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	<title>Dr. E... &#187; Integrity</title>
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		<title>The Parable of the Broken Egg, Part 5: Would a Lion Eat Its Own Tail?</title>
		<link>http://drepresents.com/blog/2011/11/12/the-parable-of-the-broken-egg-part-5-would-a-lion-eat-its-own-tail/</link>
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		<pubDate>Sat, 12 Nov 2011 15:28:09 +0000</pubDate>
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				<category><![CDATA[Integrity]]></category>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://drepresents.com/blog/?p=138</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[One of the most respected coaches in football leaves his post in a shroud of shame and a most honored University is left to stare itself deep into its soul and question, “Where is integrity when it counts the most?” Over the past few years we have been facing issues of integrity at every turn, [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>One of the most respected coaches in football leaves his post in a shroud of shame and a most honored University is left to stare itself deep into its soul and question, “Where is integrity when it counts the most?” Over the past few years we have been facing issues of integrity at every turn, from our governments, to our financial institutions to our sports and even the most respected are being exposed.</p>
<p>In the wake of the Penn State scandal, many are in shock, asking themselves, how can an institution that is dedicated to the education and growth, mentoring tomorrows leaders, educators and parents, display such callous ignorance in disregard for human dignity and respect? Perhaps this is more of an issue based in flaws in our society?</p>
<p>So many times we look at others who commit crimes and engage in unethical and unprofessional behavior, and we exclude ourselves as if it were impossible for us to behave in such a manner. Many sit in judgment of others, and we hear them say, “If I were in that position…”, while others respond with rage and hatred that seeks vengeance and not truth. We would like to think that we would all make the best decision for all when life calls upon us, but for many it doesn’t happen that way. We have to understand that even the best intended people make very poor decisions at times. While their 95% of kind, giving, supportive behaviors should not excuse their poor decisions, it is incorrect to define them by their 5% or their 95%.</p>
<p>Situations happen everyday in life that we walk by. We don’t respond out of a feeling of fear, helplessness, not wanting to get involved, not being prepared, not caring, not wanting to lose friends or be seen as unpopular… Many may want to say that this is an issue about a university protecting itself, but whether it is a university, a corporation, a government, or a family where many heinous acts are brushed under the carpet, these groups are comprised of individuals, where each knowingly closed their eyes to a serious problem where people were severely harmed.</p>
<p>At this time, there are millions casting judgment on a coach, a few administrators, a university… and still a child’s innocence was taken away. Children and adults are abused everyday, and people turn a blind eye. How long are we going to keep doing this, and how long is it going to take to see that WE have a problem?</p>
<p>We have to recognize that this is an issue of being human. We are prone to mistakes, and some we wish were never made and many can never be undone, having lifelong consequences. We can say, “That’s life,” and move on to the next headline, or we can aspire to a higher standard.  A standard where we look out as much for our neighbor as ourselves, where we think about how an action is affecting another person or group rather than our bottom line, our profits, our team, our politics… We each have choices to make everyday. Are you going to open your eyes or keep them closed?</p>
<p>I would propose this. Rather than focusing your energy on the individuals named in this action, take some time to look at yourself and the world around you. Focus your energy, thoughts, and intentions on what you would do not just in a similar situation, but in any situation that required your assistance.</p>
<p>Do you stop when someone is broken down on the highway? Do you stop someone when you see them get in a car when you know they have been drinking? Do you comment to or seek assistance for an adult who may be verbally berating or physically abusing a child or spouse? Would you stop a teacher or coach from humiliating an athlete or student? Should we really define a threshold for a behavior that results in the pain, humiliation, and degradation of another individual?</p>
<p>We all have a choice here. We can use this event as a waypoint to set the intentions and actions of our own behaviors, or we can take the time to judge others, only to perpetuate the problem, which is about as wise as a Lion eating its own tail.</p>
<p>My final questions to you – How do you define a winner and how do you define hero?</p>
<p>Respectfully,</p>
<p>Dr. E…</p>
<p><a href="http://www.drepresents.com">www.drepresents.com</a></p>
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		<title>The Parable of the Broken Egg, Part 3: Advertising Fun with Dick and Jane</title>
		<link>http://drepresents.com/blog/2011/05/17/the-parable-of-the-broken-egg-part-3-advertising-fun-with-dick-and-jane/</link>
		<comments>http://drepresents.com/blog/2011/05/17/the-parable-of-the-broken-egg-part-3-advertising-fun-with-dick-and-jane/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 18 May 2011 02:06:35 +0000</pubDate>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://erikfisher.com/blog/?p=105</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[See Dick turn on the TV. See Jane sit down next to Dick. See Dick and Jane watch commercials. See Dick and Jane want everything they see. See Corporate America with $$ in their eyes, as they market adult items to the way too young. Have you noticed the moving target? Over the past decades, [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>See Dick turn on the TV. See Jane sit down next to Dick. See Dick and Jane watch commercials. See Dick and Jane want everything they see. See Corporate America with $$ in their eyes, as they market adult items to the way too young.</p>
<p>Have you noticed the moving target? Over the past decades, Corporate America has put their crosshairs on younger and younger kids. Advertising dollars are looking to gain lifetime consumers and brand loyalty, soon, out of the crib, by marketing everything from make-up to clothing to electronics and the latest move by Skechers to focus their Shape-Ups shoes for girls. Perhaps companies feel that if Joe Camel got in on the game, “shouldn’t we get our piece? It should be okay for us, shouldn’t it? After all we are not selling cigarettes?”</p>
<p><strong>Advertising Gone Wild</strong></p>
<p>I think we have to be careful to jump to too many conclusions that many ad campaigns gone awry are exploitative from the start. There are many good intentioned people who work for Corporate America who want to make this world a better place for our kids. They often believe that what they are selling would be great for kids, and while some have valid points and misguided intentions, others have gotten lost on the way to their year-end bonuses. &#8220;Lets help our girls look fitter, slimmer, feel good about the way they look… because looking good in our culture is the most important thing. Right? It is for the Kardashians, isn&#8217;t it?&#8221; Their intentions do not always add up to a good outcome, and sometimes it is downright exploitative, intended or not.</p>
<p>This blog is not just about Skechers. It is about a consumer-based culture that has been changing in a dangerous direction. This trend toward marketing more adult products to kids is in full swing and shows no signs of slowing down. “In a down market, expand your customer base. Isn&#8217;t that good economics? Kids will be our consumers one day so why not start them out now?&#8221;</p>
<p><strong>Stimulus Overload</strong></p>
<p><a href="http://erikfisher.com/blog/2010/07/14/your-body-is-n…-media-machine" target="_blank">As I have discussed before</a>, our kids and we are inundated with thousands of images everyday selling everything but our collective soul, and even that may be up for sale soon. Our boundaries are getting blurrier and blurrier as to what is healthy for our kids, and ourselves, and we can barely see our moral compass before our eyes. This is not about a conservative movement to control what our kids see and do, and it is not a liberal agenda to destroy a corporate culture. It is a concerted effort to point out that we are taking our kids’ childhood away with our own blind ambition. In this situation with Skechers, I can see that they may not have intended to create such a negative buzz, but just like the <a href="http://erikfisher.com/familiesmatter/2010/09/24/elmo-says-think-about-tomorrow-when-dealing-with-today/" target="_blank">Elmo/Katy Perry debacle</a>, those in the position to make decisions were numb to the deeper issues and the result reflected their own dysfunction and/ours.</p>
<p><strong>The Balancing Act</strong></p>
<p>Our kids require limits and balance and so do we. They deserve a childhood that brings them the joy of time spent together – one that offers freedom from addictions to toys, phones, televisions and computers. They deserve our time, patience and love, not our credit cards and wallets.</p>
<p>We are their eyes when they are learning to see. We are their ears when they seeking sound, and we are their voice, when they cannot speak. It is up to us to realize that we may have lost our way, and may be guiding them down that path that got us into debt further than any generation before us. That debt is not just financial, it’s emotional, it’s relational, it’s recreational, it’s sleep-deprived, it’s over-scheduled, and it’s farther and farther away from peace than it is war.</p>
<p><strong>The Rear View Mirror</strong></p>
<p>We often complain that being left behind is becoming a reality. Why is that? What changed in the last fifty years? The consumer culture is part of the problem, not the solution. We are looking more at what we can buy, than what we can learn. Furthermore, when companies are confronted about their ads, they claim ignorance. When parents are confronted with their kids&#8217; behaviors and preferences they blame the culture.</p>
<p>We have become a society that blames others instead of taking responsibility for our actions. The less responsibility we take for our actions, the less we can learn. Integrity has to begin at the foundation and continue all the way up to the top floor. Where is ours today? Where is yours?</p>
<p><strong>Parenting 101</strong></p>
<p>People want an answer for how to stop corporate greed and marketing to kids. Don’t buy their products and have the self-discipline to turn the channel or the page. Here are a few more tips to good parenting. Take the time to talk with your kids about what they are exposed to – ask questions, don’t lecture. Give them limits on what they watch and compute and listen to, and how much they watch, compute and listen. Pay attention to what you spend your money on and theirs; don’t look to pacify them. Give your kids hugs and kisses, not Hershey’s Kisses and a happy meal. Take them outside and play with them, don’t just send them outside. Put your phone down, get off of your couch, turn off your I-pod, and be an example. Play games with your kids. Read to them. Don’t expect the school to teach them. Don’t complain about why our world is the way it is and why our kids are behaving as they are; do something about it. Be part of the action that will help your children and you get healthy, emotionally, relationally , recreationally, academically, socially, spiritually… Even Joe Camel wearing his Skechers won’t be able to touch that.</p>
<p>Respectfully,</p>
<p>Dr. E&#8230;</p>
<p><a href="http://www.drepresents.com" target="_blank">www.DrEPresents.com</a></p>
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		<title>In Your Living Years</title>
		<link>http://drepresents.com/blog/2011/02/01/in-your-living-years/</link>
		<comments>http://drepresents.com/blog/2011/02/01/in-your-living-years/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 02 Feb 2011 05:19:36 +0000</pubDate>
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				<category><![CDATA[Integrity]]></category>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://erikfisher.com/blog/?p=96</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[I am dedicating this blog to a great man, Gorman Fisher, aka Big Daddy. I grew up with a dad who worked a lot. His work was important to him, but it wasn’t until later that I truly realized why. As I kid, I wanted him to play with me, be at my baseball games, [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I am dedicating this blog to a great man, Gorman Fisher, aka Big Daddy.<a href="http://erikfisher.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2011/02/fisher-family.jpg"><img class="alignright size-medium wp-image-99" title="Your Living Legacy" src="http://erikfisher.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2011/02/fisher-family-300x225.jpg" alt="" width="300" height="225" /></a></p>
<p>I grew up with a dad who worked a lot. His work was important to him, but it wasn’t until later that I truly realized why. As I kid, I wanted him to play with me, be at my baseball games, soccer games, scouting events, and while he made some of them, his attention to his work seemed to take precedence. I remember that when we did play pool together, he would beat me again and again, and was amazed that I would come back for more. But what he taught me was that he didn’t play down to me, he challenged me to play better, and when I did beat him, I knew I got his best.</p>
<p>When I was 8, my brother died, and while this was painful to experience as a child, I now, as a father, can more dearly understand how difficult this must have been for him. My Father tried to revive him when he found him on the floor, and his best efforts could not bring him back to life. It was in this time, as I reflect back, that my dad was selfless in times that required strength. My parents’ priority was to make sure that we, as a family stuck together, and while they both mourned the loss of their child in somewhat silence, in a time when expression of emotion was not the norm, they continued to support their children the best they knew how. As a family, we stayed together, and I remember that my Dad worked hard to make that following Christmas memorable. I think what my parents learned from the loss of their son was that life was precious and time together was important.</p>
<p>I remember my Dad and I usually making an annual trek to a Browns or Indians game when I was growing up, especially the Monday Night game against the Cowboys. Man was it cold. I grew up wanting more from my Dad, without understanding him and how he showed love. I didn’t appreciate his hard work and his humility. I now do. It was important for him to find me jobs at his office. That was how he connected with me. I was often known as the boss’ son, and while there were a few times I let him down, he never made it more about him, but I knew his expectations.</p>
<p>In my high school and college years, I had a few run-ins with my Dad, but instead of pushing me away, yelling or becoming aggressive, we had the brief, but serious talk, and he never held things over my head. He understood my humanness.</p>
<p>The summer before I was getting ready to graduate from college, he would call me from work and ask me to meet him for lunch. I would, and we would talk. He would listen, and he said he was sorry. He said that he knew he worked too much, and buried himself in his work after my brother died. He didn’t want his grief to be our grief. He believed his job was to be strong.</p>
<p>When my Dad was running a company outside of Detroit (while my parents still lived in Cleveland), I just graduated from college on my way to Grad school. He asked me to work for him to design and build the landscaping around their major rebuild of the company grounds. We spent the summer driving to and from work together (Dad, the left lane is for people who like to drive faster than the speed limit). Even when he asked me to do this, I didn’t realize how much he believed in me. We had some of the best talks driving to and from work and to and from Detroit to Cleveland for the weekends. What he also told me about why he worked so much then was that he felt it was his job to make sure that we had the ability to do the things as kids so that we could have a better life, and he was felt fortunate that he loved what he did.</p>
<p>And when my wife and I moved into our first house, with the help of my parents, he came to help landscape our yard with me. That is when my Dad realized I was an adult when I said, “Dad there are 50,000 ways to plant a rose, and it will still grow. Trust that you taught me well.” While I added an expletive to my comment, he stopped, listened, filtered and trusted my judgment.</p>
<p>And when my first business failed, and I was under a mountain of debt and stress, he came to help me dig myself out (pun intended). When I broke down during a hard day and went back to his temporary office and apologized for letting him down, all he said was, “Are you kidding me? I wish I had the courage to take the risk to do what you did.”</p>
<p>What my Dad learned from working too much was how to be a better grandfather and how to be a better father to us in our adult years. I am inspired by his ability to take responsibility for his mistakes and perhaps the highest compliment he paid me was telling me that I taught him how to hug and that I taught him more about emotion than anyone ever had.</p>
<p>He is loved by ALL of his grandkids, whether he is Big Daddy, Be-Paw, or Grandpa Buddy. He is known for his sense of humor, and the time and patience he takes with them to teach them about the simplest things in life. I loved watching him with my daughter, as he listened intently. Whether it is blowing bubbles, swimming in the pool, making funny faces, or finding fun in just about anything, he spent the time with his grand kids that they will remember for a lifetime. I feel proud that my daughter will remember her Big Daddy, and she got to read him Nursery Rhymes tonight on the phone.</p>
<p>You see, my Dad’s health has taken a turn for the worse in the past few days, and I am heading to Tucson tomorrow to hopefully get there in time. I pray for the weather and flight schedules to cooperate. For 13 years he has honorably and resiliently lived with cancer, not complaining much through the surgeries or the chemo – just showing a desire to live, not selfishly out of fear of death, but to share and create more memories for all of us, and to be a best friend to his wife. Through example, both of my parents taught us that we could find and marry our best friends. And I thank you both for loving my wife, as you love your own daughters. He has defied death, to champion life, and his strength makes me want to be a better man and to give to my generation and the next.</p>
<p>What I want you to know Dad is that you taught more than you knew, and even more, you had the courage to allow me to be your teacher. I thought for so long that I had created my equity-based approach to the world from understanding a control-based society, but now realize that my parents fostered an environment that allowed me to explore and respected my value. For giving me the permission of self-discovery, I thank you both.</p>
<p>I know that I am very fortunate to have a Father with integrity, who valued hard work, honesty, and who loved us the best way he knew how. I have come to appreciate the greatness of my Dad not just by seeing who he is and who he has become, but by working with so many people in my work who did not have a Father like mine. He is human and he knows it, and he accepted our humanness. I am sorry that it took me this long to truly understand him and how proud he felt of all of us, but I know it now.</p>
<p>Dad, I want to tell you that I love you more than you may ever know, and I am glad I got to tell you, in your living years. I feel proud to call you Big Daddy, and I speak for all of us when I say that you leave this world in a better place than it was when you got here, and we will carry the best of what you taught us into our futures. I hope that one day the world knows how great my Dad is, but I know it is enough for him that his family knows.</p>
<p>Respectfully,</p>
<p>Your son, Erik Anthony Fisher, aka Dr. E&#8230;</p>
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		<title>The Prophecy of the Broken Egg (Part 1: Nursery Crhymes)</title>
		<link>http://drepresents.com/blog/2011/01/20/the-prophecy-of-the-broken-egg-part-1-nursery-crhymes/</link>
		<comments>http://drepresents.com/blog/2011/01/20/the-prophecy-of-the-broken-egg-part-1-nursery-crhymes/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 21 Jan 2011 03:06:28 +0000</pubDate>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://erikfisher.com/blog/?p=91</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Nursery Rhymes can be great teachers, and not just for kids. Many are not aware that the origins of many nursery rhymes were based in the monarchies when people did not have free speech and would create parodies of political situations hidden in the subtext. The great fact about many stories and parables is that [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong><br />
</strong></p>
<p>Nursery Rhymes can be great teachers, and not just for kids. Many are not aware that the origins of many nursery rhymes were based in the monarchies when people did not have free speech and would create parodies of political situations hidden in the subtext. The great fact about many stories and parables is that they can be timeless, and so many of them are still apropos. So what can Humpty Dumpty teach us today?</p>
<p><strong>Humpty Dumpty Sat On A Wall<a href="http://erikfisher.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2011/01/HumptyDumpty-206x300.jpg"><img class="alignright size-full wp-image-93" title="HumptyDumpty" src="http://erikfisher.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2011/01/HumptyDumpty-206x300.jpg" alt="" width="206" height="300" /></a><br />
</strong></p>
<p>How often do kids get in trouble for fibbing, manipulation of the truth or outright lies, and how serious are the consequences that we impose on them – grounding or time-outs, mouth washed out with soap, spanking or even physical beatings that cross the lines of abuse? How often to we ask ourselves why they are doing it or where they learned it? I think that for many of us, we have to look no farther than ourselves and then to society to find the answers to our questions.</p>
<p>The most basic motivation for a lie is to create an alternative truth or “shell” around ourselves that misdirects from our actual truth. We tell lies for some of the following reasons: to avoid pain, appear as greater than we are, create or feed fear, avoid our own fears and inadequacies, undermine or usurp others, create doubt, avoid responsibility… As you can see, many of these reasons overlap and are based in a lack of integrity.</p>
<p><strong>Humpty Dumpty Had a Great Fall</strong></p>
<p>I often tell people who come to see me that you can’t grow up in France and not learn to speak some French. More times than not, kids are a mirror to the adults around them, within their family and their culture. They are like passive sponges and their actions are often just reflecting back what they see. I think we also have to consider that the act of lying is an aspect of the human condition, and while this may be the case, it does not mean that we cannot aspire to a higher standard and level of behavior, especially as adults. What this translates into is the idea that we create an ideal self that we want to believe in and want others to believe in. The lie hides our real and our feel and the more disparity between the real, feel, and ideal, the farther there is to fall.</p>
<p>Issues of lying, manipulation and lack of integrity in our culture are reflecting on us from all angles. In our families, our political culture, religious culture, sports culture, corporate culture, the media… The problem is that many people believe that this is just the way it is. We believe that this is acceptable behavior, and many people strive to see how well they can play the game, whether it is lying about doing homework, responsibility for manipulating political facts, abuse of steroids, cooking financial books&#8230; We all may have our justifications for why we lie and manipulate the truth, but what we all need to see is that the reasons are self-motivated first.</p>
<p><strong>All The King’s Horses and All The King’s Men </strong></p>
<p>We often don’t like to look at the darker side of ourselves, and our denial can lead to our undoing and pain and even death to others around us. The consequence of this undoing often leads to more lies and manipulation to further cover our tracks. The question is, when will it stop? When do we say enough, not just in society, but within ourselves?</p>
<p>We can look to the rest of the world around us and blame them for our actions and manipulations, or we can look to ourselves and take accountability.</p>
<p><strong>Couldn’t Put Humpty Together Again</strong></p>
<p>Other people cannot put our lives in order and resolve our inability to look at our truth, however we are also ultimately responsible for the manipulations and falsehoods that we present to others. The stories, lies and manipulations that we put out there do not solve problems, they create more, and as we have seen so many times around us, the results can be tragic. Don’t the children of our generation and future generations deserve the truth? Do you have the courage to live in your truth?</p>
<p>Stay Tuned…</p>
<p>Dr. E&#8230;</p>
<p>www.DrEPresents.com</p>
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		<title>Your Body Is Not A Disneyland Part 8: The Morning After, or It’s Really Not You, but I’ve Gotta Go</title>
		<link>http://drepresents.com/blog/2010/11/02/your-body-is-not-a-disneyland-part-8-the-morning-after-or-it%e2%80%99s-really-not-you-but-i%e2%80%99ve-gotta-go/</link>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 02 Nov 2010 19:14:37 +0000</pubDate>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://erikfisher.com/blog/?p=80</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[It has been a long road, but this will be the last post in my series about sex and how we treat our bodies, and just look where our fling has taken us. We started out in Part 1 with the sex talk, in Part 2 talked about love, Part 3 became lost in the [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>It has been a long road, but this will be the last post in my series about sex and how we treat our bodies, and just look where our fling has taken us. We started out in <a href="http://erikfisher.com/blog/2010/02/26/your-body-is-not-a-disneyland/" target="_blank">Part 1</a> with the sex talk, in <a href="http://erikfisher.com/blog/2010/03/09/your-body-is-not-a-disneyland-part-2/" target="_blank">Part 2</a> talked about love, <a href="http://erikfisher.com/blog/2010/04/21/your-body-is-not-a-disneyland-part-3/" target="_blank">Part 3</a> became lost in the throws of passion, <a href="http://erikfisher.com/blog/2010/05/16/your-body-is-not-a-disneyland-part-4-vanessas-guest-post/" target="_blank">Part 4</a> took a road trip with Vanessa in our guest post, had to stop and do our homework in <a href="http://erikfisher.com/blog/2010/06/17/your-body-is-not-a-disneyland-part-5-the-homework-assignment/" target="_blank">Part 5</a>, became distracted by the TV and media in <a href="http://erikfisher.com/blog/2010/07/14/your-body-is-not-a-disneyland-part-6-the-media-machine/" target="_blank">Part 6</a>, our real, feel, and ideal in P<a href="http://erikfisher.com/blog/2010/09/19/your-body-is-not-a-disneyland-part-7-perception-disparity-and-our-search-for-acceptance/" target="_blank">art 7</a>, and now it is the morning after, and I have gotta go. I am feeling smothered.</p>
<p>In all seriousness, where has this journey taken us? Well, for as long as time has been ticking we have been and will continue to be beings that are anthropologically, genetically, physically, emotionally and spiritually driven to engage in sexual relationships with others. That has not been the issue of this series. I am all for people having sex. The issue is how we go about pursuing sex and how, in many ways, we have become slaves to our cultural beliefs, attitudes, behaviors and language of sex. IMHO, sex is one of the most sacred experiences in which we can engage with another person, and it is important that we see it that way for ourselves and others to preserve our self-respect and others’. Probably the most important subtext to this series has been the effect of our attitudes and the influence of various cultural issues on our kids. Honestly looking at all of these factors when it comes to ourselves, it is the influence of our issues on our kids is often the hard part.</p>
<p><strong>Lost and Found Along the Way</strong></p>
<p>It has not been my goal to come across as judgmental, nor holier than thou. I am not taking a religious nor political point of view; I am more focused on the health of our collective spirit. Sometimes in life, we become distracted by that which looks and feels inviting. This is not always in our best interest.</p>
<p>Life offers many distractions and temptations and so many things become a part of these distractions: work, play, relationships, television, internet, the media, drinking, drugs, social life, how we look, who likes and loves us… Many of these things I have touched on, and one of the common denominators of all these issues is often sex. It is ultimately up to us to take responsibility for what we focus on. It is my sincerest hope that you have grown through this exploration. These are some of the issues that I would like you to consider when considering your choice, not just in sex, but in life:</p>
<ul>
<li>Are we making the choice that brings us instant gratification, or making choices that look at our long-term best interest?</li>
<li>Are our actions dishonoring our self and our soul, or are we loving, respecting and honoring ourselves?</li>
<li>Are we looking for a quick fix, or are we truly looking for intimacy?</li>
<li>Are our behaviors and attitudes carelessly affecting our children, or are we careful about what they see and hear?</li>
<li>Are we indifferent to our children&#8217;s awareness and attitudes about sex/life, or if we are invested in what they are learning and doing?</li>
</ul>
<p>I hope these become guidelines for you to use in your everyday life to help direct your choices for you and those you guide. Never forget the power that you have in what you create. No matter what you do create, do it from a place of love, and let that become its foundation. After all, amusement parks can be enjoyable when we ride them safely. When I&#8217;m done with this blog, I am going to Disney World. <img src='http://drepresents.com/blog/wp-includes/images/smilies/icon_wink.gif' alt=';-)' class='wp-smiley' /> </p>
<p><strong>The Pledge</strong></p>
<p>I hope you will take the following pledge and will allow this to become a part of your everyday living.</p>
<p><em>I pledge to learn more about love, what it truly is and truly isn’t. I agree that sex is not love, but instead can come from a place of love. I agree to honor, my body, mind and soul and commit to the intention of acknowledging my mistakes in the context of sex and love and to learn and grow from them. I understand that to err is human and forgive myself and others is Divine. </em></p>
<p><em>I understand that sex is not a shameful or guilty act, and also acknowledge that sex, intimacy, trust and love belong hand-in-hand-in-hand-in-hand, and one without the others may not honor the creator’s intended design. I understand that it is my place to find my power and ability to love myself from within and will honor others as I honor myself. </em></p>
<p><em>Sex is not intended to be a vehicle of power, status or control, but a vehicle of love and connectedness that is the culmination of a respectful and healthy relationship based in Agape, Eros and Philos. I owe this commitment to myself, those I love, and those I will love.</em></p>
<p>Respectfully,</p>
<p>Dr. E…</p>
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		<title>Coming Out of the Dark (We Finally See the Light)</title>
		<link>http://drepresents.com/blog/2010/10/17/coming-out-of-the-dark-we-finally-see-the-light/</link>
		<comments>http://drepresents.com/blog/2010/10/17/coming-out-of-the-dark-we-finally-see-the-light/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 17 Oct 2010 13:40:58 +0000</pubDate>
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				<category><![CDATA[Imposter Syndrome]]></category>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://erikfisher.com/blog/?p=75</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[(I will return to Your Body Is Not a Disneyland in my next post.) What a truly inspiring week for the sum of humanity who witnessed the miraculous rescue of the Chilean miners. Whether one was involved personally or was riveted to the television, this event went a long way to redefining how we can [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>(I will return to Your Body Is Not a Disneyland in my next post.)</p>
<p>What a truly inspiring week for the sum of humanity who witnessed the miraculous rescue of the Chilean miners. Whether one was involved personally or was riveted to the television, this event went a long way to redefining how we can all witness a news event as a positive outcome and challenge us to seek a more peaceful world. And my being an On-Air consultant to CNN Networks during their climb to earth was a once in a lifetime gift. Perhaps the most synchronous part was that the miners were reached on John Lennon’s birthday – “Imagine” that. As a psychologist, I am often looking at metaphors that life evokes, and the circumstance of these miners, rescued after being trapped below the earth, provides such an apropos metaphor for the world to learn from.</p>
<p>So many times in the history of mankind, we, as a collective, have created the circumstances that contributed to our traumas, and those who were supposed to protect us either caused the trauma or did not do what could have been done to prevent it. As a result, we feel betrayed, neglected, unloved, and our trust is shattered like a stone through a window pane. Through our experiences in this world, we are taught to hide our traumas and pains deep inside ourselves.</p>
<p>So many of us have so many wounds and pains that we feel helpless to know what to do with, and we believe that the deeper we bury them, the better off we should be. Sooner or later there comes a time in our life when something so egregious happens that we can’t just turn our backs to it. We have to act, there is too much to lose if we don’t, but we often don’t have the resources to find our lost selves and heal them. We require the help of others. But how helpless it can feel when we are trapped by our own negligence and denial.</p>
<p>So we work to dig and drill down to the depths of our soul traversing the various strata of our defenses, addictions, attitudes and beliefs of indifference, anger and mistrust, the efforts slowed by almost impenetrable doubt and fear, and still we press on, learning that failure is the process of learning on the journey. Quitting, not an option, we continue, refining our technique with proper guidance, until we reach them.</p>
<p>Still alive, we give them enough to sustain them until we can bring them to the surface, one by one, and the efforts begin again.</p>
<p>Trapped for so long in indescribable conditions, banished to the recesses of our unconscious, we understand that to feel our wholeness and resolve our shame we must bring them back into the light. As we widen the reach of our efforts, we are able to free our pain from our self-imposed tombs, and we bring our traumas to our light, and as each is exposed, worn, sickly, and wary of the light, they require time to regain their strength. Share they must their traumas and pains, no more to be buried and forgotten. Learn, we will from them They ultimately grow in strength from the light. Stronger they are to stand with us, changed forever, by facing our truth we realize that our shame was not suffered through the trauma, but was the result of our own disrespect of our self and our soul.</p>
<p>Through this we learn, as failure will teach, that the love and respect of ourselves and others leads us to understand that there is no price that can be put on our soul, nor one else’s.</p>
<p>But when the miner’s were rescued, their president spoke to the world of the “33” being strong and better for their experience, denying their own negligence and accountability. And the miners’ pain and their potential pain to come, should they bury their experience behind their shield of strength, indifference, and financial reward to come, as so many have before them, would only be borne by them as others would have moved on long ago. Shall this all be forgotten when we turn the channel?  I hope not.</p>
<p>I dedicate this not only to the indeterminable strength of the “33” miners, but to the indeterminable strength of the human spirit that lives in all of us.</p>
<p>Bless you all in your journey to healing, and God bless us all in our journey to truth.</p>
<p>Dr. E&#8230;</p>
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		<title>Your Body Is Not A Disneyland Part 7: Perception, Disparity and Our Search for Acceptance</title>
		<link>http://drepresents.com/blog/2010/09/19/your-body-is-not-a-disneyland-part-7-perception-disparity-and-our-search-for-acceptance/</link>
		<comments>http://drepresents.com/blog/2010/09/19/your-body-is-not-a-disneyland-part-7-perception-disparity-and-our-search-for-acceptance/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 20 Sep 2010 02:08:24 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Integrity]]></category>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://erikfisher.com/blog/?p=73</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[I often talk about our real, feel and ideal with people. These three terms have to do with how people see us and our actions (our real), how we feel about ourselves deep down inside (our feel), and how we want to be seen by ourselves and others (our ideal). Often people have wide gaps [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I often talk about our real, feel and ideal with people. These three terms have to do with how people see us and our actions (our real), how we feel about ourselves deep down inside (our feel), and how we want to be seen by ourselves and others (our ideal). Often people have wide gaps between a few of these concepts, if not all three. The more separation between our real, feel, and ideal, usually the more distress a person feels in their life.</p>
<p>When it comes to how we treat our bodies, there are often wide gaps between our real, feel and ideal, because it can feel painful to be so honest with ourselves and others. We spend so much time trying to avoid our truth and our emotions. As a result, we look to others for approval with our appearance and sexuality to see what we need to do to feel accepted and fit in with others. Family, peers, society and sources in the media become the objects that we look to that contribute to how we determine our real, feel, and ideal. There are many areas in our life where we may apply these concepts of real, feel and ideal and our sexuality is definitely one of them that is prominent in our culture. Too many times we are trying to deny and disprove our feel, ignore our real, and spend too much time trying to support our ideal by attempting to appeal to others through the way we dress, sexual innuendo and sexual behaviors… These behaviors are often accompanied with arrogance and exploitation which become a major part of our avoidance.</p>
<p>The purpose of arrogance is to protect us with a shield of false pride. It often hides feelings like shame, guilt, embarrassment, inadequacy, unlovable, and many other emotions that we consider to be bad, wrong and weak. The problem is that it often our arrogance can lead us to denial and can result in us getting into situations that are over our head and sometimes dangerous and even life-threatening. When we attempt to dress, talk, and/or act in a sexually provocative manner, we are often trying to use some of our “assets” that we feel will appeal to others. We want the attention, acceptance and power from others, often because we want to feel better about ourselves, getting us further away from our “feel” and closer to our ideal, but at what expense to our integrity and truth?</p>
<p>Am I saying that wanting to dress up and look nice is or wanting to feel our “sexual beingness” is a bad thing? Absolutely not. What I do believe, however, is that behaving as we do contributes to our avoidance of emotions, issues, attitudes and beliefs that would help us to become better people if we had the courage to face them. Too much of our lives are spent around avoidance of learning and understanding ourselves, and the intoxication surrounding sex and everything around it is often a great way to avoid.</p>
<p>Until my next post, pay attention to your feel, real, and ideal and see what you can learn about yourself. You may be surprised.</p>
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		<title>If It&#8217;s Broke, Don&#8217;t Fix It</title>
		<link>http://drepresents.com/blog/2010/01/20/if-its-broke-dont-fix-it/</link>
		<comments>http://drepresents.com/blog/2010/01/20/if-its-broke-dont-fix-it/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 21 Jan 2010 02:45:43 +0000</pubDate>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://erikfisher.com/blog/?p=39</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Some of you may be thinking, “Dr. E…, you’ve got that all wrong. It’s supposed to be &#8216;If it ain’t broke, don’t fix it&#8217;.” Well let me tell you all, we’ve got trouble… right here in River City…with a capital T that rhymes with P… (sorry, I digress). But seriously, we do have problems that [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Some of you may be thinking, “Dr. E…, you’ve got that all wrong. It’s supposed to be &#8216;If it ain’t broke, don’t fix it&#8217;.” Well let me tell you all, we’ve got trouble… right here in River City…with a capital T that rhymes with P… (sorry, I digress). But seriously, we do have problems that we need to face in our culture, and consistently we don’t face them. We close our eyes, turn our deaf ear, blame others, play the victim and look to be rescued, and often pick sides on issues that directly affect us all that does nothing to solve the problem. Furthermore, even when we choose to address an issue, we often take the shortcut and expect the best.</p>
<p>So what I want to talk about has to do with integrity and commitment, and if we look around we will see a lack of both in the world around us. The best way to understand what integrity truly is, is to look at building structures. When a building is built with integrity, every part of that building is in line with the other parts from the foundation on up to the spire on top the building. Integrity also extends to the ground that the building is built on. Furthermore, integrity does not only apply to how that structure is built from the top down, but is it strong from side to side? The reason for structural integrity is so that the structure can withstand what life throws at it.</p>
<p>We have all recently been tragically educated on what happens when buildings are not built in integrity from what we have seen on television from Haiti. The buildings were fine for what may happen in everyday experiences and even some hurricanes, but what happened when their foundation was shaken? They crumbled like a tower of children’s block with much greater consequences.</p>
<p>Commitment has to do with how we follow through on decisions, goals, plans and/or intentions when we decide to take them on. Similar to building a structure, if one doesn’t see their intention and commitment to a task through to the end of the construction process, that structure will lack integrity. Too many times people may have had the best intention to build a structure that would withstand the tests of time, and somewhere along the way, for whatever reason, they lost their commitment, and we have seen the consequences throughout history.</p>
<p>“So why all this talk about buildings and structures Dr. E…? I don’t build houses.” Well, if you haven’t figured it out, we are like a house, and we have to recognize that we have to look at ourselves from our foundation to our top floor and even the ground on which we were built.</p>
<p>In our culture, our families are challenged, more than half the marriages in the U.S. end in divorce, our education system is showing signs of age and wear, our financial system almost crumbled, our athletes are doing anything to win, and our political system is rife with conflict, betrayal and mistrust. We don’t have to look far to see the problems, but what are we doing to fix them and/or rebuild what is broken beyond repair? To repair our our culture, we first have to start with our &#8220;house&#8221;.</p>
<p>In life, it doesn’t serve us to just live and plan for the tomorrow that brings sunshine or showers. It is easy to show people what we want them or ourselves to see. What are we doing to live our lives through the earthquakes in life, when everything we hid underground is heaved up to the surface? Have we put the time, energy and commitment into looking at our own foundation in our personal, parental, marital, spiritual, political life???  Regardless of how we got here, we have to be willing to fix these problems, all the way down to our foundation. That will be through finding the integrity and commitment to live our lives to the fullest. So what can you do to do this?</p>
<ol>
<li>Ask      yourself, “Are my beliefs, attitudes, emotions, intentions and behaviors in      line?”</li>
<li>What      can you do to get them aligned? Do you need to set goals? Communicate better?      Evaluate my commitments?</li>
<li>Evaluate      your personal, parental, spiritual, community, and even political      integrity. Are they in line or do they need to be rebuilt?</li>
<li>Get      active in the change process, but know it will take time. There may be      shortcuts, but they often don’t work.</li>
<li>Consider      all of the people that are impacted by your integrity and commitment, but also make sure you make changes in your life for you.</li>
</ol>
<p>I would ask each of you to look around your “house” and see what may be broken and in need of repair. What do you stand to lose if you don’t fix it?</p>
<p>Respectfully,</p>
<p>Dr. E&#8230;</p>
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		<title>Let The Idols Fall Where They May&#8230;</title>
		<link>http://drepresents.com/blog/2009/12/12/let-the-idols-fall-where-they-may/</link>
		<comments>http://drepresents.com/blog/2009/12/12/let-the-idols-fall-where-they-may/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 12 Dec 2009 14:39:22 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Idols]]></category>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://erikfisher.com/blog/?p=32</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[…And another one bites the dust. In the past few weeks another idol fell from Grace, and their humanness was exposed. Tiger Woods fell from the ranks of the untouchable. Please understand, I don’t say this in any sarcasm or disrespect to Tiger, I say it as an observation on a culture that creates idols [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>…And another one bites the dust. In the past few weeks another idol fell from Grace, and their humanness was exposed. Tiger Woods fell from the ranks of the untouchable. Please understand, I don’t say this in any sarcasm or disrespect to Tiger, I say it as an observation on a culture that creates idols out of humans that can only fall from grace.</p>
<p>Whether or not it is the media, our desire for fame and sensationalism, or our tendency to hold people we admire up to unrealistic standards, I see the issues of our fallen idols as much of an issue of our society as I do of the individual who has transgressed.<br />
We live in a culture of extremes: good/bad, right/wrong, strong/weak, win/lose. This all-or-nothing world view has its consequences, because there isn’t much in between the extremes.</p>
<p>We are programmed from very early on to be as good, strong, and right as possible so we can be seen as winners. We also learn to hide the bad, wrong and weak, because we believe that “losers” aren’t worthy of love. But how do we view those who we feel are better than us? Well, either we idolize them or try to destroy them. There usually aren’t in betweens. What options does this leave the person held up to idol status? Do they want to expose their humanness or hide it? Furthermore, when a person has been put in idol status, the human tendency is to believe it.</p>
<p><strong>The Imposter Syndrome</strong></p>
<p>Imposters are all around us, and you would never know it, because they don’t want to be seen in that light. An imposter is someone who has risen to a level of power or status that is higher than they feel they have earned or deserved. I am sure we have all heard the phrase, “Fake it ‘til you make it”. This is a great demonstration of this concept. Almost all imposters feel terrified to be found out, and they feel like they are constantly living a lie. The result can be an incredible amount of stress, and almost a desire to be “found out”. Then the gig is up and the pressure to be perfect is up, but then who will love them?</p>
<p>When do we ever allow our idols to be human, and even if they display humanness, do we explain it away, excuse it, blame others, or kick them to the curb? Did Tiger and all of our other idols ask to be put at that status, or did we put them there? Did he want to excel at golf? Yes, this is what he was programmed to do and what he ultimately chose. He excels at golf. When, in all that time he was on the course, did he learn to do relationships? Should he have learned integrity, values, and morals??? Absolutely. So, why was it that he defied his better judgment??? That answer we may never know, but that is more for our “idols” to figure out. Do you think he felt terrified to be found out? Only he knows.</p>
<p>Imposters have existed for centuries. So why now are so many idols falling? I believe the reason is because we demand more and the media and all of us almost feel that we own our idols and should have the right to know everything about them. The secrets that were kept in the past are no longer kept, and more often then not are sold to the highest bidder. In many ways the ways we go about this lacks integrity, but for our idols, we are demanding integrity. Isn’t this a double standard?</p>
<p>We also have to keep in mind that there are “two sides to every story”, and many times we aren’t even looking for the truth, or either person’s side. We would rather stand in judgment and form our own opinions and make them our truth.</p>
<p><strong>Arrogance, The End of All Empires</strong></p>
<p>If we look at history closely, we will see that the end of almost all empires was arrogance. When we tell people how great they are or treat them as if they are better than us, they can’t help but believe it. The same is true if you tell someone that they are a screw up. This is because in our culture, we have learned to get our power from other people. It starts with our parents and continues from there. We look for approval, love, acceptance, praise, rejection, punishment… We are not taught to believe in ourselves.</p>
<p>What we need to understand is that arrogance is a protective emotion. It is a false sense of “pride” that is often associated with a skill set that we have. What people who use arrogance do is often try to extend their skill set beyond their area of success. For a hypothetical example, Tiger, who is gifted in golf, extends his arrogance to other areas of his life, for example relationships, where may not have the same skill and mastery. He finds that he is lacking in this area of his life, but does not want to admit to this or others. He possibly feels that he is failing in some way and may be avoiding the problem by looking for others to support his ego, thus he engages in relationships with a number of others to disguise insecure aspects of his life. He may believe that the more conquests he has, the better he must be. Isn&#8217;t that how life works &#8212; at least in the golfing world. The problem is the denial in the weakness and other flaws because our “idol”, and those that idolize them, don’t want to see their humanness.</p>
<p>When we believe that we are better than others, we often develop a sense of entitlement and feel that we are above the rules, laws, morals and values of the culture around us. We believe that we can let the rules slide because we don’t want to believe that they should apply to us. When we idolize someone, we also believe the same things and feel that the rules shouldn’t apply to our idol, so we let things slide.</p>
<p><strong>Seek and Destroy</strong></p>
<p>Over the centuries, there have been so many times that the stars have fallen from the skies, whether they were in politics, music, theater, sports, movies or television. We have to recognize how we put these people in these roles in our lives, and how we all gave them power. Are they responsible for their actions? Absolutely. Are we responsible for ours? Is it difficult to live under the pressure and the microscope, and could that contribute to their problems? Yes. They still have their journey to walk in their life, and so do we.</p>
<p>Some people spend their whole life trying to live under that microscope, because they want to be fed by their worshippers. These individuals are in every corner of our society and it is up to them to understand their need to love this way. By feeding their ego, it only delays their growth.</p>
<p>How many people have to be harmed by our idolatry, curiosity and judgment? In the wake of this Tiger Woods nightmare, people are coming out of the woodwork, no pun intended, to trash an image and the man. It is as if we were all waiting for this to happen and/or feeling betrayed now that it did. We were waiting for the chink in the armor and then have sought to destroy something/someone that many of us created. The way we handle our fallen idols in the press and in ourselves is more an issue of society than anything else.</p>
<p>It is crucial to the growth and evolution of our society that we learn to find our power and belief in ourselves. It is also crucial for our “idols” and ourselves to remember that they are human and so are we. We all have our journeys in life, and we will all have our challenges. Let our fallen idols see the wisdom in healing their wounds. As you judge them, you judge yourself.</p>
<p>Can this exposure of our idols human imperfections be a good thing? Absolutely. As we expect them to live in integrity in all aspects of their lives, we should ask the same thing of ourselves.</p>
<p>Respectfully,</p>
<p>Dr. E…</p>
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