I’m a huge fan of lists . I use them often because they are abbreviated reminders of what I want to accomplish in a given day, week, or year. Lists help me collect my thoughts and prioritize what needs to be done. They shape my day and free me up to think about more important things. Lists are time-savers and sometimes lifesavers. Lists are also a great way to highlight important facts.
The following lists were developed to generate an overview of coaching and how it can help you bring clarity and peace of mind into your life. Because happiness means different things to different people, the first list provides (synonyms) for happiness. The second list covers topics a happiness coach might employ to help you become happier. The third list contains situations that might motivate you to seek out a coach.
Saying you want to be happy generally means you want more…
- Excitement
- Joy
- Pleasure
- Gratitude
- Love
- Enchantment
- Peace
- Fulfillment
- A sense of purpose or meaning
- Connection
- Hope
- Playful
- Proud
- Accepted
- Optimistic
- Confident
- Inspired
- Contentment
Happiness coaching can show you how to:
- Create your definition of happiness
- Improve the quality of your life
- Explore your emotions to live more fully and authentically
- Embrace your emotions, not fear them
- Welcome everything life has to offer
- Love yourself and others
- Improve your emotional well-being
- Turn pain into a positive life transformation
- Create, follow, and accomplish your dreams
- Find meaning and value in your life
- Discover the peace and contentment within
- Empower you to live a happier life, whatever that means to you
- Increase your sense of well-being
- Reduce or eliminate habits that bring you down
- Increase habits that improve the quality of your life
- Live life to your full potential
- Savor little moments
- Feel peace more often
- Process and let go of painful memories
Life transitions that may lead you to seek out a happiness coach:
- Ending a career/job
- Starting a new career/job
- Wanting to start a new business
- Recently ending a relationship
- Having all the youngest children in the family finally be in school
- Having adult children finally leave the house
- Moving to a new town
- The death of a loved one in the recent past
- An unexpected medical diagnosis of a loved one (or of themselves)
- Having gone through a challenging year and wanting new inspiration
- Middle age
- recent retirement

My word for 2022 is completion. I generally spend a portion of new year’s eve thinking about the past year and picking a word to represent how I hope the following year unfolds. Last year my word was action. The year before it was truth. I chose completion because at this point in my career–and in my life, I have accomplished a lot, but I have some unfinished projects that I want to complete. At the top of my list is offering writing classes that I’ve developed and tested but never really marketed consistently. I get very excited about creating content, but getting the word out about my offering is where I drop the ball.
If there is one thing we all need to overcome it’s resistance. I’m NOT talking about ohms– the opposition to current flow in an electrical circuit. The type of resistance I’m talking about is the one we suffer from when we procrastinate or put off tasks that are essential to our creative or personal growth. Of course, what we resist persists–unless we do something to change the status quo. There is always a reason for our hesitancy or reluctance. The challenge is getting to the source of our discomfort to see what we can do to calm the beast that’s preventing us from moving forward. Sometimes, there is a good reason we refuse to change, but most of the time, it comes down to fear of the unknown and false expectations about what we perceive the future holds.

Writing a memoir takes courage. It often means taking a deep dive into the past and sharing secrets with strangers, family and friends. Judgment of your work and of your life looms large–another reason why you have to be courageous. This past month I’ve been teaching thirteen brave women how to write a memoir. For most of the women, the topics they have chosen to write about requires delving deep into and making sense of childhood memories. Three of the women are writing about growing up with mothers who were mentally ill. They are on a rough road that will ultimately lead to healing. Processing memories and feelings that come up is not easy but it is possible.
The older I get, the more I realize how important it is to keep learning and expanding my areas of interest. I could easily retire, but then what? Retirement–whatever that means–never seemed like a viable option. When I was a kid, my grandparents retired and moved from Ohio to Florida. My grandfather left his noodle company to my father and dedicated his retirement years to fishing. Every morning he would take his rod and reel, walk down to the public peer and wait for the fish to bite. My grandmother was the opposite. She spent her retirement years at the pool, playing cards and shopping. My parents weren’t much different. My father retired to play golf and cards and my mother followed suit. As I approached retirement years, none of these options made sense to me.
Writing and being a writer is what I do. It’s what I’ve always done. Articles, blog posts, books, corporate scripts, courses, press releases, sales collateral, speeches and training manuals. You name it, I’ve written it. As a freelance writer, that’s what you do. You write and rewrite until you get it right and right is when the client is satisfied. A few years ago, I shifted my focus to teaching online writing classes.
Judgment is a topic that is currently at the forefront of my mind. Why? I started my 