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Monday Morning Memo

Get Your Hopes Up

November 10, 2014

| Download
https://podcasts.captivate.fm/media/bc9a96c8-ab22-4ded-b45a-a8cc4841787f/MMM141110-GetYourHopesUp.mp3

Beagle_Hope_Fairlane_720

I’m talking with a man about his happy future. There will be decisions to make and risks to take, but it’s a future that can definitely be his.

And then he says, “I don’t want to get my hopes up.”

The air leaves my body and I want to cry. And then I want to slap him, wake him up, shout the question that screams its own answer: “Do you know what happens when you don’t get your hopes up? Nothing! Not a bloody thing!”

Lethargy. Apathy. Ennui. Depression. Hopelessness. This is the black water that rushes to fill the emptiness when you refuse to get your hopes up. So for the love of God I’m begging you, “Get your hopes up.”

He says he doesn’t want to get his hopes up because he doesn’t want to be disappointed.

Sigh.

Perhaps the right answer is for him to buy a bigger TV, watch more sports and drink more beer. Yes, that’s the ticket. The clock will tick, the time will pass, and when they wheel his ancient body into a nursing facility, he’ll watch those same sports on a different TV and drink Ensure instead of beer.

“Congratulations, friend. You never had to resort to Plan B. You never had to figure out what went wrong or find a way to fix it. You never had to deal with the joys and pains of Life, the only sport worthy of a human being.”

Can you believe in things not immediately present? Of course you can. Tomorrow isn’t here, but you believe it will come.

Can you have confidence in things you cannot see? Yes, you prove this every time you write a check. You have confidence – faith – that the bank won’t let you down.

Is there anyone outside yourself that you care about enough to sacrifice time, energy and money to help them? If so, you have experienced love.

I know of a sad woman who got her hopes up once, and things worked out pretty well for her. She became extremely famous and was widely quoted and lots of books have been written about her. She said,

Many people have a wrong idea of what constitutes true happiness. It is not attained through self-gratification, but through fidelity to a worthy purpose.”

Do you have a worthy purpose?

That woman couldn’t see the future and she didn’t hear the voice of God saying, “Everything is going to be okay.” In fact, she couldn’t see or hear anything at all. Her name was Helen Keller and she lived with disadvantages so severe that the mind recoils from imagining them.

When everything else is gone, faith, hope and love remain.

Some people have faith in themselves. Others have faith in something or someone else. Where you put your faith is up to you. Likewise, each of us chooses what or whom to love. But once those choices have been made, faith gives us courage, love gives us energy, and hope is the light that shines in the darkness.

Make a difference. Have an adventure. Get your hopes up.

Turn on the light.

Roy H. Williams

 

landon_rayLandon Ray is a CEO who requires all his employees to go “radio silent” twice a day for 90 minutes. No phone calls. No incoming or outgoing email. No staff meetings. No socializing.

How do his employees react to being forcibly unplugged for three hours out of every eight?  They absolutely LOVE it.  In fact, his company’s “Time Block” is one of the many unique aspects of his company’s culture that has fueled its incredible growth as it allows all his employees to focus on the truly important rather than the merely urgent.

This week Landon Ray, the founder and CEO of ONTRAPORT, explains to our man Rotbart exactly how small companies can become giant by creating profitable corporate cultures. Tick-tock, tick-tock, tick-tock. Are you going to make time to hear this man today or are you going to be ruled by the merely urgent? Dean Rotbart and Landon Ray will be waiting for you whenever you’re ready at MondayMorningRadio.com – Indiana Beagle

IndyScout_thumb

 The clock is definitely ticking in the rabbit hole.
Look for me on this motorcycle when you get inside.
Big news. Big fun. – Indy

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Random Quote:

“In his rendering of The Entrepreneur, sculptor Dean Kermit Allison gives us a revealing look at the self-made man in his relentless struggle to chisel himself from common stone. Blindfolded, the Entrepreneur must trust his instincts. He has no way of knowing how all this will turn out.

His face bears the marks of those who would stop him while he is in this most vulnerable stage. His hand is battered from misplaced strokes of the hammer, constant reminders of his own mistakes. The exact position of the right leg has yet to be determined. The stone reveals two distinct possibilities.

To carve the leg forward and unbent at the knee would allow him to make use of a natural outcropping in the rock, perfectly positioned to accommodate the front half of the foot. To bend the knee would allow him to make use of another natural rock formation that seems to offer a finished calf. The choice is in the future, but it must be made. Whether or not to bend the knee is a choice that faces every entrepreneur.

As we continue to study this figure of bronze, it becomes obvious that the blindfold has been no impediment to his progress. His instinct has been remarkable. His enemies have not been able to stop him. He has overcome his mistakes.

The greatest danger is in his own hands. The angle of this chisel is far too aggressive. It seems the rapid removal of such a volume of stone requires a chisel judged by many to be much too direct. Spectators continue to gather and watch with mounting interest … will his next stroke be the one that cuts him off at the knees?

Like The Entrepreneur, each Allison bronze tells a powerful story of human emotion. Having translated for you most of the story of Allison’s Entrepreneur, I will leave you to put the rest of his work into words of your own.

“

- Roy H. Williams (1988)

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