Category: Uncategorized

  • When Are You Going to Write Your Book?

    karen books

    “I want to write a book.”

    As a Passion Mentor, this dream comes up frequently when I ask people what their big dream is. Or their plan for the next year. Or the next five. Or their legacy.

    It always surprises me how long people have been carrying their dreams inside. I get it. I wanted to write a book when I was eleven. I sat down at my dad’s typewriter and pounded out my first story.

    Then I procrastinated for many years.

    The excuses bubbled up:

    I’m not ready.

    I don’t have enough experience.

    I need to practice writing more. 

    I don’t know where to begin.

    I don’t have time.

    and the mother of them all:

    Who am I to write a book? 

    That last one reminds me of Marianne Williamson’s famous quote:  “We ask ourselves, ‘Who am I to be brilliant, gorgeous, talented, fabulous?’ Actually, who are you not to be? You are a child of God. Your playing small does not serve the world.”

    I spent a lot of years putting off writing a book for the mythical “Someday.”  You know that day; the one when the moon and the planets all align and I could magically sit down and produce a book.

    There’s a song by Billy Joel that haunted me throughout my college years, “James.” In the middle of my first year in graduate school, I wanted to quit. I just knew I was going down the wrong road. Three times, I came close to pulling the plug on my education. Three times, friends gave me every rational reason why I should stick it out.

    And many times, a line from “James” ran through my head and blasting through the speakers in my apartment:

    “When will you write your masterpiece?”

    Someday.

    And the song would repeat.

    James…do you like your life,
    Can you find release,
    And will you ever change
    Will you ever write your masterpiece.
    Are you still in school
    Living up to expectations…James…

    You were so relied upon, everybody knows how hard you tried-
    Hey…just look at what a job you’ve done,
    Carrying the weight of family pride.
    James…you’ve been well behaved,
    You’ve been working so hard
    But will you always stay
    Someone else’s dream of who you are.
    Do what’s good for you, or you’re not good for anybody…James.

    I had come too far down a path to quit. There was no way I could make money from writing. I had already taken a journalism class and struggled my way through it. I couldn’t do interviews because no one knew I was hard of hearing and I wasn’t going to admit it. So I failed at being a poor imitation of a person who could hear.

    Fast forward many, many years later…

    I’m working on my 9th book. 

    What changed?

    I started writing.

    I wrote small articles. Blog posts. Magazine articles. Newspaper articles. Chicken Soup for the Soul. 

    When I finally decided to write my first book, I got up at five in the morning while holding down a more-than-full-time job, raising a family, caring for a dying parent, and volunteering for a non-profit.

    So when people come to me for advice on how to begin living their dreams, there’s a process:

    Identify your dream.

    Write it down. 

    Begin. 

    If you don’t follow this process, you’ll likely drift through one day, then the next, then the next…until several years have gone by and your dreams are still sitting on the shelf. If you continually wait until the time “is right,” eventually you’re going to run out of time.

    And that book you have inside of you, it will never be in your hands.

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    Put aside the excuses. Put aside the time constraints. Put aside the self-esteem hurdles.

    Start writing. Anything. You can pound out a couple of words in ten-minute spurts if that’s all the time you have in the day.

    You will encounter critics. It’s part of the process. I can still remember the scathing words of a well-meaning friend who tried to change my writing style. “You’re too casual. You write like you talk. It should be more formal.”

    Writing like someone else is like putting on a too-tight coat and attempting to button it up. Let the authentic you shine through. James Patterson has some great advice: “Focus on the story, not the sentence.”

    Here’s the thing: done is better than perfect. I have seen many first drafts of published authors who showed their first pieces of work in workshops. Three-ring binders. Stapled papers. Tiny books that grew into bestsellers during second editions.

    Never forget, Stephen King’s first draft of “Carrie” went into the garbage. His wife fished out the papers and encouraged him to continue. Thirty rejections later, King received an offer of a $2,500 advance. The book was later sold for $400,000 and made into a movie.

    Even great writers throw away drafts that they think are nothing but…garbage.

    So, that dream you have of writing a book?

    Start.

     

    Want to try one of my books for free? 

  • The Most Valuable Lesson I Learned From My Oldest Child

    kids young

    My oldest kiddo, David, was often on “hurricane cycle” when he was young. He would bounce from one activity to the next (like his Mom??) and leave a path of destruction in his wake. I once put the baby down for a nap and left David and Lauren parked in front of the TV so I could quickly go to the bathroom. When I came out, I found the two of them drawing wavy lines on the kitchen wall. In a matter of seconds, David had grabbed some crayons off the counter and coerced his sister into coloring the wall. The artwork stayed on the wall for over a year–because neither the hubby nor I could muster up enough energy to paint over the crayon.

    One evening, David was a Category Five on the hurricane scale and my patience was long gone. David and Lauren were fighting over toys and neither of them would sit on the couch long enough for me to breastfeed the baby. Steven was colicky and wouldn’t stop crying. I was tense, crabby, and just plain tired. I was just trying to survive long enough until the hubby arrived home so I could hand off the kid duties to him.

    Joe walked in with a smile that soon disappeared from his face as he surveyed the toys strewn everywhere, the lunch dishes still on the table, and the once-folded laundry now overturned on the floor.

    “Bad day?”

    I shot him a look.

    “Why don’t you go take a bath and relax,” he suggested. “I’ll watch the kids.”

    After a hurried dinner, I filled the bathtub up and went to grab towels from the other bathroom. As I walked back in, my eyes caught something floating in the bathtub and David standing near the tub.

    “Ahhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh!”

    I dropped the towel and scooped out the brand new book that I was so looking forward to reading. With a heavy sigh, I sat on the toilet and tried to dry off the book.

    I started to cry. It was all just too much. Mothering three kids just two years apart in age had finally taken its toll and everything came crashing down on me at that moment. The tears poured out. Just then, David came over, climbed in my lap and started hugging me. He gave me a kiss.

    “I love you Mommy.” He hugged me again.

    My eyes went back to the book and I saw the title more clearly.

    “Don’t Sweat the Small Stuff.”

      
    I started to laugh.

    Alternating between tears and laughter, I smiled at the irony of the whole thing.

    It is now years later– the little boy has grown into a young man who graduated from college and is living on his own. I still have the book with the warped pages stuck together. It’s a reminder of that hectic time of three kids under the age of four–when I thought the day would never end and I’d never have a minute to myself. Today, two of the kids have moved out and the youngest one is about to graduate. How quickly the time flies.

    Don’t sweat the small stuff.

    Life goes by in an instant. The little stuff that you unintentionally blow up into big stuff will likely not matter years from now. Pick your battles carefully. Don’t sweat the small stuff.

    And remember to laugh in the process.

  • Say YES to Life

      
    “Do you want to take a ride on a seaplane?”

    The text came from my friend Gordy, a seaplane pilot who does flying lessons in Florida. 

    “Heck, yeah!”

    And that’s how I found myself flying over glassy lakes on a beautiful February morning. 

      
    But the story really begins six years ago when I heard a voice out of the blue. 

    “Write Keith’s book.”

    “Keith,” was Keith St. Onge, a two-time World Barefoot Champion. I had just met the guy and took two barefoot water skiing lessons from him. 

    So I said “yes” to that voice and we spent two years writing a book together.  The book, Gliding Soles, Lessons from a Life on Water is endorsed by Dave Ramsey, Dan Miller, Tom Ziglar, and Glen Plake. At first glance, you might dismiss the book because of the barefoot water skiing, but then you would be missing out on some amazing life lessons. (And the digital version is just $1.99–go dive into a few chapters and see for yourself.)

    In the process of saying that first yes, I met hundreds and hundreds of barefoot water skiers from all over the world and have skied in many different places. 

    And saying “yes” lead me to Gordy and that beautiful day in the air.  And yes, that’s Gordy holding a copy of Gliding Soles below. 

      
    So take a good look at the next opportunity that comes along in your life to say, “YES.”

    Don’t over-analyze. Your mind will probably come up with 101 reasons for “no.” Go with your gut feeling.

     If you’re a muddled mess –be still. It’s in the quiet stillness that you find your clearest answers.

      

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  • Turn Your Struggles, Dislikes, and Adversities Into Gifts

    karen back one foot

    I have size 9 double wide feet.

    For many years while growing up, I hated my feet. I dreaded going shoe shopping as nothing ever fit. I always had to “break in” shoes. This meant enduring a painful fit until the leather finally (hopefully!) loosened up. High heels were a nightmare because the wide fit usually meant my heels would swim in the back. I learned to shuffle along in heels–not a graceful site at formal events.

    When I first returned to barefooting, one of the World Champs took one look at my feet and said, “Those aren’t feet–those are flippers!”

    At first, the old feelings of embarrassment began to creep up, but then I thought, wait a minute, that’s an ASSET in this sport!

    The other World Champ later told me, “Your feet are good for backwards barefooting.”

    He was right. I’m much more comfortable barefooting backwards on one foot than going forwards. For many barefoot skiers, it’s the other way around.

    I’m sharing this to challenge you to reframe your struggles, dislikes, and adversities into gifts.

    How can you reframe something to see it in a positive way? Look for the blessing. Change your story. Create new thoughts around your challenges.

    Wayne Dyer said, “When you change the way you look at things, the things you look at change.”

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  • What an ‘Old Lady’ Taught Me About Life

    At the age of 44, I thought I was old.

    I felt old.

    I wasn’t looking forward to the years ahead. Aches. Pains. Wrinkles. Medicines. It seemed like everyone around me was slowing down and just going through the motions of each day, coasting until they could reach retirement. And for some, retirement simply meant they could watch their television programs anytime they wanted to.

    So there I sat on my 44th birthday with tears running down my face, thinking that the best years of life had passed me by. I missed the carefree days of my youth spent gliding across the water on the soles of my feet. I had tried barefoot water skiing the day before my birthday, with dismal results. My feet, I reasoned, were truly hung up to dry.

    Until an “Old Lady” changed my life.

    My husband sent me a link to a TODAY Show segment featuring Judy Myers, a 66-year-old competitive barefoot water skier. I sat there and watched the TODAY Show over and over. The passion that I saw on Judy’s face reminded me of the feelings I had when I was a teen. I loved barefoot water skiing.

    judy and karen

    I got in touch with Judy and she invited me to Florida to learn how to barefoot water ski again. In the process, I gained a mentor and a friend. Judy taught me some great lessons that apply to life; lessons that I put together in a new book, Outside the Wake, How an “Old Lady” Taught Me to Live.

    Outside_the_Wake

    At the age of 44, I thought life was a downward slide of life becoming less and less, and I was afraid that the best years of life were behind me.

    Judy taught me the opposite: the best years of life can be whatever you want them to be. You don’t have to accept growing older–you can choose to grow BOLDER instead.

    Grab a copy and find out for yourself: Outside the Wake

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  • What My Daughter Taught Me About Passion

    passion in NY

    “Mom, I’m quitting college.”

    Not the words I wanted to hear, but I shouldn’t have been too surprised. My daughter, Ren, had a love/hate relationship with formalized education since she was in elementary school. I can remember some days having to shove her out the car door to make her go to school.

    (Yes, I was that kind of parent.)

    “Okay, so what’s your plan?” I asked her.

    She had her heart set on acting. She was going to come home after the semester ended and figure out a plan. She might move to New York City and live with her cousin. She might try and get a job in Los Angeles and live with a friend. She just knew she wasn’t going to go back to college. Acting school, maybe.

    As a parent, I wrestled with a whole range of emotions.

    The parent side of me screamed, “oh-my-gosh-she’s-gonna-have-a-tough-life-without-a-degree!”

    The Passion Coach side of me calmly whispered, “let her have her journey, she’ll figure it out.”

    My conversations with Ren showcased the whole range of those emotions and thoughts. During one conversation, I was calm and rational, even positive. During other conversations, I brought out the “play it safe” cards and the “get your degree first–after that you can do whatever you want” rationality. I think I said some not-so-nice things.

    “How can you tell others to follow their passions if you won’t let your own daughter follow her heart?” she asked me.

    Yes, she called me on it.

    And she was right. I had to let go. This was her journey. Even if I pulled the parenting card and insisted she stay in college, I knew it would create the biggest thorn between us. She had been miserable with school since fourth grade and we had plenty of battles over it.

    As the end of summer rolled around, the plan was still unclear. My daughter even had moments of self-doubt, of wondering what direction to go in next.

    Then out of the blue, she found an audition for Spring Awakening on Broadway. Without a single bit of hesitation, she booked a flight.

    spring awakening with ren

    When she called me on FaceTime to tell me that she acquired a swing role in the play, the joy on her face was crazy radiant. Within a month, she moved to New York City and began studying the lines for four different roles. It wasn’t an easy journey. She slept on a couch until she could find a place of her own. She had to learn the roles without much practice time on the stage.

    spring awakening lauren

    After many, many weeks of sitting in the audience, the swing room, and backstage, Ren made her debut on stage in the role of Thea. I flew to New York and her older brother joined me. As we sat in the audience waiting for the play to begin, my heart was pounding for her. She was going to step on a Broadway stage for the first time.

    spring awakening debut

    I thought back to a lesson that Janet Attwood, author of The Passion Test, taught me. “Whenever you are faced with a decision, a choice, or an opportunity, always choose in favor of your passions.” And Ren had done just that. She chose passion.

    I can’t even begin to describe the incredible feeling that bubbled inside of me as I watched Ren perform with Marlee Matlin, Camryn Manheim, Andy Mientus and the Spring Awakening cast. Perform doesn’t even seem to be the right word. She became Thea.

    As the cast took their final bow, I thought back to the uncertainty Ren faced when she made the decision to walk away from the “safe” route to pursue something she was immensely passionate about. She didn’t have a plan. She didn’t know the “how.” But she was very, very clear on the what.

    And the passion? Well, see for yourself:

    Spring Awakening Cast Congratulates Ren After Debut

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  • Invite Passion Into Your Life

    Five years ago, I got lucky. I saw a sassy 66-year-old woman on the TODAY Show doing the very thing I was so freakingly passionate about as a teenager. I had stopped barefoot water skiing a few years after becoming deaf from a fall while footin’–then at 44, I figured I was too old to ever do it again. I met Judy Myers in Florida, put my feet back on the water, and re-discovered my passion again.

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    I learned a lot about passion in the last five years. Now I’m working on sharing those lessons with others. When you do what you’re passionate about, your life takes on a whole new dimension. Everyone around you benefits too. Passion is energy. You’ve gotta choose it. Most of the time, we put it off, ignore it, or suppress it. As a result, we give off less than optimal energy. This leads to a sad, grumpy world.

    Use your gifts. Use your abilities. There is no one in this whole wide world as unique as you. Not happy? Grab a brand new pen and create a new story for your life. Because if you don’t, you’ll end up with the exact same life five years from now. If you don’t like it now, you won’t like it later, either.

    Passion–choose to invite it in your life.

    If you need help with this, contact me at karen@agelesspassions.com.

  • Don’t Put Off Living By Waiting for Perfection

    growing bolder with passion

    All too often, I find that the quest for perfection often gets in the way of enjoying life. People are waiting for all the ducks to be lined up, the “i” to be dotted and the “t” to be crossed, and the perfect time to arrive–before they start living what they really want.

    When I decided to take up barefoot water skiing after a 20+ year absence, I was quite overweight and very out of shape. I wanted to put it off and get in shape before heading down to Florida.

    I’m glad I didn’t. I would still be waiting today if I waited for everything to be perfect before getting back on the water.

    Because I’m still carrying extra pounds and lumpy in all the wrong places.

    Perfection is the killer of dreams. Waiting for everything or anything to be perfect means that the world never gets to see your gifts. They never get to see the beautiful, imperfectly perfect human being that you are.

     

    in-pursuit-of-passion-karen-putz-the-passion-mentor

    I left a mistake in one of my books after publishing it. I could have easily taken it down and fixed the typo.

    But I left it in there.

    I often give this book as a gift or hand it out at workshops. It’s a simple writing journal with inspirational quotes about passion. The book is a reminder to keep our focus on our joy–to do things in life that matter and to live with gratitude.

    The typo in there is a wonderful reminder to celebrate life in all it’s glorious imperfections.

    So that thing you’re putting off until everything is perfect…

    Quit waiting.

     

  • My Mom’s New Life, How You Can Choose to Live Passionately At Any Age

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    “I really like this house. I can see myself living here,” my mom said.

     My mom, my sister, my daughter, and my niece were all crammed into a car for a winter-getaway trip to Florida. On the way down, we stopped to tour the model homes for sale at an adult-living community in Nashville. My mom and sister were tired of the long winters in Michigan and looking for a new place to live. The target was Florida and they were planning to rent a house there for three months.

    Everything changed the minute we all walked into the house in Nashville. A few hours later, my mom and my sister made the decision to sell the lake house we’ve had since 1977 and move to a place where they knew no one.

    Just like that.

    The move turned out to be a rough one, with one challenge after another presenting itself. But at 87 years of age, after dealing with a lifetime of challenges, my mom simply buckled down and tackled them as they happened.

    There were times my mom and sister questioned their decision, but overall, the move was the best thing for them both. Despite health challenges, my mom has been trying new things–such as learning yoga and zipping around the track with her walker.

    When it comes to creating a passionate life, one of the most common complaints I come across is: “I’m too old.”

    Are you really?

    Check your pulse. If you still have a pulse, you still have a life. At any given time, you can change your thoughts, your attitude, your outlook, and your actions.

     

     

     

     

  • Break Through Your Limits by Walking on Fire

    tony robbins on stage

    One of the things on my Bucket List (henceforth known as the Dream List, as a Tony Robbins graduate told me) was to experience a workshop by Tony Robbins. A few years ago, I met Mina Shah, one of Tony’s top trainers and I came close to signing up, but I felt the time wasn’t right.

    This year, the opportunity came up and everything fell in place for me to attend the Unleashing the Power Within workshop in Schaumburg.

    I have to admit, I was a little apprehensive about doing the firewalk that Tony Robbins offers at the end of the first day. In the days leading up to the workshop, I wavered back and forth between thoughts like, “What if I burn my feet,” to “I’m scared,” to “Oh come on, millions of people have walked on fire.”

    At one a.m., over 7,000 of us trudged out to the parking lot in complete darkness. Only the lights from the hotel rooms illuminated from above. Just before it was my turn to walk, the crew spread a fresh layer of glowing embers.

    Oh crap.

    The scared feeling escalated just a tad.

    But heck, everyone before me was walking through the hot stuff and smiling on the other side. Surely I could, too.

    And I did.

    I was blown away at how easy it was once I had the courage to put the first foot forward. All that followed was one foot after another until the crew stopped me and sprayed my feet.

    I was shocked to discover how easy it was. All the fears, all the wondering, all the limiting thoughts were for…nothing. Why did I waste all that time on things that turned out to be such a waste of time?

    firewalker karen putz tony robbins chicago

    Of course, walking on fire is simply a metaphor for life. The exercise is meant to identify the fears you have–the limiting beliefs–and walk right through them.

    Because if you can do that, you can do anything.

    Whatever it is you’re facing in life–here’s what you do:

    Walk through the fire.