Outstanding Club

Addressing the social needs of our communities through outstanding actions

Outstanding Club

Find Your Own Answers

Your journey begins within

Find Your Own Answers

The Virtue of Failure

From the bleakest of outcomes can rise brilliance

The Virtue of Failure

The Giving Paradox

Creating wealth by giving your money away

The Giving Paradox

Resolution Revolution

Oct 14th, 2008 by Iain Hamp | 1

Today’s Misdirectional Compass Point:

Establishing Resolutions is Only For New Years
Character is the ability to carry out a good resolution long after the excitement of the moment has passed.” – Cavett Robert

Resolution: finding a solution to a problem

Resoluteness: the trait of being resolute; “his resoluteness carried him through the battle”; “it was his unshakeable resolution to finish the work”

While it makes sense that people have a sense of starting over around the first of the new year, it has always seemed dangerously arbitrary and limiting to tie resolutions strictly to a New Year’s activity. May I humbly suggest that resolutions might make a lot of sense, perhaps even more sense, if they were made in conjunction with other holidays or events?

Can’t figure out what to get someone on Valentine’s Day? Get together as a couple and come up with Valentine’s resolutions! They’re like New Year’s resolutions, except you do them as a couple, they are about how to be romantic for each other all year long instead of one day a year, and you stick to them. It might sound silly, but maybe you’d discover things about what each other wants or needs, or make it a point to go on a date each week even though you’re married and rekindle your relationship every weekend.

Have you been wanting to visit a local museum or art gallery, but you never seem to find the time to do so? What better day than to resolve to visit such places at least four times a year, than on Columbus Day (essentially a holiday about celebrating “discovery”)?!

Even less traditional or well recognized holidays might well be good cause to make a resolution. National Pie Day could inspire you to take up cooking a home-cooked meal more often, or spontaneously go on a date with your spouse to eat pie at your local diner once a month (or week, or whatever). The point is, we always change as people through the whole year, so why only set goals to try to achieve at one semi-arbitrary point during the year? Why should New Year’s have all the fun? The Resolution Revolution is about expanding our minds and getting creative about how to spur ourselves into action in fun, interesting ways.

October 30th is Haunted Refrigerator Night – take this opportunity to clean out the fridge and find those scary things that might be growing in the recesses of your vegetable crisper!

November 21st is World Hello Day – Say hello to five people you have never met before, and if possible strike up a conversation. These could be people at work you’ve passed a hundred times and never met, or a customer at the same store you’re shopping at.

(The Brownielocks site has a great list of additional obscure holidays.)

The point is, if you tie a resolution of achieving some goal to an event or holiday that is more directly related to it, you might find you have a better chance of following through with it.

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Change Management

Oct 12th, 2008 by Iain Hamp | 8

Today’s Misdirectional Compass Point:

No Eagerness For Things to Change

“Life is change. Growth is optional. Choose wisely.”

Change is always happening, but lately it seems to have accelerated and magnified. The economic future of the United States, and in fact the world, seems to be shifting in profound ways. American economic institutions are closing doors, being bought out or merged, and/or being bailed out by a government that needs a little bailing out of its own. The National Debt Clock in New York City has run out of digits, and will be replaced by one capable of handling enough digits for the debt to reach up to a quadrillion dollars. Companies of all sizes are having trouble getting loans to cover payroll and expenses, and hard decisions about how those companies will make it through today’s struggles may impact your own career or the livelihood of someone you care about. Without a doubt, the road ahead looks to be difficult.

The normal response to such difficult challenges may be anger, panic, sorrow, or fear. You may simply not quite know how to feel – all of this just seems so BIG, how does one begin to understand what a sensible reaction might be? I certainly don’t have the answers, but I might be able to provide a few helpful questions, and perhaps even a few words of encouragement, that you can apply not just to these big, monstrous changes, but to change of all shapes and sizes that might seem, at first, like something to fear or dread.

Change is inevitable. It is constant. It simply is. To say that change is good or bad is to only look at it from a particular viewpoint, no matter who you are and no matter what the change may be. If a friend loses his or her job, your initial reaction may be to console or worry. But what if the loss of that job was the spark necessary to start an amazing new journey in your friend’s life? A loved one discovers he or she has cancer, and instinct might call for grief. But what if the cancer inspires making more of the years remaining than all the other years before, touching lives in ways they would never have dared to otherwise?

I don’t mean to indicate that job loss or cancer are good things by any stretch of the imagination! I am suggesting that judging whether such changes are “good” or “bad” is irrelevant – the changes have happened, they exist, and all that remains to be done is determine the attitude we each take with us into whatever the future holds next.

I also don’t mean to suggest that you shouldn’t show empathy for the plight of your fellow man when they face difficult challenges. They need your caring support and encouragement more than ever in these times, just as you would were you in the same shoes. But part of that support is letting them know that they still have a choice about things in their lives, they still have a chance to make amazingly positive impacts in the lives of those around them. Your best days and theirs can easily still be ahead, and it just requires facing challenges and peering deep into them for the gems of opportunity and growth that exist within.

“Change is the essence of life. Be willing to surrender what you are for what you could become.”

Some changes are, of course, far more difficult to face than others. It may be that the path ahead cannot be traveled by the person you are today, that the challenge is simply insurmountable. Most, when faced with such adversity, may walk away and live with the opportunity cost of taking a path that, while acceptable, will not take them where they desire most to get to. What if, instead of choosing a different challenge or path to face, you choose a different you instead? If you were to grow in such a way that the previously insurmountable challenge seems less impossible, the result could be an arduous but worthwhile journey to everything you dream and hope for. It would require the ability to adapt, and the courage to let go of some of the control you perceive you have in order to face the unknown. It may not even work, at first or even ever, but consider the alternatives (a life less than you desire) and that even in this worst case scenario, you’ve grown as a person and are much better equipped to face the next challenge that dares cross your path!

“Growth means change and change involves risk, stepping from the known to the unknown.”

To fear growth is, in a sense, to fear change. After all, you literally cannot have growth without change. But there is certainly risk involved, as my 401K will readily attest to these days! Some days by doing nothing, you will end up temporarily in a better position that those who chose to embrace change and take on the challenges of the day. To perceive that as a reason for inaction, though, is a trap, for there will be another day, and another after that, and change will come in each of them. Each time you don’t take the opportunity to grow from change, you lose the chance to grow into the person you have the potential to be. Who do you aspire to be? What is the version of you that would make you amazed and exhilirated to be alive, regardless of what challenges may come? What kind of husband, father, wife, mother, son, daughter, or friend do you want those you care about deeply to have in their lives? By embracing the inevitability of change and making the most of the day’s opportunities to grow, you can not only enrich your own life but also the lives you touch.

“Nobody can go back and start a new beginning, but anyone can start today and make a new ending.” – Maria Robinson

Is change something to fear, or something to eagerly await? Will you just weather the storm, or will you steal some of its power as your own? Are you going to let change happen to you, or will you embrace change and enable it to happen for you?

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Personal Mission Statement – Yakov Smirnoff

Sep 27th, 2008 by Iain Hamp | 0

“To experience happiness and teach it with passion through comedy and sensitivity”

(reference)

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Personal Mission Statement – Naomi Judd

Sep 27th, 2008 by Iain Hamp | 1

“Slow down. Simplify. Be kind.”

(reference)

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Personal Mission Statement – Mahatma Gandhi

Jul 26th, 2008 by Iain Hamp | 2

“Let the first act of every morning be to make the following resolve for the day:
I shall not fear anyone on earth.
I shall fear only God.
I shall not bear ill toward anyone.
I shall not submit to injustice from anyone.
I shall conquer untruth by truth.
And in resisting untruth, I shall put up with all suffering”

- Mahatma Gandhi.

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