and workbook.
Too many people, if pressed, would have to admit that pain is one of
their primary motivators. We sit on a hornet’s nest until it becomes too
uncomfortable to stay there anymore. When the dysfunction in our rela-
tionship becomes intolerable, when the clutter, sickness, disintegration, or
dishonesty we are embroiled in becomes unbearable, we are finally pushed
to our limit, and only then do we act to bring about a change.
I asked one young man who had taken my workshop how his dream
was progressing. He responded, “Let’s face it, I’m a hopeless procrastina-
tor.” “So, is that what you want your tombstone to say?” I asked in reply. If
so, then he was moving in the direction he wanted to go. If not, then what
was he going to do about it?
Eleanor is a woman who came to me for some private coaching, frus-
trated after having spent three years undergoing professional counseling
without significant improvement in her condition. She told me that all she
learned was that she was depressed. She had picked up a label to pin on
her symptoms, and she had even come to understand some of the dynamics
of her depression, but she continued to be depressed.
“But,” I asked, “is this what you want?” “No, of course not,” she re-
plied with some surprise. “Then let’s identify what it is that depresses you,
and what your options are in those areas. Let’s also identify the times when
you are not feeling depressed and find out what you can do to create more
of those times for yourself, right now.”
Eleanor disclosed that her depression originated when her mother be-
gan living with her. The most obvious option (finding another place for her
mother to live), seemed impossible to her, which was why she felt blocked.
I asked her, “Is there a way for your mother to remain with you without
your continuing to be depressed about it?” We began to explore the types
of adjustments and communications that would help clear up problems in
the arrangement. Was she willing to make the changes necessary to elimi-
nate the causes of her depression? That was still an important question.
But in the meantime, I encouraged her to do more of the activities that
made her feel good.
104 Live Your Dream
“You don’t have to wait until all your problems are solved before you
begin building the healthy self you want to develop,” I said. “Why don’t
you decide to start taking some definite action to bring increased happi-
ness into your life right now? People sometimes don’t realize that you can
do both simultaneously.”
It is a principle of metaphysics that whatever you put your energy into
will increase in your experience. Perhaps you have had an injury that hurt
so much you could hardly stand it. Then someone distracted you or your
interest was caught up by something outside yourself. Later, you became
aware that you had spent quite some time without ever giving a single
thought to your pain. But the minute you went back to it, the pain grew
progressively worse and worse. In this way, pain can be the motivator that
draws our attention to what we don’t want. But rather than focusing on the
pain and fostering its escalation, why not start right now to focus on what
we do want? We do have the option of allowing positive, satisfying rewards
to be the motivators we choose.
As parents, we often interject motivating influences into our child-
rearing strategies. “You can’t go outside to play until your room is cleaned
up,” we say. “If you sit very quietly in church, we’ll go to the park after-
wards.” We may design a chart and put stars up on it to reinforce desired
behaviors. When we become adults, it’s up to us to become nurturing
parents to ourselves. We must make sure there are plenty of gold stars to
reward the behaviors we want to encourage in ourselves.
“What do you like to do when you’re feeling good, not depressed?” I
asked Eleanor. She replied, “When I’m going for a bike ride out in the
sunshine—that always lifts my spirits. Or when I go to a really good play.”
“And when did you last do those things?” was my next question. “Six years
ago,” she said.
Eleanor’s example is instructive because we all have a tendency to forget
to build the reinforcing rewards that help us feel good into our daily life.
Once Eleanor built some rewards into her life, her attitude and perspec-
tive changed, and her depression lifted. Life is now a joyful journey for her.
So ask the following questions yourself now: What kind of rewards or
reinforcers motivate you? What “carrot” will keep you running tirelessly
around the track? Do you work for the money? For the chance to play?
For the sheer joy of personal achievement? For applause and recognition?
My strongest motivator is the joy of being able to go to sleep knowing I’ve
done the very best I could today, and will tomorrow, too. Make a list in
your Dream Journal and workbook of your personal positive motivators.
Wendy was a highly successful executive in a multinational sales firm.
She was midway through the “Live Your Dream” workshop when she
received a promotion to a top-level position in Japan. Identifying her
motivators was essential to Wendy’s gathering the inner strength this new
position would require of her. She could not afford to allow her energy to
Taking Inventory and Taking Charge 105
be scattered, and she must know where to plug in to get her batteries
recharged. She probed deep within, until she came to an inner assurance
about her source of motivation. Here’s what she learned: “It’s not about
money, for me. It’s not about prestige or titles. Now, I’ll finally have the
position where I can give my all as a successful businesswoman. It’s me
being in love with myself.”
My friend the “procrastinator” decided that he was motivated by a sense
of accomplishment. He realized that scheduling the hours of his day and
making a list of everything he accomplished that day would motivate him
to stop procrastinating and get to work. The next time I visited his office; I
noted that one whole wall was covered with several weeks’ worth of lists
showing what he had accomplished each day. Every time he looked up, he
felt rewarded and motivated anew. I didn’t have to ask what he was doing
to realize his dream; it was written all over the wall. “Let’s face it, I’m too
busy living my dream and becoming world-famous to have any time for
procrastination,” he joked.
Fulfilled and successful people do not spend a lot of time sitting around
waiting for the phone to ring, for someone else to come and pump them
106 Live Your Dream
up, or for the needed inspiration to carry on. Neither do they pretend
they require no motivators and no support. They take charge, in this area
as in others, of anticipating and providing for their own needs. Building
motivators into your life is a powerful way to assure that your dream will
receive the ongoing nourishment it needs, especially when the going gets
tough or you are under pressure or stress. So go back into your Dream
Journal and workbook now, and write your personal plan for making those
rewards that motivate you a part of the realization of your dream.
grow up?” and “what do I want to do with my life?” And I’ve had so many
who finally realized that where they’ve worked so hard to get is not where
they want to be at all. Then they say, “Oh, no! Do I really want to go ahead
with this?” as the mounting discomfort surfaces.
So be forewarned: You may come to a stunning realization that makes
you want to run back home and hide in your closet. You may be tempted to
crawl back into that smaller shell of yourself where you were comfortable
and secure. But if you’re not living from your true self—that greater being
you now know you are—you won’t be living your dream.
Acknowledge Yourself
The third part of this in-depth personal inventory can help you identify
your natural gifts and talents. Begin by examining some activity you re-
cently completed and listing everything you can possibly think of about it
to acknowledge yourself for. Acknowledge yourself for all the little things
involved. For example: I got home on time (I am usually punctual—good
for me!), and I took care to water all the way to the corners of the yard (I did
a thorough job. I am a conscientious person who takes pride in my work).
I worked quickly and efficiently, pulling out the dandelions at the same
time. I interrupted the job to give my child my total attention for a few
minutes (I honor my child’s needs and take good care of him); then I went
right back to finish the job (My ability to carry through a task to comple-
tion has grown immensely!). I respected my body and peace of mind enough
to sit down and relax for 10 minutes, so I’ll be able to handle the demands
of my family with renewed energy.
This exercise—acknowledging yourself in writing—is an effective tool
in building self-esteem. Use it whenever you have a need to feel better
about yourself. Try using it in situations where you feel terrible about how
you’ve been doing, writing about all the good you can extract from your
experience. Once again, you will demonstrate the magic of focusing your
attention on the positive. You will experience great benefits from tending
to and nurturing your self-esteem; why hang around waiting for someone
else to pay you a compliment and make you feel good? This exercise also
helps to identify the individual components of your natural talents and
gifts—breaking down broad skills and abilities into specific elements.
When you use your most natural curiosities, strengths and talents, you
can grow and express yourself powerfully and effortlessly. In contrast, if
you are trying to force yourself to become good at something that goes
against your grain, you are likely to struggle every inch of the way. You
may be able to succeed—but how much more successful might you be at
something that comes naturally to you? Discovering exactly what your natu-
ral gifts are—and are not—is crucial to maximizing your potential.
108 Live Your Dream
receive, appreciating that you are still the world’s foremost authority on
yourself and that you will be the ultimate judge of its validity. Ask yourself,
Is that true for me? Does this person see something I overlooked?
Now, on each page, down the left-hand side, write these headings:
My Ideal Self in:
F My Entire Lifetime.
F 10 Years.
F 5 Years.
F 1 Year.
F 6 Months.
F 3 Months.
5 years 125 lb. Sneezing and difficulty Hike Mts. Shasta and
in breathing in the past; Rainier.
breathing free and clear
all the time.
6 Months 150 lb. Decrease red meat to Join athletic club and
twice a week; continue start mountain
allergy treatment climbing classes.
regimen.
On pages 113 and 114 are two sample pages one dreamer developed as
a plan for realizing the mental and spiritual needs of a dream.
My Dream Self: Mental State of Being
TIME RESULT ACTION
Lifetime To have expanded my creative intuitive and logical pow- Read from great books of the world daily. Attend cultural
ers to maximum capacity. To acquire a vast familiarity events twice a month. Cultivate friendships with wise people
with the accumulated knowledge and culture of the ages, from all over the world and continue in my journaling to
and to develop the wisdom and understanding of a sage. see inner guidance in making wise life decisions.
10 Years Gain expertise in various world cultures through Guide anthropological expedition to Zaire; visit the foreign
study, classes, and cultural involvement, being a minister and bestow museum endowment for preservation
learner as well as a teacher. of Zairian artifacts and culture.
Identify principles of “Live Your Dream” found in other Teach “Live Your Dream” in many countries, adapting it
cultural heritages; discover myths and folk tales teaching skillfully to incorporate appropriate cultural variations.
these principles.
5 Years Have greatly expanded horizons and contacts. Increase Travel to Switzerland and Italy. Cultivate friends who are
my information continually, and become a meaningful experts in many fields. Select an organization and become a
contributor. substantial contributing member. Purchase the Great Book
series and encyclopedia; read daily.
1 Year Increase my formal and informal education. Subscribe to mini-lecture series at the university; acquire
Taking Inventory and Taking Charge
that area.
114
Lifetime Turn over all decisions to a Higher Power. Be living my Be a master practicing.
life at the total state of acceptance. Become a transcended
master. Be prepared to celebrate the death cycle as part
of the life cycle and to meet my Maker in peace.
10 Years Establish such a strong connection with my Source that Go public with my message (television and radio
others are empowered. Be a channel of divine worldwide).
empowerment.
5 Years Demonstrate that I am empowered by an unlimited Give talks; facilitate workshops sourced by Higher
Source. Power.
1 Year Experience joy at will. Passion for life is my motivating Meditate daily, opening myself to more and greater
force. joy, love, and inspiration.
Live Your Dream
6 Months Turn everything over to a Higher Power—of free choice, Keep a record of my successes each time I turn
not just in desperation. Get myself out of the way. something over.
Write what I will do based on my daily log. Take actions indicated by my writing.
3 Months Develop awareness of what my fears are of trusting in Keep a daily log of my trusting and doubting thoughts.
a Higher Power, and of the choices I make (to trust or Record the amounts of time I spend on creative,
panic). trusting solutions vs. time spent doubting. Read
inspirational books and listen to tapes daily.
Taking Inventory and Taking Charge 115
Keep It Current
The very fact that you have now stated your Dream Plan and identi-
fied its working stages has set in motion the process of realizing your
dream. As you continue to do the work necessary to keep to your sched-
ule, review what you have written in your Dream Journal and workbook
and look at your Dream Plan periodically. You may decide to change
parts of your dream or of the stages and steps you have plotted along its
course. You will undoubtedly be astonished at the progress you have made
if you truly commit yourself to each aspect of your dream.
And watch out: Your life may change! You will uncover possibilities
and potential you never knew you had. You will discover all you were meant
to be. You will become your dream.
116 Live Your Dream
Dreamwork Checklist
❑ Commit to at least 15 minutes daily visualizing yourself living
your dream, and write your thoughts in your Dream Journal.
❑ Think about and list activities that bring you joy and aliveness.
❑ Add one item every day to your list of natural gifts and tal-
ents.
❑ Call your dream partner five times a week and ask how you can
assist him or her in living according to his or her values. Share
what motivators are influencing you right now, and ask about
your partner’s Dream Plan progress.
Taking Inventory and Taking Charge 117
A SK J OYCE !
Q: After reading Chapter 4, I began to realize I was not living true to my
values. I was telling my friends I wanted to write, but I never wrote. I
realize now that I have to change either my dream or change myself to
make my dream come true. Is there hope for me or will I be a pro-
crastinator forever?
A: In Dorothy Gilman’s book, A New Kind of Country, she states the im-
portance of “living with eyes wide open.” It may help you to live more
congruently if you plan your daily schedule to include what you say you
want (to write) and then commit to living with your eyes wide open as
you observe yourself. The hardest part may be telling yourself the truth.
You may not be willing to commit to your dream.
I do know the joy of living true to yourself is worth the effort. And
this is ultimately your decision.
Q: To “look for the learning,” as you suggest, is a very new way of think-
ing. How do you suggest I do this without becoming obsessive?
A: The easiest new habit to “look at the learning” is to reread what you
write in your Dream Journal and workbook. Simply ask yourself ques-
tions such as these:
G What have I learned by living this experience?
G Is this a new concept for me?
G What will I do to make new choices that support and
empower me to live my dream?
G Is it time to take action or make a “to do in the future” list?
I am not an advocate of letting go of “something” if you find your-
self annoyed or even paying attention to it. If a life experience “has”
your attention, my guess is that there is a learning experience present.
Don’t miss it!
Q: Asking myself, What motivates me? is definitely something I have never
done. I am having a difficult time identifying what I am motivated by. I
can’t seem to fill in the blanks in the workbook. What do I do?
A: As you now realize, the Live Your Dream book series was designed to
invite you, the reader, to delve into who you are and who you want to
be. The subtitle of the workbook reads “Discover and Live the Life of
Your Dreams.”
There is no easy or quick way to arrive at truly knowing yourself.
I advise you get out your pen and think of it as a shovel or pick that
you will use to find the treasure that is within you.
118 Live Your Dream
Q: I asked 15 people what they thought my natural gifts were. This has
been, surprisingly, a nurturing exercise. My question to you is: What if
they saw things I do not see? Should I just accept it or try to live up to
their opinion of me? Should I consider these as new opportunities to
explore even though I know in my heart I have absolutely no desire to
discern if I have any talents in those areas? I am afraid I may miss my
true calling.
A: You may indeed have the talent to be a world-class painter, but if the
desire is not there all that talent will not make you happy. Although
others may see gifts in us, it is never a sure bet that those are avenues
that we will want to explore. What your friends are seeing are the many
facets that make up the composition that is you. One lifetime cannot
possibly give you enough time to study each facet. You, ultimately, must
decide where to put your energies. Do it wholeheartedly and without
regret.
Q: I finished doing all the assignments and now have my Dream Plan. It
looks great on paper, but I can’t seem to put it in action. Will you please
give some ideas to inspire me to get busy?
A: You are not alone! Here are some coaching tips to consider:
G Hire an “expert” when you know what you need and are
ready for guidance and advice.
G Join a group, club, or organization for support and
empowerment.
G Ask you dream partner to hold you accountable.
G Make sure your daily schedule includes activities and
tasks that are congruent with your dream.
Q: I still seem to have more questions than answers. Will you give me
some tips to follow so that I don’t waste my time distracting myself?
A: Certainly. Here you go:
G Make a list of your questions to ask someone who has a
dream similar to yours.
G Arrange to meet with a Dream Coach or a mentor to
share the list of questions you wrote.
G Take an action step you are advised to take and reward
yourself in some way when you follow through.
G Make a lasting change that will bring you new energy.
G Copy this quote by Jean Bolen into your list of questions
as a reminder to reach out for answers and inspiration:
“When a question is well framed, the answer will come.”
T E R
P
A F I V E
H
P roblems or challenges appear in our lives from time to time. There are
days when everything seems to be going wrong, and we proclaim with exas-
peration, “You’ll never prove to me that any good is coming out of this!”
Yet we can look so objectively at the lives of others and see that it’s not the
problem that can make or break you; it is what you make of it.
Do you make mountains out of molehills, or do you make molehills out
of mountains? Do you look at your difficulties with appreciation or regret?
In this chapter, you will have an opportunity to practice techniques that
can enable you to make the most of every situation you’re involved in. Turn-
ing a handicap into a victory is the stuff from which heroes are made. You’ve
seen the movies, read the books, dreamed some of the same dreams—and
you can do it, too, from one moment to the next, starting now.
Challenges often do turn into growth experiences. Charlene, a woman
who had been married for 14 years, was faced with the shock of her
husband’s leaving her suddenly for another woman. Never having worked
seriously to earn a living and now responsible for the support of three re-
bellious teenagers and an expensive home, Charlene did not view this as a
positive opportunity in her life—at first. But within six months, she had
identified a career goal and found a job that would sustain her while she
took night classes to get a degree. She had even enlisted the aid of her
children and developed her family into a cooperative unit, all helping out
through this difficult time.
Charlene began to be deeply appreciative and excited about the new
life that was opening up to her. Suddenly she recognized how stifled and
119
120 Live Your Dream
bored she had been before and how reluctant to make changes in her too-
comfortable life. What had seemed a tragedy evolved into a new, much
more fulfilling life for Charlene.
Someone once said, “What is our pain but the breaking of the shell
that encloses our understanding?” We can try to clutch at the pieces of the
shell as it crumbles around us, or we can leap out and go exploring in a new
world.
Vicki Noble, author of Motherpeace, captured this idea beautifully when
she wrote, “The destruction of the old always precedes the building of the
new, but one can choose which side to be on.” Which side do you want to
choose? If you feel like you’re being dragged along, kicking and screaming
in the currents of change, looking for the gift in the situation may be the
last thing in the world you want to do. Or is it? Once you begin to reach
toward the light at the end of the tunnel, your attachment to the swirling
confusion around you loosens. And the faster you can change your focus,
the less you will ever feel yourself at the mercy of life’s events.
A kite rises against, not with, the wind. Opposition is often what teaches
us. Conflict wakes us up. Have you ever noticed with surprise that you had
actually chosen a problem as a way of motivating yourself?
Andrew encouraged his wife, “Go ahead. Take that acting class in New
York if that’s what you want to do.” The moment she was gone, however,
he found himself engulfed in doubt and paralyzing loneliness. He knew
that she was growing and changing. Things could not go on any longer as
they had been.
Without his wife, he realized it was up to him to get himself motivated.
Finally, staring into the mirror, he came to a powerful conclusion: “I don’t
like myself like this—how could anyone else like me? I’ve got to make some
changes. It’s either grow or die!”
Andrew had begun his week feeling lonely, deserted, helpless, and cling-
ing. He and his wife had avoided being apart with fervor unmatched in
many of their other endeavors. To his credit, Andrew was able to use this
Your Power to Turn Negatives Into Positives 121
GFG
Go into your Dream Journal and workbook now, and take some time
to write about three problem situations presently going on in your life. As
soon as you finish, call your dream partner or a dreamer friend and share
your insights.
The third-person view is also a valuable technique to use when you
decide it’s time to understand unresolved issues you experienced as a child.
Try testing the exercise now. Recall several childhood memories and write
each as “someone else’s story.” Work with a memory that seems to block
you from realizing a dream you have. As you write, keep in mind that the
goal of this exercise is to turn what seemed to be a negative into a positive.
Like an author who already has planned a story’s plot, mold your story to
reach the conclusion of what a gift that “problem” was!
There is always a gift in the problem situation. We turn our problems
into opportunities when we allow ourselves to stop struggling, let down our
resistance, and graciously accept the gift.
Gwen’s ego felt defeated when she lost the election to the state senate
seat—a goal she had given up a dedicated legal career to pursue. The cam-
paign had been a hard and bitter one, and her opponent’s smear tactics
had churned up rough water for her to tread. Months later, she looked
back on the outcome with gratitude. Working as a political science profes-
sor was much better suited to her nature, she now saw clearly. And her
election experiences had broadened her knowledge of the field immeasur-
ably. Every member of her class had also passed through an in-depth ex-
ploration of ethical campaign practices.
The way out of the rain clouds is to start asking questions. If I create
the storm, what purpose is it serving for me now? What can I learn? What
is to be gained from the difficulty I must face? What do I need to do to
clear away the storm and bring out the sun?
Joseph, a workshop participant, followed his dream through a tempes-
tuous storm to the clearing beyond. In his early 30s, he discovered that he
had always wanted to move far out into the country and farm his own land.
When Joseph decided at last to make this major change in his life, he be-
gan at once to look for suitable properties. His hopes were soon dashed by
the discovery that he was already too far in debt to qualify for the essential
loan. I just can’t do it, he thought. It’s too late. There’s no way. The storm
moved in.
But one sunny morning he remembered that he knew how to make
good use of his problems. He began asking the questions necessary to dis-
cover the learning in the dilemma he faced. Soon the realization dawned
about what he would have to learn and do: In order to be able to trust
himself with owning his own farm, he had to build up credibility with him-
self that he could be financially responsible. He had to learn to keep tight
control of his spending and to channel his resources into his most impor-
tant purposes.
It might take a few years of concentrated effort, but he would use the
time to work hard and pay off all his past debts. In the meantime, he could
take agricultural extension classes, learn the business aspects of farm man-
agement and prepare himself in many ways to embark successfully on his
new life. When he was finally able to buy his farm, Joseph made the move
much better equipped to succeed than if he had done so impulsively three
years earlier.
One dreamer gave the following answers to these questions. Note how
his discoveries unfolded.
F What is bothering me? Most of all, it’s the fear that I won’t have
enough money to pay my bills as the first of the month rolls
around.
F What are the effects of this issue on me? Well, mentally, it has
me worrying a lot. I go over and over in my mind, what I could
do if this or that happened? What else could I possibly give up
or do without, if I have to? What’s the worst scenario? My
attention seems riveted to the problems. Emotionally and spiri-
tually, I withdraw into my fears and myself. I’m not able to do
the creative work I need to do, and this aggravates the problem
further, because when I’m more productive, I make more
money.
Your Power to Turn Negatives Into Positives 125
F What beliefs do I have that explain how this issue might have
developed? Several come to mind:
G You have to work hard for what you get.
G You can’t have it all—you have to choose.
G There’s barely enough to go around.
G Why would you deserve so much—think of all the
starving children in India!
Having low self-worth probably explains it more than any-
thing else. I grew up not thinking very highly of my abilities and
myself. I didn’t expect to be worth a lot of money. I tend to
undervalue my work and myself.
F What are the payoffs for keeping the status quo? As long as I’m
always struggling to keep my head above water, I don’t have to
face the challenge of becoming greater than my little, personal
struggle. I have some fears about becoming a highly successful
person, being out in the world in a bigger way. What if you climb
way out on a limb and then it breaks? That’s an even greater
risk than clawing your way up the tree and clinging to its trunk.
So I’m protected, in a sense, from bigger failure, by playing a
smaller game.
My worrying also serves to keep me focused on building my
business. I have to keep choosing what’s important to me. I have
to be responsible and accountable. I’m practicing the policies I
need to master to succeed in a bigger way. Also, there are some
things I need to get cleared up before I will be ready to make it
in a really big way.
You know what I just figured out? This issue that I have
been considering such a big, heavy problem is actually quite
useful to me in many ways. By going through all this, I can see
that looking at it in this new way will help a lot. It’s a challenge
I will face and learn from; why not make it an adventure, a
divine comedy, instead of a morbid tragedy? It’s my chance to
handle my concerns about money, once and for all. You know,
the more I trust and let go, the more confident I become that I
can trust still more in the future.
GFG
This person worked with his problem until he was able to transform it
into an opportunity. He moved his energy state from problem-solving into
dream-creating. He has his eye on the clear skies now, and the dark clouds
of doubt are but a veil to be drawn back, exposing the bright light behind.
Your Power to Turn Negatives Into Positives 127
As long as you stay stuck in your problem, it’s very likely that your
subconscious mind will send out commands to every function of your body
and mind: “All right—all forces—align with the block! All forces align with
the depression.” The switch comes when you take over the controls and
send out an overriding command: “All forces, align with the solution. All
forces, set your sights on my dream!”
“wellness policy” was based on the principle of integrity. Every staff mem-
ber and student was held responsible for creating his or her own state of
well-being. If someone wanted to take a day off to work on their well-being,
that was fine. The school was in full support of wellness, and we encouraged
everyone to take the best possible care of themselves and do whatever they
needed to provide healthy conditions for their bodies.
People were amazed by the freedom we made available to the chil-
dren. I was often asked, “Will anyone ever come to school?” “Oh, yes,” I
always answered with confidence. Absenteeism was almost nonexistent in
the school. The children and staff loved coming to school, and hated to
miss a minute of it. We found that once you challenge people at a high
level of integrity, they will respond at that level—and feel wonderful about
themselves in the process.
I have noticed that the only times I’ve ever been sick were when I was
not honest about facing situations affecting me. I got laryngitis when my
attempts to speak out and challenge a repressive boss failed to make an
impact. If I was sick, I could not work there. Finally, I had to face the truth
that that environment was not where I belonged—and leave it. I haven’t
had laryngitis since.
130 Live Your Dream
It is a common occurrence that once we clear away the clouds and shift
our focus away from solving problems, we feel a void in our lives. Some-
thing will rush in to fill this void. We’d better be ready with a plan to go
forward—or else, watch out! A new problem will arise to compete for our
newly freed attention.
The alternative to focusing on our problems is always to focus on
what we want. By knowing what we want, we can:
F Design our day, just the way we want it.
F Know what we’re working for and where we’re going.
F Choose who to be with.
The quickest tool for refocusing is always the single question: What is
your dream?
On the other hand, suppose that I say instead, “I will go to the store for
milk later, to avoid wasting time standing in line at rush hour.” This is a
statement that empowers me: I have viewed the situation objectively and
chosen my action based on my own preferences. I feel effective and in con-
trol, and I have not cast negative judgments on myself or anyone else.
If I say to you, “Why don’t you ever call me when you’re going to be
late? You are so inconsiderate and thoughtless!” in all likelihood, the way I
have phrased my remarks will short-circuit our communication. You will
be made to feel wrong, and your predictable response will be either to
withdraw defensively or to counterattack. My accusations may seem justi-
fied at the moment, but my problem remains unresolved and in the long
run I will feel, once again, frustrated and ineffective.
On the other hand, I could more carefully consider what I want to
communicate. I might choose caring language that invites a response: “I
felt concerned when you didn’t call. I didn’t know whether to go ahead
with dinner or to wait. I thought of canceling this evening’s plans, but
then I was sure you’d be here soon. After wavering back and forth like
this, I began feeling angry. I want you to know what I have been going
through. I’d like reassurance that you care about me and are concerned
about what I’m feeling.”
The language we use can subtly set up our experience and determine
the way we view others and ourselves. Awareness is the key to a successful
experience. Practice noticing the words you choose.
Become an observer of your language, and notice how you feel when
you use “Dead Words” and “Alive Words” and how you feel when others
use them with you. Practice consciously choosing empowering language. You
will be amazed at the power of your own words. Review and summarize as
your write in your Dream Journal and The Live Your Dream Workbook.
Then read this next section over carefully; it has the potential to change
your life.
Usually, when I ask adults to list their strengths, they mention many
skills they have mastered and things they are good at doing. I have never
yet had an adult list as a strength something that he or she was still in the
process of developing. Yet a child will joyfully boast “I’m learning sign lan-
guage!” or “I want to be an artist when I grow up.” As children, we see all
our potential abilities as strengths. It’s a wonderful outlook that need not
be sacrificed on the altar of adulthood.
Benjamin Franklin once said, “A weakness is a strength not yet devel-
oped.” Go ahead grab your journal and write a quick list of 10 things you
consider to be weaknesses you have. Now, here’s the trick: look at each of
these “weaknesses” and begin to see it not as a weakness, but as a strength
in the process of being developed—a budding strength.
For example, a participant in one of my workshops was laid off from a
long-term career position. She felt so incapacitated by fear and worry that
she was unable to begin searching for a new job. Using the above proce-
dure, she identified her weaknesses: the fear of making new contacts, of
going to job interviews, of being put on the spot, of fumbling and feeling
awkward and self-conscious, and presenting a miserable impression of her-
self and her abilities.
From these weaknesses, she wrote the following strength statements:
F “A strength I have is that I can go into interview situations with
confidence and self-assuredly present my best self.”
F “A strength I have is that I enjoy the opportunity to make new
contacts and explore new possibilities with new employers.”
your Dream Journal. For each negative belief on your previous list, write
a new, empowering strength statement. Example: “I am a clumsy, bumbling
idiot” might be changed to “I am coordinated and clever.” “I am terrified
of talking in front of a group” could be replaced with “I am a confident,
inspired, and inspiring public speaker.” Be playful and daring. My guess
is you’ll like these new dream inspiring sentences!
Eliminate Weaknesses
When you finish this list, tear up the other lists of negative ideas. You
may even want to burn the pages filled with what no longer fits your re-
newed self so the old notions go up in smoke!
Creating positive strength statements to replace the old negative ideas
and beliefs may feel at first like wearing new shoes. Your logical mind will
naturally come through with all kinds of “reasonable” arguments and ob-
jections. The old beliefs were familiar and comfortable; will the new ones
ever fit? But, you may think, I don’t feel coordinated and clever! How can it
be true? Someone once advised me to view these thoughts as passing clouds
in the sky. Just allow them to appear, and observe them as they move on by.
In the meantime, go ahead and be your new, strengthened self.
One less constructive—and usually unconscious—thing we do with
our negative self-concepts is punish ourselves for them. We use guilt and
self-punishment to keep ourselves in line and correct our “bad” behav-
iors. We criticize our own egos and deny ourselves pleasure, privileges,
and even basic needs, all as punishment for our own perceived misdeeds
or weaknesses.
Of course, self-punishment does not work. It also robs us of vitality and
aliveness and cuts us off from the reinforcing strength of feeling good about
ourselves.
WHAT AM I LEARNING
AT THIS MOMENT?
Start shouting and chanting whatever you want to be true about your-
self. Yell out in the privacy of your car affirmations that empower you,
such as “I am a confident public speaker!”; “I present material in a clear,
articulate way”; and “I am determined to succeed.”
You are the authority for your own life. You, and you alone, are the one
best qualified to make all the decisions, choices, and judgments on your life.
So don’t let people, places, or things get in the way of choosing what is right
for you. If I perceive something as a problem, my perception is the problem.
When you work from the position of your strengths, you begin to live
from the full array of your potential. Your life shifts from a struggle for
survival to an adventure in choosing what you want. You move out of the
problem-solving mode and into the creative process.
Any problem can be turned into a positive learning experience if we
purposely ask ourselves, “What’s the value in this situation? What is the
gift? The understanding? What am I learning?” Approach your problem
situations not with groans and complaints, but with a willingness to learn
and receive the gift. Just say, “Oh, good! This must be perfect! Let’s look at
how. Might as well have fun with it.” Hop over your resistance and move
lightly through your next learning opportunity. You will maximize your
energy and your effectiveness. Instead of choosing to be miserable, why
not choose to enjoy yourself?
Are you having fun yet?
Your Power to Turn Negatives Into Positives 139
Dreamwork Checklist
❑ Keep up your reading and writing in your Dream Journal and
workbook.
❑ Write parallel stories about how your life will be two years
from now.
A SK J OYCE !
Q: I am living through a very painful situation right now. I just read the
section titled “The Power of Your Dream To Weather The Storm.”
Do you think I should seek out help to weather my storm?
A: Only you can make that decision and yes, I do highly recommend seek-
ing out a therapist whenever you know your life experiences are over-
whelming and you need a place to express yourself honestly and fully.
This is vital to a growing person.
Reaching out to others is often just the step that is needed to move
closer to living your dream.
Q: I have just moved to a new town and I have not made any new dreamer
friends. I have a new job that I am excited about, but my friends and
family are now thousands of miles away. I am not feeling as confident
as I’d like and I feel like I may lose sight of my dream. What advice do
you have for a dreamer who wants to stay on her dream path?
A: I truly believe that for every door that closes, new ones open. Your
new life can be designed to empower and energize you. This is a per-
fect time for you to look at these changes as a perfect time to start a
new chapter in your Dream Journal. Start off each morning by asking
yourself: What new people and new experiences do I choose to lift my
spirits and take me closer to realizing my dream? Take a few minutes and
jot down your answers, then open your door and walk out into your
dream life!
Q: I have a weight problem, and I spend too much time worrying about my
appearance and being healthy. What advice do you have for me?
A: Is one of your dreams to be healthy, fit, and thin? Then the most im-
portant step is to reach out for help. There are many wonderful re-
sources available if you are ready to make the commitment to this
dream. Call an expert today!
Q: I think I am clear and I keep scaring myself. How can I have more
courage?
A: When I first designed and facilitated the “Live Your Dream” work-
shops I often heard statements such as “I’m going to need a lot of cour-
age to leave my job,” “I don’t know if I have the courage to tell my
husband that I want to write instead of help him in his business,” and
“As I read your book, Joyce, I said to myself, ‘Joyce, you seem to
have more courage than I do.’” These types of statements brought
out a reply that even surprised me when I said it! I quickly respond,
“It’s not courage; it’s clarity!” I still believe this.
Your Power to Turn Negatives Into Positives 141
Daring to Stretch
C
and Expand
M ore stretching? Yes. Is there no end? When do I get to lie back and
get comfortable and stay the same for the rest of my life? Never. I hate it!
No—I love it.
The day I decided to be all I am, I became fully aware that stretching
and expanding was to be a constant, lifelong process. There’s always more
to learn and more to become. Our only limit is our own willingness to grow.
Of course, it’s important to take time off to rest, relax, and rejuvenate.
But overall, if you are fully committed to living your dream, you will be
working harder than ever before, enjoying it more, and having more fun
than you ever dreamed was possible.
I know people who can have a good time at parties. Some people can
really enjoy their night at the ballpark, an evening out, or a weekend camp-
ing in the mountains. But how many people do you know whom you would
describe as 100-percent happy individuals? Who love their lives, and live
fully, with gusto and without constraint? Who, through being who they
are, are making a difference in the lives of others?
This is you, if you are continuing to stretch and expand, to fill more and
more of the possibilities of your dream every day and every year. When
asked, “Are you having fun yet?” what is your answer? In this chapter, we
will expand fun to FUN!
This is a critical point now. You are headed toward celebration. Those
new shoes are being broken in. Soon, they will feel so natural, you will run
143
144 Live Your Dream
and dance freely in them. You will not only boogie, you may learn to
dance the mazurka or compete in the Olympic high jump. You will extend
your idea of what your shoes and you can do.
This is a point where many individuals give up, if they have not built
adequate self-reinforcing rewards and supports into their program for
growth. It’s the point at which some participants want to sit out my remain-
ing workshops as nonparticipants, although those who keep doing their
dreamwork move forward by leaps and bounds. The steps required are not
always easy—and the rewards are incredible.
So, are you fully committed to advancing your dream? Are you ready
to progress to the next level, to leave behind your reticence and excuses,
and to do whatever it takes?
the Dream” to “Together to the Top” and many other versions. Today
these groups are called “Dream Circles.” I also designed a guidebook for
dreamers who wanted to create a support group for themselves and fellow
dreamers. In Chapter 1, I recommended finding a partner to team up
with to go through the entire Live Your Dream series. Now I recommend
starting and creating an empowerment group—a dream circle.
To start your empowerment group/dream circle, follow these steps:
1. Sit down and make a list of dreamer friends you may want to
invite to gather together and create a Dream Circle.
2. Read over your list and beside each name write why you
would like to be in a Dream Circle with this person. (Don’t
be afraid to add or delete names.)
3. Create an invitation or flyer or use the following sample to
provide information and stimulate interest.
An Invitation—
to be part of a Dream Circle
Who: You
Why: To free your energy to be creative!
To identify the dreams you are ready to claim.
To commit to yourself.
To share with other dreamers and join together for fun and
support.
To join with others, in a safe environment, to voice your
doubts and concerns.
To step into your power to celebrate the life of your dreams.
To ignite your spirit power.
To learn and choose to make celebration a habit of your life.
To declare this is the day, the month, and the year to make
your dreams real!
When: (Exact dates to be determined by the host and participants.)
Where: A location perfect for dreaming (in a home or place of business).
Cost: Fee will be based on any materials and supplies needed.
146 Live Your Dream
As the host of the first meeting, you need a timer, paper, and pens, and
you need to set up the room. These responsibilities will be shared in the
future.
The Dream Circle participants become effective partners in holding
the constant vision of each person’s dreams through the difficult times and
diversions. They agree to give each other needed nudges and positive re-
minders and to tell the truth with love when it needs to be heard. The
emphasis is on recognizing the progress each person makes—with fan-
fare, celebration, and fun.
As with most aspects of life, it is always easier to follow another
person’s path or walk with someone else as you accomplish or set out
towards a goal. There is nothing more unsettling than to think, Am I the
only one who thinks this way? or to feel that certain loneliness of march-
ing along without anyone else in sight.
A Dream Circle supports you and your dreams by joining your dream
to others. When we actively acknowledge our dreams by writing them down
and joining with other dreamers, we say to the world and ourselves: “I have
a dream. I am claiming my dream. My dream will come true!”
GFG
And that’s the shift we are ready to make: the shift from I have to to I
get to. This simple shift, when entered into wholeheartedly, allows us to see
ourselves as living completely from choice, 100 percent of the time. It re-
places fear, resistance and reluctance with excitement and enthusiasm. What
do you have to lose? Let’s begin to put it into practice now, as you get to
stretch and expand further into your dream!
“It makes all the difference in the world,” I said. “Those are the drapes
that will say to me, every time I look at them, ‘Yes—you are living your
dream.’”
When you’re living your dream, everything that you say is important
and counts. You can’t live your dream from a compromising position. Your
dream demands the best of you. Every dark, dingy corner of your life makes
an indelible shadow on your dream. It must be brought out into the light
and cleaned.
Take a Toothbrush
You must fine-tune your life. An exercise that many people have found
extremely valuable is the assignment to take a toothbrush and a magnify-
ing glass and scrub every corner, crack, and crevice in every room of your
house. It’s a discipline that teaches people to see the dirt that’s always been
there but never noticed or attended to. It also requires taking personal
responsibility for every aspect of your surroundings. You have to be willing
to own all your nooks and crannies before you can know how to own any-
thing greater.
So get out that toothbrush, and practice developing visual acuity. Chal-
lenge yourself to find more, and then even more smudges and grime—and
then aggressively get them cleaned out. Take charge—it is your life you are
creating!
Now take a symbolic toothbrush to the rest of your life. Scrub out any
old dirt that takes up space your dream could fill. Update your comple-
tions list and begin conquering it. If it takes years to complete all this work,
what better way could you be spending your time? Each item you cross off
your completion list frees you to focus on living your dream.
my ideal weight and health, and I feel great.” Under Values, “I see beauty
everywhere I look,” “My leisure time is a source of joy and inspiration to
me,” or “In intimate relationships, I am completely honest.” Choose pow-
erful statements that will empower you to live your dream.
Read your belief statements to your dream partner, and then con-
tinue to read them over daily, with the conviction that they are now true.
These belief statements will have a very powerful effect, even though people
do not always get results overnight. It’s often a gradual process. Someone
will say, “I was looking back in my workbook and Dream Journal at all
those belief statements I wrote six months ago—and do you know, I now
have everything I included in them! I hadn’t realized it before this.”
People most often notice that they are now interacting in a whole
different way, and no longer dealing with negative people, and that the
people they spend time with have changed dramatically. Helen was a
woman with a number of paralyzing fears. She began using a belief state-
ment: “I now have inner peace.” Many classes and workshops later, she
called to let me know, “I think I’m almost there!” Without giving it a
second thought, she was relaxed and at ease talking on the phone—previ-
ously one of her most incapacitating phobias.
Alicia, a severely depressed and suicidal woman, came to see me. She
began her first session stating, “I don’t know what I want, and it doesn’t
really matter much anyway.” As her coaching progressed, we worked to-
gether to create some new belief statements: “I love life, and life loves
me,” “My path becomes clearer and clearer with each step I take,” and
“Thank God for my amazing life!”
Protesting all the while—“I don’t know what the hell good this is go-
ing to do”—she began using these belief statements daily. Alicia today is
a vibrantly happy woman who travels widely, writes for several newspa-
pers, and spontaneously shares her joy wherever she participates.
gives orders? From someone who sits in the bleachers to someone who
plays down on the field? From someone who takes care of others to some-
one who takes just as good care of myself?
Write your life shift in your Dream Journal and workbook along with
your belief statements, so you can read it every day. Add the affirmation:
“I’m changing—I can feel it!”
As you work on your life shift, there is a special place you can go to
build your dream. You are now going to create your own imaginary
Dream Workshop. Place your Dream Journal, The Live Your Dream
Workbook, and your pen close at hand to record your thoughts
afterwards.
Get into a comfortable position and close your eyes. Relax. With
every breath, count to 10, relaxing further until even the hairs on your
arm and the tiny muscles around your mouth and stomach are re-
laxed into peaceful, expectant anticipation.
You are going for a walk down a tranquil country road. The road
is lined with flowers, tall swaying grass, and oak trees with bending
boughs overhead, as sunlight plays around their shadows. The atmo-
sphere is wild with the fragrance of wild rose and honeysuckle, and
you breathe in the fresh, sparkling air. Birds and squirrels whistle
and chirp in harmony as one great, joyful community of nature’s
creatures. Even the dust under your bare feet feels soft and clean,
and a summer breeze covers you with warm caresses. You turn onto a
small path that winds up a gently sloping hill.
Drinking in the beauty of your surroundings through every pore,
you begin to sense that you are arriving at a special place that is all
your own. You approach an opening, and you know that once you go
in, you will be in a place where you can receive any information you
need to create new dreams and find complete peace.
You pause, aware that everywhere around you, you are being
flooded and bathed in radiant white light. In the brilliance of this
healing white light, all troubles diminish into insignificance, and you
are revitalized and energized and filled with absolute love.
Dare to Stretch and Expand 153
Now you are ready to proceed inside. You imagine the perfect
entryway, a doorway that invites you to come inside and bask in the
unlimited possibilities within. Perhaps it is a wooden or glass door,
one that swings or slides open at the touch of a button or the glance of
an eye. Create your own ideal door now, and go on inside.
Take a look around you: You’re in a very special place. Use your
imagination to make it beautiful and wonderful in every way. What
are the walls made of? The floor? Are there windows? What is the
view like? You turn to one side and notice an alcove specifically de-
signed to be your own computer area. With a wave of your hand or
push of a key, you can ask the computer any question. Pay close
attention, as the answer is visible on the screen. It will assist you in
growing in the next step of your dream. Knowing that the computer
will always be there, and that you can go back to it any time you want,
you move on to see what else there is.
Now notice what you are wearing. You can be anyone you want
here. Choose the look that best supports your dream. You walk a
little farther, into another room, your video area. Here, all things are
possible, and you can use your video equipment to create yourself
living your dream, right there on the screen. Turn on the life-size
screen now. As it lights up, you see someone appear there. Who is it?
What does he or she have to say to you? You notice a procession of
people on the screen, all lining up to see you. Some of them are ones
you used to think were stopping you from living your dream. But now,
as each person comes up to greet you, they seem to have a gift for you
or message to tell you. Allow each person to appear before you, and
listen. What is the gift? What is the message? When the last person
has gone on, notice if there is anyone else you would like to call onto
the screen. You can call anyone you want to this magical screen. It
has no limits of time or space. You can call someone from out of your
past or future, or even someone who is no longer living. Ask him or
her anything you want, and receive the gift of the answer. Look again.
This screen has an even more special purpose: It can instantly enact
and reenact your thoughts to create the ideal scenario of your dream.
Suddenly you see, clear as life, the picture of you living your dream.
Create a title for your very own video—see it, appearing on the screen?
Watch as the plot unfolds. You are living your dream! Soon, you are
ready to continue on. You know that your video viewing room will
remain here for you, and you can go back any time you want.
Now it’s time to prepare your special place for doing the work
required to create your dream. Your work area will be as unique as
you and your dream are. See that space now, exactly as it needs to be
for you. If it needs to have a higher ceiling or a different kind of floor,
build one. You’re able to create anything you want, in any manner
you choose. Is this the place you’d like to have a fountain, a beautiful
piece of artwork, or some special plants? Would you like to bring in
something from nature? Snap your fingers or wave a hand: There
154 Live Your Dream
they are! Is there any special equipment you need? A piano or other
musical instrument? Art supplies? Tools? You can have as much as
you want. Place yourself in a perfect position for creating your dream.
This is where you can always come to work on your dream. Now,
bring in that one idea that will allow you to perfectly create your dream.
Let it come through now.
Now you’re ready to move into the special place nearby that is
just for relaxing. As you enter this area, pay close attention to the
colors, the sounds, the smells, and the feelings. What kind of furni-
ture will you place here? How will you design the interior walls, floor-
ing, and windows? Add anything you like to enhance its beauty and
comfort. How about beautiful bouquets of flowers? Lighted candles?
Magnificent music? A hot tub? A skylight?
Sit down, and see yourself resting and relaxing as never before in
your life. You feel your energy returning and building. Here, your
vitality is restored to 100 percent, and you feel wonderful.
Now your time in your Dream Workshop is drawing to a close.
As you prepare to leave, sense all those feelings you have experi-
enced here: the love, the comfort, the safety, the certainty, the warmth,
the power of creating everything just as you want it. Know that you
can always come back at any time, and you can change it any way you
want, at any moment.
Now you move toward the opening and pass through the entry.
The radiant light is there once again, surrounding and permeating
you. You pause for a moment to soak up its warmth. Then slowly, you
start back down the small, grassy way to the main road. You pass
underneath the spreading branches, and the lights and shadows play
on your path.
You are ready, now, to be back in your world, for you have every-
thing you need now. As you move back into your everyday world, you
take all your new vitality and new possibilities with you. You know
that your Dream Workshop will always be there for you, anytime,
anywhere that you choose to use it.
Experience yourself back now, in the room where you began. Give
your body a long, easy stretch, and notice any sounds and smells around
you. When you’re ready, open your eyes. Go to your Dream Journal
and workbook to write about your experience.
GFG
You can use this guided meditation to visualize your dream, restore
your vitality, and regain your focus. Use it often. It will be most effective if
you personalize your tape recording, tailoring the words to suit your own
individual tastes. You can listen to it passively as you enter the meditative
state and go to work in your Dream Workshop. With experience, you will
discover that your answers really are there for you, and they begin to come
with greater and greater ease.
Dare to Stretch and Expand 155
ACT AS IF
Now you are ready to really stretch and expand! You’ve done it in your
imagination; now let’s try it out for real. What is your dream? How would
your lifestyle or your way of being change if you were living your dream
right now?
Stand up for what you believe, even if you’re the only one who be-
lieves it. Spend an entire day by yourself, without talking to anyone, if
that’s something you never do. Take a trip to a place you’re afraid is too
far from home.
Speak in someone else’s language even though you’re afraid they will
laugh at you. Go to a job interview for a position you think is “above” you.
Run for political office. Call someone you haven’t spoken to in a long time
and talk about your dream. Phone someone in your family, and find a way
to honestly communicate and ask for his or her support. Join a group of
people who are already successful in a field you are just entering.
You take it from here. Do any or all of these things, and make up
more of your own. Choose the very thing that would be most uncomfort-
able and do it. The way to get beyond fear is to confront that which you
fear the most. Then the rest seems small in comparison. You always find
out that the thing you fear is not the monster you thought it would be.
I DID IT
And here’s the biggest stretch of all: For everything that happens, take
ownership. Can you find an argument to challenge this and an excuse to get
around it? Undoubtedly. In his book, Illusions, Richard Bach tells us, “Ar-
gue for your limitations, and sure enough, they’re yours.” But once your
life becomes about you being true to who you are, and telling your truth
dauntlessly—the minute you take ownership—no one and nothing else has
power over you. The powerful person, the manipulator—no one is ever
controlling you. You, and not outside people, places, or things, are the sole
shaper of your reality.
There’s a wonderful quote from A Course in Miracles:
I am responsible for what I see.
I choose the feelings I experience.
And I decide upon the goal I would achieve.
And everything that seems to happen to me,
I ask for, and receive as I have asked.
You can try this and discover the amazing results. Your perception
may be forever changed.
Dare to Stretch and Expand 157
Dreamwork Checklist
❑ Review your Dream Journal and workbook. Summarize
your progress so far and share with your dream partner.
❑ Acknowledge yourself!
❑ Eliminate excuses.
❑ Act as if.
A SK J OYCE !
Q: A friend told me that you had a section in a past issue of your newslet-
ter titled “Just Journal! Pssst! Rumors are Flying…and They’re All
About You!” Will you please send me a copy of it?
A: I’d love to! Here it is:
Where do these rumors come from? Why, from your pen of course!
Penning rumors about is a delightful, magical way to light up your
dream or give it some fire, and it often brings amazing results. It is fun
to make up your own outrageous rumors. Try it! Go ahead, don’t be
shy. When you are done, notice if you have a change in attitude. Don’t
forget to tell your Journal all about how you feel. Here are some ready-
made rumors for you to take to the limit—or you can make up your
own!
1. My dream of owning my own business is now a dream
come true.
2. I hired a personal trainer and the results are fabulous.
3. My book is hot off the press and Oprah has already sent
me an invitation to be on her show.
4. I wrote a successful screenplay, which turned into an
Academy Award–winning movie.
5. I am sending out invitations to my wedding next week.
Guess where we’re going on our honeymoon?
Call someone and read what you have written to him or her. It will
stretch you into outrageous thinking and is also a very empowering
exercise.
Q: You recommend that I organize a group for myself. This is a totally
new concept for me. What is my first step?
A: Sit down and make a list of why you want a support group (Dream Circle).
Now, read some of the reasons I think they are necessary and fun.
G To share. G To activate.
G To create. G To join.
G To ignite. G To journal.
G To focus. G To practice.
G To discover. G To align.
G To celebrate. G To identify.
G To learn. G To remember.
G To laugh. G To begin again.
G To commit. G To dream storm.
G To meditate. G To motivate.
Dare to Stretch and Expand 159
G To relax. G To improve.
G To refresh. G To express.
G To visualize. G To be yourself.
G To grow. G To claim your dreams and
G To inspire. make them real.
G To experience. G To imagine.
G To imagine. G To dream!
But please always remember that a Dream Circle is not the place:
G To complain. G To meddle.
G To dump. G To rehash the old.
G To process. G To gossip.
G To problem-solve. G To gripe.
G To coach or counsel. G To be anything other than real!
After you have spent some time thinking and deciding if you want
to create a Dream Circle, your next step may be to start out by mak-
ing a list of your dream friends. Good luck!
Q: I love the question, “How much of your energy is free to live your dream
today?” Unfortunately, my answer is about two percent. I know people,
places, and things that have nothing to do with me living my dream
often deplete my energy level. How can I change this?
A: Start off with these steps:
Section out a few pages in your Dream Journal and write down
what your focus is for at least a week. Ask others to help you identify
how you spend your time and use your energy. Record their observa-
tions. Then reread with a red pen in hand. Cross out any use of time
that depletes your focus and energy.
Now make a list of dream steps and the necessary daily tasks to
reach for and realize your dreams.
Q: I have never considered myself to be a person who makes excuses but
after I read the section “Push Beyond Excuses” I had to admit I was an
excuse-maker. I need a push now and then. Should I hire you as my
dream coach?
A: Absolutely! If you’re ready to make a commitment to realizing your
dreams and know you want a coach I’m always excited and available to
align with you to achieve what you are ready to accomplish. The easiest
way to contact me is through my Web site and to sign up for a Hotline
Session to discuss your dreams. My Web site is www.joycechapman.com.
160 Live Your Dream
Q: I often notice that days and weeks pass and I haven’t done any of the
work I need to do to realize any of my dreams. I want to stretch and
change. What question can I ask myself to empower myself to shift into
becoming an actualized dreamer?
A: Every day ask yourself: What am I scheduling time for today that will
bring me closer to realizing my dreams? Then write your answer. You
may want to enroll your dream partner to remind and nudge you often.
I also recommend that you:
F Make a list of the next daring steps to take to realize your dream.
F Take a blank calendar for the current month and write a dream
step you know will challenge you and that you can achieve for
each day.
F Never go to bed until you have reviewed your dream work for
the day or have added what is for tomorrow’s to-do list.
F Let your dream partner know what you experience because of
your commitment to realizing your dreams.
Q: I just finished reading Live Your Dream and I am very excited about a
Dream Circle. I do have one concern, and I hope you’ll answer the
following question: What should I do if you doubt the reality of my
Dream Partner’s biggest dream?
I do understand the importance of allowing each individual to de-
fine and discover what he or she is truly going to commit to and I have
this desire to challenge and question.
A: This is a very important question.
I have learned, through my years of teaching, coaching, and facili-
tating, the value of supporting and empowering each individual to re-
alize his or her dreams (by providing each individual with the
opportunity to discover for themselves what they are willing to work
on and commit to bringing into reality with lasting results).
Also, use dream partnering to offer and encourage your partner to
seek out coaching or counseling when you find yourself wanting to help
or give advice that would require an expert’s advice and/or counsel.
Remember to concentrate on your own work and bringing your dreams
into reality.
T E R
P
A S E V E N
H
Alive
F rom dream to reality, this has been an adventure. And this is only the
dawn in your future of dream living. Look at what you have become in the
process of building your dream. The face you now see in the mirror is the
image of an empowered being. Your fears have faded, replaced by a spar-
kling new motivated personality. You are your dream.
To keep creating tomorrows filled with happiness, achievement, ac-
complishment, and satisfaction, begin in this moment to say what you want
and to reward yourself for every thought and act you take to bring it about.
Exercise determination to shift your energy whenever your thoughts and
actions take a turn away from actively supporting your dream.
Stretch until your comfort zone encompasses living your dream. People
who arrive at this stage frequently report that, as their dream is more and
more a part of their daily reality, abandoning it is harder than moving
forward. Avoiding making the call is now more difficult than facing the
possibility of rejection.
It all matters will become the phrase to help and empower you when
you have made the firm decision to live your dream. You know every ac-
tion, decision, and choice you make must be congruent with living your
dream.
When new dreams come along, begin a Dream Board without delay.
And be a courageous dreamer. Living your dream is simple—but it’s not
always easy. All it takes is for you to decide that’s what you’re going to do,
no matter what. Give yourself a standing, gold-embossed personal invita-
tion, such as the one pictured here on page 164.
163
164 Live Your Dream
Throughout the book I have encouraged you to go back and review work
you have done previously and record the thoughts you have had about previ-
ous experiences. Reviewing what has happened and learning to think about
things in a new way are important to assure that you keep growing to new
levels instead of just repeating old patterns. We keep our old programmed
perceptions until we make a conscious decision to see things differently.
Examining and questioning our perceptions may draw us into a whirl-
pool of fear, anger, and guilt. But by moving through it, we come out on the
other side with the freedom to let go of faulty thinking, choose new thoughts
more in alignment with our dreams, and release our own inner creativity.
And by reviewing your successes and the progress you have made, you give
yourself valuable reinforcement. You come to appreciate clearly how you
have created exactly what you wanted. You are a powerful creative being!
When you choose to create your dream—and keep choosing that—you
can have it!
So, as a brief summary of the “Live Your Dream” process, first define
your dream. Ask always: What do I want? Then decide to claim and live
your dream. Take a look at your beliefs, values, and habits, and replace old
Keeping the Dream Alive 165
ones with new ones that will empower you. Define the steps and specify
dates for completing your dream work. Design your life to motivate and
support your newly claimed dream and your new values and goals. Turn
whatever happens into an opportunity for growth: find the gift, and look
for the learning. Keep stretching beyond limited ideas of what you can do.
And finally, get support from others and support yourself by rereading
and updating your Dream Journal and workbook and by using the tech-
niques introduced in this book. In other words:
F Define and claim the dream.
F Clear away obstructions and be clear about your dream.
F Cultivate a winning attitude.
F Take inventory and take charge.
F Turn negatives into positives.
F Dare to stretch and expand.
F Do the work to keep the dream alive.
F Live and celebrate yourself and your dream!
S TAYING ON T RACK
As you move into the culminating lap of your current “Live Your
Dream” cycle, here are some questions designed to bond your progress
firmly in place. Write the answers in your workbook and summarize in your
Dream Journal.
F What makes my heart sing?
F In what ways has the definition of my dream changed since I
began reading this book?
F What is my Dream Statement now?
F What is the most important thing I have learned about myself
from writing in my Dream Journal and workbook?
F What new habits lead me to realize my dream?
F What new beliefs are making my dream a reality?
F What changes in me have resulted from my work on
completing things?
F What remains for me to complete? What is my plan for
completing each item I’ve listed?
F What issues, situations, and relationships remain that need to
be resolved or dealt with so that I can live my dream?
166 Live Your Dream
GFG
Actions to Take
Run for election to Learn areas people are
the school board most dissatisfied with.
Assist at school-
Attend PTA meetings.
sponsored events.
Recruit like-minded
supporters of plan.
Keeping the Dream Alive 169
Is your dream large enough to absorb all your energy, to command all
your imagination, to use all your resources, and to impact the world in a
significant way? Compare this state of being to just getting by, purpose-
lessly. Why is it important to realize your dream?
The woman eyed the men on the shore with some trepidation. A
tall, majestic man came over to assist Star with the docking of her
raft.
“We heard you were coming, and we have prepared a place for
you,” he said. No one seemed affected by her arrival, so she followed
170 Live Your Dream
her newfound guide. Walking among the trees, groups of men were
visible, working at various tasks—tanning hides, building rafts, and
stringing beads.
“What have you come for?” the guide inquired.
“It is time for me to be in the light and to find my gift,” she re-
sponded. “Who should I talk with?”
“What is it you’d like to know?” he asked.
“I want to know what to do.”
The guide looked at her intently and replied, “You have been
given a gift—a gift of creativity. Do not ask how or why. Just begin.
Did you think you would be asked to justify yourself?”
Star found herself laughing at the ridiculousness of the idea, as
her guide reached over and put his arm around her shoulder. He
continued, “I will give you my cloak of freedom, and you will then
remember.” Star could not believe that only a few moments ago she
had felt as if she were in bondage. For in this new certainty she was
now released.
She wondered if she should ask. “I also came with a question for
your wise one.”
His smile revealed his sparkling white teeth. “First, a bath in the
crystal waterfall . . . then on to more truth.”
Star glanced around and found herself alone in the most beauti-
ful secluded spot she’d ever seen. Ferns, trees, and flowers of all
colors and scents bloomed around a crystal-clear pool fed by a water-
fall. She wondered if she was dreaming as she glided into the pool.
Feeling supported and lifted up by the water, she floated and paddled
around effortlessly.
When she finally emerged refreshed and had pulled her clothes
back on, her new friend suddenly reappeared. “Now?” she asked.
“Yes—now,” he replied. They walked up a sloping path between
two enormous boulders. Looking past her friend, Star could see an
old woman seated on a rock, feeding a deer.
The old woman looked up and smiled. “Why does everyone here
seem to accept me and love me?” Star wondered. She said, “Hello. I
have a question still in my mind, and yet it does not seem to fit—here.”
“Ask it,” was the old woman’s reply.
“What am I to do about money?”
“Do you see it?” the old woman asked.
“Yes.”
“Then it’s yours. No more darkness. Only light. Choose light.”
“And remember this experience,” said the woman in a kindly man-
ner. Star left with a knowing she would always be free to follow her
heart.
GFG
Keeping the Dream Alive 171
GFG
James has outlined several changes he will make. He explores his diffi-
cult task until he arrives at a way to associate the job with a purpose that is
important to him. And he introduced several new ideas for approaching
the task with creativity and flair. Note how he has transformed an odious
task into a stimulating opportunity in a single, brief writing session!
Now write 15 suggestions the expert might give to you, based on the
understanding he or she has obtained from your answers in your Dream
Journal and summarize in your workbook. Repeat this writing exercise
whenever a new fear “appears.”
I hate it! He can’t do this to me! Damn! I won’t let him do this to me!
He told me he loved me! Me! Now he’s off with somebody else. And I
love him—at least I thought I loved him. Maybe I hate him, now. What
a fool I feel like, falling all over him, believing every word he said.
Now I find out it all meant nothing! I’m embarrassed in front of my
friends…. Most of all, I hate to admit to myself I could make such a
colossal mistake. I should’ve known better.
I suppose the signs were there. But I didn’t want to see them. I
preferred to believe he was just busy, or tired. I needed him to love
me. That’s what hurts. I needed it, and I turned my needing into pre-
tending that he did, giving up my good judgment, and fooling myself.
I need to be loved. It hurts to be burned. It hurts to be alone. It’s
painful to admit my needy feelings.
Crying helps....
174 Live Your Dream
There’s learning for me here. I’ll never betray myself for any guy
again! I don’t need love like that! In fact, I want to want love, not need
it. I can live with myself, but I can’t live with fooling myself. That’s my
truth!
GFG
Once there was a remarkable Indian brave who, from sun passings
beyond the far horizons of his memory, was told by his father, “A
child is to be kissed and loved before falling into sleep; this is the way
of our people.”
It was the custom of this boy’s tribe that each child, at birth, was
presented with an oval-shaped stone with a surface as radiant as the
sunlight itself. Peering into it was like seeing through to the depths of
a sparkling clear stream unrippled by the faintest sigh of the wind.
This precious stone given to the newborn child was placed in a
pouch of the softest leather, to be worn around his neck as an amulet
for the duration of his days under the sun and the moon.
Each evening, in the warm glow of the flickering campfire, the
father of this infant child would gently remove the stone and examine
it closely. Then he would polish away from its surface any blemishes
or scratches or smears it might have accumulated during the boy’s
brush with the forces of pain or hardship that day. Only when the
stone was once again as clear and transparent as the love beaming
from his father’s eyes was it returned to the leather pouch, a shining
companion to accompany the young child into the world of the dream.
As the boy grew in years and experience, he was diligently in-
structed by his father until, one day, he was judged old enough and
trustworthy enough to become the caretaker of his own stone. Never
a mar or a scratch was allowed to remain on the stone’s surface from
one day to the next, and so its interior depths were forever protected
from the disturbances of scratch upon scratch.
At the very heart of the stone, a soft pool of light could be seen.
From it, the clear, pure, undistorted image of the boy’s own soul was
reflected back to meet his steady, unfaltering gaze. The brave grew
up to be a great, wise chieftain and leader of the people.
GFG
Keeping the Dream Alive 175
The events of a hectic or distressing day can easily mar the surface of
your “precious stone” and cloud your vision of that shining self inside.
Scratches and gouges must be polished away each day to keep your vision
from becoming lost or damaged and to preserve the bright, clear image of
yourself.
Take your imaginary stone in your hand now and examine it closely.
How would you write your stone’s story of this day? What chisels chipped
away at your stone’s surface today? What hammers pounded at its core?
What gouges and blasts did it absorb or fend off? What forces of tension
wrenched at it? Draw a diagram of your stone’s disfigurement, labeling
each incident of distress. Write an account of all the disturbances of your
stone’s day. Write whatever you need to say to “get it off your chest.”
Then, looking at your diagram and reading over your writing, ask your-
self: How will I use this? What did I learn? What will I do? On your diagram,
mark the action or thought that polishes off the scratch left by each inci-
dent of the day.
Conclude by writing a statement for yourself that begins, “Now that my
stone is polished once again, I see myself as clear and free. I see....”
And when asked what conclusion her writing would lead her to, she
replied, “I don’t want my father to keep letting me down! I’m finally going
to accept that he isn’t the person I’ve been trying to make him be. I’ve just
gotten the message that he doesn’t exist only to serve my needs. I guess I
was pretty self-centered, not to realize that before now. I’m excited about
accepting myself and my father exactly as we are. I can foresee a whole
new relationship between us, based on truth instead of fantasy.”
AM I DECEIVING MYSELF?
Ask yourself: If I were deceiving myself, what lies would I tell myself?
What is the truth I’d want to avoid knowing? What is the image of myself I
want to preserve? What would I have to admit? Write the answers in your
workbook. Take some time in your Dream Journal and write a catchy affir-
mation to remind yourself of this learning.
Write a character study of yourself, as if an empathetic friend who truly
understands you did it. Then write at the top of a clean page, “What do I
really want, and how can I best achieve it?” Write freely any thoughts that
come to mind, including objections and “yes, buts.” After each objection,
return to the question of “What do I really want?” Summarize by writing in
The Live Your Dream Workbook.
You may want to take your original drawing and cut it in half. (Note
that you now have half a person, surrounded by other people you “can’t
stand.”)
Pretend that you are a concerned coach and that your task is to inter-
view each of these other “intolerable” people. Sympathetically question
them until you understand what purpose their undesirable characteristics
serve. Write the questions in your workbook that you would ask, as well as
the answers they give. What reasons do you perceive for their adopting
such undesirable characteristics? Write out your recommendations for
helping them to be more effective and to love themselves more.
Finally, close your eyes and reclaim each of your “dark side” charac-
teristics. See yourself joining with each of the other “undesirable” persons
you have interviewed and thanking each for the new understanding he or
she has given you. See yourself as unified with all these people and with all
of the elements within yourself. Open your eyes and draw a new picture.
Reread what you wrote and set up a dream-partner session to discuss.
Each time you move to a new level of living your dream or expanding
your dream, new demands will be made on all your relationships. You will
either communicate, tell the truth, make needed adjustments, and grow, or
your relationships will be at risk of becoming outdated and dysfunctional.
Do these questions sound selfish and self-centered? Ah! That’s a won-
derful question, because on the surface it may seem selfish to keep focus-
ing on what you want. But at a deeper level, these questions form the
foundation for a solidly grounded relationship, in which you don’t cheat
the person you’re with because you’re knowing and being yourself. With
your own wants and needs satisfied, your energy is freed to share and ex-
press yourself with others. The emphasis shifts from being self-centered to
being self-actualized. In such a relationship, each person says to the other,
184 Live Your Dream
Lissa
Lissa’’ s Dream Novel
Awakening early, without an alarm clock, I feel refreshed, peaceful,
and confident as I look forward to the day. My imagination is ig-
nited for my present writing project. After feeding the pets, I head
for the computer, excited to have the time, energy, and focus to get
right to it.
Several of my works have already been published, earning both
critical and financial rewards. They have found a large appreciative
audience, entertained and enlightened by what I have to say and how
I say it.
My spiritual life is richer than ever because I have increased my
ability to hear and follow divine guidance. I have learned to surren-
der what no longer serves me and to trust that what I need is pro-
vided. No matter what is going on in my life I feel capable of handling
it, knowing the appropriate action and when to take it.
I continue to grow in wisdom and peace through reading,
journaling, theater, lectures, traveling, and relationships with oth-
ers. In addition to family, my support network includes groups and
individuals also living their dreams, reaching to fulfill their soul’s
purpose.
Continually inspired by the magic and mystery in everyday life, I
urge others to find it as well. My writing is balanced with the highest
use of my skills as a counselor, assisting individuals and groups to the
best use of themselves. This evening I will be facilitating a group where
my skills as storyteller and counselor will be balanced for the highest
good of all concerned.
Writing can take center stage in my life now because I live in a
financial comfort zone. I am debt-free and have what I need to sup-
port me. With energy drains no longer blocking the flow of light, cre-
ative inspiration shines. I also contribute generously to individuals
and organizations that are making a difference on the planet.
My home is my sanctuary and sacred space, beautiful to me in-
side and out. That which was broken is repaired. That which I no
longer need has been released. Outside I have my own secret garden,
a place that nurtures me and connects me to spirit whenever I step
into it.
Now physically healthy, I have created for myself a “fun-for-me
exercise plan.” Both my breathing and body flexibility are great, giv-
ing me the energy and stamina needed to handle “real world” matters
efficiently.
Peace in the world is growing, as more and more people under-
stand that we are one human family with more similarities than dif-
ferences. By contributing to all the people in my life with empathy,
compassion, humor, and a loving heart, I serve the vision of world
peace and union.
Keeping the Dream Alive 187
GFG
Lianne
Lianne’’s Dream Novel
Never before had she felt such peace, such inner calm. Never before
had she held her own strength so completely. Never before had she
felt so complete. Pleasing everyone was no longer an issue in her life.
Pleasing herself was fulfilling her in every way. She was in a strong
position. She could choose—anything she wanted, and direction to
go in, any place to travel. The work she was doing was fullfilling her in
every way, and was bringing in a good living. She was independent.
She could choose....
She walked from the beautiful, earthy house of her dreams into
the magnificent garden and breathed in the sweet, heavy evening air.
She looked around her, at the house—this house of her dreams, with
its Garden of Eden, filled with lush green grass, robust oak and fruit
trees, bushes, and creepers. It was wild and jungle like with lots of
bright, exotic flowers of all colors, and filled with the loud chirping of
euphoric birds, drunk with abundance.
In the evenings after sunset, she would sit out on the veranda,
looking at the night-blue lake beyond the garden, and hear grasshop-
pers finding their soul mates under the powerful magic of the bright,
iridescent moon. Stillness, quiet, close to nature, yet not far away from
the people she loved and near enough to the excitement and bustle of
the city to aid with the conveniences of the life she led. Her big, cream-
colored Labrador came bounding up and she knew the laughter and
shrieks of her three children were not far behind. She patted the dog’s
soft, silky head and closed her eyes, remembering the past, with a
grateful prayer of thanks on her lips for the present. What a gift it was
to be living this life of her dreams, with light in her soul, unencum-
bered. What a gift to have been able to channel her healing energy
and build her dream of helping others empower themselves. That is
what she had come here to do: to help others see light in their lives
and achieve their life’s purpose. What a gift she was no longer stuck
in the misery of pain and struggling.
Her thoughts rolled back five years, to when it all began, to when
she, with the invaluable support of five very close friends, began a
process of self-empowerment and release, in order to let go of old
and painful patterns. She remembered clearly the day she had said to
her son, “Oran, this for me, is a dream come true. I always knew,
deep down inside, that becoming thin and healthy did not have to
mean pain, deprivation, and suffering.” She always knew that if she
188 Live Your Dream
could only find the right keys to unlock the blocked chambers of her
heart, she could fulfill her dream of trusting her body to do the right
thing for itself. That deprivation had no part here, not for her body
and not for her soul. It was all a matter of choice. And if she helped
herself make the right choices, she could trust her body to heal itself
and be healthy. The 35kg she lost, the chains that bound her virtu-
ally all her life, had gone effortlessly, with joy and trust, and had
become a metaphor for the way she would approach the rest of her
life, forever.
GFG
Beverly
Beverly’’s Dream Novel
Never had life been more perfect. Each segment of Bev’s busy yet
carefree schedule ran without a hitch. The dream was now a reality
for Beverly, and she savored every moment.
Spiritually alive, she awakened each morning to the sound of the
waves rushing to the shore outside her beachfront home and began
the day with the meditations she had grown to cherish, prefaced with
some inspirational reading. Peaceful moments alone with the munifi-
cent Universe were the bulwark of a full, rich day of work and play.
Beverly participated in a blend of yoga and walks along the shore to
reinforce her connection to the Divine. Reading and following her
own inner truth had rounded out the path of spirituality so vital to her
balance. It was a bonus, she considered, that she was able to share
her love of truth with the rest of her family.
Family—the foundation of her reason for joy. Her daughter Kate
was in her final year of law school, with an offer already in hand for
an apprenticeship in a fine Washington, D.C. law firm. Kelly was en-
joying her sophomore year at the small local college and had recently
been elected homecoming queen. Kirk, Beverly’s son, would soon be
graduated from high school with honors and had already been ac-
cepted to both Harvard and Stanford. And although John had joined
the family only recently (a “dad” to the children and loving husband
to Beverly), his warmth and generous love brightened every day.
Their home was a demonstration of the beauty and serenity felt
by each member. An expanse of glass in the living room reflected the
sparkle of the California coast. The muted colors of nature decorated
the exquisite interior of the sizable home.
Beverly’s attention to her physical well-being was evident in her
firm, trim body. Daily exercise was the norm. Regular tennis was in-
terspersed with ongoing yoga. Beverly’s organized shopping plan had
paid off with a well-coordinated closet—the latest fashions accented
by tasteful jewels facilitated her desire to always look her best. The
holidays would be filled with family entertaining and gatherings at
Keeping the Dream Alive 189
the homes of their many friends. All the kids would be home, filling
the house with their own friends and their laughter. Christmas week
would culminate with a midnight champagne buffet for a host of friends
and family. Even now, the decoration process had begun. Fine orna-
ments and strands of white twinkling lights and pearls rounded out
the stately tree, reminiscent of a romantic, Victorian era.
Beverly’s mental agility and productivity had been challenged in
her job where she was the top producer in a brokerage house. An
abundance of money had long since ceased to be her motivation, and
she now produced beyond her wildest dreams for the sheer joy of it.
Well-earned respect and accolades were the fruits of her commit-
ment and dedication to her dream. And the community work now
funded by her firm—because of her diligent persistence—served hun-
dreds of people every week.
Tomorrow was to be such a special day for Beverly and her two
closest friends. As a surprise for one friend’s birthday, Beverly had
arranged for a private jet to fly the trio to San Francisco for a day of
shopping, lunch and a new hit play. Champagne, love, and laughter
would be their watchwords. The expectation of their merriment
brought a smile to her face.
GFG
Lynn
Lynn’’s Dream Novel
A quiver of exhilaration surged through her, as the rapturous theme
of Dvorak’s New World Symphony rose and enveloped Lynn in its
mystical beauty, luring her attention away from the work on her desk,
and laying full claim to her imagination. Willingly surrendering to its
inspiration, she leaned back in her easy chair and closed her eyes to
receive the gift of the music. The beauty of the surrounding room en-
veloped her, lending an aura of its own to the magic of the moment.
A procession of happy thoughts paraded past her consciousness.
The latest manuscript—a brilliant, delightfully humorous, inspirational
work—was expertly developed and complete; she would deliver it with
pride and confidence the following day, to a meeting with her pub-
lisher halfway around the world.
The traveling was always a special part of this work, meeting such
engaging and bright people and staying in interesting new places for a
few days, especially when she was able to bring her son Brendan along.
Such an amazing child, that delightful boy, curious and eager to learn
about everything, so intelligent and so much fun. And other times
when her new beau would accompany her: the delight of going ex-
ploring together, of discovering beauty beyond the ordinary, insights
into each other from a new perspective, the mutual support given and
received in the intimate way that is possible when two people com-
municate openly and fully out of love.
190 Live Your Dream
GFG
It is with joy and excitement that I include this last dream novel. It is
also an excellent example of one of my dreams coming true. Since the very
beginning workshop I knew that someday I wanted others to take the step-
by-step program I had designed and to train to teach/facilitate Live Your
Dream all over the world! I had the confidence that my years of research
and own personal learning created a curriculum that would make living
true to one’s self and following one’s dream a popular concept!
Sherry Laness is a “Live Your Dream”certified facilitator who will
definitely assist and empower me and others through her extraordinary
commitment to her dreams!
It’s five in the morning. The first birds are chirping. A rooster crows.
Sherry wakes up. Her first thoughts are, Wow! What a wonderful day
this is and what fun I’m going to have today! Sherry says a Hebrew
prayer: “I give thanks before you, living and existing King/Queen, for
returning my soul to me. Great is Your belief in me.” With a stretch,
Sherry jumps out of bed.
Quickly dressing and lacing her walking shoes, Sherry glances at
her weekly schedule. She notices what is planned for the day, the
week, and the month ahead and is filled with pleasure and gratitude
for a life that is so fulfilling. This morning, there is the opening of a
“Live Your Dream” workshop in Hebrew, with a group of 24 men
and women who are training to be “Live Your Dream” workshop
facilitators. Tonight, is the “If I Had Three Wishes, The Only One
Would Be!” workshop with 18 participants. Tonight’s meeting is the
third one and the group is so inspired and inspiring! Tomorrow she
is addressing a combined session of the Education and the Defense
Ministry, who are interested in her proposal of having the “Live Your
Keeping the Dream Alive 191
GFG
Your own story may he longer or shorter than these examples. You
can add to it as your vision and your dreams grow. Be sure to describe all
the various aspects of the dream life you envision: career, self-expression,
relationship, finances, home, family, recreation, and so on.
Set aside time for reading and updating your story on New Year’s Day
every year.
GFG
Keeping the Dream Alive 193
Five-year-old Cathy, who had come into the shoe store knowing ex-
actly what kind of shoes she wanted, asked the salesperson, “Do you
know everything about shoes?” The reply was, “Well, sort of.” Cathy
asked incredulously, “Then why are you selling them?” The salesper-
son stepped back and allowed herself to hear an important message:
If you are living your life by “sort ofs,” what sort of result can you
expect?
GFG
Will you be the main character in your own life? Will your life be a
daring adventure or nothing?
This is your life! Now that you have finished this book, go right back
and start again. Experience shows that the person who grows is the one
who starts the process all over again as soon as they have reached the goal
of one dream.
See it!
Claim it!
Create it!
Celebrate it!
Suggested Reading List for
Enjoyment and Expansion
F Live Your Dream: Discover and Achieve Your Life Purpose: A Step-By-
Step Program
F The Live Your Dream Workbook: Discover & Live the Life of Your Dreams
F Journaling For Joy: Writing Your Way to Personal Growth and Freedom
F Journaling For Joy: Writing Your Way to Personal Growth and Freedom
(workbook)
F If I Had Three Wishes, the Only One Would Be: Your Personalized Plan
for Discovering Your Life Goals, Igniting Your Spirit Power, and Mak-
ing Your Dreams Come True
F If I Had Three Wishes, the Only One Would Be :Your Personalized Plan
for Discovering Your Life Goals, Igniting Your Spirit Power, and Making
Your Dreams Come Alive (workbook)
195
196 Live Your Dream
Haas, Robert. Eat to Win: The Sports Nutrition Bible. New American
Library, 1985.
Hanley, John. Lifespring: Getting Yourself from Where You Are to Where
You Want to Be. Simon & Schuster, 1989.
Hesse, Hermann. Siddhartha. Bantam, 1982.
Hoffman, Bob. No One Is to Blame: Getting a Loving Divorce from Mom
and Dad. Science & Behavior, 1979.
Holmes, Ernest. The Science of Mind. Dodd, Mead & Co., 1938.
Houston, Jean. The Possible Human: A Course in Extending Your
Physical, Mental, and Creative Abilities. J. P. Tarcher, 1982.
Iluang, Chung-Liang Al. Quantum Soup: A Philosophical Entertainment.
Dutton, 1983.
Jampoisky, Gerald G. Love Is Letting Go of Fear. Bantam, 1982.
Jeffers, Susan. Feel the Fear and Do It Anyway. Harcourt Brace
Jovanovich, 1987.
——. Opening Our Hearts to Men. Fawcett, 1989.
Johnson, Spencer. One Minute for Myself: How to Manage Your Most
Valuable Asset. Avon, 1987.
Josefowitz, Natasha. Is This Where I Was Going? Warner, 1983.
——. Paths to Power: A Woman’s Guide from First Job to Top Executive.
Addison-Wesley, 1980.
Josefowitz, Natasha and Herman Gadon. Fitting In: How to Get a Good
Start in Your New Job. Addison-Wesley, 1988.
Joy, W. Brugh. Joy’s Way. J. P. Tarcher, 1979.
Keyes, Ken, Jr. The Hundredth Monkey. Vision Books, 1982.
Klauser, Henriette A. Writing on Both Sides of the Brain: Breakthrough
Techniques for People Who Write. Harper & Row, 1986.
Kubler-Ross, Elisabeth. On Death and Dying. Macmillan, 1970.
Lama Foundation Staff. Be Here Now. Crown, 1971.
Lenz, Marjorie and Marjorie Hansen Shaevitz. So You Want to Go Back
to School. McGraw, 1977.
Lerner, Harriet Goldhor. The Dance of Anger: A Woman’s Guide to
Changing the Patterns of Intimate Relationships. Harper & Row, 1985.
MacLaine, Shirley. Out on a Limb. Bantam, 1983.
Maltz, Maxwell. Psycho-Cybernetics. Pocket Books, Inc., 1983.
Mandino, Og. The Greatest Miracle in the World. Bantam, 1983.
Millman, Dan. Way of the Peaceful Warrior: A Book That Changes Lives.
H.J. Kramer, 1984.
Noble, Vicki. Motherpeace: A Way to the Goddess Through Myth, Art and
Tarot. Harper & Row, 1982.
Norwood, Robin. Women Who Love Too Much: When You Keep Wishing
and Hoping He’ll Change. J.P. Archer, 1985.
Peck, M. Scott. The Road Less Traveled. Touchstone Books, Simon &
Schuster, 1980.
198 Live Your Dream
199
200 Live Your Dream
U victim story, 68
visualize your dream, 27-33
unfinished business, visualizing end results, 115
clearing, 71-81
finances, 77
home/yard, 76
W
leisure, 78 weaknesses, eliminate, 137
physical/body image, 75-76 wellness policy, developing,
relationships, 77 129-130
self-development, 77-78
words, and feelings 133-135
work, 76
words, dead, 133
V
values, 92-100
choosing, 95-96
communicating about, 98-99
core, 94
About the Author
203
204 Live Your Dream
She is also extremely proud to share her life wishes, hopes, and dreams
as a wife, a mother of four grown children, a grandmother of 11 grandchil-
dren, and a friend who treasures friendship.
For more information, you may e-mail Joyce Chapman
at dreams@joycechapman.com. Visit Joyce’s Web site at
www.joycechapman.com to join The Live Your Dream ~
Dreamcircle and subscribe to a free monthly newsletter.