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February 1, 2021
I call it stream thinking.
Because I believe in the power of now.
The challenge is to write one page.
10 minutes only. No editing. Whatever you feel in the moment. Drop the writing instrument then walk
away. On a different day we get to talk
about it. This week’s subject hits us
all in the heart. What we think we know versus what we want to know. What do we really know? What are we knowingly doing about it? This tends to serve as a trigger for many. It sends emotions toward challenge and change
or into moments of taking cover. The
investment of energy is personal and isn’t easy to pull off. If something or someone has moved into your
tight circle, the objective should always be to put peace first. As a third degree Black Belt this was shoved
deeply into our thinking and reaction process.
It wasn’t to train like warriors on a headhunt. The mission should always be to put peace
ahead of all things. There can’t be a
reason to find strength in defense. But
in the real world of the everyday situation the design of so many thinking
patterns is fed by how others violate our space. We’re ready to use what we want to know as a
reason to resurface what’s now become the newer connection. Taking what we know
and putting value in it as a tool. I
love it when people say, “I’ve got nothing to complain about.” I instantly respond, “But if you did. What would it be?” The usual response is, “Let’s not go there.”
Because we know! Learning how to
collaborate with other passerby’s is vital in the way of generating enough
space to stop stepping on what others know about you. I’m blown away with how a simple nametag
changes the direction of what a person may think they know. On the frontline, I’m not the radio guy. I don’t use his name. People approach me thinking they know. One look at the nametag and it’s a different
conversation. How often do you do the
same? No matter where you travel the
information held helps pave the way until the edge of the surface fails to put
into play because you didn’t know the entire story. Do you keep walking or get to know something
new?
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