Igen, ez a változás természetesen érinti az esküvődet is, de ha az esküvőipar is szinte percenként fejlődik, ha napról napra újabb ötletek és megvalósítások látnak napvilágot, akkor miért szerveznéd az esküvődet most is úgy, azon az elven, ahogyan tette azt a barátnőd 2 éve vagy tették a szüleid néhány tíz évvel ezelőtt?
Az esküvő szervezést is hozzá kell igazítani a változáshoz!
Nem engedheted meg magadnak, hogy ne legyen tökéletes az esküvőd. De mi kell ehhez? Hogyan érhetsz el fergeteges hangulatot? Esküvő szolgáltatók interjúi között számtalan meglátás olvasható:
"A jó szervezésen, és hogy a házasulandók, vagy a szülők ne izguljanak, hogy minden rendben lesz-e. Ezért javasoljuk az esküvőszervezőt."
"Az esküvő sikere szerintem több összetevős dolog; kell hozzá egy jó vőfély, egy nagyon jó zenekar, természetesen egy nagyon jó esküvőszervező, és a násznép összetétele is nagyban befolyásolja az esküvő sikerességét"
"Esküvőszervezőként arra törekszem, hogy megvalósítsam az ifjú pár álmait és vágyait; ami rájuk hárulna teher, azt átvállaljam, így biztosítva nekik a felhőtlen boldogságot a nagy napra."
Olvasd el Varga Takács Ágnes esküvőszervező hogyan vélekedik erről.
Tuesday, July 21, 2009
Saturday, May 12, 2007
The title got your attention, didn't it? And NOT in a good way.
Aren't you feeling a little agitation right now? I bet you are. This is the normal response to being told we are WRONG. Your intention in reading further may even be to prove to me that you are NOT wrong, but quite right. And youd on't even know what we are talking about yet!
This attitude is why we have conflict. Conflict is caused by the desire to be right. Think about an argument you have recently had. Was it with your spouse, co-worker or the cashier at Target? It doesn't matter WHO is was, or what you THINK about them, or even what the actual FACTS were. What generated the conflict was your need to prove you were right about whatever happened.
In any given situation that involves conflict (whether that is aggressive conflict or polite conflict, it hardly matters) you would be better off in the long run to give up your irresistible need to be right EVERY TIME. You may wish to fight to the death on some issue that is important to you---and those fights are likely the ones that define who you are and what you stand for. But when you are fighting over who took the garbage our last or were you the next one in line, you may need to see where your need to be right is getting in your way.
Dr. Robert Bolten, bestselling author of "People Skills" states, "My research indicates that 95% of all conflict stems from our irresistable need to be right. Our conflict would greatly diminish if we gave up this mindset."
So how do we go about changing this mindset? Following are a couple of quotes based on Dr. Stephen Covey's Work (The Seven Habits of Highly Effective People) and to take a quote from this list and put it to work for you. Place it on your computer screen, as a screensaver or post if somewhere you will see often like the bathroom mirror.
"Assertiveness is defined as courage balanced with consideration."
Dr. Stephen Covey
My interpretation: Have the guts to stand up for yourself, but do it with some manners.
"What is more important ? To be right in your relationships or to be effective in them?"
Dr. Stephen Covey
My interpretation: On your deathbed, will your last words be "I was loved" or "I was right" ?
Stephanie Goddard Davidson is considered a subject matter expert in workplace communications and specializes in leadership and interpersonal skills training.
Frequently appearing as a guest on radio programs and published in numerous articles on workplace communications, Ms. Davidson is also a nationally certified trainer for Covey’s Seven Habits of Highly Effective People; Ridge’s People Skills for Managers and Individual Contributors; Myers-Briggs Type Indicator; FranklinCovey’s Project Management and master certified in Achieve Global’s Management Programs; as well as an instructor with the American Management Association.
Friday, April 20, 2007
I have made several observations about anger management classes and anger management coaching over the last few years. One of the first observations I’ve made is the change in view towards anger management from punitive to purposeful. That is to say, I’ve seen a shift in the public view from anger management having a negative flavor to it; to anger management becoming accepted as a worthwhile and meaningful educational intervention to help improve ones interpersonal relationships and quality of life.
When I first started seeing clients, especially those that were court ordered, it was viewed as if they were taking a traffic school class. After about two sessions, they quickly realized how amazing anger management classes were to them. First, they got exposed to skills that really were going to help them improve their relationships. Second, many agreed that if they really knew what anger management was all about; they would have taken a class a long time ago. The public perception is changing and it’s about time.
Another observation I have made is that anger management coaching is a wonderful way to teach these skills to those that do not want to participate in a group. While there are advantages to participating in a group, many prefer a one on one format. I have seen a steady increase in requests for anger management coaching and I believe it is party due to business and industry also opening their eyes to alternate ways of helping employees. Many self-referred individual clients also like the “coaching” aspect of learning anger management skills because they leave each session with a new tool; a concrete tangible skill to try and practice at home, work, and with loved ones.
Anger management classes in general tend to teach skills in variety of areas. Our classes and anger management coaching use the Century Anger Management model of intervention which is based on the client workbook, “Anger Management for the Twenty-first Century” written by Ari Novick, Ph.D. and Tony Fiore, Ph.D.. This is an easy to use workbook and curriculum, and teaches clients eight core skills. These skills include assertive communication; empathy and social awareness; how to have better judgment and impulse control; challenge automatic thinking; expectation management; forgiveness; stress management, and skills for staying calm.
Anger management classes and coaching is meant to be short term. Classes are usually 10 sessions but can be customized for more or less classes as needed. Most self-referred clients tend to benefit most from about 10 classes. Those that are referred through the court will usually have their requirement set by the Judge issuing the classes.
Is anger ruining your relationships and quality of life? Are you asking yourself if anger management is right for you? I guess it’s like asking if you should see a doctor for a compound fracture. Most people would not hesitate to see a doctor for a broken arm, a toothache, or a bad back. Why would you want to prolong your ability to learn skills to better your relationships at home or work? Taking an anger management class might save one of your most prized assets from tragedy, you.
For more information on our anger management programs visit http://www.ajnovickgroup.com or http://www.centuryangermanagement.com
Sunday, March 18, 2007
Anger, not expressed, can have potentially devastating effects, especially when you suppress it and turn it inward on yourself. Harboring feelings of anger often leads to emotional or physical consequences. We see this every few months in the news about an incident in which a person shoots several strangers. The latest event of this kind that occurred early in 2007 took place in Utah.
On a more mundane level, people who leave work with pent up anger take their feelings out on those who have a harder time fighting back such as spouses, children and waitresses. Suppressed anger can eat away at the body producing headaches, eating disorders, intestinal disturbances, and other more serious illnesses. It can also diminish your self-esteem, undermine your self-confidence, and reduce your feelings of self-worth.
If you’ve been struggling from such aftereffects of anger, would you like to achieve a healing from them? A few years ago, I discovered a powerful method that could enable you to heal from the debilitating effects of anger held in. I call my approach the Anger Technique.
I must caution you though, it is not easy to use. Before you begin, you must make sure that it is safe for you to do a significant amount of physical exercise. In addition, you must be certain it is okay for you to get in touch with angry feelings that you hold. Furthermore, it requires significant emotional work for up to twenty-five minutes per day for a week or two.
Is my approach worth the effort? You bet. If you are able to use it successfully, the healings you obtain are truly life changing. As I implied the results come unusually quickly. Furthermore, the healings appear to be both complete and permanent.
Description of the Anger Technique Is there a person toward whom you have harbored strong angry feelings? Imagine you are confronting this person. In a standing position, visualize yourself screaming at the person phrases like “you son of a gun.” Obviously, you would want to use much stronger language. You need not do this out loud.
As you express these feelings, it is essential to involve your body physically. One way to do this would be to move your arms like a boxer punching a heavy bag. With another way, you could place a pillow at the edge of your bed, kneel down on the floor, and pound on the pillow. Use whatever variation would work best for you.
You will make the best progress if you put all your strength into the physical effort. To avoid exhaustion, do this for about five seconds at a time and then relax for a few minutes until your body has calmed down. Repeat this a number of times in a twenty- to twenty-five minute session. After several of these sessions (typically between three and eight) you should go through what I call a healing transformation (HT). The HT might last anywhere from a split second to several seconds. It is likely to occur as you are “screaming” and “punching,” and when it begins, you should continue what you are doing.
When the HT happens, you might experience sensations that are not easy to characterize. The most salient feeling is a tingling in the upper part of your body. It is similar to what you experience when your foot has been asleep and is in the process of reawakening. Light headedness and deep breathing might accompany this tingling. After the HT, you are likely to experience a deep feeling of relaxation in the pit of your stomach that will last for a few days.
The results may be somewhat different if you acquired your angry feelings gradually, rather than through a traumatic incident. In such cases an HT might not occur. I am confident, though, that the approach will still be beneficial in terms of reducing your angry feelings.
Another Benefit of the Technique I have also learned that if you use the technique on a situational basis, that is, whenever you feel very angry or frustrated because of an upsetting experience, the technique will dissolve the angry feelings or frustration and allow you to maintain a healthy emotional state. There is nothing wrong with feeling appropriately angry when you feel mistreated. It isn’t the anger that is destructive; it is the harboring of it that creates problems. On such occasions, when I use the technique for just a few minutes, it helps me release most of my anger. I can then view the person with whom I am angry from a more peaceful or neutral perspective. If the situation is such that I need to communicate further with the individual, the procedure allows me to later relate my concerns in a calmer and more effective manner. Here are two examples. One day, on my way home, I had an unpleasant encounter with an extremely nasty bus driver. Although my behavior during the interaction was quite reasonable, later on I wanted to express some of the anger and frustration I was still feeling toward the man. Using the Anger Technique in the comfort of my home for just a few minutes helped me become much more at peace.
On another occasion, I felt rejected by a woman to whom I was very attracted. For a long time, this was a mutual attraction. When she abruptly changed her mind, I felt frustrated. Using the technique for several minutes helped me express and eliminate my emotions. I was then able to think about her from a completely neutral point of view. If you use the Anger Technique, I am interested in knowing your results. Please contact me to let me know. You can reach me at P.O. Box 173, Newton, MA 02456.
Fred Craver, Ph.D., is a partially sighted person who is now developing his fourth career, as a professional speaker and author. He discovered his approach for dispelling anger in the mid-nineteen nineties out of his desperation to rid himself from long held angry feelings. The inner peace that soon resulted was most gratifying.
Fred began his professional life as a college teacher of physics at St. John Fisher College, near Rochester, New York, where he taught courses at all levels. When his declining vision made teaching difficult, he became a human services director and social worker. He ran a summer vacation program for blind adults sponsored by the Massachusetts Association for the Blind. When developing technologies made it possible for partially sighted people to work with computers, he became a programmer at the Army Research Laboratory in Watertown. Fred received his bachelor’s degree in physics from Cornell University and his master’s and doctoral degrees in the same subject from the University of Rochester.
Thursday, March 15, 2007
Some of us are fortunate; things go well enough that we develop expectations that our good luck will continue indefinitely, and we are able to create buffer zones. Then disrespect from other angry people doesn’t cause severe reactions, and the cycle of anger, where each tries to regain respect by diminishing the other, is disrupted, and things don’t spiral out of control. If the cycle of anger isn’t cut by someone by backing down, violence results, maybe even war.
But if life creates a majority of people who are dissatisfied because of a disparity of wealth, or a lack of freedom, or many of the inequities we see around the world, then violence becomes a way of life, and suffering can become widespread. The trouble is; we never know exactly how life will play out for us. It’s a crapshoot.
If we are intelligent at all, we know that our good life is susceptible to erosion, so we attempt to shore it up and secure ourselves. The definition of secure is “firmly attached,” and being firmly attached to anything means that we cling to it desperately. In other words, we fear losing it; therefore, security cannot exist without its companion . . . fear.
If we don’t understand our thirst for security and the resulting fear, then, although we are extremely intelligent in other areas, we are ignorant of the basic mechanisms of our heart, and when we are ignorant of life at this basic level, we make bad decisions. One bad decision is becoming angry when that which we cling to is threatened. Clinging is the first bit of ignorance, and anger merely compounds it.
This plays out all the time. Look at anybody who becomes angry, and underneath the anger you will find what it is they depend upon, what is threatened. We must investigate in this manner if we are ever to become free and see the beauty of life. Only when we understand our underlying motives and urges can we unchain ourselves. If we don’t understand our motives, how can we not blindly continue down the same roads that have caused so much of our worry and fear in the past?
This lack of understanding, and especially the lack of interest in understanding, is ignorance, an insidious ignorance, because we don’t realize that we’re ignorant; we think that we are extremely intelligent. Our intelligence, unfortunately only goes as far as our brains, and not our hearts. We are blind to the workings of our hearts. The heart to us means emotion, but this is not the heart at all, the heart is intelligent beyond emotion, beyond animal instincts of survival, of greed, hatred, and illusions. When we are able to develop this kind of intelligence, not only will we end our anger, but we will end our fear and conflict as well.
Recognising that you have this sadness or anger bottled up inside you, or dealing with lower level emotions are articles that can be found on the Urban Monk website. I am focusing on letting out anger on this article because I feel it is one of the worst. It is crippling; it colours everything you do in your life and is often linked with depression.
Anger is crippling
I used to suffer from massively pent-up emotions; while I was often described as a teddy bear guy, I had massively pent-up anger and to a lesser extent, sadness. When I blew up, I blew up. I became verbally abusive and irrational – often this would only be shown to, and therefore unintentionally hurt, the people who love me the most and are the closest to me. This led to a deep depression that lasted for more then a year – and badly deteriorating physical health.
So trust me; be honest with yourself, and find out if you have anger issues. If you do, take steps to fix it – for yourself and those who love you.
Besides being a major step towards happiness, there are other benefits to dropping all that emotional weight from your shoulders. Self-esteem, confidence, and courage are other parts that develop as you deal with anger.
Understanding Anger and Sadness
The first step to dealing with it is to understand anger. Anger is not “negative”. It is simply an energy; an emotion. It serves as a protection system. When you get angry, it is a sign that something or someone is infringing on you or your rights.
It is not to be confused with blind rage; blind rage is when you start being abusive; when you start being violent towards inanimate objects, or worse, other people. That is not healthy.
I heard a great analogy once; emotions are like vegetables. When they are fresh, they are fine, when you hold it in for a long time, that’s when they become toxic. They explode to the surface and manifest themselves in unhealthy ways. It could also lead to cancer, stress, and several other nasty conditions.
How to deal with Anger
There are a few universal exercises for releasing anger across all the different sorts of methodologies and therapies I’ve researched. I’ve captured the essence here.
Often times you need to do this a few times. Pain comes in waves, and often times one such exercise won’t be enough to release all that pent-up energy.
There are many causes of anger or sadness; bad parenting, childhood bullies, and so on. Try to trace it back to the roots, understand it, and try to give it a voice. As you’ll see below, this is vital, as the vocal component is the most important.
Note: If it is something that you cannot handle, please do not feel ashamed to seek out professional help. And avoid self-destruction; numbing of the pain with alcohol, drugs, or other risky behaviour. I went through a whole year of this and paid for this behaviour physically and emotionally for nearly a year after. And I’m one of the luckier ones.
Once you have that, find a safe location. Somewhere you can scream and act out your anger and sadness – either alone, or with an understanding person. With each one of the following options, remember you need to scream out – all the words you’ve always wanted to say – while you are doing it. Even if it’s just a string of vulgarities, do it!
Let it all out. You might feel weird and self-conscious doing this, it’s normal. Don’t give up. Just do it over and over again until you feel that all your repressed anger is gone. You'll know when this happens, instinctively. It might take weeks, it might take days, it’s different for everyone.
The three steps
1) Do this in a safe location. Kneel on your bed like you're praying. Find a large pillow. Make a hammer fist with your hands. Not a boxing style fist, you might your wrist. And pound the pillows, with all your might until you can’t go any more.
2) Sometimes twisting is better. Find a towel, and twist it like you are trying to wring out every last drop of water.
3) Sometimes just screaming is good enough. Go somewhere abandoned, with some loud music put on maximum and scream with your whole body. Become the yell. Yell until your whole body trembles.
What’s next?
Usually what follows the release of anger is sadness. Read the next in this series of articles for this at the Urban Monk website. You’re on your way to Mastery!
This article is for educational purposes only. It is based on the author’s research and own experience; however you and you alone are responsible for what you do with it. By reading this article you agree that he will assume no liability or responsibility to any person or entity for any loss or damage related directly or indirectly to this article.
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