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Leadership

Thoughts and insights on how to be a better leader.

From Burden to Benefit

By Leadership, Preaching
Having recently turned 50, I've set a goal of running at least one 10k during my 50th year - which ends on November 6, 2020. Although I'm in generally good health (or at least I think so), my wife and I followed wise advice and found a training program that progresses from not running at all to finishing a 10k. Following additional wise counsel, we each purchased a good pair of running shoes. So far, so good. But having a training program and a pair of running shoes does not make you a runner. Running makes you a runner. Although I was excited to start training for a 10k, I'll also admit to not enjoying the first few training sessions. My knees would agree - they didn't find it too enjoyable either. But after a few weeks of sticking with it, something interesting happened: I found myself looking forward to…
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Starting an UnSelfie Movement

By Leadership
In 2013, the Oxford English Dictionary added the word “selfie” to its official list of words. It was a linguistic recognition of a cultural trend that had been growing for several years -- and one that hasn't slowed down since. Nearly all smartphones come equipped with front and rear-facing cameras. In between actual phone calls (who does that anymore), you can flip around your camera and snap a few selfies. With so many pictures being taken, it shouldn't be surprising that many of them turn out bad. Here's one of me at Casa Bonita, a Denver landmark not known for its quality of food but for cliff divers and people in gorilla suits. It was also featured in episodes of South Park and Diners, Drive-Ins, and Dives (literally for its dives). Don't worry, I never held a hot plate - I had other things to worry about ... like the…
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Spiritual Health is Connected to Physical Health

By Leadership
According to the news, those of us who are privileged to live in Douglas County live in the healthiest county in the state of Colorado. Nearly every day, I see someone walking, running, riding a bike. Here's a tip: If you see me running, do me a favor and don’t call an ambulance. Call the police: I’m probably being chased. Rather than give workout tips, I'm more interested in the spiritual benefits of taking care of our physical bodies through exercise, good diet, and rest. Here's why: Our physical health and spiritual health are connected. We tend to think of our physical bodies as separate from our spiritual identity. How does God see things? In his eyes, they are connected. In a modern world, we may be tempted to see ourselves as simply machines. We certainly have machine-like qualities such as the ability to do math in our heads and…
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Self-Care as Stewardship

By Leadership
Stewardship. To some, it's largely a religious word -- and often attached to money. Outside of finances, our culture doesn't talk much about the idea of stewardship. That's unfortunate. Why? Because it's a matter of two perspectives: Stewardship and ownership. Ownership is simple: If I own something, it belongs to me and not to you (unless we're co-owners). As the owner, I'm free to do whatever I want with it. Ownership can breed entitlement. This is mine, I bought it, you can't have it. Stewardship, on the other hand, is about managing someone else's resources. These resources -- or blessings -- have been given to me and I'm responsible for managing them well. For me, self-care is a matter of stewardship. I have been entrusted with one life. As much as I often think otherwise, my life is not my own. It is a gift, albeit a complex, often confusing…
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Ordinary Walking

By Leadership
My wife and I spent part of her fall break this year at the Great Sand Dunes National Park near Alamosa, CO. They are the tallest sand dunes in all of North America and they’re in Colorado! Some of the dunes are over 700 feet tall. The entire dune field itself is 30 square miles. From the base of the dunes, it's hard to tell which peaks are the tallest because of how far back they set. We picked a ridge lined with hikers and set out for what we believed to be the tallest dune. It wasn't. Not even close. It might have been the second tallest dune - still quite an accomplishment for someone about to turn fifty. Imagine walking up a steep incline made entirely of sand. But once you make it to the top, the view was worth every step. Later that day we went to…
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