Give up your excuses
You’ve done all the right things. You set your goal, took action but somehow, somewhere along the line things didn’t work out and you didn’t get the results you wanted.
It snowed. The supplier was late, delivered the wrong thing, or in the wrong colour. The schools were shut so you had the kids at home. You got a cold. The dog died. You got tangled in the duvet and couldn’t get out of bed…..
You’ve heard them. You’ve given them. What are they?
They are excuses.

Noooo, I hear you yell. They are not excuses! They are valid reasons. They are REAL!
The economy IS bad. Customers ARE harder to find. There just isn’t as much money around so we’re bound to be struggling.
So why is it that in a bad economy, with fewer customers with less money, some businesses are doubling or tripling their turnover and profits? Are they in a special “lucky” market? Do they just have more resources?
Well they might be, but this modern age with the internet and social networking is a great leveller. Even the little people stand a good chance. So what are those thriving companies doing that the struggling ones are not doing?
It’s simple. They don’t accept or give excuses.
When you set a goal it’s pretty simple. Either you achieve it or you don’t. You either get the result you want or you don’t.
If you find yourself not getting the results you want it’s very tempting to look for reasons. But what if those reasons were just excuses? And what if those excuses were preventing you from achieving many of your goals?
What if you gave up your excuses? What if all those reasons that you gave for not getting the results could be overcome, bypassed or even turned into opportunities.
We learn to give good excuses when we are children. We learn that if the cat had kittens on our homework we get an extension. If we broke an arm we get off the 4 mile cross country run.
But this seeking out excuses doesn’t serve us at all in adulthood. And when you’re running your own business it’s a disaster. You can’t pay your staff with excuses. You can’t take them to the bank. You can’t take them to your customers
Let’s take this idea of “the economy” as an excuse not to grow a successful business. I’m not saying the situation isn’t real, or that it can be changed but the way you approach it can be. Yes people are spending more cautiously, the low hanging fruit isn’t there anymore. But what you do have, higher up are very committed and keen customers. They may be harder to find, but when you find them they are like gold dust.
So here are some ways you can start to give up your excuses.
Are you being impatient?
In this age of instant gratification we sometimes forget that some things just do take some time. Maybe you haven’t failed, but rather the results just haven’t had time to show up yet. For example in a marketing campaign there is a time lag between taking action and the clients showing up. In this middle time you need to protect your mindset. Doubts will stop you taking the very action you need to take, you need to continue to market until you can reasonably expect results then decide whether or not you have failed.
Is it time to try something different?
If your actions are not giving you the desired results try taking different action. The reason many people don’t do this is because it’s risky. They know what to expect with the tried and tested methods, even if those results aren’t great. But when you try something new you have no clue what to expect. Be brave, take a risk try something different.
Do you have a limiting belief?
The beliefs we hold shape our reality. They affect the thoughts we think, the things we say and, most importantly the action we take. The result is, just like a self fulfilling prophesy, we make them real.
The reality that you experience is a direct result of the underlying beliefs. For example having no money is the reality, and no, that’s not a limiting belief. If you have no money, that’s a fact or real. But underneath that might be a limiting belief like “I can’t make money” “I’m no good at selling” “people don’t want to buy from a small company” “people don’t spend money in a recession”
Let’s take the belief “people don’t spend money in a recession”. If you believe this, how motivated do you think you will be to get out there and sell? Probably not that motivated.
So you won’t make your sales calls, stop writing web pages or sending e-mails, and generally stop taking action around getting sales. Then it’s a foregone conclusion that you won’t have any sales thus proving yourself right.
Now you have a choice you can be right or you can be successful, but you can’t do both. Are you willing to go bankrupt to prove yourself right? No thought not. So decide that you are wrong about some things. Believe and think something different and take the action you know will get you the results.
Be brutally honest with yourself
As a coach one of my less fun tasks is to be brutally honest with people, and the get them to be honest with themselves. Be honest about where you are, the resources you have to hand and the action you can take. Pretending that it’s all going to be alright if I just say enough affirmations or do enough “positive thinking” is simply putting your head in the sand.
Use the resources you do have, take the action you can take, and you will get results. But most importantly, give up your excuses.
And now I would like to invite you to claim your free instant access to my emotional resilience online course
By Dr. Lisa Turner
Why Evolution Never Stops – are you ready for the “cookie challenge”
I was at the gym this week enjoying my favourite class “body pump” which is exercises with weights to loud music (probably so you don’t hear the groans).
I’ve been slowly working to rebuild my lower body strength and today I felt strong and brave enough to raise my weights. I took “the cookie challenge” where you add just one small, cookie shaped weight onto the bar to increase it just a little.
So I took the cookie challenge, and am now enjoying that lovely stiff feeling of muscles that have been worked hard. As I was working out the instructor called to us “if it’s too easy your weight is too low, keep increasing your weight so you are always working the muscles to fatigue”
It occurred to me that this is just like the way we evolve and wake up. It starts when we take on a challenge, which at the beginning feels hard, then after a time it starts to feel easy, and we can do it comfortably. Then it’s time to “up the weight” and take on another challenge. After a while that too becomes easy, and so on.
Mass media and convenience goods (and food) have taught us that having it easy is a good thing, and something to aim for. But if you think about it, if it’s easy then you’re just not stretching yourself. You will stop growing and evolving, and then even what WAS once easy becomes hard.
We know that the result of not working our bodies is that we get fat, or unfit. But what isn’t so obvious is that when we don’t’ challenge our minds, our psyche our inner strength we become psychologically and spiritually “fat”.
My invitation to you is to take the cookie challenge. Do just one small thing that will stretch you, challenge you, fill you with that tingle of excitement, even if it is just a little bit scary.
You already know what it is. It’s that thing you’ve been telling yourself you’ll do “one day”
Make today that day.
I’m off to practice learning Hebrew.
Enjoy.
By Dr. Lisa Turner
Cynic, Sceptic or Susceptible
This week I got in the Daily Express, where I shared the story of my journey from scientist and engineer (who barely
trusted magnetism on the grounds that you can’t see it) to a psychic who channels guides, can “see” people’s energy bodies and knows what illnesses and emotional problems they have.
It’s the story of how I went from Sceptic to Psychic.
Much of what I do as a psychic and spiritual teacher still seems quite bonkers to the scientist in me. But it was the scientist in me who dared to ask questions rather than simply reject what I was experiencing. It’s this that took me on a journey to investigate psychic abilities and the spiritual world.
As a scientist a lot of what is portrayed is, quite frankly, rubbish. It’s bad pseudo science at best, and ego driven manipulation that misleads and can disempower people at worst. It’s fluffy, flaky and useless.
But not all of it.
My experience was that following a near death or out of body experience that I began to notice things that were just inexplicable to my scientific mind at the time:
- Burning hands when around someone ill or in pain
- I knew things that I had no way of knowing, like the decor in a house I’d never visited
- Seeing colours round people’s heads, and lines of “light” through their body.
- I could “feel” which wire or sensor of the hundreds to check was faulty on a test rig
- I “knew” where to search for a data anomaly in a test that might have otherwise taken hours of signal processing and graph scouring.
Most disconcertingly, I knew that something was very wrong with a man who 3 months later died of cancer, at the time even he didn’t know - I could sense presences when I was supposedly alone.
Quite frankly when I added it all up, there was something going on that warranted further investigation. Which is exactly what I did.
I became an open minded sceptic.
When I broached this with many of my colleagues I was usually met with ridicule. They refused to even consider the evidence. As much of it was based on personal and anecdotal experiences I could understand their scepticism , but what upset me at the time was their cynicism.
There’s a big difference between a sceptic and a cynic.
A sceptic is someone who doesn’t blindly reject or believe, but is open minded and asks questions to reach an understanding.
A cynic is someone who believes that others are only motivated for their own ends, that nothing will work or is possible. They typically don’t believe anything other than what they already know to be true, which closes them off to new experiences or learning.
During my investigations I discovered many ways that psychic abilities or intuition can happen, how they work, and how to train others and myself to enhance their intuitive and psychic thinking, and to open to a more spiritual way of living. The results are that these people tend to be happier, more content, and more resourceful in times of crisis, and they become better at problem solving than they previously were.
Which can only be a good thing.
However, on my journey, I also noticed that there was a lot of blind faith. People so desperate to believe anything or something that they wouldn’t question, they would simply accept whatever their teacher said.
Much of the explanations simply didn’t hold water or stand up to scrutiny, yet they were the common beliefs of most spiritual schools.
I became quite concerned for many of the students of these schools, because, rather than becoming stronger and more resourceful, they seemed to have the opposite result, they became more reliant o their guru for the answers.
Blindly rejecting or blindly accepting is equally dangerous in their own ways. One will lead you do cynicism and being closed minded and rigid. This will stop you seeing opportunities and getting inspiration that might solve problems.
Blindly accepting without question is to be a sheep, to be gullible and to allow you to be disempowered by others.
However if we do dare to ask the questions like: “What’s going on here?” “How can this be happening?” it can lead to a much greater understanding of yourself and the world you live in. Just don’t reject science completely, because very often that is where the answer lies.
I guess that’s why I’m known as the psychic scientist. I’m psychic, and I’m a scientist.
My invitation to others is to cultivate the healthy sceptic. Question what you don’t understand or can’t comprehend. Don’t blindly reject what doesn’t fit with your current worldview, nor blindly accept what you are told.
And you can read what the Express said about me here.
http://www.express.co.uk/posts/view/178786/Near-death-experience-changed-me-forever



