Life Lessons I learned as A Cheerleader: (Lesson 2) You have to SHOW UP to SHOW OUT

Well, one sunshiny day while purging old papers in one of my many attempts to go "paperless" (I am not there yet at all), I ran across my FAMU Cheerleader Handbook. I nostalgically begin to take a read...read full article >>>>

Life Lessons I learned as a Cheerleader (Lesson 1) YOU MUST KNOW THE ROUTINE!

It's 4:30 am and the alarm is blaring; the sound is like music to my ears as the first day of pre-camp is today and I am ready. It is customary for cheerleaders to return to school....read full article >>>>>

My Diary is Pink and my Journal is Blue

My hands are under the bed, and my neck is strained backwards as I try to press my whole self under to grab my key. "It is under here somewhere, it just dropped", I think, and finally my hands feel the stick of the mini jagged edges.....read full article

MY Blog's New Features Videos are on My YouTube Channel

Please see my new features upcoming videos in my YouTube Channel................Wish You best luck to Visit my Blog>>>>>

-Dynamics Lessons to Increase Your Self-Confidence-

Life frequently presents us with complexity and confront, some of which we’ve conceded since babyhood. Self-confidence isn’t developed by avoiding these complexities, but rather than it’s cherished and reinforced by the way of our responding to these situations and finally how we analysis ourselves in spite of them… click hare to get more>>>

Wednesday, March 19, 2014

Does Music Cue Opportunity

I recently finished Maya Angelou's latest manuscript "Mom and Me and Mom".  Weeks later, I still think about the book night and day. In this book Maya Angelou continued her biographical triumph and once again let us in. While reading of her tenacity and courage to stay her course with her life

Saturday, March 1, 2014

Lesson 4: How to Build Self Confidence with Haters



As a homeschooling mother and self-help junkie, I still love New Edition and traveling. Ever since being introduced to personal development and self-help through the world of network marketing, I have been a student of personal development. Friends call me in the morning for

Friday, February 28, 2014

Cheerleader Lesson 3: It ain't my fault and How to Improve Self-Confidence

It ain't my fault, as Mystical would say. He was one of the mega rap stars in my day. That is the attitude you must have when a player hater tells you that you only made the cheer leading team because of who you know. They will begin to berate you about being a part of handpicking, a terrible cheerleader tradition if

Sunday, February 2, 2014

Life Lessons I learned as A Cheerleader: (Lesson 2) You have to SHOW UP to SHOW OUT

Where is my life manual?!?! Does anyone actually have a grasp on how this living thing works?

Well, one sunshiny day while purging old papers in one of my many attempts to go "paperless" (I am not there yet at all), I ran across my FAMU Cheerleader Handbook. I nostalgically begin to take a read...
I find it interesting that I still have it after so many moves; but it was there in my special purple box that always goes with me, no matter how quick the move is. As I thumbed through, I was so intrigued to find the handbook speaking to me like a life constitution. Handbooks traditionally include things like operating procedures, behavior, attendance, and performance standards -- this Cheerleader Handbook was no different.

This Handbook was so SERIOUS with bold headings like: Mission, Purpose, General Guidelines, Attendance Guidelines, Behavior Guidelines and so on. This book was so serious because the University wouldn't just leave it to chance that cheerleaders would show up and do their job. Standards and a checks and balances system were put into place to ensure that the mission and purpose of the squad, and more importantly the University as a whole, were performed properly.
The ATTENDANCE section had more than six separate regulations that basically said, “Don't be late, EVER” and “Any missed practice or performance will be met with severe consequences.” A “no-show” on the cheerleading squad was no different than a job -- no call, no show, YOU GO.

Yep, line after line of ways to be reprimanded.

I laughed and thought, here's your darn LIFE Handbook...Maybe, Mika, if you take your life and put it into the handbook model with a real, mission, purpose, and dare I say, consequences, you will begin to execute your goals.  Why not apply the same discipline and fortitude to create your very own manual for life?  I had plenty of un-used journals around, so it seemed like a great time to put them to use.

My journal read like a handbook, with my mission and purpose clearly in front of me. I began to feel more prepared each day to nail it. But, I politely left off the attendance chapter and the section on consequences for not showing up. This is where it gets hard. I. HAD. TO. SHOW. UP.

Why so serious about this attendance thing anyway?

Because lives are on the line (cheerleading is 2nd in catastrophic injuries behind American football). 

[http://ussa.edu/news/cheerleading-ranks-first-in-catastrophic-sport-injuries]

When individuals miss practice, that is time away from nailing the routine, and producing the best, most unified and precisely injury free performance.  If a squad member didn't show up to practice, routines would be made without that member and she would enjoy the game from the stands, seated next to the coach. It was literally a case of “No Risk, No Reward.” If you did not risk life and limb at each practice for the sake of the spirit, no way do you get the reward of cheering with your squad during the game.

My Life: If I didn't show up to the time I set aside to work on tasks that lead towards my goal, my life would continue to be in danger of un-fulfillment and leading towards catastrophic death by depression.   Or, I could show up to each meeting with myself, practice each step and NAIL my goals;  leaving me confidently and happily dancing on the field in stead of admiring others in the game from the stands.

Sometimes, I just can't get to it...

If, for whatever poor excuse of a reason I could come up with that I did not reach certain accomplishments, my trusty old cheer handbook and working Mika's Life Handbook would be there as my judge. Any missed target now required a full explanation.

LIKE: Did I create a workable routine that included at least 45 minutes per day of active work on a particular goal? [If you haven’t read Outliers, check it out here: [http://cs.ecust.edu.cn/snwei/studypc/jsjdl/data/OutliersTheStoryOfSuccess.pdf]

--If routine was created did I miss more than one day. Unfortunately, I begin to see that my so-called failures were just hopeful, lackluster, ineffective attempts that I just didn't show up for. Heck, there was no coach to report to, so I guess I didn't have to do it. The reality was, severe Self-Discipline had to set in.

Today, I have a routine that reflects what's important to MIKA and helps me move towards my mission and purpose in this life. Side note: (your life is not what others want for you, it is what you and your higher power have planned. So quit envying others and go for your best YOU)

I find it quite hilarious when I hear someone share excuses and say something like “Things just aren't working out for me.” Now, instead of offering condolences for their loss or failure, I ask “Did you do what it takes to make ‘IT’ happen?” Did you really put in the time, REALLY put in the time? Do you have a routine and stick to it? Further sharing that having experienced serial failure, reflecting on my things that "didn't work out", I clearly see where I didn't show up enough to make them work out.

In cheerleading, our goal each week is to keep spirits flowing and have winning energies around to encourage our team to VICTORY. 

(1868: Jack “Johnny” Campbell, takes the credit as the very first of these “yell leaders” to pick up a megaphone, jump onto the sports field, and lead the crowd with the already popular university organized cheer:  “Rah, Rah, Rah! Ski-U-Mah! Hoo-Rah! Hoo-Rah! Varsity! Varsity! Minn-e-so-tah!”   With much credit attributed to Johnny Campbell and his “yell leaders” abilities to motivate the crowd & their American football team, Minnesota won the game 17-6 and cheerleading was born.)

Learn more cheerleader history here:   [http://cheerunion.org/Content.aspx/History]

In order to do that, cheerleading has gone from chanting: "sis, boom bah", to tuck and rolls, basket tosses, and one hand holding cupies...stunts, routines and moves that are both energizing and death-defying. One missed step ruins a routine. One missed basket catch can paralyze a cheerleader.
So, a cheerleader willingly signs on to be a Leader of Cheer, knowing the risk, and decides it is well worth it to show up to practice and be a contributing member at the game.

So what happens when we don't move towards purpose by executing a small goal?

Well, when we miss days working towards our goals, we become paralyzed like a cheerleader missed in a basket toss. One missed toss, breaks her neck. One missed day from your goals, breaks your spirit. That broken spirit feeds the nasty little voice in your head that says you couldn't do it anyway.

Self-Paralyzation will set in, with it, each day becomes harder and harder to get to work towards your goal.

 It becomes easier and easier to find distractions -- these distractions become “more important” to do than your goals.  It seems so hard to do it, to make time for "IT".

It was hard as a cheerleader to sacrifice six out of seven days a week, to practice, travel, and cheer. But, real cheer-Leaders are tenacious. Real Leaders that cheer always do what it takes to win and achieve goals. "IT" takes dedication and discipline. "IT" takes knowing it won't be easy and then doing "IT" anyway. It takes saying “no” to happy hour and maybe even ‘Scandal’.

It takes hard ass work -- so quit being a buster and do what you gotta do (that was for me not you, because I am probably the only person left in the world who needs discipline).

LOOK, the next time something "doesn't work out". Ask yourself did you show up and work it? Did you work it to get that team handbook gpa that keeps you in the game and out of the stands

                   It is so easy to not show up when you are on campus and your friends are hanging on the set; and you have to get to a study group and to your lifeguard job at the school pool and prepare for fall pageants.

 But oh man, as a cheerleader, you wouldn't change it for the world.

I think everyone should...

1.  TAKE TIME TO MAKE YOUR VERY OWN HANDBOOK
2.  CREATE A ROUTINE AND STICK TO IT
3.  CREATE SOME CONSEQUENCES FOR NOT DOING IT

... better yet....

HIRE A COACH- here's a couple links to some miraculous coaches. If you are ready to live according to your own Handbook, spend your tax money on something that will change your life.

I took the PEP with Chloe-Taylor Brown, A Lifestyle Enhancement Coach, so check her out.
[http://www.chloetaylorbrown.com/]

Alexis Lior is a Success Coach and Author of “F.R.E.E.: Finally Released to Experience Expansion.”
[http://www.alexislior.com/]

I have been Googling Tiphani Montgomery’s GUGH coaching. That is next for me.
[http://tiphanimontgomery.com/]


Here's a little chant to motivate ya':
Clap and chant the words below 3 times through and then again.
Come on let's Do it, Do it, come on, let's SOAR.
Come on let's Do it, Do it, You know you want more.

"I trade sweat for strength. I trade doubt for belief. I trade cheerleading for nothing!" Author Kate, Midland, Ontario, CANADA

Sunday, January 12, 2014

Life Lessons I learned as a Cheerleader (Lesson 1) YOU MUST KNOW THE ROUTINE!


http://www.flickr.com/photos/shavar/49203773/in/photostream/
It's 4:30 am and the alarm is blaring; the sound is like music to my ears as the first day of pre-camp is today and I am ready.  It is customary for cheerleaders to return to school almost a month in advance to be able to learn, practice and perfect the routines, both old and new for the the upcoming school year.  Now, there will be a few appearances before the first game, so you have to know the routines without exception.  On the first day, 17 year old wet-behind-the-ear excitement turns to fear when you meet your captain for practice- who has no smiles, just a mission to whip her team into shape before the 2 a day practices are no more.  You will have even more fear when you realize that there are more cheers, chants and dances now than ever in your high school history, and she is telling you that you have to test out by performing all alone with the catty eyes of teammates watching in heavy critique. Gosh, darn it!
You’ll think, “I have to know the routines.. I WILL know my stuff. I must! Two hours in the morning to work as a lifeguard, where I will practice when not on post; back to evening practice with the team for 2 more hours tonight and then to a freshman teammate’s house for a nightcap review because we have to present it in the morning…”
 To the average person, it would be a wonder why we would choose to go through such pressure because: we must know the routine; any slight misstep or miscount in the cheer world could result in literal death; furthermore, an accidental fall could result in a paralyzing  or heck, even getting kicked off the team.

When I left the comforts of the university where all I had to do was know the routine, it quickly became evident that the routine I had become so used to learning now meant more than just that 5 minute performance.  It now became a model for how to live my life:

1.  Begin with the end in mind; know what you are doing each day, each hour, and each minute and know exactly why you’re doing it.

2.  Know that if you are going to really nail it, you have got to practice it, breaking down each part until the movements become inherent.      

3.
 You probably won't have it right after the first ten times. It is always after the hundredth time doing the routine that coach says, “it just doesn't work. Let’s make a change”. But because everyone on the team knows the routine, we can adjust course and move to the point of excellence.

Now when you look at your life and that nagging goal, just realize that all you have to do is create the routine, know the routine and practice it until you nail it.

"Cheerleaders practice 200, 000 minutes for a 5 minute routine."

"Cheer yourself on and put in the work."  Mika Terry