• Home
  • Contact
Menu

Mari Melby

Street Address
City, State, Zip
Phone Number

Your Custom Text Here

Mari Melby

  • Home
  • Contact

how small actions can create big change in your life

December 31, 2017 Mari Melby
If you are looking to change an aspect of your life, I invite you to start small. Maybe getting a pet doesn’t make sense for you right now, but getting a plant does. Maybe you can buy something you wouldn’t normally buy for yourself or start a new h…

The  vast majority of my reading clients are looking to make some sort of change in their lives. From attracting a relationship to changing careers, most of the people that I talk to don’t know how to get started on working towards a big transition. It seems too overwhelming and frankly, no one has the time.

I truly believe that my crazy wave of transitions over the last few years all started with two small changes: I got a dog and I dyed my eyebrows. 

While these might seem wholly unrelated to what ended up resulting in major shifts in my career, health, and relationships, it all started there. My dog, Peter, immediately made me feel less lonely and more like my personal life served a purpose. He had needs that I had to meet on a regular basis, and I had to start setting more firm boundaries around my work at school. My health was poor at the time and taking him on a walk around the block felt exhausting, but gradually we worked up to being able to walk all the way around a nearby park. And when he got very sick as a puppy and almost didn’t pull through, I was reminded that it was okay to be open to love, even in the short term. I had no regrets about inviting him into my life. Peter began to open me back up to the idea of finding love, love in any form.

As for the eyebrows, I have always had very light blonde eyebrows and have never really done much with them, as they are essentially invisible to the naked eye.  However, I was looking for change in major areas of my life and wanted to start small. It actually made my face look quite different, to the point that I was a little shocked at who I saw in the mirror in the first few days afterwards. I liked feeling just a little bit different than my old self. This change was temporary—the tint faded within a few months.  However, it showed me that we are able to make very subtle changes in our lives that make us feel wildly different.

A few months after getting Peter and dying my eyebrows, I starting dating the man who would become my husband. While I will never know how things would have turned out without having made these changes, I can say that Peter and my newfound eyebrows made me more ready to embrace the new relationship and all the other changes that were beginning to happen. 

So if you are looking to change an aspect of your life, I invite you to start small. Maybe getting a pet doesn’t make sense for you right now, but getting a plant does. Maybe you can buy something you wouldn’t normally buy for yourself or start a new hobby. Hang out with a new person. You are shifting your energy and setting a ball in motion for change. Expressing that you are ready to receive the changes that the universe has in store for you is the first step to living a life that is more authentically yours.

P.S. You might also like One Simple Way to Shift Your Energy

In Energy & Intention Tags life coach, intuitive reading
Comment

5 steps to supercharge your weekend

October 14, 2017 Mari Melby
5 awesome ways to supercharge your weekends! Ready to bring intention and self-care back into your days off? Five tips to help you to recharge, reconnect and create powerful habits for maximizing your weekend days. Learn how to focus on what is mean…

I think a lot about living with intention—of treating our lives preciously and making really good use of the time that we have in this life. But on a daily basis, so much of my time and energy go into the basics—keeping my kids changed and fed and well-rested, getting my work done, and hanging out with my husband.

It can be hard to spend what little free time I have with intention and doing what I really want to do. 

 

I’m reading Gretchen Rubin’s latest book, The Four Tendencies. She essentially divides the population into four categories based on how we respond to internal and external expectations. If you are curious about your tendency, you can take her quiz here. I am an Obliger (with a dose of Questioner), which means that I do great meeting other people’s expectations (meeting deadlines for clients, showing up for appointments on time, taking care of my kids’ needs) and not so great about taking care of myself and my own interests.

One example of that is the difference between a weekend that I planned out intentionally and one that feels like like it happened to me. A weekend that happens to me is one in which I drag my way to the finish line of the week. The house is a mess and we have no food and few plans. But then we just kind of hang out and do the same things we do during the week or spend the whole time filling it with chores we feel like we should do. Some of this is just reality right now with two small children. However, I always feel significantly more refreshed and recharged with just a little bit of planning before the weekend begins. 

Let’s say that I know it’s going to be a really snowy weekend (and in Minnesota, this is a fairly common occurrence). When I’m stuck inside on a wintery day, I like to make soup, bake cookies, and watch a good movie. But if I wait until the weekend, I might not have the energy or motivation to go out into the wintery weather and get ingredients. I probably won’t think about a movie I actually want to see. I’ll just look through Netflix until I find something that isn’t too obnoxious, and then spend most of the time "watching it" just scrolling through Instagram. However, with just a little bit of planning ahead of time, I can pick out what recipes to make, grab the ingredients before the storm, and spend a few minutes reading movie reviews to pick the perfect movie. 

Another piece of this planning that works well is that I get to anticipate my weekend. I can really get excited about whatever recipes I’m making and my time watching a movie. I am less likely to have my phone open if it’s something I really want to watch. I am more likely to be present and enjoy whatever it is that I have planned, even though my amount of free time is fairly limited.

This all starts with something that sounds simple but can actually be pretty challenging for those of us who struggle to meet our own expectations. 

 

Think about the most awesome version of yourself. The one that sometimes makes an appearance in real life, but is often just a figment of your imagination. Maybe this person gets up early on the weekends to go kayaking or is working on writing a novel. Maybe this person volunteers regularly or is an amateur chef. It doesn’t really matter what the most awesome version of yourself is like—these are your own interests and ideas. But most likely, there is something (or maybe a few things) that you imagine yourself doing more regularly in your spare time. But when you actually get the chance, it can be hard to get yourself to do whatever it is that the dreamy version of yourself does on a regular basis.

Yep, it’s difficult to understand why we sometimes have trouble doing things that we actually like, but we are often stretched so thin taking care of the basics that there is  little time or energy for the things that make our lives worth living. 

Are you interested in spending your weekends more intentionally, doing what the most awesome version of yourself would do? 

Here are 5 steps to making it happen:

  1. Get clear on how you want to FEEL over the weekend. Relaxed? Energized? Well-rested? Content? Exhilarated? 
  2. Think about what activities you could do that will elicit that feeling.
  3. Pick one of those activities and schedule it into your next available weekend. Put it on the calendar.
  4. Schedule in one additional block of time before that weekend to do any necessary planning and supply gathering.
  5. Sit back and anticipate your fun weekend, and then when it rolls around, enjoy the hell out of it! Take a few pictures but set aside the temptation to make everything Instagram-worthy. Enjoy this time with yourself or with your friends and family. We never know how many opportunities we will get to do the things we really, truly enjoy with those we love the most.

So that’s it! It all comes down to the process of identifying what it is that you want to spend more time on, scheduling it in, allowing enough time to put the pieces together beforehand, and then going for it!

Also know that it is totally okay to sit on the couch and binge-watch an entire season of something on Netflix. But even that feels better when it is a show you truly look forward to watching, when you invite someone to watch it with you, and when you pick up some truly epic snacks ahead of time.

How does the super awesome version of yourself spend time on the weekends? And what are your blocks or obstacles to making it happen on a regular basis? 

 

P.S. You also might like It's All About That Energy

In Energy & Intention, Structures & Planning Tags life coach, intuitive reading
Comment
← Newer Posts Older Posts →
Hi, I'm Mari. I'm a birth worker, an intuitive, a writer, and a mama.

Hi, I'm Mari.

I’m a freelance writer and editor based in Minneapolis, Minnesota. In addition, I’m a parent, an avid reader, a dog lover, and an outdoor adventurer.

Learn More

categories

  • Birth & Postpartum
  • Book Recommendations
  • Energy & Intention
  • Food & Body Image
  • Outdoor Adventures
  • Structures & Planning
  • Sustainability

You might also like...

Featured
IMG_7155-2.jpg
Mar 11, 2021
Meet the Editors: Hill Press
Mar 11, 2021
Mar 11, 2021
20190916_101703.jpg
Feb 5, 2021
A Love Letter to Gale Woods Farm
Feb 5, 2021
Feb 5, 2021
Book Recommendation: Murder Mystery Series
Jan 30, 2021
Book Recommendation: Murder Mystery Series
Jan 30, 2021
Jan 30, 2021
51vQNx81YKL.jpg
Apr 24, 2020
Book Recommendation: Favorite Cookbooks
Apr 24, 2020
Apr 24, 2020
IMG_1574.JPG
Apr 24, 2020
Just another Pandemic Puppy: Updates from a Quarantined Existence
Apr 24, 2020
Apr 24, 2020

Copyright Mari Melby, 2023. All Rights Reserved.