Holy Discontent

I finished Holy Discontent by Bill Hybels last night. A great read and very inspiring. I almost wish it wasn’t over just because I’m still searching, waiting for some direction and clarity when it comes to my own personal Passion Groove and Holy Discontent. Granted I don’t think Hybels is in anyway attempting to tell you what your own personal Holy Discontent or purpose or passion is – I think he’s just encouraging you to find it and dive into it and live it out in your life.
When I left off last time I believe I was just finishing the chapter on feeding your passion. Rather than running from those things that get our blood boiling or give us our passion, we should run straight towards them.
Rather than running away from Goliath, David said, “I’ve had enough! I’m not putting up with this guy putting my God down anymore! Someone has to do something! And if no one else will – I’ve had all I can stand and I can’t stands no more!” He then takes off with his sling and rock and confronts what he sees wrong with the world. God gives him an unbelievable courage and strength and he gets rid of the giant.
When we find our own passions we need to do the same. Live with and spend your time with the poor, the homeless, AIDS victims. Spend time with the lost. Whatever it is that you can’t stand – run towards it so your fire will burn brighter than ever.
Some other great thoughts from the book:

  • “If your holy discontent decides somewhere along the line to morph, my advice to you is to follow it.”
  • After going to a U2 concert, Hybels noted, “… just how devoted Bono is to his holy discontent. If I had to classify it, I’d call his cause dismantling apathy. He just can’t stand apathy!”
  • The number of times Scripture mentions God’s passionate concern fo the poor, the oppressed the windows, the orphans, those who are incarcerated, and those who have no voice is astounding!”
  • Hybels talks next on the idea of the fundamental state and normal state. “In the normal state, you’re almost entirely self-absorbed. You have a reactive approach to life. And you try to maintain the status quo… ‘When we accept the world as it is, we deny our ability to see something better, and hence our ability to be something better. We become what we behold.'”
  • “In the fundamental state, however, people care so much about getting results that they begin to move and breathe in a totally different realm. They operate with intentionality. They act with massive doses of enthusiasm and persistence. They surrender their ego because the cause simply can’t afford their pride. They open themselves up to any and all new ideas and forms of input – regardless of where those suggestions come from… Their creativity kicks up a notch. Their energy soars. Their passion swells.”
  • Hybels recalls the story of Bob and his wife who were living the typical American life when suddenly his church asked him and his wife to move to Australia for three years to work on church plants in the country. “You may want to take note: this is what chasing your holy discontent with all you’ve got can do to you. In the blink of an eye, it’s very possible that you too will wake up one day and find yourself relocated to a place I’ve started calling life’s ‘lunatic fringe,’ and the only thing crazier than the destination itself is how much you enjoy it once you’ve arrived.”
  • “The moral of the story is that a bad day lived from the energy of your holy discontent is far better than the best day lived anywhere else.” – I love that. I look forward to that and desire that.
  • “Speak up for those who cannot speak for themselves… Defend the rights of the poor and needy, uphold the rights of the oppressed and the destitute and rescue the poor and the helpless.”
  • “Part of what it means to operate in the fundamental state is that you care more about the results you want to create than about getting what you want.”
  • “Can you imagine what might happen in corporations and churches and families all over the world if we all got serious about becoming fundamental-state people?”
  • “Beg him (God) to pump you full of Spirit-inspired-holy-discontent-driven, refuse-to-be-shaken belief!”
  • “When you charge toward your holy discontent with boundless passion, optimism and energy, you become the very best kind of contagious!… Erwin McManus says that it is this context that true greatness gets unleashed.”
  • “Don’t forget that there’s a reason why you grew up the way you did. Why you’ve experienced what you have. Why you’ve traveled where you’ve been. And he is looking for someone just like you to start setting some things right in this world.”
  • Friends, in what other life are you going to go all out? We all have one shot and one shot only to leave a lasting legacy – a definitive mark on this world that reflects our decision to lean into, not away from, our areas of holy discontent.”
  • Finally I love this challenge, “We steward the only message on planet Earth that can give people what their hearts need most, which is hope.” It reminds me of Mark Batterson’s quote, “The greatest message demands the greatest marketing.” What and how are you going to get out and share that greatest message with the least of these? What drives you nuts to see in the world around you? What is it that you see that you know has to be made right? I’m still searching and praying for clarity on those things in my life. As you can probably tell by reading my blog, my heart is tugged in many number of ways and I’m trusting God to not only point me in the direction he wants me to go, but the direction he wants Laurie and I to go together. I ask that as you seek and search for your passion grove, pray that we find ours as well.

Journalist blogging

Teaching Journalism has an interesting comparison on journalists who blog.
They compare:

  • Bridget Gutierrez, who writes the blog Get Schooled for The Atlanta Journal-Constitution. Gutierrez covers K-12 education for the newspaper. Previously, she covered K-12 education for the San Antonio (Texas) Express-News
  • Jamie Gumbrecht, who writes the blog It’s All About for the Lexington (Ky.) Herald-Leader. Gumbrecht covers entertainment, media, performing arts, online trends and youth for the newspaper.

It’s a good write-up for journalists and bloggers. I’ve always been a fan of using blogging to extend the newsroom, extend thoughts from the story and to live-blog events that may not translate as well into print. Some of the most fun I had while writing for the paper and blogging was live-blogging city council workshops and budget hearings. There’s a lot of information that gets passed along that can’t always fit into a news story — it also makes for a fun read on the blog. If the money was there it would be fun to start doing that again on my own… hmmmm.

e-mail and presentations

Merlin Mann’s (at 43 Folders) presentation at Google over how to manage your e-mail has gotten more and more hype on the blogosphere. It’s based on a typical Get-Things-Done way of doing things. He basically says there are five actions to do with every e-mail….

  • Delete
  • Delegate
  • Respond
  • Defer
  • Do
Merlin says that if you limit yourself to those five actions for e-mail you can keep your inbox clean and really increase your productivity. I put some of these things in practice when I worked at the paper due to the number of e-mail lists and news releases I received but since I’ve been working for the county I’ve let it slide and now my e-mail inbox has become more like that pile of clothes that collects in the corner of the room. It started with a jacket and now there’s pants, shirts, socks etc.
I’m going to see if I can put these things back in place – especially with personal e-mails. Luckily I’m not at Google where employees are saying they get at least 500 e-mails a day just from within their company – not including all the e-mails they get from inside.

You can watch Merlin’s talk to Google here:

More information on Merlin’s plan, Inbox Zero can be found at inboxzero.com which links to Merlin’s series of blog posts about the process.

He also has his presentation online here which is another great topic for discussion.
He also has information on his blog about making presentations better.

Some of Merlin’s tips for better presentations include:

  • “Tell a story that makes the audience into the protagonist, then demonstrate how your approach to solving their problem will help them win in the end.”
  • Also, suck up your pride, and make yourself fill out Cliff’s Word template (available here) for telling your story
  • It’s quite simple: a PowerPoint presentation should have ten slides, last no more than twenty minutes, and contain no font smaller than thirty points.
  • I love the look of a very simple graphic alongside a very few words
  • Do a cold open
  • Work the notes field
  • Think: “Stephen Colbert”
  • <5th email just showed up>

  • Finish early – this may be one of my hardest things to do. I want to be sure I include every ounce of information possible so there are no questions at the end. But I may be giving way more information than I need to. Finish early and give everyone a chance to ask questions if they want/need to. Merlin says, “Running long not only says you weren’t properly prepared for the time you were allotted, it leaves no time for the best part of every presentation for me: the Q&A. I love interacting with the audience and getting a chance to apply all that hand-waving to real-world questions.”

Well that should give you some fun things to look at and consider over the weekend – how do you handle e-mails? What works best for you? Are you like some people I know who just check it and delete everything or are you more like my dad where it builds and builds and builds and builds and builds until it takes an hour everytime you check your email?
Also anyone out there have any good presentations tips they want to share? What works for you? How can you/we apply these things to say a small group meeting at church? Can we use these ideas for a small meeting at work or does it only work when you’re presenting to a group of 50 or more?