- Un mélange de textures -

Coucou les filles !

J'avais envie de tester un mélange entre le brillant et le sugar mat. Donc j'en ai profité pour utiliser un sugar de mon nouveau coffret chopé aux soldes ^^ 
Et c'était parti pour une manucure au scotch !

L'effet brillant/mat est plus évident en vrai que sur les photos par contre, mais je pense qu'on se rend quand même compte du résultat. 



J'ai donc mis le très beau noir Licorice de Essie et Watermelon de Kiko ((qui est beaucoup plus joli posé que dans sa bouteille je dois dire!))

Voilà, je referai sans doute ce genre de mélange de texture parce que c'est vraiment sympa !!!




- Nail art romantique -

Juste un petit nail art tout simple et tout mignon qui conviendrait parfaitement pour la st-valentin maintenant que j'y pense ^^
Fais rapidement au pinceau et à l'éponge pour le dégradé de paillettes.

plus prèèèès

Et réalisé avec Light Pink de Kiko, Beyond Cozy de Essie et Alpine Snow de OPI. ^^

C'est tout doux et romantique, j'aime bien, et vous ?

- Coffret Sugar Mat by Kiko + swatch complet -

Ce coffret n'est pas nouveau, mais je voulais essayer de l'avoir pendant les soldes. Enfin j'avais des doutes parce que j'y suis allé que samedi et en plus en fin d'après-midi, alors les chances d'en trouver encore étaient plutôt minces.

MAIS je l'ai eu ! Et d'ailleurs il restait une dizaine de coffrets... Chose rare, parce qu'il s'arrache ce bijou !



Place aux photos 
!!! Attention Paillettes !!!

451 Apricot, 452 Watermelon, 453 Cherry Red, 454 Wine

 
455 Light Taupe, 456 Teal Green, 457 Royal Blue, 458 Anthracite


Et une photo pour les swatch quand même ! Comme la dernière fois, sur papier.



Perso celui qui me plait le moins là tout de suite, c'est le 451 mais il est surement parfait pour l'été. Les autres, j'ai juste envie de tous les mettre ! Je sais pas par lequel je commencerai pour ma prochaine manucure, le choix va être difficile !


Vous préférez lequel vous ?




Finding Freedom in INTRApersonal Competition

In last week's post, I discussed the importance of focusing primarily on intrapersonal competition (competing against yourself) rather than interpersonal competition (competing against others) in goal setting.  This is an important aspect of setting SMARTIES Goals.  Today, I share my story that influenced me to change my own viewpoint of competition.

Growing up, I was a very competitive kid.  My passions were running and basketball.


My goal was usually to beat anyone I was competing against.  This objective held up pretty well as a kid. I was always one of the first ones chosen on playground teams growing up, where it was not unusual for me to be "leading the pack."  In the process, I found enormous satisfaction from "beating others" in interpersonal competitions.

As a sophmore, I finished fourth at the Utah State cross-country meet.  For my Junior year, I set a goal to be the 2A State Champion.  I wrote down my goal and displayed it in a prominent place in my bedroom.

That season, I worked hard.  I continually envisioned myself crossing the finish line before anyone else.  My focus and hard work paid off, and I accomplished my goal of becoming a State Champion.

But then something interesting happened: I got greedy.  I really liked the color and appearance of the bright, gold, first-place medal, and I wanted more and more of it.  The following spring, I set my sights on more gold.  This time, I would win all four of my events so I could get FOUR gold medals.

Long story short, I fell short of my track goal.  Instead of four first place finishes at state, I finished with two seconds, a third, and a fourth: zero gold!

I was very disappointed.  For many years after that, I viewed my senior track season as being largely a failure because I did not win any of my events.  This perspective was unfortunate -- and naive.  Why?  Because I had run personal best times in all three distances during the State Meet.  It was the best I had ever done before.  Regardless of my finish compared to others, I should have been very pleased with my performances. I had not yet learned my lesson in intrapersonal competition yet.   

Several years later, after I had completed my 2-year mission, I was again running competitively, this time in college.  College was different than high school. Instead of winning multiple races and being one of the best runners, I rarely won.

Despite my lack of victories, I began noticing something in my performance that was enormously satisfying to me.  The three best races of my life were all run in college, and I did not win any of them.  What made them my best races? First, I ran a personal best time in each one.  Second, I knew in my mind and heart that I had given a complete effort; I had left it all on the track.  I may not have been winning races anymore, but I was getting better, and somehow, that was just as sweet, if not sweeter, than beating others.  

The heightened level of competition in college taught me the great truth that there will almost always be someone out there who is bigger, faster, stronger, smarter, wealthier, and more talented than me, and that is okay!  In this world of over 7 billion people, no one else is exactly like me.  No one else has the same genetics, circumstances, and experiences I do.

This fact makes me at least one in 7 billion, and the same is true for YOU!

This does not mean that competing against others does not have its place, or that you shouldn't try to be better than your competition.  What it means is that competition with others should always be secondary to competition with yourself.  If you focus first on being your best, then your place among others will take care of itself.  If, on the other hand, you become too focused on beating others, you will waste time and energy that could be invested in bettering your own performance.

In our culture, we are conditioned for competition with others.  Media is littered with advertisements that implicitly pit you against the beauty, intelligence, and supposed sophistication of others.  You can't watch television without coming across all kinds of competition programming.  From sports and gameshows to reality shows like Survivor and the Bachelor, there is no shortage of high profile interpersonal competition available just a remote-click away.  This makes it extra challenging to focus your time and energy on intrapersonal competition.

To make matters worse, we often exacerbate these comparisons by pitting our biggest weaknesses against the greatest strengths of others, which is terribly unfair.  In the end, your whole perspective gets knocked askew of reality, and you are left feeling unmotivated and discouraged.

By focusing primarily on being your own best self, you not only increase the likelihood of turning in your own, best performance, but you also maximize your chances for success when you compete with others.  It is a win/win!

Points to Ponder...

In what ways do you waste time and energy worrying about how you compare with others?

What could you do to reinvest this same time and energy in producing your personal best?

The Satisfaction of Goal Achievement

Last weekend, I traveled to Jackson, Mississippi to run the Mississippi Blues Marathon as part of my SMARTIES Goal.  It was the first of four marathons I plan to run this year in my quest to qualify for the elite Boston Marathon.

I am pleased to report that I met my goal of running under 3 hours and 30 minutes.  I also broke my March 1st goal of running under 3 hours and 20 minutes.  My time for the race was 3:18.00.

While I still have my work cut out for me to qualify for Boston (I must run under 3:05.00), it was very satisfying to meet two of my goals for the year so early on in January.

Having experienced the defeat and deflation of missing the mark by 70 minutes after my second marathon, it felt pretty good to narrow that margin down to only 14 minutes after my 9th try at the distance.  Most importantly, I ran my best time ever by over 12 minutes.  Getting a new "PR" (personal record) was one of the highlights of the day for me.  It definitely made the hard work feel worth it.

The Self-Action Leadership (SAL) philosophy teaches that self-competition is more important than competition with others, and that it is the only authentic form of fair competition. No two people are exactly alike in this world, so the concept of fair interpersonal competition is really a misnomer.  If you can honestly say to yourself at the end of a day, race, project, school year/program/degree, etc., that you have given your best effort, then you are, at that moment, consummately successful in that area, and there is no comparison in the world that can or should tarnish the joy and exultation of that priceless self-knowledge.  The SAL Theory and Model is designed to always focus your mind primarily on becoming your best, not on bettering the performances of others.

This is not to say that competition with others is bad or should be entirely avoided.  Interpersonal competition has its place, but that place must always be secondary to the intrapersonal competition that motivates you to become your best.  For example, it felt good to know that I finished 28th place out of 827 finishers on Saturday, but I wasn't about to let the fact that 27 people beat me dilute the enormous satisfaction I felt at having just run a marathon 12 minutes faster than I have ever run before.  In next week's post, I will share the journey that led me to change my thinking to focus primarily on self-competition instead of competition with others.

In the meantime, I wish to thank all my readers for being my "Accountability Partners" for my Boston Marathon qualifying goal.  Knowing that I am committed to report to you after each of my marathons this year has already provided me with much positive motivation to invest my best efforts to achieve my goals.  It is helping me, and I thank you!

In consideration of my performance on Saturday, I have adjusted my new goals moving forward as follows:

March 1st Marathon in The Woodlands, Texas: Run under 3 hours and 10 minutes.  Also, lose 15 more pounds prior to race (I've already lost 10; I have 20 to go to be in top form).  This goal will prove the most challenging for me because discipline and temperance with sugar, soda, and other less healthy foods has never been my strong suit.

June 14th Marathon in Provo, Utah: Run under 3 hours and 5 minutes and qualify for the 2015 Boston Marathon.  Lose an extra five pounds to weigh in at #160 or less on race day. (I weighed about #180 on race day last Saturday)

October 4th in St. George, Utah: Break the 3 hour barrier.      

- Shocked by Picture Polish -

A mon retour de vacances j'ai eu la belle surprise de trouver un cadeau de la part de plusieurs copines. <3

Le magnifique vernis SHOCKED de Picture Polish. *danse de la joie*


C'est un jelly avec pleins de particules holographiques, on a l'impression d'avoir du coulis de framboises venu tout droit du pays des licornes au bout des doigts, c'est juste magique !


J'ai tardé à mettre des photos parce que je voulais y ajouter du stamping et donc faire des photos avec et sans nail art.
Hier je sors mes plaques MOYOU, je stampe... Et là !!!! Ca venait tout gâcher !!! ((bon j'abuse un peu)) Les motifs que j'avais choisi étaient beaux hein, c'est pas ça le soucis, c'est que ce vernis se suffit tellement à lui-même que de venir ajouter quelque chose c'est pas du tout nécessaire. Enfin c'est une question de gout, du coup j'ai tout enlevé lol Donc je le porte seul et c'est aussi très bien ^^


Comme toujours, les reflets holo sont difficiles à capturer mais là vous avez un léger aperçu.


Sinon comme on m'avait demandé une comparaison entre Shocked et Electric Dream je vous mets les photos ici aussi, ça peut servir à d'autres =)

Place aux beautés !



Je vais m'arrêter là ahah
Vous avez un préféré ? Ou comme moi vous aimez les deux ?


- Jasmine Hair'oïne by Lush REVUE -

Hey hey !!!

Je vous l'avais annoncé lors de ma dernière déco de racines faite chez le coiffeur en octobre... Les cheveux blancs me manquaient !
J'ai donc décidé de les refaire pendant mes vacances en Suisse. Certaines ont pu voir quelques photos sur instagram ou sur mon FB privé ... Mais pour toutes les autres c'était encore un "secret" jusqu'à hier.

Pourquoi je vous parle de ça ? Parce que pour avoir les cheveux blancs il faut faire des décolorations, mais pas seulement des racines pour le coup. Et les déco, même si on fait attention, ça abime les cheveux et il faut en prendre soin par la suite, très beaucoup soin ! ((c'est français chuuuut))
Comme généralement je ne fais que mes racines mes cheveux ne souffrent pas trop, mais là c'est partout sur toute la longueur alors forcément ils sont bien plus secs que d'habitude. J'ai fais des soins chez ma mère bien sure et j'ai même acheté le masque "H'Suan Wen Hua" exprès, mais pas le droit de le prendre dans ma valise au retour en avion.

De retour à Nice, je suis donc allée chez Lush pour acheter le fameux masque "H'Suan Wen Hua" que j'aime d'amour.... Mais ils n'en avaient plus et n'en auront qu'à partir du 21 !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
OH DÉSESPOIR !!!! Je ne peux laisser mes cheveux attendre jusque là, ils me supplient de les nourrir et me crient "maman pourquoi tu nous a fait ça ?"  ((oui les déco nous font aussi entendre nos cheveux parler looool))  et j'ai pas envie d'utiliser toute mon huile d'olive pour faire des masques maison.

cliquez pour lire la description du produit

C'est là que la vendeuse m'a proposé le baume capillaire "Jasmine Hair'oïne" qui selon elle fait des miracles, rend les cheveux ultra brillants, ultra doux et qui serait à utiliser en alternance avec le H. Je me suis laissé tenter malgré le fait que je n'aime pas du tout l'odeur du jasmin et qu'en plus il coute cher ce petit pot, surtout qu'avec mes cheveux long, il fera pas long feu. 21,95€ pour Jasmine  contre  13,45€ pour H
Mais que ne ferais-je pas pour mes cheveux ?!



Bref le soir même je mets de cette mixture sur mes cheveux secs ((je veux dire pas mouillés ni humides, car c'est un avant-shampoing ^^ ))  et je laisse poser toute la nuit. Le lendemain matin je rince le tout, je fais mon shampoing et mon après shampoing comme d'habitude, puis je les laisse sécher à l'air libre.

Résultat ?
Au début j'étais pas contente, enfin j'avais les cheveux poisseux. Donc re-shampoing.
Après le deuxième shampoing et cette fois séchage au sèche cheveux. Ca me plait pas du touuuuut.
Mes cheveux ne sont pas plus doux, pas plus facile à démêler et pas plus brillant.... Il me reste cette odeur de jasmin que je n'aime pas. Bref grosse impression de m'être fait avoir.

Mais j'ai pris en compte le fait d'avoir appliqué un soin à la kératine en Suisse, et peut-être que ce soin à "bloqué"  Jasmine ? Car même en me lavant les cheveux ce soin laissait les cheveux "dur/rigide" et il fallait le faire "fondre"  avec le fer à lisser pour qu'il pénètre et seulement là les cheveux redevenait souples.
J'ai attendu une bonne semaine avant de remettre Jasmine, histoire de laisser partir l'autre soin.

Deuxième essai :
Cette fois ci je dois dire qu'effectivement mes cheveux se démêlent HYPER facilement, l'odeur de jasmin j'avoue que je m'y suis habitué, mais je trouve pas mes cheveux incroyablement plus doux, par contre oui ils sont plus brillant. Et aussi il y'a moins de casse, forcément puisqu'ils sont facile à démêler. =)

Bon je vais finir mon pot et voir l'évolution, on sait toutes que c'est pas des produits magiques qui du premier coup font des miracles, surtout pour mon cas, qui je le rappel, est d'avoir décoloré mes cheveux à blanc. Alors je lui laisse sa chance jusqu'à ce que je le termine et je mettrai un édit à la fin de cet article. Mais je dois quand même dire que je préfère milles fois "H'suan Wen Hua" alors je vais me jeter dessus dès qu'il sera dispo en boutique.


Les points positifs selon moi:
- le démêlage n'en est même plus tellement il fait bien son job
- rend les cheveux un peu plus brillant
- les cheveux cassent moins

Les points négatifs:
- le prix 21,95€ pour 220gr
- l'odeur mais ça c'est vraiment personnel
- 2 shampoing pour faire partir le masque complètement


En bonus une petite photo de mes magnifaaaiiiiques cheveux blancs et roses quand même ;D




Voilà pour ma revue, je vous fais de gros bisous je reviendrai pour l'édit !!


Combatting "Insanity": My 2014 New Year's Resolution

In last week's post, I taught the principles of SMARTIES Goals.  As promised, this week, I will share with you my 2014 New Year’s Resolution, which is to qualify for the elite Boston Marathon, and describe it as a SMARTIES Goal.

I must confess to cheating a bit in that I actually started working on this goal three years ago.  Fortunately, this kind of cheating is encouraged!  You don’t have to wait for the New Year to set goals—especially SMARTIES Goals.  Furthermore, goals that are challenging and important sometimes take several tries before you accomplish them.

I am a runner.  I ran my first race at age 6.  In high school, I was a State Champion in cross-country.  In college, I was an All-American in track & field.  I have a lot of experience with running and racing.  After I turned 30, I wanted to start tackling longer races – half and full marathons.  In 2011, my brother challenged me to qualify for the elite Boston Marathon with him.  His challenge helped me turn my goal into a SMARTIES Goalby adding SpecificityMeasurablity, and Accountability.

I worked hard and ran a lot of miles in preparation for my Boston Qualifying race in Salt Lake City in July 2011.  Unfortunately, I fell short of my goal.  Nay, I speak too lightly; I fell embarrassingly short.  I was completely and utterly humbled by the marathon distance and missed my mark by nearly 70 minutes!  I’ll never forget the deflating experience of running past my wife and other family members who had patiently and cheerfully waited over an hour longer than anticipated for me to pass by.  My body, mind, and ego were so bruised that I stopped running for four months!

The final “S” in the acronym SMARTIES stands for “Sane,” and refers to goals that you re-set after failing on previous attempts.  As discussed last week, the definition of insanity is: Doing the same things over and over while expecting different results In order to set a "SANE" follow-up goal, I had to examine what I had done – and had not done – to prepare in 2011, and then make changes to my future training to avoid getting the same result. 

My brother Joe did qualify for the Boston Marathon in 2011, so I asked him what he had done to train.  First, he completed an intense 60-day strengthening video course which, ironically, was called Insanity®  Second, he had run several marathons before.  Lastly, Joe had invested great time and effort over multiple years participating in long-distance bike riding and racing.  He had even competed in the grueling Leadville 100-mile mountain bike race SEVEN times!  As such, both his mind and body were well conditioned to lengthy and arduous physical challenges. 

Following in the footsteps of someone who had qualified for Boston, in 2012, I completed the 60-day Insanity video course myself.  I spent much more time running outside instead of running too many miles on the treadmill.  I also ran FOUR marathons in 2012 to condition my body and mind to competing at long-distances.  The results of these changes were significant.  I ran 48 minutes faster than I had in 2011! While I failed again in my goal to qualify for Boston, I got much closer than I had before.  I felt GREAT about my race and was motivated to keep trying until I met my ultimate goal.

Last year was an unusually busy year for my family and me that included a move, a new baby, and the completion of my graduate studies.  Now that I am settled, graduated, and not expecting any newborns in 2014, I am ready and motivated to try again to achieve my elusive goal to qualify for the Boston Marathon.  But, is it a SMARTIES Goal?

First, let’s review the components of a SMARTIES Goal as introduced in last week’s post:

Specific
Measurable
Attainable & Accountable
Relevant
Time-bound
In competition primarily with yourself
Engaging
Sane

SPECIFIC: Qualify for the Boston Marathon in (at least) one of four 2014 marathons: Jackson, Mississippi;  The Woodlands, Texas;  Provo, Utah;  & St. George, Utah.

MEASURABLE: Run under 3 hours and 5 minutes (requirement for Boston).  Time goals for specific marathons include: Jackson in January (sub 3:30), The Woodlands in March (sub 3:20), Provo in June (sub 3:10), and St. George in October (break the 3 hour barrier).

ATTAINABLE: Check.

ACCOUNTABLE:  My wife, four friends, and YOU, my readers, are accountability partners.

RELEVANT:  My goal is relevant to my physical and mental health. Nothing like a vigorous run to clear your head, soften your heart, and lower your cholesterol.  

TIME-BOUND.  There are specific dates for each marathon.

IN COMPETITION PRIMARILY WITH MYSELF:  Check.  No goals to beat anyone but my own personal best time and the clock.

ENGAGING: Check.  I love to run and to race.

SANE: I have made several additional adjustments to my training regimen this time around.  For example, I started both my cardio and strength training several months earlier than I did in 2011 or 2012.

This weekend, I compete in my first of four marathons for the year.  My goal is to run under 3 hours and 30 minutes.  Wish me luck.  More importantly, I wish YOU luck as you begin the process of setting your own SMARTIES Goal for 2014.

If you’d like to share your SMARTIES goal, e-mail me at jordan.jensen@freedomfocused.com.  If I get any responses, I will share them in my post next week, along with my results from the Mississippi Blues Marathon in Jackson.