Tag Archive for: Can you be your own Life coach? Maria Geraci

Acceptance Awards do’s and don’ts


Although I’m knee deep in copy edits that are due back to my publisher by Friday (yes, tomorrow, that Friday) I still took a break last Sunday night to watch the Golden Globe Awards show.

I’m such a sucker for these awards shows. I love watching the stars in their glittery gowns, seeing the men in their tuxs, listening to the acceptance speeches, etc.

As per my own tradition, I kept a running list of my personal likes and dislikes:

Do’s:

DO invite British comedienne Ricky Gervais to host the show again. Despite his acerbic and rather insulting wit, I find him funny. Apparently, so does someone else because he’s done it 2 years in a row now.

DO have a great acceptance speech set up. Even if it’s an obviously pre-rehearsed skit. You people are entertainers, so entertain. Best acceptance speech of the night? The Modern Family gang, accepting their award for Best TV comedy. Love that Sophia Vergara, who looked absolutely stunning.

DO invite back sexy film stars who are classy and look drop dead gorgeous in a tux. Namely, Mr. Darcy, er… I mean Colin Firth (sorry, he will ALWAYS be my favorite Mr. Darcy!)

Now for the DONT’S:

Is it just me or was I the only person in America who couldn’t take their eyes off these star’s arms? I mean, yes, Angelina Jolie and Madonna are beautiful women, but enough working out is enough. They need some meat on those arms! Or at the very least, cover them up. Apparently, no, I’m not the only one who thinks this either. So does Piers Morgan.

And lastly, my personal awards show biggest no-no. Stars who go over their limited time in their thank you speech.

This year’s biggest offender? Meryl Streep.

Now, don’t get me wrong. I LOVE Meryl Streep and think she deserves every award she gets. I can forgive her for looking as if she’s just crawled out of bed and thrown on her bathrobe here, but I can’t forgive her for sounding like a flustered ninny on the stage.

Meryl, you have to know that whenever you are nominated, there is a GOOD chance you will win. Prepare a speech, for God’s sake, and rehearse it.

So who’s looking forward to the Oscars?

Maria Geraci

Can I be my own Life Coach?

by Maria Geraci

I can’t remember the first time I heard the term “life coach.” I just know that like lots of other trendy, new wave sort of 21st century adages (like Twitter, Skype, etc…)  the term just sort of crept up on me. And then I began to see it everywhere, most notably in the biographies of lots of writers.

ExampleSusie Smith grew up on the tropical island of Pango Pango, spending the first thirteen years of her life in  a Swiss Family Robinson type tree house, with just two monkeys as her only companions. With graduate degrees from both Harvard and Yale, she has traveled extensively and speaks over fourteen languages. Her non-fiction debut, Check your Baggage at the Front Door, has become a world wide phenomena. Susie runs eight marathons a year and is a life coach, helping other, less adventurous souls achieve their wildest dreams.

Okay, so I made this up, but you get my drift. Life Coaches are “in” right now. Everyone is using them. Take Ron Howard’s daughter, Bryce Dallas Howard. She credits her life coach for her ability to balance her busy life. Below is her quote from a New York Times article:

“…decades after her father made it in Hollywood, Ms. Howard, 25, is making her own way in acting, and she’s therapist-free. She sees a life coach instead. Ms. Howard, who is on location filming “Spider-Man 3,” said her coach helps her navigate the demands of show business on her own terms, including making time for writing and protecting a degree of privacy during press interviews without losing her cool. 

“It’s not about rehashing the past,” said Ms. Howard, who said she’s “really into self-improvement.” She called Sherri Ziff Lester, her coach, after a manager friend passed on her name last year. 

“With Sherri,” she said, “it’s, ‘Let’s talk about this week.’ She asks me a series of questions so that I see my priorities and decide what I need to do.

Life Coaches don’t provide therapy. Their job is to motivate you and to help you achieve your goals (both personal and professional). Life Coaches help you overcome negative behaviors that stand in the way of your success. They can help you get “unstuck” from the ruts that slow down your life.

I don’t know about you, but all this sounds pretty cool to me. Recently, I wrote down a list of all my goals (personal, professional and financial) and while the list is way too long to share on this blog, I realized there were certain behaviors (2 mostly) that if worked on, would enhance my life considerably. Those were:

1. Daily exercise

2. Finding ways to write more productively.

Unfortunately, with 2 kids in college, a mortgage, car payments, etc… I just can’t swing the $50-100 an hour fee that a life coach charges. So, I thought, “Why can’t I be my own life coach?” 

I know this sounds shockingly too twentieth century, but isn’t that what most of us have been doing since the beginning of time? So I Googled the term “goal setting” and “how to make your goal into a reality.” This produced a whole lot of articles and links to more people who will help guide me on my path to perfect nirvana. Argh.

My husband has a saying that I’ve heard many times (he credits this bit of knowledge from his army days) and I’ve always taken it as a collective human wisdom. If you do something over and over it will eventually become a reinforced habit. In other words, if when I get up every morning and I force myself to exercise, eventually, this will become a habit for me (hopefully, an enjoyable one.) I used to run when I was younger, and I loved it, but like everything else, the opposite of the “over and over” rule is that if you stop doing something, you will eventually stop doing it all together and it will be harder than ever to pick it back up again.

So: Life Coach Goal number one: For the next two weeks, I will get up every morning and walk for 30 minutes. No matter what. I have written this down on an index card and taped it to my refrigerator where I will see it first thing in the morning when I reach inside to get the half-n-half for my coffee. Consider this my own “coaching tip.” Let’s see if it works.