You can also ask your family members or colleagues what they think are your strengths. The important thing to understand is that whatever realm they lie in, with a little digging you will find that you do have strengths, talentsand abilities. And those strengths can be used to improve or overcome those areas in life where you are not as strong. FOSTER POSITIVITY Barbara Fredrickson, an author and inspirational leader in the emerging field of positive psychology, has taught us that you need to be at or above the tipping-point ratio of at least 3:1 of positive emotions to negative emotions for your brain to function at its best. In other words, you need a 75/25 percent positive energy ratio to succeed. This isnât just facile âput on a happy faceâ stuff. Itâs hard to be positive all the time. Some days, it may be hard to feel positive at all. But while negative emotions are good teachers, you canât change if your thinking and energy are impaired by too many negative emotions. Fredrickson has also taught us that positive emotions are the active ingredient enabling âresilience.â This is that wonderful quality we so admire in children. Itâs caused by responding positively to adversity and is necessary for change. Itâs inevitable that you will fall back from time to time. In fact, if you donât bump into setbacks youâre probably not going to make lasting change. But try to see these challenges as teachers and friends: welcome them and appreciate them and they will serve you well. Here are some ways to âreframeâ your emotions and accentuate the positive. One way is to make peace with the past. Negativity in one area (for example, not forgiving yourself or someone else for something that happened) can follow you around like a dark cloud that overshadows the otherwise positive aspects of your life and disposition. Itâs particularly important to let go of the past as it relates to the area youâre working on. If you feel ashamed or embarrassed about your past behavior and performance, the negative feelings will act like brakes on your forwardmotion. If it was an embarrassing or damaging incident that prompted you to pick up this bookâwhether losing your keys again or losing a job because distractions got in the way of performanceâwell, you need to put it behind you, starting right now. The past is the past. Whatâs done is done. Time now to take the lessons of what happened; apply them to tppen and develop a fresh, open and positive outlook toward the future. Hereâs a little pep talk I give to my clients who are stuck on mistakes theyâve made in the past. If need be, you can use this âmistake mantraâ to absolve yourself: I forgive myself for the mistakes I made. Iâm not perfectâno one isâand Iâm committed to learning and getting better. In fact, the past experience is my wise teacher, and I will apply the lessons well. Enough with the mistakes. Fredrickson has identified the most common positive emotions. Here are some you can work on: Cultivate curiosity about and interest in the challenge of change. Seek inspiration from others who have been successful. Be grateful for something, anything. Savor small moments on the journey. Enjoy the pride of doing something wellâappreciate even small steps forward. Celebrate early wins. Itâs very easy to ruminate on the negative. Itâs less familiar to focus on the positive. Have fun. Making positive changes in your life can be extremely enjoyable. We donât mean to make this sound like a lark; itâs not and your reasons for wanting to get yourself âtogetherâ may be serious. That doesnât mean you canât discover joy in the process of changing. In fact, you probably will! BUILD A SUPPORT TEAM Itâs hard to change when your environment is working against you. A chaotic or noisy desk or office can be highly distracting. Or