Dear Maripat,
Happy 2010 (almost!),
The New Year is a pivotal time for us all. What is 2010 going to mean for you? Time to create something new? Time to stop a way of thinking or being that no longer serves you?
I’ve created a process where you can acknowledge and learn from all that has occurred for you in 2009, as well as create intentions for 2010. Contact me if you’d like to set an appointment to develop your unique plan. This is a fun, yet powerful, process that will help ensure that your intentions are realized. Whether you partner with me or not, I’d really like to see all of you take time to focus on what you’d like to see happen in 2010.


Maripat Abbott, CPCC
Life Coach
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New Year’s Resolutions: How to Make Them So You Can Keep Them
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This will be the fourth year in a row Katie L. has made a New Year’s Resolution to exercise more. She’s also vowed to lose weight (an annual resolution since 2006), and to finally start that novel (this one goes all the way back to the 90s.) Like two out of every five Americans, Katie begins every new year with stout resolve and good intentions. But like most who make New Year’s Resolutions, by the time the spring fashions hit the shop windows, all that resolve has gone the way of last year’s colors. No exercise program. No weight loss and, sadly, no novel. Not even a beginning chapter. What goes wrong? Katie’s problem, and the difficulty most people face in keeping their resolutions, is that changing behavior involves more than simply vowing to do so. A lot more. So, whether you want to do more or less of something, quit something altogether or start something new, here are a few tips that can help.
As for Katie and her novel, at last report, she committed to a page a day, four days a week. At that rate, by the end of 2010, she’ll have more than 200 pages completed – two-thirds of her way to a good-sized novel. |
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