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The Tricky Business Of Giving Advice

A mom is a consultant, counselor, teacher, trainer, advisor, mentor, and coach. Our children prepare us for entrepreneurship more than we sometimes care to realize or acknowledge. No wonder we call it MOMpreneurship.

When I embarked in the business of having babies, I set the intention to raise conscious individuals. As a free spirit myself, known to have given my mom more than a few headaches because of my defiant forward thinking, I want to make sure my children know who they are, love who they are, and express who they are.

Elayna Fernandez - The Positive MOM and Master TrainerThis is tricky. Sometimes we want for our children what we want for our children… and we want for our clients what we want for our clients. We see their potential, we see the possibilities, we see the path to their imminent happiness, and they …um … just don’t. Ugh…

In those [now brief ] moments of frustration, I remember a quote from Socrates that helped me understand the meaning of being a teacher, a coach, a trainer, a mentor, and a happy mom:

“I cannot teach anybody anything. I can only make them think.”

As infopreneurs, mentors, and experts, we can inspire hope, instill a love of learning, and bring to our pupils’ imaginations what transformation may be ahead, but we cannot choose for them.

There Are 3 Key Characteristics Of An Outstanding Coach and MOM:

  1. Presence – Be present and make your time together count. Listen intently. Listen to learn their questions, fears, hopes, and dreams.
  2. Acknowledgment – Acknowledge and appreciate their condition, situation, position, asking questions to open their ears, minds, and hearts. Meet them – and love them – where they are at and for who they are NOW.
  3. Perspective – Offer perspective rather than advice. Paint various “cause and effect” pictures so they feel empowered to make an informed, inspired decision.
This recipe (which I can’t help but notice makes for a funny acronym :)) has made me effective in my home business and given me peace in the business of my home.
Total commitment to guidance with no attachment to outcome is the highest service we can provide. Our students will ultimately make the choice (or mistake) that they consider best suits them, in the timing they deem proper, and in the way that fits their reality.
When we have provided different choices, perspectives, and solutions, we have done all we can do. Remember Art Williams’ quote:
All You Can Do Is All You Can Do And All You Can Do Is Enough!
[But make sure you do all you can do!]

[ela]

Can One Conversation With Your Child Save Lives? -  ★ Elayna Fernandez ~ The Positive MOM ♥ ★ Elayna Fernandez ~ The Positive MOM ♥

Wednesday 24th of February 2016

[…] love raising awareness, promoting discussions, and encouraging you to think deeply about topics I am passionate about, knowing that YOU ultimately have the choice to act just how you believe it will go best for […]

Patricia Figurski

Friday 30th of May 2014

This is so true! Basic three steps...and so many of us is falling here... I think I am gonna print these and put it on my fridge so I always can see it.. Thanks for the post!

krystalskitsch

Friday 30th of May 2014

One of my goals right now is to BE PRESENT. Spend time with my little one and enjoy!

Danielle

Friday 30th of May 2014

I totally agree with this post. My son always wants me to just tell him what to do but I never do I give him options and tell him to think about the different outcome and decided which one he can live with good or bad. He has been dong pretty darn good making good choices.

Liz Mays

Thursday 29th of May 2014

Your three points make really valuable points. I like how well you summed this all up.