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3 Words for 2010 – Story, Others, Positive

Following Chris Brogan’s lead Terry Storch recently published his 3 words for 2010. One of his 3 words was “Inpsire”, so I want him to know he’s already done so by inspiring me to follow his lead.

My 3 words for 2010 are Story, Others, and Positive. Each of these words came to me through 3 great books I read this past year or two.

Story

I’ve read every book that Donald Miller has written and I’ve had the privilege to see him speak twice in person at the Catalyst and Story conferences. I had hoped to meet Donald Miller while at Story but he had the flu and darted off shortly after speaking. His best book since Blue Like Jazz (a must read) is his most recent one, A Million Miles in a Thousand Years. In the book he explains that many of us are not achieving what God has intended for us because we’re not living the story God has written for us. A story involves a person that wants something and is willing to overcome conflict to get it. It is my goal to write a new story for my life and family this year. To get a taste of this idea, read Donald Miller’s most recent post on goal setting, or better yet, get his book and see how it impacts you.

Others

Another favorite book I read last year was The Hole in the Gospel by Richard Strearns, CEO of World Vision. Do not read this book unless you want to be seriously challenged in your faith and your actions. It was truly a wake-up call to what it really means to be a Christian, to share our faith, and to serve others. One of the verses he highlights that hit me hard was Ezekiel 16:49, “Behold, this was the guilt of your sister Sodom: she and her daughters had pride, excess of food, and prosperous ease, but did not aid the poor and needy.” My goal is to put others first at home, at work, at church, and in the world. I’m not sure how this will manifest itself yet, but whatever it is, I plan to do it in the context of a “story”.

Positive

One of the best books I read in 2008 was The Art of Possibility by Benjamin Zander. He is a renowned orchestra conductor and current music director for the Boston Philharmonic. In his book, Zander recalls that he was in his mid forties until he realized that during a concert the conductor doesn’t make a sound. He realized that everything he did depended 100% upon the achievement of others. It was at that moment that he began to look at things differently and focus on teaching and inspiring others. He brings forth simple yet profound insights in his book, one of my favorites is Rule #6 which, simply stated, means, “Don’t take yourself so ____ seriously”. Much can be learned and taught with the right positive attitude regardless of whether life sends you roses or thorns. You can get a small taste of Zander's message by watching his 20 minuted presentation at the TED conference.

Blessed Beyond Belief

As we near Thanksgiving I'm reminded how very blessed I am. It's impossible to list everything but here are a few highlights. I'm thankful for…

  • My salvation in Christ
  • My beautiful wife Melissa
  • My wonderful kids, Colton and Mercedes
  • My church, where my family thinks this, this, and this is commonplace at every church in America
  • Faith Christian, where my wife teaches and my children attend school, and where amazing stories like this happen regularly
  • My role at Fellowship Technologies, where I can work alongside an excellent team of 60+ individuals committed to changing the world by changing the church world

God bless,

Curtis S

Facing a Mid-Life (Technology) Crisis

Lately I feel like I'm entering into a mid-life crisis. But this one is neither biological nor emotional. Coloring my hair and buying a red sports car won't make me feel any better (ok, well maybe it will). No, this crisis is a technology one. You see, much like when my metabolism slowed to crawl after I passed 30 so has my ability to keep up with technology.

For the first 10yrs of my career I was a programmer and an application architect working with a wide array of technologies like C++, Java, Unix, Windows, Oracle, SQL Server, WebSphere, WebLogic, IIS, etc., etc. I had a voracious appetite for technology. However, over time, I moved into broader leadership roles and before I knew it my technology life was passing before my eyes. Here at Fellowship Technologies I have a wide range of teams that report to me, from Data Center Operations to Customer Services to Professional Services and Product Development. Time and other factors preclude me from exercising my tech skills as heavily as I did in the past. When I recently celebrated my 3rd anniversary at Fellowship Tech I realized that I may have indeed become… dare I say it?… a "Generalist".

I believe I'm still an effective leader. My background in SaaS technologies and architectures allows me to challenge the team's ideas and help to ensure we've arrived at the best possible solutions. Solutions that serve our current customers well and scales effectively and efficiently in the future. But thankfully both for my team, and for our customers, I am no longer making the daily, low level, technology decisions, I leave those to our experts.

Here are a few of the warning signs of a Mid-Life Technology Crisis (perhaps you to are exhibiting a few of these):

10. You find yourself writing down terms and acronyms used by the team during a meeting and then secretly Googling them later to figure out what they mean

9. You use a formerly relevant TLA (Three Letter Acronym) such as "DTD" and your team begins to refer to you as "Grandpa"

8. You have to get assistance to setup a blog reader because it now suddenly seems as difficult as it is for your Dad to set the time on a VCR

7. Your iPod is filled with PodCasts of the McLaughlin Group and episodes of The Office

6. You get a new laptop and after your install Microsoft Office you realize that you really don't need to install anything else to do your job effectively

5. You begin to lower your screen resolution rather than raise it so you can read the text without squinting

4. When the team was speaking about Scrum and Agile you pipe in with a comment about Rugby

3. You prefer to be in bed eating a toaster pizza watching The Colbert Report rather than staying up till 2am watching Microsoft's Channel 9 vlogs

2. You have to get your teen age son to help "fix" your computer

1. Pulling an "all-nighter" now means you didn't have to get up out of bed to go to the bathroom

I'm clearly exhibiting all 10 of these behaviors so I'm now focusing on other skills like leadership, team building, vision casting, metrics, best practices, etc. I will miss being in the thick of technology things but I'm finding that these new areas are just as challenging and fun.

God Bless,

Curtis S