Have you ever worked so hard to earn something and somehow months or years later you sabotaged your success and lost it all? Perhaps you have been so disappointed that without realizing it, your brain (i.e. parasympathetic nervous system) has triggered a chemical response, which has you feeling tired, melancholy and full of hopelessness. No wonder you have no ‘umph’ to push yourself back on track, right?!
Or maybe you are angry because you allowed your inner critic to call the shots again?
Both of these feelings happened to me over the past 18 months.
See, I lost over 120 pounds (got down to a size 10) and then gained almost all of it back when a male friend of mine, who I knew for more than a decade, said sexually inappropriate things to me during a few keynote events where I was speaking on body language sales secrets.
He was my event manager and made sure every speaking engagement went off without a hitch.
At first his help was great. I trusted him. However, the more weight I lost and the stronger I became, the more he would sexually harass me before going on stage.
One might think I would have fired him on the spot. But what I did, like so many other women, was make excuses for his behavior, push down my tears and remind my myself to move and breathe.
After my last event, I literally became a human piñata. I couldn’t shove enough candy and junk food in my body – and I didn’t taste any of it. I wanted to put my fat suit back on faster than a speeding bullet so I could feel safe again.
Then the coronavirus hit, and I faced a new set of challenges: a divorce, homeschooling, my father fighting for his life with COVID, my business nearly collapsing. As I watched the scale go up, strangely I started to feel safer and safer.
RELATED: The 5-letter word that will put you back in the driver’s seat during the pandemic
Maybe you are following my Know Your Value series on pushing the reset button.
Well, this series will chronicle my weight loss journey. Inspired by Alicia Keys’ 2012 hit of the same name, her song is about a woman who takes back her power and no longer allows a man’s words to burn her. For me, I’m NOT imagining a man, but instead I’m not allowing my inner critic “burn me” anymore.
Self-help author and motivational speaker, Dr. Wayne Dyer, said: “Change the way you look at things and the things you look at change.”
So this year, I’m changing the way I look at getting and staying healthy. I’m cutting down the sugar and focusing on a diet rich in proteins, cooked and raw veggies. Physically, I walk or ride my indoor bike for at least an hour, six days a week. Then I work in 20 minutes of daily calisthenics through the Metabolic Renewal app.
And yes, while that regime has jump-started my health journey, I’ll be adding four unique tools to keep the weight off.
February: Writing My Grief Story workshop with comedian, eulogist Terry Moore
During this 3-week workshop on Zoom, I plan to use Terry’s self-exploration and self-discovery prompts as a tool to explore all the times a little piece of the feminine, sexy side of me died. The goal: to create a brand-new kind of me and brand-new kind of free.
According to Harvard Medical School, writing while grieving increases emotional and mental health, and it boosts the immune system. And are you surprised to discover the strong connection between writing, mindfulness and happiness? And are you aware that writing sends a signal to your brain to flag relevant opportunities and tools to achieve your goals?
Count me in! Interested in joining me? Sign up here: Write Your Grief Story.
March: Video Self-Modeling
A couple of years ago, I gave my second of four TEDx talks and the presenter before me, Dr. Melissa Root, gave a talk called “Eliminate Self-Doubt: Tap Your Root Response.” She left me rethinking how to fast track excellence.
Dr. Root describes it this way: “You can succeed at almost anything by eliminating your self-doubt, but how? The answer lies in your pocket and brain using a psychological technique called Video Self-Modeling. Proven to impact nearly every type of person on almost any behavior.”








