Share This Article
I am excited to announce that I am a certified life coach (CXL) and have been practicing my Certified Life Coach (CLC) with my life coach clients for over 4 years now.
I have attended several seminars and workshops on the issues related to my profession, and as a result I have become very knowledgeable on the issues you are discussing, but I would also like to say that I am still learning something about myself as well.
I’ve been working with clients for the past few years, helping them with stress, anxiety, and depression. I have also had the experience of working with clients who have become so consumed with their own problems that they have not taken the time to learn about the issues or to help themselves.
That is the exact problem this article is about. I have an issue with my own professional life that I haven’t fully addressed and that is the fact that I have not learned to ask for help or ask for help, even when I ask for help, because I don’t know what I could be doing wrong.
Stress, anxiety, and depression. I have also had the experience of working with clients who have become so consumed with their own problems that they have not taken the time to learn about the issues or to help themselves.That is the exact problem this article is about.
The problem is not one I have personally, but rather a problem that many of us have in our professional lives. We are constantly in a “state of stress, anxiety, or depression” but we rarely know what to do about it. The article begins with the question “Should you ask for help?”. This is a question that seems to be a bit of a red flag because it suggests that you should not necessarily look for it in your own life.