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January 2007

2000 Bloggers

I have received a few emails from folks who found CounselingBlog via 2000 bloggers.  Since I did not have a clue about 2000 bloggers, I decided to check them out. 

2000 Bloggers - A very clever and interesting post linking people together, creating an interesting and random group of people, all smiling and drawing in my curious brain.  I am one of the 2000, not sure how I got there, but I am in great company!

Hope you get a chance to visit the bloggers and their clever creator Tino Buntic!

Some folks have reprinted Tino Buntic's blog post on their own, but I am not sure how to do that, so i am going to leave it to you - Visit the 2000 bloggers, and drop Tino a note while you are there.
Cynthia
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Cynthia McKenna, LPC, NCC
www.cynthiamckennacounseling.com

It's Here!

Well, I am about 3 weeks late, but I am starting my tomato plants today.  I grown mostly heirloom tomatoes, with seeds purchased through Seed Saver's Exchange and other organic sources, as well as seeds traded with other tomato lovers.

Isn't it a bit early to be talking about tomatoes?  Well, actually no.  In Texas, the growing season is short - we have until about the end of June to get good fruit set, then the plants wait until August to start setting fruit again - the July sun and temps are too intense for the pollen to survive.

So lots of people started their tomato seeds on Boxing Day, but with the renovations at home, I just couldn't get it done.

However, today is the day.  I am heading to Home Depot to pick up seed starting mix and by tonight, I'll be happily incubating some tomatoes.

I can't quite explain my love of tomatoes -it is a deep and true devotion.  You know how it goes, you see a lush tomato plant at a friend's house, or maybe your neighbor shares some of the largess of their crop...you taste that warm tomato flesh, and you want another...

It is absolutely an addiction with me.  I promised myself "no more store bought tomatoes" and only gave in one time this winter -

Store bought tomatoes are not the same creatures as home grown - I might even suggest they are a different species!  The varieties are selected to withstand transit and still have a perfect tomato shape.  They are also cultivated to withstand long periods of storage.  they are picked green, and then ripen, if that is what you can call it, along the way in cardboard boxes and grocery refrigerators. 

I don't like store bought tomatoes.  I think we should all grow our own tomatoes, or support local farmers and farmer's markets and buy up all their lovely tomatoes.

Heirloom tomatoes are different than hybrid tomatoes. 

Hybrids are cultivated to select for desirable properties - like really big tomatoes, or tomatoes perfect for sauces and canning.  there are some great hybrid varieties - Sun Gold and Early Wonder come to mind.  Hybrids are cross pollinated and then the seeds are grown out over several generations to make sure the crossing is stable (so if you are looking for Sun Gold you actually get that delicious little golden tomato - not red, not yellow)

Heirloom tomatoes are grown from seeds that have a history.  They often have stories like, "variety grown by my Russian grandfather" or "saved from tomatoes my Aunt Sue got from her husbands mother."  they have names like Earl of Edgecomb, Aunt Ginny's German Green, Mortgage Lifter, Brandywine, and Pink Ping Pong.  They don't come out perfectly shaped, some need to be eaten almost as quickly as you pick them because they don't store very well.  But oh my, are they delicious!  They even have a bit of a pedigree.  The seeds can be traced back to the person that had them first - that always amazes me.

Here is to the tomatoes of 2007 - I can't wait to taste them!

Just in case you want to know more about heirloom tomatoes, check out Tomatoville - and tell them I sent you !

Cynthia
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Cynthia McKenna, LPC, NCC
www.cynthiamckennacounseling.com

Boundaries

I met a fellow therapist through a forum on a directory that my practice is listed on.  She wrote a very interesting blog post today about our electronic connections.

Part of what Nancy Quay says is that the instant connection, whether IM or email, or whatever, makes it more difficult for us to keep clear boundaries with each other.

Boundaries, in case you wonder, are the spaces between people - emotional or physical space - that says, "this is me/mine" and "that is you or yours"

Take a look and see if her comments stir anything in you.
Cynthia

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Cynthia McKenna, LPC, NCC
www.cynthiamckennacounseling.com

Thaw

The sun is trying to peek out, and the ice cycles are beginning to drip.  Looks like I-10 will be open by this afternoon.  It has been glorious having a few quiet days at home.

there is a tom cat hanging around, newly named Thomas (and maybe Thomas the Rhymer - we'll have to see).  He has been in the close vicinity of the house for about 2 weeks, now he's coming much closer and not acting aggressive towards the other cats.  He has white paws and  a grey tabby back and head - typical feral cat around here - but he looks solid and well-fed.  Don't know if he's run away from home or if he was dumped in the area.  I put some food out for him this morning...so I suppose he is staying.

Here is a bit of background on Thomas(the rhymer, not the cat) - in case you are curious

Cynthia
**************
Cynthia McKenna, LPC, NCC
www.cynthiamckennacounseling.com

Let it Snow!

South-Central Texas, where I live, has had a big winter storm.  We had some snow and a lot of sleet.  Here is one of the big Live Oak trees covered with about 1/4 inch of ice.  If you look to the left of the tree - you can see the famous tomato kennel.

Jan_2007_007

Here is Poppy, eating some ice

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I will post some more photos - from a better camera - these two kinda make it look like I live in Smurfville. 

So, no counseling today - just the welcome stillness that comes from having an ice storm.

Cynthia

*************

Cynthia McKenna, LPC, NCC

Do You Know About Web Content Awareness Day?

Don't Miss Web Content Awareness Day 2007: An Information Celebration Right in Your Email Inbox. Get instant access to trusted service providers, advice from top web marketing experts, great offers and more. Runs Jan 9 to Feb 9 - Learn more/sign up at http://WebContentAwarenessDay.com today.


WCAD is brought to you by Dina Giolittlo - a great copywriter and marketing advisor.  You can learn more of her services at Wordfeeder

Cynthia

*************

Cynthia McKenna, LPC, NCC

Creating Healthy Relationships

www.cynthiamckennacounseling.com

CounselingBlog

Authenticity and Vulnerability

The following blog post was in my inbox this week - It is a thoughtful piece and I hope you all find some value in it as well.   With Andrea's Permission, it is reprinted in full:

Authenticity Eye-to-Eye | Do You Get Self-Conscious or Fear the Limelight? Do Your Clients?

Jan  4, 07 07:03 PM | Posted by Andrea

"I don't want to be known."

The obstacle many business owners face is this fear of being known, don't you think? And alongside this is its corollary - the fear of not being seen, being invisible and misunderstood. Alas, it's quite the quandary. So what's a coach to do, for a fearful client of this kind, or indeed for themselves?

hp_jane_fonda.jpg The below article "The Roots of Self-Consciousness" may be a beginning. It highlights a story from Jane Fonda, and goes on to provide a simple exercise to test the depth of your Authenticity.

Reprinted with thanks to author Lee Glickstein, Founder and President of the powerfully supportive Speaking Circles International which I've found very reliable as a referral to coaching clients seeking personal power from the stage. 

Worth reading especially at the Speaking Circles website is Lee's personal story of his first public speaking experience - truly horrifying. Almost as remarkable as the depth of his authenticity now.

----begin article----

A passage from Jane Fonda's autobiography pinpoints the root of self-consciousness. She writes about her first child at 9 months:

It is late at night; I can't get Vanessa to sleep; I am despondent. I am lying on my back on the floor, with Vanessa lying on my chest.

She lifts her head and looks straight into my eyes for what seems like an eternity. I feel she is looking into my soul, that she knows me, that she is my conscience. I get scared and have to look away. I don't want to be known.

This rings like a common recurring scenario for those of us who grew up with self-consciousness. Some of us had the other extreme: our gaze was returned aggressively. Likely we had some of both.

Imagine reliving such a scene over and over again until the pain of not being met (or having our eye space invaded to meet the need of another) brings us to a hiding place deep behind our eyes.

Whether survival depended on shying away from attention or performing to meet expectations, our automatic behavior mechanisms kick in most extremely when all eyes are on us. As a result, some are too terrified to cope at all in front of groups, while others have developed a passable act, even a great act.

Though coming from different directions, neither state allows authentic presence or expansive expression, so the way back to ourselves is fundamentally the same.

To gauge the nature and extent of your authenticity challenge, go to a mirror and simply meet your eyes for a minute. Just breathe and be with yourself. Do you need to smile? Wink? Grimace? Look away?

Are you judgmental? Are you counting the seconds for the time to end?

If doing this exercise in absolute peace with yourself is a challenge, you are not alone, and real authenticity with groups is not possible until you can be at ease with yourself.

If you take at least a minute each day to explore this exercise, and stay with it, you will eventually access self-ease.

The next step is to allow words to arise and be spoken into your eyes in the mirror without compromising the ease.

Then, do the silent gaze with a partner, followed by one minute turns as you allow words to arise easily with your partner.

This path of Relational Presence--whether practiced in the free home study program or accelerated in professionally facilitated Speaking Circles, is all about naturally reversing our earliest experiences of not being met and honored eye to eye.

The good news is that it's all we need to get the ball rolling toward accessing our inherent ease and power with groups and in the world.

----end article----

How authentic are you? Do you change 'selves' when different people are looking? 

What tools or exercises do you use to excavate the real you, or 'get naked' with your clients?

# # #

Andrea J. Lee is an award-winning author, entrepreneur, mentor, coach and consultant to business owners on five continents.

A thought-leader in the field of personal and business coaching, she builds and manages among the most innovative coach training organizations in the world and specializes in consulting to helping businesses.
               
Now CEO of the Andrea J. Lee Group of Companies, she consults, holds teleseminars, coaches, writes, speaks and develops advanced marketing, internet and business systems for coaches. 

Want to know more about Andrea Lee? 

As always, your comments are most welcome!
Cynthia
*************
Cynthia McKenna, LPC, NCC
Counseling & Life Coaching
www.cynthiamckennacounseling.com

Happy New Year

I had a little tamale party over the weekend...

Doug & Cathy Ricketts getting ready

Xmas_2019

Doug Ricketts and Melanie Fain preparing artistic tamales

Xmas_2021

Using a great recipe from Chef Bobby Flay, we had a lot of fun and, more importantly, a lot of great food.

Tamales are an integral part of holiday celebrations in South-Central Texas.  However, tamales have always been a bit mysterious to me. 

The traditional recipe takes a lot of time effort, and experience to get the masa just right, and lots of hands to assemble the delicious bundles.

Bobby Flay's take on tamales is lighter, and certainly user friendly.

It was fun to participate in the tradition of tamales, and of course, a great pleasure to share holidays with friends.

Cynthia

Pixies in the New Year

Yesterday, I sent out a New Year's edition of The Occasional Newsletter.  That is a pretty common occurrence around here, and one that is not normally fraught with danger.

I use Constant Contact (CC) for my newsletters.  I find it easy to use and it presents a fairly professional product.

Last month, they offered me the chance to try a Beta version of their templates - and I decided to use the new templates for yesterday's newsletter.

The new templates are great as they employ a WYSIWYG format.  I don't think the new templates are any faster than the old, but for folks who aren't proficient in HTML, the changes will be welcomed.  I know enough HTML to get through w/o the new templates, but still, I love new technology so I was excited.

CC offers the chance to send a "test copy" of the newsletter to yourself or others for proofing etc.  I always do this because I am not known for great spelling, and it just helps me make things nice.

My test newsletter came out beautifully - and so I happily sent it out and then spent the rest of the day dining and hiking with friends.

When I got home last evening, I had a chance to look at my "real" version.  I saw that text had shifted places, entire sentences were missing - it looked awful. 

UGH!

I love doing these newsletters, and get great feedback from clients and colleagues about both the layout and the content.  I certainly would not have knowingly sent it out with the text scrambled. 

So, I began 2007 with a cuppa coffee, sitting at my laptop, completely redoing the newsletter in the OLD format.

A friend calls getting dizzy or woozy "getting pixie."  I certainly think my newsletter was pixie - or pixied (charmed by faeries).  Hopefully, the newsletter faeries will look kindly on this revision and let me spend the rest of the day in peace.

I did complain to Constant Contact, and they have asked for copies of both the correct test copy and the wacky actual copy - that gives me hope.  However, I did not mean to impose the very betaness of this on my clients...

I am off to make a fresh pot of coffee - with fingers crossed.

Happy New Year -
Cynthia
ps - I'll post photos of the hiking and tamale making a bit later today - we had a grand time.

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In The Garden...


  • Home and Garden Blogs - BlogCatalog Blog Directory
  • Tomatoville!
    This is a smaller site with great ideas, good feedback, and some fun threads thrown in as well. Info on growing tomatoes, diseases, tomato festivals, pet photos - it is all here.