Chris Gribble

Be yourself - Everyone else is taken (Oscar Wilde)

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No. 4 – 9 Learnings of 9 Years of Brain Pickings

October 23, 2015 by Chris Gribble

Number Four connected with me the most. The rest are really good too.

4. Build pockets of stillness into your life. Meditate. Go for walks. Ride your bike going nowhere in particular. There is a creative purpose to daydreaming, even to boredom. The best ideas come to us when we stop actively trying to coax the muse into manifesting and let the fragments of experience float around our unconscious mind in order to click into new combinations. Without this essential stage of unconscious processing, the entire flow of the creative process is broken.

From 9 Learnings of 9 Years of Brain Pickings: Link

Filed Under: Going Deeper, Quotes

John Two – The first secret to beating the lie

October 23, 2015 by Chris Gribble

Laughter and fun is always an important part of the relationship between the Voice, the Breath and the Flesh. They regularly share the pleasure of life together. This is one of the first things that the lie attacks. The lie sometimes will give a pretence of enjoyment but it’s always short lived.

One of the first things that Jesus did with his friends was to go to a wedding together. Weddings are times of fun so this event was chosen by Jesus to demonstrate how the Voice, the Breath and the Flesh related to each other.

Weddings celebrate community specifically the potential of a new community that is a emerges from a marriage. Family is the always feeling the brunt of the lie. Divorce is one of the main examples of how much the lie can influence human behaviour.

When Jesus arrived at the wedding there was clearly something wrong. People were gathered in small groups and talking in quiet voices. It wasn’t the boisterous laughter that you normally expected in this setting.

Jesus mother knew her son was special. I don’t think she expected what was about to happen when she told her son that they had run out of wine. But, she told the waiters to do whatever her son told them to do.

I could see Jesus’ reluctance to solve this problem. It was early days in his ministry and he knew the lie would seek to take anything he did and twist it to add confusion to his task.

But, Jesus responded with compassion to the plight of the parents and his mother’s request. He looked around for something that would be big enough to hold the amount of wine needed to get through the wedding celebrations.

He saw to one side a number of water jars normally reserved for religious ceremonies and he told the servants to fill them with water. They didn’t question him and did as they were told. Then they took a cup of the water to the master of ceremonies.

I could see the surprise on his face when he tasted it. He couldn’t believe that they had kept the best wine for this part of the wedding. Somehow the water had changed into wine. It was that point in the proceedings when everyone had drunk enough to be not too fussy but Jesus created the best quality of wine.

There were only a few people who knew what had happened. Everyone knew that there was a problem with the wine but only a select few knew that Jesus had solved the problem.

It was often said that this was the first indication of who Jesus really was. It was just a taste of what was to come. As the next few years of our story unfolded together we were to see this confirmed more and more clearly.

This secret was only shown to a few people this time. Later it would be retold so that others might be able to understand the way that Jesus went about defeating the lie. For now it was enough for those people to continue enjoying the wedding and their time with Jesus.

Filed Under: Going Deeper, John's Gospel

There are two types of seeds in the …

October 22, 2015 by Chris Gribble

watering flowers in garden

“There are two types of seeds in the mind: those that create anger, fear, frustration, jealousy, hatred and those that create love, compassion, equanimity and joy. Spirituality is germination and sprouting of the second group and transforming the first group.”

Amit Ray

Filed Under: Going Deeper, Quotes

Whatever course you decide upon…

October 21, 2015 by Chris Gribble

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Whatever course you decide upon,
there is always someone to tell you that you are wrong.
There are always difficulties arising
which tempt you to believe that your critics are right.
To map out a course of action and follow it to an end requires courage.

~ Ralph Waldo Emerson
(American Poet, Lecturer and Essayist, 1803-1882) ~

Filed Under: Going Deeper, Quotes

My Version of John Chapter One

October 21, 2015 by Chris Gribble

Introduction to the Voice, Breath and Flesh

This story originates with a small community who each desired to express their creativity. This community is made up of, a Voice, Breath and Flesh. I am one example of that creative expression. There are many others that are too numerous to mention in this brief introduction. My life is a testimony to the desire of that first group to share their creativity with their creation.

The Voice, the Breath and the Flesh realised that by myself I can only dimly make out a sense of who they are. This image is distorted by a lie. This lie is spread throughout the world and influences everything in the world. The good news is that the lie always has to give way to the Voice, Breath and Flesh.

Creation once was a complete unity then it was divided. How this came about is complex but the Voice continued to talk to his creation. He never stopped speaking the truth even though the lie was believed by most people.

Before I was born the Voice, Breath and Flesh began a plan to make truth absolutely clear. This plan required the Flesh to live with his creation so that everyone could see the lie clearly. His presence focussed the differences between the truth and the lie. It became obvious that people believed either one or the other.

The preparations for the Flesh living with us were carefully planned out. A man called John was specially prepared from birth to ensure that everyone knew who the Flesh in person really was. He knew the entire history of the Voice speaking and how deceiving the lie could be.

John was not afraid to speak the truth. He was very clear about who the Flesh was and the Flesh’s relationship with the Voice and with the Breath. It clearly was a huge commitment by the Voice, Breath and Flesh to separate for this time so that their creation could get a first hand account of the truth.

The Lie and John Argue for the First Time

Some people didn’t like John’s account of what was happening between the Voice, Breath and Flesh. They didn’t like it because they knew it would disrupt the lie that they had become very comfortable with.

Their tactic was typical. They questioned John’s character. They asked if he was claiming to be the Flesh. I am sure that they thought if he made this claim it would be easy to debunk his message.

When that didn’t work they questioned what he was doing. John was baptising people and the lie didn’t like that either. In all this John was very clear about his purpose. Simply put he was there to make sure people were ready for the Flesh.

John and the Flesh Meet

While John was baptising people the Flesh approached him. It was Jesus, his cousin. But, John had no hesitation in declaring that Jesus was a part of Creation’s original community in person. John clearly stated that his purpose was to announce the arrival of the Flesh. It was a simple job that he performed faithfully.

Then amazingly John had a view of the rest of Creation’s community, a window into the heavens. The voice spoke to John and said that Jesus is the Flesh, a part of us, Voice and Breath.

The Flesh Creates His Community

Jesus began to gather people with him to form a new community. They were to get to know him intimately, The Flesh, but they knew his name, Jesus. From the outset they saw that Jesus clearly was an example of truth. He was not influenced in anyway by the lie.

The group started with some fishermen, Simon who became known as Peter, Philip, Nathanael and Andrew. They were all good men who were to travel closely with Jesus for the next few years.

Their travels would take them all around Israel and they would get to see the truth lived in many situations. Jesus told them from the outset that they would get the full picture of Creation’s intent. Through Jesus they would see what the Voice and the Breath and the Flesh were truly saying. They lived in a culture that was steeped in the lie but as they spent time with Jesus this would change.

Filed Under: Going Deeper, John's Gospel

We are at war with everything because we are at war with ourselves.

October 20, 2015 by Chris Gribble

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We are at war with everything because we are at war with ourselves. The war is in the world because the war is in our minds. We find peace only in the meditative moments of surrender from our violent minds. People around us are constantly under the scrutiny of dissecting judgements by others. We do not actually know other people; we only know our judgements. When we release people from our vicious minds, we grant them a small reprieve from a life of endless guardedness. Through meditation and surrender we can bring peace into the lives of others by sharing our safe emotional atmosphere. People love the freedom and space to simply be; it is treasured when given. There is nothing more spiritual than freedom. Zero control; that is true love. Real love is freedom.

Filed Under: Going Deeper, Quotes

Personal mentoring reflections – What’s it like to be mentored?

October 20, 2015 by Chris Gribble

Summary: This essay will be in two sections. In the first section I will reflect on my personal experience of mentoring with two significant mentors. The second section will review where my story intersects with the mentoring experience.  

My mentoring stories.

A mentor from young adulthood.

My first two careers after leaving school at age 15 were firstly completing a trade as a fitter and turner then completing my nursing studies. When working as a nurse I went through a personal spiritual experience and ended up in a small community in Emerald, Queensland. The community had a philosophy of work, study, tutorials and sharing life with people who had similar desires.

One of the most keenly anticipated parts of the experience was the regular tutorials. These were occasions when a community leader would meet individually with each student to check in with their progress and to listen to their concerns and ideas.

Initially it took a while to connect to my mentor. He was naturally a shy person that didn’t quickly disclose personal information. But, the relationship deepened as the first year progressed and we shared more experiences together and we began spending time with each other outside the formal tutorial arrangements.

Once my student days were completed the relationship continued. We became colleagues and then after a period of time I replaced him as Dean of the college. Over time the relationship matured and deepened to become a valued friendship. He was a person who demonstrated amazing humility in allowing me to lead the community that he founded.

Today I cannot remember many things that were said to me. But, I am deeply grateful for the time that he invested into me. As I emerged from my previous self destructive lifestyle I was impressed that he valued me enough to commit himself to my well being. Like most young people I was uncertain about myself and my capacities, I was still learning to develop relationships and I was still developing a sense of my vocation.

This relationship was instrumental in my choice of vocation for the next 25 years and his influence continues to shape me today. I saw that John made enormous personal sacrifices to mentor many young people. I knew he sacrificed personal career options to follow what he believed in. He served as a role model who lived out what he taught. He served as an inspiration to me of what happens when an ordinary person committed himself to a higher cause.

A current mentor.

My current mentor was for nearly three decades principal of a Bible College. I had observed him from a distance for more than a decade and felt a deep respect for his obvious humility and his evident personal warmth. During this first 10 years we didn’t connect one on one but I observed the way that he related to others and I valued his honesty and integrity.

I remember him stating clearly to a group of people that his one of his biggest failings during his tenure as Principal was the lack of leaders produced. He saw this as a huge deficiency in his own leadership. I admired his openness and my respect grew deeper at his frank admission. I saw him an an amazing leader who had brought his organisation through a radical transition from an extremely traditional college to a student centric, multimodal college, that enabled access to quality education to a huge geographical area.

We began communicating personally when I was completing my Masters in Online Education more than a decade ago. This was the early days of online learning and he asked me the whether online learning was an appropriate platform for ministry training and particularly spiritual formation. We shared many of my ideas that emerged from my studies and were percolating in those early days of online education.

After he retired Keith committed himself to mentoring leaders. He was widely sought after by a number of CEO’s of organisations and also large churches. He has often said that in retirement he actually found his vocation and felt more productive and fulfilled than in his previous role.

With some trepidation I approached Keith to ask if he would consider mentoring me. I wasn’t sure if he would consider me worthy of mentoring because of his popularity and because so many important people were mentored by him. When we began our mentoring relationship I was an honorary small church pastor who had started a part time business and had little to offer when compared to his many high profile mentees. However, he said that he would meet with me to see if we were a good fit.

We met and connected and five years on we have an ongoing relationship. He speaks with amazing clarity into my life. I continue to resonate with his wisdom and insight. I am pleasantly surprised that he sees the time that we spend together as worthwhile. Usually at the end of session he thanks me for my time.

Personal observations about my mentoring experiences.

I describe my life so far as fortunate. I have a  wonderful family, good friends,encouraging workmates and a great city to live in. I consider myself  a privileged person who has benefited from a lifelong education that has opened many possibilities.

In the midst of this I have sought to maintain connected to a range of mentors. My relationship with those people I call mentors is different to the many other positive relationships I have.

They have connected personally.

In the two key mentoring relationships I described in section one growing trust allowed me  to open areas of my life that previously I would be kept hidden. As the relationship has developed there is increased capacity to connect to each other’s deeper selves. The commitment my mentors demonstrated to our relationship created a space where a close personal relationship could ensue. They didn’t just see me in terms of my human capital but as a whole person that was valued for my intrinsic worth.

I was recently talking to another mentor who is very successful in business and academia.  I consider him as a mentor (even though we haven’t formalised the arrangement) and when nearly finished thanked him for his time. He smiled when I said how much I appreciated the chat knowing that I was of no economic benefit to him.  His said that quite simply it’s not about the money it’s about the people.Then he proceeded to spend another 10 minutes with me telling me stories of how he had invested in other people during his career. Spending time with people was his passion and I believe also a key ingredient of his success.

The mentors that I highly value know the worth of being able to waste time with someone. They are able to listen to my story attentively and because of this my story can explore nuances that are not available if they didn’t have the time to be attentive (Ref: Link). My experience of other helping professions such as psychologists and coaches is that the relationship is firstly transactional and based on a very specific time period. For example the psychologist has allotted a one hour session and it’s always acutely obvious that to go over that time will impinge on the next person’s time. I have observed that my  mentors have cleared the space in their schedule to allow for time to attend to the my story.

Mentors that have high levels of influence in my life have been willing to open themselves and connect their story with my story. Healthy development of the mentor/mentee relationship is dependent on this movement toward a deeper personal relationship as Casto et al. (2005), state, ‘‘successful mentoring requires a mutual commitment to time, open communication, clear yet flexible boundaries, and adjustment to new rules and roles as the mentee moves toward becoming a colleague’’ (p. 336).

I attribute the success of my relationship with my mentors to a growing meaningfulness that has developed into strong friendships. My review of the literature is that increased meaningfulness is to be expected in the final stages of a successful mentoring process, the relationship transforms into a more collegial, peer-like relationship (Kram 1983; Vance and Olson 1998; Morton-Cooper and Palmer 2000).

They have helped me to understand my story.

We develop stories to bring to our lives unity and purpose. They assist in bring context to life’s experiences.  My story is made up of the key actors, tensions that have arisen, resolutions or lack of resolution and hopes about the outcomes. My story is constantly evolving in light of new discoveries and new truths that come forward through different phases of my life. Generally when telling my story I am searching  to bring some resolution to the events that have come forward at that time. Over time my story has matured and emphasises different things to what I did in early adulthood.

A significant part of a mentoring relationship is in the storytelling. Most of our time spent together is not seeking to identify particular issues to work on but on telling the story about the journey so far. There is incredible insight sharing a reconstructed past and the anticipated future in the desire to ensure that there is a future hope (Ref: Link) .

In a mentoring relationship the mentor keeps  the mentee mindful of the journey by actively listening and contributing to the conversation. By listening to my story they enable me to make meaning of my journey. Keith always includes in a mentoring session a time on reflection on the key themes that he feels has emerged from our time together. I always appreciate this brief summary because it charts the journey as Keith as heard it and then is reflected back for me to hear the things that I have said.

My significant mentors have helped me to understand my place in the world. I want to know that I fit somewhere and they have helped me discover the unique value that I bring to the word. As Allen and Eby (in press) note, individuals possess a universal and fundamental “need to belong” (p. 399) (Ref:Link). My mentors have guided my understanding of where my story intersects with the rest of humanity’s story and then beyond that to an understanding of where it connects to a bigger spiritual story. This outside value has given increased meaning to the way that I see my current circumstances.

They served as role models.

I know that I have modelled myself on my mentors. This highlights my attraction to Athene’s activities in The Odyssey where role modeling is a central quality of mentoring. Athene provided Telemachus with a standard and style of behavior which he could understand and follow, this was done because Athene took on human form to communicate in a way that was understandable for Telemachus. Athene helps us comprehend that mentors need to make themselves available to mentee as role models and to understand how their modeling can stimulate perspective, style, and a sense of empowerment within the mentee (Ref: Link).

John was a shy retiring person who never wanted to be in the limelight. Yet, he was one of the most gifted and powerful teachers that I have sat under. I don’t remember tiring of his lectures even after a year of learning. He spent hours with me sharing his own methods and  insights into people and his own experience of dealing with the issues of community. Role models invest  time, know-how, and effort in enhancing another person’s growth, knowledge and skills’ (Shea 1999, 3).

John’s teaching style heavily influenced my early teaching approach. His was a well structured, thoughtful approach with no hype but a solid logic. Today I recognise that he could have included more emotion however he contributed much to my current teaching practice. I recognise that sometimes I am the other extreme of having too much emotion so this early modelling served to moderate my style.

Keith is a significant leader in a church denomination. His influence has spread well beyond his assigned role as college principal. He earned his authority through his generous humility, innovative style and obvious care for others. There are few people that I have met that have such a powerful presence that is based on transparent modesty.

His leadership approach has significantly shaped my own understanding of leadership and particularly the concept of servant leadership. This phrase was coined by Robert K. Greenleaf in The Servant as leader, an essay that he first published in 1970. In that essay, Greenleaf said:

“The servant-leader is servant first… It begins with the natural feeling that one wants to serve, to serve first. Then conscious choice brings one to aspire to lead. That person is sharply different from one who is leader first, perhaps because of the need to assuage an unusual power drive or to acquire material possessions…The leader-first and the servant-first are two extreme types. Between them there are shadings and blends that are part of the infinite variety of human nature”.

A servant-leader focuses primarily on the growth and well-being of people and the communities to which they belong. I believe that this describes Keith well. He has served as  a leader and mentor because he first chose to serve. He brings a people first approach to leadership demonstrates his commitment first to culture that then enables successful strategy to be developed.

Concluding Reflections

I recognise that the two chosen mentors are both leaders but extreme introverts. I often wonder why I am attracted to these mentor qualities? I think I chose them initially because I saw that I lacked strengths that they had. In the MERID model (Figure One) they both belong in the non-directive, reactive spaces. I tend to be directive and reactive in my approach so I think that I gravitated to the strengths in their styles in an attempt to mitigate my own weaknesses.

MERID

Figure One – MERID model

As I reflect on the what things have mattered to me in the way that I have been mentored I realise that they are things that I have implemented in my relationships with others. I am discovering that as I am getting older there are an increasing number of mentoring type relationships emerging. I haven’t always set out to deliberately mentor some people but as the relationship develops and takes on a higher level of commitment this becomes an appropriate word to use.  

Further reflection on my mentoring relationships evokes a deep sense of personal satisfaction from these relationships. I have been fortunate to have discovered positive role models, people who have been willing to waste time with me and people who have shared the journey over a period of time and for these qualities and behaviours I call them mentors. The label mentor assigns a sense of commitment to the relationship that implies the depth and character of the mentor bring mentoring qualities.

The notion of transition is inherent to the concept of mentoring and may be seen as a change or growth in personal capability, position or some other area of achievement (Clutterbuck and Lane 2004).

References

Casto, C., Caldwell, C., & Salazar, C. F. (2005). Creating mentoring relationships between female faculty and students in counselor education: Guidelines for potential mentees and mentors. Journal of Counseling & Development, 83, 331336.

Gagne, F. M., & Lydon, J. E. (2003). Identification and the commitment shift: Accounting for gender differences in relationship illusions.

Personality & Social Psychology Bulletin, 29, 907–919.

Clutterbuck, D., & Lane, G. (2004). The situational mentor: an international review of competences and capabilities in mentoring. Gower Publishing, Ltd.

Kram, K. E. (1983). Phases of the mentor relationship. Academy of Management journal, 26(4), 608-625.

Morton-Cooper, A., & Palmer, A. (2000). Mentoring, preceptorship and clinical supervision. Nurse Education Today, 20, 418-421.

Vance, Connie, and Roberta K. Olson. The mentor connection in nursing. Springer Publishing Company, 1998.

 

Filed Under: Going Deeper, Mentoring

Live your life with purpose.

October 19, 2015 by Chris Gribble

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“Live your life with purpose. Focus on your blessings, not your misfortunes. Focus on your strengths, not your weaknesses. Be yourself and don’t wait for the approval of others. But most importantly, have a positive and humble mindset no matter what situation you are in. Count your blessings, not your problems, and you will realize how beautiful your life truly is.”

Troy Amdahl

Filed Under: Going Deeper, Quotes

Hope – the key to making an idea work.

October 18, 2015 by Chris Gribble

Both optimists and pessimists contribute to society. The optimist invents the airplane, the pessimist the parachute.
George Bernard Shaw

When hope smiles

When hope smiles,
“Possible” is not a winsome regret,
It’s an opportunity,
That opens with a new day,
With the sunrise smiling back at me.

When hope smiles,
“Work” is not a drudgery,
It’s creativity,
Born from a Creator,
Well done his voice says to me.
(Chris Gribble)

I wrote this poem when considering the importance of hope in my own life. Two key thoughts for me centred around the words possibility and creativity. Both of these emerge from the idea that “work” is an intrinsically good thing.

Despair is the antithesis to hope. Despair also is the voice of regret and drudgery. Hope makes possibilities possible and reimagines work as a creative expression of who we are. When we lose our way in our work then it can become life draining instead of life giving.

Hope is an important ingredient in making ideas work. Professor Martin Seligam is considered an authority on optimism – In his findings he describes some of the differences between optimists and pessimists.

For example he writes about the differences in how the two mindsets view setbacks. The pessimist globalises the setback while the optimist limits it to the one event.Then in the case when something goes right the pessimist will say that it’s a once off event while the optimists believes that it will continue.

The resilient person views a setback as something that can be changed in the future.

Creative, possibilities – Well done. This is the voice of hope.

“When hope smiles…”, possibility emerges.

Filed Under: 5 Minute Inspirations, Discovering Potential, Going Deeper

A Franciscan Blessing

October 18, 2015 by Chris Gribble

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A Franciscan Blessing:

May God bless you with discomfort,
at easy answers, half-truths,
and superficial relationships …
so that you may live
deep within your heart.

May God bless you with anger
at injustice, oppression,
and exploitation of people,
so that you may work for
justice, freedom and peace.

May God bless you with tears,
to shed for those who suffer pain,
rejection, hunger and war,
so that you may reach out your hand
to comfort them and
to turn their pain to joy.

And may God bless you
with enough foolishness
to believe that you can
make a difference in the world,
so that you can do
what others claim cannot be done
to bring justice and kindness
to all our children and the poor.

– Amen

Filed Under: Going Deeper, Quotes

To laugh often and much…

October 17, 2015 by Chris Gribble

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“To laugh often and much; to win the respect of intelligent people and the affection of children; to earn the appreciation of honest critics and endure the betrayal of false friends; to appreciate beauty; to find the best in others; to leave the world a bit better, whether by a healthy child, a garden patch or a redeemed social condition; to know that even one life has breathed easier because you have lived. This is to have succeeded.”

Ralph Waldo Emerson

Filed Under: Going Deeper, Quotes

I tell you this…

October 16, 2015 by Chris Gribble

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I tell you this
to break your heart,
by which I mean only
that it break open and never close again
to the rest of the world.
—Mary Oliver, Lead

Filed Under: Going Deeper, Quotes

C.S. Lewis – Love anything …..

October 16, 2015 by Chris Gribble

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“Love anything and your heart will be wrung and possibly broken. If you want to make sure of keeping it intact, you must give it to no one, not even an animal. Wrap it carefully round with hobbies and little luxuries; avoid all entanglements. Lock it up safe in the casket or coffin of your selfishness. But in that casket, safe, dark, motionless, airless, it will change. It will not be broken; it will become unbreakable, impenetrable, irredeemable. To love is to be vulnerable.”
~ C. S Lewis

Filed Under: 5 Minute Inspirations, Going Deeper, Quotes

It is not the strongest of the species that survives…

October 15, 2015 by Chris Gribble

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“It is not the strongest of the species that survives, nor the most intelligent that survives. It is the one that is the most adaptable to change.”

Filed Under: Going Deeper, Quotes

So many people stay stuck…

October 15, 2015 by Chris Gribble

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“So many people stay stuck in a horrible or unloving relationship for the sad sake they are afraid of change and afraid of being alone. It takes courage to stand alone; it takes strength. Loveless relationships only hurt people. Move on. Happiness is in our mind and in our soul, and is to be shared with those who deserve us — not ones who disrespect and hurt us. Make good decisions. Make it work or make an exit. Don’t live in misery.”

 

 

Filed Under: Going Deeper, Quotes

Having new eyes

October 15, 2015 by Chris Gribble

The voyage of discovery lies not in seeking new vistas but in having new eyes.
— Proust

A settled restlessness

A tightening surge rises from within,
Uncertainty, fearfully, remembering,
Breaks the imagined calm,
Too much, too fast, too soon,
Restlessness breaks in on every task.

Serenity is imagined from my soul’s mind,
Hopefully, trusting, relearning,
Reality is almost in sight,
Rest, slow down, wait,
A settling transforms whatever comes today.

(Chris Gribble)

There is plenty of evidence to suggest that turning up each day for work is a daily stressful event for many people. I know that there are some days where I feel that tightening inside. As a recovering workaholic, with a reasonably recent episode of burnout I sometimes still feel that anxious feeling rising inside.

I know that I have felt the restlessness that seeks to break in on my creativity. It starts when I begin flicking through emails rather than sticking to one task. Somedays when there’s a lot on I feel like the pace is starting to threaten me again and it breaks through the fragile calm. I move to restless activity that breaks in on everything creative that I attempt to do.

But, I have recently been reading Rachel Remen’s work on how to rediscover meaning in what we do. She points to three questions: What surprised me today? What touched my heart today? and, What inspired me today? This simple 15 minute daily task can bring amazing results in the lives of those who practice it regularly. I have been doing a, “Daily Examen” with similar set of questions.

In the second stanza of “A settled restlessness”, I wrote the words,“Rest, slow down, wait”. As I was choosing those words I felt that they were the antidote to, “Too much, too fast, too soon”. Serenity imagined, from that place deep within, changes the nature of my activity.

As Rachel Remen says, sometimes we need to change our way of seeing things to be able to grasp the meaning of our activity. Meaning is what brings satisfaction and fulfillment, the “settling that transforms whatever comes”.

Filed Under: Going Deeper

Daily Examen

October 15, 2015 by Chris Gribble

Question One – Where did I see God today?

I took time to spend time with God first thing in the morning. It was good. A listened to the Psalms and wrote about them.

Question Two – What am I thankful for today?

I am thankful for rest. Then creativity. For people. To be able to work in a team.

God’s provision.

Question Three – What did I feel today?

I felt good about the day. There was time to get everything done that needed to get done.

Question Four – How do I feel about tomorrow?

I haven’t planned tomorrow but it looks positive. There are good things happening that I want to be a part of.

Filed Under: Daily Examen, Going Deeper

What does it take…

October 14, 2015 by Chris Gribble

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What does it take
To begin again
To share life
To love deeply
To celebrate joy
To embrace today
To live hopefully?

Perhaps the courage
To let be
What was always intended to be.

Filed Under: Going Deeper, Quotes

Don’t worry about what people think of you.

October 14, 2015 by Chris Gribble

Don’t worry about what people think of you. Of course you want to feel accepted and loved, and of course it hurts when people misunderstand us, betray us and reject us. But, so many of our problems begin when we start worrying what others think of us. Just remember that everyone is on a different level of understanding. Try to believe that when someone is hard on you it may have very little to do with you at all. People who are hard on others are usually very hard on themselves, and the pain they inflict on others is a reflection of the pain they inflict on themselves. But even knowing this does not make it easy.

Filed Under: Going Deeper, Quotes

Perspective

October 14, 2015 by Chris Gribble

Perspective

The mountain is,
The interminable climb,
Tired muscles, painful breaths,
To get to the top.
Or,
It’s the awesome view,
The soul renewing outlook,
That was waiting to be reached.

Most mornings my wife and I go for a walk. We are fortunate enough to live near the edge of the Toowoomba range so we are given a beautiful context in which to do this. I wrote this poem after seeing a particularly glorious sunrise during this walk.

While we walk we talk. Mostly we talk about people – Our kids, our wider family and our friends are the usual topics. Each day the conversation starts again. Most of the time our talk is a celebration of the good things in our life. Sometimes disappointments come up but they usually don’t take too much of our time.

We try to take a long walk. The minimum time we like is an hour. The gift of this amount of time is that we tend to run out of words. This isn’t the silence because of conflict but the sound of two people being content just to be with each other.

What I find is the walk gives me perspective on the day ahead. Work is about people, relationships, hopes and ideas. It’s also about the things that have to be done. Sometimes work can be the climb, the tiredness and the pain. Or, sometimes there is the opportunity to take a rest and appreciate the view.

Two questions I have been asking myself lately are:

  1. Is there time to walk?
  2. What is my perspective of the mountain?

Filed Under: Going Deeper, Self improvement, Spirituality

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Chris and April – Destiny Rescue

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