Saturday, April 23, 2011

Why is Easter so important ?

Easter is the celebration of getting your OWN private Attorney for FREE*

*Conditions apply: Need Faith in the attorney

So what’s this all about? So, here is a story. There is something so wonderful about little stories…..

After living what I felt was a 'decent' life, my time on earth came to the end.
The first thing I remember is sitting on a bench in the waiting room of what I thought to be a court house. The doors opened and I was instructed to come in and have a seat by the defence table.

As I looked around I saw the 'prosecutor.' He was a villainous looking gent who snarled as he stared at me. He definitely was the most evil person I have ever seen.


I sat down and looked to my left and there sat My Attorney, kind and gentle looking man I felt I knew.

The corner door flew open and there appeared the Judge in full flowing robes.
He commanded an awesome presence as He moved across the room I couldn't take my eyes off of Him. As He took His seat behind the bench, He said, 'Let us begin.'

The prosecutor rose and said, 'I’m Mr. Satan and am here to show you why this man belongs to me and in hell.'

He was accurate and knew all my mistakes. All those secrets no one knew about. And those horrible perversions that were once in my life and the more he spoke, the further down in my seat I sank. I was so embarrassed that I couldn't look at anyone, even my own Attorney, as the Devil told of sins that even I had completely forgotten about.

I was upset at Satan for telling all these things about me so openly and embarrassing me. Darn, I was really a sinful man and he could easily win the case. I know I had been guilty of those things, but I had done some good in my life - couldn't that at least equal out part of the harm I'd done? Satan finished with a fury and said, 'This man belongs in hell, he is guilty of all that I have charged and there is not a person who can prove otherwise.'

When it was His turn, My Attorney first asked if He might approach the bench. The Judge allowed this over the strong objection of Satan, and beckoned Him to come forward. As He got up and started walking, I was able to see Him in His full splendour and majesty. He stopped at the bench and softly said to the Judge, 'Hi Dad,' and then He turned to address the court. Now I realized why He seemed so familiar; this was Jesus representing me in court because I believed in him.

'Satan was correct in saying that this man had sinned, I won't deny any of these allegations. And, yes, the wage of sin is death, and this man deserves to be punished.'

Jesus took a deep breath and turned to His Father with outstretched arms and proclaimed, 'However, I died on the cross so that this person might have eternal life and he has accepted Me as his Saviour, so he is Mine.'

My Lord continued with, 'His name is written in the Book of Life, and no one can snatch him from Me. 'Satan still does not understand yet. This man is not to be given justice, but rather mercy.'
As Jesus sat down, He quietly paused, looked at His Father and said, 'There is nothing else that needs to be done. I've done it all.'

The Judge lifted His mighty hand and slammed the gavel down. The following words bellowed from His lips.....
'This man is free. The penalty for him has already been paid in full. Case dismissed.'
As my Lord led me away, I could hear Satan ranting and raving, 'I won't give up, and I will win the next one.'


I asked Jesus as He gave me my instructions where to go next, 'Have you ever lost a case?'

Christ lovingly smiled and said, 'Everyone that has come to Me and asked Me to represent them has received the same verdict as you, ~Paid In Full.'

(Source: Unknown, Some chain email stated by someone somewhere)

Thursday, April 21, 2011

God Hears Prayers, He Responds Fast! Do You Know?


The story is told about a black woman who was in trouble many years ago in the days of slavery. Her 16-year-old daughter was about to be sold on the auction block.

The mother bowed her head and prayed, “Dear Lord God, if You were in trouble as I am in trouble, and I could help You as easy as You could help me, I would do it!”

This story is a historical fact; a U.S. Senator was present. The senator’s 15–year-old son was with him, and when the boy saw them pulling this girl away from her mother, and he saw their tears, he ran to his father and said, “Daddy, loan me $10!” The senator gave him the $10. And the boy ran to the auction block.

Before anybody else could start bidding, he said, “I will bid $10.” (Ordinarily, $200 would have been a low opening bid, but everybody was so thrilled at what he was doing that nobody else would bid.)

The boy bought the girl for $10. Taking the bill of sale, he matched right over and handed the girl back to her momma.


[Source: El-Shaddai: The God that is more than enough, by Kenneth E. Hagin]

Monday, February 14, 2011



“Leadership and self-deception: Getting out of the box” – Arbinger Institute.

This book is a wake-up call to all those who think they're good with people. “Leadership and Self-deception” is a valuable book that explains how we deceive ourselves, and how that deception eventually impacts our personal and professional relationships. Self-deception takes place when we blame everyone else for the problems that are going on. It is one of the key factors that determine outcomes in business and personal life. The book calls self-deception as being “in a Box”, a situation wherein we focus only on ourselves. We may be both, “in a box” and “out of the box” at the same time, depending on the people we interact with.
Most of us value honesty and think we are being honest in our relationships. This book effectively shows how we get "in the box" in our personal and professional relationships. What does this mean? It means that when we are “in the box”; we assume that our actions and reactions to the other person are both honest and justified. However, we are unconsciously distorting the other person's motivations and actions in order to defend our "in the box" viewpoint. This radical concept made me uncomfortable and forced me to question some of my self-righteous moments.
All workplace activities are focused on achieving results for the company. However, we can't completely focus on company results if we are "in the box"(there we are more focused on ourselves). Our own results and achievements may take precedence over everything and we may not focus on what's best for the organization. An "in the box" person usually as has one or more of the following symptoms such as lack of commitment, conflict, stress, poor teamwork, lack of trust, lack of accountability and communication issues.
To get out of the box, we should do our best to help others succeed and achieve results (personally and professionally). We must stop treating people as objects to meet our own selfish needs. The books explains why solutions such as trying to change others, coping with others, leaving organizations, communication solutions, implementing new skills or techniques and changing one’s behavior are only superficial solutions. In reality, we must question our own virtue to solve this problem. We must ask ourselves about how our distorted view of the situation started. How our view has affected our judgment and how our responses have been. Doing so will help us identify our areas of self betrayal. Success as a leader depends on continuously identifying and rectifying our habit of self-betrayal and attempting to be “out of the box” as often as possible.
This book focuses on how Tom, a new executive is molded into the unique culture at “Zagum”. It’s a culture that focuses on the awareness of self-deception and individual interactions between people. The company believes that all these things determine the outcome in business and personal life. Self-deception almost destroyed the personal and professional life of Lou, the company founder. He learned to break through the long maintained and painful communication barriers between himself and his son during the Anasazi program, a short-term emotional growth wilderness program for adolescents. This made Lou understand how he was also part of the problem. He adopted their learning and successfully turned around both, his decimated company and his relationship with his estranged son and family.
The book explains how we never know everything. Ignaz, a doctor in the mid-1800s couldn’t figure out why so many patients in his ward were dying. Even after trying almost everything, he failed to change the situation. The concept of germs was not heard of at that time. Many of his doctors researched on dead bodies and then examined patients without washing their hands. This simple difference between his ward and the others made him realize that the true problem was about hand washing and germs. The death rates dropped drastically after that. A lack of knowledge of a problem made it difficult to bring about change.

Instinctively, Tom had dealt harshly with a coworker who committed a serious mistake. This news flows thought the company and reaches Bud (senior management). Bud takes this opportunity to start explaining the company’s culture using a radical, yet simple approach on relationships. He explains that the way we treat coworkers, friends, family, random people, etc determines whether we are inside or outside the box. Once people get “in a box” they think that their reaction to others is honest and justified. When in the box, we view these people as objects, nuisances, or problems, not as people and put our needs and desires before others. We unconsciously and consistently distort our motivations and actions to defend our point of view. Bud uses two examples to explain this “in the box” concept. In the first a person on an aircraft tries to avoid others from taking the free seat beside him. This fills the man with negativity (in the Box) towards his fellow passengers as he sees them as nuisances, as pests who were there to make him as uncomfortable as possible. In the other example (out of the box situation), a woman helps an unknown passenger by voluntarily coming over and offering her seat to clear the confusion. She didn’t have to help, but she did. In this case the woman passenger did not have any negative feeling towards the fellow passenger. The difference between the two reactions shows how we treat others. We deceive our self when we look at others as objects and without compassion.
A person gets in the box through self-betrayal. This happens when people respond contrary to how one should. Self-deception makes the individual to unconsciously justify the reason for not responding in the desired way. This causes the person in the box to create a distorted perception of the other person or organization. The very nature of distortion is such that people don't realize their own distorted viewpoint. Self-betrayal has seven characteristics:
1. An act contrary to what I feel I should do for another is called an act of "self-betrayal."
2. When I betray myself, I begin to see the world in a way that justifies my self-betrayal.
3. When I see a self-justifying world, my view of reality becomes distorted.
4. So - when I betray myself, I enter the box.
5. Over time, certain boxes become characteristic of me, and I carry them with me.
6. By being in the box, I provoke others to be in the box.
In the box, we invite mutual mistreatment and obtain mutual justification. We collude in giving each other reason to stay in the box. We justify our self-deception by using some of the following techniques
1. Inflate others' faults.
2. Inflate our own virtue.
3. Inflate the value of the things that justify my self-betrayal.
4. Blame.
There are many quick fixes as mentioned below that people try to do to when they are inside the box. However, Lou explains why they are ineffective. This eliminates almost all the possible solutions and leaves the reader confused. However there is hope and we can get out of the box and it’s in the next section.
1. trying to change others
2. Doing my best to cope with others;
3. Leaving
4. Communicating
5. implementing new skills or techniques
6. Changing my behavior
The book solution leaves the reader slightly off-guard, confused and humbled. Lou’s solution is to question our own virtue. To question ourselves and find when we distorted our views and how our distorted view of the situation is affecting our response. To question our willingness to see a person in a way that vindicates our self-betrayal, rather than attempting to understand who the person really is. Tom’s and Lou’s example shows how their situations changed when got “out of the box”. The book “LEADERSHIP AND SELF-DECEPTION” ends with the advice that until we "get out of the box" and the remove the distortions it causes, we won’t really know who we work and live with.
Staying “out of the box” is an important take away from this book and leaders should strive to achieve that. Leaders have power and control over people. People reporting to their superiors may or may not be able to tell the leader about the harmful effects of their actions. Team performance is optimal when the team works towards a common goal as a unit. Self-deception is can break a team or organization into pieces. The effect is more severe when the leader has a problem with self-deception. The book also mentions that when a leader is “in a box” everyone else’s ideas and views fade into the background. Many problems in organizations are usually not due to a lack of expertise; rather, problems due to the conflicting relationships between different employees in an organization.
The tricky bit is that people can be both in and out of it at the same time. This blurs the problem and makes it hard to detect. Hence, as leaders we must constantly evaluate ourselves and aim to be out of the box as often as possible.

“Failure”, I’m in love with you

"To be successful, you must learn to learn from failure?" – L Lewis
Failure is the stepping stone to success. There can be no success without failures ( unless you are good at hiding them). That’s because we learn by our mistakes. As kids we fell again and again. We made horrible mistakes, tore books, broke expensive articles and then gave that million dollar tear when caught. We cried, laughed and then smiled with honesty. We were always so upbeat and energetic. Every sad moment lasted only for moment and no more. There was so much to do and learn. There was always something to hope for.
Why did we lose this skill as adults?
Was it family, culture or self that caused this change....( food for thought). I don’t know and may never know what changed me. All I know, is that I need to understand that failure is the stepping stone to success. Failure is just another step in the path to success. I think that to have success, we must learn to celebrate failure. We need to pick some to the tips below.
1) Evaluate ourselves and the cause of the failure
2) Set your goals realistically. Aim high and be prepared to work hard. Its Ok to Make mistakes; criticize yourself and move on
3) learn to change the circumstances that led to failure (the hard bit). Never let failure make you sad and helpless. Its just a failure for Christ’s sake. Get up pick the pieces and walk again.
4) BE OPTIMISTIC (Really, this is very important). Be optimistic about everything in life. Spread the optimism, make it infectious and see the hope that goes around come around ;)
5) Forgive yourself and others for their mistakes.
6) Be nice to yourself and respect yourself. If you don’t respect yourself, why should others respect you?
7) Talk to someone honest, optimistic, mature and sensible.
8) Pray to God and be patient. Do your best and keep you eyes open for other possibilities. Never stare at the closed door for too long. You may not notice other newly opened doors.
Again, never give up!!!!!
Failure is an option (* conditions apply) Most successful people started with failure. Others managed to successfully cover their failures.
* Jumping from planes, tight ropes walking, fighting after beers etc are not covered by this statement.

Below are some people who didn’t manage to cover their failure… Ha ha ha. Have a read; pick yourself up and laugh ( there is hope).
Walt Disney: Today Disney rakes in billions from merchandise, movies and theme parks around the world, but Walt Disney himself had a bit of a rough start. He was fired by a newspaper editor because, "he lacked imagination and had no good ideas." After that, Disney started a number of businesses that didn't last too long and ended with bankruptcy and failure. He kept plugging along, however, and eventually found a recipe for success that worked.
Bill Gates: Gates didn't seem like a shoe-in for success after dropping out of Harvard and starting a failed first business with Microsoft co-founder Paul Allen called Traf-O-Data. While this early idea didn't work, Gates' later work did, creating the global empire that is Microsoft.
Albert Einstein: Most of us take Einstein's name as synonymous with genius, but he didn't always show such promise. Einstein did not speak until he was four and did not read until he was seven, causing his teachers and parents to think he was mentally handicapped, slow and anti-social. Eventually, he was expelled from school and was refused admittance to the Zurich Polytechnic School. It might have taken him a bit longer, but most people would agree that he caught on pretty well in the end, winning the Nobel Prize and changing the face of modern physics.
Isaac Newton: Newton was undoubtedly a genius when it came to math, but he had some failings early on. He never did particularly well in school and when put in charge of running the family farm, he failed miserably, so poorly in fact that an uncle took charge and sent him off to Cambridge where he finally blossomed into the scholar we know today.
Winston Churchill: This Nobel Prize-winning, twice-elected Prime Minster of the United Kingdom wasn't always as well regarded as he is today. Churchill struggled in school and failed the sixth grade. After school he faced many years of political failures, as he was defeated in every election for public office until he finally became the Prime Minister at the ripe old age of 62.
Oprah Winfrey: Most people know Oprah as one of the most iconic faces on TV as well as one of the richest and most successful women in the world. Oprah faced a hard road to get to that position, however, enduring a rough and often abusive childhood as well as numerous career setbacks including being fired from her job as a television reporter because she was "unfit for tv."
The Beatles: Few people can deny the lasting power of this super group, still popular with listeners around the world today. Yet, when they were just starting out, a recording company told them no. The were told "we don't like their sound, and guitar music is on the way out," two things the rest of the world couldn't have disagreed with more.
Michael Jordan: Most people wouldn't believe that a man often lauded as the best basketball player of all time was actually cut from his high school basketball team. Luckily, Jordan didn't let this setback stop him from playing the game and he has stated, "I have missed more than 9,000 shots in my career. I have lost almost 300 games. On 26 occasions I have been entrusted to take the game winning shot, and I missed. I have failed over and over and over again in my life. And that is why I succeed."