Newsletter: Our Family Christmas Card, 4 Productivity Hacks, Bad Attitudes & Flat Tires, 3 Best Christmas Songs, Helping the Homeless at Christmas

My Newsletter for December 24, 2021

Four Awesome Ideas to Level-Up and Design a Better Life!

Merry Christmas & Happy Holidays Everyone,

It’s Christmas Eve, and there are eight days until the new year of 2022. I am already plotting and planning my goals and projects for the upcoming year. Are you?

It’s 54 degrees here in Ohio. That’s just weird for us. Yesterday I saw someone mowing! That’s nuts.

I hope you an your family are blessed with peace & prosperity, love & laughter, and health & happiness over the holidays and into the new year.

Here are four ideas for you to knock around:

  1. A quote I am reflecting on: “A bad attitude is like a flat tire. If you don’t change it you’re not going anywhere.” Anonymous. I am enjoying this quote as I research and write my next children’s book, An Awesome Attitude. Everthing about this book on attitude is a work in progress. The writing of the stanzas, the sketches, heck even the title are all in their infacy. I believe having an awesome attidude is the single greatest quality to living a good life, leading, being happy and finding success.
  2. My 3 favorite Christmas songs: These are the songs that say Christmas to me!
    1. O’ Come All Ye Faithful by Elvis
    2. The Little Drummer Boy by the Bird and the Bee (Featuring Dave Grohl) You gotta hear this one!
    3. Do They Know It’s Christmas by BandAid
  3. I spoke at the Cherry Street Mission Last Night: What an amazing gift this Christmas. I was honored and humbled to speak and share my art at The Cherry Street Mission in Toledo on the eve of Christmas Eve. I met so many wonderful people who are facing serious challenges but remain upbeat, positive and kind. So many people are in a rough transition in life, but I am grateful they have access to this amazing organization and the services they provide. Cherry Street Mission helps in so many ways. They provide shelter, food, care, services, and education of skills to transition back to work the force. What an Amazing place! My heart has been so deeply touched. I’m blessed To have brought some laughter and fun to their evening and life. I joined them for dinner and learned so much. Brilliant and beautiful people. What a great Christmas memory! Consider donating some time or money to the Cherry Street mission. Keep them in your thoughts and prayers and all the people who use their services. Shout out to Kurtis Tallman Vice President of Operations who remembered my presentation from when he was a young man and invited me out. Learn more on how to help here: One day I hope to speak at your organization and meet you! Maybe in 2022.
  4. A Head Start on Your Goals for 2022:
    1. I am joining Jon Gordon, author of The Energy Bus, for his free
    2. I use the app Things for a daily to-do list and GoodNotes on all my devices for daily, mobile productivity.
    3. I use this : daily to plan and accomplish epic stuff for the year. I get a new one every year!
    4. A couple of days before the new year I have a planning session for what I want to focus on and accomplish for the year. I break it into months, weeks, and eventually even days. It track progress in my journal and a Google Sheet and review these regulary. The planning of the year is exciting and fun! I hope some of these ideas inspire you.

PS: Merry Christmas!

Bonus: to see me drawing a Santa illustration every day. They are cool speed painting videos your family will enjoy. Follow kcroy on

Kelly Croy is an author, speaker, and educator. Want to learn more? Send an . • . Listen to Kelly’s other podcast with over 215 episodes of interviews and professional development. • Order Kelly’s book, a book on personal and professional leadership, and for your personal library. • Follow Kelly Croy on • Follow Kelly Croy on • Follow Kelly Croy on

Newsletter: Own Your Ugly, New Book Announcement, Helping the Neediest, 10×10 Grid Tracker!

My Newsletter for November 21, 2021

Four Awesome Ideas to Level-Up and Design a Better Life!

Hey everyone!

This is my favorite time of the year. I love the fall, and I love Thanksgiving. It’s great to be around family, friends, football and food.

I try to bring positvity and kindness to the world to help others through the hardships and stress they are experiencing in their lives. My life is far from perfect, but I cannot imagine a better time in history to live. Seriously! I need reminded of this myself from time to time. Too often we focus on the negative. That can be contagious. While I am a super-positive guy, things wear me down too. That’s why we have our circles and check in on one another. When you are up, check on everyone else and vice versa.

I hope this newlsetter brings something useful and positive to you.

Something great is truly around the next corner for you, now here are 4 Ideas to Knock Around:

  1. Quote I’m Reflecting on: “You are responsible for you: the good, the bad, and the ugly. You must own all of it.” ~Callie Bundy This quote speaks to me! We cannot count on other people, outside events, things, the future or anything else to change our situation. We cannot even be hopeful of that! We are responsible for our happiness, how we feel, what we have, and everything else, and we need to own all of that. Start now. (Share this on Twitter)
  2. A New Facebook Group for My New Book: Social media doesn’t interest me much anymore, but the private Facebook Group I created for my second book Unthink Before Bed sure was a lot of fun. It started with 25 people who all ended up being named in the book and then grew beyond 450 members for the launch of the book. It was a lot of fun and so helpful as I worked on the book. Well, I’m changing the name of the group and announcing a new children’s book that I’m working on. The new group is titled: Start With an Awesome Attitude, a book by Kelly Croy. You can join by clicking here to request to be a member. The working title for my new book is Start With an Awesome Attitude, and yes, it is all about attitude, and yes, my dog Jedi will be a part of it. Attitude was the first chapter of my first book Along Came a Leader, and now the subject of this fun children’s book. Joining the private Facebook group will give you a behind-the-scenes peek at my progress and some opportunities to participate, and you might even make it inside the book. It’s fun. Join this private Facebook group by clicking here. (Share this on Twitter)​
  3. Speaking at Cherry Street Mission this Christmas: I have been invited to speak at the Cherry Street Mission in Toledo, Ohio this Christmas. I am blessed each year to speak at schools, corporations, organizations, fundraisers and other events, but this opportunity to speak at the Cherry Street Mission gives me an incredible feeling of gratitude and happiness. The Cherry Street Mission feeds people, clothes people, and helps the neediest people in our communities. As we all prepare to gather and give thanks, I hope you will consider sending The Cherry Street Mission some words of thanks, encouragement, and maybe even a small donation to help them make a difference. Click here to learn more about The Cherry Street Mission and their important work. (Share this on Twitter)
  4. 10×10 Grid Tracker: I was recently inspired to created a simple 10×10 grid in my journal to help keep myself accountable. I wrote down ten simple habits I wanted to track for ten days. That’s it. Well, the results were less than impressive. I was NOT very consistent, so I did it for another ten days. I did better, but I still missed more than I wanted. I am now on my third stretch but making more improvement. I encourage you to give it a shot. Again, these were pretty easy habits, but ones that would benefit myself and others. I “thought” I was doing them okay, but now I “know” I need to do better. Knowing what you need to work on is a game-changer.

I hope a few of you will hit reply to this email and share your thoughts. I answer every email eventually.

Keep being awesome.

Thank you for being a part of this newsletter. I hope you will share it with a colleague, family member, or friend.

Kelly

​This link will take you to how we can connect: https://linktr.ee/kellycroy

Watch Your Mouth! Guard Your Mind!

Your Choice of Words Has the Power to Transform, Positively or Negatively

The words we choose have incredible power.

It does not matter whether we say them out loud or to ourselves. Our words attach powerful meanings and begin to pour the foundation of a belief system. Each time they are repeated or reinforced it is like another layer added to a fortified wall. In time, our words build an impressive structure of belief that becomes difficult to tear down.

My question to you: Is the structure you are building helpful or hurtful?

Many will fail to choose an answer and claim that what they say is merely an observation. To that, I declare, “Baloney!”

Our words can heal and harm. Our words can inspire and depress. Our words can unite or divide.

As a teacher, coach and parent I have seen the power of words impact lives in so many different situations that there is no doubt to me of their immense power. I’ve seen a coach talk an athlete into standing two inches taller and performing at a level beyond anything they had previously exhibited. I have seen teachers direct a student toward an opportunity that previously seemed unobtainable. I have seen parents shape their children with their loving and nurturing words to create a work of beauty within an environment of chaos.

And, I’ve seen the opposite.

I’ve seen people beaten down by words of judgment, limited and enslaved by negativity, and sent down a path of depression and sadness by the words people use. I’ve seen families divided, teams derailed, and the culture of organizations fissured by a repetition of poorly chosen and repeated words.

Yes, words.

Too often, incredibly volatile words are carelessly tossed around and detonated without any care of the devastation on the intended target let alone the collateral damage they ensue.

Our words for ourselves and each other need to be chosen with the same care and intentionality as a poet, lyricist, novelist, and orator.

When they are not, they need to be corrected. Self-corrected or other, but they cannot stand.

The organizations, families, colleagues and friends I admire most have one thing in common, how well they speak of others. I’ll bet the same is true for you. Think about those you admire. Think about how they speak of others. Am I wrong?

One organization I have great admiration for stands out significantly in how they refer and talk of one another with awe, wonder, and admiration. This is truly an organization to be a proud member of primarily because how they refer to one another as “amazing, distinguished, rockstar, wonderful, and brilliant,” and they mean every word. Who would not want to be part of that?! They see the best in others and call it out. Each time they do, it grows. It grows!

I have heard of successful sports teams, corporations and historical leaders forbidding negative talk in their locker rooms, workspace, boardrooms and environment. They know it works, and they have the means to put a stop to it.

We can’t wait for someone to come along and forbid us of using negative talk when talking about ourselves or others. It’s not going to happen, and we wouldn’t want it if it did. What we need to do is make the choice, the disciplined choice, to end talking negatively. Quit talking poorly of others. Quit talking poorly of ourselves. Correcting our words when we do.

Why? Why must we watch our mouth and guard our mind to eliminate negative words?

Two reasons:

  1. Our words become contagious.
  2. Our words become our reality.

Do not allow your poorly chosen words to lessen yourself or anyone else.

Make a difference in the lives of others and yourself with the words you choose with great intention and repetition.

~Kelly

Kelly Croy is an author, speaker, and educator. Want to learn more? Send an email. Sign-up for Kelly’s NewsletterListen to Kelly’s other podcast The Wired Educator Podcast with over 212 episodes of interviews and professional development. • Order Kelly’s book, Along Came a Leader a book on personal and professional leadership, and Unthink Before Bed: A Children’s Book on Mindfulness for your personal library. • Follow Kelly Croy on Facebook.  • Follow Kelly Croy on Twitter.  •  Follow Kelly Croy on Instagram 

 

Newsletter: Nov 3, 2021: 4 Ideas to Knock Around! Cheer for Yourself! How to Read More! Mental Wellness Tools and Tips! Take the Garbage Out!

My November 3, 2021 Newsletter

Four Awesome Ideas to Level-Up and Design a Better Life!

Hello there!

Something great is around the next corner for you, now let’s get to 4 Ideas to Knock Around, shall we?

  1. Quote I’m Reflecting on: “Spend more time cheering for yourself than your favorite sports team. Most people do the opposite and wonder why they’re so unhappy.” ~Jarek Lewis
  2. How to Read More Books Than You Ever Imagined: I recently came across an amazing app for my phone called that provides written and audio summaries of books that I can consume like potato chips. (If you’ve never seen me consume potato chips, you’re welcome.) I was skeptical of Blinkist, but tried the free , and then I fell in love. I know I’ll never be able to consume all the books I want to read about becoming a better human, building a better business, and many other important categories, yet Blinkist breaks down the core concepts of books I know I’ll never get to and offers it in easily consumable “blinks” that allow me to get the gist of an entire book in about 12 minutes. I kid you not. I’m now a subscriber. Yes, of course I still read, and a lot, and I still listen to audio books on Audible, regularly, but I love Blinkist for those books that I just want the essence of to apply in my life. . That’s saying a lot.
  3. Awesome Mental Wellness Tips & Tools: I recently attended a presentation by Denny Doughty and Lonnie Rivera where they mentioned some quick and easy ways to improve mental wellness from legend speaker and poverty expert, Ruby Payne. Their tips included: water, tapping and touch, looking up, and breathing techniques. I NEVER knew water could impact anxiety. I had heard of some tapping techniques in the past, but I was very skeptical, a friend shared the app with me and well… I am finding value. Looking up!?! Who knew that looking up, that’s right, just looking at the ceiling can improve your mental wellness. That’s easy enough to do. Breathing in for 4 seconds, holding the breath for 4 seconds, and slowly letting it go for 4, was also mentioned, and that is a practice I employed in my children’s book, . Try these out and let me know how they go! I am putting all to use. Yes, I deal with anxiety every day. Some days it is a war, so I need every weapon imaginable.
  4. Take Out the Garbage: A Message From Me: “The garbage in this world isn’t just physical pollution. I love and admire people who decide to contribute and help. So many people either act as if it is someone else’s job, or they just don’t care. Kindness and check-ins are elite actions. Not fluff. How we deal with ‘pollution’ is a measure of our own personal and professional leadership. How do we stop contributing? How do we help clean it up? Too many pass it by or just point. I am fully committed to making the world a better place. I will not allow the negativity nor pessimism of others to delay or derail me.”

Thank you for being a part of this newsletter. I hope you will share it with a colleague, family member, or friend.

Kelly

This link will take you to how we can connect:

Knockabout Newsletter: Wired Educator Publishes First Author/Educator, Keven Rinaman

I am excited to announce that Wired Educator has published its first book, 3DU: A Guide to 3D Printing in Every Classroom, written by Keven Rinaman.

If your school has a 3D Printer, it needs this book. Keven provides simple and affordable ways to start 3D printing in ANY classroom, no matter what grade or content area. Yes, EVERY educator can use 3D printing to engage students and help them create. As the host of The Wired Educator Podcast it has always been my primary mission to celebrate and promote the voices of outstanding educators. I am proud to celebrate the outstanding work of Keven Rinaman and share his voice and message with the world.

The Wired Educator Motto is, “To Level Up and Make a Difference in the Lives of Students”. Keven’s book does that and more. Keven’s book emphasizes that students should be using devices to create MORE than they consume. I love the possibilities and direction Keven offers teachers to bring 3D printing to every grade and every content area.It gives me great pride to help a fellow educator publish a physical book that another educator can hold in their hands, apply in their classroom, add to and pass along to others. This is the first book published by Wired Educator. I can feel the impact this book will have in students’ lives, I can picture the amazing creations students will design and produce, I can hear the laughs of failed prints, and the cheers of success as students and teachers collaborate together to create an environment of learning where experimentation, reflection on failure, and the tenacity to try again until they succeed is the norm.

Congratulations Keven on an amazing book and making a global impact on education. Well done.

~Kelly Croy

Keven Rinaman is an educator and author.

He has taught history, math, and technology at middle and high school grades, and has served as the technology director and Dean of Students for his district. Keven has coached numerous sports including: wrestling, golf, baseball and esports. He is a graduate of Heidelberg University and Western Governors University, earning both his Bachelor’s and Master’s degree. He also serves as an adjunct professor at Tiffin University.

Keven is the author of 3DU: A Guide to 3D Printing in Every Classroom, the host of an educational podcast titled, Magic Potion EDU, and blogs at TeachersTechToolbox.com. Keven has spoken at numerous national and regional conferences including FETC and OETC.

Keven lives with his wife Katie, and son, Cooper in Tiffin, Ohio. Contact Keven at kevenrinaman@gmail.com

Book description: Did your school purchase a 3D printer for teachers to use? Did someone donate one to your classroom and you are not sure how you will use it with your students? Check out 3DU: A Guide to 3D Printing in Every Classroom. This book is full of project ideas and lessons that will help any teacher, in any grade level, and in any content area, learn how they can use this technology with their students.

Starting with the basics of vocabulary and how the printer functions, readers will then embark on a journey that features projects and lessons that dive deeper with their students and make a cultural shift from consumption to creation. This book will give students the opportunity to get hands-on with their learning and make objects that demonstrate their understanding of classroom content through creative means.​

3DU is for you if…

  • You are a teacher eager to engage students with your content.
  • You want students to design, create, and find solutions.
  • You are an administrator leading instructional change toward a 21st-century learning environment.
    You want to create opportunities of hope, fun, and fulfillment for students.
  • Wired Educator Consulting, Inc. will be publishing the voices of more educators over the next year. Stay tuned.

Kelly Croy is the host of The Wired Educator Podcast and founder of Wired Educator Consulting, Inc.

Integrity is Your Resume’

Live Authentically!

Some things in life truly are all or nothing, and integrity is clearly one of them.

You can’t be a ‘little bit’ honest.

Morality isn’t a fad.

A lifetime of studying and practicing leadership has taught me that integrity is the greatest filter of all leaders.

Anyone can be honest and true in a moment, for a day, a duration, a stint, but integrity is the sum of all our decisions and actions. Integrity is our resume’.

You can hold many leadership positions…

You can obtain numerous degrees…

You can have a tremendous list of references…

But in the end your integrity will separate your ability to lead from others.

I love that the word “integrity” has the word “gritty” kinda built in there, because it takes courage and resolve to consistently make decisions and actions with intention and morality.

Living an authentic life is paramount to maintaining your credibility as a leader, serving others, and leaving a lasting impact.  Authenticity is the glue that holds leadership together; without it a leader falls apart. 

If you assembled all of the people you know, together in one room, would they describe the same person? Authenticity isn’t about being perfect, but it has everything to do with trust, integrity, and loyalty. Living an authentic life is paramount to maintaining your credibility as a leader and leaving a lasting impact on others. We trust and admire those who live authentic lives. Leaders are people who live by a set of core values regardless of the circumstances, and regardless who is around. 

Do you act the same way regardless of who is around? Or are you a different person to different people? As a teacher and coach I have observed that student athletes often act differently depending on who is watching them. The same holds true for many of the fellow employees I have worked alongside over the years.  Even within some families we see behavior changes, and issues of integrity based on who is around at the time.  I have had many discussions with teachers and coaches that describe very different observations of the same student, athlete, or colleague.

Authenticity is about who you say you are, who people say you are, and who you really are. Tell me what you truly value and I’ll tell you what kind of person you will become.

Authenticity is the glue that holds leadership together. Without it a leader falls apart. Nothing will weaken your impact more, or destroy your accomplishments faster than a breach of trust or a lapse in your integrity.

Every conversation, decision and action adds to your integrity or subtracts from it.

Make the next best decision.

Live authentically.

~Kelly

Kelly Croy is an author, speaker, and educator. Want to learn more? Send an email. Sign-up for Kelly’s NewsletterListen to Kelly’s other podcast The Wired Educator Podcast with over 208 episodes of interviews and professional development. • Order Kelly’s book, Along Came a Leader a book on personal and professional leadership, and Unthink Before Bed: A Children’s Book on Mindfulness for your personal library. • Follow Kelly Croy on Facebook.  • Follow Kelly Croy on Twitter.  •  Follow Kelly Croy on Instagram 

 

 

Leaders Get Rid of the Crappy Stuff

Dan Butler Has a New Book Out: Permission to be Great

Leaders Get Rid of ‘The Crappy Stuff’

When CEO Mark Parker of Nike called Apple CEO Steve Jobs for advice, Jobs told him to “get rid of the crappy stuff.”

According to Forbes, When Parker asked for advice, Jobs said: “Well, just one thing. Nike makes some of the best products in the world. Products that you lust after. But you also make a lot of crap. Just get rid of the crappy stuff and focus on the good stuff.”

Leaders make a difference in the lives of others and the world. They do what has not been done before. They take people to new places. Leaders create meaningful experiences. To accomplish this, however, leaders can’t be tenacious about everything; they must focus on what matters. Take Steve Jobs’s advice to heart: identify the crappy stuff and let it go. Focus on what will produce results. Focus on what matters. 

One of the most important things a leader must do is identify what they shouldn’t do. Don’t try to do everything. Learn to say, “No.” Be proud of what you do, but be prouder of what you didn’t do. There is much wisdom in these words. 

(The above is an excerpt from my book, Along Came a Leader.)

I just finished an interview with Dan Butler for my Wired Educator Podcast. (Dan and I were fortunate enough to present at Jeff Zoul’s What Great Educators Do Differently Conference in Texas.) Dan just published an awesome new book titled Permission to be Great. In the book he discusses six areas that cause mismatches between people and their work. These mismatches cause stress and burnout.

It’s a leader’s job to remove some obstacles, take something off the plate, or as Steve Jobs put it, “Get rid of the crappy stuff.”

My challenge to you: What are you going to eliminate?

Leaders and innovators frequently talk about what they are going to start, do and finish, but there is a finite amount of time and space in a day, week and year. Just like a coffee cup, if you keep adding things will eventually spill over.

As we make plans both personally and professionally, we will certainly be adding new initiatives and goals, but what are we willing to remove?

What needs to go?

I hope you will send me an email or leave a comment below about what you plan to reduce or eliminate.

I hope you will grab a copy of Dan’s new book. It is a great book for leaders wanting to improve their culture.

I loved our conversation. It will be going live next week on The Wired Educator Podcast.)

(I like how both our books have an arrow pointing at each other’s book.)

~Kelly

Kelly Croy is an author, speaker, and educator. Want to learn more? Send an email. Sign-up for Kelly’s NewsletterListen to Kelly’s other podcast The Wired Educator Podcast with over 200episodes of interviews and professional development. • Order Kelly’s book, Along Came a Leader a book on personal and professional leadership, and Unthink Before Bed: A Children’s Book on Mindfulness for your personal library. • Follow Kelly Croy on Facebook.  • Follow Kelly Croy on Twitter.  •  Follow Kelly Croy on Instagram 

 

Appreciation Isn’t a Day

I am certain few people forgot Mother’s Day this past Sunday.

I would imagine most people knew last week was Teacher Appreciation Week.

I’m guessing few knew, though, that Principals’ Day was the previous Saturday.

All incredibly deserving of our appreciation.

Appreciation can be challenging to sincerely express.

How on Earth can we truly show appreciation to our mother? Flowers?

How do we adequately show appreciation to teachers, especially in this year of ‘what’s behind door #3’ of learning environments? Food?

How do we let principals know we are thankful for their hours of service and putting out countless fires? Elbow bump?

Obviously the answer isn’t things. Things are tokens and symbols of our appreciation.

Our appreciation of course isn’t only on a single day or even a week.

Our appreciation for others is woven into our daily conversations and interactions. It should be genuine, frequent, and first.

‘First’ is probably the most important quality. Before we begin any work, a mutual acknowledgment of some sort should be felt. We don’t have to agree on everything and won’t. We can have differences of opinions and should. We may do jobs differently, but they need to be done effectively. I see your differences, and you see mine, but we engage in the appreciation of one another. We can feel it. We know.

I see you. I see the value you bring. I acknowledge both genuinely and frequently.

Everyone deserves to feel appreciated for the work they do and the impact they make. Some frown on ‘trophies for all’ and a part of me gets that, but the bigger part of me wants to point out that appreciation and trophies are two different things. Award excellence if you wish, but always show appreciation to others.

I find it odd that to watch a server at an expensive restaurant thanked and given a generous gratuity while a cashier at a fast food restaurant, working at a hectic pace, is given nothing and too frequently treated poorly.

No one should leave work nor end their day with the feeling they are not enough.

Everyone deserves to feel appreciated and valued. You don’t have to be the MVP, Mother of the Year, or Employee of the Month for appreciation.

A colleague shared her key to appreciation: understanding others’ love languages. Knowing how others feel appreciated. Not everyone feels appreciated the same way. For instance, some people feel appreciation with words of affirmation, others would internally prefer meaningful time with you, while others scream “Feed me!” and a few will gladly take that gift card. Personalized appreciation is probably the hardest to deliver, but the the most meaningful. (You can learn more from the book  The Five Love Languages.)

I have spoken at appreciation and recognition nights. Those are indeed special, and I say let’s keep the days and weeks as we have them, but let’s all try to show genuine kindness and appreciation to one another daily. A smile and a kind word is good fuel for the soul. Be first!

~Kelly

Kelly Croy is an author, speaker, and educator. Want to learn more? Send an email. Sign-up for Kelly’s NewsletterListen to Kelly’s other podcast The Wired Educator Podcast with over 197 episodes of interviews and professional development. • Order Kelly’s book, Along Came a Leader a book on personal and professional leadership, and Unthink Before Bed: A Children’s Book on Mindfulness for your personal library. • Follow Kelly Croy on Facebook.  • Follow Kelly Croy on Twitter.  •  Follow Kelly Croy on Instagram