Archive for category General

Autopilot brain

As I’ve been getting used to having more control of my time with GTD, I’ve found an interesting phenomenon that I call “autopilot brain”.  Essentially the way I think of it is that the brain (or perhaps the will) has a couple of modes.  In one mode I have the ability to dream up any idea or action, figure out what needs to be done.  In that mode I can write down huge lists of things that I’d like to have happen, or I can sit and contemplate what I need to do.  But, it is very hard to actually do anything when I’m in that mindset.  The most I can usually manage is to write the things down or record them in some other way.

The second mode is what I call “autopilot brain”.  It requires almost no willpower because I’ve already defined what needs to be done, so I just follow those decisions.  Sometime it takes a little more work because I have a lot of options, but it is within a world of narrow possibilities.  The great thing is that it is so much easier to do all those things, I don’t need to “get motivated” or “find the energy” I just start rolling along and as I complete each action I find a bit more energy for the rest.  When I have a long list of things to crank through and don’t feel like thinking too much, it’s nice to just start at the top and trust that I was right when I decided to put each item on the list.

There are probably other modes, reflection, contemplation, etc. and I even think there are times when I can do both at the same time which I would call “congruent” mode.  I think that I may be better than the average person at that congruent mode, which is why I was able to survive so long without any kind of organizational system.  But the problem is that it can be very stifling and limiting to try to “do both” or to force it.  I think it’s much better to shift back and forth and then periodically click into the flow of both doing things and deciding what to do in the same moment.  It may actually be more beneficial to switch back and forth because the non-obvious but still important things get done.

I still haven’t figured out the rhythm of how this will all work with school.  It seems like I’m always coming up to the wire with reading, I’d like to find a way to get just a little ahead.  It just takes a lot of time so I’m often tempted to get a few other quick things checked off my list instead of doing the reading which is arguably one of the most important tasks I have these days.

Approval Essay Part 4

Part IV: Person in Ministry
In light of all that you have written in the preceding sections, write a concluding essay in
which you reflect upon yourself as a person in ministry. What strengths and weaknesses
regarding your leadership have come to light for you? How might you build
upon your strengths and mitigate your weaknesses? How do you assess and evaluate
yourself as a ministry leader? How do you seek to learn from your mistakes and to
correct them? How do you imagine you will grow in your leadership capacity during
your first three years under call?

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Approval Essay Part 3

Part III: Integration of Leadership and Theology
Briefly describe a specific incident or event that might occur in the contextual situation you have envisioned in which you might be called upon to exercise ministry leadership.
For example: a council, committee or congregational meeting surfaces a specific issue related to the contextual situation you have described; an event occurs that brings, in a new way, some aspect of the contextual situation to the attention of the people among whom you serve; a question or decision prompts controversy related to the contextual situation.
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Approval Essay Part 2

Part II: Theological Proclamation and Teaching
Present a sermon you preached related to the situation you’ve described, or compose a sermon indicating how you might preach in that situation.

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Core Values Meditation

This is a meditation practice that I created for myself as part of my GTD weekly review.  I already have my list of values, which is fairly static but I’ve adapted it for use with a group who may not have written out such a list.

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GTD and Weekly Review

The last couple of months I’ve been getting back in to Getting Things Done (aka GTD), which is a set of personal organization methods.  If you’re interested, check out their site, read the book and try it out.  I used GTD at work before I started Seminary, but never really implemented it in my personal life so it was very hard to adapt to the different demands of being a student.

A couple of months ago, I reread the book and actually tried to follow it as closely as I could and it has done nothing short of completely revolutionizing my life.  That sounds like an exaggeration, but I really mean it.  Not only am I dramatically more productive, but I feel happier, more dynamic, confident, responsible, patient, present for other people, etc.

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Approval Essay Part 1

I finished my approval essay a few days ago and thought it would be fun to share it in the form of blog posts.  I’ll be making a few posts out of it and it’ll take me some time to adapt each section to the blog, but here is the first part.

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Sermon from June 26th

Jun 26

Sermon from April 10th

April 10

Sermon from March 9th

Mar 9