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5 Lessons for Successful Life Transitions

By nina · Comments (0)
Saturday, March 26th, 2011

When we reach midlife, many of us realize we need to make some changes. We want to lose the weight we find accumulating on our bodies, have more challenging careers, or maybe even fan the flames of love. But often we keep doing what we have always done because we’re not sure whether it’s worth doing something new that might not work out.

On my internet radio show, Push the Reset Button , I recently interviewed a dynamic woman who was forced to make a change; and once she made it, she went on to transform her entire life for the better.

The woman I’m speaking of is Michelle DeBerge. Her story is inspiring and educational. Together, Michelle and I were able to identify five powerful lessons from her experience for people who are in transition. I’d like to share a little bit of her story with you right here and those five points.

Before I tell you how she remade her life, I must let you know that the beginning of her story will make you shake your head. It may even make you cringe. It may seem too horrible to be real. But it is real, and I hope her experiences will give you courage. Michelle was able to transform her life, and you can too.

In her late thirties, professionally Michelle was flying high. Her picture was in the newspapers, she and her colleagues were stars. She was doing fulfilling work that really helped people.

But Michelle had a secret. Away from work, she lived in loneliness, fear, and pain. And she hid this from everyone outside her home.

Her secret was that she was married to a man who was angry, alcoholic, abusing drugs, and abusing her. He had made her believe that she was worthless. He had convinced her that she would be all alone in the world without him. And he was beating her.

Her husband’s teenage son from another relationship lived with them, too. His own mother had abandoned him. Angry and neglected in this situation, he also was drinking and doing drugs.

Michelle had retreated to the garage of her home to live. Every time her husband’s truck pulled into the driveway, it scared her. Furthermore, she had turned to food for solace. Over time, she gained 300 pounds.

Michelle felt isolated and powerless. She didn’t tell her mother because they had become estranged. She didn’t tell her friends because she was afraid that they would abandon her if they knew. She thought that if she left her husband, she would be bereft, vulnerable, and lonely.

One evening she woke up on the floor of her garage with fractured ribs and a fractured skull. Her husband had attacked her and repeatedly slammed her head into the concrete. He had beaten her unconscious because she had been away for his birthday and cooked him a dinner to celebrate when she returned. Bleeding and in pain, one thing became clear to Michelle: she needed to make a change.

First, she ended her marriage. Then she acquired custody of her husband’s son and helped him change his life. She also lost 200 pounds. Furthermore, she outgrew her job and established a successful business. She also created new, supportive relationships with her mother and friends.

Four years after that night when she was beaten nearly to death, she lives in happiness and love. She shares her story with the whole world as a way to help others.

You can hear much more of Michelle’s remarkable story in her own words on my radio show Push the Reset Button .

Michelle saved not only herself, but also her husband’s son, too.  She didn’t want him to grow up to be like his father. She wanted to break the cycle.

I asked her how she managed to do all this. Together we identified the five lessons I mentioned before. Here they are:

1. Acknowledge problems for what they are. In Michelle’s words, if you are making something right in your head that is in no way right in reality, you need to rethink the situation. She made excuses for her husband’s behavior for years when she could have faced the truth much sooner. Also, if your public and private lives are out of sync, that’s another red flag that there may be a problem you need to face.

2. If you think there is a problem in your life that you want to fix, ask yourself if there are any negative, repeating cycles you need to break. Repeating cycles are those recurring behaviors or situations that we can observe if we take a step back and look at the big picture. We all have them. And if we can identify them, we can get down to the more fundamental causes of our immediate problems.

3. Be purposeful. Determine exactly what it is you want and carefully plan out how to get it. Then motivate yourself to make the change and stick it out. Michelle says no matter how hard or scary it may be to make a transition, it’s worth it. She wanted a life of love and happiness, and now she’s got it.

4. Ask for help. It’s out there, and people are happy to lend a hand. For example, Michelle finally asked each of her friends to call her one night a week to tell her how their day had gone. She needed the company. Her friends were more than happy to do this and even more.

5. Recognize when you lack expertise and need to learn something. Often, we tell ourselves that we can figure things out on our own. But this isn’t always true, and with major life changes, we should plan to learn something new. In Michelle’s case she didn’t have experience working with troubled teens. So she hired a parenting coach who taught her how to practice tough love. This was key to Michelle’s ability to help her husband’s son. Now, he has turned his report card from all F’s to passing grades. He is also clean and sober, has a job, and has started college. They have an open, loving relationship.

I hope you found Michelle’s story inspiring; and I hope these five lessons will help you when you decide to make a change.

Please don’t hesitate to get in touch with Michelle if you want a hand. Her full time job now is helping people through life transitions. You can find her at MichelleDeBerge.com or StartingOverWithoutHim.com.

Until next time, I wish you success in love and life transitions.

Comments (0)
Categories : BlogTalkRadio, Confidence, Midlife Reinvention, Personal Change, Push the Reset Button, Reinvention
Tags : abuse, breaking the cycle of abuse, life transitions, Michelle DeBerge, Personal Change, Push the Reset Button, reinvent yourself after 40, Starting Over Without Him, successful life transitions

How to Eat What You Love and Still Be Slim

By nina · Comments (0)
Friday, March 18th, 2011

Can you count how many times you’ve lost weight and then gained it right back?

I can’t. Over the years, I’ve tried so many different kinds of diets: low carb diets, low fat diets, you-name-it diets. And many worked for a little while. But then I eventually went back to “real life” and the pounds returned. Of course, there also were times when I tried to lose weight but couldn’t reach my goals in the first place.

After all these years, I now know why.  First of all, I didn’t have the tools to overcome my cravings for foods I love, like most desserts. Also, the diets weren’t realistic. I was starving myself of foods and nutrients that my body needed. Sometimes I also was exercising way too much to sustain over the long term.

But the biggest reason I didn’t find long-lasting success was that I never got to the root causes of my weight issues. I now know that I have food sensitivities that I wasn’t aware of. These were inflaming my digestive system and making it hard for my body to metabolize food. And now that I’m at mid-life, my metabolism has slowed down, to boot!

So, I learned an important lesson: if I wanted to lose weight, I had to stop dieting. “What’s that?” you ask. “Stop dieting?” That’s right. It sounds radical, but it’s true.

This revelation, that to lose weight you have to stop dieting, is one of Kelly Cornell’s key messages. I recently interviewed her for my radio program, Push the Reset Button. Kelly has a B.S. in nutrition and is a certified holistic health coach. For years, she’s been helping people over the age of 40 lose weight and keep it off.  The first thing she said when we talked was, “Stop dieting.”   I had to ask, if her clients don’t diet, how do they lose weight?

She had a lot of great stuff to say, including that she has a healthy recipe for chocolate pudding called Creamy, Dreamy Chocolate Delight. She and her clients are able to stay fit and enjoy something that’s absolutely delicious, too. How do they do it? Here’s my summary with some of my own commentary from the interview:

1. You have to believe that you can succeed. Yes, you may be middle aged or older, you may have tried before and not succeeded, you may have an injury or body pain that limits your exercise, or you may have a family history of being overweight. But if you have hope and are committed, none of these things can stop you. You CAN shed the pounds.

2. Identify the root causes. Many people suffer from one or more specific issues that are holding them back from maintaining a healthy weight. Common causes are food sensitivities, hormone imbalances, emotional issues, old habits, cravings, lack of nutrition knowledge, midlife metabolism changes, stress, and simply not prioritizing their own health. Until the root causes are addressed, they hamper weight loss efforts.

3. Take a holistic approach. Look at the whole picture. As you can see, the common root causes span mind, body, and spirit. In order to slim down for good, you have to address them that way, too.

4. Use the natural healing power of food. As I’ve said before, people evolved over millions of years in relation to nature. So the nutrition and restorative materials you need often are right in nature, too. This is a fundamental tenet of Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM). (The west has only recently started to catch on!) A well-trained health care provider can help you identify what you need and how to use it.

5. Learn to love yourself as you are, body and all. Often, people are defeated by their own negative body images. They look at their thighs in the mirror and decide they hate them. Or they are embarrassed because of extra weight on their stomachs. But in order to be happy with your body, you have to love it as it is, have a vision of how you want to shape it, and love it through the process. Otherwise, as Kelly points out, once your thighs or stomach are molded to meet your criteria, you’ll just find something else to criticize.

6. Have a well-thought-out plan. You need to figure out how emotions play into your weight, what foods to eat, which foods to avoid, how to exercise, what to do when cravings strike, and more.

7. Get support. All of this requires expertise, encouragement, and often, accountability. A certified holistic health coach like Kelly can provide these. You can reach Kelly via her web site at Kelly Cornell Wellness.

I hope this blog post has inspired you to think about weight loss in a different way. And I encourage you to listen to the full interview. We discuss all these points in much more detail, and Kelly relates exciting stories about her patients’ successes.

Watch this space for insights about healing your relationship with food and cleansing.
Until next time, best wishes for getting to the root causes and enjoying life, including delicious foods!

Comments (0)
Categories : BlogTalkRadio, Health, midlife weight gain, nutrition, Personal Change, Push the Reset Button, Traditional Chinese Medicine, weight gain
Tags : body image, Emotions and weight, food cravings, healthy chocolate pudding, holistic weight loss, midlife weight loss, natural healing power of food, stop dieting
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