Friday, May 26, 2017

Forgiveness- Experiencing Freedom



I’ve been hurt. I’ve been broken. I’ve been belittled. I’ve been cheated on. I’ve been manipulated. I’ve been emotionally abused. I know what it’s like to be taken advantage of. I know what it feels like to be disappointed. I know what it’s like to hold a grudge. 

I have many stories of resentment, but I also know what it’s like to forgive. Here’s one of those stories. 

I was a very active kid. A diagnosis of ADD would have certainly been true had I been tested. School was very difficult for me early on. I couldn’t focus or sit still. My parents were concerned about me and got me involved with different sports such as soccer, baseball, swimming lessons, wrestling, and Taekwondo, hoping I’d come to control myself. All these activities I quit after a few years doing them. My parents still jokingly remind me of a time I was playing in a baseball game and standing in the outfield bored out of my mind waiting for a ball to get hit to me. I would toss my glove up in the air and catch it as a way to distract from my boredom. I just couldn’t stand still in one place. One time I got so bored I remember picking some grass on the field and decided to put it on my head like I had green hair. At least it gave me something to do!

There is one sport that kept me attentive though: basketball. It was a high-paced game that involved strategy, endurance, speed, quickness, strength, flexibility and teamwork. Since I was a young boy I had been highly involved with basketball. I was a slasher and got the majority of my points driving to the basket and off fast breaks. My dad involved me with a team of kids my age, and we grew up together as really close friends. We won over 80% of our games and earned first place in many tournaments. My dad used to display the championship trophies in his classroom, and I loved going in there to look at them. My dad would take us to high school games to watch the older players. Watching the athletes dominate their competition, we were inspired for our own future. We often talked about how cool it would be to warm up to the band playing and hear our names called during the starting lineups. We had a goal that we would win the state championship when we were seniors.

When we got into middle school we were excited to represent our school. When it came time for team selections, however, two of our players were brought up to varsity. The rest of us stayed on the JV. This was very difficult to accept at first. We were so successful together, and we believed our team should’ve stayed together. The separation of teammates initially brought anger and jealousy amongst many of us JV players. Nevertheless, we accepted our roles and played the game that we loved. By having two of our teammates go up to varsity it gave the rest of us incentive to step up our game. I focused solely on basketball that year and got better and better. At the end of the season I won team MVP honors. The following year we would all be together again and win many games. 

When freshman year came along, we once again focused on our future goal of winning a state championship. My freshman year we were all placed on the C-squad, and we won many games. That year I won MVP honors again, and I began to envision myself playing college ball. 

During our sophomore year we were once again split up. It was a repeat, as two of our teammates were brought up to varsity and the rest of us were placed on JV. The anger of the split fired me up once again, and I worked my butt off to improve my game. I won team MVP for the third time in four years. I held on to the hope that during my junior and senior years I was going to be on varsity, and I intended to continue my improvement and be the leader on my team. I went to many camps that summer and practiced my offensive moves and defense every day. My friends would come over to my house to play games like 21, hot-shot, bump, 2-on-2 and 3-on-3. I constantly sought out competition from other players. Junior year came and more of us were called up to varsity. I received very little playing time, and was given the option of swinging to the JV for three quarters so I could get playing time. I accepted, and helped lead a younger group to a winning record. When senior year came I was expecting to be a starter. After the teams were announced the coach called me into his office. He told me I was the 7th man in the rotation, and he said he only played six players consistently, yet he still expected me to be cheering on the bench. Hearing this shattered me, but I knew I could prove him wrong. During practices I competed with the starting guards. I made sure the coaches saw that not only was I a better player but I was a fierce competitor. Nevertheless, when the first game of the season came, I played only four minutes. After another game of limited play, I decided I no longer wanted to be part of a team that didn’t respect me as a basketball player. I told the coaches I was done and turned in my uniform. 

I went on to play intramural college ball, though it wasn’t the same passion I had in high school. It took me a long time to get over the resentment I held towards my high school coach and the players that took my place. The thoughts of betrayal made me extremely bitter, and I was angry for many years. Like before, this anger drove me to respond, and I put my focus on the development of my younger brother, who had watched me play during my middle school and high school years. He became my crutch of the hurt I experienced in high school. He became a tremendous player and he was very successful in high school, leading his team to the playoffs, making the All-Area and All-League teams. He was offered several sports scholarship from various colleges in the Pacific Northwest. I basked in his glory, yet ten years after my heartbreak I still held a grudge.

After my brother’s basketball season was over I knew that I could no longer hold on to this resentment. In a way, this resentment had positive effects on my brother’s personal growth. It led me to passionately work with him on his game and gave him an opportunity to develop as a skilled player. Twelve years his senior, he had to constantly compete and improve his game against me. Within me, however, this resentment was unhealthy, unproductive, and kept me bound to the past. Finally, I decided to let it go and forgive my coach and those two players. The relief I felt was incredible. I finally felt free from a ten-year burden. 

Forgiveness is the Doorway to Freedom

“Life is an adventure in forgiveness.” Journalist and author Norman Cousins 

Everybody has their own story of hurt, and everybody at one point or another has had to deal with feelings of anger and resentment. These bitter feelings always lead to one thing: bondage. This prison holds us to the past traumatic experience(s) we want to forget and move on from. Yet these prison bars are hard to break through.

Forgiveness is essential to experience a life of freedom, love, and peace. In order to forgive you must go beyond the ego which seeks justice and revenge. You must go deeper within yourself, below the layers of the ego, to the part of yourself that calls for freedom, the part that is connected to love and spirit. Once you have found this place of inner being you have already initiated the healing process and are on your way to freedom. As Christian author Lewis B. Smedes says, “To forgive is to set a prisoner free and discover that the prisoner was you.”

How to Forgive Someone Who Has Hurt You

The healing process takes time, but there are a few things you can do to speed up the process of recovery. 

      1.) Give up on hope of a better past. This was a profound statement when I first came across it. How easy it is to relive our past hurtful experiences and imagine a rewrite of the ending. This irrational imagery creates a false hope that leads nowhere. Accept the reality of the hurtful event and move on.
          2.) Be present. After suffering through a 4-month depression, the one thing that helped me forgive was being present. By focusing on the here and NOW you center your mind on what is, not a story that has already happened that you are recreating in your head. Be here now in the present.
      3.) Choose to be kind over being right. You were served an injustice, horrible and undeserved. It wasn’t right and it wasn’t kind. But as Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. declared to the injustices of the system, “Darkness cannot drive out darkness; only light can do that. Hate cannot drive out hate; only love can do that.” Don’t reproduce that which hurt you. Instead, spread kindness.
4      4.) Stop playing the victim. Stop looking for occasions to be offended- that’s easy. It’s also very wounding. There is no justice in further wounding yourself. In fact, you only further open the wound. Transcend the victim mentality, and instead focus on what will make you stronger.
5    5.) Send love to those who have hurt you. Did somebody do something that irritated you? Send them love. Did somebody really hurt your spirits? Send them love. Reach beyond the ego and access that part of yourself that is connected to all things and all people.
      6.) Forgive them not for their sake but yours. Initially, we may think forgiveness is letting the abuser off. It’s quite the contrary. Instead, you are allowing yourself to let go of all those hurtful feelings you’ve held onto.
      7.) Acknowledge that we are all humans doing the best we can with our present awareness and resources we’re given. All of us have developed a certain level of awareness and given a certain number of resources to be used at any given time. We are human. Acknowledge that the person who has hurt you may have been given a lower level awareness and fewer resources. They acted upon what they have been given.
      8.) Utilize this time as a growing experience. All experiences in life, good or bad, can grow us. Seek the opportunity to grow from your hurt. Hurt oftentimes breeds the greatest growth experiences.
      9.) Be like water. As Bruce Lee once said, “Empty your mind, be formless. Shapeless, like water.” Don’t attach to one past moment or you’ll drown in the incessant waves. Ride with the ever-changing waves.
      10.) Remember: time always heals. For me it took ten years, an unnecessarily long time. But time finally led to my healing. You may reopen that wound over and over, but eventually there will come a day when you will finally be able to move on and embrace life again.  
If you feel in bondage from a past hurt or experience, forgiveness may be your doorway to freedom. Grow this center, and experience a liberty like you’ve never experienced before.

Forgiveness Quotes:

I can have peace of mind only when I forgive rather than judge.
Gerald Jampolsky

There is no love without forgiveness, and there is no forgiveness without love.
Bryant McGill

The weak can never forgive. Forgiveness is the attribute of the strong.
Mahatma Gandhi

Darkness cannot drive out darkness; only light can do that. Hate cannot drive out hate; only love can do that.
Martin Luther King, Jr.

The heart of a mother is a deep abyss at the bottom of which you will always find forgiveness.
Honore de Balzac

Forgiveness is not always easy. At times, it feels more painful than the wound we suffered, to forgive the one that inflicted it. And yet, there is no peace without forgiveness.
Marianne Williamson

Forgiveness says you are given another chance to make a new beginning.
Desmond Tutu

When you forgive, you in no way change the past- but you sure do change the future.
Bernard Meltzer

Never forget the three powerful resources you always have available to you: love, prayer, and forgiveness.
H. Jackson Brown, Jr.

It’s one of the greatest gifts you can give yourself, to forgive. Forgive everybody.
Maya Angelou

To err is human; to forgive, divine.
Alexander Pope

We think that forgiveness is weakness, but it’s absolutely not; it takes a very strong person to forgive.
T.D. Jakes

To forgive is to set a prisoner free and discover that the prisoner was you.
Lewis B. Smedes

Forgiveness is the fragrance that the violet sheds on the heel that has crushed it.
Mark Twain

Life is an adventure in forgiveness.
Norman Cousins

Thursday, May 18, 2017

Contentment- A Philosophy of Living




Here are two personal stories where I learned contentment:

Living in a Mansion
In August of 2008 my family moved to Castle Rock, Washington. I was born and raised in Yelm, about an hour and a half northeast of Castle Rock. We had a small one-story home in Yelm, built sometime in the early 20th century. My great-grandparents had lived there. So had my grandparents. It was where my mother was raised. It was where I was raised as well. The original home was tiny, and we added on additional rooms as the years went on. To modern standards, our Yelm home was lower-middle class.
When we moved to Castle Rock, we moved into a 6-bedroom, 4 ½ bathroom, 5000+ square foot home. It was on 16 acres overlooking Mt. St. Helens with a trout pond, fenced-in garden, indoor gym, and beautiful landscaping. It was worth well over a million dollars. When my grandma first saw the house she was overwhelmed, calling it an “English mansion.” Indeed for those who visited us, they saw the same thing. In the initial move we felt we had moved up on the social scale. Our overall happiness made a brief jump before landing back to the same feeling of contentment we had before we moved homes. Our house was bigger. Our house was better. Our contentedness stayed the same.

Happy Boy in Africa
In July of 2009 I went on a study-abroad trip to South Africa for a month. The second week we worked with Habitat for Humanity building homes for less fortunate families in the township of Mfuleni. In between work times, we had tea breaks. During these breaks several of us volunteers spent time playing with the kids. Being a basketball fan, I remember making a basketball hoop out of wire for the kids and creating a ball out of paper trash. The kids loved it! Despite all the playing, I was so surprised to see the happiness of these kids. They had very little. They barely had enough food to put on the table. Their shelters were poorly built. The townships were very high in violent crime. Yet, these kids were happy. There was one 12-year boy who stood out to me because of his smile. The following poem I wrote during this time when I was working in the township.

The little township boy
About 12 years of age
Poor, yet rich in so many ways.
He smiles as often as the rising sun,
His teeth as healthy as a rich man’s wallet.
What was it about this boy
Who smiles so sincere?
He lives in a township
Nothing to brag.
The mischief is haunting
Day by day.
Yet the boy keeps on smiling
A shield in the face of deprivation
As if there was no trouble
No crying, no holdbacks.
My heart is out.
I will never forget.

Both of the stories above describe major lessons I learned in contentment. The first story my family and I experienced a major upgrade from our previous life in Yelm. It was certainly much better, yet we soon realized the truth that money can’t buy happiness. The second story further magnified that truth. The young township boy had no money. His surroundings were beyond poor and dangerous. Yet this boy smiled in the company of us wealthier volunteers. He didn’t ask for money. He didn’t ask for food. He simply smiled in the face of deprivation. 

What is Contentment?

Contentment is a state of happiness and satisfaction. Other words to describe contentment are gratification, fulfillment and pleasure. Simply, contentment is being happy with your life.
The way to contentment is misunderstood by many. The driving understanding is this: if I get x, THEN I will be happy. When we do get to x, we experience but a short-lived contentment. We come to realize that when we finally get THERE, there’s still a little farther to go before we’re fully content. We are met with a dead end. 

It’s a paradox: the more we get, the more we want. 

Let me give you a visual of two different paths to contentment. Imagine two balloons, one red and one blue. The red balloon is a typical balloon. The blue balloon is the same balloon but it has little holes poked through it. Now imagine trying to blow up those balloons. The red balloon blows up relatively quickly and with little effort. The blue balloon, however, has a different result. No matter how much effort you exert, no matter how much air you breathe, you will NEVER be able to blow up that balloon. The red balloon blew up to its potential; the blue balloon failed in all its effort.
The holes in the blue balloon represent the holes of greed. Let’s use an example. We desperately want that new car. We’ve thought about it for years. When the time comes to finally buy the car, you don’t hesitate. Soon you are driving your dream car! You drive it around town, you show all your friends, and you bask in the pride of reaching your dream. Then suddenly you notice somebody driving with a fancier car than yours. Soon, your feeling of satisfaction recedes and you’re wondering about upgrading your car. You decide to install a new speaker system. It sounds rad! As you’re driving down the street blasting the bass a car drives past you and blasts its own powerful noise via exhaust. You soon want one for yourself. So you work tirelessly to make enough money to buy that new exhaust. You continue installing things as you think about new upgrades. You pile up debt. You then tell yourself: as soon as I can pay off my debt, THEN I will be happy. The cycle continues for much of your life. You feel more and more trapped and contentment seems farther and farther away.
Indian leader Mahatma Gandhi said, “Man falls from the pursuit of the ideal of plan living and high thinking the moment he wants to multiply his daily wants. Man’s happiness really lies in contentment.” Alfred Nobel says, “Contentment is the only real wealth.” Stoic Greek philosopher Epictetus declares, “Wealth consists not in having great possessions, but in having few wants.” How many great thinkers, mystics and leaders do we need to hear before we come to adopt the belief that happiness doesn’t come from getting more? This false understanding is further propagated by the media through advertisements claiming how if you buy this certain product, you will feel more fulfilled. It’s all an illusion. 

Contentment-Aspiration Dichotomy

How can you be content while at the same time having the desire to grow yourself? This paradox is interesting. Think of it this way: your aspiration is your direction; your contentment is the vehicle you use to get there. Your vehicle may have to take a detour every once in a while or you may have to change a flat tire due to a rough patch on the road, but you can be content no matter what kind of road you’re driving on. When I was in the Peace Corps a fellow volunteer once told me, “Life is a journey and the journey itself is home.” What an awesome way to live life! You have a direction your journey is taking you, and you can feel content, feel “at home” throughout. Contentment you can have whether you achieve your goal or not. Contentment is something you can experience no matter what circumstance is going on in your life.
                               
The Six “C’s” of Contentment

So how can one become content in life, no matter the circumstance? The six C’s of contentment will grow you to a more satisfied life.

1    * CHANGE your worldview. Instead of telling yourself “If I get ____, THEN I will be happy,” change your mindset to say “I choose whether I am happy or not.” If you want to be content, you must adopt the belief that happiness is a choice. Once you do, your contentment will grow exponentially.

2    * CUT the comparisons. The more you compare yourself to others the more poor you feel, the uglier you feel, the weaker you feel, and the worse you feel. The more you compare yourself to others the more you want. This greed creates great turmoil within us. Cut the comparisons. 

3    * CLEAR room for more options. In his video “Why We Are Unhappy,” Nat Ware explains that the reason so many people are unhappy is they create expectation gaps. An expectation gap is when our expectations are greater than our experiences. The reason for such a gap is because we attach to the grandest possibility without leaving room for other options. Remember, plans change but visions remain. Don’t attach to just one option. Clear room to allow for additional options to manifest. 

4    * CONCENTRATE on the present. When I was 23 years old I went through a 4-month period of depression. I tried everything to alleviate my suffering, but nothing seemed to work. People tried to cheer me up but I remained in my depressed state. I read numerous books on how to be happy, but I was stuck in the gray. Then I heard about present-moment living as a way to stop suffering, so I decided to try it. One day on the way to copy some papers for my students, I decided to try present-moment living. I decided to focus on my step. As soon as I brought my full attention to a single step, all my suffering went away. Incredible! I started to experiment with this present-moment focus in everything I did. Soon I kicked myself out of my depression and started enjoying life again. “Realize deeply that the present moment is all you ever have.” Eckhart Tolle reminds us that all stress and dissatisfaction is caused by our minds wandering to the past or future. When you focus solely on the past you risk depression. When you focus solely on the future you risk overwhelming stress, anxiety, and exhaustion. In reality, the present is the only real experience. Concentrate on the NOW. When having a conversation with somebody, focus solely on that dialogue. When stretching, focus on the lengthening of that cramped muscle. When you breathe, focus on your breath Accept all that Is in the now. Satisfaction is found in the present.

5    * COUNT your blessings. Instead of focusing on what you don’t have, focus on what you do have. Adopt an attitude of gratitude. Keep a list or journal all the things you’re thankful for. Write something new every day. Count your blessings. You are much better off than a lot of people in the world.

6     * CEDE your concerns to God. Early Christian leader Paul of Tarsus told the Philippians, “Do not be anxious about anything, but in every situation, by prayer and petition, with thanksgiving, present your requests to God. And the peace of God, which transcends all understanding, will guard your hearts and your minds in Christ Jesus.” There are certain concerns you can influence. These are your calls to action. There are other concerns you have no control over. No matter what you do, these concerns you can’t solve. Worrying certainly doesn’t solve them. Instead of worrying about what you can’t change, focus on what you can change. Then give all your other concerns to God. 

I encourage you to implement the six “Cs” of contentment in your daily life. I promise that if you consciously implement them you will begin to experience a deeper satisfaction in your life.

Quotes about Contentment

Health is the greatest gift, contentment the greatest wealth, faithfulness the best relationship.
Buddha

Man falls from the pursuit of the ideal of plan living and high thinking the moment he wants to multiply his daily wants. Man’s happiness really lies in contentment.
Mahatma Gandhi

Contentment is the greatest treasure.
Lao Tzu

Contentment is the only real wealth.
Alfred Nobel

The world is full of people looking for spectacular happiness while they snub contentment.
Doug Larson

Contentment does not come from achievement.
Paul Henderson

Contentment consists not in adding more fuel, but in taking away some fire.
Thomas Fuller

Wealth consists not in having great possessions, but in having few wants.
Epictetus

I am not saying this because I am in need, for I have learned to be content whatever the circumstances. I know what it is to be in need, and I know what it is to have plenty. I have learned the secret of being content in any and every situation, whether well fed or hungry, whether living in plenty or in want. I can do all this through him who gives me strength.
Philippians 4:11-13


Monday, May 8, 2017

Courage- Stretching Beyond Your Comfort Zone





 
Have you ever read the novel Hatchet? Written by Gary Paulsen, Hatchet is a survival story about a thirteen-year old boy named Brian whose plane crashed in a lake in the Canadian wilderness. Brian survived, but the pilot did not. Brian had to survive alone in the unknown wilderness for an unknown period of time. When Brian recovers from the crash, he climbs out of the lake and begins analyzing his situation. He found he had matches, cooking equipment, multiple packs of freeze dried food, and a hatchet. He also had a radio, though he didn’t understand how it worked.  He found a place where he could build a shelter and where there were edible berries. Brian had to overcome the challenges of finding food and water, creating warmth, fending off wild animals, and lasting through severe weather. Survival was not easy. After 54 days, Brian discovered how to turn on the emergency radio transmitter. Soon a plane flying overhead saw the signal and landed to rescue Brian.
 
Hatchet is a story of a common city boy that transformed into a survivalist in a matter of days. Brian didn’t intend to be a survivalist. The experience was forced upon him. When the plane crashed, Brian had a choice: he would either live or die. He had nobody around him to help him make the decision. He had no cell phone or internet to check the pros and cons. It would have probably been a lot easier to die. Survival is hard, certainly uncomfortable, especially in a treacherous environment. Nevertheless, he made the decision to survive. Brian took the road less traveled. Brian was going to fight to survive. 

The Three Zones of Living
One of my all-time favorite quotes is by author Neale Donald Walsch. He said, “Life begins at the end of your comfort zone.”
There are three zones of living: the comfort zone, the stretch zone, and the panic zone.


The comfort zone is the zone of reflection. It’s a state of relaxation and peace. It’s what I like to call “Point 0” living. It’s also a place where action is limited and excitement wanes. It’s where things are familiar and easy to do. Adjectives to describe this zone are secure, stable, lifeless, bored, comfortable, safe, unchallenged, and easy. Spending too much time in your comfort zone kills motivation and shrinks your potential.  In my mid-twenties I spent much of my time in the comfort zone. I had experienced a major heartbreak in 2010 and it sent me spiraling down into a depression for four months. I had no desire to risk experiencing that hurt again, so I pulled back from emotionally attaching to anything or anyone. Instead, I spend the next few years reflecting on my life and what I wanted to do. It was a peaceful time. I never experienced suffering during these years. Nevertheless, I soon felt stalled in my life. I wasn’t going anywhere. It was only through traveling to new countries and unknown places that I was able to experience immense excitement. It wasn’t until I made the decision to join the Peace Corps and leave home for a year that I broke from this “Point 0” and began to feel completely alive again. It was in Mongolia that I made a decision to start spending more time in the stretch zone.

The stretch zone is the zone of growth. It’s a zone of action and excitement. It’s where change happens. The activities in this zone challenge you without overwhelming you. Adjectives to describe this zone are excited, challenged, willing to take risk, alive, and exhilarated. In his book 15 Invaluable Laws of Growth, John Maxwell talks about the “Law of the Rubber Band.” In this law Maxwell compares human lives to a rubber band. The purpose of a rubber band is to stretch. It’s through stretching that the rubber band proves most effective. If a rubber band is not stretched, however, it loses its potential and doesn’t serve its purpose. This is similar to our lives. We each have a God-given purpose in this world, and in order to fulfill that purpose we must grow to our full potential. In order to do this we must spend time in our stretch zone. If we just stay in our comfort zone, however, we’re working just as ineffectively as that idle rubber band. We must therefore stretch ourselves to become the most effective.

Now if you stretch a rubber band too far, what will happen? It will break! This is what happens to us when we enter the panic zone. The panic zone is the zone of stress.  It’s the zone where fear stops all action or the action creates disastrous results. It’s where tasks are too daunting or conflict with our values. When we enter this zone, we have the potential to break. My dad used to tell me to not “put too many irons in the fire.” I have a tendency to want to do many things. I want to get my Master’s degree. I want to do more concerts with our band. I want to write a book and create a curriculum. I want to get married and take care of my family. I want to build a house. I want to travel the world. The more I delve into a collection of these areas, the more stressful my life becomes. The more stressed out I get the more exhausted and irritable I become, and I also find myself in the same “Point 0” immobile state of the comfort zone, only this is more frustrating. These negative emotions often drive my immune system down, and as a result I get sick and am in bed for days. This is what happens when you spend a lot of time in the panic zone. The high stretching and over-exhaustion does more damage than good. Adjectives to describe this zone are fearful, tense, exhausted, fed up, tired, frustrated, annoyed, and anxious. 

A Stretch-Zone Solution: Courage

As I’ve talked about in my previous blog post, all of us have irrational fears that prevent us from moving forward and growing. One of those fears listed was fear of the unknown. In order to conquer this fear you must have courage. While fear of the unknown is a master at keeping us where we are, courage is the engine that keeps us stretching. The fear of the unknown thrives on comfort and normality. Courage says, “Bring on the unknown!” In order to move forward and grow to our full potential we must have the courage to stretch beyond where we are and into unfamiliar territory.
Life expectancy in 2015 averaged 78.9 years. The female average is 81.3 years and men are slightly lower at 76.5 years. Just to work with an easier number, we’re going to round the average lifespan to 80 years. Now, I want to give you a visual representation that hopefully motivates you to grow your courage. Below is a 10 x 8 graph of eighty squares, each square representing a year in your life. If you can, draw your own 10 x 8 graph. Then I want you to fill in as many squares as your age (ex. If you’re 28, shade in 28 squares).   


















































































Take a look at your graph. How does it make you feel? When I marked my graph I noticed more than a third of it shaded. It freaked me out. Have I really lived a third of my life already at 30? I feel young, yet looking at the graph created some difficult feelings for me. It also motivated me to start focusing on all the blank squares- the years I have left. 

So how can you stretch to your full potential with the years you have left? I have found that bucket lists are a great visual way to operate in the stretch zone and grow yourself. They help give you direction, focus and purpose. It’s fun to do them individually. It’s also fun to create one with a partner in crime. The more you talk about your bucket list, the more effective it becomes. Telling your friends and family about your list inspires you to act. There are so many different ideas on the Internet. I came across two YouTube videos this week that featured two young gentlemen, one named Travis Bell (“Life’s Way too Short Not to Live Your Bucket List”) and another named Ben Nemtin (“Six Steps for Crossing Anything off Your Bucket List”). Both of these men have inspired countless individuals in developing personal bucket lists. Bell gave an acronym for helping generate different ideas to include in your bucket list. Taking his list, I revised it using the acronym STRECHNOW. 

                S- Satisfy a curiosity.
                T- Take lessons
                R- Rewarding relationships
                E- Express yourself
                T- Tough challenges
                C- Conquer a fear
                H- Heart acts
                N- New travel adventures
                O- Outstanding achievements
                W- Wealthy legacy

Use the STRETCHNOW acronym to help you develop your own bucket list. I would love to hear about the top items on your bucket list! Just leave a comment with three things you would love to do to expand yourself. 

I encourage you to start investing time in your stretch zone. It is through this courage that you will continue growing towards your potential.

Quotes about Courage

If you put yourself in a position where you have to stretch outside your comfort zone, then you are forced to expand your consciousness.
Les Brown

Respect yourself enough to walk away from anything that no longer serves you, grows you, or makes you happy.
Robert Tew

The first trip of the Pony Express was made in ten days- an average of two hundred miles a day. But we soon began stretching our riders and making better time.
Buffalo Bill

If we’re growing, we’re always going to be out of our comfort zone.
John Maxwell

Life begins at the end of your comfort zone.
Neale Donald Walsch

In this world you’re either growing or you’re dying, so get in motion and grow.
Lou Holtz

Every moment of one’s existence one is growing into more or retreating into less.
Norman Mailer

A ship in a harbor is safe, but that’s not what a ship is built for.
Unknown