http://www.habitat.org/getinv/volunteer_programs.aspx
Want to do something useful this summer?
Habitat for Humanity is always building something.
Teens 16 and up can help with the construction.
They also have special events.
http://www.habitat.org/getinv/volunteer_programs.aspx
Want to do something useful this summer?
Habitat for Humanity is always building something.
Teens 16 and up can help with the construction.
They also have special events.
I set out to discover
what every person needs,
to focus on the core of life
and cull out the weeds.
We all need safety and love,
water, food, and clothing,
But, we also fundamentally need
to contribute something.
© 2013 DarEll S. Hoskisson (dsh)
It is because giving is so rewarding to me that I want to share these
opportunities with others. I hope this website will become a useful place where if people need help or want to give help, there will eventually be a good resource here for that. I would like for this blog to be useful. And, if it helps even one person deal with life better in any way, it will be worth the trouble. If nothing else, it fulfills my need to contribute something. Love, DarEll
Racing, pacing forward
toward a line not seen
unaware that it was also racing
back with careless tragedy
fame of a sort
no one wanted or looked for
pursued instead for vigorous, long life
mocked
the unity of heart beats
pounding out with a chorus
of a thousand footsteps
stopped
The breathing of a nation
waits to understand
an answer that will not come.
This was planned.
The fear whispers
life’s one definite truth:
don’t take life for granted,
the finish line comes to you.
© 2013 DarEll S. Hoskisson (dsh)
This link will help you compare foods and personally track your exercise and food intake. Why track? To see your own progress and recognize when you’ve met short and long-term goals or beat your own record.
Treadmill, frightful, boredom
demanding, intimidating, impossible
slow, tedious, mind-numbing
impersonal, task-oriented, bossy
inflexible limits
Predictable accomplishment,
successful trade offs and juggling,
realistic planning and pacing
In control, efficient
free
© 2013 DarEll S. Hoskisson (dsh)
If perfection is not the goal because for one thing it is unrealistic, then what is? I’m not a quitter. I am incredibly tenacious and persistent. Eventually starting again and again on the goals I had for a while but they got crowded out by choice and by higher priority. Still, I’ve wondered how to also make room for and “keep in line” lesser priorities I still want in my life. Quitting and restarting is not giving up, but, that still doesn’t get me the results I want because for so many pursuits consistency really works best.
For example, my garden keeps wilting or dying (but I keep replanting it!) I have started to learn to play the piano at least 5 or more times (I’m really, really good at the primer level), etc. Yes, certainly, for some pursuits consistency is just plain more effective than spurts.
Today I was studying for my personal trainer exam and the instructor said, “remember the 80/20 rule. Consistency is not perfection” In this case she was referring to our choices for nutritious eating. I have applied this already to gauging my eating choices. In other words, if you eat nutritious foods 80 percent of the time or more, that IS CONSISTENT enough.
Obviously this is in general and may not apply to us specifically. I figured that that meant that eating a special dessert, celebrating a birthday party with traditional cake and ice cream, etc. are great, but probably not much more than two times per month. Sometimes that can be really difficult because at work someone is always having a birthday, then at church, more birthdays. The more people you know the more Christmas parties and celebration temptations. But, empty calories are not out of the question. They are just not what you USUALLY eat. 80% of the time is measurable.
But today, it struck me quite differently. There are times when striving for excellence is detrimental. For instance, if I guarded everything I said or wrote and only published on the web what I thought was truly exceptional and up to my standard, I wouldn’t share much. In fact, I might not be able to write at all. All action requires some risk. Trying to edit as you write is a quick recipe for writer’s block. That must be true for all action.
Of course I know it is okay to make mistakes. Goodness, I even bought a book about all the advantages to a good mistake. They are the learning experiences we never forget (hopefully) but if not, don’t worry, we’ll get to try to learn it again, later.
But, what if I gauged my other pursuits that way? For instance, if I get up on time most of the time (80% or more). Then, that IS consistent. I could say I usually get up on time. However, if it is causing a major life stress to me, my family, or my job, then maybe it isn’t consistent enough. But, let’s say it doesn’t stress anyone. Then, that can be good enough.
This is a reasonable marker because it gives 20% left for exceptional and excellent. Really the difference between good enough and exceptional is just in the finer details or the greater consistency. Excellence is not accepting good enough and pressing harder for exceptional.
But, we can’t grow all directions at once and sustain it. Believe me, I’ve tried. A focused improvement in one or a few areas is much more doable and sustainable. So, where is the line?
I guess it is where it is consistent ENOUGH to get the results you need. Excellence is getting or surpassing the results you want.
It really helps to have a more realistic and measurable definition of consistent.
There are really only a few areas I need to be more consistent in. And, I see now more clearly, it may not be as far of a journey to consistent as I thought.
© 2013 DarEll S. Hoskisson (dsh)
Painfully aware of all I do not know
of each mistake
of all my missing strengths
it isn’t even perfectionism
just the truth
that my brain can’t hold
all I wish it would
that my missing talents prevent
consistent excellence
like I love.
I love to excel
I love to impress
I’m most enamoured with
continuous progress
So much so that
I am regularly suprised
at how well I do perform
and how many people do
stick around and still love me
because I failed to appreciate
all I do know
all I can do
all I am
too distracted by
what isn’t me
Yet!
© 2013 DarEll S. Hoskisson (dsh)