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Is Realistic Thinking for Cancer Registrars?

As we approach the Thanksgiving Day holiday we all look forward to spending time with family and friends, good food, rest, relaxation and just “getting away from it all” even if only for a day or so.  The holiday also gives us opportunity to appreciate the blessings we have in our lives.    

While this is good, we can, and should, maximize gratitude and our performance by learning realistic thinking.  Realistic thinking and daily thoughts of gratitude will not only enhance your value as a cancer registrar but they contribute to a healthier and happier lifestyle.  All this, literally, is 100% free and readily available.  Just imagine, no medical bills, no pills to take, no doctor visits.  Instead, it is a process we use to think about and react to our daily lives and the world around us. 

Now, realistic thinking is not about replacing negative thought with positive thoughts.  We will always have and be bombarded by negative thoughts in our society.  Instead, realistic thinking is the development of a process that helps you to change deeply ingrained habits of thought.  Your awareness will increase as your abilities to control your thought processes and reactions increase.  This, in a nutshell, is how you become a realistic thinker and move forward to a life of gratitude, happiness and success.  When you incorporate daily gratitude and appreciation with realistic thinking you become a “force to be reckoned with” and significantly enhance your ability to change your thought patterns and reactions. 

As cancer registrars our reactions to our workplace and environment are observed by others.  Negative thoughts and behaviors detract from our effectiveness as a cancer registrar and negatively impact the value our profession and industry has in patient care.  Just imagine the power and success that we can all experience if cancer registrars across the nation radically changed into realistic and grateful thinkers and doers!  I know that each of us has the capability to make this change.  I invite you to join me in evaluating your core behaviors and to adopt a realistic thinking process that will ensure your place in healthcare for the years to come. 

To learn more about realistic thinking and how to change your life, read this article titled,  “Taming Stressful Thoughts: Making Thoughts Work For You.” 

To learn more about how gratitude can improve your brain health, happiness and longevity visit Dr. Daniel Amen’s website by clicking here.

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http://www.RegistryMindset.com.  Michele Webb is a nationally recognized, certified cancer registrar (CTR) who is committed to Cancer Registry leadership and professional growth.  She helps cancer registrars around the world as a motivational speaker, author, and educator.  You have permission to repost this article as long as you do not alter it in any way, give credit to the author and link back to her website.       

 

How to Increase Your Likeability

Enchantment: The Art of Changing Hearts, Minds, and Actions is a great book written by Guy Kawasaki.  In it, he explains how to influence what people will do while maintaining the highest standards of ethics.  Here’s a snapshot of his poster on the subject to get you started!

Increase likability

Failing Up

Have you ever heard of anyone who was successful in their work, life or business that did not experience failure at some point in time?  Probably not.  And, if everyone was being honest they would probably tell you that they learned more from their failures than their successes. 

In his book, Fail Up: 20 Lessons on Building Success Tavis Smiley talks about failing up and draws an analogy to what he calls “The Drum Major Instinct.”  Simply put, is your motivation to help or lead others coming from a positive, constructive spirit within you, or are you more interested in leading the parade, like a drum major?  Your motivation and intention are predictors of your success.

As a cancer registrar it is easy to want to be the drum major and lead the parade.  You may want everyone to fall in line behind you and to simply do as they are told.  While many may adopt this approach it is a journey that is headed for disaster and dictated by your ego.  Ego-driven leadership leads to ineffective and negative influence in the workplace.  Intentions driven by ego do not serve a useful purpose in any situation.    

Learning from our failures and then using the lessons learned to “fail up” is what achieving success is built upon.  Cancer Registrars will be successful if they set their ego’s aside, somewhat like laying down the drum major’s baton, and learn from their failures.  Smiley refers to these as “success scars.” 

Here’s the bottom line.  You cannot have success without failure.  You must learn from those failures in order to stretch, grow and to reach a new level of achievement.  And, when you reach the new level, you will likely fail and repeat the cycle again.  Successful Cancer Registrars must go through this cycle in order to achieve their goals and serve the healthcare communities.  Period. 

If you have not taken the time to evaluate your failures and to identify what you learned from those situations then I encourage you to do that as quickly as possible.  To get maximum effect, briefly write down the scenario in which you failed, how and why you think you failed and then craft some constructive and positive statements on what you have learned and how you can use that situation to fail up.  By adopting this mindset to failure and success you will achieve much and be the cancer registrar you are meant to be!

http://www.RegistryMindset.com.  Michele Webb is a nationally recognized, certified cancer registrar (CTR) who is committed to Cancer Registry leadership and professional growth.  She helps cancer registrars around the world as a motivational speaker, author, and educator.  You have permission to repost this article as long as you do not alter it in any way, give credit to the author and link back to her website.  

When No One is Looking

“Quality means doing it right

when no one is looking.”

~ Henry Ford

 

Give First, Then Receive

As cancer registrars we can be more successful at influencing our cancer program team and peers by applying a few simple principles.  Often people think of influencing others as a form of manipulation and unethical behavior.  But, nothing is further from the truth.  Influence, when used appropriately and for the right reasons is not only ethical, but highly effective. 

According to Robert Cialdini, author of Influence: Science and Practice, the first principle of influence is reciprocation.  People will be ready and willing to help you when you have first done something for them.  This is really quite simple and perhaps you recall The Golden Rule.  The principle also suggests that the cancer registrar will be proactive in how they approach and influence members of the cancer program, instead of reactive.  So, in a nutshell, this means give first, then receive.  

The heart of the Cancer Registrar’s work is helping others.  It stands to reason that they will also develop their professional assets and skills to help others do their jobs better, be more successful and to collaboratively work together.  You have one of the most valuable assets in healthcare at your fingertips and that is information.  By freely giving of applicable and critical information you can generate feelings of gratitude that makes the other person want to reciprocate.  This will foster not only a collaborative environment but will demonstrate your value to the organization and cancer program.  

What are you giving to others today?  Are you generating a sense of gratitude and reciprocation?  How do you demonstrate value as you influence others?  

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http://www.RegistryMindset.com.  Michele Webb is a nationally recognized, certified cancer registrar (CTR) who is committed to Cancer Registry leadership and professional growth.  She helps cancer registrars around the world as a motivational speaker, author, and educator.  You have permission to repost this article as long as you do not alter it in any way, give credit to the author and link back to her website.       

 

Something That Matters

Just recently heard this song from Kristen Chenoweth’s newest album, Lessons Learned.  The song is amazing!  What is that you want to do with your life?  How can you make a difference and help to make this world a better place?

Click here to listen to Kristin Chenoweth – I Was Here MP3 (lyrics below).  

I WAS HERE

by Kristen Chenoweth

You will notice me
I’ll be leaving my mark
Like initials carved in an old oak tree
Just wait and see

Maybe I’ll write like Twain wrote
Maybe I’ll paint like Van Gogh
Cure the common cold, I don’t know
But I’m ready to start cause I know in my heart

I wanna do something that matters
Say something different
Something that sets the whole world on it’s ear
I wanna do something better
With the time I was given
I wanna try to touch a few hearts in this life
Leave nothing less than something that says
I was here

I will prove you wrong
If you think I’m all talk, you’re in for a shock
Cause this dream’s too strong
And before too long

Maybe I’ll compose symphonies
Maybe I’ll fight for world peace
Cause I know it’s my destiny
To leave more than a trace of myself in this place

I wanna do something that matters
Say something different
Something that sets the whole world on it’s ear
I wanna do something better
With the time I was given
I wanna try to touch a few hearts in this life
Leave nothing less than something that says
I was here

I wanna do something that matters
Say something different
Something that sets the whole world on it’s ear
(I wanna do something that matters
Say something different
Something that sets the whole world on it’s ear)

I wanna do something that matters
Say something different
Something that sets the whole world on it’s ear
I wanna do something better
With the time I was given
I know that I will do more than just pass through this life
And leave nothing less than something that says
I was here
I was here
I was here

Actions or Dreams

“Some people dream of success …

while others wake up and work hard at it.”

~ Author Unknown

Cancer Registrar Influence

You can watch a short video on this subject by clicking here

For most of us, the very thing that we tend to think of least is what has the greatest power to impact the success in our work and personal lives.  I’m talking about our personal influence.  What we believe in, think about, and the attitudes we choose radiate from us each and every day. 

Each of us have the gift of influence.  This ability comes from what we really are, not what we pretend to be.  As humans, we have the power and even the responsibility to choose our beliefs and actions and how we want to influence others. 

Each of us has the opportunity to select the qualities and behaviors that need improvement.  By choosing to work on our personal and professional growth we can not only dramatically change our own lives, but we can also change our influence on others. 

What is your power?  How do you influence others in your cancer registries, hospitals, organizations and even in your community?  We all have something that can be improved upon and I know that with a little thought and action, you can be a change maker and positively impact the world around you.  And, when you choose your attitude and mindset, you will be able to influence others with respect and empathy and prove your value as a cancer registrar.  

I hope that you watch the short video by clicking on the link above and that you share this with your friends and colleagues.  Tell us how you’re influencing people around you or what “your secret” is for demonstrating value by communicating with love, respect and empathy.  Just click on the “Leave Comment” button below and drop us a few short sentences.  Check out our professional growth courses at www.RegistryMindset.com, the cancer registrar’s best resource for professional growth and top-quality continuing education programs. 

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Michele Webb creator of the cancer registrar continuing education program, http://www.RegistryMindset.com, is a nationally recognized, certified cancer registrar, committed to Cancer Registry leadership and professional education as a coach, mentor, motivational speaker and author.  You have permission to repost this article as long as do not alter it in any way and give a link back and credit to the author and this URL

 

Double Your Value as a Cancer Registrar

Recently I received an email from Brian Tracy that got me to thinking about cancer registrars and their success.  Did you know, that by investing in your own continual professional improvement that you can double your productivity each year and be more than 1000 times more productive in the next decade?  Now, don’t go away yet because this is serious business and it can make the difference between your success as a cancer registrar, or not.

To get started create your customized plan that includes your vision of success.  When you are “successful” – what will that look and feel like?  Take your vision then write down a few goals that you need to reach that will help you achieve the vision.  Just start breaking it down, one by one, until you have your continuous improvement plan.  See, it’s really that simple!

Another component of success is accepting 100% responsibility for everything you are and everything you become.  Refuse to make excuses or blame others.  Accept more responsibilities, in fact, ask for them.  Put your whole heart into doing an excellent job.  Carry out every task or project to the best of your ability and utilize your God-given talents.  Keep doing this and not only will you increase your value but you will gain more experience and be given more important things to do. 

Dedicate yourself to continual professional improvement.  That includes more than just learning the standards or the rules.  It means that you will continually develop and grow yourself as a “whole person.”  Your plan needs to include personal and professional development, leadership, communications, relationships skills, strategic thinking and more.  Keep increasing your skills and knowledge a little at a time. 

Here’s how the compounding works.  If you become 1/10th of a percent more productive each day, you’ll be one half of one percent more productive each week.  One half of one percent becomes two percent each month and 26% more productive each year.  With compounding, you will be doubling your overall productivity and performance every 2.7 years.  In the next 10 years you will be 1004% more productive (and successful) than you are now. 

This concept is called the Law of Accumulation.  It is the primary reason people become successful.  If you study the highly successful people in this world you will find that they have their own personal plan for continual development. 

Make a decision, right now, to become a 1000% person and cancer registrar!  Commit yourself to developing the “whole person” and creating your plan for continual professional development.  Read, listen to programs, take additional courses (in fact, look at our Registry Mindset continuing education courses on this website – click on the “register” menu option to learn more)!  One thing I know for sure, if you follow this process you will transform your life and be a happier, more successful cancer registrar than ever before! 

Be patient.  Success does not come overnight and changes to our lives take time.  Just focus on becoming a bit better at something you do each day and your future will be bright and rewarding!

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Michele Webb, creator of www.RegistryMindset.com, is a nationally recognized, certified, cancer registrar who is committed to Cancer Registry success and leadership.  She helps cancer registrars achieve their dreams as a coach, mentor, motivational speaker and author.  You have permission to repost this article as long as you do not alter it in any way, give a link back to this page, and give credit to the author and this website. 

Performance Ideas for Life

This short inspiring movie by the Freiberg’s says it all!

Performance Ideas for Life from Dr. Kevin & Dr. Jackie Freiberg on Vimeo.