The Life Pact Program


Introduction
CLEAR Basics
The Steps to Making a Life Pact



Introduction


The Life Pact Program is the heart of All Around. You could say that the Life Pact Program IS the All Around Program. This webpage will introduce you to six aspects of the Life Pact Program that are practically essential. After the six aspects are described, the steps of the program are presented so that you can begin the program.
  •   Understanding the purpose of the program
  •   Having ongoing personal support
  •   Understanding the Life Pact Cycle
  •   Using the Life Pact Form
  •   Being familiar with other tools on this website and using them when appropriate
  •   Understanding and using the CLEAR method
  • These six aspects are described in detail below.

    Purpose

    The purpose of the Life Pact Program is to help people do more good: achieve greater personal fulfillment, improve themselves, reach their goals, help others, and maintain and improve the world. The program does this by bringing together the necessary ingredients of learning and change. It helps you create and maintain a learning environment that makes success and growth easier.


    Having ongoing personal support

    One of the ingredients that people often lack is ongoing support to keep making efforts. You can get this support through one-to-one support or small groups support—or both. Ongoing support provides ongoing encouragement, feedback and the expectation to keep making reasonable stretches.


    The Life Pact Cycle

    The Life Pact Cycle is in four steps: First you assess your situation. Then you set new goals to accomplish. Then you make plans or choose the methods to reach the goals. Then you take action. After this, you re-assess your situation and repeat the cycle again. We suggest a period of four months for one cycle. Four months allows you to work on long-range goals, but have a sense of completion in only a few months.


    The Life Pact Form

    The Life Pact Form allows you to summarize your goals, plans and support structures on two or three pages. It's purpose is to be a reminder to you of what you are striving to do. You can look at the Life Pact Form now, if you like.


    Being Familiar with Other Tools

    Many of the assessments, forms and other tools can be found in the section "Steps to Making a Life Pact" below. But many other tools and resources are available to those who join as members.


    The CLEAR method

    If the Life Pact Program is the heart of All Around, the CLEAR method is the heart of the Life Pact Program. You could do a Life Pact without using CLEAR, but the more elements of CLEAR that you use, the better. The CLEAR method is a set of strategies and areas of action that produce efficient and balanced change. It's explained below.



    CLEAR  Basics

      

    Understanding CLEAR

    Some practical tips on doing CLEAR well
    Pick your favorite style of CLEAR
    Additional tips for doing CLEAR


    Understanding CLEAR

    The CLEAR method is about making stretches in five areas, the five "CLEAR" areas:

    C = Capacity, as in increasing your time, money and skill, and removing obstacles

    L = Live!, as in live your mission and happiness more fully

    E = Empower others, as in helping them to help themselves

    A = Add to your life-support systems at least as much as you take

    R = 'Ripple Effect,' as in pass on this method to others personally

    In the first area, for instance, participants don’t just do any kind of capacity-building, such as time or money management. Instead, each person chooses to work on the biggest obstacle or the greatest source of potential new capacity. The same is true for mission and fulfillment—you don’t just do an hour of anything fulfilling, you do whatever you determine to be the best action towards your mission and fulfillment. This idea of spending an hour on the best use of time carries over to all of the areas of CLEAR.

    Although the other areas are understandable enough, the "A" area of CLEAR, the fourth area, needs to be properly understood. This area isn't just environmental action; it has to do with a new idea called the Golden Rule 2.0: "Put back into each of your life-support systems at least as much as you take." These life-support systems include: your body, your mind, your relationships, your community, the environment, the economy, and the political system. If you think about it, personal fulfillment and a stable world require that all these areas be addressed. But as with all the areas of CLEAR this needs to be done gradually, by making reasonable stretches.

    Doing CLEAR causes several things gradually to happen together: First, you build up time, money and personal energy. This usually includes getting a support buddy to help keep you focused and motivated. It also requires that you spend quality time on your own fulfillment and happiness on a regular basis. In the "empowering others" area, you can do traditional volunteering or help others informally. The method asks you to make some personal lifestyle changes to maintain your life-support systems. Finally, you’re asked to pass on the approach to a few others, giving them personal support to learn CLEAR and then pass it on to others.

    We recommend that people try to do at least five hours a week of CLEAR. While we encourage people to do as much CLEAR as they can, five hours seems doable in the long-term. At first, however, you may need to work your way up to five hours, by focusing on capacity-building until you can comfortably commit to the five hour level. 



    Some practical tips on doing CLEAR well

    You can choose whatever steps make sense to you, but for many the following five steps are recommended:

    1.  If you, like most people, have difficulty sticking with a goal and staying motivated, then find a buddy to support you with regular calls or meetings, so that you will follow through. See Buddy System Basics page, or create another form of ongoing support. Without ongoing support, most people won't achieve long-term growth and goal-attainment. It's as simple as that.  

    2.  If you find you are lacking in time, energy, or some other necessary resource, build up whatever is the missing ingredient. If you don't have the available time, energy, and resources, you can't do much CLEAR.  That's why "C" or capacity-building is usually the first order of business. It is alright and sometimes necessary for some people to focus all their efforts on capacity-building, or else they will not be able to do the rest of CLEAR.

    3.  If you keep a calendar, schedule the time to do CLEAR. Better yet, get into the habit of doing a little CLEAR at a certain time each day or week. For many people, a kind of "hour of power" approach might be easiest. That may mean spending one hour a day in each area, or some time in each of the areas each day, making sure that by the end of the week, you’ve completed an hour in all five areas. Another option is to dedicate a weekend afternoon to making these stretches. 

    4.  One of the first things to do during the time you set aside for CLEAR, is to brainstorm for the best actions to do in each category. Remember, CLEAR means not just any good effort, but your best effort. Once you've picked what you think are the best actions, then put them on your calendar and begin acting. Then, each week, take some time to celebrate your efforts and accomplishments, and then brainstorm and plan your next week's CLEAR. 

    If you are stuck for ideas in any of the areas, or confused about what is in each area, read the appropriate section of the CLEAR Actions Menu. This long list of actions is divided into the five areas and then further subdivided into easy-to-do tasks, longer projects, and ongoing actions.

    5. In the area of  "R," ripple effect, however, we recommend that you don't invite others until you've had more personal experience with the program and are comfortable with it. At the beginning, spend your "R time" on learning more about the strategies and tools of All Around. That way, when you tell others about it, you will be knowledgeable.

     


    Pick your favorite style of CLEAR  

    There are at least three different styles of CLEAR. Each style has a different impact on how you live your life. You can use any combination you wish, but you're encouraged to try each:

    "Plan and Do"  This is the simplest style. On paper or in your personal organizer, list the actions that you plan to do that are stretches for you, and do them during the week.

    "Awake and Respond"  In this style, you make stretches by being aware of the people and situations around you, and you do actions that occur to you, that you wouldn’t have done otherwise. For example: "I first keep reminding myself to notice what’s going on. Then I happen to notice that someone around me did something nice. I then compliment them when ordinarily I wouldn’t have." Another example: "I remind myself to notice what’s going on.  I notice that my back and neck muscles are tight. I push myself to do some stretching exercises or yoga." The Awake and Respond style makes you more aware and responsive in your relationships with others and to your current situation.  It's more spontaneous than the Plan and Do style.

    "Path Management"  In this style, you ask yourself periodically, "What is the best, most loving use of my time right now?" Then you do the action and count it as CLEAR when it's a stretch.  An important variation of this is to address the question to God and make it a prayer.  More on this subject can be found in the Path Management article.

    If you want to send in a CLEAR report weekly, notice that with the last two styles, it’s important to note your actions and time spent right away, so that you don’t forget.



    Additional tips for doing CLEAR