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Dr. Joti Samra
Robert
Herjavec
Haven’t yet lost that dreadful muffin top or made amends
with your latest friend-turned-foe? Nowhere near achieving
the relationship or career you so desperately want, need?
We called upon the experts to crank up our happy-o-meter
with motivational tips that will take us that much closer to
personal fulfillment. What we asked: How can we be just a
little bit better this year?
ROBERT HERJAVEC
Celebrity investor, businessman and
author of The Will to Win: Leading,
Competing, Succeeding
Find a problem and start a business.
People overcomplicate starting a
business and their
starting point is
often “What do
I want to do?”
It’s what your
customer needs —
so find a need that
you are interested
in fulfilling.
www.robertherjavec.com
34
City Life Magazine
Feb/Mar 2014
Interviews By Simona Panetta
DR. JOTI SAMRA
Clinical psychologist /
TV host and expert
The one small thing I try to do daily
is to start my morning with a thought
of gratitude. I express thanks for
something I have in my life, whether
it’s my warm house, my comfortable
bed, my shower with running hot water
or my good health. It’s easy to get caught
up in all the things we don’t have (most
of us go through life doing “upward
comparison,” which is comparing
ourselves to people who have more
of what we want or desire — but it is
very humbling to do some “downward
comparison,” to articulate and express
appreciation for things you have in your
life that others don’t have). It’s amazing
what a shift in perspective this small
exercise can create for your day.
www.drjotisamra.com
www.citylifemagazine.ca
Photo By Vairdy Photograph
PEOPLE
WHO WILL
CHANGE
YOUR
LIFE
P ottoo By Ca
Pho
Cam
miillla Puc
uch
cchholtl
Chairman and CEO of retained search
firm Waterstone Human Capital, and
father of five
The first thing you want to do is get
a one-page plan. Spend some time
reflecting and evaluating what you want
this year to be, what your goals are going
to be, what your mission is going to be,
and get it down on one page. Look
at it every seven days to make course
corrections to stay on track. Clarity
precedes mastery. Clarity is power. And
every great entrepreneur, every great
CEO, every great athlete, has one thing
in common: they have a monomaniacal
focus on their vision.*
www.robinsharma.com
STEPHANIE JOANNE
Celebrity fitness expert
So you’re holding a smartphone, right?
Use it to download a fitness app, sync
it to all your devices and use it. When
people want to work out, they go
down to the basement and hop on the
treadmill for a few minutes, but then
don’t know what to do. People want
the answers, they want the diet — they
want the step-by-step program. But
they don’t need to spend the big bucks.
They don’t have to hire a trainer; they
don’t have to get a gym membership.
There are a lot of ways we can use
technology as motivational tools to
overcome fitness objectives. If your
problem is snacking, and you need
someone to motivate you not to reach
for a cookie, there’s an app for that.
Free or for just a couple of bucks, these
resources can design a customized
workout program for you, create your
grocery list and motivate you to reach
your fitness goal. www.stephaniejoanne.com
36
City Life Magazine
Feb/Mar 2014
Personal financial expert,
author and speaker
Ph too By Tim Le
Pho
Leyes
yes
Things that drive us crazy, that make
us angry — especially in the corporate
world — are usually the things we want
to do or don’t want to do as much. For
someone with a high-drive mentality
like myself, it can get frustrating when
I can’t achieve something as fast as
I want to. Many years ago, someone
shared with me a quote from Mark
Twain: “Anger is an acid that can do
more harm to the vessel in which it is
stored than to anything on which it is
poured.” Anger brings more stress to
the person who holds it than to anybody
else. It can eat you up. So remind
yourself to take your frustrations and
let them go; lighten up and laugh.
www.waterstonehc.com
ROBIN SHARMA
Author and leadership expert
Photo
oto Pro
P vidded Byy
Sharma
rm Le
L ade
adersh
ship
ip Int
I ern
ernati
a onal
at
onaal Innc.
c..
Photo By Arturo Parada
KELLEY KEEHN
Ask yourself: What does having more
money mean to me? Until someone has
a clear idea of what they’re working for,
it’s more difficult to attain it and enjoy
the process along the way. Does having
more money mean the freedom to travel
with your spouse and check off the items
on your bucket list? Does it mean giving
your kids a leg up by helping them
fund their post-secondary education,
or starting a business or buying a home
sooner? Once you get clear about how
more money (or wealth) can change
your life for the better, it drives every
part of your being with congruency.
www.kelleykeehn.com
www.citylifemagazine.ca
*Text extracted from Robin Sharma’s online video,
Special Habits to Make 2014 Awesome
MARTY PARKER
People tend to coast through life not
being honest with themselves — about
the choices they’ve made or how
they got to where they’re at in life.
If they’re not pointing fingers at
someone else, they’re chasing someone
else’s dreams. And that comes a lot from
your upbringing. Being compared to
siblings, or hearing that your cousin’s
a lawyer only results in you doing
things that don’t contribute to your
own goals. Be honest with yourself, and
that honesty will lead to accountability
— the basic principles to a wellbalanced lifestyle. On the romance
front, ask yourself if you’re having
a positive or negative experience, if
you’re articulating your needs. Don’t
put the onus on your partner to do
all the correcting and fixing — take
accountability for the relationship.
www.brunologreco.com
KERRY HANNON
Author, Great Jobs for Everyone 50+:
Finding Work that Makes you Happy
and Healthy … and Pays the Bills
My Labrador retriever is my personal
fitness trainer. We walk briskly for at
least four miles a few times a week and
shorter distances the other days. Some
38
City Life Magazine
Feb/Mar 2014
DR. DAVID GREENBERG
Physician at St. Joseph’s Health Centre,
guest expert on CityLine
BOB CAREY
Photographer and co-founder of
The Tutu Project
© Bob Careyy
Master life coach and mentor
Pho
P
hhoottoo By
B El
Eliizab
E
zabbeth Dr
Drani
anitzk
ani
tzkee
tzk
Photos Provided By Bruno LoGreco Inc.
BRUNO LOGRECO
key canine advice from Zena: Push in
fresh directions every time you walk out
the door. She’s always on the lookout for
new opportunities. She takes advantage
of every jaunt. Smells and sounds lead
her from one new place to another with
an openness and sense of tail-wagging
excitement that always amazes me. So
keep your eyes open and follow your
nose — even if you’ve been down that
trail many times before.
www.kerryhannon.com
If you’re living a life where you’re
doing the same thing every single day,
everything’s normal, smooth, you’re
going to work and everything’s good
and flat and there are no bumps, to
me, I kind of compare that to a flat
line on an EKG — you’re just kinda
walking dead. Take the opportunity
to have more fun and not take things
so seriously. If you’ve never skied and
you’re healthy, go skiing. I don’t know
if my knees are good enough to skydive,
but I want to try. Believe in yourself,
believe in what your heart tells you,
and live without letting other people
tell you that you can’t.
www.thetutuproject.com
As far as happiness goes, make time to
explore and discover new things. I love
to get in my car and have a week off
and not know where I’m going. That to
me is freedom, that to me is fun, and
the stories that come out of those trips
and the people I meet are amazing. I
think people get in a rut when they
say, “I don’t do this, or I don’t do that.”
Know your numbers.
Waist size (sorry), blood pressure, blood
sugar and cholesterol are things men are
(hopefully) regulating annually. What
men should also be thinking about is
getting their testosterone levels checked.
Apart from sexual dysfunction, low
testosterone is associated with type
II diabetes, cardiovascular disease,
depression and cancer. Starting around
40, testosterone levels start to drop, and
it may happen slowly enough that you
don’t really notice. But one day it may
occur to you (or it’s pointed out to
you) that you’re not as effective at work,
your sports performance is tailing off,
or that you’re falling asleep after dinner,
crankier than usual, not as interested
in sex. You may want to blame it on
“It’s just what happens at my age.” But
the best way to know this is to get a
baseline now when you’re young and
still feeling great.
www.aboutmen.ca
www.citylifemagazine.ca