Sunday, September 7, 2014

Become a Senior Dynamo



The Prosperity Plus class is over but it revived my interest in completing a book I started awhile back: Become a Senior Dynamo. Expand Your Dynamic Range and Live Large in Your Golden Years.

You may be wondering, so what exactly IS a senior dynamo? It’s those of us, in our  later years, who want to tap our inner dynamos of energy and generate our personal power to the max -- to radiate the good health, creativity, loving relationships and financial abundance that form the four pillars of experiencing our best life now.

Even though we may feel ourselves slowing down, experiencing the vicissitudes of an aging body, or possibly seeing dreams unfulfilled,  we don’t intend to shuffle off  this mortal coil with the thought, “It’s too late, now.”

And expand our dynamic range? What’s that? In photography we use the term to describe the luminance range of a scene being photographed, and use different techniques to increase that dynamic range to produce a brilliant, very detailed photograph.

So as an avid photographer, I adapted this phrase to describe a Senior Dynamo...someone who is expanding the parameters of human existence to live life full throttle, someone who is evolving to become more brilliant, powerful, alive, healthy, loving, creative, fulfilled, beautiful and spiritual!


While I stalled on the book, I managed to get started on a senior dynamo website: (www.seniordynamo.com). But really, I want to finish the book. The challenge is that I often don’t feel like a Senior Dynamo.

“Aging ain’t for sissies,” said Betty Davis in her laser fashion. And sometimes I let fatigue, depressed mood or inertia take over. So the recent Prosperity Plus class was helpful, in bringing motivators such as Thomas Edison and the power of FOCUS to our attention.

Edison said, “If we did all the things we are capable of, we would literally astound ourselves.”  He was an inventor. That’s what he did.  He cut out the distractions and focused on his work. He tried, and tried again. “I have not failed, I’ve just found 10,000 things that won’t work.”

He had the ability to FOCUS on the one thing he was working on. “The difference is you do a great many things and I do one.”

I realized that’s what I’ve been doing. Allowing one distraction after another to steal my time and attention.  I need to clear away the clutter and focus on what matters most. 

That’s the advice of Gary Keller, in his book, The One Thing, The Surprisingly Simply Truth Behind Extraordinary Results. Rev. Mike McMorrow will be teaching a class around this book in September, so we’ll have an opportunity to practice this approach on our projects and ask ourselves: "What’s the One Thing I can do such that by doing it everything else will be easier or unnecessary? 

For me, it’s not only finishing my book, but becoming a fantastic Senior Dynamo.

Wait! That sounds like more than one thing. Maybe the class will help.

And so it is.

Here's a link to a youtube video of my talk, which starts at the 1:18 minute mark.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Iq7CTREth0E













No comments:

Post a Comment