The Essence of Passioneering: 12 Keys to Thriving as You Give Back

Since December 2008, I’ve had the honor and joy to interview over 300 bold, inspiring leaders and entrepreneurs who are leaping vibrantly and passionately into making big, positive contributions in the world.  I call them Passioneers® and have been featuring their stories in a variety of venues, including radio interviews and blog posts, to share this very simple and powerful message:  When you do what you love AND give back, the rest does follow.   The vision is to bring these thriving Passioneers together to inspire and support budding Passioneers so they too can pay it forward.  Think “pay it forward” multiplied many times over.

The journeys are vividly unique and poignant, yet I have discovered a common thread of twelve qualities that weaves itself throughout – a kind of Passioneering “lifeline” for what it really takes to make big impacts in the world AND remain vibrant and prosperous along the journey.  Below are the twelve Passioneering Essences, which are now making their way into a new book (January 2011 launch) and upcoming blog posts:

  1. Vision: A bigger you requires a bigger view.
  2. Love: Let love connect the dots.
  3. Zeal: Spread the pathogen of passion. It’s incurable.
  4. Courage: Fear is inevitable.  Leap anyway.
  5. Faith: With seed-like faith, you’ll move mountains.
  6. Service: Pay it generously forward in all directions.
  7. Perseverance:   Take quitting permanently off of the table.
  8. Integrity: Put the walk into your talk.  Frequently.
  9. Community: Assign a powerful team to unleash your dream.
  10. Vibrancy: Nourish your mind, body, and spirit.
  11. Prosperity: Be a pump for prosperity, in AND out.
  12. Gratitude: Cultivate a grateful heart.

Cheers and Happy Passioneering!

Free PassionCast MP3s: Tune into a the Vibration of Prosperous Passioneering

If you’re a social or spiritual entrepreneur who wants to thrive at giving back and you missed our November 2010 PassionCast, it’s Copyright All rights reserved by Paulaastorganot too late!  Tune into the high-vibin’ dialogue among 14 panelists and our fabulous guests about REAL, relevant topics on thriving at what you love.

The MP3 recordings from the four sessions are now available below! Enjoy and Happy Passioneering!

CLICK HERE FOR YOUR FREE MP3s!

Enjoy and Happy Passioneering!

Protected: November 2010 PassionCast – Sessions 1 and 2

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Protected: November 2010 PassionCast – Sessions 3 and 4

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Happy Passioneering!

Passioneer® Stephanie A. Jones, Political/Social Scientist, Founder of Geek Nerd Wonk

Stephanie A. Jones, J.D., LL.M., M.P.H., is the Founder of GeekNerdWonk Charitable Foundation (“GNW”) (www.geeknerdwonk,org –  under construction!)

Stephanie, raised in Los Angeles, began her training as multi-disciplinary social and political scientist, taking degrees from Yale (Sociology, with specialty in Political Science, cum laude) and Columbia (Masters of Public Heath, in Ethics and History of Public Health, in Socio-medical Science), as well as a doctorate (J.D., University of Cincinnati, College of Law, American Jurisprudence Award, Law Review) and a post-doctorate degree in law (LL.M) in Mental Health Policy.

A life long scholar, Stephanie went to medical school for a few years -  abandoned over fury of health care waste, and institutionalized, socio-cultural, systemic conditions that guarantee health care disparities in marginalized and vulnerable populations.  She’s studied graduate level Bioethics at the University of Dayon, Death Penalty with Cornell’s Law School in Paris, International Human Rights with Gonzaga’s law school in Florence.  Graduate psychology studies at Columbia in Neuroscience, Stigma and Social Marketing complimented her training at Stanford’s Political Psychology Institute, and in Johns Hopkins’ Department of Psychiatry.  She’s published in multiple venues, and works across the US and in Africa for marginalized, vulnerable and discriminated against populations, often doing work where multiple stigmatized statuses operate synergistically.  She thinks of herself as an educator, researcher and writer.

The Passions and Possibilities Network Radio Show airs every Wednesday at 9am PST on Blog Talk Radio.  Join us live by dialing in at (347) 205-9038 with your questions, insights, and comments.  Thanks and Happy Passioneering!

Stephanie’s Passioneer Questionnaire:

SZO:  What’s your definition of “passion”?

Passion is living one’s one unrepeatable life wrung dry.

SZO: What have been the key factors in your success and what one word best describes it?

The key factors in success are both the possession of and a reputation for the possession of unimpeachable integrity, over-generosity of time, talent, resources and work ethic; and a certain St. Bernard-ish slobbery enthusiasm for every conceivable person met or subject broached.   And get up EARLY!

SZO:  What has been your biggest challenge(s) in leaping into your passions, and how you have addressed them?

I belong to many of the marginalized groups for which I work, and it is my speaking openly about my overcoming and/or the managing of these challenges which motivates my work.  I live with severe bipolar disorder and I am recovered from alcoholism, anorexia, and severe domestic violence. Most who possess such stigmatized statuses do not live in a time in which there exist finely tuned psychotropic medication, to which I am neurobiologically responsive and 100% medication compliant  for the best medical care one can buy.

As an adult, after marriage, children, a divorce, and heterosexually dating, I happened to fall in love with a woman.  Therefore, I live with what could be imposed upon me, were I to allow it,  multiple, synergistically-operating stigmatized statuses.

Most who possess such stigmatized identities have not my sheer dumb luck of having been born as a white American Citizen, with the unearned gifts of private and Ivy league schools,  and having had a  debutante ball, hailing from a family dating back (in America) to the Colonial Wars.  This social capital TRUMPS my would-be stigmatized statuses. These psychotropic drugs have enabled me to dance in the black of Aristotle’s “genius/madman” ledger, have enabled me to obtain a preposterously superb education, and enabled me to earn professional credibility and authority.  It is my calling to speak out for and work on behalf of those who are not so blessed as I, who are too frightened to get help for the types of synergistically operating stigmas one might want to put on me.

SZO:  Who or what inspired you to leap into your passion?

My mother, who is unconditional love, wisdom, and tenacity personified; and who taught me that one can indeed have one best friend for an entire lifetime.

Sir Winston Churchill, who, like me, suffered a mind besieged by bipolar disorder, at a time in which there was no medical help to assuage his pain, while insisting “Never, never, never give up.”  And he never, never, never gave up.

SZO:  Do you have a quote that you would like to share that speaks of you and your passion?

“Thoughts lead on to purposes; purposes go forth in action; actions form habits; habits decide character; and character fixes our destiny” – Tyron Edwards

“The first quality needed is audacity.” – Sir Winston Churchill.

SZO:  What do you hope people would say about you when you’re gone?

“She left everything on the field.”

SZO:  What three brief tips can you give to somebody making the leap into their passion?

1) You must be prepared to work harder than you can conceivably imagine.  That means a 9-5 job to keep a roof over your head, and another 6 hours per day devoted to your true passion and/or volunteering, to whatever feels most authentic to you.  If you do not work 14-16 hours a day you will never escape your 9-5 job, when the goal is to be so successful at your authentic job you can do IT alone for 14-16 hours a day.

2) There is no vacancy waiting for you.  You have to claim your space. There is no room at the top just waiting for your particular brilliance, ready and willing to step to the side to enable your joining the hallowed ranks.  Educate yourself, give of yourself, establish your credibility, and then march in and claim your space.  Then work twice as hard to maintain your right to be there.

3) If you tell the truth. 100% of the time, you never have to remember anything you have ever said.

Thanks Stephanie!

Passioneers® Gary Mantz and Suzanne Mitchell, Radio Show Co-Hosts, Metaphysicians

Gary Mantz was twelve years old when he surreptitiously read Flying Saucers Serious Business by Frank Edwards in an art class where he discovered he was a truly terrible artist. As it turns out, his art is painting word pictures on The Gary Mantz Show Sundays 7-9pm on Alternative Talk 1150.  He can be reached at www.garymantz.com.   Suzanne Mitchell grew up in Chicago and graduated from Northwestern University with a Bachelor of Arts degree in English Literature.  As producer and co-host of The Gary Mantz Show, Suzanne uses her proficiency in business matters to organize the elements of show production and sometimes jumps into the on-air conversations.

Catch them live on Wednesday, October 27th, when we interview them on the Passions and Possibilities® Radio Show.

SZO:  What’s your definition of “passion”? The thing you do when all your duties are handled and you are free to do as you please.

SZO:  What have been the key factors in your success and what one word best describes it? Gary: curiosity  Suzanne: persistence

SZO:  What has been your biggest challenge(s) in leaping into your passions, and how you have addressed them?

Gary: overcoming the intransigence of those who considerate their professional duty to hold me back by dogged determination and a belief in a higher power  Suzanne: wanting to do more things than time permits and having to let some things go

SZO:  Who or what inspired you to leap into your passion?

Gary: Vin Scully & Art Bell, two giants of broadcasting  Suzanne: Gary

SZO Do you have a quote that you would like to share that speaks of you and your passion?

Gary: do it or don’t do it; you’re going to die anyway, so how would you like to spend the rest of yours days? You’ve got to choose. Suzanne: allow the unexpected.

SZO   What do you hope people would say about you when you’re gone?

Gary: He did what he most loved to do and he did it pretty well.   Suzanne: I miss her.

SZO:  What three brief tips can you give to somebody making the leap into their passion?

A: ignore the people that tell you you can’t do it because of your age, race, religion, or any social category that excludes you. B: nurture your passion privately until you’re ready to go public C: let your passion be tempered with gradualness. Be enthusiastic and methodical at the same time.

Thanks Gary and Suzanne and Happy Passioneering!



Passioneer® Lissa Rankin, Founder of Owning Pink, Author, Ob/Gyn Physician

Lissa Rankin is an OB/GYN physician, an author, a nationally-represented professional artist, as well as the founder of Owning Pink, a website and series of workshops committed to building authentic community and empowering others to get their mojo back. She is currently redefining health at the Owning Pink Center, her practice in Mill Valley, California. She is the author What’s Up Down There: Questions You’d Only Ask Your Gynecologist If She Was Your Best Friend (St. Martin’s Press). She currently lives in Northern California with her husband and fellow artist, Matt Klein, and their daughter, Siena.

Catch her live on Wednesday, October 20th on when we interview her on our Passions and Possibilities® Radio Show.

Lissa’s Passioneer Questionnaire:

SZO:  What’s your definition of “passion”?

The word we use for that in the Owning Pink community is “mojo” or MOre JOy. It’s that joie de vivre, the feeling of complete aliveness coursing through your veins, rocking out in all areas of your life – physical health, relationships, spirituality, creativity, sexuality, etc. It’s all about owning who you are and being all you, all the time. That kind of vitality is infectious and inspiring.

SZO:  What have been the key factors in your success and what one word best describes it?

That word would be Pleap (that’s a “Pink leap of faith” in our community). For the past four years, my life has been about taking one giant leap of faith after another. I’ve listened to signs from the Universe and done what has been in my heart, even if it made no sense at the time. The series of Pleaps began when I quit my job as a full time OB/GYN in a busy managed care practice where I was expected to see 40 patients a day. Subsequent Pleaps have included moving my family hundreds of miles (twice), starting OwningPink.com, opening my own wellness center, writing two books, and countless other things that seemed insane at the time, but ended up being exactly what I needed.

SZO:  What has been your biggest challenge(s) in leaping into your passions, and how you have addressed them?

The signs from the Universe have not always pointed me in directions I necessarily wanted to go. The decisions I’ve needed to make have been far from convenient, and definitely not easy. For example, I was working in an integrative medical center last year, when I began receiving signs that it was time to leave and start my own wellness center (the Owning Pink Center). I reeeeally didn’t want to accept this, as it would take me way out of my comfort zone and pose challenges I didn’t know if I was ready to undertake. Whenever I’ve felt a calling like that, it’s always come with a whole host of objections from the part of me that just wants things to be easy and straightforward. But I’ve never once regretted answering the call.

SZO:  Who or what inspired you to leap into your passion?

After what I call my “perfect storm,” where I gave birth to my daughter, my dog died, my brother ended up in liver failure (he’s okay now), and my beloved father died – all within two weeks – I decided that I couldn’t continue living life in a way that didn’t feel authentic. I decided then and there that it was time to be all me, all the time, and let the chips fall where they may. As I said, the first step was quitting my job, and a miraculous series of events unfolded (and keep unfolding) from there.

SZO:  Do you have a quote that you would like to share that speaks of you and your passion?

“To be what you must, you must give up what you are.” That’s from a song by Yusaf Islam (formerly Cat Stevens). We can’t get too attached to things as they are. Life is ever-changing. As I learned from my perfect storm, your world can get turned upside down in the space of a few weeks. If we hold too tightly to what we think we’re supposed to be, life will do a number on us. I’ve found that letting go of fixed ideas about anything helps me to move forward with an open heart. I’ve surrendered to the Universe’s master plan, and know that that is full of surprises. I need to be open to whatever life is asking of me, which requires a lot of flexibility and willingness to change.

SZO:  What do you hope people would say about you when you’re gone?

I don’t want them to remember me as any one thing – doctor, artist, writer, mom, daughter, wife – I want them to remember me as a whole, authentic, real, loving human being who inspired others to be whole, to embrace their vitality and to never fear taking leaps of faith. If even one person can say that I was the midwife helping her give birth to herself, I’ll have left the legacy I desire.

SZO:  What three brief tips can you give to somebody making the leap into their passion?

  • Go with the flow. You can’t know everything the Universe has planned for you. Sticking too rigidly to one plan often results in struggle and suffering.
  • Set intentions but surrender attachment to any specific outcome. The Universe might have something even better in store for you.
  • Once you are clear on your purpose in this life, ask the Universe for what you need to support you, and be open to what comes. You’ll be amazed at how often your prayers are answered.

Thanks Lissa and Happy Passioneering everyone!

Creating a Powerful Video to Share Your Passioneer® Story

Videos are red hot hot HOT!  They allow your audience to connect on a more personal level with you than text and audio, and search engines love them.   So creating and posting a few simple, short videos on your website can provide tremendous marketing traction in sharing your Passioneer® story. If you’ve been procrastinating about taking the plunge into videos, the tips below are for you!

Clarify Your Intention

  • Start with the end in mind:  Do you want to entertain, inform, call into action, etc?  Choose and focus on one primary intention.
  • Who is your target audience?   Focus more on what they want to see than on what you want to share.
  • What do you want your viewers to feel, think or do after watching your video?  This is critical!
  • What must you communicate in order to elicit this response in them?

What Makes a Great Video?  K.I.S.S. (Keep It Simple, Silly)

  • Keep it real, relaxed, and conversational.
  • Keep it brief:  video lengths have been dropping over the past few years.  Under two minutes is a great start.
  • Create a compelling call to action:  Be clear on what you want your viewers to do next (e.g., join your email list, call you, sign up for a class)
  • Be creative, playful, and have fun!  Enough said.
  • Release judgment and need for perfection: Some of the most popular videos are popular because of their imperfections.
  • Maintain professionalism: real and relaxed does not mean sloppy or profane.
  • Show rather than tell: Find creative ways to demonstrate the key points in your message.  Use stories rather than boring monologues.
  • Include client testimonials or examples of results:  Bonus points if you get footage of clients’ sharing how you impacted their lives or businesses.

Creating a Great Video

  • Use a flip, webcam, camera, or video camera that you have begged, borrowed, but not stolen.  Try some types out before you buy.   Nowadays you can get a solid, highly-functional videocamera for less than $200 .  Try out offerings from Flip, Sony, Sanyo.
  • Have someone assist you:  It’s so much easier and better to have another individual doing the video recording, so that you can focus on your message.
  • Write out the outline and basic “script” of your video so that you know where you are headed.
  • Practice a few times, yet not too much.  You do NOT want to memorize your script, nor come across as too polished.  Think “approachable”.
  • Pick a great video location with some visually interesting, but not too distracting or loud, backgrounds.
  • Learn to do some minor editing, using inexpensive video-editing programs.  Or find a virtual assistant, intern, student, or someone else who can assist you.  Minor edits include deleting obvious mistakes or distractions.
  • Upload your video to YouTube, Hulu, Facebook, Vimeo, Viddler, etc., or use  TubeMogul to post your video to all of them at once.
  • Share with as many of your social media connections as possible, including Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, MySpace, etc.

Good Luck and Happy Passioneering!

Coming Up in Our Next Post:  “How to Prepare Your First Video, and How to Improve…”

Passioneer® Book Review: Karmic Management (What Goes Around…)

I just finished the short ‘n sweet Karmic Management by Geshe Michael Roach, Lama Christie McNally, and Michael Gordon, who also published the book The Diamond Cutter last year.  Karmic Management has TONS of valuable insights and wisdom for social and spiritual entrepreneurs who want to thrive as they give back.  These authors aren’t spouting psycho-spiritual mumbo jumbo.  Nope.  They’re imparting authentic, practical, and universal principles that have led to the success of their own businesses. Two BIG Passioneering thumbs up!

What is so great about this book, besides its brevity, clarity and simplicity?  Let me count the ways:

  • Eight practical rules to unleash karma more fully in your personal and professional ventures, even if you’re not a “color inside the lines” kinda person.  My favorite two rules:
    • “KM Rule #1: Stop Doing Things that Don’t Work”. The authors suggest that we spend most of our lives mitigating risks and dealing with uncertainty and the possibility of failure.  That’s human nature, yes, AND what becomes possible if, instead, we operate as if we are sure that things will work out?   What if our chances of success are actually 100%?  What a concept!   Admittedly, there are many behaviors that I keep doing that just don’t work, and I keep expecting different results = the definition of insanity.  How about you?  Karmic Management Rule #1 is a clarion for new ways of thinking and being.
    • “KM Rule #5: Stop Making Decisions”.   Step away from the left-brained analysis, lists of pros and cons, and heavy-duty contingency planning.  “Decisions are borne from the uncertainty of the odds,” state these authors, so they are reactionary, non-creative, and kill possibilities.  How can a world possibly operate without decision-making?  In my own career, I received lots of money to help corporate executives make major decisions and mitigate risks for their businesses.   So this tenet seems to fly in the face of everything American.  Yet, what I glean from Rule #5 is to stay open, flexible, and nimble by making moment-to-moment choices via intuition and whole-brain thinking rather than by reams of analytics.   The line between choosing and deciding, albeit fine, is distinct and powerful, because it props open the doors of infinite possibilities.
  • A calling by the authors to NOT read the book from cover to cover in one sitting (like I did).  Instead, they recommend savoring each of the short chapters and completing the relevant exercises.   Moving through the book for the second time, I am really getting the principles at a much deeper, richer level.
  • An emphasis on a balanced, holistic mind/body/spirit approach.   The chapter-end exercises include practices that are simple to incorporate into busy schedules: meditation/reflection (“quiet sitting”), journaling, and changing the way that you eat.
  • Transformed business life cycles. The authors suggest that, by following Karmic Management principles, you can bust through the normal business life cycle of birth, growth, maturation and closure.  How?  By continually paying it forward and planting karmic seeds among your business partners, clients, and others.  Using this approach, your business catapults to a new, higher level of growth and success, instead of nosediving into non-existence.

Simply put?  Things go better with karma.  When I am on the hunt for “what’s in it for them,” instead of what’s in it for me, my days are more fun, connected, and the synergies abound.  While I never know exactly when or how things will come back around for me, I can rest assured that they will in miraculous, often-mysterious ways.   What is required is the releasing of control and my expectations of how it should look.   When I remember that surrendering is really strength in action and that not knowing is wisdom unfolding, I’m able to live more fully and joyfully in the moment.

Happy Karmic Passioneering![/private][/private]

Bi-Monthly PassioneerConnect Calls

[private][private]On the second and fourth Thursday of each month at 5:30 pm PST Pacific, Sue Oliver will facilitate a 60-minute coaching call on the attitudes, belief, and behaviors of successful Passioneering. If you seek to thrive at what you love, while giving back, then these calls are for you. The format will include key elements of masterminding such as brainstorming, celebrating successes, sharing action steps, being held accountable for follow-through, and group support.

  • Second Thursday of each month, 5:30 pm PST: Vision and Focus (“Catch the vision and keep it!”)
  • Fourth Thursday of each month, 5:30 pm PST: Action and Balance (“Take baby steps and stay in balance.”)

Agenda for The Calls

  • Opening/Centering
  • Check-in on well-being and successes
  • Brief discussion topic
  • Commitment to action and well-being steps for upcoming 2 weeks
  • Closing

To register for the calls, please fill out the information below:

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How to Contribute

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There are many ways to support budding Passioneers in leaping fully and vibrantly in their passions for giving back, particularly our new WA-state charitable nonprofit, Make a Passion Possible. Click here to find out more how you can support our efforts.

Happy Passioneering![/private][/private]

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