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  • Choosing Your Values Even When Anxiety Shows Up

    Written by Kelsey Irving, Licensed Clinical Therapist Kelsey Irving is a licensed therapist and recognized specialist in OCD and anxiety disorders. She is the founder of Steadfast Psychology Group and author of the children’s book Jacob and the Cloud. People often come to me feeling frustrated, powerless, or fed up because they see that they are no longer in charge of making decisions in their lives. Instead, anxiety, obsessions, and compulsions have “taken the wheel” and now steer the course based on avoiding pain or discomfort. Take these real-life instances. “I love going to the beach, but my fear of driving has limited me to a 2-mile radius. I went all summer without seeing the ocean.” “I want to support my son at his soccer games, but I have so much social anxiety that I often end up staying home to avoid speaking to other parents.” Anxiety or worry can take us off course in many small scenarios until one day we look up and wonder, “How did I get here?” Consistently making decisions based on fear-driven reasoning can really decrease our confidence. We lose sight of our ability to handle discomfort, which can lead to self-doubt and judgment. How to make more value-based decisions The first thing to do is get back in touch with your values. What is really important to YOU? If you need help exploring that, here are a few helpful worksheets  to get you started. When you are clearer about your values, it is easier to determine whether your motivation is fear or love. Let’s revisit the examples given above: “I am scared to drive, but the ocean air and salt water are good for me. Walking on the beach and swimming in the water is good exercise, and I value my health.” “I am uncomfortable with socializing, but it is important that my son feels supported at his soccer game.” Note that we are not aiming to get rid of the discomfort in either situation, but rather act on what’s important despite the fear. When we make decisions based on what’s important to us, we string together a series of days, months, or years that are filled with things we can be proud of. Even if we still feel anxious, sad, worried, or distressed at the end, we will have done something productive and meaningful with our time! Buddhist teachings offer a helpful reminder that discomfort is not a mistake, it is part of being human. The concept of dukkha  acknowledges that fear, anxiety, and uncertainty naturally arise, and that suffering often increases when we struggle to make these feelings disappear. Rather than waiting to feel calm, Buddhism emphasizes mindful acceptance – noticing difficult emotions without judging them or letting them control our actions. Through non-attachment, we learn that we can care deeply about our values without needing our experiences to feel comfortable. Fear can be present without being in charge. When we act in alignment with what matters to us, despite discomfort, we loosen anxiety’s grip, build resilience, and create a life guided by intention rather than avoidance. If you’d like to change the course of your life so that you can live more aligned with your values than your fears, contact me  to see whether we’d be a good fit for therapy. Follow me on Instagram , LinkedIn , and visit my website for more info! Read more from Kelsey Irving Kelsey Irving, Licensed Clinical Therapist Kelsey Irving is a licensed therapist specializing in the treatment of adults with OCD and anxiety disorders. Inspired by a close family member’s diagnosis and the widespread misunderstanding of OCD, she became deeply committed to providing informed, compassionate, and effective care. Kelsey serves individuals through her private practice, Steadfast Psychology Group, and extends her impact through her children’s book, Jacob and the Cloud.

  • Why Your Healing Journey Might Be Sabotaging Your Love Life

    Written by Yalini Nirmalarajah, Self-Love & Relationship Coach Founder of The Yalini Experience, Yalini has qualifications in psychology and a master’s degree in social and political science. She is a certified Master Practitioner in hypnotherapy, neuro-linguistic programming (NLP), and timeline therapy. "I need to heal before I'm ready for a relationship." How many times have you heard this? Maybe you've even said it yourself. After all, it seems to make perfect sense, heal your wounds first, then open your heart to love. Work through all your past traumas, resolve your trust issues, and only then will you be truly ready for a meaningful relationship. But what if I told you this well-intentioned advice might actually be keeping you from the love you desire? Don't get me wrong, taking time to process past hurts and reconnect with yourself after heartbreak is important. But somewhere along the way, this healthy practice morphed into an impossible standard, the belief that you must be completely healed before you're worthy of love. Let me share something I've witnessed with my clients, like Tracy, who came to me convinced she needed to resolve every issue from her past relationships before she could date again. She'd spent years in therapy, reading self-help books, and doing inner work. Yet somehow, she never felt "healed enough" to open her heart again. Here's what Tracy, and maybe you too, didn't realise. Love isn't meant to come only after you've perfectly healed all your wounds. In fact, the right relationship can be one of your greatest catalysts for deeper healing. Think about it, our deepest wounds often come from relationships, so why do we believe we must heal them in isolation? Sometimes, it's within the safety of a loving partnership that we find the courage to face our most buried fears and insecurities. In fact, here’s something that might surprise you, a quality relationship is actually designed to trigger you. Not to cause more pain, but to bring hidden wounds to the surface where they can finally be healed. The challenge is that many people mistake these triggers for problems with their partner or the relationship itself. They think, "If this person were right for me, it wouldn't feel this hard." Except what's hard has nothing to do with the other person, and everything to do with what's coming up inside of themselves, the emotions and vulnerabilities they weren't ready to face until now. Maybe it's about learning to speak up and say when they're uncomfortable, so they can honour their boundaries. Or perhaps it's about sharing how they truly feel, their sadness, their hurt, and discovering it's finally safe to be seen. In this case, the triggers aren't warning signs, they’re invitations for growth. When your partner's actions or words stir up old insecurities or fears, it may not be because they're wrong for you. It might very well be their presence that’s creating the safe space needed for the wounds to finally surface and heal. Of course, this doesn't mean you should jump into dating without any self-reflection or healing. There's still important inner work to do, work that I always support my clients with, like: Grieving past relationships and letting go of old attachments Understanding your patterns and triggers Building a foundation of self-love and worth Learning to trust your intuition again Remember, the right relationship will challenge you to grow, but it should also feel safe and supportive. It's about finding that balance between comfort and growth, between being triggered and feeling secure enough to work through those triggers together. I've seen this transformative journey with another client, Emma, who was surprised to discover that her new relationship actually accelerated her healing in ways years of solo work hadn't. Why? Because her partner's presence triggered old wounds she didn’t even know existed. And instead of projecting them onto him, thinking he was the problem, she realised that it was his loving presence and support that created the safe space required for her to face and release the wounds she couldn't access on her own. The beauty of love is that it doesn't demand perfection, it creates opportunities for transformation. The right person won't expect you to have it all figured out. Instead, they'll understand that each trigger, each moment of vulnerability, is a chance to grow closer and heal deeper. They'll stand with you as you learn to trust, to open up and be truly seen, not because you're broken, but because you're ready to evolve into an even more authentic version of yourself. Follow me on Facebook , Instagram , LinkedIn , and visit my website for more info! Read more from Yalini Nirmalarajah Yalini Nirmalarajah, Self-Love & Relationship Coach Yalini Nirmalarajah, a global self-love and relationship coach, empowers women to reclaim the source of their light, their feminine essence, and intuition. In societies where women are taught to be more like men, her guidance helps women overcome this false conditioning so they can heal from the trauma it’s created, reconnect with their emotional bodies, and live authentically from their hearts. Inspired by this mission, she launched the Lead From Love podcast. Founder of The Yalini Experience, Yalini has qualifications in psychology and a master's degree in social and political science. She is a certified Master Practitioner in hypnotherapy, neuro-linguistic programming (NLP), and timeline therapy. Her expertise extends to postgraduate training in rebirthing breathwork, iridology, sclerology, health, and wellness. Yalini is dedicated to continuous development to provide the highest quality care for all her clients.

  • The White House Just Validated Your AI Strategy – Are You Compliant as a Business Leader

    Written by Dhru Beeharilal, The Ikigai Coach Dr. Dhru is an entrepreneur and executive coach with 15 years of coaching and 10 years in IT consulting. An ICF Professional Certified Coach and Georgetown University faculty member, he applies his Ikigai Aperture™ framework, blending business strategy, psychology, and stoic principles, to help align profit with purpose. The message coming from Washington, D.C. is crystal clear. Artificial Intelligence (AI) is no longer an optional experiment or a concept for the distant future. It has officially matured into a core requirement for any responsible, productive, and ethical business operation. With the White House and DC government issuing new guidance covering everything from AI usage to data protection and automated hiring tools, the conversation has permanently shifted. It’s no longer about whether you should adopt AI, but how you can deploy it strategically and responsibly to drive growth. What makes this moment especially significant for business leaders is that the new AI guidance has received bipartisan support. Across political lines, there is rare agreement that AI will shape the future of work, competitiveness, and economic resilience. Regardless of political affiliation, the signal is the same: AI is here to stay, and responsible adoption is now a shared national priority.   This is a defining moment for small business owners. While you may not have a massive compliance department, the standards for safe, fair, and effective AI are now set, and they apply to every size of enterprise.   The good news? This national guidance simply underscores a truth we champion every day at Nayan Leadership, AI is the ultimate productivity and skills multiplier when it's guided by confident, human-centered leadership. This is your chance to turn regulatory headlines into a powerful competitive advantage.   AI: Your team's non-negotiable competitive edge Let's move past the outdated fear that AI threatens jobs. The recent government focus highlights AI’s immense potential to enhance human capability, which is especially critical for lean small businesses aiming to maximize output.   AI transforms your operational capacity by:   1. Automating the mundane to unlock real value AI is brilliant at handling the routine, repetitive chores, the daily "admin drag" that drains focus and energy. Think about tasks like drafting initial summaries, sorting large datasets, writing first-pass marketing copy, or processing routine customer requests. By offloading this work to AI tools, you achieve genuine time savings and significantly boost operational efficiency. This frees your team to focus on the work only they can do. 2. Amplifying human skills for strategic focus When the administrative burden is lifted, your employees gain the most valuable commodity: cognitive space. They are free to concentrate on high-value, uniquely human responsibilities: strategy, creativity, relationship-building, and complex problem-solving.   AI essentially acts as a powerful skills multiplier. Your team members become more capable, sophisticated, and productive without needing a huge increase in headcount. You're building competitive advantage and small business resilience by maximizing the human element.   This is the core of smart, strategic AI adoption: using technology to free your people to focus on high-impact work.   Navigating the compliance & ethics checklist: Integrating DC's mandates The new guidance from the White House and DC officials isn't just a friendly suggestion, it establishes a clear expectation for business conduct centered on fairness, transparency, and data privacy. This includes protecting against bias in automated decision-making and ensuring human oversight in key areas. For a small business, bridging the gap between high-level mandates and daily practice can be complex. How do you ensure your affordable AI hiring tool is compliant? Where do you draw the line when using generative AI with sensitive business data? This is the practical, strategic gap Nayan Leadership is designed to fill. We help you move from being intimidated by regulation to confidently achieving compliance. The recent attention from the White House and DC government on AI governance aligns naturally with the work Nayan Leadership already does, giving small businesses a practical path toward both compliance and growth. While government guidance highlights the “what,” such as preventing algorithmic discrimination and ensuring fair hiring practices, Nayan Leadership delivers the “how.” We help leaders evaluate automated hiring tools, build equitable review processes, and maintain strong human oversight so they can confidently address Ethical AI, AI bias mitigation, and fair hiring automation. At the same time, as policymakers emphasize data privacy and secure systems, our coaching supports small businesses in building sensible, sustainable data governance practices. We guide leaders in creating internal protocols for working with sensitive information and using generative AI tools responsibly, strengthening their overall approach to AI governance, data protection, and risk management. And to meet the growing expectation for transparency and clear human alternatives in AI-powered workflows, Nayan Leadership helps organizations design communication plans and people-centered processes that empower employees rather than monitor them. This reinforces the principles we value most: Human-Centered AI, leadership development, and genuine workforce empowerment. Your strategic solution: Confident leadership in the AI era Adopting new AI technology is tactical, mastering the leadership required to implement it ethically, strategically, and compliantly is existential. As tasks become easier to automate, the uniquely human dimensions of leadership vision, inspirational communication, emotional intelligence, and executive presence become exponentially more valuable. At Nayan Leadership, we don't just advise on AI tools, we specialize in equipping you, the small business leader, with the executive presence and the ethical framework needed to guide this transformation with confidence. Our programs ensure that your AI strategy is not only compliant with emerging national standards but also actively fuels a culture of trust and rapid growth. We empower leaders to build a future-proof organization by teaching them to Build a resilient culture: Encourage safe experimentation and normalize "learning curves" around new AI tools, fostering a continuous learning environment that adapts easily to market changes. Ensure ethical deployment: Help you clarify your organizational values and implement governance frameworks that align AI adoption with non-negotiable standards of data protection and fairness. Maximize the skills multiplier: Strategically identify the low-value tasks AI should handle to maximize your team's focus on high-impact, revenue-driving activities and genuine innovation. The future of business leadership will be defined by those who can harness the massive power of AI to transform productivity while steadfastly upholding the highest standards of ethics and fairness. What’s notable about this moment is that AI’s importance is no longer framed as a political issue. With bipartisan support behind national AI guidelines, the direction of travel is clear, no matter where leaders fall on the political spectrum. AI is not a passing trend or a partisan initiative, it is a foundational capability for modern, resilient businesses. Don’t let uncertainty hold you back. Build an AI-powered, resilient organization now and let Nayan Leadership ensure your strategy is smart, ethical, and fully compliant. Contact us today. Follow me on Facebook , Instagram , LinkedIn , and visit my website for more info! Read more from Dhru Beeharilal Dhru Beeharilal, The Ikigai Coach Dr. Dhru is an entrepreneur and an executive leadership coach who helps small business owners break free from exhaustion and create purpose-driven success. With 15 years of coaching experience and a decade in IT project management and consulting, he understands the challenges of achievement without fulfillment. His search for balance and meaning led him to develop the Ikigai Aperture™ framework, a method that unites Japanese philosophies of bushido and ikigai with Western stoicism, positive psychology, and business strategy. Through this approach, he helps entrepreneurs align profit with purpose. His clients gain clarity, balance, and resilience that transform both their leadership and their businesses.

  • 6 Training and Eating Fixes for the Aging Athlete

    Written by Dan Taylor, MS, CSCS, 50+ Fitness and Nutrition Expert Dan's exercise physiology/sports nutrition education, NSCA strength and conditioning background, and work with a wide variety of active older adults since 1998 make him the ideal guide to help navigate the muddy waters of optimal eating and training strategies for the over-50 athlete and fitness seeker. Are you over 50 and still making fitness and nutrition top priorities in your life? Were you an individual or team competitive athlete in high school or college? Have you struggled to dial in the best combination of eating and training practices for your current condition and lifestyle? You’re in good company. Most aging athletes have the desire and discipline to stay in great condition but don’t have the critical knowledge that will ensure success. But we think that we do have that knowledge, so we have become so entrenched in the program we’ve developed over the years that we miss the opportunity to sharpen our attack on old age with precision, elegance, and time-efficiency. In this article, you’ll find six simple but effective fixes (three for eating; three for training) that will help you break through performance, energy and body composition plateaus that you thought were unavoidable, and push you to a level for performance and body composition that you didn’t think were possible at this stage in your life. What’s wrong with my eating? The foundation of health and athletic performance is nutritious and energy-adequate (but not chronically excessive) eating practices. As we age, fit people look, appropriately, towards the intake habits of master’s athletes  (generally, over 40 physically active people who pursue some regular form of athletic activity or competition). Why? Because master’s athletes (MAs) are at the forefront of managing the delicate balance of optimizing quality protein (PRO) intake , getting a robust and broad-spectrum array of vitamins and minerals (micronutrients), and accomplishing all that while avoiding overconsuming energy (kcals). The bottom line for achieving this peak state consistently is that if you’re not sure you’re doing this already, you are most likely not. What’s wrong with my training? Individual physical conditions, chronic injuries, recovery from surgery and training responses to medications (all of which should be discussed at length with your primary care physician and involve any fitness coach, personal trainer or strength and conditioning professional with whom you engage), there are very common fundamental physical changes that are both related to biological age and cultivated from long term habits that should be factored into the ideal training program for the older athlete. Common characteristics I observe include: Postural deterioration Strength and range of motion imbalances Lopsided conditioning levels between endurance, strength, flexibility, core stability and anaerobic power Poorly designed programs that preserve or exacerbate the elements mentioned above Accumulated injury related (especially back, shoulder and knee) compromised function If you’re not presenting at least two of these problems (if not all, to some degree), you would be a physical anomaly, rather than the mere mortal I suspect you are. Eating and training fixes that work Like a gourmet meal, your eating and training practices need to not only include the right ingredients, in the right amounts, but they need to be combined and sequenced in a way that they’ll all work together to elevate the whole. And that needs to be, like any science experiment, planned, organized and consistently repeatable. It’s also important, given that our lifestyles and day-to-day-urgencies often interfere with our “plan A”, that we have back-up or substitute practices that accomplish the same objectives and can also adapt to the circumstances of the moment.  Eating fix priorities 1. Improving your intake micro-nutrient density While typically considered primarily PRO sources, lean meat, seafood, dairy and eggs (for omnivores) and soy, legumes and nuts/seeds are actually great sources for many essential micro nutrients. The same is true for whole grains, but to a lesser extent. But the real jackpot for vital micronutrients resides in the produce (vegetables and fruits) to which you may not be allotting enough of your food intake budget. If protein is the building material for muscles and countless biological processes, think of micronutrients as the design and craftsmanship that put up the floor, walls, and roof of your prime physique. It’s cliche to say “eat more veggies” (many people already eat enough fruit, in total), but there’s a simple approach that optimizes the nutrient-density equation I’ll share with you in a future article examining this “fix” in detail. 2. Optimizing your protein intake Many older athletes are not aware that we gradually begin to lose PRO absorption sensitivity as we age. That means we need to eat more to retain enough, as compared to our younger counterparts. Recent research supports a boost of previous recommended levels for general population older adults, while athletic profiles, especially regularly strength-trained athletic older adults, have been guided to upwards of 1g per pound of ideal bodyweight daily, or even higher. No significant risk has been found for those without compromised kidney function at twice those levels. However, muscle protein synthesis (increased skeletal muscle volume and strength) does not appear to correlate with levels above 1g/lb. For most of us, though, getting that much protein from primarily food sources while also keeping total kcal intake low enough to maintain or gradually reduce body fat levels is the real trick. There will be more on that in my upcoming protein-specific article. Related article: Overview on daily protein needs and options 3. Managing your goal-specific energy intake range  This is the single most elusive goal in the fitness world. That’s partly because goals vary (are you a marathoner, a powerlifter, a waterskier or a multisport/no-sport fitness seeker?), and partly because every variable I mentioned earlier (and some I didn't cover like behavioral tendencies, work schedule and family eating and activity integration) affects the others and the ultimate outcome. So, how can you hope to master the formula? This will be broken down into a clear, understandable framework that anyone can master in a future article. But if you want a comprehensive and effective pathway right now, it’s here . Training fix priorities 1. Balance your program components This includes every major area of potential imbalance, including work-to-rest ratios, mode focus (cardio/strength/core/flexibility/agility, etc), muscle strength ratios (compound prime mover versus assisting and stabilizing muscles, upper vs. lower body muscles, dominant/non-dominant side capacities), range of motion limitations that improperly stress the spine and major joints and core-juncture stabilizing capacities. Leave something off this list and injuries become much more likely and can be severe, or even catastrophic.  2. Set goal baselines for strength-to-bodyweight ratios, endurance capacity, and mobility that provide a firm foundation for sport-specific training   Think of gymnasts, rock climbers and surfers. They all practice different sports, but the physiological requirements and demands for all are startlingly similar. And those precise similarities coalesce to both optimize athletic performance versatility while at the same time minimize inherent injury risk. There are simple ways to achieve these ratios of strength and mobility that I’ll examine in greater depth in a future article. But a valuable template and roadmap to get there (as well as to address the other two training fixes mentioned in this article) is right here . 3. Limit your sports skills training for ideal performance This surprising piece of guidance is primarily to help you avoid two common but potentially devastating training pitfalls: Over-training muscle capacities already addressed in your fitness base Risking sub-par focus on specific skill development due to mental fatigue The short answer on how to do that is to prioritize your fitness base training in both sequence and time allocation. More on that coming soon in my article on this sub-topic. Get help from the right source – today In future articles I will delve more deeply into each of these six fixes, and you can learn the crucial features of the ideal older adult training and eating practices that optimize your performance and light the path to ideal body composition while retaining strength and muscle volume in my comprehensive subscription program for mature athletes . Follow me on Facebook , LinkedIn , and visit my website  for more info! Read more from Dan Taylor, MS, CSCS Dan Taylor, MS, CSCS, 50+ Fitness and Nutrition Expert Dan left a career in high-tech corporate finance in 1998 to pursue his mission - to lead others in elevating and simplifying the art of physical aging with the best fitness and eating practices for the mature athlete (and aspiring athlete). His online subscription program provides a clear and simple pathway to: Achieve peak performance while lowering disease and injury risk, Adopt powerful and principled eating practices that effectively support the training framework and, Develop an individualized, manageable and adaptable template for both.

  • The Silent Second Shift – How Caregiving Redefines Identity and Fuels Burnout (Part 1)

    Written by Danielle S. Calhoun, Empowerment Facilitator and Keynote Speaker Danielle Calhoun is a certified coach and wellness strategist with a background in HR leadership. She empowers high-achieving professionals to overcome burnout, reclaim their power, and create balance through strategic coaching integrated with spiritual alignment. For many professional women, caregiving does not arrive with a plan. It arrives with a phone call. A diagnosis. A realization that “helping for now” has quietly become a permanent role. One moment, you are managing meetings, deadlines, and expectations. The next, you are coordinating medical appointments, navigating unfamiliar systems, and carrying responsibility that does not pause at the end of the workday. This is the silent second shift, and it is where burnout often begins. When caregiving changes who you are Caregiving for an aging parent often begins without ceremony or consent. It is not a role most women actively pursue, it is one they step into out of love, duty, or necessity. Yet beyond the visible responsibilities, caregiving initiates a profound internal shift. Professional women are accustomed to structure, competence, and forward momentum. Caregiving introduces unpredictability, emotional vulnerability, and an ongoing demand for presence. Over time, the boundaries between who you are and what you are responsible for begin to blur. You may still be successful by external standards. You may still be the dependable one at work. But internally, your sense of self begins to stretch and strain. There is often an unspoken grief for the woman you once were, the one with more flexibility, energy, and personal bandwidth. That grief is frequently paired with guilt for even acknowledging the loss. Caregiving does not erase identity. It reshapes it, often without permission. Why burnout looks different for caregivers Burnout in caregiving professionals is frequently misunderstood. It is not simply the result of long hours or demanding roles. It is the outcome of sustained emotional, cognitive, and nervous system overload. Caregiving adds layers that traditional work stress does not: Constant vigilance High-stakes decision-making Emotional responsibility for another person’s well-being The need to remain composed across every environment Unlike professional stress, caregiving stress rarely has clear boundaries. Even moments labeled as “rest” are often filled with anticipation, worry, or mental task-listing. This is why common burnout solutions such as time off, vacations, or productivity tools often fall short. The exhaustion is not due to a lack of resilience. It stems from carrying an unrelenting emotional load. Burnout, in this context, is not a personal failure. It is a physiological response to prolonged demand without adequate recovery. The cost of always “holding it together” Many women in caregiving seasons pride themselves on strength. They are problem-solvers, leaders, and caretakers by nature. They have spent years being reliable, often at their own expense. But strength without support eventually becomes unsustainable. The pressure to “hold it together” frequently delays the acknowledgment of burnout until the body intervenes through chronic fatigue, anxiety, irritability, or emotional numbness. By the time burnout is named, many women are already depleted. What is often missing from this conversation is compassion, for the complexity of this season and for the identity shifts it demands. Naming burnout without shame One of the most powerful steps a caregiving professional woman can take is naming what is happening without self-judgment. Burnout does not mean you are failing. It means you are human within an inhumane pace. Caregiving changes how energy is spent, restored, and protected. Recognizing this truth opens the door to a unique way of leading, one rooted in sustainability rather than sacrifice. Author reflection As both a former HR leader and a wellness coach, I have witnessed how easily caregiving responsibilities become invisible, especially when carried by high-performing women. Many navigate this season quietly, minimizing their own needs while continuing to show up for everyone else. Naming burnout is not an act of weakness. It is an act of clarity. Looking ahead Identity and burnout are only the first layer of this experience. In Part 2, we will explore the invisible emotional labor caregiving women carry, and the anticipatory grief that often goes unrecognized but deeply felt. In Part 3, we will examine how this season invites a redefinition of leadership and success, one that honors rest, boundaries, and worth beyond productivity. Follow me on Facebook , Instagram , LinkedIn , and visit my website for more info! Read more from Danielle S. Calhoun Danielle S. Calhoun, Empowerment Facilitator and Keynote Speaker Danielle Calhoun is a leader in holistic success, burnout recovery, and spiritual alignment for high-achieving professionals. After years in corporate HR, experiencing and witnessing the toll of chronic stress, she developed a transformative coaching approach that blends wellness strategy with soulful purpose. She now dedicates her work to helping others reclaim their power, create balance, and lead with intention. Her mission: Thrive from the inside out.

  • The Silent Superpower – Chatham House Rules in Today’s World

    Written by Denzil Tafadzwa Tanyanyiwa, Global Strategist | Founder | CEO Denzil T. Tanyanyiwa is the Founder of Linkmount Global Network and Executive Director at Solicitude for Orphans Children Support Group. He serves as the Chief Executive Officer of AfriCan Bioenergy Corporation. A visionary leader committed to sustainable development, innovation, and building impactful networks. With a strong focus on diplomacy (including commercial diplomacy across Africa), and fostering Global partnerships and Investor Relations. Denzil champions initiatives that empower communities and drive meaningful social and economic impact. I first came across the Chatham House Rule in important discussions among diplomats. These were not the polished conversations you see in press releases. They took place in rooms where one wrong quote could lead to serious problems. The rule is simple. You can share what was said, but not who said it. No names. No attributions. In a world where screenshots and quick reactions are common, this simplicity is very powerful. I have seen the mood change when someone says, “Chatham House Rules apply.” People relax. They start to think rather than just defend their views. Conversations shift from arguing to exploring new ideas, which can lead to better outcomes. A century-old rule for modern problems This rule started in 1927 at Chatham House in London to help diplomats talk openly without causing international issues. Almost a hundred years later, it is still very relevant. Negotiations on big issues like climate change or trade can often feel stiff and rehearsed. But behind closed doors, when Chatham House Rules are in effect, people feel free to share ideas they would not normally record. They express doubts and look for compromises. I have seen old disputes start to resolve once this safe space was created. That is why you find this rule being used where making progress is important, from climate talks to regional conflicts and sensitive economic discussions in Africa, Europe, and the Middle East. How it works in business As CEO of AfriCan Bioenergy Corporation, I use this rule often. When government officials, investors, competitors, and community leaders gather, I usually suggest we follow Chatham House Rules. The difference it makes is immediate. I think of it as the gentle version of a Non-Disclosure Agreement, or NDA. An NDA keeps information safe legally, while Chatham House Rules protect trust. One secures contracts. The other secures conversations. For real teamwork, both are needed. Trust in an age of optics This method is not about keeping secrets. It is about making a space for honest discussion, where people can test ideas and talk about difficult truths without worrying about public criticism. Nowadays, conversation often focuses on how things look and sound online. These pressures can make discussions shallow. Chatham House Rules help bring depth back to conversations and enable real work to take place. A quiet advantage While digital tools can help protect anonymity, trust really comes from culture, not technology. It depends on how meetings are set up and whether people feel safe participating. The Chatham House Rule does not attract attention, and that is why it works. I have seen it resolve stalled talks, close deals, and bring rivals together. As the world becomes more complicated and divided, this quiet approach might be one of our best tools. Real progress often starts in informal spaces, where people can think freely before speaking out in public. One protects the paperwork. The other protects the people. And for real progress, you need both. Discover more: AfriCanBioenergyCorporation | Instagram | LinkedIn | Website Read more from Denzil Tafadzwa Tanyanyiwa Denzil Tafadzwa Tanyanyiwa, Global Strategist | Founder | CEO Denzil T. Tanyanyiwa is a Global Strategist, High Representative for Strategic Partnerships & African Advancement, and CEO of AfriCan Bioenergy Corporation. He is also the Executive Director at the Solicitude for Orphan Children Support Group. Through his work, Denzil champions inclusive development, entrepreneurship, and diplomatic collaboration across Africa and the global South.

  • How Hypnotherapy Supports Mental Health, Emotional Wellbeing, and Lasting Change – A Practical Guide

    Written by Dr. Kapil and Rupali Apshankar, Award-Winning Board-Certified Clinical Hypnotists | Board-Certified Coaches Dr. Kapil and Rupali Apshankar are international bestselling authors and globally respected mentors in business, life, and relationship success. As the founders of Blissvana, a premier personal development and success studio, they have dedicated their lives to empowering others. Their proven coaching methodologies have consistently delivered exceptional results across all areas of life, from personal growth to professional achievement. Many people who explore hypnosis and hypnotherapy are not looking for answers anymore. They already understand their mental health patterns, yet understanding a pattern is not the same as changing it. They know what triggers their anxiety. They recognize when stress, burnout, or emotional overwhelm is building. They may even be able to trace these patterns back to earlier experiences. What they struggle with is not insight. It is what happens in the moment. They know they are safe, yet their body reacts as if they are not. They know a situation is manageable, yet their emotions surge or shut down. They tell themselves to calm down, but their system does not listen. This gap between understanding and experience is where many people feel stuck. Hypnotherapy supports mental health not by offering more explanations, but by working with the part of the system that actually governs emotional response. It helps the nervous system learn, through experience, that new ways of responding are possible. This is where lasting change begins. Mental health as learned patterns, not personal failure Many mental health challenges can be understood as learned responses rather than permanent conditions. Anxiety often reflects a nervous system that learned to stay alert for long periods of time. Depression can reflect a system that learned to shut down to conserve energy. Emotional reactivity often develops when early environments required quick emotional responses for safety or connection. These responses were adaptive once. The problem is that the nervous system does not automatically update them when circumstances change. Hypnotherapy helps by creating the conditions in which new responses can be learned safely, without forcing change or re-experiencing distress. What hypnotherapy actually does (in plain language) Hypnotherapy does not put someone into an altered or unconscious state. It works by guiding attention into a focused, calm, and receptive mode where the nervous system is no longer scanning for threat. In this state, the body settles, the breath slows, and emotional responses soften enough to be observed rather than reacted to. This matters because most mental health challenges are reinforced during moments of stress. When the nervous system feels overwhelmed, it defaults to familiar patterns, even when those patterns are no longer helpful. Insight alone rarely interrupts this process. Hypnotherapy creates a learning environment. It allows the system to experience emotional safety while revisiting thoughts, memories, or situations that would normally trigger anxiety, shutdown, or reactivity. New associations are formed not through force, but through calm repetition. In practical terms, hypnotherapy helps people recognize internal cues earlier. They begin to notice subtle shifts in sensation, emotion, or attention before reactions escalate. This awareness creates choice. Over time, the nervous system learns that it can stay present during discomfort without needing to brace, escape, or collapse. Emotional responses become more flexible. Recovery becomes faster. What changes is not personality or memory, but response capacity. People often describe feeling more steady, less reactive, and more able to pause before responding. These shifts may feel subtle at first, but they accumulate into meaningful change. Hypnotherapy supports mental health by helping the system learn new ways of responding to familiar situations. This is why the effects are often noticed not during sessions, but in everyday moments where old reactions no longer dominate. How hypnotherapy supports emotional regulation In practical terms, hypnotherapy supports mental health by helping people experience emotions without being overtaken by them. During sessions, clients learn what it feels like to remain present while emotions move through the body. The nervous system learns that it does not need to escalate, shut down, or dissociate in order to cope. Over time, this capacity carries into daily life. Emotional responses soften. Recovery time shortens. People begin responding rather than reacting. This is not suppression. It is regulation. Real-life situations where hypnotherapy helps Example 1: Anxiety that appears without warning One client described feeling calm most of the time, yet experiencing sudden anxiety with no obvious trigger. Intellectually, they understood there was no danger. Their body did not agree. Through hypnotherapy, the focus was not on eliminating anxiety, but on helping the nervous system experience calm while recalling similar situations. Over time, the body learned that these moments were not threatening. The anxiety did not disappear overnight, but it became quieter, shorter, and far less disruptive. Example 2: Emotional overwhelm despite self-awareness Another client had spent years in self-development work and could clearly articulate their emotional patterns. Still, when conflict arose, they became overwhelmed and shut down. Hypnotherapy sessions focused on building internal safety first. Once regulation was established, emotional triggers were revisited gently, without reliving distress. As the nervous system learned new responses, the client noticed they could stay present during difficult conversations instead of withdrawing. Example 3: Burnout and chronic stress A third client felt constantly exhausted despite loving their work. Rest did not seem to restore energy, and stress felt ever-present. Hypnotherapy helped by allowing the nervous system to experience deep rest without collapse. Over time, the body learned the difference between rest and shutdown. Energy gradually returned, not because responsibilities changed, but because the system stopped operating in survival mode. How to use hypnotherapy daily for mental health and emotional wellbeing Hypnotherapy is often misunderstood as something that only works during a session. In reality, its greatest value comes from how it supports daily regulation. Used consistently, ideally on a daily basis, hypnotherapy helps train the nervous system to recognize safety, recover from stress more quickly, and respond to emotional triggers with less intensity. This does not require deep trance or long sessions. It requires consistency and intention. One practical way hypnotherapy supports daily mental health is by helping people recognize early signs of emotional escalation. Through repeated hypnotic states, clients become more aware of subtle shifts in their body, breath, and attention. This awareness makes it easier to intervene early, before overwhelm takes over. Another practical application is emotional containment. Hypnotherapy teaches the system how to experience emotion without being flooded by it. In daily life, this often shows up as the ability to pause, breathe, and stay present during moments that previously felt destabilizing. Hypnotherapy can also be used to reinforce internal safety. Brief self-hypnosis practices help the nervous system reset after stress, workdays, or emotionally charged interactions. Over time, the system learns that rest and regulation are accessible, not rare. Importantly, daily use of hypnotherapy is not about fixing emotions or eliminating difficult feelings. It is about building a stable internal environment where emotions can move through without taking control. When used this way, hypnotherapy becomes a form of mental hygiene, supporting emotional wellbeing in the same way sleep, movement, and nourishment support physical health. What makes change last Lasting change does not come from insight alone. It comes from repeated experiences of regulation. The nervous system learns through exposure and repetition. When hypnotherapy provides consistent experiences of calm, safety, and emotional balance, those states begin to feel familiar rather than exceptional. This is why change often feels gradual rather than dramatic. Emotional reactions soften. Recovery time shortens. The space between trigger and response widens. Another factor that supports lasting change is integration. What happens between sessions matters more than what happens during them. When people practice small moments of regulation in daily life, the system begins to generalize what it learned in hypnosis. Consistency also builds trust. Each time the system experiences stress and successfully returns to balance, confidence grows. This confidence is not intellectual. It is embodied. Over time, mental health shifts from something that feels fragile or reactive to something that feels more stable and resilient. Change lasts because it is learned, not forced. When the subconscious and nervous system learn safety, clarity, and balance, emotional wellbeing becomes something that can be lived, not managed. If this approach feels quieter and more sustainable than how you have engaged with mental health in the past, it may be worth exploring further. Connect with Kapil and Rupali If this article has opened something within you, trust that feeling. It is simply your inner self asking for a little more space to breathe and a little more compassion as you grow into a new chapter of your life. You may also enjoy our Color and Affirm book series . These books blend soothing illustrations with simple affirmations to encourage self-love, calm, and creativity. They make thoughtful gifts for anyone seeking peace or personal reflection. At Blissvana , we believe every person is an artist of their own life. Our programs and sessions are designed to help you shape your inner world with intention, clarity, and love. If you feel called to explore this work more deeply, we invite you to join us for a gentle, no-pressure conversation where we can explore what your next step may be . Say yes to healing with compassion. Say yes to emotional clarity. Say yes to a more blissful way of living. Follow us on LinkedIn , Instagram , Facebook , and visit our website for more info! Read more from Dr. Kapil and Rupali Apshankar Dr. Kapil and Rupali Apshankar, Award-Winning Board-Certified Clinical Hypnotists | Board-Certified Coaches Dr. Kapil and Rupali Apshankar are international bestselling authors and globally respected mentors in business, life, and relationship success. As the founders of Blissvana, a premier personal development and success studio, they have dedicated their lives to empowering others. Their proven coaching methodologies have consistently delivered exceptional results across all areas of life, from personal growth to professional achievement. With a unique blend of clinical hypnosis, coaching, and holistic personal development, Kapil and Rupali have transformed the lives of thousands worldwide. Their signature programs are designed to help individuals unlock their fullest potential, overcome limiting beliefs, and achieve sustainable success in every facet of life. Through Blissvana, they offer workshops, retreats, and one-on-one coaching that provide their clients with the tools and strategies to thrive in today’s complex, fast-paced world.

  • From Insight to Wonder – Aha Moments, Émerveillement, and the Limits of Artificial Intelligence

    Written by Dragana Favre, Psychiatrist and Jungian Psychotherapist Dr. Dragana Favre is a psychiatrist, psychotherapist, and seeker of the human psyche's mysteries. With a medical degree and extensive neuroscience education from prestigious institutions like the Max Planck Institute and Instituto de Neurociencias, she's a seasoned expert. Human cognition is often described through moments of sudden clarity, the instant when a solution appears, a pattern resolves, or a problem “clicks.” This phenomenon is commonly referred to as the Aha moment, a flash of insight that reorganizes perception and understanding. In contemporary discussions of artificial intelligence, especially in machine learning communities, similar language is increasingly used. Terms such as grokking describe abrupt transitions in model performance, where an artificial system appears to “suddenly understand” a task after extended training. Yet human experience encompasses another mode of cognition that is fundamentally different from insight, émerveillement, a French term connoting wonder, enchantment, and existential astonishment. Unlike the Aha moment, émerveillement does not resolve uncertainty into clarity, instead, it deepens mystery and opens the subject to meaning beyond instrumental understanding. Here, I argue that while AI systems can increasingly mimic the structural features of the Aha moment, émerveillement remains inaccessible to them. I propose that the distinction lies not in intelligence per se, but in subjectivity, embodiment, and symbolic participation in the world. AI can approximate insight as optimization, but wonder presupposes a being for whom the world matters. The aha moment: Insight as cognitive reorganization The Aha moment has been extensively studied in cognitive psychology, particularly within Gestalt traditions. Köhler’s early experiments with chimpanzees demonstrated that insight arises not from gradual trial and error learning, but from a sudden restructuring of the perceptual field.[7] Later research confirmed that insight involves a rapid reconfiguration of mental representations, often accompanied by affective markers such as surprise and pleasure.[8] From a Jungian perspective, insight can be understood as a moment when unconscious material breaks into consciousness in a coherent form. Jung described such moments as manifestations of the transcendent function, which mediates between conscious and unconscious contents to produce a new synthesis.[6] The Aha moment, in this sense, is not merely problem-solving but psychic integration. However, even in Jung’s framework, insight remains goal-directed. It resolves tension by producing meaning that can be assimilated into the ego’s worldview. In machine learning, grokking refers to a phenomenon where models trained on algorithmic tasks show a sudden jump from poor generalization to near-perfect performance after prolonged training.[10] Superficially, this resembles human insight, long confusion followed by sudden clarity. Yet this resemblance is structural rather than experiential. AI systems do not experience confusion or understanding. Grokking is better described as a phase transition in parameter space, where internal representations align with the task’s underlying structure. The “Aha” is attributed by observers, not lived by the system. From a philosophical standpoint, this distinction echoes Searle’s (1980) Chinese Room argument. Syntactic manipulation can mimic semantic understanding without genuine comprehension. AI produces correct outputs, but the meaning of those outputs exists only for human interpreters. Émerveillement: Wonder beyond resolution Wonder has long been recognized as foundational to philosophy. Aristotle famously claimed that philosophy begins in thaumazein, astonishment at the existence and order of the world (Aristotle, trans. 1998). Unlike insight, wonder does not close a question, it opens one. Modern philosophers such as Heidegger emphasized that wonder is not a cognitive failure awaiting resolution, but an ontological mood that discloses Being itself.[3] Wonder suspends instrumental reasoning and places the subject in a receptive, vulnerable relation to the world. Émerveillement thus resists optimization. It is not about solving, but about dwelling. In Jungian psychology, wonder is closely linked to encounters with the numinosum, experiences charged with awe, fascination, and terror that exceed rational comprehension.[5] These experiences are symbolic, not informational. They transform the individual not by providing answers, but by reorienting meaning. Unlike the Aha moment, which strengthens ego mastery, émerveillement often destabilizes the ego. It confronts the subject with archetypal patterns that cannot be reduced to utility or prediction. AI systems lack access to this symbolic dimension. They manipulate signs but do not participate in symbols as lived realities. As Jung emphasized, symbols are not merely representations, they are psychic events. Max Weber famously described modernity as characterized by Entzauberung, the disenchantment of the world.[12] Scientific rationality replaces myth, mystery, and sacred meaning with calculability and control. AI represents an intensification of this process. Predictive systems extend rationalization into domains once governed by intuition, art, or chance. The Aha moment aligns well with this trajectory, insight produces control. Émerveillement, by contrast, resists disenchantment. It emerges in moments where calculation fails or is irrelevant, art, nature, love, death. Sociologically, wonder is relational and cultural, embedded in shared narratives and existential stakes. AI, as a product of rationalization, cannot escape the logic that created it. Contemporary philosophers of technology emphasize embodiment as central to human cognition.[9] [2] Humans encounter the world through fragile, finite bodies that can suffer, age, and die. Wonder arises precisely because existence is at stake. AI systems have no mortality, no vulnerability, no horizon of loss. They do not encounter the world, they process data about it. Without existential exposure, there can be no genuine astonishment. Even advanced multimodal systems that simulate perception do not care about what they perceive. Émerveillement presupposes care. AI excels at moments that resemble insight because they align with optimization and representation learning. Wonder, however, belongs to a different ontological category. The danger is not that AI will become conscious in a human-like way, but that humans may increasingly model themselves after AI, valuing only insight, efficiency, and problem-solving, while neglecting wonder. Jung warned that technological overidentification with rationality leads to psychic imbalance.[4] Preserving émerveillement is thus not a technical challenge but a cultural and ethical one. It requires acknowledging that not all intelligence is computational, and not all meaning is solvable. The Aha moment and émerveillement represent two fundamentally different modes of human cognition. The former reorganizes knowledge, the latter transforms being. Artificial intelligence can convincingly simulate insight because insight, stripped of subjectivity, reduces to pattern alignment. Wonder, however, depends on embodiment, finitude, symbolism, and existential risk, conditions AI does not and cannot share. Understanding this distinction clarifies both the power and the limits of AI. More importantly, it reminds us that what is most human may not lie in intelligence alone, but in our capacity to be astonished by a world that exceeds us. Follow me on LinkedIn , and visit my website  for more info! Read more from Dragana Favre Dragana Favre, Psychiatrist and Jungian Psychotherapist Dr. Dragana Favre is a psychiatrist, psychotherapist, and seeker of the human psyche's mysteries. With a medical degree and extensive neuroscience education from prestigious institutions like the Max Planck Institute and Instituto de Neurociencias, she's a seasoned expert. Her unique approach combines Jungian psychotherapy, EMDR, and dream interpretation, guiding patients towards self-discovery and healing. Beyond her profession, Dr. Favre is passionate about science fiction, nature, and cosmology. Her ex-Yugoslav roots in the small town of Kikinda offer a rich backdrop to her life's journey. She is dedicated to helping people find their true selves, much like an alchemist turning lead into gold. References: [1] Aristotle. (1998). Metaphysics (H. Tredennick & G. C. Armstrong, Trans.). Harvard University Press. [2] Dreyfus, H. L. (1992). What computers still can’t do: A critique of artificial reason. MIT Press. [3] Heidegger, M. (1962). Being and time (J. Macquarrie & E. Robinson, Trans.). Harper & Row. (Original work published 1927) [4] Jung, C. G. (1968). The symbolic life (Collected Works, Vol. 18). Princeton University Press. (Original work published 1959) [5] Jung, C. G. (1969). Psychology and religion: West and East (Collected Works, Vol. 11). Princeton University Press. (Original work published 1938) [6] Jung, C. G. (1969). The transcendent function (Collected Works, Vol. 8). Princeton University Press. (Original work published 1957) [7] Köhler, W. (1925). The mentality of apes. Harcourt, Brace. [8] Kounios, J., & Beeman, M. (2014). The cognitive neuroscience of insight. Annual Review of Psychology, 65, 71–93. [9] Merleau-Ponty, M. (2012). Phenomenology of perception (D. A. Landes, Trans.). Routledge. (Original work published 1945) [10] Power, A., et al. (2022). Grokking: Generalization beyond overfitting on small algorithmic datasets. arXiv preprint arXiv:2201.02177. [11] Searle, J. R. (1980). Minds, brains, and programs. Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 3(3), 417–457. [12] Weber, M. (1946). Science as a vocation. In H. H. Gerth & C. W. Mills (Eds.), From Max Weber: Essays in sociology (pp. 129–156). Oxford University Press. (Original work published 1919)

  • The Conflict Trap – Why We React, What Triggers Us, and How to Respond with Clarity

    Written by Nashay Lowe, Conflict Transformation Scholar-Practitioner Dr. Nashay Lowe is known for her work in conflict management and qualitative social science research. She is the founder of Lowe Insights Consulting, an orator, the author of several publications (including thought pieces and peer-reviewed articles), and host of The Resolution Room podcast. We all like to believe we handle conflict with logic. But in reality, most of us react long before we realize why. Behind every sharp reply, silent withdrawal, or feeling of defensiveness lies a deeper story waiting to be understood. This article explores what’s happening beneath those moments and what they’re quietly costing us. What makes us react? Conflict is one of the most fundamental human experiences, yet when tension rises, many of us default to automatic, protective patterns like anger, withdrawing, over explaining, or trying to “fix” the situation. These reactions often feel outside of our control, but they are not random. They are learned, patterned responses shaped by identity, context, and the social and psychological ways we interpret threats to our safety, dignity, or belonging. The critical difference between reacting and responding is a moment of intentional space. A reaction is fast, emotional, and protective, often fueled by the amygdala’s quick activation. However, what we perceive as a threat is deeply shaped by experience, culture, and power dynamics. A response, conversely, is intentional, grounded, and aligned with our values. As Viktor Frankl famously noted, “Between stimulus and response there is a space. In that space is our power to choose our response. In our response lies our growth and our freedom.” That space is where conflict management shifts to transformation. What triggers us Triggers are often rooted in deeper needs, the need to feel respected, valued, understood, or in control of our own story. A single phrase, gesture, or assumption can activate old emotional associations. Researchers like John Gottman highlight that conflict escalates fastest when people feel unheard or misinterpreted. Triggers in conflict situations indicate deeper, unresolved issues, like things left unsaid or aspects that feel vulnerable or unprotected. These are often not related to the immediate scenario but have been internalized over time to become core beliefs. When we operate from this standpoint, we are no longer reacting solely to what was said, but to what that perceived slight means about us. The critical intervention is to take a deliberate step back, pause between the stimulus and response, and name your emotional triggers. By bringing these subconscious interpretations into conscious awareness, you begin to dismantle their power. Informed reflection is essential for personal control. It shifts us from automatic, defensive emotional reactions to proactive, constructive participation. Why old patterns resurface Our early environments, including families, schools, community norms, and even past workplaces, acted as primary training grounds, teaching us what conflict meant and how to survive it. These survival strategies, repeated over time, become automatic, unconscious scripts. We no longer consciously decide to react, the reaction simply happens. In psychology, this phenomenon is called schema activation. A schema is a mental framework, a way of organizing and interpreting information. When a current situation, like a critical tone, a challenging demand, or a familiar facial expression, contains elements that feel similar to a past threat or conflict, even a mild one, the old framework resurfaces. The brain, prioritizing speed and perceived safety, instantly pulls the old script. We find ourselves saying or doing things that feel out of our control, as if they were driven by a ghost from the past. The single most powerful step toward changing these patterns is noticing when we’re replaying the past. This act of observation, pausing before reacting, and asking, “Is this reaction about this moment, or is it an echo of an old story?” is the key to interrupting the automatic script and choosing a response that is aligned with our evolved values, needs, and goals. It is the moment where choice re-enters the equation. How stress distorts judgment High stress impairs judgment by suppressing the prefrontal cortex, the brain’s center for reasoning and empathy. This leads us to interpret neutral comments harshly, read simple observations as attacks, and develop an intentionality bias, assuming the other person’s actions are deliberate attempts to hurt us. This defensive mindset, driven by a need for self-protection, prioritizes being “right” over achieving understanding. Everything is filtered through fear rather than curiosity, making true resolution impossible. The cycle is broken by regulating stress, which restores clarity and allows the crucial shift from asking, “How do I defend myself?” to genuinely inquiring, “What is this person trying to communicate?” Why conflict escalates Conflict rarely escalates because of the issue itself. It escalates because of the emotional reactions around the issue. Psychologist Roy Baumeister’s research on “bad is stronger than good” explains why negative cues, such as tone, posture, and tension, hit harder than positive ones. When one person becomes reactive, the other person’s nervous system responds in kind. Before long, the conversation isn’t about the problem anymore. It’s about the fear beneath it. Escalation is a feedback loop of unregulated reactions. Breaking the loop starts with one person choosing calm. What can we do differently? How to rewrite reactive habits Changing deep-seated conflict patterns is a journey built on consistent practice, not perfection. New, productive habits are primarily cultivated through repetition, which reinforces healthier behaviors and open-minded curiosity. This inquisitive stance allows us to pause before an automatic reaction and ask, “What is truly happening here? What is my underlying need? What is the other person’s perspective?” This represents a crucial shift from blame to understanding. Crucially, this process requires self-compassion, not self-criticism. Self-criticism is counterproductive, generating shame and anxiety that trigger the very reactive patterns we aim to change. Instead of a critical voice that says, “I always mess this up,” replace it with a compassionate, objective one, “What can I learn from this, and what will I try differently next time?” This transforms a setback into a data point for growth, paving the way for sustained, healthy change. Building proactive capacity How to move from reaction to proaction True resilience and effective conflict resolution are built on proaction, a continuous practice of strengthening our internal resources long before a tense moment arises. This preparatory work, emotional regulation, self-awareness, and clarity, collectively widens our “window of tolerance,” the optimal zone of arousal where we can think clearly, regulate emotions, and access complex problem-solving skills. When conflict or stress pushes us outside this window, into hyperarousal like anger, or hypoarousal like shutdown, our capacity for constructive dialogue is lost. Cultivating this proactive foundation allows us to remain calm and available for productive engagement, transforming conflict into an opportunity for understanding and growth. Moving forward together Conflict will always surface in human relationships, but the way we meet those moments can change everything. For readers interested in strengthening those early moments, the RESOLVE Workshop Program offers a simple, research-informed framework that helps teams recognize these signals early and respond with steadiness rather than urgency. Those who prefer to explore these themes through conversation may appreciate The Resolution Room  podcast, where each episode looks beneath the surface of real-life tensions and examines how ordinary moments of friction can become opportunities for connection and insight. Remember, small shifts often lead to larger transformations. Follow me on  Instagram , LinkedIn ,  and visit my website  for more info! Read more from Nashay Lowe Nashay Lowe, Conflict Transformation Scholar-Practitioner Dr. Nashay Lowe is a leader in conflict transformation, leadership development, and organizational culture. From an early age, she was drawn to understanding and complex problem-solving. This calling inspired her to create practical frameworks and people-centered approaches that move conversations from breakdown to breakthrough. Through Lowe Insights Consulting and The Resolution Room podcast, she lives out her mission to help the institutions shaping our daily lives turn conflict into a catalyst for change, because when our systems work better, so do our communities.

  • Our Community Has a Voice, It Feels Like Home

    Written by Carlo Cecchetti, Relational Landscape Facilitator and Coach Carlo Cecchetti facilitates relational natural landscaping resonant to the Earth's consciousness and resources. Founder of integralgardens.com , Carlos's work expresses through the human body, relational energetic containers and systemic landscape to channel energies of belonging. How would you like to be part of a community that is a living organism at one with Earth consciousness and life force? In this article, I am highlighting the services I provide to create this community as a resource and enabler. Foundation first We humans were born with the capacity to access through our body Earth energy and dimension, among other dimensions. This allows each human to directly access Earth consciousness, life force, native wisdom, and resources, and to restore our capacity to trust our own body intuition to know deep inside what is going on at local and planetary levels, and beyond. Separation from the Earth dimension has a direct influence on fear, loneliness, feelings of scarcity, and a lack of trust in one’s own feelings, among others. The individual liberation and empowerment that comes from accessing collective dimensions is a paradox for the logical mind, which tries to do everything alone. Single plants standing on their own roots create the garden together. In my coaching and facilitating practice, which I describe as relational resonant landscaping, whether for individual, family, organisational, or community relationships, I integrate access to Earth resonance through the body when working with clients’ challenges around belonging and freedom, health, purpose, and creativity. Access to energies of belonging through bespoke landscape Although I work with humans only, I also offer a service of creating bespoke landscape design, for indoor or outdoor spaces, initiated to be a physical bridge and anchor for people to channel their own specific energies of belonging through their body. This service requires prior work with the client to explore challenges and restore flow in their own energetic field of belonging, the inner landscape whose members they are connected to and part of at any moment. Bespoke landscape design can include garden colour schemes to channel resonance to the family soul. White roses to remember who belongs. High shade trees for protection. A fountain with written words to connect to the garden soul and welcome guests. Natural elements in offices to channel specific organisational purpose energies. Shopping centres can resonate with wellbeing and business purpose energies through natural images, sentences, and landscape elements. Working with community stakeholders and field Working in service of community spaces starts with community stakeholders expressing their wish to explore challenges, solutions, and possibilities connected to their needs and desires. This allows energetic access to the community’s field of belonging and exploration of what is emergent, such as the voice of the land, resistance and possibilities, evolving tradition, heritage and legacy, resources, and unique shared purpose. When needed, this work can honour and release unresolved events from the past that are still holding people back today, including abandoned buildings and public spaces people no longer visit or invest in. Access, possibilities, co-creation and vision The core restoration is to Earth wisdom, resources, and opportunities for people’s agency. Each individual can find personal and collective answers and support through their body. Yoga practitioners are often already resonant. It is also possible to generate written sentences, images, and QR codes to facilitate inner connection for people with reduced body sensitivity. Examples of landscape elements include access to energies connected to shared community purpose, surrender, being seen, Earth energy and dimension, ancestral support, safety, and strength. These can take many forms, from pyramids to circles, integral journalism, benches for grief and loneliness, spaces to transform shame, expand individuation, and work with tension and fear, land of origin and land of immigration, harmonising hubs for interconnection and exchange, and tapping into Earth energy for large scale transformation. Other elements may include community catalysts, voice, sacred and temple spaces, returning home, organisational Earth resonance, life force mergers, deep listening, play, being held, creativity and shapeshifting, leadership spaces, places where people can ask for a message, mystery and journey portals, practitioner spaces at one with the Earth, creative voids, spaces for holding creative tension and transforming conflict, trauma processing and coregulation, spaces for creative fire and the arts, and storytelling. Heartbeats can synchronise with the Earth. Imagination is the limit. A fundamental feature of this community is the availability of a space as an Earth buffer where people can return burdens they carry, conscious or unconscious, regardless of time and space, without hurting or excluding anybody. This movement directly enables the restoration of individual strength and agency, sustains transformation at scale, increases interdependence, and reduces codependency. Existing landscape elements can be initiated and transformed into specific energy channels, or new landscape elements can be added to existing environments. To reduce vandalism, universal access points such as ancestral support can be created, allowing individuals to receive their own specific ancestral energy while contributing to the shared community purpose. It is also possible to create universal community access points that people can use to work with any of these possibilities and beyond, including access to online information for inspiration, tutorials, and guidance. By default, the community energetic field  is accessible by anybody from any location. Self-organising ecosystem at one with the Earth As people cocreate and evolve, the overall ecosystem self-organises and resonates with the community’s evolving energies of belonging. Social coherence increases through its energetic scaffolding for shared responsibilities and possibilities, allowing it to hold and sustain the growing energies required for today’s uncertain times and emerging opportunities. Reading this article, are you curious to discover the emergent possibilities of your own resonant community, being held at one with the Earth? Reach out to book a free discovery call to find out more. Follow me on Facebook , LinkedIn , and visit my website for more info! Read more from Carlo Cecchetti Carlo Cecchetti, Relational Landscape Facilitator and Coach Carlo Cecchetti specializes in human relational abilities resonant to the Earth's consciousness and resources. Born in a family of landscape designers, his personal development led him to help people remember themselves Being Held At One with the Earth. Founder of Integralgardens.com , Carlo's work delivers through the human body, relational containers and bespoke systemic landscape to anchor and channel unique energies of belonging.

  • This Midlife Breakdown You’re Living? It’s the Threshold Before Your Becoming

    Written by Claudia Scalisi, Renaissance Embodiment Coach Claudia Scalisi is a visionary educator and modern matriarch, founder of a global movement redefining womanhood through ritual, story, and embodied wisdom. She teaches that matriarchy begins with initiation – a conscious passage through menopause that births sovereignty. Midlife women are not broken – we are becoming. Menopause is initiation into sovereignty, sensuality, and legacy. In Childless Menopause –  Embodying the Matriarch Beyond Biology , I invited women to see rupture as initiation. Here, we continue that movement together, exploring how sovereignty, sensuality, and legacy become the rise of embodied matriarchy. Midlife often arrives with ruptures we were never prepared to meet – grief, the fading of recognition, for some of us, childlessness, the shedding of hair, the loss of identity, and the quiet conditioning that tells us our beauty and worth are fading. For years, I believed these ruptures marked a decline, menopause included. That’s the story mainstream culture has handed us, as if being a full-spectrum human is something to fear. What I now understand is that rupture is not an ending, it is a threshold. Each fracture in the story of womanhood carries a hidden code, a doorway into the woman we incarnated to become through reclaiming sovereignty, sensuality, and legacy. For me, these ruptures were intensified by what I later recognised as CPTSD, Complex Post Traumatic Stress Disorder, the layering of unresolved trauma responses retriggered by hormonal shifts in midlife. When old wounds collide with neurochemical changes of perimenopause, survival mode feels relentless.  In the article Addressing CPTSD in Midlife , The CPTS Foundation notes, ‘hormonal shifts in midlife can amplify trauma responses, retriggering old wounds and intensifying the sense of rupture.’ My lived experience echoes this research, but it also shows that thresholds can become portals into radiance. I name this here not as a clinical diagnosis, but as a lived experience, the way midlife can magnify what has been buried, making the descent feel heavier than we imagined.  And yet, my journey shows that thresholds can become portals into radiance. Rupture can be rewritten as initiation, and midlife as coronation. The rise we embody – Sovereignty, sensuality, and legacy In my first article, rupture was the descent. Here, I name the rise. Through rupture, I discovered that survival mode was not sustainable for a fully realised life. I wanted more for myself than to simply go through ‘surviving’ it. What carried me into radiance were three living pathways I still walk today – Sovereignty, Sensuality, and Legacy. These are not abstract ideals, they are embodied practices that restore rhythm, intimacy, and creativity. Together, they form the lens of Embodied Matriarchy, a way of living as initiation rather than decline. Let me take you a little further into this journey. Sovereignty in midlife – Rhythm and boundaries Rupture taught me agency. When the body changes and cultural narratives silence us, entrusting our wellbeing to clinical specialists can feel safer, after all, it’s what we’ve been taught to do, and we are fortunate to have access to extraordinary research and medicine. Yet, in our progressive culture, something essential has been dismissed, the wisdom of ancient practices and the sacredness of the body itself. The female body does not move in straight lines, it spirals its way through transitions, carrying memory, rhythm, and story. Sovereignty begins when we give ourselves permission to trust this spiral, to feel and metabolise our emotional landscape rather than outsource it entirely. It is the reclamation of rhythm, choosing boundaries that honour our nervous system, our energy, and our truth. As writer Simone Niles  describes, menopause is a “power stage” of sovereignty and creative rebirth, affirming that agency and rhythm are central to midlife leadership. Sovereignty is not about control, it is about listening, attuning, and reclaiming the authority of our own body as sacred. Sensuality – Pleasure as repair The shedding of hair, the fading of the youthful mirror, and the silence around intimacy fractured my relationship with beauty and desire. For a time, I believed sensuality had abandoned me. So much of my sexual energy had been poured into the task of trying to conceive unsuccessfully that intimacy became transactional, stripped of its mystery. When I later discovered that what I thought were conception losses were in fact the early signs of menopause, I recognised how far I had travelled from the embodied, magnetic woman I once was. I had met my husband while immersed in Tantric practices, deeply attuned to my body’s rhythms. How, then, did I not know what was happening? And would I ever feel that depth of connection again? Yet within rupture, I remembered that sensuality is not goal-oriented, it is repair. Pleasure became medicine. Combined with my growing sovereignty, even the smallest steps toward recovering bliss restored confidence, soothed my nervous system, and reminded me that joy is not indulgence, but initiation. In midlife, pleasure is not frivolous, it is profound physiological repair, a way of re-patterning the body toward safety and self-agency. Research on vagus nerve activation  affirms this truth, when the nervous system is tended, pleasure and connection return as natural states of being. Sensuality, then, is not about reclaiming desirability in the eyes of others, it is about reclaiming intimacy with ourselves. It is the invitation to soften, to feel, and to allow joy to become the portal into radiance. Legacy – Creative and cultural stewardship Realising my future would be without birthing children ruptured the narrative of the legacy I had inherited. For so long, legacy was defined by reproduction, by lineage through blood. Within the wellness spaces I once belonged to, women gathered in moon ceremonies, fertility workshops, and conscious birthing practices. I longed to rest in a circle with my spiritual community, yet the red-hot shame of jealousy and the disorientation of my new reality diverted me from participating further.  My rupture came with an isolation that pulled me inward. Leaning on creative expression, I held both death and rebirthing ceremonies for myself at home, guided my self-led yoga practice, and ventured into the bushland alone to speak with God on countless occasions.  Through this descent, rupture revealed a deeper truth, legacy is not bound to biology. Steeped in practice, I was giving birth to a new vision and a new version of myself. I came to understand that legacy is creativity, cultural stewardship, and the stories we birth into the world. Every ritual, every piece of writing, every act of reclamation becomes lineage. Legacy is not only what we leave behind, but it is also what we embody now, in the choices we make, the boundaries we honour, and the cultural stories we reshape. As Gabriella Espinosa  reminds us, midlife is a time to birth new purpose and cultural leadership. Legacy is not the shadow of what was lost, it is the living architecture of who we are becoming. To claim legacy in midlife is to recognise that our presence itself is generative. We are authors of culture, carriers of wisdom, and stewards of stories that ripple far beyond us. If you are leaning in, know this, rupture is not the end of your story, it is the initiation into your authentic radiance. Sovereignty, sensuality, and legacy are not abstract ideals, they are embodied practices that transform thresholds into power. For women ready to move from rupture into radiance, The Reconnection Journey is the living container where these practices become rhythm. It is where sovereignty is reclaimed, sensuality is restored, and legacy is rehearsed together. Rupture is the doorway. Radiance is the path. TRJ is the journey. I invite you to walk with me on  Facebook ,  LinkedIn,  and  Instagram   and visit my  website , where I share living practices for women reclaiming rhythm, pleasure, and sovereignty, not as theory, but as daily ceremony. Read more from Claudia Scalisi Claudia Scalisi, Renaissance Embodiment Coach Claudia Scalisi is a visionary educator and modern matriarch, founder of a global movement redefining womanhood through ritual, story, and embodied wisdom. Her journey through early onset menopause and unrealised motherhood became the crucible for her work, reframing grief as a portal into wisdom. Through courses like The Reconnection Journey, she guides midlife women to practice self‑attunement, reclaim pleasure, and rise into sovereignty.

  • Mature Athletes – Your Fitness and Sports Skills Programs are at War and Here’s the Peace Plan

    Written by Dan Taylor, MS, CSCS, 50+ Fitness and Nutrition Expert Dan's exercise Physiology/Sports Nutrition education, NSCA Strength and Conditioning background, and work with a wide variety of active older adults since 1998 make him the ideal guide to help navigate the muddy waters of optimal eating and training strategies for the over-50 athlete and fitness seeker. Most training plans for over 50 athletes fail for one simple reason: they pit fitness and sports skills against each other instead of aligning them. This is the most common and most damaging, albeit avoidable, factor in the programs of many older fitness practitioners. But how do you avoid it? After all, you only have so much time during the week and want to maximize both your conditioning and your sports performance capacity. Wrong. You want to optimize both, and this is critically important in relation to each other. Keep reading to learn how. Problem: Both your fitness foundation maintenance and sports skills training draw water from the same well Sports skills training and foundational fitness capacities (strength, endurance, mobility, balance, coordination, directional precision, explosive power, deceleration capacity, core stability, sprint, and acute recovery capabilities) require similar resources. And our well gets drier with each passing year (sorry, the truth hurts, I know). So, clearly, more trips to the well are not the answer. Neither is filling up multiple buckets each time you go. The solution is to both ration your “water” for the most important and urgent needs, while simultaneously developing a sustainable system to keep the main water supply to the well renewing and as productive as possible for as long as possible.  Redundant training effects All fitness capacities have points of diminishing returns for optimal cultivation. Each of the above-mentioned abilities has its own, and they have collective points of diminishing returns. The unfortunate thing with older athletes is that, although we rarely require incentive or motivation to hit the gym or the playing field, we’re commonly ill-equipped to make objective evaluations about where that point is . Often, we overestimate what we should be doing, and we succumb to blind spots of familiar training patterns that worsen the problem. Incomplete muscle stress recovery, excess aerobic loading (both acute and chronic), and inadequate post-workout (WO) recovery are epidemic in our community. Competing training effects What’s commonly known in hybrid athlete circles (and is a more consequential problem for older athletes) as the “interference effect” refers to any combination of elements for which maximizing one ability/skill makes the other one suffer. This is almost certain to happen when the collective points of diminishing returns collide. Running and lifting weights for the lower body are classic examples. Surfing the morning after a three-hour hike the previous afternoon would be another such convergence. Isolating the individual training templates and calculating the optimal combination and timing requires expertise, an elegant touch, and an open mind regarding conservatism when experimenting with different protocols. Age related diminishing tolerance of redundant and competing effects Hormonal changes, durability and elasticity of muscle/tendon tissue, the robustness of other connective tissue (primarily ligaments and cartilage), and the need for improved nutrition and recovery habits all factor into the requirement for the 50+ athlete to  shift her/his focus from competition to long-term resilience . A severe acute or nagging chronic injury will not be the first warning that the shift is due, but either will ratchet up the importance dramatically if you’re paying attention and are open to the change. The mobility and strength paradox As most aging athletes discover over the years, we slowly move across the continuum of limber-to-stiff until we’re far less vintage Jim Carrey and more the Tin Man squeaking for the oil can. At least as disconcerting is that we either lose a significant amount of strength and muscle volume or fight like crazy to retain as much as possible. For the latter group (likely your situation if you’re reading this), joints and connective tissue become more rigid and movement becomes more restrictive, sometimes as much a result of years of resistance training as the normal aging process. Optimizing both to avoid the conflicting effects takes careful programming and relentless adherence to it. Most mature athletes struggle with doing this. Optimal pre training requirements for both conditioning and sports skills work Endurance and sprint training are performed better when the muscles are not in an immediate post-resistance training recovery period. It’s the same with most sports skills work, but cardiovascular exhaustion and central nervous system (CNS) fatigue also compromise optimal sports skills practice. CNS fatigue is more influential in degrading the quality of sports skills training in older athletes, as we present more consequential hormonal and physiological challenges as well. Separating the training modules to allow for peak performance of sports skills is critical to successful programming. Solving the problem: Practical tactics There are many ways to structure a training program. It can be event-specific periodization  or, more commonly in our age group, weekly cycles that allow for constructive work/recovery phases. The important point is that measures should be taken to ensure the program structure effectively addresses these important factors: 1. Avoid excessive central nervous system fatigue Accumulated, full-body systemic fatigue is an easily overlooked obstacle that can drag down older athletes. Early signs are often ignored, and the progression of chronic CNS fatigue  is usually slow and cumulative. 2. Train with a power, sprint, and strength sequence Explosive power, especially the kind that also requires precision, control, and consistent repetitive quality, requires the least impeded runway. Peak performance for this type of movement is most achievable with the least amount of starting fatigue. After that, sprint capacity requires cardiovascular recovery to be as robust as possible. Finally, strength can be effectively built and retained with less detrimental encroachment than the other modes preceding resistance work. So, the sequencing should be planned accordingly. 3. Protect joints and connective tissue Joint and soft-tissue stress is minimized if the program sequence is optimal for both energy and recovery management. But it is also important to limit acute training/event stress  and to structure the frequency/duration/intensity triad conservatively. The key to successfully managing this rate-limiting component is to err on the side of restraint regarding accumulated training time over the week. 4. Prioritize acute training module recovery As implied above, the successful longer-term (chronic) program will be determined primarily by the strategically implemented individual post-WO recovery intervals. The body will respond to a given event or training session in accordance with the adequacy of the rest period allowed, given the overall work of the previously accumulated training. Ideally, the athlete feels fresh and rejuvenated for each training bout or event. If that bar is repetitively unmet, trouble is brewing. 5. Manipulate the frequency and duration relationship The reality is that athletes rarely vary the applied intensity of their given WOs dramatically. If, in fact, these variations are built into the structure of the program, this is ideal. However, more often, given a base level of consistently moderate to high intensity, the overtraining trap is the result of a rigid weekly program that is either too frequent, features WOs that are too long, or both . Often, the driven older athlete is reluctant to add two or more non-consecutive rest days to their program, fearing it will compromise performance. Instead, these elements are often the linchpin for performance breakthroughs as well as a valuable preemptive measure that reduces injury risk. Sample weekly training template This is my current weekly program. For reference, my sport was boxing, so the physical and neuromuscular demands that potentially create maximal interference in the training process are about as severe as they can get. I’m 63 and maintain an outstanding age-specific Vo2max, better than 1:1 strength-to-bodyweight single-rep max capacity for the big four lifts,  and have very open, balanced mobility, head-to-toe. Mobility warm-up and push/pull muscle-endurance  lead all formats (except cardio/core/yoga), all formats (except Sunday) end with large muscle group eccentric dynamic flexibility . Mon: Heavy big four lifts and isolating exercises using cables and dumbbells for accessory muscles. This provides an ongoing benchmark for overall strength to bodyweight ratio. Tue: Rest, modified fast day, details in subscription program . Wed: Peanut bag and heavy bag training, core work, and high intensity interval training or muscle endurance if fully recovered from Monday’s workout. Thu: Rest or light recreational movement such as a long walk or bike ride if fully recovered. Fri: Shadow boxing, mitt work, light sparring, and a 60 repetition full body dumbbell stack . This elevates heart rate dramatically and becomes a de facto integrated strength, sprint, and skills workout. The hardest session of the week. Sat: Rest. Sun: Cardio, core, and yoga format with four minutes work, one minute rest, and three to four cycles of each as fatigue dictates. Why this model works Preserves neuromuscular capacity: Each day involves different loading patterns, force-application planes, movement techniques, pacing variants, and specific directional placement and stabilization requirements. Sequences work to minimize redundant and conflicting training effects: Because of the variety mentioned above, the order (light warm-up before heavy lifting, power/sports skills before more fatiguing conditioning) and proper spacing for similar stresses, diminishing returns, overtraining, and injury risk are all minimized. Allows adequate recovery time for joints and connective tissue repair: The multi-plane loading, varying pure strength vs. power, separating impact, and allowing chronic recovery between WOs combine to allow more comprehensive repair for both muscles and connective tissues (ligaments, tendons, and cartilage). Provides fine-tuning options to adapt to current conditioning and skills response: The format has built-in flexibility, and all three variables (WO duration, frequency, and intensity) are adjusted ad hoc as indicated by the body’s freshness for each new WO. Additionally, I recommend and practice periodic de-load weeks (monthly, quarterly, or as needed based on how the athlete feels). Employ expert guidance to personalize fueling and training Optimizing your training and sports skills programs is an individual art based on broadly applied scientific principles. Most older athletes would benefit from the expertise and objectivity of a guide well-versed in the needs, preferences, and profile-specific priorities for both eating and training. So if fueling for performance consistently with precision, maintaining your athleticism, and avoiding injury are priorities, choose the right mentor . The  50+ Hybrid Athlete  subscription program is built around the fundamentals covered in this and my other articles in this   six-part series . You can unsubscribe at any time, but you won’t want to miss the ongoing helpful guidance and the time-released, astoundingly  valuable bonus products  that you get as a subscriber. Follow me on Facebook , YouTube , LinkedIn , and visit my website for more info! Read more from Dan Taylor, MS, CSCS Dan Taylor, MS, CSCS, 50+ Fitness and Nutrition Expert Dan left a career in high-tech corporate finance in 1998 to pursue his mission of leading others in elevating and simplifying the art of physical aging through the best fitness and eating practices for the mature athlete (and the aspiring athlete). His online subscription program provides a clear and simple pathway to achieve peak performance while lowering disease and injury risk, adopting powerful and principled eating practices that effectively support the training framework, and developing an individualized, manageable, and adaptable template for both.

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