Tag Archive - relationships

Mentors, Models, Coaches & Friends

I’ve spent a lot of time lately considering the close relationships I have in my life and how each one has impacted, influenced and shaped me.  Talking about the importance of community, I recently heard Rick Warren say:

Mentors, models, coaches & friends. The quickest way to change your life is to change who you’re close to.

I don’t know where it originated, but I’ve often heard the following statement and believe it to be true:

Show me your friends and I’ll show you your future.

This same theme is echoed in a more cautionary tone in the Bible:

Whoever walks with the wise becomes wise, but the companion of fools will suffer harm. – Proverbs 13:20

There’s a lot to be said about who you surround yourself with. What this particular Proverb is saying is that, to a great extent, we become amalgams comprised of the voices we ascribe worth to and give permission to speak into our lives. With that realization comes with it a great responsibility to steward our hearts on a relational level.

When you’re young and invincible, it’s easy to take for granted the life lessons and wisdom flying through the air like radio broadcasts, yours for the taking if you’re paying attention and dialed in to the correct frequency.  But sadly, we spend many of our younger years scanning the dial in relational oblivion, often not realizing the long term effects of how we allow others to invest into the moments of our lives. The older I get, the more I’ve not only seen the need for all of those varied voices in my life, but the more I’ve felt the weight of not having them as life assumes different shapes, regularly handing me new and diverse challenges and opportunities to grow.

I also realize that the more I’ve become intentional about anything, the more I’ve seen that thing change. The more intentional I’ve gotten about investing in these kinds of relationships, the more I’ve seen my life take shape and bear fruit resulting from the investment of others. At the same time, the more I’ve embraced this perspective, the more I’ve found myself on the other side of the equation and filling these various roles in the lives of others.

I’m thankful for those who give big picture counsel, live the blueprints, shout ring-side blow-by-blow instructions and speak wisdom and truth into my life. It’s a combination of the presence and selfless investment of all these voices that are constantly shaping, developing and investing in me, pushing me forward to a better version of myself and speaking to the trajectory of my life as much as to the next step.

Do you actively engage the presence of mentors, models, coaches & friends in your life?

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What It’s Really About

I had dinner with a friend last night. Part of our conversation centered around the current season of our lives.  As we both wondered out loud about what it really is that God is doing in each of our respective lives, I couldn’t help but think about the gift of perspective that is given over time.

I’d like to think it’s a pretty common occurrence to be in the middle of any given life situation or scenario and ponder, “what is THIS really about?”

Is this about my current job?
Am I here because of THIS opportunity?
Is this stop a destination or a bridge to what’s next?
Is this about developing and investing in new relationships?

These questions and more are often par for the course for thinking about life seasons.

As we talked through this, I asked my friend, “when has it EVER been about what you THOUGHT it was about?”

In other words, I can look back now over many seasons of my life and see quite plainly that the take-away from that season was nothing like what I thought it was while I was actually in the middle of it.

The other day, I was thinking through a particular situation I’m walking through along these lines and tweeted the following thought:

There is invaluable perspective just over our shoulder that we often miss when consumed with what stands before us.

Perspective is highly underrated and without it, we are destined to wander in the proverbial wilderness for lack of grasping the wisdom locked inside life experiences.  Many times I didn’t fully realize what God was doing in my life until I was on the other side of it and could look back from where I stood after the fact.

A great example is the current season of life I’m in now. I think a lot about what things were like a year ago. Things were hard and I often felt like I was spiraling out of control, unsure what was happening, my heart in vertigo. I often pondered what it was all about, but couldn’t see clearly at the time. A year later, I still have a healthy set of challenges and opportunities to learn, grow and develop, but they are quite different from those I had this time last year.  Having walked through what I did, I can look back, extract the perspective and wisdom that wasn’t available to me from where I was, and stand on top of those things to face what is now before me.  A year from now, I hope to be able to do the same with the things that I’m challenged with right now.

After you begin to intentionally process your life’s experiences that way, it tends to shape how you approach and react to what’s happening right now. It tends to be less about what’s happening right now and more about reading God’s resume of bringing clarity out of tumultuous seasons… in time.

A big part of being a person of faith is understanding God works in both the broad strokes of a lifetime and the exactness of each moment, but you don’t always realize that when pressed up against the canvas.

Very rarely is it ever about what you think it’s about.

What perspective can you extract from where you’ve been that helps bring wisdom to where you are?

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Resolve To Invest (Remembering My Friend Bob)

I haven’t had many close personal experiences with death in my life. I suppose I’ve been somewhat fortunate in that, although even making that statement makes me cringe because of my disdain for the words “fortunate” and “unfortunate” in reference to people and experiences.  Any use or derivative of “fortunate” is typically indicative of luck or chance, and I am no proponent of either. Especially during this holiday season, I kick myself when I make a reference to “those less fortunate”, as if to say I have stumbled upon some sort of proverbial pot of gold that “those poor saps” just didn’t. Bleh. I hate it.

Perhaps it would be a more fitting statement to say I’m thankful that I haven’t had many close personal experienced with death in my life.  The first significant death/funeral experience I remember was in 1995 when “Sister Evelyn”, whom I had grown up around in church, passed away and I remember being very emotional. Other than that, a school friend was killed in an automobile accident in 1989, the father of a close friend died in 1999 and my grandmother passed away in 2004. The latter was certainly the toughest because of how close I had been to my grandmother throughout my life.  While there were certainly others that happened in the lives of those around me, those are the only 4 that really stick out for various reasons.

Until now.

When I moved to Houston in 2007, it wasn’t long before I began meeting the Woelfel kids. They were everywhere. Turns out, there were 14 of them! I would see them at church, helping take care of my boss’s kids, working in our office… it seemed like everywhere I turned, there was a Woelfel… serving, loving, giving.  Then I met 20 year-old Bob.

I could quickly tell that while Bob was cut from the same cloth as his 13 siblings, he also seemed to be marching to the beat of his own drum and looking for his place in the world. After spending some time with him and having a few great heart and life discussions, I realized I wanted to find ways to intentionally invest into Bob’s life.  At that time I lived in a very nice, practically brand-new 4-bedroom house with just one roommate, so I invited Bob to move into the house,  offering him space to not only experience life in a different context than what he was accustomed to, but also to just broaden his horizons on what was possible for him to accomplish and what might be next for him.

Bob wrote and he was very creative. He wanted to do work creating films and he loved spending time working his way through my large DVD collection,  digesting and commenting on elements of the story and visuals that I had overlooked. He saw things differently.  Bob’s passion for life was contagious and his 20 year-old takes on life and faith would often challenge me, frequently reminding me to stay young and keep my heart open to something I might be missing. I remember sharing my various life experiences and lessons with him on several occasions and how he would respond, appreciative and always extracting something that he could both relate to and that would challenge and stretch him.  Bob was passionate and was not afraid to ask questions.

In August 2008, when I was navigating a particularly challenging time involving resigning from my job and figuring out what would be next for me, Bob came home one day excited that he had an opportunity to go to college. He would have to leave quickly and needed to raise a certain amount of money for admissions and to get him started. I couldn’t write him a check fast enough. I guess I saw part of myself in Bob and I was proud to be able to sow into what God was doing in his heart and life. Days later, Bob had what he needed and he left for college, driving overnight from Houston to Lee University in Cleveland, TN.  Bob was uncertain where it would land him, but he was not intimidated by the pursuit.

Though we kept in touch and talked on the phone every so often, that night was the last time I saw Bob. I remember talking to him on the phone in early 2009, after I had moved back to Nashville, and he was in Hawaii!  After spending some time at Lee, he wanted another adventure so he up and went to Hawaii for school. Bob was courageous and not afraid of taking a risk.

Always one to challenge himself to go farther, on August 2nd of this year Bob was trying to break his personal record for holding his breath underwater, but he passed out underwater and actually drowned. After 55 minutes of CPR, the paramedics were able to get his heart beating again. The 4 months that followed were filled with many testimonies of faith, highs and lows and the doctors did all they knew to do and his incredible family and friends stood in prayer and faith for his full recovery.

This past Sunday, at 1:59am, Robert Woelfel did indeed fully recover as he went to sleep here, slipped through the curtain of time and woke up in Heaven, more alive than he has ever been. I don’t have a lot of theology to offer on the afterlife and I don’t know what kind of party the angels threw when he got there, but I do know that Bob trusted Christ as his Lord and Savior, and that he is with Him now.

I am sad and miss my friend, but I really have no regrets. If anything, my resolve is strengthened… a resolve to continue to do what I love to do, invest in the lives of those around me. I’d like to believe that the small investment I was able to make into Bob’s life produced a return in ways I will never know and places I will never go. And so it is with those each of you reading this now. The return is not up to you, but seizing the opportunity to invest is.

In these bodies we will live, in these bodies we will die

Where you invest your love, you invest your life

- Mumford & Sons

Invest. Give yourself away.

I am honored to have had the opportunity to invest in Bob’s life and I am blessed he was my friend.

See you soon, buddy.

 

Confessions Of A People Pleaser (Guest blog by Stephen Brewster)

Today’s guest blog post is from my friend Stephen Brewster.  Stephen is the Sr. Director of Marketing for Integrity Media, where he works closely everyday with some of the most prolific and recognized worship leaders of our time, including Paul Baloche, Israel Houghton, Kari Jobe, Carlos Whittaker and John Mark McMillan.  Stephen and I first met in February 2008 when his artist and my then boss, Israel Houghton, was invited to perform live on the 50th Annual GRAMMY Awards telecast in L.A. That was a trip I will never forget for many reasons, and Steve and I clicked right off the bat.  By the time that weekend was over I was convinced we had been separated at birth, and we’ve had a great friendship ever since. Stephen lives in Mobile, AL with his wife Jackie and 4 awesome kids. He is passionate about people, creativity and leadership and merges all those passions in a very unique way on his blog.  You can also follow him on Twitter.

I am not sure if it is a creative thing or just an insecurity thing, but being a people pleaser has always been a problem for me.

We all desire to be liked. We want to fit in, and we all feel the need to be accepted. Sadly, that desire ends up selling us short on the unique nature for which we were created. We start to sell out our original US to be a poor imitation of someone else. And we do all this just to be accepted by someone who in all likelihood is just as insecure about themselves as we are.

I know this, because I have been “that guy.” The chameleon guy. The dude who changes who he is to be accepted, admired, approved…and then felt guilty afterwards because I was not being real about who I was created to be. We walk into these relationships setting expectations that are so out of wack and totally built on an act that we can never live in a healthy relationship.

It is normal to want to be accepted, liked, and approved, right up until we turn that emotion into an idol. Then we start to obsess with these emotions. Because the truth is, after we start to slip down this slippery slope, we find ourselves being defined by our relationships, our acceptance, and these fake ROLES that we have manipulated and constructed. We are defined by how we feel other people see us, even if it is only our perception of how the actually view us. Worse, we never get to live our lives by the blueprint that has been customized just for us by the true Creator. Instead of full lives lived with purpose we live inside the lives of everyone else. We live for them, through them, and based on their emotions instead of with the purpose and destiny God designed for our lives.

It gets worse though, GULP. After a few years, we get really good at being “all things to all men” when really we are nothing to anyone but a fraud and a cheap imitation of who we should be. And so our cycle of fake relationships, half realities, and worshipping the idol of man pleasing takes over our life. We even justify it away as much as we are able to, in an effort to convince ourselves we are not people pleasers.

We end up even starting to forget who we are and can not identify our own selves in a line up. So how do we know when we have fallen to the idol of man pleasing? Ed Welch wrote a terrific book called “When People Are Big And God Is Small”. In this book he lists the symptoms of being a people pleaser:

1. You are dependent on others.
2. You crave compliments
3. You devalue yourself in order to get affirmation
4. You are afraid you will be exposed as an impostor
5. You spend disproportionate amounts of time managing your reputation
6. You are overly concerned with how you look
7. You focus on your self esteem, a lot
8. You feel under-appreciated, mostly because you desire affirmation
9. You always justify mistakes, make excuses, or shift blame because you can not handle the feeling of failure
10. You show favoritism to those who can help you and undervalue those who can not.
11. You can never say no.
12. You constantly find things to keep you busy because you are afraid you will not matter.
13. You are easily embarrassed
14. You constantly compare yourself with others. Feeling great when you perceive yourself to be better and awful when you do not feel you stack up.

But there is hope.

You can end the cycle today,  but it is not something that is going to be fixed overnight. It is not something you are going to be able to right all in one fatal swoop. Just like it has been a process to lose who you are, it is a process to find yourself again. Like all addictions, it starts with admitting we have a problem. Then, we must identify the things we know we have been created to do…and start chasing those passions. As we do that, we have to accept we won’t always be liked, and that is not just okay but very healthy for everyone to not be cool with us.  We have to start saying no to things that do not fit our life plan. We have to pray a lot that God will help us embrace our insecurity and allow for him to define us as who he created us to be.

Steven Pressfield writes in his life changing book, “The War Of Art”:

“Our job in this lifetime is not to shape ourselves into some ideal image we ought to be, but to find out who we already are and become it.”

So start your cycle today. Break free from the bondage of what everyone else is thinking of you and start to focus on what God thinks about you. The freedom you will develop out of this process will become the strength you need to distance yourself from the traps of always pleasing man. Find people who will love you no matter what, and build with them. You can do it, you have to do it!

Do you feel trapped in the “people pleasing” cycle?


 

Weekly Recapitulation

Each week I read a lot of blogs and consume a lot of media, and I want to centralize some of my favorite finds of the week and share them.  So I’m going to start doing a week in review, or a “weekly recapitulation” rather, of some cool stuff I’ve found online in the previous 7 days that fall under my primary blog topics of faith, life and culture. This will all be stuff that has inspired, challenged, encouraged or in some cases flat out entertained me this week, that i want to share with you. The goal is to do this over the weekend, but this one fell on Monday morning. Should be fun times. Here goes.

Faith

Proverbs: A Mini-Guide To Life by Timothy Keller

“In my regular, daily Bible reading over the past year I read through Proverbs 3, a passage I’ve studied and preached through many times. But during this reading, I realized that in verses 3 through 12 we have all the themes of the rest of the book, and therefore a kind of mini-guide to faithful living. There are five things that comprise a wise, godly life. They function both as means to becoming wise and godly as well as signs that you are growing into such a life.” – Timothy Keller

Motivated By Rank by Pete Wilson

“At some point I’ve got to come to grips with the fact that my identity is not based on what I earn, what I have, or where I rank.  At some point I have to realize this game is doing immense damage to my ultimate goal of Christ being formed in me.” – Pete Wilson

Life

Do You Need A Personal Board Of Advisors? by Jason Young

I loved this post and concept. I’ve been thinking a lot about personal goals and being much more intentional in my life, and this concept speaks directly to intentionally surrounding yourself with the right people to help you do life wisely. Love that.

Is It Worth It? by Kevin Deshazo

“I didn’t realize the how significant of an impact my job satisfaction had on my family.  Had no clue.  I want my son to understand that your job matters.  Not in the ways that the world thinks, but in terms of your impact.  I want him to find what he’s passionate about and do it.  He will be better for it.  His family will be better for it.  The world will be better for it.  If that means lower pay, fewer benefits and fewer job security, so be it.  Let everybody else be safe and miserable.” – Kevin Deshazo

Letters From A Devastated Artist part 3 by Randy Elrod

In part 3 of his series, Randy shares, with great emotion, his gratitude to a few friends who have been very instrumental in shaping his life and who he has become.  This is powerful and makes me think of the friends in my life who have played key roles in shaping who I have, and continue to, become.

Culture

Jamie Oliver’s Food Revolution

I watched this show Friday night and loved it!  The show was incredible and I hope it serves as a wake up call to people about what we’re putting in our bodies.  The whole health/fitness/nutrition thing has become a big focus for me this year, and I’m excited to see this show develop.

Robbie Seay BandMiracle

These guys released their new album “Miracle” this past week and it is instantly one of my favorite albums of the year.  The song “Awaken My Soul” makes me want to run a marathon, go skydiving or something!  I love this album and will be doing a blog about it very soon.  You can listen to it here, then buy it here.

Jonsi

The lead singer of Sigur Rós, Jónsi, is releasing his solo debut album April 6.  In the meantime, he has released four videos of him and Nico Muhly doing undressed versions of songs from the upcoming album. Jónsi’s voice sounds particularly delicate on its own, so he and Muhly stick to just piano, guitar, or ukulele for each song. The sessions were filmed at Bethnal Green Working Men’s Club in London. AMAZING!  Props to Stereogum for this!

Anything cool you’ve found online this past week that you’d like to share?


 
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