Tuesday, December 26, 2006

The Real Reason to Work Hard by Tiffany Morrissette

I played basketball as a kid. I was always good enough to make the teams but not good enough to get much playing time. So the highlight of my basketball “career” was the warm-up time before the games..you know, when all the players get in two lines; one line is shooting lay ups and the other line is getting the rebound and passing to the next shooter. I remember running as fast as I could, jumping as high as I could, and trying my darndest to make those lay ups..and to make ‘em look good!    
   
And why? Because there was a crowd there, that’s why!    
   
Every day, practice was drills, scrimmages, and sweat in an empty gym. But when game day rolled around, there were people, spectators, parents, teachers     ..and girls!    
   
Attention is powerful. When somebody’s watching, we tend to give it our best. But the opposite is equally true; when nobody’s watching, we tend to slack off.      
   
So how do you get yourself “fired up” on the job when you’re ‘just part of the machine’; when no one seems to know what you do, whether you do it really great or just get by.      
   
I found my answer in a quote from a really bright guy named Os Guinness. He says “We live our lives before an audience of One!” And that one is our Heavenly Father. He cares immensely about you. He knows every thing you do, every ounce of extra effort you put in as well as every shortcut you take. He never turns His head to look the other way. He never goes on vacation, so the idea of “the cat’s away, so the mice will play” just doesn’t cut it. He’s always in the audience smiling, pulling for you, watching what you do and how you do it.    
   
Imagine if there was a real live “God-Cam” installed in your office, in the break room, in the employee cafeteria. We’d be working pretty hard and focused on doing it right, wouldn’t we!    
   
Well, there is a “God-Cam” in your office. There’s also one in the break room, in your car, at the restaurant where you have lunch, and over your computer where you access the Internet. Your “audience of One” is always tuned in, watching, pulling for you to make good choices, and wincing in pain when you don’t.    
   
So the next time you think no one cares about the job you do, remember that you have an audience. A very important audience who’s there with you and for you in everything you do. That audience is One. THE ONE! Make Him smile.  
   
   
A WORK PRAYER    
Lord, I know that You see all that I do, but sometimes it is easy to forget that. As I work today, help me to remember that I should be working for You, not just because You’re watching, but out of love for You.  Amen.
  
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Sunday, December 24, 2006

Never let the shadow of failure block the sunlight of success. – Charles Haddon Spurgeon
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Thursday, December 21, 2006

Do You Believe It? by Gretchen Runkle

Whenever you hear me ask you, “Do you believe it?” you may be interested to know that that phrase

has a very special meaning to me.

Many years ago I was struggling with feelings of hopelessness and helplessness. I felt as though I

was pretty much “less than” everyone else around me.

I was also struggling with prayer during that time. I had experienced the power of prayer in my life in

the past, as Jesus has worked truly miracles in my life and my family, but with my feelings of “less

than,” somehow I felt as though my small prayers for simple things weren’t important enough to

bother Jesus with. “He had lots of more important things to focus on than my small prayers,” I

thought.

Yet, one of my favorite old, worn-out T-shirts is one that has an amazing picture of Jesus with a little

girl in His lap. She is whispering in his ear and He is listening attentively. The caption under the

picture reads “No prayer is too small.”

I never really told Jesus in prayer the way I felt about my “small prayers.” But those feelings were

always there somewhere….on the sidelines of my prayers. And Jesus can definitely read between

the lines. He knows us more intimately than we know ourselves, and He knows what we need before

we ask Him.

One day as I was wearing that T-shirt, going about my daily activities, I happened to look in the mirror

and began admiring the picture. I looked at the stroke lines of Jesus’ hair that the artist had painted,

the care that the artist had taken in the details of Jesus. I thought about how much admiration and

love the artist had put into his portrait and studied it for several minutes. As I looked closer, my eyes

finally fell on the words “No prayer is too small.” and just as those words registered in my mind, in my

thoughts came an almost audible question that spoke gently and firmly to my heart “Do you believe

it?”

It was a direct and poignant question that came into my thoughts separate from my own, and I knew

that it was Jesus asking me. That was it…. “Do you believe it?” That’s all He needed to say. His

question seemed to be suspended in time. It is like all things stopped for His voice in my heart. He

was present with me,…in that moment,…specifically to ask me that question. And He was there for

the answer….waiting…. It could almost have been as if I was the little girl in His lap at that moment

and that was the question He responded with…waiting for the answer.

His question stirred my heart, inspired and challenged me, as it reminded me of His complete interest

in all aspects of my life, every little thought, fear, errand, challenge, surprise, success, dream,

frustration, celebration, great laugh, kitten hug, weight gain, business decision, thank you,

operation, concern with my family, need for our home, birth, death, you name it….everything in my life

is important to Him. He wants to DO LIFE with me!

And…Do I believe it? Do I really believe it?

I have yet to hear God’s audible voice, as some of my friends have mentioned that they have. But I

have heard His voice that is audible to my heart, my soul and my spirit. And, as Jesus says in the

Bible, Follow Him…. So that means if I believe it, then I should put my belief into action. Prayer… Believing

that I can take all things to Him in prayer, and then doing it. That would be the essence of following

Him. He’s not too big for my smallest of prayers, and…by the way…He’s big enough for my hardest

questions, too.

So when you hear me ask you “Do you believe it?” you’ll know that that loving challenge has a very

special place in my heart, and that, yes, those words are GOSPEL to me! I may challenge you from

time to time with those words, as Jesus has challenged me. …When we believe something we do

truly put our belief into action.

Believing does take work… We have to work on believing something. We have to BUILD belief in our

hearts. It takes commitment to build on a belief.

Jesus has turned my self image and life perceptions around, especially with regards to any feelings of

“less than” others around me. It is important to Him that I understand how much incredible value that

I have to Him and to others, too. I am no less and no more than anyone else around me. He has

given me a new life and a new hope for each new day.

His changes in me didn’t happen overnight, just as those negative feelings didn’t develop in me

overnight. But He continues to work with me and daily He BUILDS with me. Someday we’ll see

what completed work He has been working. We’re not done yet!

May He continue to challenge me with those words, as with daily activities and life I tend to need

often reminding. And He knows that. He’s got me covered, because we’re Doing Life Together!

How about you? What do you believe?

GOD BLESS YOU ALL!

 

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Wednesday, December 13, 2006

Cherish your visions and dreams as they are the children of your soul, the blueprints of your ultimate achievements. – Napoleon Hill
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Sunday, December 10, 2006

One hundred percent of the shots you don’t take, don’t go in. – Wayne Gretzky
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Wednesday, December 6, 2006

QUIT Your Way to the Top

Quit complaining! 
 
Quit blaming the past for your present! 
 
Quit making excuses! 

Quit procrastinating! 
 
Quit blaming others if things don’t turn out right! 

 
Quit being close-minded! 
 
Quit doubting yourself! 
 
Quit being afraid! 
 
Quit saying If only ! 
 
Quit basing your life on what other people say or think! 

Quit refusing to get up after a fall! 

Who ever said a quitter can’t win? 
 
You just need to choose what to quit on and 
 
NEVER QUIT ON THE BASIC ESSENTIALS FOR SUCCESS IN LIFE
….. 
  Whatever they may be for you…
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Monday, December 4, 2006

In order to win, you must expect to win. – Richard Bach
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Saturday, December 2, 2006

Eliminate the DE-Motivators in Your Life, courtesy of Michelle Hill

There are four demotivators common to all of us, which we must overcome to attain our goals.

The first demotivator is the fear of losing our security. We are so afraid of losing the security we have, that we won’t give it up to get the greater security we seek. I truly believe that there is no such thing as security other than the security we build within ourselves. We are only secure to the extent of our ability to cope with the struggle called living, and we cannot be more secure than our capabilities of handling insecurity allow us to be.

This means we have to give up what we have, to get what we want. If we refuse to give up anything, where will the space, time, money, and energy for new achievements come from?

The second demotivator is fear of failure. How many times have you refused to try something, because you were afraid you’d fail? Isn’t it sad how many of us doom ourselves to mediocre lives rather than accept the momentary rejections that success demands?

We must challenge our fears, and conquer each fear forever. Soon, you will find that every time you conquer a fear, the easier it will be to beat the next one. Remember: Do what you fear most and you will control that fear.

The third demotivator is self-doubt. When we’re gripped by negative conviction, we believe everything we do will be wrong. When you’re thinking like this it is likely that everything we do fails, and ultimately, we fail.

Instead of looking at what you did wrong, look at what you did right. Keep an up attitude, overcome rejection and keep trying.

Soon, you’ll start to win. The wins will start to pile up until they smother all self-doubts under a mountain of positive conviction.

The fourth demotivator is the pain of change. We resist change because it means that part of our old self must die, and a self that is unknown to us, is born. We mourn the loss of the familiar as we labor through the birth of the new.

To overcome this attitude, we should make a habit of trying new things when we don’t have to, so we can keep the best of the old in our lives as a strong emotional foundation. Remember, there is an element of pain in all change, but those you put into motion yourself are far less painful than ones thrown at you by others.

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Reach high, for stars lie hidden in your soul. Dream deep, for every dream precedes the goal. – Pamela Vaull Starr
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