of insanity. A man of faith lives in perpetual reward," states Andy Andrews in The Travelors Gift. As a physical therapist, I work with people who are battling one of the most terrifying events that can occur in a person's life. This event that I am referring to leaves individuals with a feeling of helplessness and isolation. They believe there is no hope and it causes many to be afraid to go to bed at night, walk to the restroom or go to the grocery store. One person may have said it best, "Dizziness is the hardest thing on a persons nerves..."
I never imagined I would be a person who helps clients with dizziness. I have learned so much by working with clients who battle this problem. One of the biggest lessons I have learned is how important it is to not allow fear to drive or control us. Once fear gets hold of our lives, it makes everything worse. The crazy part about this lesson, is that if anyone has the right to be afraid, it is a person battling a vestibular disorder.
Vestibular disorders can oftentimes be unpredictable in how they impact people's lives. They can come on with no warning and with no pattern in intensity. People often say, "Am I going to have to live with this the rest of my life?" Faith that this is only a moment in their life and not their life is needed to build hope in their future.
We have to dream, explore, grow, change, overcome, make progress, let go and work within our purpose and mission. We must battle habits, patterns, generational norms and familial tendencies that lead toward anything other than progress. We've got to hold on. It's time to be transformed!
Sunday, November 6, 2011
"A man of fear lives always on the edge
Wednesday, October 26, 2011
Anger keeps leaders
from growing. Anger robs us of our leadership potential. Andy Stanley has a great leadership Podcast series on "Enemies of the Heart." He states that leaders who have internal problems eventually are held back because internal problems eventually express themselves externally. He states the condition of our heart becomes an invisible lid to our leadership (John Maxwell's Law of the Lid).
In his podcast on anger, he states anger states "you owe me." Anger causes us to expect pay back. He states angry leaders fix blame on individuals rather than systems. However, nine times out of ten a system is to blame. Being angry puts us in "pay back mode." Anger causes us to believe that "you took something from me."
He states angry people have very little emotional margin and that they tend to blame people. The way to get over anger is to release others from their debt to you. I must decide, "you don't owe me anymore." This does not mean they weren't wrong or that they didn't owe me. It just means I am deciding to forgive them of the debt they owe.
Forgiveness breaks the power of anger. Andy states, "We don't like to lose" and when we decide others don't owe us anymore, we feel we are giving something up. Anger gives us a sense of power over others. When we decide they don't owe us, we feel as though we are giving up power over them. We do not like to lose and we don't like to give up power. When we decide we are going to forgive others, we feel like we have lost. However, in reality it is a big win as forgiveness creates emotional margin. Thanks Andy Stanley for these thoughts!
In his podcast on anger, he states anger states "you owe me." Anger causes us to expect pay back. He states angry leaders fix blame on individuals rather than systems. However, nine times out of ten a system is to blame. Being angry puts us in "pay back mode." Anger causes us to believe that "you took something from me."
He states angry people have very little emotional margin and that they tend to blame people. The way to get over anger is to release others from their debt to you. I must decide, "you don't owe me anymore." This does not mean they weren't wrong or that they didn't owe me. It just means I am deciding to forgive them of the debt they owe.
Forgiveness breaks the power of anger. Andy states, "We don't like to lose" and when we decide others don't owe us anymore, we feel we are giving something up. Anger gives us a sense of power over others. When we decide they don't owe us, we feel as though we are giving up power over them. We do not like to lose and we don't like to give up power. When we decide we are going to forgive others, we feel like we have lost. However, in reality it is a big win as forgiveness creates emotional margin. Thanks Andy Stanley for these thoughts!
Monday, October 24, 2011
"Life begins where your comfort zone
ends!" My cousin just shared this statement with me on facebook and I believe it to be true. I remember our campus minister in college sharing that we needed to be uncomfortable with our comfortableness.
I know as a physical therapist, the only way to build a muscle up is to make it do what it is not comfortable doing. So, plow ahead! Go against the flow! We only live once.
I know as a physical therapist, the only way to build a muscle up is to make it do what it is not comfortable doing. So, plow ahead! Go against the flow! We only live once.
Saturday, October 8, 2011
The Consistency Muscle
"The signature of mediocrity, is chronic inconsistency." Jim Collins made this comment at the recent Catalyst convention in Atlanta, Georgia. Consistency can be difficult, but it is more difficult if we haven't worked at being consistent on a consistent basis. In other words, I think there is a consistency muscle. The more we work at being consistent, the more easy it is to be consistent. As we grow, consistency in tougher situations is much more likely.
Saturday, October 1, 2011
Pin your ears back
and go. I remember my high school football coach telling me that during pre-game warm ups. The idea was that you just go for it. Don't hold back. Don't let fear keep you from accomplishing what you have prepared to accomplish. Take everything you have done to prepare over the last several months, let go, have fun and go baby!
I think that in life we need to pin our ears back and go. Life is too short to miss out on great experiences and opportunities because of being timid or lazy. We gotta live while we can.
I think that in life we need to pin our ears back and go. Life is too short to miss out on great experiences and opportunities because of being timid or lazy. We gotta live while we can.
Thursday, September 29, 2011
Deportation?
I don't think I knew what this word really meant until a little over two years ago. One of the most meaningful journeys of our lives took a detour...yes, we were deported from another country. It's sad to say that we didn't catch the date error on our Visas prior to traveling half way around the world...
I learned so many valuable lessons from that experience, but one of the most important lessons I learned is DON'T EVER GIVE UP! If you believe that there is something you are meant to do, then do whatever it takes to get the job done. Don't give up. Don't waver. Keep fighting. Keep trying. Stay focused. For the Spirit God gave us does not make us timid, but gives us power, love and self discipline. (2 Timothy 1:7)
So glad we GOTCHA!
I learned so many valuable lessons from that experience, but one of the most important lessons I learned is DON'T EVER GIVE UP! If you believe that there is something you are meant to do, then do whatever it takes to get the job done. Don't give up. Don't waver. Keep fighting. Keep trying. Stay focused. For the Spirit God gave us does not make us timid, but gives us power, love and self discipline. (2 Timothy 1:7)
So glad we GOTCHA!
Thursday, September 22, 2011
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