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In This Issue
Note From Dolly
Wise Words
Feature Article
Legacy Story
Events & Resources
Aligned Experts Corner
About Dolly
ISSN 1943-8133
Volume 2009-12, Issue 1
December 8, 2009

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As we close out our first year of publication, please know how much we appreciate your readership, participation and referrals. Thanks for your support — and if you wanted to forward this to a couple others to help grow our legacy family, we would be honored. Join us on the blog for more articles, stories and the LG Archive — and leave your comments!


Note from Dolly


Snowflake
Happy winter holidays to our readers and all you legacy creators! On some level, each of you are already creating a legacy — why not make it formal, give it some conscious thought and substance? No two will be alike, and all are important.

Last week we completed our 7 Steps to Creating Your Legacy inaugural program. Participants and presenters alike learned a lot over the eight week journey. Some amazing legacy development blueprints were created, and some incredible steps taken to begin implementation. With the commitment to take action, some powerful ‘feedback from the universe’ has already started showing up in their projects, in the forms of precession, synchronicity, powerful connections and synergies. We’re now going into a year-end process of program evaluation to determine whether and when to hold the 7 Steps program again, and what new form it might take. Here’s what it looked like first go round. If you have interest in doing the program, or any questions about it, please contact us.

Since it is the holiday season — the season of giving with a spirit that matches our mission, we have a special gift to let you put a toe in the water and check out what this concept of legacy building means for you ... and what you might choose to do about it. Be sure to check the Events & Resources section below to learn more about the free Creating Legacy Studio and come join us if you’re at all inclined to become a positive leader powering sustainable change who wants to make a difference now that lasts for generations!

Cheers,

Dolly

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Wise Words

"You give but little when you give of your possessions.
It is when you give of yourself that you truly give."

 -- Kahlil Gibran

"We should give as we would receive, cheerfully, quickly, and without hesitation;
for there is no grace in a benefit that sticks to the fingers."

 -- Seneca

"I never thought I’d get into science, but being able to turn salad dressing into a school bus – that’s the kind of chemistry that tickles the fancy."  

-- Paul L. Newman


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Feature Article
Legacy-Level Holiday Gift-Giving

This holiday season, remember the 4 R’s: Reduce, Re-use, Recycle and Rot. Not words you think of when it comes to the holidays? You can easily begin to incorporate these terms of environmental conservation into your gift-giving plans.

What do the 4 R’s really mean? Many people understand them to be equal alternatives, when really they form a hierarchy. The best first step is to Reduce the amount of material consumed, and therefore the energy used and waste produced in making it. Next in line is to Re-use goods and material that no longer serve their original purpose, but can serve another one with minimal process until their useful is exhausted. This is the one that is probably the least used or most mis-used in what has become a worldwide throwaway society. How many one-use items will you throw away today alone (think coffee cups, other beverage and food containers plastic bags)? Recycling is only third in line -- its benefit only kicks in when it’s not possible to avoid consuming new materials to begin with or to re-use them. And while a great thing to do, recycling requires use of additional resources for transportation to processing facilities and for the recycling process itself. Think: "an ounce of prevention vs. a pound of cure." Finally, Rotting (composting organic materials) is always available but is primarily an activity of the agrarian age gone-by that too few of us utilize. It happens naturally in landfills and our water supply, with little benefit and the need to expend energy to clean or reclaim those resources after compostable items are discarded or washed down a drain. That valuable organic matter could instead be going back into the soil to enrich it.

So, how can you make a difference in this arena, especially during the holidays? Here are some suggestions:

Reduce by just limiting the amount of stuff — plain old consumer goods and consumables — you purchase and interact with this holiday season. Your savings account and waistline will thank you. And you will reduce the amount of packaging and overall energy expenditures involved (including your own personal life energy). Let simplicity be the watchword — meaningful quality rather than quantity in gift-giving. The Story of Stuff also sheds some important light on issues of over-consumption and the true cost of things you may otherwise consider a bargain. When you think you’re getting a deal and can therefore buy more — think again about the hidden costs ... and buy less.

There are many ways to Re-use other than to save wrapping paper and make last year’s paper greeting cards into gift tags (although those are good ideas, too). Gifts don’t have to be shiny and brand new to be significant and meaningful. They can be hand-crafted, one of a kind wonders (a different way to say homemade, but heck, what’s wrong with homemade?) Some examples are shown below.

Hopefully, you are already utilizing the environmental conservation practice of Recycling. Of course it’s hardly a new concept. Prior to synthetics, mass production, and particularly the end of WWII, conservation and recycling were the way we lived. Goods made from nylon, real rubber and many metals were rationed and reused. The environmental movement of the 1960s and 70s brought the practice back into "fashion" after the "throwaway society" heralded by Life Magazine in 1955 —. The invention of disposables was a way to free up the modern housewife (and baby, just look how encumbered we’ve become!) Fortunately, Earth Day and the movement that followed created a whole new (old) way to look at what it means to waste, and what we consider trash (which, as they say, is often someone else’s treasure). So when you shop for that holiday party, take your own cloth shopping bags, buy beverages in glass and aluminum containers that can be re-fashioned into new items, and consider using recyclable corn cups and bamboo plates for informal gatherings. The latter can go into your compost.

Which brings us to Rot. Don’t forget being generous to your compost bin or pile. You can easily create the gift some beautiful rich fertilized soil for your plants and garden beds when discarding anything organic — from the morning’s coffee grounds and eggshells to all your veggie and fruit trimmings and peelings. Bigger gatherings, more food = more of this precious organic matter that may go to waste without a consciousness of how valuable it is. Learning how to compost is easy. Even winter and snow don’t need to stop you. Think of it as your gift to the planet and future generations on a very basic level ... because it is.

The 4 R's are a back to the future, or maybe forward into the past (?!) concept at its best!

Here are some other specific gift ideas that can keep you in the holiday spirit in a down economy, as well as, add to your environmentally friendly practices:

Spa1. Give Services instead of Goods. You can give a gift certificate for salon or spa services, a car wash, a gardening service (like tree-planting or mulching the planting beds around the house), or organic cooking lessons. You can also give the gift of your own time, energy and expertise. Giving someone a book of coupons representing anything from computer training to your help doing household chores can be a very meaningful ... and useful gift.

2. Give the Gift of An Adventure or Event. This is my personal favorite. At this point in my Honeymoon 1life, I’ve got enough stuff. But sharing time and experiences with people I care about means a lot to me. A card redeemable for lunch with a friend is worth a lot. My husband and I create trips and adventures (from local to international) to share with one another — which also supports the economies of the places we visit.

Honeymoon 2Here are a couple of photos from our recent honeymoon / "staycation" in our hometown of Key West. We had great fun being hometown tourists. Yes, we’ve chosen to live in this paradise at the end of a long road (which has its trade-offs folks), but I’m guessing your hometown paradise has great things to recommend it, too. Re-watch the Wizard of Oz if you need more of a reminder.

Gift certificates in the form of tickets to the movies, a concert or a local playhouse can be great fun especially if you get to be one of the ticket holders. This is also true for local attractions — to play golf (or mini-golf), enjoy a water park or spend the day at a botanical garden or museum. Memberships in local nonprofit organizations — producing the gift of involvement — are also an option.

Gold Watch3. The Gift of Personal Treasures. You may have family heirlooms, antiques, collectibles, artwork or jewelry that someone else would treasure, too — especially since it once belonged to you. This is true also of crystal, wood carvings, geodes or similar pieces of nature as art. They contain part of your story and lots of sentimental value, two things you can’t buy anyway.

Baked Goods4. Special or Healthy Edibles. This is when "homemade," or hand-crafted with heart, is something especially good. Pies, cakes and cookies, barbecue or hot sauce (perhaps complete with the old family recipe) or even fresh or dried herbs from your garden are easy on the environment and convey your heartfelt wishes through the effort you put into exercising your culinary skills. Making up a few batches as gifts probably won’t take more time than trudging to and through the shopping mall, and it will be time more pleasantly spent by you, especially if the weather outside is frightful. And you never know what the effort might produce – see our Legacy Story this issue.

5. Gifts of Social Good – another of my favorites. I decided a couple years ago to make gifts in the names of family, clients and friends, that make a contribution in the world. Farm girl that I am, one of my favorites is Heifer International, an organization that provides needy individuals and families with the gift of sustainability by providing them with numerous farm animals that can then be used to produce commodities like dairy products, wool, honey, etc. — not to mention offspring, which the beneficiary agrees to pass along to another member of the community in effect "sharing the wealth." Some of the other organizations we support are:

  • www.GENI.org — an organization focused on linking renewable energy resources around the world using international electricity transmission in attempt to answer the question: "How do we make the world work for 100‰ of humanity in the shortest possible time through spontaneous cooperation without ecological damage or disadvantage to anyone?"
  • www.FINCA.org — which provides micro loans that give poor women the opportunity to work their way out of poverty; and
  • www.WomenForWomen.org — which helps women survivors of war rebuild their lives. (This one is particularly special to me since my own mother was a survivor of WWII who came to the United States to rebuild her life and work).

Each one is an amazing legacy story of its own, and we’ll tell them here by and by. For this holiday season consider making a donation to one of them, or any other organization that moves your heart, in the name of someone you care about. You’ll be making an important difference at the same time.




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Legacy Story
A Legacy Born From Salad Dressing And A Pretzel

Paul NewmanGreat legacies can have humble beginnings. Take the legacy of the late, great Paul Newman for example. He and a long-time friend, author A.E. Hotchner, working out of Newman’s basement, used to mix up and their homemade salad dressing and put it in old wine bottles to give to friends while Christmas caroling. People loved it, and shortly after it actually became a limited edition holiday item stocked in local gourmet food shops. So they thought about marketing it. They asked friends to sample recipes (aka ‘tested their target market’) and selected the original Olive Oil & Vinegar dressing as their first product. The two friends contributed $40,000 each as start up capital and found a private manufacturer to bottle it.

Then, Newman did two other things significant to getting the multi-Shameless Exploitationmillion dollar Newman’s Own line of natural food products where it is today: he personalized the effort by putting his picture on the label (as a joke); but more significantly, he decided to give away any after-tax profits because he neither needed or wanted to make money from the business. While marketing consultants were skeptical, Paul and A.E. became business partners and in 1982 Newman’s Own, Inc. was born. Expecting the losses predicted by consultants and friends, the two went for it anyway and generated after-tax profits of nearly a half million dollars ... in their first year.

Since that time, Newman’s Own, with the business tagline “Shameless Exploitation in Pursuit of the Common Good” has not only gone on to produce a line of numerous salad dressings, lemonade, pasta sauce, cookies and a whole new array of organic products, it has given away over $280 million to thousands of charities. The venture supports Newman’s personal cause, his signature Hole in the Wall Camps, which provide a medically supervised, free-of-charge true camp experience for children with serious illnesses and life-threatening conditions. What started out in 1988 with a single camp, has expanded into the nonprofit Association for Hole in the Wall Camps to support existing camps and the formation of new ones internationally. A family legacy, Newman’s Own, is now run by Paul’s daughter Nell, – who launched Newman’s Own Organics in 1993 ... with a pretzel.

Paul NewmanPaul Newman lived a very full life as an actor, husband and family man, friend and activist — the personification of his loves and values. The media coverage of this amazing story speaks of remembering Paul Newman and his legacy, as if it was born at the time of his passing. The truth is, his legacy began well before that, with salad dressing and a friend in a Connecticut basement, a sense of holiday cheer, the pursuit of fun and joy, and a decision to make money for the purpose of giving back and creating something meaningful to benefit others. From that spirit, a significant legacy was created, and in less than 30 years it has made an incredible difference that will indeed lasts for generations.

If you were to combine the elements of the true meaning of the holidays, with a friend, fun and a decision to make money to benefit people, places or things you care about ... what would you start? Here at Creating Legacy we can imagine where it could go, and can help you get it there.

It only takes a first step.


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Email me about someone you know who is living or building a legacy. We’d love to feature their story. Maybe it’s you?!

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Events & Resources

A Holiday Gift for You: Announcing The Creating Legacy Studio

Child holding heartWe’ve also combined the true meaning of the holidays with friendship, fun and a decision to make money to benefit people, places and things we care about — through the opening of the Creating Legacy Studio!

The Studio is the collaborative brainchild of Dolly Garlo, founder of Creating Legacy and long-time friend, colleague, fellow coach and health care provider (among other amazing credentials), Elizabeth Crouch. Together, throughout 2010 and beyond, we’ll further develop products and services designed to provide you with tools, resources and customized support that

  • Help you make your life and work magnificent and meaningful, so you feel truly great to be alive each and every day;
  • Assist with making a transition from "been there, done that" (even if it was great and full of successful accomplishments) to that enthusiastic "what’s next?!" in your life’s adventure; and
  • In the process, builds as many great legacies as possible to make an important, positive difference in the world.

ChalkboardTo begin, we open The Creating Legacy Studio with free, twice a month open teleconferences. Here you can begin to explore with both of us what you want to do with your precious life and work to fulfill what in your heart and soul you know you’re capable of and truly want to do. No pre-registration needed, just show up, join in, and maybe even have your legacy coached out of you.

    In December, The Studio will be open on the 9th at 16th at 10a PT / 11a MT / noon CT / 1p ET — just call in at the top of the hour from wherever you are, and plan to spend the hour with us.
    Teleconference number: U.S. 1-218-862-1300 (long distance charges apply)
    Conference Code: 534481
    More Info Here

We look forward to getting to know you.

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Aligned Experts

Some fabulous products and services of others that you may find helpful:

Earlybird Ezine Telecamp — Still Time to Get Into the Second Session!

Early Bird CampThis program is the brainchild of the amazing Linda Claire Puig, a newsletter marketing expert and a writer with 25 years’ professional experience. She and her amazing resources helped bring the Legacy Journal into publication.
If you struggle to send your newsletter issue by issue, or if you want to send a newsletter but have no idea where to start — and you want it to be EASY — you must attend her Earlybird Ezine Telecamp.

The telecamp — a program delivered by telephone conference — includes 6 live teleclasses that walk you through EVERY aspect of putting together your ezine, and 6 live Q&A calls to end any confusion about how to do everything right. The first session started November 17, but you can still get in to the second one beginning January 5, 2010. Her program is designed to help you get all your 2010 newsletters ready to go for the whole year, and by the end of the first quarter of 2010 you could have a year’s worth of newsletters planned and ready to go. Linda’s got three different packages — each INCLUDING your own custom-designed newsletter template — along with some great bonuses for participation. Click here to learn more.

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About Dolly
Dolly GarloDolly M. Garlo, RN, JD, PCC is the founder and president of Thrive!!® Inc. and Creating Legacy™. It is a company devoted to empowering business owners and entrepreneurially minded professionals make their positive impact in the world — with joy and meaning.

For 30 + years Dolly has supported clients in many different arenas — healthcare, law and business. While she’s currently best known for her expertise in business development and professional career transition, her clients, members of Generation G (for generosity!) share that her biggest impact comes from her philosophy.

That philosophy is to design your work and create an exceptional life by making sure that all your actions reflect your personal integrity and values, greatest level of wellness, highest and best contribution, and individual sense of abundance — for which you can feel exceedingly grateful. These, Dolly says, are the keys to true, lasting satisfaction and happiness from which you can also "make a positive difference that lasts for generations."

You can learn more about Dolly and her programs, presentations and products at CreatingLegacy.com and AllThrive.com.

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The Legacy Journal newsletter is written by Dolly M. Garlo: http://www.CreatingLegacy.com. If you have any questions or comments, please send them to: Dolly@CreatingLegacy.com.