Little Detours offers inspiration for life
I hope these episodes of Little Detours with Regina Brett help you to create a life you love out of the life you have.
I’m hitting the pause button on the podcast, but each week in my weekly newsletter, you’ll get tips, tools and takeaways to help you love your self, your life and everyone in it.
I hope it will replenish your soul and help you rediscover your own inner compass so you can enjoy wherever the journey of life takes you.
Just sign up for it from this website!
Miracles sometimes wear disguises. They’re tucked in the ordinary and mundane parts of life that we might want to skip. Or they come right when you’re ready to give up on you or someone else. Don’t quit before the miracle happens.
There might be more than one miracle. Or you might miss a deeper miracle you can’t yet see.
Years ago, I was asked to help a boy who had all sorts of disabilities. I volunteered to help him. It turns out he helped me more. He taught me not to quit. He was my miracle.
Comparison is the thief of joy, President Theodore Roosevelt said.
We are all in this world for something greater than self, some holy mission, an assignment, a calling that is yours and yours alone. Your whole life belongs to that mission, even the parts you don’t always love or like.
It doesn’t matter what has happened to you, it matters what you do with what has happened to you. Life is like a poker game, you don’t get to choose the cards dealt to you, but it’s entirely up to you how you play them.
You get to decide what you’re worth, how you matter and how you make meaning in this world. No one else has your gifts, You are an original. A masterpiece. Act like it. Live like it.
When was the last time you got angry at God? Most of us are too afraid to.
God doesn’t want us to be so holy we aren’t human. God doesn’t want fake praise and phony prayers. God wants an authentic, honest relationship with us. It’s human to experience anger and frustration, even at God. At some point in life, we all struggle with life, with the deaths of those we love, with misfortunes and confusion and heartaches that sometimes seem endless.
There’s no wrong way to pray. Just speak from the heart. You don’t have to understand God to pray. God understands you.
I don’t understand electricity, but I don’t let that keep me in the dark. I just hit the switch and let the light in.
Prayer is the switch to let the Light in.
You don’t have to take a giant leap or complete a five-year plan or fill out an Excel spreadsheet. Just take the next right step.
What it is? It’s beneath all those 19 other steps that have you paralyzed into procrastination.
If you’re feeling overwhelmed and don’t know where to start, pause, pray for clarity and proceed with the next right step. The next step is usually clear, but we look too far down the road at all the other steps we don’t want to take or don’t know how to take and end up doing nothing.
Once you take the next right step, the small one that IS clear, then the step after that becomes clear, and the next and so on.
Our job as survivors of cancer and other big detours in life is to bear witness, to share our experience to lighten the load for others, to carry the torch of hope to all who need a light in their darkness.
Cancer is a big wake-up call. Once you get it, you don’t go back to sleepwalking through life. You say “Yes!” to life — the good, the bad, the ugly, to all of it. You love life as is, with no conditions, with no complaints.
Once you’ve had cancer, you never know if you’re cured forever, so you live the hell out of the day you are in, this big, beautiful, glorious day, and give thanks for being alive to see it unfold.
Make your life a prayer. Not a quest for more money, awards, popularity, achievements, praise or fame.
A Jesuit priest used to offer this simple statement to everyone he counseled: “God is the answer. Now what was your question?” The solution to every problem is more God. More love. More joy. More peace. Not more booze, gambling, shopping, sex, winning, achievements.
A simple sign hangs over the monastery gates where Thomas Merton wrote at the Abbey of Gethsemani in Trappist, Kentucky. Just two words that says it all: God Alone.
Once you have God, you have everything.
Saints aren’t perfect super-human beings who wear halos. Saints are people who know how much God loves them.
To know that fully means you live without demands on others for time, attention, gifts and constant reminders that you are loved. You are loved by the Source of all Love. It’s a radical, extravagant love that completely fills you up. Saints can see God hidden in the rest of us.
You don’t have to have supernatural powers to be a saint or to be martyred. It doesn’t mean you are above being human. It means you are fully human and also connected to the Divine being that you truly are, that we all are.
Every day, give yourself a do-over. You don't need to wait for a birthday or a New Year’s Eve to give yourself a clean slate. Every day is the day to give birth to yourself and create the person you want to be and the life you want to live.
Start right now. Go look in the mirror and fall in love with that beautiful child of God looking back at you.
Every day you have a chance to be reborn, to give birth to yourself, to choose joy.
We all have an inner critic. They key is, do you let it run — and ruin — your life?
Change your thoughts and you change your life. You, the soul, spiritual You, have the power to change your thoughts. You also have the power to ignore them, replace them or release them.
Try to replace negative thoughts with positive ones. Repeat affirmations. Stop and ask yourself often, “Do you want to be happy?” Then act like it. Think like it. Think thoughts of gratitude, kindness and love. Create a one word thought replacer, or a thought interrupter to jolt you back to You, like “banana split.”
If you’re really stuck, focus your attention on how to be of service to help someone else.
Many of us pray without ceasing, but maybe we need to stop and simply say, “Thank you.”
When you pray like you mean it, you believe God heard you the first time. You ask, then you pause and receive your answer, without any proof. You trust that your prayer was heard, that once you hit the Send button, it arrived and you don’t have to keep pounding on the keyboard to deliver it.
The next time you pray, pause and acknowledge that you have complete confidence in a God who loves you. That God will give you “this, or something better.” I don’t always understand the “something better” part right away, but I trust that God heard my prayers and that the Universe is unfolding exactly as it is supposed to without me grabbing the steering wheel from God and trying to drive it somewhere else.
Real faith isn’t praying without ceasing. It’s believing that God heard you the first time.
You have all the answers you will ever need. They’re inside of you. How do you access them? Consult your own soul.
Too many of us run around interviewing friends and family and strangers for the answers we need.
To really hear the wisdom within, you have to take time away from the noise and stay silent and listen. When you consult your soul, it will say “Yes” or “No” loud and clear.
Your monkey mind will get muddy and noisy and churn out all sorts of nonsense, but your soul will give you perfect clarity and peace if you will train yourself to listen to it.
How do you put the oxygen mask on yourself?
First, you give yourself permission to do so. The care and feeding of you is up to you and no one else.
Take back the remote control of your life. Own it. Your time is your time. Don’t give yourself away so there’s nothing left of you for you. Before you give any of your time away, ask what you’re trading in for it. Is it worth the trade?
Every week, set aside one hour just for you. Make it your own personal pleasure cruise. Take an hour of beauty and go to the art museum. Take an hour of calm and listen to your favorite music. Take an hour of nature to soak up the sun, the rain, the stars.
Put the oxygen mask on yourself first, and everyone around you will breathe a little easier, too.
The secret of life is no secret. It’s sprinkled all over your life.
What does it take to be happy? Getting a gigantic raise? Nope. Retiring with a huge nest egg of millions? Strike two. Winning the lottery and buying your dream mansion? You’re out.
The secret of life is to find God in the present moment. If you do that, you’ll discover the secret of life is no secret.
It’s a baggy pair of overalls. Poems by Mary Oliver. Music by Louis Armstrong. Chocolate by Godiva. And so, so much more.
It’s celebrating what already is, right here, right now.
There’s an old saying: If you’re five minutes early, you’re on time. If you’re on time, you’re late and if you’re late, you’re fired.
I used to be late for everything. Then I realized how selfish and self-centered my behavior was to those waiting for me. When you’re constantly late, people see you as rude and disrespectful — and you are! Being late causes stress for you and everyone else.
Now I’m almost always early. I add a little extra time to drive anywhere so I don’t risk getting a speeding ticket or fueling anyone’s road rage. Arrive early and you’ve scheduled in room to breathe.
Instead of being predictably late, arrive early and be the one everyone can count on.
Whatever you put your personal magnifying glass on grows. So why not put it on the good?
Magnify the good. In your boss. In your spouse. In your kids. In the cancer verdict you just got. In the pregnancy test that came back positive or negative.
A beautiful soul named Larry Petrus taught me that. He saw and magnified the good in every stranger he met.
Whatever you focus on grows, so train yourself to magnify the good in the marriage you have, the house you have, the job you have, the family you have, the body you have. When you practice seeing the good and the God in everyone, and you’ll see it more often than you ever imagined.
We all judge ourselves too harshly when it comes to doing our best. We raise the bar too high, setting it at perfection, and give ourselves a failing grade for anything that falls short of that.
I’ve learned that completion is the goal, not perfection.
A beautiful teacher named JoAnn Hollis taught me that even at our worst, our work can still be a great gift to others. It’s not ours to judge, just to complete.
The results of what I do are none my business. My business is simply to do my best, then release the results and move on to the next assignment.
Monica Turoczy was a human sparkler. In her brief life, she taught me to Carry As You Climb so we can all rise.
No one should climb a career ladder alone. Carry someone else up as you make the ascent. Empower others to be their best selves and you make the world better for everyone. How many people helped you get to where you are in life?
Whatever career ladder you’re headed up, take someone with you. You can climb a career ladder in heels, steel-toed work boots or a pair of sneakers. Value and support each person you meet, no matter what his or her position is.
And as Monica would say, remember: “You are fantastic, doll. Just find your groove and ride it like a wave.”
The most quoted rule for Book Clubs is this: You do not talk about Book Club.
Okay, so a Book Club shouldn’t feel like Fight Club, but there are rules to follow. You read just one book at a time. Conversations go on as long as they need to. If it’s your first night at Book Club, you have to talk.
A book club should feel like a joy, not another task. No book should feel like homework and book clubs shouldn’t feel like you’re back in Language Arts class with a term paper due on Monday.
Find out how to create the best book club and read the best books. And remember, What happens in book club, stays in book club.
How many pages do you give a book before you stop reading? I give a book 40 pages. If it doesn’t make my Wow Meter go wild, I stop reading.
No boring books. I don’t read anything that feels like homework. That’s one of Regina’s Rules for Reading. Here are a few more:
Agree to disagree: Just because everyone else likes a book doesn’t mean you will. Take “Ulysses.” Please, take it!
Always read more than one book at a time: It takes the pressure off any one book.
Make the book yours: Turn down the corners. Highlight it. Underline passages. Draw stars in the margins.
Try different genres: Give a new poet a chance. Read a collection of essays or short stories. Crack open a mystery.
Hang out at the library: Free books! Need I say more?
Join a book club: You’ll discover new authors to love.
Read deliberately: Choose books over Facebook.
Life is short. So many books; so little time. Get busy reading!
A library card is a passport to the world.
You can go anywhere in the world. With a library, you don’t need a passport to go to Peru. You don’t need airfare to tour the Mediterranean. You don’t need reservations to travel the Riviera.
Libraries matter. You can meet Einstein, Gandhi, Sojourner Truth, Shakespeare and August Wilson there. Ralph Waldo Emerson called the library The People’s University. It is the only free university for all. No tuition, no fees no entrance exam.
If you can’t afford a vacation, the library is your vacation. If you need a job, the library offers limitless opportunities to craft your resume, learn new skills or build your confidence.
A library isn’t a luxury, it’s a lifeline.
When you become a first-time dog owner, it helps to adopt the motto: Overprepare and go with the flow.
And yes, that might mean the flow of dog pee all over your living room floor.
How do you prepare for a puppy when you’ve never owned a dog in your life?
Like many others, we got a pandemic pet and discovered puppies are a lot of work. But I made a commitment for life, one I vow to keep no matter how much our cute puppy acts like a juvenile delinquent. The cuteness factor does wear off when he barks at 3 a.m., throws up on the shag rug or digs a hole right in the middle of the yard.
But when you look into those eyes, you’re looking into the soul of a beautiful being, one that will love you better than you ever love it.
Naming a dog isn’t easy. You thought naming a child was hard? This is harder. With a child, only the parents get a vote. With a pet, everyone in the family wants a vote.
But who actually decides? Me? My husband? Our three grandkids? Their parents? This was going to be a family dog, so all 7 of us were in on the choosing.
There are so many things to consider when naming a dog, especially when you’ve never had a dog and you’re 64 and it’s probably the only dog you’re ever going to have in your life.
A dog’s name can’t be one that’s embarrassing to scream at the top of your lungs when it runs away, so Poopsy Pie, Sprinkles and Mister Snuggles were out. Find out what we chose and how, and steal from our list of the great names we didn’t choose.
I’m not a dog person. So why is there a giant dog crate in the corner of my living room?
Blame the grandkids. All three of them. Grandkids have a way of cracking open your heart. And that’s what happened. My heart cracked open.
During the pandemic, the grandkids were begging for pet and settled on a gerbil. Then one day our 9-year-old granddaughter announced, “I don’t know why we’re talking gerbils when we should be talking puppies.”
That was the moment. Our hearts opened wide to a pandemic puppy.
Listen to Part 1 of our journey to create a generation of dog lovers. It’s the story of how two non-dog lovers became pet people to transform their family forever into dog people.
It all started with the decision to love one puppy for life. And oh, what a life changer it has been.
Elton John was right. “Sorry” seems to be the hardest word. Why is it so hard to give an apology yet so powerful to receive one?
Most people don’t know how to apologize. We’re all pretty clumsy at it. We say, “If I offended you, I’m sorry.” Or, “Sorry you feel that way.” Or, say “I owe you an apology” yet never give one.
None of those are genuine apologies. An apology includes the words, “I’m sorry.” Those two words can repair and right a relationship forever. No one likes to admit they’re wrong, but we’re all wrong some of the time. And sometimes our wrongs hurt others.
If we learn from our wrongs and apologize for them, we don’t have to flog ourselves forever. It takes grace to receive an apology, to give up remaining a victim. But you can give up your hurt and move on. Once you release that person, you’re free, too.
Albert Einstein said if he had an hour to solve a problem and his entire life depended upon the solution, he’d spend the first 55 minutes asking the right questions.
What are the right questions? The kind that help you live your deepest, best life. Questions like…
Do you believe the Universe is a friendly place? What is the kindest thing to do right now? If today were the last day of my life, would I want to do what I am about to do today? Apple founder Steve Jobs urged people to ask themselves that question, and if the answer was “No,” then change your life.
Discover the power of asking the right questions.
What’s on your Bucket List? It’s a list of all the things you want to experience before you “kick the bucket.” Things to try before you die.
It’s the opposite of homework. It’s life play. Instead of focusing on your life’s work, you focus on your life’s play and make sure you live your big adventure here.
It can include travel or challenges, thrill-seeking adventures or learn hobbies you’ve always wanted to try. Or you could go deeper and turn your Bucket List into a Bucket Life. You could create challenges to become a better person: Learn CPR. Get certified in Wilderness First Aid. Donate blood. Teach someone to read. Become a foster parent. Forgive everyone everything.
When you turn your Bucket List into a Bucket Life, everyone benefits from what’s on your list.
People say “get out of your comfort zone.” Sometimes you actually need to climb into it, get cozy and savor it.
You can create a Comfort Zone out of your favorite chair, a nightstand or a corner of a room. You just need a spot that is all yours that brings you a measure of peace where you can reboot and restore your life. Even Superman needed a Fortress of Solitude.
You can call it your sanctuary, your refuge, your oasis. Just find a spot to call your own then add some scented candles, pillows, soothing music or fresh flowers. Then you can meditate, read, write in your journal and nurture your soul so you can be a comfort to others when it’s time to leave your comfort zone and step back into the world.
We could all benefit from professional help. Getting counseling might be the best thing you ever do for yourself.
If you were broken and bruised from childhood abuse or neglect, or sexually abused as a teenager or young adult, you don’t have to keep tiptoeing around the minefield of your past to avoid explosions of shame, anger and rage. You don’t have to feel desperate and hungry and lost your whole life.
If you broke your leg, you’d go to a hospital and get professional help to heal it. If you were broken by child abuse, neglect or a sexual assault, you need a professional trained to help heal that broken part. You are worth getting help.
There is joy on the other side of all that pain. Find it.
You are beautiful. When was the last time you looked in the mirror and believed it?
Too often we are our own worst enemies. Some of the meanest things said about us are said by us.
Too many of us look in the mirror and see only flaws: Split ends. Pimples. Wrinkles. Age spots. No matter how beautiful our eyes, our smile, our skin, we zoom in on the one thing that makes us feel flawed.
We need to honor our bodies, no matter what size or shape or age we are, and believe this truth about ourselves: we are beautiful, as is, right now.
Kindness is contagious. Why not spread it?
Opportunities for kindness are everywhere. At work, home, school, Facebook, Twitter, the breakfast nook, the dinner table. With one daily act of kindness, you could change the world. You could…Listen more than you talk. Hug your kids. Kiss your spouse. Clean up after your dog. Unjam the copier. Over-tip. Thank a teacher.
Imagine if we all said, did, posted, shared, clicked and liked only content that was kind. We could start a revolution.
Let’s do it!
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