Author: Karen Putz

  • The Passion Book

    The Passion Book

    UYP Dan Miller Quote

    Psssst…

    I’ve got a new book out.

    You’ll like this one. It’s about…passion.

    How to unwrap your passion and create the life you truly want.

    I spent the last several years asking a lot of people about passion. I took all the lessons I learned and put them in this book. It was a lot of FUN to write this one, because when you interview passionate people about the stuff that lights them up, drives them forward, or allows them to savor life–you get all kinds of really cool answers and life lessons.

    UYP Dara Torres Quote

    The book is available on Amazon, Barnes and Noble, Books a Million or your favorite local bookstore (just ask, they can order if they haven’t already!).

    Your passion matters.

    UYP Joel Boggess Quote

    Here’s what my own editor, Tyler Tichelaar says about Unwrapping Your Passion:

    In the Foreword to Karen Putz’s new book Unwrapping Your Passion, bestselling authors and self-help gurus Debra Poneman and Janet Attwood, state about Karen, “How amazing is that woman?” I have to agree. You’d be hard-pressed to find anyone as passionate as Karen about her own passions as well as helping others discover theirs. In addition, she’s deaf but doesn’t let that get in her way, and one of her biggest passions is barefoot water skiing, a sport she took back up at age forty-four. Now she water skis across the United States year-round, pursuing her passion.

    “What’s your passion?” is the question Karen Putz challenges her readers with. She believes we all have a passion, and once we find it, we can enjoy our lives like never before. Sometimes we just need a little inspiration and help in discovering it, which is why Karen has written this book. In fact, she needed a little of that herself when she got back into barefoot water skiing. At forty-four, she thought she was too old until she met a sixty-six-year-old woman who had started barefoot water skiing at age fifty-three. Both women are proof it is never too late to find your passion.

    In writing this book, Karen set out to determine how people find their passions and what keeps them passionate. She interviewed 200 people, and she tells many of their stories, revealing their secrets and inspirations. Then she challenges readers with exercises to help discover the passion within themselves.

    The various chapters in Unwrapping Your Passion look at different ways to find your passion and also ways to overcome obstacles that present themselves in your pursuit of it. One way Karen strongly advocates for finding your passion lies in the power of meditation. One of the people she mentions in the book, Patti, taught her, “passion doesn’t just have to be the fire in the belly—passion is also the quiet nudging of the heart. We just have to listen.” Karen knows that from experience. It was listening to a quiet voice that caused her to write her first book. She had never written a book before, which was challenge enough, but that quiet voice was telling her to go introduce herself to a water skier she had never met and write his story. It seemed like an impossible situation, but she did it, and now she has several books under her belt.

    One obstacle to pursuing one’s passion is fear. Too often we repress what we want because of our fears, whether it’s fear of success, fear people will reject us if we pursue our passion, or fear of physical harm. Karen, herself, dealt with the fear of physical harm. She wanted to barefoot water ski, but she was also deathly afraid of alligators. She even had nightmares about them, which made her not want to venture out on lakes. But she knew if she was going to pursue her passion, she would have to overcome that fear. With the help of a qualified friend, she got up close and personal with an alligator, actually touching it, discovering what beautiful and magnificent creatures alligators are, and then her fear dissolved.

    I can’t discuss all the topics Karen covers in this book but others include how to avoid toxic people who will try to suck your passion out of you, and how to deal with stress that will debilitate you from pursuing your passion. She also quotes and interviews many authors who know a lot about passion. One of them, Terry Hadaway, author of Live Your Why, offers great advice when he says that we often have the question all wrong. Instead of asking “What do you want to be?” we should be asking, “How do you want to live?”

    Nor is it always easy to be a cheerleader for others when they want to follow their passions. Karen discovered that hard truth when her daughter wanted to drop out of college to pursue an acting career. Karen was terrified for her daughter and tried to convince her to stay in school until her daughter called her on the situation, saying, “How can you tell others to follow their passions when you can’t even let your own daughter do that?” Karen knew her daughter was right. Today, her daughter is on Broadway.

    Finally, if you think it’s too late or you don’t think you’re good enough to succeed at what you’re passionate about, take this bit of advice from Karen, “There’s a learning curve when you are doing something that’s totally new to you. Every expert on earth has started out as a beginner. I often tell people, ‘Don’t compare your beginning to someone else’s ten-year process.’” I love this advice and would add that in ten years, if you don’t pursue your passion, you won’t get anywhere you want to be, so begin, no matter how small or hard that beginning is.

    As someone who has spent his life pursuing his passion for writing, even making decisions some people told him were mistakes, and knowing that it has all turned out well regardless, I guarantee that Unwrapping Your Passion will leave you feeling reinvigorated and passionate about the endless possibilities that lie before you. Karen will help you find your passion, and once you do, the sky’s the limit.

     

    Grab your copy at your local bookstore or online: Unwrapping Your Passion

  • The Greatest Relationship-Building Tool

     

    dad dying

     

    When my father died, I received a card that changed my life. You see, just a few days before he passed, I posted a picture of our hands clasped together. A friend saw the picture, put it on the front of a card, and sent it to me with heartfelt words of condolences inside.

    I received many beautiful cards from friends, but this one had me in tears. No store-bought card could hold a candle to the card that held a precious picture capturing my father’s last days.

    “How did you do that?” I asked.

    Turns out, she used a revolutionary company that is changing the whole greeting card and gift industry. I immediately became a distributor. (And yes, if you click on that link, it will take you to my distributor page.)

    But the real reason I’m sharing this here is to explain how this simple act of sending cards can change your life and lead you to some awesome relationships. Because you see, when you send a card or gift to someone, you’re probably going to brighten up their day– and perhaps even change THEIR life, too. Most of our trips to the mailbox often involve junk mail or bills, so receiving a heartfelt card will bring some awesome energy to someone’s day.

    making-a-difference-card-300x215

    Think back to the last time you INTENDED to send someone a card. Perhaps you wanted to say thank you, or celebrate a special occasion, or reach out in support…but the moment passed and then you just became too dang busy to run to the store, sit down and write, and then drop it off at the post office.

    Or maybe you didn’t have any stamps…

    Now, imagine this instead:

    You’ve met someone new and you want to stay in touch. You’ve got this great selfie you took together. No problem–you whip out your card app on your phone, slap the selfie on the top of the card, write a cool paragraph with heartfelt words (in your own handwriting font, imagine that!!), click on their address, and send the card.

    A few days later, this person gives you a call, texts you, or reaches out through Facebook and you’ve connected again.

    Yup, you now have the greatest relationship-building app right on your phone!

    And you can get it here:  Cards Anywhere


     

     

  • The Handstand Lesson

    Like a lot in life, we often see the end results of success instead of the struggle. 
    When my daughter and I came across this piece of rock on a beach in Florida, I wanted to do a handstand on it. 
    The first several tries resulted in a bunch of pictures with one foot or nothing. A couple of things were happening:
    The rock sloped downhill. I was afraid I would fall forward or backward into more jagged rock. 
    I had just started doing handstands a few months ago– more than 30 years after I did my last one. I didn’t trust my ability to do it. 
    So my daughter suggested trying the handstands uphill instead. 
    It worked. After a few practices, I had the confidence to try it downhill and that’s the picture you see here. 


    So in life, if at first you come up to a challenge, change the way you approach it. Try something different. Practice. Gain the skill. Above all, persist.

  • Create a Life You Love



    Imagine waking up each morning excited to start the day because you know it will be filled with joy, fun, and happiness.

    You can absolutely have this kind of life. It’s not a pipe dream, but it will require change.

    Think about it; you can change three things:

    Your thoughts.

    Your attitude.

    Your actions.

    Victor Frankl, a Holocaust survivor, wrote about this in his book, Man’s Search for Meaning, which the Library of Congress lists among the Ten Most Influential Books. Victor, a psychiatrist, spent three years at the Auchwitz Concentration Camp. He knew he could not change his circumstances, but he was completely free to determine what thoughts he would dwell on, what attitude he could choose to have, and what actions and responses he could put forth.

    Everything can be taken from a man but one thing: the last of the human freedoms—to choose one’s attitude in any given set of circumstances, to choose one’s own way.
    When we are no longer able to change a situation, we are challenged to change ourselves.

    Between stimulus and response there is a space. In that space is our power to choose our response. In our response lies our growth and our freedom.

    You have it within you to create a passionate life that you truly love.
    What I Learned from Choosing Passion

    Not too long ago I spent the evening in the company of guys who are crazy passionate about the sport of barefoot water skiing. As we watched videos of last year’s barefooting runs, I was thinking how much my life changed since I rediscovered my passion.
    Seven years ago, I didn’t know any of the barefooters I know today. An “Old Lady”, Judy Myers, inspired me to step back into a sport I had long ago abandoned. Her simple invitation started me on a wonderful journey and many lessons on the importance of following your passion. 
    Here’s what I learned: 
    When you choose in favor of your passions, you will meet many people who will teach you in every way. The masters will cut your learning curve in half–in less time than if you tried to journey alone. A community will form around your passion and the connections will multiply. Your tribe will push you and stretch you in different ways, both by keeping you safe and yet, knocking you out of the comfort zone so that you grow. 
    Passion will drive you. It will carry you through tough times. You’ll discover there is far more you can do than you ever originally imagined when you first started. 
    Doing what you love to do will bring you joy, laughter, and tears –and it will be so, so worth it. 
    So my advice for you is this: step into your passion. Choose in the direction of joy. Your life will change in incredible ways.

     

     

  • Are You Too Old to Do What You Love to Do?

    “I’m too old.”

    In my work as a Passion Mentor, I often hear this excuse as a reason for not living a passionate life. 

    I get it.

    At the age of 44, I felt like I was too old to enjoy the sport I once was so passionate about as a teen. The day before my 44th birthday, I attempted to barefoot water ski with my oldest son driving the boat. 

    I couldn’t do it. 

    I’m too old, I thought. 

    I was lucky. Back in 2009, I saw 66-year-old Judy Myers barefoot water skiing on the TODAY Show. She completely reframed my mindset. Suddenly I wasn’t too old–I had 22 years left to catch up to her! Thanks to Judy, I got back on the water and found my joy again.


    In the last seven years, I’ve been studying this thing we call “passion” and learning from others. I spoke about this at the 140 Conference in Los Angeles: Unwrapping Your Passion at Any Age

    Before I went on stage, Howard Rosenman spoke. You might not recognize his name, but you probably have seen the movies he’s produced: Father of the Bride, Buffy the Vampire Slayer, and Gross Anatomy.

    Howard wanted to be a movie producer when he was a young child but he took a detour by going to medical school to become a doctor instead. In the middle of an operation, Howard decided to listen to his calling for the arts. That decision lead to a career in Hollywood. “Making movies and storytelling, that’s my passion,” Howard said.

    And passion, Howard says, is something that you love so much that you will go through any obstacles to do it. (You can read more about Howard at my Growing Bolder blog.)

    If you find yourself thinking that it’s too late to live a passionate life, I want you to take ten minutes to watch a video that can change your life. In ten short minutes of this captioned video, you’ll learn how you can unwrap YOUR passion at any age: 

    No, You’re Not Too Old

  • So You Want to Write a Book, But Have No Idea How to Start

    write a book

    So you want to write a book but you really have no idea how to start…

    Or maybe you’re just procrastinating because it’s easier to put things off than to face a blank page and thought paralysis.

    I know…

    I’ve been there.

    There’s really no other way to begin–you simply have to write.

    Just start. The words may be a few jumbled thoughts at first. You might have a vague idea of what your book should be about. You might trip yourself up and think, “who am I to write a book?” or “Everything good has already been written.”

    Well, no one has read YOUR book yet.

    Once you actually start the physical capture of thoughts into written form–something magical happens. That’s right–you’ve stirred the universal magic into motion.

    I just sent my tenth book off to a publisher (I self-published my other books) and I have two more books planned for this year.

    Over the years, I’ve developed some strategies and short-cuts to make the whole book writing process a little more streamlined and easier.

    Here are some tips:

    Use Evernote or Notes in your phone to write ideas, paragraphs, or even whole chapters. Use your voice to text option and simply speak into your phone. Write while waiting at the doctor’s office. Write while walking your dog. Write while relaxing in a hot bath (don’t drop your phone!) Later, you can transfer this to Word, Google Docs, or Scrivener. Email a copy to yourself as a backup.

    One of the magical things for me is actually a $1 spiral notebook. I carry it everywhere. I get my best results when I go to a place surrounded by nature and let my thoughts flow.

    Keep a quote journal and add quotes as you come across them. You can place relevant quotes throughout your book or at the beginning of every chapter. 

    Write out 50 life lessons you’ve learned personally. Write out 50 life lessons or stories from others. You can use these lessons in different chapters.You may also be sparked to write several books from the lessons you’ve captured.

    Set aside time to write every day. I often hear the excuse, “I really don’t have the time.” If you really, really, really want a book in your name, you’ll MAKE the time. Get up 30 minutes earlier. Go to bed thirty minutes later. Ditch 30 minutes of TV. Jerry Jenkins wrote 187 books. He wrote from 9 pm to 1 am when he had a full time job.

    Set a deadline and have an accountability partner. These two strategies will move your book to the finish line much quicker than if you do it alone.

    Hire a top-notch editor.  When you make mistakes–relax. I just read a brand new Janet Evanovich book that had a typo in it. 

    And remember this: you are the only person who can write from your own perspective. Don’t be a carbon copy of anyone else. Write from your heart.

     

    Karen Putz wanted to be an author since she was 11. It took her a few years to finally start writing. She threw a few books up on Amazon: Karen Putz, Author. 

    And here you go, a free book just for you: Outside the Wake

  • Soulotravel, Travel that Feeds the Soul

    Last year, I took a personality test and the results surprised me. 

    INFJ.

    At first, the letters meant nothing. Despite two college degrees in counseling, I hadn’t paid attention to psychological tests in my training. After reading the description of this personality type, so many parts of my life suddenly clicked into place.

    Growing up hard of hearing, I struggled to fit in and be like everyone else with normal hearing. I felt like I was weird. I spent hours at the library alone, devouring books instead of going to parties. Parties were both energizing and exhausting at times. I wanted to be liked by everyone, yet sometimes I was quiet and withdrawn. I always blamed my hearing loss. 

    If only I could hear I would be more _____.

    I’ve been told I’m too sensitive. “You need to toughen up,” a friend once told me. 

    When I saw the explanation of the INFJ results after taking the personality test, everything clicked into place. All of a sudden I understood why I was “weird.”

    Only one percent of the population has an INFJ personality. Here’s a blog post that explains more: Secrets of the INFJ Personality Type.

    I love people, yet I get my energy from being alone. 

    In the last several years, I’ve traveled alone often–speaking at schools, corporations, and conferences. I love travel. I’m so thankful for my husband who completely gets me and is supportive of what I call “Soulotravel.”

    Yes, travel revives my soul. I need the mountains, the sun, and water–any type of water I can get. 

    Right now I’m in Florida, housesitting for a friend and working on another book. My soul is completely content and I feel my reserves filling up nicely. My head is clear and I’m able to focus on my writing. 

    If you love to travel but you keep putting it off because you have no one to go with–wait no more. Plan a trip. Be open to what the universe delivers to you in the process. You will meet people. You will see things you’ve never seen before. You will return with a mind so expanded that you will yearn for more. 

    Soulotravel may not be for everyone, but if you are willing to step out of your comfort zone and take a trip alone, you may find that you discover a whole new side of you that you’ve never experienced before. 

  • Lessons from 25 Years of Marriage

    joe and karen

    When I first met my husband-to-be, I knew within two months of dating that I wanted to marry him.

    It took him a bit longer. He realized it around six months in. We were only 19 and 20 at the time, but we waited five years to tie the knot. We had to get college out of the way first.

    In 2015, we took off to California to celebrate our 25th anniversary. As we watched the sun set on the beach, we looked back at the years. How quickly they flew by. There were lots of good years, but some were peppered with “Divorce Moments.”  In fact, there was a year when our kids took bets as to when we would split. It was not a pretty time in our marriage, but going through the rough times has lead me to a different level of love and understanding in our marriage.

    After 25 years together, I’ve learned a few things:

    Perspective is Everything

    In the early years, we actually fought over parking spaces. I kid you not. I would become incredibly irritated at my husband when he circled around and around finding parking spaces. He, in turn, would criticize my parking skills, insisting that I park perfectly in a space, requiring me to back out and pull in again.  Then I read something in a book (I wish I could remember what book it was, but hey, that was quite some years ago) about changing YOUR behavior so that it causes a shift in your marriage. So the next time we went out, I clamped my mouth shut about parking. I took extra care to park the way he liked it. It took several outings before my husband realized we were no longer fighting about parking spaces. He learned to keep quiet about the parking stuff as well.

    Be careful what you pour your energy into. Put things in perspective–does the trivial stuff really matter in the bigger picture? If not, learn to let it go.

    Our Needs Are Different

    My spouse’s needs and my needs are different. We don’t have to do everything together, nor do we have to like the same things. It took me a long time to figure that one out. It took me a long time to respect it.  I used to drag him to events that bored the heck out of him. He used to sit me through movies that bored the heck out of me. Now we’re at this place where we have Yours, Mine, and Ours time. Compromise is the secret sauce that flavors a marriage.

    Life Will Get in the Way Unless You Make a Plan

    When our third child was born, we were outnumbered. We could no longer juggle things evenly. It was a struggle to get through each day and before we knew it, the week would fly by. The biggest problem? We were putting our marriage on the shelf during those times. You’ve probably heard this over and over: put yourselves on the calendar. Ink in that date night. Because if you don’t, you’ll find life getting in the way and the two of you drifting apart.

    Shake up your routine. Do something new together. Do something different. But for crying out loud, carve out that sacred time for just the two of you.

    Gratitude, the Divorce Antidote

    My spouse drives me completely up the wall when we are late for an event. It’s so, so, so easy for me to fly off the handle and berate him to change. Here’s the thing, you can’t be mad and grateful at the same time. So choose gratitude.

    When the two of us went to counseling years ago, the counselor listened to me fire off a list of things that I was disgruntled with in my spouse. She looked me in the eye and asked me what I was grateful for. What was working right? What did I like/love about my spouse? I was focusing so much on what was wrong, that I couldn’t see what was going right. So I thought about what I liked best in my spouse with gratitude and the feelings shifted. What a lesson to learn. Shift the focus to what is good in your marriage. After all, the two of you really liked the heck out of each other in the beginning. Focus with gratitude on what you have together that’s going well in your lives.

    karen and joe

    Love, Baby, Love

    Remember that excited, hot, “oh-m-gosh-I-can’t-take-my-hands-off-of-you” feeling in the beginning? I can remember it, I just can’t recreate it physically after 25 years. BUT, it has been replaced with a different kind of love, one that is just as nice. It’s a love that sustains. It’s the “I’ve married my best friend and I want this to go on ’til the end of our lives” feeling.

     

    This post first appeared on Ricky Martin’s Piccolo Universe.

    Want some more lessons? Outside the Wake 

  • You Can’t Plan Adventure

    I’ve entered a new season on the parenting journey: I’m now a mom of three young adults. This phase has required a shift in my parenting experience, one that requires a new skill set. It requires letting go and stepping back versus the heavy guidance of earlier years. 

    And it’s hard. 

    I keep wishing I could step back in time, to hold them once again as toddlers and revel in the innocence. 

    In this season of parenthood, it takes a lot of coordination, plane tickets, and divine timing to gather us all under one roof. We were fortunate to spend Christmas together this year followed by a vacation in the Caribbean. 

    I love to travel. I especially love being in new places that feed my soul, especially with nature. To travel with my family is always the ultimate trip for me. 

    This year, we joined a cruise with my son’s girlfriend’s family and their friends. It was a magical blend of different ages, generations, deaf, hearing, and backgrounds. 


    Memories are not made of things, they are made of experiences: the way you feel, the people you meet, the knowledge you acquire, and the discoveries that appear on your path.

    Before we left, I posted the Instapic below on my Instagram feed.


    “You can’t plan adventure,” my daughter said. “Adventure is spontaneous.”

    I get what she means. Adventure is often associated with the unknown and unplanned that unfolds in life. 

    But without vision and dreams, one blithely goes about the daily routine without much spark, passion, and yes, adventure. 

    Adventure requires taking action and there’s some planning that goes into it. This means clarity is required–by beginning with the idea that you will invite adventure into your life and stay open to new opportunities for adventure. 

    Some of the best adventures come from spontaneous moments–of embracing an opportunity and choosing to experience it. 


    Here’s to an adventurous year! 

  • The Best Podcasts With Transcripts

    The Best Podcasts With Transcripts

    There’s nothing more frustrating to a deaf person than seeing what looks like an awesome podcast–and no way to access it. As a deaf person, I obviously can’t listen to podcasts, but because podcasts are one of the best ways to learn new things and meet new people, I truly appreciate those that come with complete transcripts.

    I have found that people with normal hearing also appreciate transcripts, for if they are short on time, they will look through a transcript before committing their time to listen to the full podcast.

    Another big advantage for podcasts that have transcripts: transcripts show up in web searches.

    Over the last several years, I’ve been “listening” to podcasts via transcripts. Here are some of the best:

     

    Jaime Masters, The Eventual Millionaire 

    Jaime Masters interviews millionaires to discover their secrets and how they rose to the top.

     

    Luis Congdon and Kamala Chambers, Thriving Launch

    Luis and Kamala feature interviews from well-known individuals in the self-help field, such as Jack Canfield, Gretchen Rubin, and more.

     

    Michael Hyatt, Lead to Win

    Michael Hyatt provides tips on how you can live your best life as well as leadership strategies for those in the corporate world.

     

    Pat Flynn, Smart Passive Income

    Pat was one of the earliest podcasters to add transcripts. Pat covers a variety of topics related to earning money from the internet to interviews with well-known web personalities.

     

    Tim Ferriss Show

    Tim is known as the “Four Hour Work Week” guy. To get the transcripts, you do have to trade in your email address to access them.

     

    Freakonomics

    Anything and everything is discussed in this daily podcast.

     

    Karen Putz is known as The Passion Mentor. She specializes in helping others unwrap their passion at ANY age. She is the author of Unwrapping Your Passion, Creating the Life You Truly Want.