DLGP

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

Selah: Pause and Ponder

By: on October 12, 2020

As I read Shawn Cramer’s blog from last week, along with the concept of pause in Not Doing, I couldn’t help but reflect on the concept of pausing from a broader coaching perspective. Have you ever wished you could hit the reset button?  I am sure that I am not the only individual that has…

16 responses

wu-wei

By: on October 10, 2020

There was a dark spot noticed on the floor of the lobby of my workplace a few weeks ago. I walked by it a few times before I thought to explore it further. To begin with it was just one, solitary alien drop; I stood there at first slightly dazed, thinking about soya sauce and…

2 responses

Leadership Potential of Pregnant Pauses

By: on October 7, 2020

With an expressed attitude of “bias towards actions,” Design Thinking, in its most popular form, lacks helpful pauses to assess, think, and reflect. These pauses possess the potential to be pregnant with critique, corrections and creativity. What rests are to musicians, lines breaks are to poets, and negative spaces are to artists, so pregnant pauses…

10 responses

Walk at the Pace of Trust

By: on October 6, 2020

Central Oregon’s Clergy for Justice is a collective of local faith leaders that is committed to the remaking of our community into a space where justice & equity are a lived experienced for all. Last Tuesday, Trump, from the debate stage and in response to a question about white supremacy, told the Proud Boys and…

11 responses

The Most Important Step

By: on October 5, 2020

“There is nothing that man fears more than the touch of the unknown.  He wants to see what is reaching toward him and to be able to recognize or at least classify it.  Man always tends to avoid physical contact with anything strange.” – Elias Canetti[1] We stand at the precipice of the unknown.  A…

9 responses

Improvise; the latest quick fix!

By: on October 5, 2020

It’s a quiet rainy Sunday morning. It has been a full and busy weekend so far. With the help of my son and son-in-law Saturday was a day of home repairs that were long overdue. This morning with coffee in hand I looked out over the deck at a cedar fence that needs repairs. Just…

9 responses

When the Next is Now

By: on October 5, 2020

Three years ago, when I left the church, I left not only my primary connection to community, but also many ministry responsibilities. These ministry responsibilities consumed much of my time for so long, I was disoriented when those responsibilities were no longer required. When I left the church, friends said kind things like “God has…

10 responses

Kites Abounding

By: on October 4, 2020

My dad was an English Teacher and he loved to talk. He loved to tell stories. I think he enjoyed the attention at the front of his class; he was a passionate teacher. My brother and I certainly didn’t offer him the respect teachers are deserving of. His class-front podium with the undivided attention of…

8 responses

Stop Fearing Discomfort

By: on September 30, 2020

Fear. It’s a high-octane undercurrent of energy that drives some to remain safe and others to lash out with violence. Fear. It seems to have replaced the hope and the vision and the optimism the once inspired personal, organizational, and even cosmic exploration. Fear. For some, it’s a debilitating power that renders them paralyzed. For…

9 responses

Neophobia and a Community of Practice

By: on September 29, 2020

Innovation requires risk. Risk requires courage. Courage responds to fear. The twenty-first century possesses a fear-based, ambivalent posture towards innovation. Only 4% of businesses have not defined innovation as a strategic priority, yet only 10% are satisfied with their current innovative endeavors. Meanwhile, a culture of fear has hamstrung courageous risk taking – from the…

5 responses

The Ballad of Fear

By: on September 28, 2020

I pause at the door, my hand hovering over the latch.   The steps out of the Tower and out of the City are filled with Unknowns I don’t know where I’m going – I hardly know where I’ve been at this point. I can still turn back. I can still I say, “No.’ That’s…

9 responses

Hot Spots in the Dirt

By: on September 28, 2020

A friend of mine embarked on a 23-day hike along the John Muir Trail earlier this month. Just days into the trek, wildfire smoke became a prohibiting factor. She and her fellow hikers were forced to leave the trail. Not to be deterred, they traveled to eastern Oregon so as to keep their feet moving…

12 responses

Papa, Tell Me a Story

By: on September 28, 2020

“Papa tell me a story” is a common request when Facetiming my 4-year-old Granddaughter Addison. “Papa use the faces!” So it begins. I pick an emoji face that covers my face and start the story. “Once upon a time there were 3 little pigs (the pig emoji face covering mine) …” When I get to…

10 responses

Bubbles

By: on September 25, 2020

A pandemic spanning across the planet, caused by Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome(SARS) Corona-Virus 2, is a new challenge for us, as a global community, to navigate through. Residents of North Americans saw the virus infecting and killing multitudes as it rounded the globe last winter. Upon arrival in our respective cities (and, recall that day)…

8 responses

A Lament for Breonna Taylor and the Ignorance that Killed Her

By: on September 23, 2020

Breonna Taylor is dead. She is one more soul in a large and ever-growing constellation of black lives that have been prematurely extinguished by white-made systems. Today, the lethal actions of her executioners, three Louisville police officers, were deemed “justified.” Just like that, another devastating, yet highly probable and predictable outcome has traumatized our black…

14 responses

Control, Really?

By: on September 22, 2020

“Our anxiety does not come from thinking about the future but from wanting to control it.”[1] Where does this need for control come from? Coach and motivational speaker Tony Robbins states, the need for control comes from self-doubt and fear. People seek control to get a temporary relief from anxiety and to find assurance that…

10 responses

Beyond Thinking at the Edge

By: on September 22, 2020

I find myself in the wardrobe. I entered to hide, but mystery awaits here, I sense. The smell of mothballs fills my nose. Some things will certainly die here. What will those things be? Will I let them perish? What will grow in their stead? These hanging coats are not my usual dress and they…

11 responses

The Pilgrim

By: on September 21, 2020

I’ve failed. My conversation with the Seeker replays over and over again in my mind.  Their parting words cut to my core: “Until others can grasp what you say, knowledge is useless.  Knowledge may be powerful, but if it is not properly wielded it is simply useless strokes on a page.”  Fury rises in my…

11 responses

In Search of Significance

By: on September 21, 2020

  She sat next to me on the park bench, warm morning sun shining on her face. She shared about a funeral she attended where story after story was told about an old woman who lived life large all over the globe producing concentric circles of influence.   My friend said she wanted a life…

12 responses

Thunderstorms: Creating Balance

By: on September 16, 2020

How many people choose a career based on the advice and the good intentions of others? I grew up on a small ranch in Montana. My dad was a hard worker and skilled craftsman but often struggled to hold onto a job as a carpenter. The issue was never his talent. It was because he…

12 responses