The LifeQuake Blog

Posts for May, 2010

Five Tips for the Stay at Home Mom Re-entering the Workplace

Monday, May 24th, 2010

Dr. Toni was recently interviewed on ABC’s View from the Bay in San Francisco. The following is a link to the show and an outline of the five tips are written below.

http://abclocal.go.com/kgo/story?section=view_from_the_bay/everything_else&id=7448452

 Conquering mom’s phobia of re-entering the workplace.

Stay at home moms are now being called to get extra income given the economy and often fear what going back to work will do. They are turning to addictive behavior to alleviate the stress and avoid taking action.

5 tips to re-entering the career world:
By Dr. Toni Galardi

  1. List Your Fears About Returning To Work

    Make a list of your beliefs about your fears regarding going back to work with a line through the page. On the other side, list possible solutions.

    For Example: In one case, a client was very unhappy in her marriage, and she was afraid that going back to work would break up her marriage. A solution: the reverse occurred. Out of going back to work, she no longer looked to her husband to get all her intimacy needs met and was actually happier having some money of her own.

    When we face our fears that come from the left brain logical mind, we can use our right brain intuitive mind to come up with possibilities we hadn’t considered. By forcing the brain to think more expansively, it will cooperate.

  2. Pay Attention to How You Feed the Fear

    Notice what you are using to distract yourself from being solution oriented, i.e. social media or extensive chatting on your cell to other moms. Whether, you are a stay at home mom or someone facing a big life transition, change can translate in your mind as loss so to avoid the risk of loss. We turn to addictions or distractions to numb out.

    For Example: I was working with a stay at home mom who kept herself very fit through jogging and yet around 4:00 as she would start to prepare for dinner, she would start drinking wine.

    By the time her husband came home, she wasn’t feeling her frustrations about boredom or money fears and could listen to his report of his stressful day. Another mom who was a working mom but unhappy in her job had become addicted to YouTube videos. It was her 14 year old son who busted her in a session he did with me.

    By delaying action through addictive habits, you risk falling into a depression because it is only a band aid. By feeling your feelings, you are more likely to do something about them.

  3. Quiet Your Mind

    Spend 10 minutes a day while your kids are napping, for example, in quiet, focusing on your breath and getting centered. Then ask, what is my next step? Answers are more likely to come when our mind is still.

    For Example: One client I worked with went to the gym a lot while her kids were in school to avoid her anxiety about getting a job. By getting her still through listening to visualization (on my CD), she realized that a job wasn’t her answer.

    Designing purses which she did as a hobby could be a business. She shared her idea with another mom and together they started a business.

  4. What’s Your Subconscious Telling You?

    Keep a dream journal by your bed and instruct your subconscious mind before sleep. Throughout history, great inventions have come to people through their dreams. Two great scientists, Einstein and Kekule, discovered their formulas while taking a nap.

    Lying down and napping can bring you creative ideas. “Give me guidance in my dreams as to whether I should take a job or do something out of my home. Show me.” Write down what you remember and you may be surprised.

  5. Pay Attention to the Overall Message

    Now that you have primed the pump of intuition, connect the dots. See the theme in whatever triggers interest or enthusiasm throughout the day. Write down your impressions of what all these things you are interested in have in common.

    For Example: I gave this exercise to an out of work executive and she realized that the couple hours a week she spent volunteering with inner city kids was the most fulfilling part of her life.

    But, she had a mindset that she couldn’t make money doing that, so she dismissed it as a possible career option. When we discussed this, I suggested looking into grants (a huge untapped source) or cold calling companies to sponsor her in creating a charity. The economy is forcing people to be more enterprising, and sometimes self employment offers more creative fulfillment and flexibility around your children.

Share your list with a friend or career coach. It could be a clue to your new life purpose and they may be able to see a clearer picture than you can.

>> Buy this book on Amazon: The LifeQuake Phenomenon: How to Thrive (Not Just Survive) in Times of Personal and Global Upheaval

For more information on Dr. Toni Galardi, visit www.lifequake.net EVENT INFORMATION:Speaking and book signing
Border’s Bookstore, San Rafael, CA
May 18 at 7:00 PM 

Ask the LifeQuake Doctor May issue

Sunday, May 23rd, 2010

  Dr. Toni Galardi – The LifeQuake Doctor

As we go to press, the world is going through massive changes: earthquakes, tsunamis, and now volcanoes. Scientists have observed that every time man has made an evolutionary leap, it has been informed by climate change. If you reframe whatever big transition may be going on in your life to something that is even bigger than you individually, it may help to see that these challenges, these inner earthquakes and lifequakes are all a part of collective change. We are indeed quaking up!

Dear Dr. Toni:
My thirteen-year-old son doesn’t listen to me anymore. Not only will he not listen to requests I make, but he is also not doing well in school. He ranks in the 95th percentile on standardized tests but only cares about being with his peers and hanging out. His father whom I am divorced from undermines my authority with him constantly. What should I do?
Frustrated in Beverly Hills

Dear Frustrated:
Your son is at an age when he requires male authority. It is natural for him to rebel against maternal authority because he is looking for independence from his mother. Do some research. Find the Big Brother Organization nearby and other community groups where men volunteer their time. Call the Rotary or Kiwanis Club. They may have resources that can help support a different non-profit group every year.
If you can afford it, pay for a male tutor who can also be a guide. The colleges often have boards that you can post ads on. Lastly, set boundaries so that he knows he cannot disrespect you without consequences. Be consistent. If he disobeys or doesn’t do his homework, then there’s no YouTube or cell phone, for example. Stay connected to him even when he is shutting you out. These are tough years, 13-15, and you cannot do this alone. It really does take a village. Get a support team.

Dear Dr. Toni:
This is embarrassing for me to talk about. I think I am addicted to porn and I am a woman. I don’t know of any women who visit porn sites and spends their evenings watching movies and masturbating. I haven’t been in a relationship for five years. I have a respectable job. No one would know that I have this addiction. I am educated and make great money.
I was watching a program on sex addiction and they said that it is most common in women who were sexually abused as a child. I wasn’t abused but I was raised by my father and he had a lot of women coming in and out of our house when I was growing up. I don’t really see the connection between my watching soft porn films and my childhood. How do I know if it is a problem?
“Georgia”

Dear Georgia:
You raise an important question. When does a behavior become an addiction? Is it frequency that determines it? One of the criteria for addiction is that it interferes with your life somehow: job performance, relationships, health, etc. What is more subtle is the type of addiction that allows you to perform in the world and doesn’t interfere with your health so that all that is affected is your personal evolution.
When we retreat from the world of intimate relationships, it prevents us from getting hurt but the long term cost is that we do not grow as much as is possible in partnerships. How did the last relationship end? Witnessing your father bringing women in and out through a revolving door did not model intimacy for you. Sex was seen as something very superficial and non-committal. You don’t mention what happened to your mother but I would submit that you learned a traditional male style of relating to sexuality. Perhaps you are afraid of acting out your father’s behavior. Risking that promiscuity in this day and age could be dangerous. Therefore, this compulsion may be a mask for other feelings that you are avoiding at night such as loneliness. I would recommend that before you sit down to watch a movie or surf the sites, that you take 10 minutes and just sit on your sofa and breathe. Notice what feelings come up. Don’t analyze them. Just witness the feelings and direct your breath into the place in your body where you are experiencing these sensations. Now go back to the first time ever that you felt these feelings and simply breathe into whatever emotions come up with the memory. Now, imagine that you can add someone to the memory this time—a figure that has a goddess-like energy full of light and compassion. Allow her to speak to you. What does she want you to know? If there is no answer, ask her for a symbol that represents her gift to you. Do this exercise every night for seven days and see if anything changes. If not, perhaps seeing a therapist who specializes in addiction or going to a Sex Addicts Anonymous meeting may be supportive. Some people there are dealing more with sexual obsession than acting out. You may need community in your life and/or you may need to be with people who understand your situation. Great healing can come from meeting the feelings underneath this compulsion.

To submit questions for Ask the LifeQuake™ Doctor, contact Dr. Toni Galardi through DrToni@LifeQuake.net (no period after the Dr.) For those seeking phone coaching, Dr. Toni can be reached at 310.712.2600.