• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to footer
Kykeon Coaching

Kykeon Coaching

Lighting the Way For Young Leaders of Today!

Menu
  • About
  • Sponsors
  • Assessments
  • Coaching
    • Personal Performance Coaching
    • Kykeon Life Coaching
    • Kykeon Career Coaching
    • Entrepreneur Business Coaching
  • Retreats
  • Small Group Workshops
  • Contact

Simplicity

Stress Management

October 15, 2020 by Jon Salmen

Right now, this year, the year to come… it is all very stressful and the world is a bit tense. But I believe that we can approach our lives with more optimism and hopefulness despite each negative circumstance. We are trying our hardest to field every piece of information we receive and filter them all out, but what if we can put a positive attitude on auto-pilot?

Our lives consist of more than just randomly occurring events and individual moments and they are more than our routines. The way a painter or writer takes days, months, even years to craft something beautiful, we too can approach each of these moments with similar finesse and style. 

Stress gets in the way of our patience to see things through and it hinders our ability to look ahead. Stress often begs us to look down at each and every small step. We sometimes go like this until we are brought to our knees, consuming to make ourselves feel better; TV, alcohol, social media, food, drugs, etc. But as we all know, those are not permanent or healthy solutions.

If our vision is ahead of us and we are looking down, of course those steps feel like chores, like useless expenditures of our time, money, and energy. Likewise, we will create other games and states of mind to distract ourselves from our problems. But it is only when we are able to see that what has been is in the process of creating what will be, that we can begin to appreciate each and every moment as a moment of our own unique creation. 

When we are constantly moving closer to our vision, each step feels more important, and when something is important to us, the stress becomes a motivator instead of a depressant. 

How do we do this?

First and foremost, Create a Clear Vision.

Get your What Will Be extra clear. This is your vision for life! Have you no vision for your life?! Of course you do. But we forget sometimes, don’t we? If you haven’t already, create a clear vision for your life or go back and revisit one you’ve already made and adjust. Feel welcome to use the P3 commitment coaching format available for planning out each category of your life. 

Additionally, Have a Silent “I” Time. SIT.

Show daily appreciation to yourself by sitting undistracted for 20-30 minutes. There are plenty of ways to do this outside of your shower, but you have to make the effort. There are hundreds of guided meditations online (headspace, youtube, podcasts) and plenty of beautiful peaceful lo-fi beats or piano compositions wherever you get your music. Just plain silence is also nice, and this time to yourself allows you a safe space to analyze your thoughts and feelings so they cannot control your day. During this time, reinterpret your emotions and thoughts and remember that they are not 100% true. You decide what your thoughts mean. Thoughts are not dictations, they are interpretations.

Lastly, Turn your emotion into motion.

Yes, there is only so much vision boarding and nirvana reaching you can do before you must move your body into action. Set physical goals that are as ambitious as your career or relationship goals and do them together. When we put ourselves to work, we can consciously choose to see ourselves manifesting something healthier and better for ourselves. This commitment to your health will carry over to your other commitments as well. 

More links that are helpful: 

“How to Make Stress your Friend”

“Fear Setting” – Tim Ferriss

“Quiet the Noise, Soothe Your Soul”

“5- Hindrances to Self-Mastery

Filed Under: Motivation Tagged With: goal-setting, Simplicity, stress management, vision

Simplicity

March 5, 2020 by Jon Salmen

Your life probably seems like a big mess especially if you care enough to look. But worrying about things is almost always totally useless. So here is a quick obstacle course to run the old mind through… Like a HIIT workout for your brain (no stretching required). 

5 quick questions to ask yourself:

  1. How is my life going?

Satisfaction is typically our measure for this category. In the areas of your life, how are all those categories working? Rank them 1/10.

2. How many things do I do?

Literally, what roles you have. What you do and a total exhaustive list of the things that you have to do from pure human physical upkeep and labor to hobbies and career goals.

3. Do I need to do all of those things?

Now think about how many of those things are actually necessary to do. Prioritize which ones just take up time and which things add and benefit heavily to your life and purpose. 

4. How far do I fall short of those standards I set for my actions?

There was a standard you needed to meet. Or at least from here on, you will set a standard to meet. Just evaluate and be honest, compassionate, and forgiving if you have not met them. 

5. What do you need to do to improve and progress?

What knowledge or skills can you use? What knowledge or skills can you learn? How can I change my attitude? Again, forgive yourself for your shortcomings and focus on the progress not the past. 

Get a current state, simplify, reevaluate and then do what needs to be done. 

Don’t contemplate it, do it.

Filed Under: Self Discipline Tagged With: FocalPoint Coaching, FocalPointKY, Simplicity

Footer

 
  • About
  • Sponsors
  • Assessments
  • Coaching
  • Retreats
  • Small Group Workshops
  • Contact

© 2026 Kykeon Coaching • Privacy Policy

  • About
  • Sponsors
  • Assessments
  • Coaching
    • Personal Performance Coaching
    • Kykeon Life Coaching
    • Kykeon Career Coaching
    • Entrepreneur Business Coaching
    • Back
  • Retreats
  • Small Group Workshops
  • Contact