Tuesday, January 29, 2013

Worth of a Soul

This week may be short.  I am a little crunched for time.  It seems a little ironic after what I spoke of last week but I promise I am not stressed, I just have little time to do many things.

My so what this week is what I learned in my MCOM class tonight.  (This is what you have been waiting for Professor Middleton).  While discussing good presentation skills we learned that a presenter should be sure to focus on their audience rather than themselves.  In the moment of presenting they should forget how they look or what people are thinking of them and instead focus on what the experience is like for the audience.  Are they getting the message?  Are they feeling what you hope they should be feeling?  We should put them before us.

So now what?  I propose that this philosophy can be applied in all aspects of life.  It is a common teaching in The Gospel of Jesus Christ.  We need to be selfless.  This teaching has just helped me see more clearly the practical applications of this teaching.  When I am walking across campus I should think more about what the people I am passing are going through than what I am going through.  I should think of the person who just cut in front of me on the highway as a person and not a car.  I grew up in a small town where people were people.  Moving to a "big town" like Provo I have found that I have fallen into the trap that most people are objects unless they are significant people in my life.  My goal this week is to treat all people as people an not objects.

Wednesday, January 23, 2013

Perspective

The so what for this week is stress.  When was the last time you met someone that to you that life was calm and they always had an excess of time.  I guess this may be the case for a few people but not many.  I don't think I remember the last time I was able to say my life was like this.  It seems as much as I look forward to the day when I will finish the tasks that are currently making my life a busy list of things to do it never actually comes.  Now before I go any further I want to point out that I completely recognize that this is one of those things that is not unique to me in any way and anybody reading this is thinking to themselves, "you think your life is busy?"  Well it is, and I am sure that yours is too.  The truth is we are all busy, and we will always be busy.  That truth brings me to my now what.

Perspective is my now what.  Life is busy, but what determines whether or not that busyness turns into stress or not is how we look at the situation.  Do we take the time to put things into perspective.  I have found that the best thing to do is step back, look at the big picture, and see that things don't matter as much as I think they do in the moment.  Showing up five minutes late for class will not matter two days from now.  Failing a test or getting a B+ in a class instead of an A- will probably not matter ten years from now.  If we take the eternal perspective it becomes even more clear what is important and what is not.  We start to realize that at the end of this life it will not matter what career we had, our social status, how well known we are amongst men, or how big our house is.  We quickly begin to see that the important things are family, how we treat and serve others, did we live our values, and what kind of person we have become.  In stressful busy times, which is pretty much all the time, a perspective like this can serve to calm us and refocus our efforts on what matters.  Unfortunately it is in the stressful times that this perspective is most difficult to maintain.  I am going to set a goal for myself that I will stop whenever I am stressed and force myself to think about these things and see what matters and what doesn't.  There are many ways to do this.  The one I will use is the scriptures.  I will take the time to read them whenever I am stressed and try to turn my thoughts and heart to an eternal view of my world.  



Tuesday, January 15, 2013

Foolsumptions

My "so what: for this week doesn't have anything to do with my Writing in Business class.  If anybody ends up reading this besides my professor they will probably be grateful for that because if every post had to do with me improving my grammar or writing ability this blog would probably not me a very interesting read (sorry professor Middleton).  So, my "so what for this week has to do with the assumptions we make.  We have probably all heard what happens when we assume.  You know, when you break of the syllables it makes a cleaver phrase.  In order to avoid any appearance of vulgarity in this blog I will do it with the word "foolsume" instead.  When you foolsume you make a fool out of u and me.   I have been hearing about the truth of this statement a lot lately.  I am in a Doctrine and Covenants class right now taught by Brother Steven Harper and Brigham Young University.  If any of you don't know what The Doctrine & Covenants are you can go here and see for you self.  Anyway, we are learning the history behind the revelations and the biggest thing that Brother Harper tells us is that we need to eliminate our assumptions.  Our assumptions block us from learning truths and can sometimes shake our foundations if those assumptions are part of them.

Then, last Sunday I attended the CES devotional given by President Dieter F. Uchtdorf.  He talked about truth, and how we learn the truth.  He talked about how it is possible for our assumptions to impede us from learning the truth.  I realized that this may be the case for me.  Let me give you an example.

I was at Winco this weekend with my wife.  We were enjoying the wonderfully cheap produce and the wide variety of by-the-pound products.  When we were in line to check out the man behind us began to talk to us about how wonderful Winco is.  This man was large.  Buzzed head, old leather jacket, possibly wearing sweats, and looked a little bit rough around the edges.  For a split second I was inclined to send him a signal through body language telling him that it was socially unacceptable for him to be talking to me.  I am glad I did not.  I decided to be courteous and it turned out to be a wonderful experience.  The guy was kind, happy, and funny.  The conversation we had with him made my day better.

Our interactions with the people around us are full of "foolsumptions."  We just people about the way they dress, the way they talk, and they way they aren't like what we would hope they were.  These foolsumptions cripple us and them.  We decide that we know what they are like without giving them the chance to show us what they are really like.

So what?  Now what?  I am going to think each day about an assumption that I make about people and make an effort that day to not make it.  This may end up being more of a thought exercise than an action exercise but I feel like it may end up effecting my actions as well.  My hope is that if I make a daily effort to remove my prejudices I will be able to see people more as our Heavenly Father and Jesus Christ see them.  I will be able to see the truth about who they really are and what they have the potential to become.  I will be able to love them more.


Thursday, January 10, 2013

From the beginning



I am currently at the beginning of many things.  I was married 11 days ago and so I am at the beginning of a new family and life as a husband.  I am at the beginning of a new semester of school which appears it will be the most difficult semester I will have as a student at BYU.  I am at the beginning of the process of applying to medical school.  And of course, I am at the beginning of my first blog.

When I was told in my business communication class that I would have to create a blog I was not excited.  I always saw blogs as an interesting mix of two things: (1) entertaining writings from a few people who actually had unique experiences worth sharing and (2) a whole lot of written reality shows where people tell the world about their very normal lives as if they were full of action and adventure.  I have always been sure that I would fall into the second category and have therefore found no reason I should ever write a blog.  On top of that I am no anywhere near an entertaining writer so I was sure my writing would do nothing more than bore and confuse anyone who read it.  So, when I was given the assignment to write a blog I groaned a little inside.

Then, I started thinking about what a blog is and could be.  A few of my realizations came from my professor.  It could be a great learning tool to get me experience at using another one of the many forms of social media important in our age.  It is also a way for me to train my mind to seek for things that I can learn from like and figure out how to apply them for change in my life.  Some other things I realized on my own as I thought about what I would write.  I realized that I may from time to time have a rather unique experience and a blog would be a way to share those experiences with others so that may glean some benefit as well.  I also saw it as a way to share my faith.  I am a member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints.  My faith plays a bigger role in my life than just about anything else and I hope that will reflect in what I write in this blog.  If just one person who reads this blog gets just a little closer to Christ because of what they read than the whole thing will be worth it.  

As I thought about these things I decided that I was actually excited to write a blog and that I would do my best to make it a positive experience rather than a dreaded one.  I would try to make my blog interesting.  The prompt for the class for our blogs is "So what? Now what?"  In other words we are supposed to take something we learn each week (so what) and fin a way that we will apply it in our lives (now what).  For the next few months this will be the basis behind each of my blog posts.  After the class is over I may continue to follow the same idea or I may change my format.  We will see.  

For this week, my so what is that I learned that writing and reading a blog can be useful and a great experience if we go at it with the correct attitude.  My now what is what is right in front of you now and what you will read as I write.  I will make this blog something useful.  It may not be useful to anyone else but my but nevertheless it will be useful.  I am going to enjoy writing it.  I hope any who read it will enjoy it as well.