Back In The Day


Here you the star athlete in high school and college and maybe you even made it to the pros? Or perhaps you were always the smartest kid in the classroom, received all the accolades, and were the envy of all of your peers? Now you’re all grown up and life didn’t exactly turn out the way you planned. If you constantly reminisce about the good ol’ days, you might be still living in the past instead of in the present.

“If you are doing that, then you have to ask yourself how it is serving you. Typically, there’s an advantage to living in the past that usually involves self-protection. We hang on to our past hurts so as to not get hurt again. The problem is, we also block out our joy too,” says John Kuypers, president of W.I.N. Leadership, an executive coaching and leadership development firm in Burlington, Ontario. Kuypers says letting go of the past “involves accepting what life gives us. This is painful because we desperately want to believe that we can control our destiny.” Living in the present is a process of awareness that will make you look at yourself and think twice about your current situation rather than what used to be. Here are some ways to get you there:

Look at the worst-case scenario. Ask yourself: “What is the worst thing that can happen?” says Kuypers. That means facing fears, feeling pain, and letting it pass through your system. “These situations beg the question, what’s important now?” says Kuypers. Otherwise, our past and future fears will paralyze us from doing what’s important now. When you focus on the present, you find the courage to trust yourself to do what you know in your gut is right and real, without letting fear of failure and disapproval hold you back.

Understand that life is not fair. It’s like going to the right school, knowing the right people, and landing a great job. But then the economy went south and so did your job. “A huge part of being present-moment focused is to accept what we cannot change. You can’t undo the last 20 years, but you can stop smoking today,” says Kuypers. “It’s a way to depersonalize it. There’s nothing wrong with you. In light of the cards you’ve been dealt, ask what should I do now?” The process is really about having regrets, learning to face them, and moving on from there, says Hamilton Beazley, author of No Regrets: A Ten-Step Program for Living in the Present and Leaving the Past Behind (Wiley; $14.95). “You should first list the regret because if you can’t see it, you can’t resolve it. Look at how holding on to it is affecting you.” Are you feeling angry, impatient, or out of sorts every time you think of it? Then it’s time to come to terms with the fact that you won’t win all of the time and that internal healing is necessary.

Grieve your losses. “One of the problems with early


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