Archive for the 'Thoughts' Category

Thanks to everyone who participated in last week’s explosive launch campaign for The 4:8 Principle: The Secret to a Joy-Filled Life!  Because of your efforts, The 4:8 Principle achieved both Amazon and Barnes & Noble Best-Seller status simultaneously! I believe this is just the beginning of what I am calling “The 4:8 Movement.”

This goal of this movement is to equip millions of individuals, couples, families, and organizations with the thinking tools to reach their full potential and at the same time enjoy every moment along the way. I am especially passionate about the biblical roots of The 4:8 Principle. It is incredibly exciting to me personally that a book that honors God and teaches the REAL SECRET can make such a splash in the general bookseller’s marketplace.  Thanks to you, this happened last week and is continuing today. When you, your family, and your friends practice the 4:8 principle, great things can happen!

Please help spread the word!  Order an extra copy today for your most important relationships or ask for it at your local bookstore! If you are an entrepreneur, business leader, mom, dad or student, you can benefit from the life-changing power of The 4:8 Principle today.  Your Joy Blesses Others!

What are you feeding your mind?

Sunday, August 26th, 2007

In The 1% Club, Positive Mental Nutrition refers to an ultra-healthy mental diet.   A healthy mind, like a healthy body, must be continuously fed a diet (more…)

Whatever happened to real boys?

Friday, June 15th, 2007

 “Whatever happened to real boys?” That’s a question a friend and client asked me recently. Not knowing the answer, I replied with “what’s a real boy?” It’s a question that a lot of folks are trying to answer these days. John Eldridge raised a similar question in his bestseller Wild At Heart and Bill Perkins raises it in his (more…)

Can You Hear That?

Friday, May 11th, 2007

Can you hear yourself think?  Can you hear God speaking to you? Sometimes, in this day and age, it can be hard to silence the noise around us long enough to hear God’s voice? I was driving home yesterday and saw 6 people walking independent of each other down the sidewalk. The first 5 women were all holding mobile phones to their ear as they walked. The last person, a man, appeared to be (more…)

When driving, we’ve probably all shared the experience of beginning to merge into another lane of traffic, only to be interrupted by a loud horn from another driver we were about to collide with. We weren’t intentionally trying to crash into the other car, of course. We just didn’t see it. We looked in our mirror, glanced quickly over our shoulder, didn’t see another vehicle and confidently began our lane change. Where did the other car come from? It was in our (more…)

Billions of Potential Thoughts

Friday, May 4th, 2007

There are literally billions of potential thoughts you could choose to think at any given moment. It’s great news that you are not limited to thinking in only one way. Your thoughts can be totally different and consequently, your life and experiences can be totally different. In a private MasterMIND session yesterday, I explained to a group of new clients that every thought (more…)

Easy and Common

Tuesday, October 10th, 2006

It’s easy and common to gradually become disconnected from the people we love the most. This is apparent in many marriages, particularly when children are involved. It’s easy to get swept away in kids’ activities, social commitments, business obligations and the chronic stuff that keeps us preoccupied. This well-intentioned busyness can fiercely compete for time with our most important relationships.

If, overnight, we became dramatically distanced, we would notice it and remedy the situation immediately. If we put on 10 pounds overnight, we’d take action to fix that as well. Since the relational gap happens little by little, it’s easy and common to become accustomed to it. Rather than fighting for our priorities, it’s easy and common to simply accept things the way they are.

You are probably aware of (more…)

So you think you are having a bad day?

Tuesday, October 10th, 2006

On our radio program this past Sunday, Steve and I interviewed tri-athlete, Scott Rigsby. Scott is a double amputee who lost one leg in an accident after graduating high school in 1986. Scott was thrown from the back of a pickup truck, dragged over 300 feet on the hot asphalt and then pinned underneath a 3-ton trailer. Listen to the full interview to hear about the “miracle tow truck.” Twelve years later, Scott asked his orthopedic surgeon to remove his remaining left leg. Today he is (more…)

Trans Fatty Disaster, Years In The Making

Thursday, October 5th, 2006

A few weeks ago New York City’s health department introduced a proposal that would bar cooks at any of the city’s 24,600 food service establishments from using ingredients that contain the artery-clogging substance, commonly listed on food labels as partially hydrogenated oil. Like the tobacco industry, the food industry (and the government) has long known the toxic effects of trans fatty acids on the human body. However, until recently, very little has been done to educate and warn the public and change the cost-cutting practices of food manufacturers. Like smoking, ingesting trans fatty acids causes (more…)

I was rereading Tom Rath’s valuable book, How Full Is Your Bucket, last week when I came across a suggestion that caught my attention. Rath and co-author Don Clifton point out that cigarette smoking has been shown to reduce life expectancy by 5.5 years for males and 7 years for females. (Of course this doesn’t mention the consequences of second hand smoke on the rest of us) Relating these smoking statistics to research on positive emotions and longevity, the authors suggest that negative emotions may very likely shave off more years of life (10) than even smoking. In light of this, maybe there should be a Surgeon General’s warning about the danger of negative emotions. No doubt, negative emotions are responsible for far more damage to individuals and families than smoking. This got me thinking.  

Smoking and negativity have a lot in common. Obviously, both begin as a choice. Over time, these choices become unconscious, automatic reflexes that inflict damage to oneself and those in close proximity. In addition to short term consequences, there are also the ultimate consequences of both smoking and negative emotions. Like smoking, expressing negative emotions provides temporary satisfaction that will inevitably need to be quenched again in the not to distant future. Both smoking and negativity become stubborn addictions that their owners become accustomed to and rationalize quite cleverly. As a non smoker, it’s hard for me to understand how someone could knowingly, willingly pollute their bodies with a cigarette or anything else for that matter. And I have the same curiosity for the negative crowd as well.  The damage spreads well beyond the source. As with smoking, the negative “bucket dippers” create a ripple effect of second hand negativity that circulates and pollutes their surroundings.  

If you have enough reasons to quit, you can snuff out that final cigarette once and for all. We all know those who have done it. Likewise, if you have a big enough “why” you can overcome negativity and the collateral damage it causes as well. Consider who you are building up as a result of your positive emotional energy. And, who are you pulling down as a result of your negative energy? How could you infuse your best relationships with your best self in the next 48 hours?  It’s worth thinking about! What do you think?

Coach

 
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