Last week was a classic part one, introducing the problem in all its messiness. This week, I hope to bring it all together with a life lesson not easily learned or forgotten.
Read moreColumn: Passion and Resistance, Part 1 (4/18/2021)
When I was a kid my mom would have to remind me to clean my room, and every blue moon I’d get a wild hair and deep clean that sucker—so much so that when she came back in to check on me, I had every item I owned strewn across the floor, hunting the perfect organizational home for it.
Read moreColumn: The Day God Was Impressed (4/4/2021)
Last week, we said that money doesn’t impress God. Which begs the question, what does impress Him?
Read moreColumn: Of Birds, Azaleas, and Money (3/28/2021)
“But if God so clothes the grass in the field, which is alive today and tomorrow is thrown into the furnace, how much more will He clothe you?”
Read moreColumn: On Calming Seas and Making Lemonade (3/21/2021
Another time, Jesus was in the Sea of Galilee, at the bottom of a boat, and a storm arose quickly. He was asleep, and He didn’t wake up.
Read moreColumn: Of Fives Loaves and Two Fish (3/14/2021
When Jesus stood up to teach the people in Galilee, they listened until it was past supper time. His disciples panicked because they didn’t have enough food for them. Just then a boy walked up with a sack lunch of 5 loaves of bread and 2 fish.
Read moreColumn: Good Enough to Move On (3/7/2021)
Being a perfectionist is both a good thing and a bad thing. It’s a good thing because of obvious reasons. It’s a bad thing because humans aren’t good at moderation.
Read moreColumn: Making the Difference (2/28/2021)
One of the most frustrating things about life is that the people who are committed to making a difference are the ones who so often lose sight of their value. When you’re trying to change the world, it’s easy to forget about the next step.
Read moreColumn: Listening to Your Own Stories (2/21/21)
One of the best ways to market yourself is by telling your story, because stories activate the imagination and convey more meaning than random sentences.
Read moreColumn: Success: A Byproduct of Meaning (2/15/2021)
The world isn’t the way we wished it was; in fact, sometimes it is awful beyond our worst nightmare. Other times it just seems to fall flat.
Read moreColumn: To Live and To Love: A Tale (1/31/2021)
Author’s Note: This is the business section so I’m going to tell you the meaning up front, but I’m using a story because only stories can communicate intricate meanings. None of this story is based on people or places in reality.
Read moreColumn: Embracing Questions (1/24/2021)
We all want answers and sometimes feel like we deserve them. But, even in 2021, there is still more that we don’t know about the world than that we do know.
Read moreColumn: Getting Command of Life’s Stress (1/17/2021)
Work is stressful, our music is equally stressful, movies are only really entertaining if they have an element of unknown (stress) carrying them along. And we wonder why we are so stressed?
When you hitch a ten-thousand pound trailer to a truck, the truck is under serious stress, whether it feels like it or not. The same could be said of you and me.
We only talk about “stress” when we feel overwhelmed, but according to a certain medical website, stress exists anytime there is a stressor (a stress-causing factor) exerted upon you.
Stress is natural, and can be good, and it happens every day. But we often find ourselves victim to it, not commanders of it.
Let’s work on that.
I remember being younger and competing in classical piano competitions and feeling absolutely strung-out stressed, and I was taught to channel that feeling and adrenaline into focus, into bettering my performance.
We all carry loads, therefore we all put stress onto our bodies, minds, emotions, and souls. Sometimes we stress them out so much that part of us breaks and we start to feel “stressed out.”
But I think it’s very rare for a company, leader, or co-worker to stop and identify the stressor and ask whether or not it is healthy and useful. To master your stressors and command them, now that is a true pilot in the storm.
There are acute stressors (hard deadlines, sprints, really heavy lifts) and there are chronic stressors (slow-burns that wear you down). I have found it very helpful to list the stressors in my life and categorize those things as acute or chronic, necessary or unnecessary.
If you do that, then I have found myself prepared to lift when it’s time to lift, and rest when it’s time to rest, and be thankful for it.
The thing is, stress is a byproduct of challenges. If you lift a ton, you’ll feel the stress of the lift.
But too much stress can break you.
Ten years of chronic stress, un-commanded, is what eventually leads to a momentary collapse or bad health or other negative symptoms.
To take it one step further, that same medical website defines anxiety as stress that continues once the load has been lifted.
Anxiety is stress in memory.
I remembered just how stressful performances were, so if I didn’t control myself, each performance got more tense than the last. Practicing became a chore because I couldn’t stop thinking about the stress of that upcoming performance.
Anxiety is when you let the stress overcome the memory and ruin it.
But if you load the truck up with as much weight as it can stand and tow it, the weird thing about trucks is, it won’t get any stronger. It actually does the opposite and slowly loses capacity.
Weird thing about humans is they do actually get stronger.
You go the gym and stress your body at a healthy pace, and you will get stronger faster than you think. Too much stress will break you, but not enough will ruin you.
Mastering stress and commanding it for good is the only way to tow the load, and this is something we need to spend more time strategizing about.
Column: Here's Hoping For 2021 (1/3/2021)
I think we all deserve an award for 2020. We hit a rapids in the river that turned into waterfall after waterfall, and the fact that the boat is still floating and we are all (mostly) still in it is a miracle.
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