Tuesday, May 17, 2011
Friday, July 17, 2009
The Eyes of the Future
It's easy to look to the past and long for the old days or wallow in its pain but that leaves us stagnated. We can never hope to move forward when we have our head turned backwards. It's okay to look to the past to avoid its mistakes but we should nearly always be looking forward to see where we can go.
What lies in the future only God knows but one thing is for sure it is a journey filled with stories that are yet to be told. Life can only take you down two different paths one filled with the miseries of life laced with pain and sorrow or one filled with the pioneering spirit of the travels we've not taken, full of anticipation and excitement for what we can not see. The journey we've not taken is either good or bad depending on which road we choose to walk, one looking backwards or one pressing forwards.
God Bless you all today in your travels,
Thursday, April 30, 2009
How To Believe
"I can't do that" or "That's impossible" are just two of the many phrases we use to express our disbelief in the possibilities. There’s an old saying “seeing is believing”; this begs the question: do we really have to see the results before we can believe in the possibilities?
I believe not, it is the possibilities that make life so incredible not the results. For me seeing is not believing but believing is seeing because when you believe in something that’s the moment when anything becomes possible.
Somewhere along the way we lose our ability to believe in the possible. As we grow up we begin to focus on the reason why not. There is no scientific way to explain why this happens but I have a theory. I think it’s because we see what our society has done to believers. Our society has taught us that if we dare to believe and step out that we will be ridiculed for being different (think back to your school days). If we fall down they laugh and taunt us for being failures but even when we succeed they scrutinize every step we make and so we just sit and wonder “if I could have done this or that then I would’ve been able to”.
We just need to find a way back to when we knew how to believe. Think about it, when you were young and you dream about being a Fire Fighter, an Astronaut or even President you never thought about the reasons why that wasn’t possible, you just believed.
We have to un-train ourselves out of the “Why Not’s” and train ourselves to believe. So, how do we do that?
In order to believe you have to first think you can do something. In order to think you can do something you have to tell yourself you can. It all starts with what you’re saying about yourself. You’ve been saying negative things about yourself (i.e. “I can’t”) and so we need to make a shift and start saying things that breathe life into your possibilities. Here’s how to do that:
- Make a list of all the things that you’ve dreamed about doing and still wish you could.
- Start saying OUTLOUD “I can do ______!” or “I will do _______” every morning, at lunch, dinner and before you go to bed.
- Every time you have one of those negative thoughts pushed it out of your mind and immediately replace it by speaking out something positive (if it’s about your list, then speak your affirmations)
- Start making plans that’ll help you accomplish your list (do the research to find out what it’ll take and start putting things together).
You see when we start saying things as if they were already part of our lives and we do that long enough then our thoughts will change to reflect what we’re saying. When we start to think those things long enough it will shape what we believe about what we think. When we believe then anything becomes possible. The best part is that there is no limits on how many beliefs we can have.
You can also visit our relationship blog at http://forever-newlyweds.blogspot.com
Thursday, March 26, 2009
Power on your words
Think about it, it also goes back to the scripture about reaping and sowing. If you sow negative and defeating things in your life then your harvest will most certainly be negative. If that's true then the opposite is true, if we sow positive and life giving things, then our harvest has to be positive and life giving which basically means we are blessed.
The tricky part is that it's our choice what we sow, that's why the scripture say life and death are in the power of the tongue because we have the choice of how we'll live. So, today let's all choose life! Let's speak life over ourselves and the people we come in contact with today. That is how we can shine Christ's light into this dark world.
Thursday, February 26, 2009
Success is in Failure
Across the vast book collections everywhere are books about how to be successful and become more successful but I don’t know of any book that tells us about how to be a good failure. Probably because you wouldn’t read it because we have a distaste for failure. I don’t believe success is the answer we are looking for but failure is. Yes is said it, failure is the key to success.
When you look around at the people in your city, your neighborhood or even your family, have most of them achieved great success in their lives? Or have most of them settled for being mediocre? Have you ever stopped to ask why that is? Maybe it’s because most of them don’t believe they are gifted or talented enough to achieve greatness or maybe they didn’t have an opportunity to go to college and they just got stuck in their job doing the same old thing.
I believe that the reason for the spread of mediocrity is the importance our society has placed on success. In schools across America we are taught that we are measured based on our successes but we’re not encouraged to work through our failures. In our most revered profession, Hollywood leaves us with imagery and the perception that we have to be perfect in order to matter in life. Women are elevated if they are thin and beautiful, men must be handsome and muscular and neither can say or do anything that may offend someone leaving no room for mistakes. It used to be that if we failed we were told to try, try again but today we are publicly humiliated for our failure which leaves us not wanting to take a chance.
Now, the only person I know of in the history of man who could measure up to this standard could also walk on water. But as humans being fallible is just part of life.
What makes an overcomer different is that they view success and failure differently. Most all of us have heard the story of Thomas Edison and the invention of the light bulb but what is less known about him is his definition of an overcomer. He said: Many of life’s failures are men who didn’t realize how close they were to success before they gave up. Basically the only failure is a quitter but far too often we try to overcome a situation with only a few attempts and if we don’t succeed, we give up. It’s only if we give up that we become a failure and really there are no failures there only quitters.
Our perception of failure is wrong; we view failure as some sort of limitation when in fact it’s exactly the opposite. It is an opportunity to learn what doesn’t work; make our adjustments and move forward. When Edison was berated by the press and asked why he kept working on the light bulb after failing so many times he looked up at them and said very plainly; I have not failed. I’ve just found 1,000 ways that it doesn’t work. My only question to you is, would you keep going after you’d failed 1,000 times?
One of the most crucial steps in becoming an overcomer is to change our perception of failure to one that accepts and allows failure as part of the process of success. There was a time in each of our lives when we didn’t know how to walk. How did we learn how to walk? Did we just get up one day and start walking? Put you hand down you know that’s not true. We learned to walk because we fell down a thousand times but we always got back up. Success at walking was merely getting up one more time than we fell down.
Winston Churchill said: Success is not final, failure is not fatal: it is the courage to continue that counts.
Proverbs 24:16 says: for though a righteous man falls seven times, he rises again.
The pathway to success is one of multiple failures and the will to get up just one more time.
You may be saying, that sounds good but you don’t understand I had a harsh life growing up, my parents never encouraged me or maybe you were one of the thousand who were abused and that’s what is holding you back.
I know a man who as a young boy believed that he would never be anyone important because growing up he was harshly, if not violently, punished for the mistakes that he made. Throughout most of his life his parents would say things to him and about him that tore him down, making him feel unlovable. On top of that he had also been sexually abused at a very young age. He believed that his life had no meaning and it became a destructive, self fulfilling prophesy. He was always getting into trouble, doing the wrong things. In his teens he started drinking and smoking, dabbling in drugs and all the things anyone would expect from a nobody. To deal with his emotional pain he would cut into his own flesh with a knife always a step away from going over the edge. After a violent fight with his step-dad he left home at age sixteen to live in his truck on the side of a river just to get away from his abusers. He finished high school but only because it was a requirement to go into the Marine Corps. The reason he chose the Marines was because they were the first branch of the military to go into combat where he hoped that he would be able to give his life for his country to prove to his parents that his life was worth something.
This story is played out everyday in this country and I feel their pain because that young man in the story was me. Fortunately, I never got the opportunity to give up my life in the military. Instead my perception started to change and I started to see that life was worth living when I met the most amazing women on a little island in the Pacific. Looking back, I don’t regret anything that has ever happened to me because if I had been successful as a child, I would have never went into the Marines, got stationed in Guam and I would’ve never met the most beautiful, perfect woman on the face of the earth who is now my wife of seventeen years and I wouldn’t have my two wonderful children, who bless my life every single day and I wouldn’t have one more on the way. Basically, my failures led to my successes but only because every time I fell, I always got back up one more time.
Romans 12:2 says: Don’t copy the behavior and customs of this world, but let God transform you into a new person by changing the way you think. Then you will learn to know God’s will for you, which is good and pleasing and perfect.
In order to be an overcomer we must allow God to change our perception of failure, not doing so will only keep us from finding out what God’s will is for us, and God’s will is perfect, not ours. Our perception is our truth and if our truth is leading us to a path of being mediocre then we need to change our truth by allowing God to change our perception. Perception is changed by opening our minds and allowing ourselves to see things the way God sees them. If we see failure as a negative thing; then we need to open our minds to the possibility that success is achieved through our failure, making failure a process and not a limitation, which is how God intended it to be. He wants us to learn from our mistakes get back up and keep going. If that wasn’t true then when we were born we would already know how to walk. If we can we can allow God to change our perception of failure then He can start opening the doors of success for us and we will begin to see His plan for us begin to take shape. God doesn’t see you as a failure, He sees you as a work in progress and if we allow Him to transform us we can get on His perfect plan for our lives.
Tuesday, February 17, 2009
Success Speaks
The secret is what you say not what you think. I know that this statement goes against the grain, but I’ve found it to be true in my own life. Several years ago, I started representing a new service in the marketplace for a NYSE company (I won’t mention any names) that had a fantastic service that was offered. I started out like a wildfire and within just a few days I had reached stardom within the company and it was great. About a year into it, I started to work with this young lady who couldn’t seem to help herself; saying the most negative and defeating things I’d ever heard in my life. Eventually, I found myself repeating the very same defeatisms she’d committed to memory. It began to take its toll on me, which resulted in my sales dropping and my shining stardom fading away, and I couldn’t understand why. It’d gotten so bad that I’d stopped functioning properly, and when I finally got the opportunity to present my service to a group (of only thirty people) fear completely enveloped me, and my mouth went so dry that my lips literally stuck to my teeth.
At first, I allowed myself to say negative things about others, and then after some disappointments, the tables turned and I began to say those things about myself. Before long, I had talked myself into being a failure. Did it happen overnight? No, it snuck its way into my life; little by little. I’m sure you’re wondering what I did to get out of that hole that I dug for myself. I started to talk myself back into being successful; I printed lists of positive things to say about myself. For example, things like ‘I’m a successful salesperson; I’m talented; I’m great at helping people. I created as many affirmations about myself as I could. Most of which, I came up with by writing down the exact opposite of what I felt about myself at the time.
This is called the perception of truth; whatever you believe to be true is true. Let me give you an example: You’re forced to work overtime at the office. You get home and give your spouse a hug or kiss; she smells the faint smell of perfume or cologne on your shirt each time you come home. You explain it with the traditional “I don’t know what you’re talking about”, which does nothing but raise the suspicion that you’re cheating. And to top it off, you were at the office alone, so no one can corroborate your story. Whether you did or didn’t cheat is irrelevant. If they believe that you cheated, then to them you did unless and until you can change their perception of that truth.
The same is true about what we believe about ourselves. In order to achieve anything in life, you have to first believe that you can achieve it; in order to believe that you can achieve you have to think its possible; in order to think its possible you have to tell yourself it is. Of course, there are other factors involved and this has its limitation— especially if you’re telling yourself something outrageous like, “I’m going to be the best NFL quarterback in history” when you’re 45 and have never played a professional sport in your life. However, within reason this will work! If you’re a number four salesperson in your company and you want to be number one; then start convincing yourself that you can be number one by telling yourself that you are. Yes, it will take time for you to get to a place where you finally believe you can accomplish what you set out to achieve, but the first person you have to convince is yourself. I dare you to write positive things down about yourself and start saying them to yourself every morning, at lunch and just before you go to bed for the next 30 days and see for yourself the difference that it can make. You have nothing to loose except the negative and that wouldn’t be such a bad thing.