Ever tried to set sail in a tornado?
Are you being carried along to some inevitable destination? Gravity, tidal forces and currents of water don’t care about where they are taking you. They are uncaring, unrelenting, only seeking the lowest point they can find. Always falling, never stopping. There is no avoiding it, you cannot change it.
Swimming against a current can feel hopeless. How can you make your way against the unrelenting forces around you. Isn’t it just easier to drift (or even swim) along with the current. After all, when you look around and all you see is everyone else moving the same direction, it must be … continue reading.
The carrot and the stick
What motivates people? Do you think you know? Spend 10 minutes on this and then let me know what you think. I’d like to hear…
Softball Fairplay
Lisa and I went to watch the Living Water co-ed softball team play last night in Lacey. Our team won in extra innings – a closely played game. I was blessed to watch an environment of competition with respect and godliness.
My daughter Rachel Guddat (wife of first baseman and all around nice guy Jason) informed
me that I could only cheer for our team, no jeering of the other team allowed. (I wonder why she might feel the need to coach me like this…) Apparently, this is a church league where respect and nice play are the rules of the day – cross the wrong line and a fan could get his/her team disqualified.
It was eight innings of positive comments and fun from both sides of the field. Terrific!
Fair Play
Have you ever noticed the droning sound – the constant humming sound of a soccer game? I’m watching the US vs. Algeria World Cup soccer game this morning. It sounds like a bee hive… Maybe the better question is, have you ever noticed a soccer game?
Yesterday, Jon Cobler mentioned today’s early morning game, reminding me it wold be broadcast around 6:30 a.m. So I thought I’d tune in to see what the fuss is about. The commentators mentioned a controversy about a referee’s call in a previous US game. The ref disallowed a US goal late in a match. It was supposed to be the winning goal. Instead the game ended in a 2-2 tie. Lots of soccer games end in a tie. After traveling thousands of miles and attracting thousands (millions) of viewers, tie’s are silly. They are probably why more Americans do not watch professional soccer. They are against nature aren’t they?
What piqued my interest is the story about how our team had been wronged. I became interested only after I heard about a controversy. Where was my curiosity about the game itself? What is it about me that wants to rise up when a perceived injustice is done – to my team. Fair Play.
Oh no! Our team just had another goal disallowed for “off sides”. But the replay showed it was good. Shouldn’t our coach run onto the field and kick dirt on the umpire’s feet – ala Lou Pinella? Fair Play, right?
Guess I’ll have some Shredded Wheat and watch a bit more of this game. It’s kind of interesting to watch…
Edit one hour later: Scoring a goal at the very end of the match, the US won and advances in the World Cup. This is such an exciting sport!
Faith and Vision
Lisa and I recently visited the Kennedy Space Center. It was magical for me to stand exactly upon the spot from which our very first manned rockets “blasted off” into space. (We weren’t sophisticated enough to say “launched”.) As a little boy, certain special mornings found me sitting on a cold floor five feet in front of a small black and white TV with my eyes, ears and heart locked upon the flickering image. Missing a blast off was unthinkable. The imagination of this little boy, my nation, and maybe the world, was captured.
When President John F. Kennedy challenged our nation to send a man to the moon by the end of the decade – it seemed the obvious thing to do. Once accomplished, the moon landing became a point of national pride.
Retrospect gets warped by the more advanced capabilities present today. Even an astounding accomplishment like landing on the moon seems less impressive than it actually was – because today’s technology creates higher expectations than were reasonable back then.
What kind of crazy challenge did President Kennedy lay down? Consider this: His challenge came in a speech in May of 1961. Only 34 years had passed (May of 1927) since Charles Lindbergh made the very first solo flight across the Atlantic Ocean. Mankind was only learning how to fly airplanes. The challenge to go to the moon and back was an impossible dream.
I look back at the accomplishment with awe. Understanding the scope and scale of the challenge puts President Kennedy’s vision into the category of the extraordinary. Personally and deeply affected because someone else had a vision and enough faith and guts to declare it, I’m grateful.