Category Archives: Uncategorized

Conversations in a doorway

The place where I work had someone leave to take a different position this past week. Normal thing on a job, people come and go, some you connect with more than others and you miss them. They may be a good enough friend the leaving will not change your personal life. Maybe they are a nice person and you wish them luck. On occasion they are people you say good radiance to. Then there is the extremely rare occasion where someone leaves that changes everything. Those are so rare we don’t expect them at all. They shock us. They change everything, not just their lives, or their job, but literally everyone and everything. I must state this again, this is profoundly rare.

They say we may change jobs up to 20 times in our lifetime. To come across one of these types of people once in your life is still a 1000 to 1 chance. But that was this person and this situation. In fact, it is so significant that this job needed to happen in my life if for no other reason than to meet this one person and see this one thing happen. One life makes a difference. One life can change everything.

Understand I am someone who believes this intrinsically. (A word I used a lot in my last conversation with him) That said I was still shocked at how intensely true it was. It was funny when I read the email where he shared he was leaving, I was floored. Stop in your tracks floored. Change your entire plans floored. I knew it was a game changer, what I didn’t understand was just how it would change the game. Even more I had an inkling it could effect my life, but I thought it would be limited to some of my choices. No, it was bigger than that. IT CHANGED MY LIFE!!!

Now let me step back with you for a moment. I like this guy, he is a great person, super smart and funny. I knew him at a fond colleague level. Always looked forward to engaging with him, enjoyed our conversations, laughed (if you know me that is a common theme) if had a few minutes and he was in his office I would pop in, stand in the doorway, and we would chat. A few minutes usually turned into 30 or more. We could swim laps in the pool of life conversations. Deep, shallow, silly, funny, philosophical, practical and meaningless. My favorite type of conversation. We did not interact often though. Nor did we socialize or cross paths in our general lives, even though we had a lot in common. Sometimes you just don’t.

We worked in different departments and he was not a flashy person. Not the first person you would notice in a room. Not the biggest personality. Not the magnet in the room. He was in operations, I worked in marketing. Flashy people were my daily existence. His area was function, mine was in form.

Bear with my rabbit trail for a moment. We both work in the real-estate industry. I have loved houses all my life. There are lots of pretty houses that are built for crap. Something I have learned is a pretty house with a crappy layout, materials and function is not worth nearly as much as a well built, well thought out house, that is solidly built and truly meets the needs of the people who live there but is ugly. Oddly people buy pretty over practical 9 times out of 10. Can I tell you something? It is much more affordable to change carpet and paint than structure and mechanics? We often ‘buy’ people the same way.

The gentleman was also a detail person. Details can be so boring. It is so funny though; the magic is in the details.

After he had sent out the email, over the next 48 hours, his last in the office, I watched almost every single person in our company, as well as some of the satellite offices, and organizations go out of their way to stop in, chat, hug, cry and say good bye. He did not work there for 30 years, in fact less than 10.

We don’t work for a huge cooperation, rather a small local company of just over 100 people. Some of whom, like myself had been there for just a year or 2. Yet well over most of them took the time to reach out share their sadness. To let him know how much he would be missed and the impact he had had on their lives.

I watched this and was not overly shocked, like I said, it was a change your plans and schedule kind of response. What amazed me was that with each person that stopped in, phone call, email and text he had a very personal and ‘inside’ joke or connection that they had shared. He knew the details. He knew not only the details of the company and its function, duties, tasks, challenges, idiosyncrasies and systems. He knew the details of its soul, the people. Not just the flashy ones either, every single person had value. Not a lip serve statement we put together to make ourselves feel like we are making a connection, but a unique acknowledgement of who they were, what they could do and how much they meant. I watched as this man of function and details appreciated people in that same detail. He had seen the form, not just the function, of the people. He knew the heart and soul of a company of systems. I was humbled to the core by who he was. It reminded me of who we are truly called to be.

In our last conversation with him before I heard the announcement our question was from the deep end of the pool. “What does leadership mean to you?” His response was simple “The ability to do the right thing.” What I saw lived out in the last 48 hours is; To do the right thing and truly lead others, you need to first BE the right thing. That takes a lifetime of details to BECOME.

Guess what? If you are to BE the right thing then you probably won’t be the flashy person in the room. Rather you will most likely be the funny, slightly odd guy in a back office who pays attention to the details like character, ethics, a strong inner compass who focuses more attention on others than he does himself. Who takes the time to connect the details to the value of who people are and what they have to offer. Who is not afraid to confront that which is wrong or is a total mess, with the courage to fix it or turn away from it if it is wrong.

Interesting how it is not rocket science but is so rare that we are stopped in our tracks when we see it, and unfortunately rarely recognize it until it has passed. I am grateful, deeply so, that I got to see it, and even if I didn’t fully recognize it until later, I still had the opportunity to have my eyes opened and my life changed.

Thank you, sir, I pray I do not throw away this lesson. That I let it truly impact the ability to see the details. May there be another life that becomes one to see and add value. Not to be flashy or be lip service, rather to leave each life better for having been in a door way having a conversation.

FINISHER

I hung a sign in my home office today. You hang your id tags on it after you complete a ‘race’, a 5k, 10k the like. These races are on my vision board and my bucket list, ideally to run the whole race. Granted my run is more like a slow jog, slightly quicker walk, not exactly a run. Still I cannot hang my tags unless I truly finish the race. This sign, oddly enough means something pretty significant to me. So does the vision board. It means I need to finish what I start, something I am not stellar at, and something I am working on, something that is a life goal.

How do you become a finisher? It is a real question. I am so good at starting things! It is fun, interesting, new, exciting, and full of possibilities. Finishing, dang, that gets hard, boring, repetitive, hard, really hard. (Did I already say that?) Lets take the blogging thing for example. I was supposed to write 50 blogs the year I turned 50. As I am 50+ now, not thinking I met that goal. That said, I still intend to write the 50 blogs. I have to finish what I started. It just might take me longer to get there.

I am going to throw my husband under the bus here for a minute. He is a good man, a wonderful father and a wonderful husband. Sometimes spouses speak truth to us we don’t want to hear or have a hard time accepting. Scott has done that a few times in my life, sometimes he is 100% right and sometimes he is in the 50% right zone. One side is not easier to take or digest than the other. Often times the more right someone is with their constructive critique the more difficult it is to hear. This time he was in the 50% category and my reaction was one of quiet anger and resentment. I could see the partial truth of what he shared, but resented that this is how he saw me.

What he said was ‘Teresa you never finish what you start, you quit everything.’ He reminded me that I quit college before I got my degree, that I had quit several jobs, that I had a lot of undone projects around the house and I often quit diet and exercise programs. He was right but he was also wrong. I had left college before I finished my degree and I had left several jobs, I still have undone projects and sometimes I diet and exercise more than others. Where he was right? I do often create big dreams and visions and then don’t complete them, my 50 blogs for instance. The 3 or 4 books I intend to write. The 10 rules piece from my uncle. A craft room full of half-finished ideas, weeds in my garden, papers never filed, cookbooks never opened, yoyo dieting, a dusty yoga mat and the list goes on and on and on.

What I disagreed with on this statement was sometimes you have to make changes in life to continue to grow and move forward. That would mean job changes, even college changes and sometimes time use changes. I also never quit something that I place high value on. Things of strong conviction or purpose, nor do I quit on the people I love, even if I face strong opposition or very real obstacles, when I am committed I complete it.

I just want to become more committed. I have beautiful projects that would warm my heart and bless my home or a friends, which need to be completed. Weeds that need to be pulled, races that need to be run, a bucket list that needs to be done. I do need to lose some weight and get into better shape for my life, it is important. I want that statement to be 100% wrong. Accept change when it needs to be made but DO NOT QUIT what needs to be done. Commit and follow through, even if it takes longer than anticipated.

One of the things I like to do in my ‘spare’ time is go to the cute little shops that sell all the stuff other people are so amazingly creative with. The stuff that looks like it was custom designed for Chip and Joanna Gaines. A few weeks ago I found something at one of those shops. The board I just hung up in my office. It says ‘finisher’ on it.

I bought this one for myself because I have a friend I have made in the last couple of years that has really inspired me. She makes me want to get going and finish the races I keep saying I want to do, to really knock off that part of my bucket list. 5K’s, 10K’s and a half marathon, namely Grandma’s in Duluth. Also because it symbolizes this very thing. This truly great voice in my soul that wants to silence the bad voice in my head that hears the ‘you don’t finish what you start’ statement.

My life, my life long race has to be one that finishes. I have to finish this race, finish this life, finish this journey, finish my goals and finish them strong. I have 25 pounds to go, but 35 have come off, I have projects to finish but also projects that have been completed. I have blogs to write but also blogs that have been written. I will finish my Uncles 10 rules, I will finish my book(s), and I will finish my projects, my garden and my cookbooks. My soul wins when it is the voice I listen to. My soul commits. My mind wanders. It is amazing to me how true this statement is. My soul has decided it is ready to be a finisher.

This is going to be a great journey!

10 Wise Rules # 2) Words matter, so use them wisely

10 Wise Rules

I meant to post this last night but instead had the opportunity to spend time with my Aunt Pam Goold, Uncle Bill Goold, Alice Marie (Goold) Driskell – Sorrell, David Sorrel and my husaband Scott Cleveland. Uncle Bill is visiting from out of state and we all met for dinner. What a time of blessing. Aunt Pam your peace, grace and joy will forever be a source of inspiration and awe. Steve was richly blessed to have you as his wife.

Rule #2) Words matter, so use them wisely.

Matt. 12:36 shares
‘But I tell you that everyone will have to give account on the Day of Judgment for every empty word they have spoken.’

I think of the adage we you to say when we were kids; “Sticks and stones may break my bones but words will never hurt me.” Oh what a false statement that is. Words have power. I carry around lies I believe that were said to me when I was young. Things people said that I took to my soul and have to actively fight against on almost a daily basis. In fact on our way to dinner I was sharing something I was concerned about and a little afraid of with my husband and he said to me “ Teresa I don’t know why you listen to that tape in your head it is not true about you” and then proceeded to share with me what is true. Those were powerful words in a beautiful direction that spoke right to my heart and offered encouragement and growth. The tape I have played over and over again, empty words that I listen to all the time, those words kill my heart, my mind my soul, but still I play that tape.

I think though how many times have I spoken idle, empty words? Cruel and cutting sarcastic words that damage people’s lives? How many times have I heard them and carried them with me for years, for months or even if just for days. Think about that scripture and put it into our current culture. If we are to be held accountable for the words we say and the impact they have on the people we come in contact with, how many nails are putting into the hands and feet of Jesus on a daily basis? How many lives are we setting up to listen to harmful tapes?

What if we become as scripture advises ‘slow to speak’ instead? What if we really understand our tongue is a weapon of mass destruction? How about instead we stop, and use our words wisely to build one another up instead? What if not just doing the right thing we pause in order to say the right thing as well. May our actions and our words live in unity and strength? May we discipline our tongues with wisdom, love, mercy and guidance?

Please note, sometimes hard things need to be said but like the do the right thing rule, make sure when words are used for disciple, we cover them with love and compassion for the person and their hearts, say them in a way that doesn’t prove a point, but rather teaches, trains and can be heard. Hard words do need to be said, but they do not need to slash, rather they need to be handled like a surgeon working to remove a malignancy and promote healing not hurting.

Rule #2 – how wise will you be with your words today?

Faithful

I have a friend who is a life coach. She is an amazing woman. She has for the last few years encouraged me to pick a word of the year. I chose the word ‘Determined’ this year. Last years was ‘Faithful’. To be honest for this year I have kept the word ‘Faithful’ and added the word ‘Determined’. Last year the goal was to become more faithful to my word. That is if I said I was going to do something, I would do it. Follow through. Honestly it is not a strong suit of mine. That is not because I don’t want to but rather because I forget, or get distracted, or feel like I am being a pest to people.

Last year, 2015, there were so many big goals set. Most of them are shared here already, most of them have been started but not necessarily finished. Because of that and because the meaning behind it has changed the word stayed, and the new one is added. There was a realization at the end of 2015 that was discovered. Faithful is a heart word, determined is an action word. For me to be true to what they mean they need to be done together.

This blog is going to be short. It will be the sharing of a renewed start to work being done. 2016 is a year that will in many ways determine exactly where and what I will be doing for the next 5 years for sure, and more than likely the rest of my life. This journey will be an open sharing of how both tattered we are, and how beautiful that journey can become. I know this in my soul. Thank you for walking with me on it.

For more about my friend the life coach check out:
Barbarachurchill.com

Prayer

If there has ever been anything in my life that I should be thankful for it is prayer. The older I get the more I realize what a complete and total cornerstone to my very existence prayer is. The story of prayer in my life is really a chapter book. A chapter on those who have prayed and the impact it has made. The story of Jeff Krouch and how he helped me to understand what prayer really is. The story of my father and how prayer was so much of WHO he was! Then the story of now, how prayer is becoming the soul of who I am. So this one is short but it is the start of a story.

I don’t know that I can write out how deeply true this one is. I have had the chance in the past month to pray very directly and very personally for a few people, for my church, my family and my own life. It is different than it used to be. I have actually prayed my whole life, but not like I do now. Today I had the honor to pray for a precious child who I can see Jesus is reaching for in a new way. Someone hurting who is carrying a load bigger than she can or should ever have to carry in her life.

Isn’t that the way it is though? We all, everyone of us carries a load bigger than us at times in our lives. Isn’t interesting how that is when we most hit our knees?prayer-on-my-knees42
We forget how much we need him. Oh how I need him. I simply can not do this life with out him. I can not be strong, I can not be pure, I can not be faithful, I can not be honest with out Jesus. I CAN NOT! But he can. So now I know with every fiber of my being I NEED TO pray. To pray and talk to God and pour out my heart like the need water, or the need food, or the need for air. That is what prayer is to me now. To pray as a direct source of life.

My fathers prayers make so much more sense now. The way he prayed, the intensity of it. The depth and the consistency of it. The hunger for the fellowship and the desire to share it. His prayers opened the door so that God could strengthen his life and every life he prayed for. I hope when I come before the Lord he can do the same through me. Now I understand Isaiah chapter 6. How being in the very presence of the Lord puts you on your knees. But this is not the same as when Satan would drive you to your knees. When I meet with Jesus in prayer, my heart fills with his love, I am on my knees because I am so humbled by his presence, so very aware of what a precious honor this is, how much he loves me and how much I do not deserve that love, but how very desperately I both want it and need it.

When Satan drives me down, he does it with abuse and hate, pain, scorn, self loathing.
guilt
When I bow before the Lord it is in love and gratitude, humbled grace and an out stretched had to lift you up.
no condemation

In this moment I know I have been in the presence of the one who sends me to my knees in humility and lifts me up with his strength. The battle is his and it has already been won. He is already there. I just listen and follow. The one leading on this journey is the very source of life, the one following may be tattered, but the destination is beautiful, whole and freedom! This is what prayer means to me more each day of my tattered journey.
isaiah 61