Archive of "Leadership" Category
A reason for Church
Why a post about Church?
Recently a friend and collaborator Harry Jarrett Jr.posted his thoughts about why he likes a denomination my wife and I have been members of for the past several years. Although our historical family tradition is Mennonite, and we both went to Mennonite Highschools CD and LMH, but, I have not been actively involved in the Mennonite church as a larger denomination/network or agency until recently.
A brief backstory.
As a family, my spouse and I have worked in the space of evangelical mega-church, after which we spent half of our adult life not going to a formal church, but started a home group called Livingroom during our recovery from Church. After some major life transitions we become active member/participants in a local congregation where we have found support and friendship for our journey and a space to belong to God’s Body, the Church, even I don’t “fit in”, (in the more traditional sense of the word).
The reality of the work I have been invited to participate in would not be possible with out the connection to the Church and it’s agencies.
Being Church Again.
Here is how I have participated with this denomination called Mennonite Church USA
I was invited into leadership development relationships through Franconia Conference and given oppertunities to apply my ideas and experience through leading seminars and speaking.
Later, I was invited to apply experience and learning for a missional experiment through Doyelstown Mennonite Church called
This past year I have listened and shared thoughts on a Transformational Team through Eastern Mennonite Seminary where I am continuing my adult learning in Leadership from an Anabaptist perspective to graduate in 2012 with a M.A.
In 2013 I will be apart of implementing innovative ideas for an interactive experience through media/tech at Mennonite Church USA Convention in Pheonix Arizona.
Possible Reasons for Church
A gift this network of people, churches, agencies and higher learning.
Relationship with a broader community of faith acting out of a narrative of peacemaking and reconciliation in our world. This has transformed my understanding of self, others and mission. I have become a player in a theatrical story taking place in our world for the work of God, where people with out food, share a meal with people who live in abundance. I can invision what Jesus talks about in the gospel being repurposed through an actual Church in a where society has removed themselves from the system of doing church on a large scale. I imagine from my own experience this is due to the amount of corruption, and injustice done in the name of God, Jesus, Crusades where ”Jesus”, “God” are used for personal/political gain.
I can imagine an actual body of work over the past 1500 + years of being Church reconciled in our local communities and global society where acts of violence/injustice are actively confronted through practices of resiliency and peacemaking from a broader perspective of faith. This is due to the STAR program I participated in last year on a hilltop in scenic Harrisonburg Va. through Strategies for Trauma and Resiliency . Recently a Nobel Peace Prize winner winner was a graduate of this institution and applied her leaning from the Center for Justice and Peacemaking to her context in Africa.
The greatest part of being apart of Church, is the sense of participating in the narrative of God’s love in our world that confronts our own fears and inabilities to understand others on a healthy and functional human level. This grand story in scripture and live out through history, be it unreconcilable at times, invits us to particpate in practical ways in our relationships with self, family and friends. Our indavidual story has the chance of getting caught up in the epic journey of holistic spiritual transformation in order to actualize a self that can make a mutual benifit in society. I have witnessed the results and outcomes in my relationship with my spouse, daughter, extended family, community, colleagues, and a cohorts of learners.
What is your expeirence with Church?
In what ways are you making meaning out of Church?
What are your reasons for or against Church?
Entrepreneurism Understood
Recently after speaking on digital media and the cultural revolution we are undergoing at this present moment I was faced with the fears of many who approached me for conversation. There was an embedded assumption that I had an answer for them, when I have more questions, because I am apart of the same cultural revolution. I am going through my own transformation and change daily. I long to have the slightest bit of control over my present circumstance. The reality I see for the rest of my life with be charting a path based solely on my values and conviction from a narrative I lived and a community of relationships I am living within. This vision for my future is most present in my work as a consultant with leaders in business, ministry and community.
When I listen to people who identify with my process, they seem to identify with being understood, heard and named for the good within them. They may have been poorly branded in their current market for social engagement and business development. They seem to be attracted to a process of uncovering their unique voice in their world. The irony of my experience has been found in the identity development process of a discovery phase with my clients. The irony is found in my own leadership journey as an Entrepreneur co-founding my first enterprise at the age of 27th and then founding my second venture in December of 2010. The path I chose in my mid 20′s lead me into a wilderness of doubt and fear. I could not see myself through the trees of every day challenges of leading relationship development and process oriented structured services. There were opportunities I never planed for that revealed them self as I walked down the causeways of my mind and grocery isles at the whole foods markets where I spent a considerable amount of time doing market research and listening to customers for my first business venture.
During the listening I began to hear stories of customers who were longing for an experience beyond purchasing a product. What emerged was a desire for story to connect and belong. The story we all long for is one that gives us hope in our daily life as we seek to make meaning out of the mandain and painful. Entreprenurism gives the adventurous a chance to risk their name and future through creating solutions and products for human interaction. This process of naming a vision based on values is spiritual in the way a person or group of people are invited to imagine what may come through their venture. This allows the others who will join the company or organization a story to be apart of. This is a theological act of some sort, forcing us to uncover what we think or don’t think about God. This is when the questions lead us down a path and process toward illumination of what was and what is to come.
The entrepreneurial journey is a desirable path to an outside observer, because it looks like the person pioneering gets to do what they want. This perspective is over simplified, because of the lack of a contextual reality. Most entrepreneur in today’s market of individualism and immediate success recognizes their limitations of moving a system forward or toward transformation for something new to emerge. They have to be surrounded by and embedded with in a community or culture which values their strength to the collective vision for the future.
As I face the beginning of my second year as a “new” entrepreneur, one who has decided to live and work in this way to create culture and community. I find myself with more time for my family, friendships, and community. I have time to study and learn, speak and share. The goal of this venture is to create a culture of flourishing, where people associated with us, find themselves wrapped up in the never ending story of hope that find us all.
Responsability for Personality
My personality is like this quote from Joe E. Lewis, “you only live once, but if you work it right, once is enough…”
Responsibility denotes ones own ability to accept, absorb and learn from their decisions. This often takes place when a person finds themselves at a “crossroads” in life. A traumatic incident may have taken place, for example, a death of a loved one or loss of job. These incidents evoke a stress response in the neurological system, causing systemic results in the mind, body and spirit. As the person goes through the transformational process of full acceptance of ones own behavior or situation in life, they become responsible for their personality. (This could take years, decades, a life time or never at all.)
Here is my perspective:
People in western Society don’t like reality. The acceptance of who they are, because we are really good at developing extensions of ourselves. Ie, business, blogging, inventions etc. Our extensions allow us to analyse and distract us from the core of who we are. The real problem facing the world today. We can be all connected virtually at any moment, and yet we have digressed in our own understanding of our responsibilities. We can live in alternative realities of what it means to be human, male, female, black, white, successful, etc.
We tend to accept the illusion that we are above culture, that somehow our understanding of ourself comes from a higher power. As someone who’s worldview and belief system is shaped by my identity in a Anabaptist/Mennonite faith tradition. I do believe in a higher power (God), however, in my work with Christians, I am finding an unwillingness to accept our own limitations, as well as possibilities for greatness. (The word greatness needs work, I am not able to go into for this blog post.)
For example: I have notice this from my own personal development and work with organizations and individuals. There is a tendency to slip into the comfortable understanding of self as just made up from the values of our culture. This is just one small example: Our culture values what we buy, because our broader society values the consumptions of goods and services. Therefor, my identity becomes shaped by where I shop, who I support financially etc. This is not wrong, but it does not make up the some of all our parts a citizens of the world, in our own particular tribe, family and business. This can be found in where we live, the church we go to, the places we shop, and the name on our bank account.
My suggestion is we all take small steps toward responsibility for our personality. We must stop thinking we can change the world and start believing we can be apart of the greatest transformation to ever happen in human civilization. I am talking about the illumination of all mankind. That we are all connected and who I am, what I do actually matters. It does, just look at your neighbor, or the person who washes the dishes at the restaurant you frequent.
Over time, a long period of time, individually and collectively we can have a reorientation of character. We can be transformed by the renewing of our minds – scripture.
Here is the question:
How are you oriented right now and what are small steps you can take to reorient toward responsibility today?
According to wikipedia‘s definition of Character Orientation:
Receptive Orientation: People who are passive.
What are you asking from someone that you can be responsible for?
What can you do right now to become responsible?
Hoarding Orientation: People collect and keep stuff they don’t need
What are things you do not use you can get rid of this week?
Marketing Orientation: Who are you trying to sell?
To take a step today, I would suggest asking the question:
What/Who am I investing in?
This blog was inspired by my investment in my own personal understanding and responsibility for decisions and outcomes I find less desirable. We all have a shadow mine tends to be narcissistic, impulsive, unfocused, rebellious, undisciplined, possessive, manic, self destructive, and restless. This is true, just ask my wife or colleges over the past 10 years. However, with that said I have a radical belief that we are living in and out of a story. My story is not over, but it has meant taking responsibility for my personality. Understanding my strengths, my unique contribution to my wife, daughter, family, friends, colleges, partners, congregation, community and world.
Perspective From a Year In Transition
Recently, I saw a post on facebook from a friend who said, “feeling in transition.” There was part of me felt sorrow and part of me felt excitement for this person.
If you are feeling in transition this post is for you. Welcome to the new normal, welcome to the new way of being in this world. Where we can finally face some of the the lies which we inherited like “security” and “wealth” and flip them on their heads with a radical simplicity. A hope in something more than the individualistic, consumer, American “dream”, which has failed us all.
To understand failure and its power of transformation, I believe one needs to fail their expectations and live in spite of fear. The driving theme in our human narrative is the fear of death. Overcoming our greatest fears, is a process of living well.
“What do you do?” is in my estimation the toughest question for a person in transition.
May I suggest a better question for people in transition, “What are you learning?”
Here is what I am learning:
1. We need new metrics of success. (Money, power, fame will not work in this new world we are living in, where the curator of information and the promoter of others, becomes the new CEO, because last I heard the salaries aren’t that good
2. We need community more than we need commodities. (When I use the word community think of this analogy. An alcoholic steps into a room and this persons friend hands them a diet coke while entering a party. Community empowers the person, it does not enable destruction.)
3. There is are new social spaces emerging. (We have the white noise of social space vibrating our phones and filling our minds with activity. But People who make real face to face human contact happen, will yield the new currency.)
4. Empathy can take the lead in the “new economy”. (I am biased, I have a passion for faith communities specifically the tribe I belong too. The reason the congregation can lead is they can design mission around people projects, not buildings and salaries.)
5. At the end of my life, I will be thankful for this year. (I am overjoyed with a thankfulness to the people who have allowed me to commit and share with. Each week I become affirmed in my faith as a way of life, not just a belief.)
One year ago I stepped away from a company I co-founded with my father, wife and a couple friends. I did this to reclaim my life and it’s purpose. I did this to integrate a life lived on mission with my wife who is my greatest partner and friend. I did this, because I have a daughter and if I hope for her to live in a way that is abundant and meaningful than, I better start living with intention.
Step 1 – I went back to school to finish a degree in leadership.
Why did I go to Eastern Mennonite Seminary?
The Anabaptist Mennonite narrative is my grounding story. They are my faith community and were instrumental in bringing me back to life. I hope to ultimately work with leaders in activating their God given dreams for this world on the mission of reconciliation and transformation.
Step 2 – We started a “company” Why?
This time we designed it a little differently by founding a Talent Collective. I have a gift and I want to share it with amazing people, companies and organizations. There are better ways to work and www.myohai.com is just one of them.
Step 3 – We named and joined a movement
There are 1000′s of movements all around us, I recommend naming one or joining one you identify with. I connect and collaborate with www.ohipeople.com and www.anabaptistnetwork.org.
In the past year I have had the opportunity to share my gift with inspiring people doing amazing work in business, NPO’s, community development and churches.
Thank you for all those who have given me oppertunities and encouragement over the past year.
Ambassadors of Reconciliation
In order to be ambassadors of reconciliation, bearing witness to the gospel of Christ’s love in our world. We learn how to release control of the message, in order to become the message of hope through reconciliation. No longer seeing ourselves as the privileged holder of power over “other”, we gain the ability to listen and share our convictions through a conversation.
When we sit down at a table with a person unlike us, we are engaging in the work of reconciliation. If we dare to break bread and share a meal, we may find ourselves in the midst of transformation. Similar to the early followers of Jesus in Rome or Corinth, pre Christendom. Before the empire held the church to the center of society and Christians settled into the comfort of an earthly kingdom. At the time after Jesus’ death when followers were opening their homes to passers by, on their way to the city. The message of Jesus was shared during a meal, in a home or in the market place.
The call we hear from Paul in the scripture today, is to be proud, in verse 12, of the people who are persuading others to live a radical lives of following Jesus through the mission of reconciliation. Here we see the church as the message of reconciliation to the people of Corinth. Christ’s love is the compelling impulse in life to act out radical faith with others in our neighborhood.
We may hear this radical call, that God is all ready reconciling the world to himself in Christ, not counting peoples sins against themselves in verse 19. (pause) And yet we live in a world where horrific acts of injustice, violence, and corruption are done. We may ask, how could there be a God, let alone a reconciling Christ when these things take place. May I suggest it is precisely in these moments when we hear the call to be present in a place where we are ambassadors of reconciliation?
(BREATH)
Recently, I had the opportunity to serve alongside Jenifer for 3 evenings of coffee and conversation in Souderton. These took place in a coffee shop in Souderton during the season of Lent. During the conversations with people in the neighborhood we discussed issues of faith from the themes of the Sermon on the Mount. This sermon is when Jesus calls his followers to see the kingdom of God in an upside down reality. Where those who mourn are comforted and those who are meek inherit the earth in Matthew 5.
It was in these moments I witnessed an ambassador of reconciliation in a Post-Christian society. Where Jenifer set the table of intimacy and vulnerability through a posture of compassion to the others in the room. Trusting the spirit of Christ in all of us, she invited the other’s to share around broken places in their lives and this community.
Then four weeks ago I had the opportunity to witness Jenifer again creating hospitality through her presence in a block party in down town Souderton. Where a group of radical followers of Jesus had the audacity to believe celebrating a town was in and of itself a generous act of hope. Where over 1000 neighbors jumped on blow up kids games, broke bread with hotdogs, shared the cup with rootbeer floats and sat down at the table during a local concert and art show.
Someone asked me after the event, called Celebrate Souderton; the block Party. Did you have a message? Perplexed by the simplicity of this question I said no… Unsatisfied with my answer I was reminded by Jenifer that the event was the message. That simply being present, offering a gift, and our best art is an expression of our faith in a reconciling Christ through the people of God.
What I see in Jenifer Erikson Morales, is a follower of Jesus much like the one Paul is asking the listener to be proud of for their visible acts of reconciliation when no one is watching and no one is paying for their service. I see a willingness to move from the center to the margins of society where the people with out a voice are given space to be heard. For example the work she does with local mothers in her neighborhood.
At this time in society when churches are realizing they may have lost their prophetic voice due to the shift in the way people perceive Christianity. We have a leader emerging with a deep trust in the one who’s name is Jesus, the one who invited his early followers to walk with him from town to town, until he enter the city of power, where his message threatened the very system of control. Calling people to follow Christ, so that they may have life, reconciled with God now and forever more.
I see Jennifer as a leader in the Post-Christendom church when we begin to rediscover hope- a vision of what society will be like when the kingdom is fully present-and advocate on behalf of those who are oppressed by the current system.
“A church that knows it can no longer control how history will turn out, what people believe, or how they behave can revert to its original calling to bear witness to the gospel.” Stuart Murray
Visceral Hope
In spite of a tragedy locally with the violent murder of a 9 year old girl. The madness of a narrative where violence to justify violence through the murder of the perpetrator begins to release through the air waves. I find myself surprised by hope. My hope is found in an ever convincing thought that we live into a story we follow, believe and tell. In relationship with people on a professional level, I spend great amounts of time listening to their fears, problems on concerns. If they don’t have fear, I will usually ask questions that evoke their great fears. What I have found is there are two predominant social narratives taking place in our time, one of fear that leads to isolation, an isolation that leads to a greater sense of hopelessness and ultimately a great separation or what C.S Lewis calls, “The Great Divorce.”
Lately, in the Christian thought community found through online media platforms like twitter and blogs, people have been getting excited about the possibility of heresy. A word used to describe people who do not toe a particular orthodox line of thought or belief in the more evangelical stream of Christianity. There is a lot of fear in the christian community. All though I am a “member” in tradition and heritage, I often find a lot of the stories, being followed believed and told. Unchristian from a kingdom perspective. This perspective is represented well through the teachings of Jesus in the Gospels as well as modern day theologians like N.T Wright and pastors like Greg Boyd. There is a kingdom reality to our life, a space of trans-formative justice where the kingdoms, powers of our world are turned upside down.
There is a place where a table can be physically made in the midst’s of suffering and great loss. where a community is invited to eat, a prepared meal is shared by the host and the hosted. This is the kingdom message/story I hear in my imagination. The one that is called out of many people from different perspectives and world views.
This week after the horrific news of a murder of the girl in my town. I found myself protesting the narratives coming through news outlets and the broader community. People naturally wanting to keep their kids off the street and lock their doors, so that the violence will not happen again. Although, I can sympathise with the response and any emotion felt is a necessary part of a grieving community. However, I would like to suggest an idea that the merely locking of ones door and becoming more vigilant, like a recent facebook post said, “I believe taking the community back means we all become responsible gun carriers,” is the wrong action to take and will not accomplish a shared desire to make the community a safer place to live, play and ultimately belong. I would like to suggest this will actually have the opposite effect in our community.
This belief is not only grounded in a restorative narrative of Christ’s kingdom through the gospels, it is also grounded in leading restorative justice research and practice. My belief based on the stories I follow and share is that we prepare a table for the other, the one we do not know, the one who scares us. We sit down, we break bread and we listen. We listen to the great terror in our minds, hearts and body’s. We then invite the other to wash their hands. As they lean forward to wash we offer a towel. As they begin to dry off their hands we hold out some bread. When they break the bread, we offer them a cup to drink.
My Process of Transition
My last post I explained the Journey Andrea and I have been on of following our dreams and creating a path in the wilderness of transition. Remembering the good seems to be apart of designing a better future, so its time to share some of the amazing people I have worked with and the projects I have worked on in the last couple months.
The first project I worked on was a brand development and fundraising campaign with C.L.I.A India in the late summer and early fall of 2010. In January of 2010 I had the privilege of going to India and visiting this amazing organization and ministry. Working with a team for CLIA allowed me to use my gifts developed through 3.5 years of work with One Village Coffee building their brand and business partnerships. I continue to use my experience to help NGO’s, ministries develop their brand voice and strategic narrative for organizational growth. My father owns and operates One Village Coffee to this day with the other founding members.
Another project was with a consulting group, where our team went through a process of assessment with the leadership for brand and business development. This was the first project with my new role with MyOhai LLC and even though we did not get to complete the full scope of the project we were hoping for, the organization implemented our suggestions in their communications strategy/brand development. We learned how to work effectively as a team through this project. We also learned about some of our limitations and developed better process’s for future clients.
The following project was a grant submition for a brand/product development of STAR (Strategies for Trauma Awareness and Resiliency). This is an amazing opportunity to create a scalable product of resources to pastors and congregations after a trauma or disaster hits a city. I will be going through the STAR process on April 11h-15th at Eastern Mennonite University in Harrisonburg VA. We will find out about the grant in September of 2011.
There have been oppertunities to speak about social media and how it is shaping the way people connect and communicate. There have been several opportunities to meet with non profit, ministry and business leaders and help them work through their fears to create a helpful strategy for their desired outcomes. I love being apart of transformation and innovation. My way of helping looks like this:
1. Listening
(There are real issues keeping leaders and organizations from using tools or creating strategies that could help them reach their goals.)
2. Uncovering a mark/message
(Every person and organizaiton has something unique about them. It is usually found in what has got them to the point they are at now and can be used in creating the platform for the future.)
3. Idea creation (ideation)
4. Strategic development
5. Activating the strategy or dream (I love this part of the process)
6. Reflecting on what went well and would could go better for the future process.
Celebrate The Small Things
For the past five month my wife and I have been on a journey to live our life as a fullfillment of a calling. The word calling is weighted and has a lot of meaning, so I will explain what that means to me.
I have not used the word “calling” in my vocabulary till recently, due to the many meanings it has had in my life. It used to mean to me that there was this specific job, role, task I was meant to do or person I was meant to be. Now calling is more about the fullfillment of a longing that ecompasses both my intellectual, spiritual and emotional understanding of myself in the world. I fullfill my calling primarly in the small things, like doing dishes, laundry and spending time with Andrea, my wife, June my daughter and the relationship extenstion that keep me grounded.
I need grounding in my life, because I am a dreamer and impulsive. Expressing myself as a whole person in family and society comes with its challenges. Number one challenge in my life is developing a carreer, profession or the word I like to use: vocation. The word vocation takes into account the small things I do every day to fullfill my calling. I have a deep longing to be a husband, father and worker. A person who serves God in the profession of helping people live their calling through their business, ministry and work.
Five months ago Andrea and I went a way to a small house in New Jersey to find clearity on how we would live out our longings as parents and workers the upcoming year. After seeking counsel from wise leaders who know our passion, hopes and dreams we started a talent cohort to do our work together in community with people who have gifts outside our capacity. This provides a level of accountability and a structure to work with small business leaders, Ministries, and Non Profits.
Andrea and I failed at our first effort of working together. Largely because of my ego and in ability to take her lead where she is strong. Thankfully the business we helped start continues to this day and it doing well. Removing ourselves from structures that did not support our strength was our first step in developing our vocation and fulfilling our calling. We have just begun and it is a challenge and rewarding in our personal relationship. There are many different opportunities we have because of this decision, but it has meant letting go of the american dream of owning home, property and stuff. We are privilege to even get to decide that we will “sacrifice” those dreams for a more holistic dream of living our calling.
How do you celebrate your way of life?
How do you understand your way of being in this world?
A Spark in the Revolution
I have spent most of my professional life trying on different identities to see which one fit. In the process I was a youth pastor, musician, delivery driver, summer camp director, philanthropic intern and social entrepreneur. Only since my recent decent into the freelance/consulting world have I found out what I have to offer that is good for others. It is a spark in the revolution.
The revolution is the leveling of the playing field. People want to offer their best to the world and they are tired of being told to wait until the powers that be are ready for them to serve. This is heard in the global voice of young educated leaders in Egypt who used social networks to organize, communicate and create change in their country. This revolution is taking place in the market space of philanthropy, social entrepreneurship and and it is even taking place in and around the American evangelical faith communities.
This can be witnessed in the rise of tribes who support the release of a new book by Rob Bell. This can also be viewed as a grand marketing platform which get’s an organic trending topic on twitter and thousands of comments on blog posts. I think of it as a sign of what people of faith want. They want to bring their “calling” to the for front of the way they live. Not in a dogmatic or forced way. They want to be liberated and able to lead with their whole heart.
As a recovering Evangelical I found myself liberated in my 20′s by the ability to enter into the questions people like Rob Bell, Brian McLaren and now early Anabaptist voices through class’s and Eastern Mennonite Seminary. The historical narrative of faith expressions connecting people to the teachings and way of Jesus is and will always be transformational. The fact is we do not “know” intellectually as we once thought we did and this scares a lot of people. It is easy to sell Certainty, people want to know if they are in or if they are out. If it is not as simple as hitting a “like” button on my computer I may loose interest a leave your church for my television or go to a golf course.
As a person who has just emerged from many years wrestling with my identity as a “christian” and how I live and work in the world. Recently I have started working with local leaders on a faith experiment this has helped shape the way I feel I best serve the needs of my local community. I am both a leader and a listener. I am listening to the passions of leaders in and around the church and I am leading by creating platforms for people to collaborate and bring their inner desires to the community.
We have asked the question of what it would like like to work together with other faith communities, business leaders and artists for the common good of a community. We do this through collaboration and generosity. You can learn more about the emerging platform for generosity at Open Hand Initiative.
Lead Us
After a day spent with church leaders in the Anabaptist context I have hope for how the church might engage people now and in the future. Clearly it can not be the same show, because the audience has become fragmented. The message I heard today from a young leader in Pittsburgh is that people want to be challenged. There is a need for communities of faith to call people to a life of discipline and transformation. This message will go against the heavily influenced western individualistic mindset of, “I want it now”.
In my recent life, career, and spiritual mentoring I have found it difficult to tell that very loud voice of individual idealism to “shut up and simmer down”. “You had your 20 plus years to speak now it’s somebody else’s turn,” I want to say to that little boy whom struggles to grow into this 31 year old mind, soul and body. Maybe I like to keep fighting against the forces of nature, because I think suffering is Divine. However, causing pain in another persons life because of my own inabilities or limitations is more than I can bear at times.
My mentor recently told me, “your gift to an organization or person is small and significant.” He calls what I bring to his business and leadership, “rocket fuel”. I love it when he talks to me about what he sees, because all I see at times like this is confusion and chaos. Constantly questioning past decision to make sure I didn’t screw up… But wait a minute if who I am in the world is a starter, then most of my effort will go un noticed and there will be many pieces left to complete. This is where leaders are important and why I believe every can lead. Leadership comes from our internal desire to live in a way that fits our personality and unique style.
Ever since I worked in the church out of college my view of leadership has been changing. The minute I started listening and stopped leading the young people through speaking to them, things started to move and people started to connect. They were responding to their own words reinterpreted to them through my mind and each other. Now there are times I think what is going on is because of me, and that is when I get out of sink with the team, because what I am is a molecule on the body that makes up the organization and the people leading create the future. With out leaders there is nothing for me to do, but wait, listen and wait.
My favorite way of being in the world is through leading in my activating, futuristic, and catalytic ways. This has happened several times through out my life. Most recently with a group of people who have started organizing here.
