Archive for the 'For Women Loving Life' Category

Record Your Life History

Joyce Pierce April 23rd, 2009

Did you ever see the Michael Keaton movie, “My Life”? It’s a real tear-jerker about a high-powered executive, diagnosed with terminal cancer, who’s forced to make plans for his unborn son. He begins filming a home movie, MY LIFE, in which he teaches his son all the things a man must know: how to shave, how to slam dunk, and, most of all, how to love.

If you haven’t seen it yet, it’s a must see!

I looked at the Internet Movie Database, www.imdb.com and learned that the movie was released in 1993. I remember seeing it as a newly-released movie, and later bought the DVD. Critics might not give the movie a high rating, but I agree with one of the comments made on this site about the movie. “Those of you with fathers, those of you who have lost fathers, and those of you who are fathers should see this movie.” That pretty much includes all of us, doesn’t it?

I lost my father when I was a young mother myself. I was mad at him for 20 years after that because he left me. One of the lines in this movie is, “This whole dying thing wasn’t my idea.” It was a message I needed to hear, and of course, I knew that if my father could have had a say in the matter, he would definitely not have died.

The reason I mention this movie is that I love the way it stresses the importance of keeping records! I’ve been a pretty faithful journal keeper all of my adult life. I encouraged my grandfather to write about his life, and I love reading through it, but I sure wish I would have done a video recording of him TELLING me about his life.

In 1991, which was about five years after my grandfather died, my mother came to visit. At the time, she was 71 years old, and in pretty good health. We had just bought a video recorder because every new grandparent has to have one! I had Mom sit on the couch and I set the recorder up on a tripod. I stood behind it and asked her questions. One of the things I do regret is that I didn’t ever come forward and sit beside her, or even give her a hug. There is no record of ME – I am just the voice behind the video.

Here is how we got started:

Tell me about your grandparents.

What were their names?

What do you remember about each one of them?

What about your parents?

What were there names?

What do you remember about them?

Tell me about your siblings. Start with the oldest.

Tell me his name, birth date, what was he like as a child?

What about your oldest sister?

You get the idea. I don’t remember having a script, and watching and listening to it today, you can tell it’s done by an amateur, but the thing that impresses me the most is that I was actually listening to what she had to say, and trying to get her to expand on the topic.

For instance, when she told me she went to Hornbeak High School, I asked her what she remembered about the school. How many were in your graduating class? Who was your best friend?

You can’t script something when you’re really wanting to find out who they are! You just have to listen.

As incredible as it seems to me now, we kept the camera rolling for almost two full hours! I couldn’t get my mother to write one word about her life, but she loved talking about it.

When we finally stopped, I put the tape away and told Mom I wouldn’t show it to anyone until after she passed away. She talked about some sensitive issues that I wasn’t sure she wanted shared with everyone at that point. It was nothing as sensational as the discovery the kids made in “The Bridges of Madison County,” but just some details that I wanted to make sure were recorded correctly.

Seventeen years later, we can now watch my mother’s life story, just the way she wanted to tell it.

When we were told that Mom didn’t have long to live, I took the tape to the video copy store and had three DVDs made. One for me, and one for my sister. The third one was for my aunt. I brought it home and cried as I watched the mother who was animated and very much alive in 1991. There she was on my television screen: talking, making familiar hand gestures, throwing her head back to laugh, with twinkling eyes that were full of life. This was not the mother I had known in recent years; the mother who had merely existed in a worn out body. The mother who was often confused as a result of prescribed medications.

The day Mom passed away, I showed the video to my sister. She couldn’t watch more than about five minutes of it because the emotion of losing our mother was just too much. But she did say something that will forever live in my memory. “Joyce, I don’t know what inspired you to do this, but if I had nothing else of Mom’s, this would be enough. This is priceless.”

Priceless. It truly is priceless.

The wonderful thing about capturing someone on film is that in some ways, they live on forever.

Grandchildren who only knew their great-grandmother as someone who was dependent on us for her care, can learn to know her as was one of the most INdependent people who ever lived. They can come to know her as we all did, when she was the traveling grandma who came to visit quite often. The grandma who took us out for pizza on Saturdays. The grandma who was plump and very snuggable. The grandma my children loved and enjoyed. The grandma who tried to recapture so much of her youth through her grandchildren and great-grandchildren.

If you’ve got a video camera on the shelf, get it out! Don’t wait for the next family reunion to record those stories. You may not get Uncle Dave to sit still for two hours, but fifteen minutes is better than nothing.

You don’t need to feel like you’re imposing by asking someone to let you tape their story. Wouldn’t you love to think that someone finds you interesting enough to want to capture your life on camera?

Make every moment count!

Joyce Moseley Pierce is a contributing author to the Chicken Soup for the Soul series.  She’s the creator of All They’ll Need to Know and owner of Emerson Publications.  She’s the Family Preparedness Expert for Ideamarketers.com as well as Women Loving Life Worldwide.  Visit www.emersonpublications.com or www.preparedineveryway.com to learn more.  Follow Joyce on Twitter @piercejam.

Nothing Changes Until We Do

Renae Pelo March 15th, 2009

Renae PeloNothing changes until we do. Ask yourself, “What kind of a friend do I want to have?” And then be that friend—be that woman—be that agent of change in your own world. Ask the women in your life to help you become the woman you want to be, the woman hiding inside you now. Women Loving Life Worldwide is not a place for complaining and gossip. On this website you will find encouragement, lessons, suggestions, and quotes that will all support you in the positive changes you want to make. There is nothing in the world more powerful than a determined woman. Let us be determined to truly support our strengths and live our greatest purpose.

The world is in our hands. Do you want to hand your children the world as it is now? It is within your power to bring peace and strength to your own world. You have it in you and you can pass it on. You DO pass on who you are, whether you like it or not. There is no choice. You can choose to be the woman of your dreams and be powerful in the ways of women. You can pass that on.

There is no need for force. There is no need for war. There is a need for healing and for assisting one another in that healing. It is a compassionate and loving thing to do. We can choose to do that, if we want to give our children and grandchildren the world they deserve. Their future is in our hands. Your future is in your hands.

I have witnessed and experienced for myself remarkable changes in women who were willing to look themselves in the eye and say, “I have had enough. I am done. I won’t live in pain and fear any longer and I won’t pass it on to my children. No matter what it takes, I will change.” And they did and so can you.

Women who love life are confident in the direction they are going. They choose a life of purpose and beauty. They find it within themselves and they spread it around. Perhaps you think you are the exception and that you have too much going against you to claim your purpose and beauty. It’s not so. That is why we need a group of women who can see us in our lies and witness our beauty and strength when we feel we have none. We must take courage and let go of the ever present noise of the world. We must sit with ouselves–in quiet–and experience the beauty of our own hearts. It takes focus. It takes effort. It takes change and we can do it.

One of my favorite ways to do this is to write in a journal every day. A gratitude journal is a great place to start. Ask yourself those three magic questions (from Dan Kuschell’s Prosperity Based Living) each day, “What am I grateful for? Write down five things you are grateful for and then ask, “What am I happy about? And What have I done well today?” Who wants to know if you didn’t get everything on your list done or if something went wrong at the office or if you had a fight with someone at home? It doesn’t matter. Spend a few minutes answering those three magic questions and if you still want to complain, go ahead. You will soon get over it and begin to look forward to journaling each night no matter how late it is. Actually, you can finish the whole exercise in five to ten minutes and go to bed with a smile on your face. You will begin to get up in the morning with a smile on your face. It can be addicting, but it takes commitment and determination. I promise the rewards will be great.

Different Expert authors on the site will give you ideas about how to improve you life in numerous ways. You will have exercises you can do to claim prosperity in every area of your life from business and money to family and spirituality. There is something for everyone.

Give yourself a chance to unveil the spark that is within you wanting to be fanned into flame as the woman you really are–the woman who is needed to lead in your family and in the world today. This is a day of awakening in every area of life. We have choices that have never been offered before in the history of the world. We can choose to remain in the thick of thin things or we can step out of the way of the on-rushing crowd, take a breath and choose a better, happier way to live.

You are sent here in this time to be a light to others. We need one another to achieve our greatest purpose. I need you and you need me. Let’s rise to the challenge and believe we can learn to love our lives more every day. Become a Woman Loving Life and bless other women with your personal gifts while you celebrate theirs. We all have so much to give. Don’t be afraid to give and never hesitate to receive. You can’t have one without the other and we can all do both. Please join me in celebrating the strengths of women and supporting one another in living our greatest purpose. The world will never be the same. History will tell our story and generations will thank us.

Choose Who You Will Be At Seventy

Renae Pelo March 1st, 2009

Renae PeloAs a younger woman, I wondered what I would be like when I was seventy.  I believed I would be really old.  Old meant frail and not very active.  I was born when my grandmother was seventy and to me she was always old.  Maybe some of my grandchildren think I am old now, but I don’t think so because I began believing I could determine what I would be like at seventy.

I have always wanted to live to be very old, healthy and happy.  I have been saying, “I eat right, look great and feel terrific.” for over twenty years.  I liked to post positive sayings around the house to remind me how to think.  However, at that time, I didn’t have a method or know the laws behind it all.   I just knew I felt better when I thought more positively.  I hadn’t given up the negative self talk yet.  I spent a good many years struggling between the two poles of positive and negative thinking, not knowing the importance of making a real choice in favor of my own well being and happiness.

I remember meandering through the side streets of a town in our valley one Saturday thirty years ago. I thought I might stop at a garage sale.  I saw a sign with a few things set back on the lawn and decided to take a look.  There were some books strewn across a small area of lawn.  One of them jumped into my hand and said, “Take me home.”  That happens to me in bookstores, too, and at Amazon.com.  I wish I could remember the name of the book, but it doesn’t matter because the name of the book that jumps into your hands will be different.  The principle is the same.  If you read it and do what it says, you will change.

That little book, which probably cost .50, put me onto the path of repeating a positive affirmation so often that it changed who I was.  It helped create the positive person I am today.  I didn’t just put the first thing that came to mind on a piece of paper.  I remember writing, praying and mulling over in my mind who I really wanted to be and how I could say it in a few short sentences.  It took me some time beyond reading the book.  The author taught me to write my desire in positive, present, first person language.  I was to add emotion, be grateful and ask God for additional help.  This is what I wrote.  I can say it for you today.

“I have a positive mental attitude.  Whenever I am faced with negativism in any form, I change it to a positive thought and act.  I build up everyone by my very presence and positive mental attitude.  I thank Thee for this joy and peace of mind and pray Thou wilt show me how and where I can serve Thee better.”  I don’t know how many hundred times I have repeated those few sentences.  They are part of who I am and I like myself better for it.

What do you want your life to be like when you are seventy?  It really isn’t a matter of whether or not your thoughts will determine who that person is, because, by law, they will.  It has been happening for as long as you have lived.  Now is the time to take the advice of my unknown writer or others you have read and make of your life what you want it to be.  No, it isn’t an instant fix, but it is a journey in the right direction, in the direction of who your best self.  Maybe you would like to eat right, look great and feel terrific at seventy like I do.  Please join me.  I love my life.

You Have A Dream Just Waiting To Be Fulfilled

Renae Pelo February 25th, 2009

Renae PeloYou have things to do that nobody else can do.  Wait!  What do you mean, you don’t have a dream?  You say you are overworked and under paid?  You are sick and tired of the rat race and nobody cares?  Who has time to dream?

Whoa there!   Listen to me for just a minute.  I know you don’t even know me, but I know you.  You are a woman with work to do and you have dreams to fulfill.  You are married or single.  You are a mom or not.  You may be overweight or skinny.  If you are employed, you could be underpaid and under appreciated.  You have money or you’re broke.  You are confident or afraid.  There are many qualities you may or may not be aware of.  All those qualities make up the woman you are.  All of your life experiences so far have created the uniqueness of you.  See, I do know you.  I am a woman, and I am the mother of eight daughters, plus two wonderful daughters in law.  I have had lots of experience coaching women.  That makes me somewhat of an expert, don’t you think?  Read on and see if you agree.

What do I know about women?
1. Every woman has an unfulfilled dream.
2. Inside of every woman is the little girl who wants to be loved.
3. Every woman deserves to be treated with respect.
4. Every woman who earns money deserves to receive as much money as the guy doing the same work.
5. Every woman wants to be listened to.
6. Every woman wants to have money to spend.
7. Every woman wants to contribute to the world in a way that matters.
8. Every woman wants a circle of friends.
9. Every woman wants to nurture a child.
10. Every woman wants to laugh and be happy.

Does this remind you of you?  Every point contains a bit of who you are.  Of course, there is much more to you than this.  What if you really could see each of these desires fulfilled by living universal laws of creation and abundance?  Is that possible?  It really is possible and you can learn to do it.  Let me share a bit of my dream with you.

Before I was born, my mother prayed for a girl with a “gift of gab.”  My mother was a very shy person when she was a little girl.  She was raised on a homestead in southern Idaho.  She  wasn’t able to finish high school because her mother died and she had to take care of her four younger siblings.  She yearned for the finer things of life and enjoyed working for a wealthy woman who gave her elocution lessons as a young woman.  She would lie on the grass under a tree and practice her recitations, living out her own dreams in her mind.

When I was a little girl she encouraged me to do something very scary.  She wanted me to recite a poem on the stage of our local church in our annual talent show.  I hadn’t even started school yet, but somehow she infused in me the desire to do my best.  She helped me memorize “At Breakfast Time” by Edgar A. Guest.  It was twenty four lines long and included drama and humor.  She taught me to speak loudly, hold my head up and face the audience.  We practiced it over and over.  The big night came and, with her encouragement, I was able to do it just the way I had practiced.  Everyone clapped and I was thrilled.  I had accomplished a very big goal for such a little girl.  I even won a quarter for my performance.  I was not only entertaining, I was rich.  What more could a girl want?  My little heart nearly popped out of my Sunday dress.

That was a defining moment for me; however, I didn’t know it until many years later.  I realized that day that I could do something hard if did my best.  I could make people happy and they would clap for me and I could make money doing it.  It took me a long time to develop my gift of gab but being on stage was different.  I could do that and I did all through school.   However, I gave it up when I got married.

I was 68 years old when I joined Toastmasters and learned to give speeches that people would clap for again.  Within a year I started getting paid for what I had to say as a life coach and speaker.  It took me a long time and a lot of steps to accomplish some of my big dreams.  Being a wife and mother of ten children was my biggest dream.  The children are  grown up, married and have families of their own now.  Nothing will ever top being a mom and grandma, but I can accomplish other dreams as well.  There is always time and ways to live your dreams.

Women Loving Life Worldwide was created for women just like you; women who know there is something more to do, to be better at something or try something new.  The writers on this site are here to encourage you and help you accomplish your dreams, big or small.  Just start where you are and step forward.  You may find someone clapping for you and you may even get paid for it.

Welcome To Women Loving Life Worldwide

Renae Pelo February 22nd, 2009

Women Loving Life Worldwide was born after nearly seventy years of gestation.  That was a very long pregnancy, wasn’t  it?  I think I was born with a little golden magnet in my heart that makes me want to connect with all the women of the world, including you.  I love to inspire women to expect more of themselves and support one dreams and purpose.

I have spent my life learning from experience as a wife, mother and business woman. Now, at age seventy I have found a way that makes it possible to connect with women worldwide–the internet!  You can help connect by sharing this site with all the women you know.  Why will they want to come?  Why will you want to return? Because, here you will find resources and women who understand and support you in being the best ‘you’ possible—a place where you can celebrate your strengths and live your highest purpose.

Yes, I promise that as you return you will find women with whom can relate and you will want to join us. If you are interested in business, there are experts for you. If you want to improve your relationships, there are women with experience who can show you how. There are many experts here to serve you. On our forum, you can connect with women near and far. Support can come from many sources. I get chills just thinking about it.

Together, we can create something beautiful. We are all participants in weaving the beautiful tapestry of life.  If you hold back your strengths, there will be holes in the weave.  If you refuse to grow and be true to your purpose, the edges will fray.  If you hold back your thread of understanding of another, the design will be less rich.  If you hold back your burst of joy at overcoming your own struggles, the color will be dull.  We must all participate and encourage one another to participate and live our greatest purpose.  By doing so, the tapestry will become a work of art beyond our most creative imagination.  Only then can we exclaim with joy, “We are part of something magnificent and without me it couldn’t be.”

A bit grandiose?  Maybe, but I like the big picture. I believe in you and in your ability to create the life you want. Women Loving Life Worldwide is here to assist you in doing that.  Get started by receiving your FREE Guidebook For Women Loving Life Worldwide by clicking in the box to your right.

Loving life will become a way of life and together we will change the world.