10 WAYS TO BRING GROWTH INTO YOUR LIFE

Just as gardeners look for ways to promote growth in
their garden, so, too, do people look for ways to bring
more growth into their lives. Repotting is our term for how
those who have outgrown the pot or container of their
daily lives, are transplanting themselves into a larger
growth environment. What happens to a beautiful,
flowering plant that outgrows its container? If you don’t
repot it, eventually it withers and dies. Our book,
Repotting: 10 Steps for Redesigning Your Life shows
you how to rejuvenate your life by following our
step-by-step process. No matter what your age, stage of
life, or circumstances, you can benefit from the repotting
process and philosophy.

Here are 10 ways that to bring more growth into your life as spring approaches:

1. Rethink Your Landscape. Adopting a new perspective is the first step to
successful repotting. Just as some plants need a different environment if they
are to thrive, you need to start thinking in new ways, too. Ask yourself: What is
really important to me? What trade-offs do I need to make to bring more light
and meaning into my personal garden? What will bring color to my
landscape? For example, if you are constantly traveling for work, but missing
important family activities and milestones, you could revisit career/family
priorities, and after consulting with colleagues and supervisors, make
adjustments to your travel schedule.

2. Realize That Planting Is a Process. Slow down and create time in your
schedule to research new avenues for personal growth. Don’t be afraid of empty
spaces. A friend of ours who cut back on her schedule immediately filled the
open time slots with new activities. Remember to let “fallow beds” lie—don’t fill
up your free time until you know what you really want to do.

3. Weed Your Garden. Take a disciplined approach to finding more time in your
day for activities that offer opportunities for growth. Make a list of the “must do
activities,” then eliminate non-essentials from your day or week. A woman who
ran a successful event-planning firm cut back on the number of clients she
handled in order to make time in her life for painting classes and choral
singing—two long-lost passions.

4. Let in More Light. Your true gifts may be languishing for lack of sun. In order
to grow and change, you’ll need to open your mind to new possibilities, set goals
that challenge you, and take some risks. A lawyer we talked to was offered a
partnership in her firm. Instead of following the safe path she had pursued, she
opened up to explore a completely different lifestyle--that of becoming a pastry
chef. Ultimately she quit her job, giving up financial security in favor of a less
constraining life.

5. Tend Your Garden Regularly. Whatever you choose to undertake—whether
it’s building a new career, volunteering, or pursuing a new hobby—do something
on a daily basis to make progress. Be fully committed, so that distractions won’t
take your energy away from the tasks necessary to achieve your goal. A woman
who wanted to use her spare time to do personal writing found herself distracted
by TV programs--until she decided to unplug the set from Friday to Monday.

6. Cultivate Your Dreams. To repot successfully, you need to let your mind run
free to entertain new concepts, ideas and avenues. Unleash your creative side
by visualizing a new future for yourself. A mother of four, who had spent 20
years raising children, allowed herself to visualize a new identity. In the process
of helping an exchange student living in her home, she discovered a talent for
counseling troubled youth. She allowed her imagination to take her beyond her
current role of stay-at-home mother to that of a therapist for adolescents.

7. Water Your Roots. Find the core values that motivate you. Make sure the life
you are living is in sync with your deepest values and priorities. If not, see what
you can do to realign it. Let’s say you feel the lack of spirituality in your life, but
aren’t sure how to find it. For two of our repotters, the answer to spiritual
fulfillment lay in serving non-profit community organizations. Two others,
however, took a religious path: one started a Bible study group, and the other
entered seminary and was later ordained.

8. Don’t Forget Fertilizer. When you expand your knowledge, you expand your
options. For personal growth, ongoing learning is crucial. You can seek
self-enrichment in a variety of ways and venues, whether to pursue a hobby or
gain new credentials for a career. The stimulation of learning fosters new growth
and change—and acquiring knowledge and skills can happen at any age. A
middle-aged stock market analyst decided to go back to school for an M.B.A. so
that she could start an entrepreneurial venture with her grown daughter.

9. Plant a Sample Bed. Until you try a plant in your own personal garden, you
won’t know for sure if the conditions are right for growth. If they’re not, you can
always rip it out and start again. Embrace trial and error. A woman running her
own real estate appraisal company took training to see if she would like to
become a massage therapist. While she enjoyed the nurturing aspect of this
profession, she realized she couldn’t do it fulltime. She continues to run her
company and sees massage clients on weekends.

10. Get Input from Other Gardeners. Tap into your network—family members,
friends and colleagues—who may be able to give you feedback, advice,
information and emotional support along your journey. As you benefit from the
advice of others, you may also find that you’re helping someone else along the
way. Among the many blessings of repotting are the social relationships you
build along the way. An accountant we met wanted to change fields. She
consulted her family, professional friends, and people who had known her
throughout her life. This research reconnected her with long-lost friends,
deepening current friendships and building new, rewarding relationships in her
new field.

Author's Bio: 

Diana Holman is an entrepreneur and well-known trends expert who speaks worldwide to corporate audiences on lifestyles trends. She founded WomenTrend in 1993, one of the first companies to analyze and interpret trends created by and affecting female consumers. Since selling WomenTrend in 2001, she has focused her efforts on marketing and trends consulting.

Ginger Pape is a former Wall Street executive and Washington-based corporate officer of a Fortune 100 company. She helped found the Women's Business Center to train women how to start businesses, and over the last 15 years has advised women from all walks of life on their repotting process.