DLGP

Doctor of Leadership in Global Perspectives: Crafting Ministry in an Interconnected World

Category: DLGP02

And the winner is…

By: on April 3, 2023

David Rock wins the prize for “Most Immediately Applicable Book We’ve Read.” I read Your Brain at Work [1] last week and sat with it before tackling this blog post (thank you, spring break, for that extra time!). In those few days, I found myself applying Rock’s reflections in a surprising number of ways. 1. When…

7 responses

(A Day In The) Life of Brain

By: on April 3, 2023

This is a recent day in the life of MY Brain… 0615 hours (that’s 6:15 am in military time, which makes this whole post sound way more legit):  I woke up, without my alarm, having sensed the Lord’s voice to my heart saying, “Come and be with me.” So I got up, grabbed my Bible…

6 responses

Being Wrong is The Right Way to Grow…

By: on April 2, 2023

September 2022, I was not only excited about starting school, but I was pretty sure and excited about my NPO. Even though I knew I would be working on my NPO I was thankful it was pretty much set and had to be tweaked a little. After two months of school, I was getting some…

2 responses

Struggling With Dunning-Kruger Effect

By: on March 24, 2023

“There is a strong linear relationship between confidence and being wrong” -Bobby Duffy-   One of the main things in this book that challenges my comfort zone in thinking is when Bobby Duffy also references the theory of the Dunning-Kruger effect, which identified that the illusory superiority bias—our tendency to think we’re better than others—has…

8 responses

The End is Near…or is it?

By: on March 23, 2023

I can still remember a few times as a kid when I believed I had been “left behind”. Meaning I thought Jesus had come, taken my family, and left me behind on earth. Just watch the movies. I grew up in a faith tradition that preached all kinds of ideas around the “end times”. These…

16 responses

Being Wrong and Holding onto Hope

By: on March 22, 2023

I tell myself stories. They are usually harmless assumptions about why people do, say, or believe certain things which are confusing or cause me distress. The stories can be positive or negative. When telling myself a story I usually try to make it a good one. I recognize my storytelling arises out of uncertainty, my…

12 responses

A walk well wasted

By: on March 22, 2023

My best game of golf was one I played alone. On vacation at a cottage we had rented for the week, I went into the local town and played a round of 18. The course is a typical municipal course, each hole is fairly straight, the sand traps are easy to navigate and there certainly…

6 responses

The Pursuit of Happiness

By: on March 22, 2023

The evidence is mounting. The conclusion is clear: we are likely to misread reality. We’ve read about this through various lenses. Be it admitting our errors (Kathryn Schulz’s Being Wrong) or the risk of developing cancer (Chivers and Chivers How to Read Numbers), we must face our own misperceptions and just general lack of ability…

11 responses

Welcome Wisdom & Instruction!

By: on March 21, 2023

“The fear of the Lord is the beginning of knowledge, but fools despise wisdom and instruction.”  Proverbs 1:7 The more I read, the more confused I think I am becoming.  I was asking my husband all sorts of questions and sharing quandaries in my thinking; not sure that any of it was connecting.  My system…

13 responses

Trying To Do It Right!

By: on March 21, 2023

I think of the things that I have been wrong about; it is a list that is longer than I care to admit. But let me list a few. I was wrong when I thought that me and my best friend in second grade would be friends forever, we are not even Facebook friends. I…

22 responses

Am I Wrong?

By: on March 20, 2023

Years ago, like in the early 1990’s, I read a book that was “all the rage” called “The Day America Told the Truth.” After a quick internet search for it, I was reminded that it was written by a then relatively unknown James Patterson, whose books have gone on to sell over 425 million copies,…

8 responses

Dinka, Is It Really You?

By: on March 17, 2023

Freedom comes when we start to allow people to see not only the glossy image but the mess as well -Simon P. Walker-   Looking good and impressive is something that many people like. That’s why many people will try to conceal their past and background. Many people don’t like their true identity to be…

10 responses

The hidden anguish of emotional disconnection

By: on March 16, 2023

My father passed away in 1969 when I was three years old, leaving behind me and my younger brother. In 1999, I reflected back on my childhood and discovered something I had never noticed before. For 18 years my mom cooked dinner for me and my brother Troy and we would sit at the dining…

16 responses

Fig Leaves Then. Performance Now.

By: on March 15, 2023

A few weeks ago, I attended a community luncheon that revolved around mental health awareness. The goal was to break stigmas around psychological and emotional health issues and provide more resources for churches in our area. During the event, some pastors and members in the community shared their experiences of rejection and shame for experiencing…

14 responses

Words are very unnecessary

By: on March 15, 2023

Lately I have been working on saying nothing. I am chatty, I know that. I like to have conversations, I enjoy asking questions and engaging people in dialogue. I also enjoy being asked questions and sharing my responses to ideas or suppositions; the chance to insert my opinion is insatiable. This is my front stage…

20 responses

A Prison Blanket Perfectly Folded…9855 Times

By: on March 15, 2023

  My one-minute gaze into Nelson Mandela’s prison cell had a profound impact on me. That neatly folded prison blanket represented the dailyness of Mandela’s life for 27 years.  The consequence of not folding a blanket to perfection in the prisons he was kept in would produce a severe beating. A leader who had already…

14 responses

Who I am on the Inside Matters!

By: on March 15, 2023

My missionary career began as a 23-year-old new wife and mother with a fresh university degree in hand. My dream to minister overseas came sooner than imagined. While excited to be heading to Jakarta, Indonesia, I lacked confidence that I was prepared for the work ahead. Nothing magically changed on the 36-hour journey between Seattle…

4 responses

One Leader’s Landscape

By: on March 14, 2023

Using Food stamps, gathering government commodities and collecting pop cans for extra funds were just a few of the regular survival strategies in my family.  I grew up in a low income family.  However, I had two parents who loved God, were devoted to one another and loved their children.  My dad, a highly intelligent…

14 responses

Trust and Leadership

By: on March 14, 2023

At the beginning of my second semester at Berkeley, my friend and I were invited to attend a leadership training. We were newly selected leaders of a campus student organization that worked with high school students of color to assist with applying for admission into UC Berkeley and providing retention services after admissions. The training…

9 responses

Cognitive Dissonance Inherent in the Gospel

By: on March 14, 2023

“A leader leads people from where they currently are to another place, which at first is unknown to them and can only be imagined.”[1] Moses. Hudson Taylor. Abraham Lincoln. Martin Luther King Jr. Every single one of you as you dream about graduation day in May 2025. What do all these leaders have in common? They…

7 responses