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- Thank you so very much for this post. This is so awesome. I've been in the DC area for almost 6 months and have been searching for church. Thank you again for this list.
- don't forget you blog at http://nextgenerasianchurch.com too!
- Way to go, DJ. From one Dallas grad to another, "Preach the Word!"
- For me http://www.careermantra.com/computer-dictionary/ works much better than others.
- it's because you'reusing disqus. ;) *sigh*... i guess i'm unsubscribing now... ... j/k.
djchuang.com
strategist / networker / ideator / unconventional
maybe it’s the context that my life moves in, but it irks me often enough to notice announcements, or calls for volunteers or signups, where the phrase, “if you’re interested“, is added to the wording.. it’s such deflating, weakening language.. takes any lift out of the sails.. you don’t hear NetFlix or Starbucks or Coca-Cola [...]
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5 years ago
5 years ago
5 years ago
interesting enough, we almost undo the passion and resolve behind the "big ask" when we disempower them by saying, "if you're interested."
what happens is it might:
1. cause people to shy away from something so unenthusiastic, unsure, weak, passionless...
2. cause people that do sign up to be passive in their volunteering...maybe that's why some volunteers do a half-baked job (which they wouldn't do at their own work); because we offer it in a half-baked way.
very good article!!! empower people by the words we use!
5 years ago
Just watched the Peter Jennings piece, "How to Get Fat without Really Trying." Of the thousands of new food products being marketed, not a one of them says, "Buy this chocolate cereal, if you are interested". No, they enlist fat children to sit in a room with a pleasant lady while men sit behind a one way mirror, observing the children when they say, "I want this cereal." No passive language there.
If I ever told one of my clients in the psychotherapy office, "Try this technique on your spouse...if you're interested", he'd look at me as if my head was screwed on backwards! Instead, it's expected that I tell the client, "You need to do X, and quick, if you don't want to risk losing Y", and then let the client decide for himself if he's going to do X.
Maybe what we're barking at is the last of the politeness, the tentativeness, the geisha-ness of speech that I associate with Ovaltine.
As for the joy of seeing business ideas come into being without being able to predict the financial outcomes... gee, how much art/books written/songs sung, etc., would have been done if only those that made money were actually produced? Birthing a good business that makes a difference is like creating art -- lots of anticipation, plenty of uncertainty, pour in faith and belief and good old fashioned enthusiasm, add risk, moments of despair and wah-lah!
Anne Lamott reminds writers to not share their ideas too early, lest someone pour discouragement on it in those early stages. Incubate your idea in a safe environment. If it was "meant to be", our God and His Universe has a strange way of meeting you right when your idea needs to be shared with the world.
5 years ago
As for business ideas, you've always been a good sounding board for some ideas. Money isn't necessary but fulfillment is a must. Success seams to be the ultimate rush, but it means that much more when it was your creation.
Oh yeah, Boba in NC may work somewhat (AH HAH! <-- weak language.) I will have to see the results when I come back for x-mas.