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The Monday Morning Memo

The Belief Systems and Scars that Make Us Who We Are

August 5, 2019

| Download
https://podcasts.captivate.fm/media/8132def3-e87d-4da9-946e-38ecdc6164c3/MMM20190805-BeliefSystemsAndScars.mp3


Most non-fiction books are written as reputation builders. We write them because we want to be seen as experts. We want more speaking opportunities, more customers, more recognition. These “how to” books appear to be about the subject matter, but they are really about the author.

This sort of reputation-building was the motive behind my Wizard of Ads trilogy.

There is a second, less-populated category of non-fiction books whose authors have a different motive. These books appear to be about the author, but look closely and you’ll see they are about the reader.

Memoirs, when well-written, reveal the brokenness, the triumphs, and the tragedies of the author. They describe an event-filled journey.

Memoirs inspire us and make us believe that we can make a difference. They encourage us, showing us how someone else passed through this dark forest and how we can pass through it, too.

We laugh at the silly mistakes, cherish the faithful companions, cry at the suffering and loss, cheer the little victories, and feel that we know the author.

Memoirs are not written as reputation builders, but as relationship deepeners.

If you want to write a good memoir, you must make yourself vulnerable, revealing all your fears and flaws and secrets. If you don’t, you will be guilty of the sin of Margot Asquith:

“The affair between Margot Asquith and Margot Asquith will live as one of the prettiest love stories in all literature.”

    • Dorothy Parker, in her 1925 New Yorker book review
      of The Autobiography of Margot Asquith.

Even worse, they might say of you,

“He is a self-made man and he worships his creator.”

Vulnerability is the price of intimacy.  Confession is the price of trust.

Never trust the advice of a man who doesn’t limp.

It is our belief systems and our scars that make us who we are.

Do you want to build a strong culture in the company you founded? Write your memoirs.
Do you want your customers to feel like they know you? Write your memoirs.
Do you want to cast your bread upon the waters, pay it forward, help thousands of people you will never meet? Write your memoirs.
Do you want your descendants to know who you were, the clay from which they were formed? Write your memoirs.

Other people will be faced with the fears you have faced.
Other people will make the mistakes you have made.
Other people need to know the lessons you have learned.

Do you have the humility – the vulnerability – to tell us how you got your limp?

Roy H. Williams

Contact Zac@WizardAcademy.org if you’d like to be notified of any development of a Memoir Workshop. If enough people inquire, we’ll schedule it for early 2020.  In the meantime, the perfect prerequisite is already scheduled for Nov. 5-6, How to Craft the Story of Your Company. ADVICE: Snag an on-campus room while you still can. – Indy Beagle

Rudy Schmid is a veteran accountant who helps young adults launch their own side-hustles free of the flaws that too often hobble new businesses. Rudy also advises established businesses, especially when it comes to hiring and managing people, and sizing up banking relationships. At 86 years of age, Rudy is an inspiration to every would-be author who thinks he or she is ‘too old’ to write a book. You’ll hear his advice and learn about his new book as soon as you travel to MondayMorningRadio.com. It’s just around the corner. You can be there in the blink of an eye.

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Random Quote:

“

One day in the mid-two-thousands, a teen-ager named Amy waited to hear the voice of God. She was sitting in a youth Bible-study group, surrounded by her peers, and losing patience. Everyone else in the group seemed to hear God speak all the time, but Amy had never heard Him, not even a peep. Her hands didn’t shimmer with gold dust after she prayed, as others claimed theirs did, and she was never able to say, with confidence, “The Holy Spirit told me to do it.” She went home that evening, determined to try again the next day. A few years passed and she still heard nothing. She began to wonder if something was wrong with her. “God didn’t talk to me,” she wrote later, in a blog post. “I was afraid that meant either he wasn’t there, or I wasn’t good enough.”

Amy, the eldest of five siblings, was homeschooled by evangelical parents in the suburbs of Alberta, Canada. (She asked that I use only her first name.) She was bright, and happy, and remembers days spent reading “David Copperfield” aloud with her siblings. It was only when she left for college—Ambrose University, a Christian liberal-arts school—that aspects of her childhood began to strike her as peculiar. Amy remembers her parents telling her, when she was six, that her grandparents were going to Hell because they weren’t Christians. She grew up believing in creationism, and was startled to feel persuaded by the evidence for evolution in her college textbooks. She grappled with the “problem of evil”: If God is all-knowing and all-powerful, how can he allow so many terrible things to happen?

“

- Anna Russell, The New Yorker, Aug 30, 2024

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