Defining Moments

Throughout our life opportunity presents itself, opportunities to direct/sculpt/create our life. It comes in the form of choices. These particular choices are not your ordinary choices. These are the choices that change your life forever. When we come face to face with a defining moment, we are making defining choices. These are choices that will alter the course of our life. For good or bad, we are determining the course of the rest of our life.

If you think back, the defining moments will reveal themselves. You know which ones they are. Sometimes the moment is so etched in our mind that we remember it down to the tiniest of details. We remember the two choices that we were presented with and even the feelings that we had, and then we make what seems like such an inconsequential decision, but it alters our life forever. If we only knew the power that we held in that moment. Defining moments seem almost magical. They find us. We do not find them.

Unfortunately, they do not always find us when we are in the best frame of mind to be making defining, life-altering choices.

So the question is how do we alter the course if we have made a bad choice in a defining moment, or to put ourselves in the best place to make good future choices? Defining moments are internal choices. We make them with our heart, not necessarily our instincts, but our heart based on everything that has brought us to this place today and what we have come to know and believe, and or fear up to this very point. That is the problem with defining moments. We are not always in the healthiest of places when we must make them. An important thing to note about defining moments is that while they do alter the course of our life and define our lives from that point on, we do have the power to change that course. It may not be in the magic of a defining moment, but it is possible.

Think back to the choice you made and who you were when you made it. That is where our attention must be focused. The person we were when we made the choice. Who was she? What did she think? What did she believe? What did she do daily? The defining moment is changed when we see the person who made the choice and begin to do things differently than she did. Was she selfish? If so, then do things that require giving. Was she fearful? If so, then do things that require being brave. When you change the person who made the choice, you will create a person who makes different choices. Many times we hear that knowing is half the battle. Yes, but it is not the whole battle. The rest of the battle comes when we change what we think and do daily. Consistency is key. Be careful not to fall into the trap of thinking that just because you see the error in the choice you made that that makes you changed. That can be a trap making you think that you are entirely different. You are not truly there until you are consciously changing the day to day choices. Remember, it’s the day to day choices and thoughts that ultimately lead us to being the type of person who makes our defining moment choices. True change does not come until you consciously and consistently living a different daily life. We cannot change history, but we can create a new future. -Topaz

Finding Yourself

Dear Amazingly Beautiful Leading Lady and Kind Friend,

I recently read the eulogy that Steve Jobs’ sister wrote and was deeply touched. I felt like I knew him after I finished reading it and felt he was someone I would have liked and would have been friends with. His sister knew him. And she knew him well. It made me wonder could I sit down and write about my own self as she had written about her brother, and if I did what would I say.

If someone described you, what would they say? Is what they are seeing who you really are? Is it how you see yourself? Is it how you want others to see you? Sometimes we don’t accurately represent who we are because we are not walking in a total awareness of who we are. We throw around the phrase “finding ourselves” a lot today. Sometimes we seem to know others, or at least think we do, better than ourselves. So how well do we know ourselves?

I penned a simple list, for now, just to begin exploring. I would like to come back later and flesh it out more. I made an interesting observation after making my list. I do not always spend time doing the things I really love. I want to change that. Instead of spending an evening watching television, what if I spent the evening exploring an art gallery, or even a new art book? Or what if I spent the evening with friends discussing our hopes and dreams over dinner with a bottle of wine? Even something as simple as listening to the music I love can get lost in the busyness of a day. How many times do I get so busy that I don’t even think to have music playing? I said before there is power in the written word, and I believe that. If my life is the canvas, let me use these words to paint my life, my authentic life.

I love music with heart and passion.
I love the smell of the ocean.
I love turtle necks and jeans.
I love good conversation.
I love black and white.
I love creating.
I love simple.
I love fall.
I love joy.
I love art.
LOVE
I love art.
I love joy.
I love fall.
I love simple.
I love creating.
I love black and white.
I love good conversation.
I love turtle necks and jeans.
I love the smell of the ocean.
I love music with heart and passion.

I love that this is who I am and that I love all of these things.

I didn’t mention my material possessions, but of all the possessions I have, my Bibles, pictures, piano and writings mean the most to me. They are the things that cannot be replaced. My piano has a story, so even it cannot be replaced.

A perfect evening would be spent with people I care about enjoying wine, music, inspiring conversation, and wonderful food.

I wonder how many of us actually know our own selves as well as Steve’s sister wrote about him. I wonder if we even stop and think about it much, who we are. If we did, I believe we would like ourselves more than we realized, and low self-esteem would be less of an issue.

And if we did realize who we were, would we realize that we are not living our lives as our true authentic selves.

What do you love? How do you like to spend your time? What moves you? What inspires you? Are you spending your free time doing what you really love?

Take care, dear friend. May your life be beautifully you!

~Topaz

What do you love? How do you like to spend your time? What moves you? What inspires you? Are you spending your free time doing what you really love?

Steps to Confidence and Growth – Your Future Awaits

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Did you ever think that maybe the person that we want to be is the person that we are meant to be? Maybe the desire is our true self pulling us where we need to be. Go ahead and take the first step and just start owning it. If you want to be confident, then act confident. If you want to be adventurous, then go on an adventure. If you want to be brave, then do something that scares you. Go after the life you want. It just might be the life that you were destined to have.

We often think we must feel or be something first before we do it, but rarely does anything work like that. Many times we think someone is confident, adventerous, or brave but come to find out, they feel just like the rest of us. The only difference is they do it anyway. And that is how we learn these things. Once we have read enough, watch enough people do it, it will all come down to us practicing it. Sometimes we must do it before we feel like it.

Think about how we learn or do anything. Do people usually feel that they can swim before they learn how and practice it? No. They feel it after they have spent many hours learning it and then many more hours practicing it. The same goes for playing an instrument. We never feel like we can do it before we learn and practice. It’s after those many hours that we then FEEL it. Let’s suppose for one moment that this could apply to confidence. I don’t know anyone who wants to lack confidence but many of us do at different points in our lives. So what if we take this principle and use it for confidence. We will only feel it by practicing it. Actors and actresses do this all the time. When we are watching a movie we believe that the actors are feeling everything they are acting, but for all practical purposes, they are acting. The interesting thing about this is the more we practice something the more we feel it, and the more people respond to us as such, which then in turn makes us feel it even more.

Take, for instance, someone who wants to be more adventurous. But they are not in the habit of being adventurous. If this person started going on more adventures, they are going to start to feel excited, brave, and adventurous. And you know what? People are going to start looking at their lives and treating them like they are adventurous.

The main thing we have to do is just to decide what we want. More than likely, if it is something that we really want, it is who we are meant to be. Many people feel that we are naturally who we we are, but I do not believe this. I believe that because of many various factors that some of us rarely live up or reach our full potential. The reason I say this is many times who we are naturally is not who we really are. It’s who we are because of what we have gone through. It could even be an old wound that has stunted your growth. But just because this is who you are today, it does not mean it is who you were meant to be or who you will be tomorrow.

Putting it into practice:

In your journal, describe the person you want to be. What type of traits does she have? Place these traits on a chart or in columns. List under each trait behaviors that a person with that trait would exhibit. Choose from this list each day or each week. Keep it by your bed and add or change it as you grow. The most important thing is to remember that in order to change, you must change what you are doing. Read more on how to be confident and take a 30 day challenge by The Art of a Beautiful Life.

Find a time and place of solitude. Look into the distance, and into the future. Visualize the tomorrow you are going to build – and begin to build that tomorrow, today. -Jonathan Lockwood Huie

I Am Making a Memory

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I had the most wonderful dream. I dreamed that my mom and I took a camper and set out for a few days, just the two of us. I knew when we got there that this was going to be a special time for us. It was just the two of us, everything else left behind. I just sat for a moment and soaked it all in. So in my dream, I wrote a status update on facebook…yes, I apparently post status updates even in my dreams, which is funny because I do so little of that in real life. But this is what I posted on facebook in my dream.

I am making a memory.

Wow. It was so powerful. It gave me chills as I wrote it.

Read more on this life-changing dream and realization…. I Am Making a Memory by The Art of a Beautiful Life

Timeless Beauty – True Beauty Knows No Age

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The media has put youth and physical beauty on a pedestal to such an unhealthy degree that young women are more insecure than ever and developing eating disorders, plastic surgeons have waiting lists, and we have completely discounted the beauty in any woman who is over 25.

Yes, there is beauty in youth, but have we gone too far? From the positive response that we are seeing toward the new, older models and magazine covers featuring older women, I would say that America is saying yes we have. Not only have we doing an injustice to many beautiful and amazing older women, we have done an injustice to our younger women, who will also be older women one day, sooner than they realize. Time goes so quickly. We have much to learn from a generation that youth has discarded. Older women used to be role models, and we need to move back toward that for the sake of our younger generation. The one thing that we all must have to be beautiful, no matter what our age, is confidence, and that must begin by focusing on inner beauty and being a real woman. There is a confidence and timeless beauty in an older woman that our younger women need to learn from…the wisdom of the aged.

Valerie Ramsey, who became a model at 63, said it so beautifully:

“I think younger women are looking at women like us and seeing that we are real, that we are continuing to be involved, that we have something very, very dynamic to offer to the world and that the real beauty comes from, I would say, above all from confidence and from having courage to be ourselves, from the wisdom that we have acquired within ourselves over the years, from vibrancy, excitement, about being involved in life. and it’s when all of those things are on the inside and shine through on the outside, that’s what real beauty is all about.” -Valerie Ramsey

Here is another wonderful quote from Iris Apfel, a 90 year old model. Be grateful for every year that you have lived.

“I think it’s pitiful that people lie about their age. What’s wrong with getting older? If you’re lucky enough to get old you should celebrate it.” -Iris Apfel

So as leading ladies, let’s embrace our where we are and who we are. We have fought and won many battles to be where we are today. We have loved. We have lost. We have embraced. We have let go. We have scars to tell the story. And we have the courage and strength to show for it. And the best is still yet to come. Be the kind of woman that makes other women want to be you, a confident woman who takes care of herself and lives life being true to herself above all else. Find your inner beauty, and let it shine.