We remember…

  • The experience that was over the top.
  • The note that was handwritten and mailed.
  • The movie, restaurant, or transaction that was better than expected.
  • The one who cared.

May your moments be guided by this question – If I stopped doing this would I be missed?

Here’s a model and mantra for your next startup…We do things you won’t forget.

That’s a mindset and mission that makes enterprises soar in any economy.

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Innocent

A hero of mine once wrote, “I’d love to start again, go back to innocent – and never leave.” That hero would be David Crowder.

At two years of age, my daughter rarely has a day that wasn’t at some point a blast or leaves her awestruck saying “oh my!”. I’m starting to think that innocence has a lot to do with this.

We finish our days  locked in our inbox instead of gazing at the cosmos and we start our days fogged in the  breaking news in-lieu of being lost in the rays of possibility that the sunrise holds.

Could it be that we know too much and experience too little?

I’ll never forget the day my life changed. Mid February 2006. That was the day I went from “wondering generality to meaningful specific.” It was also the most innocent day of my life.

I try to go back to that day everyday now.

Innocence makes color jump off of the blank canvas and leaves us saying “oh my!”

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Defining What You’re Trying To Convey

Careful with definitions.

It’s more effective to live out what you’re trying to convey rather than just giving a few words to it.

With words comes a need explanation of what you mean. With action we simply just get to see what you mean.

You’re human right is to show us…

 

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Fiction or Non-Fiction?

Is this fiction or non-fiction?

That’s a great question for our moments of thought and vision.

Asked another way, are we seeing things as they truly are or as we choose to see them?

Seeing fictionally is typically grounded in assumptions of others, things, and circumstances.

On the other hand, seeing non-fictionally requires empathy, pause, and bravery – there is no harder work out there.

Take a moment to step out of your story. Revisit the past pages and then please dive head first back into the non-fiction you gleaned from your pause.

Sometimes we must actively step out of our story to read it and find the character we’re becoming.

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Fire

Salespeople with 1000s of sales will point to the first small sale…the first yes…the first spark.

Artist describe to us the flash and spark in their mind that led to their masterpiece.

Authors will tell you about the first sentence, the spark, when asked about their book.

Musicians will point to a moment of clarity as their spark for a song’s blaze.

All fire starts within a spark.

It is there that our obsession, focus, and hope must lie.

Act small…be sparky.

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