Up Close and Personal with his Holiness the Dalai Lama
“We all have a natural tendency to desire happiness and avoid suffering.” – Dalai Lama When I opened my Christmas present from my…
Lisa Haisha is a world traveler, holding a Masters Degree in Psychology which she parlayed into becoming a personal counselor/consultant to some of America’s biggest Hollywood stars and executives. She is the originator of the unique and powerful counseling approach known as SoulBlazing.
“We all have a natural tendency to desire happiness and avoid suffering.” – Dalai Lama When I opened my Christmas present from my…
Do you know anyone that you’ve met in your life who’s ever had “it all?” You do? Well, you don’t know that person as well as you may think!
Millions of heartbreaks a year can be avoided if more people chose more appropriate partners who share their same baseline values. And by values, I don’t mean those of religion and politics—those are philosophical and moral values that work themselves out in the head. In this case, the values I’m referring to are values of attraction, the ones that begin in the unconscious and provide the foundation for or against a successfully committed relationship.
Lack of autonomy in a relationship is a common harbingers of a relationship’s demise. Fostering a sense of independence in a relationship is healthy!
Here are some questions you should ask yourself if you feel you’re not living a life of prosperity. And remember, prosperity isn’t the destination.
Being in a relationship doesn’t have to be a threat to achieving your professional goals, but you must apply the same kind of exciting courage and risk for love as you apply toward your work life in order to fulfill your life.
Secrets? I don’t think so! But you have to ask questions to get answers! I’ve run a successful life coaching business for over ten…
Jealous tendencies, combined with social media, has transformed our ability to be jealous more intensely, and more incorrectly, than ever before.
“Sleep divorce” can do wonders for a relationship, and could actually assist in preventing the breakup that bears it’s name.
We spend over 1/3 of our entire lives working, so why shouldn’t that work be meaningful to us, instead of simply a means to gain increased status and wealth?
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