Husband. Dad to 5. Student Ministry Pastor. Follower of Jesus. Yatta yatta.

Archives for September 2009

I LIKE BUILDING STUFF

Today I helped some friends get their home owners insurance off their back and save some serious flow by building a railing on their porch.  I was dripping in so much sweat by the end of a hot day in SD that I actually showered before going to soccer practice.  Still, it’s always fun to help friends build stuff.

Picture makes it look like the first post was put in at about 15 degree angle, but it’s an optical illusion, it’s plumb my friends.  So glad I don’t have to stain it 🙂

LEADERSHIP AND PUNISHMENT

I have several roles I strive to lead in that lately share one common dilemma: what do I do when those I’m leading won’t listen or don’t seem to care? Ie:

  • AS A DAD: what do I do when my child won’t own up to a responsibility at home?
  • AS A YOUTH PASTOR: what do I do when a students refuse to listen even casually and simply text message all through a service?
  • AS A COACH: what do I do when a kid is passive aggressive and only gives me the bare minimum in practice?
All of these are real leadership situations of the past 2 weeks, but recently, that last one has really got me thinking. I’ve had conversations with my assistant coaches particularly on my U14 team about what to do when our players stop listening to the coach. I coach on a field that has several other teams being coached on it at the same time, and the answer to that for many of my peers is “make them run”.
But I have a problem with punishment leadership. It’s not that I don’t believe in consequences, but I think that every time I have to call on my title and force a child, student, or player to do what I say… there is only one thing we can be teaching: submission. When I make a student run, we are no longer coaching soccer, I’m only coaching them in one thing: “I’m the coach, and you’re the player, and now we can’t do anything else until you get that straight.” There is a time for that, but I hate it… and it ALWAYS takes a lot of time to recover to the place of relationship. For a while, I’ll be simply “coach” and they’ll be “player”. It’s hard to be friends, mentors, or even to laugh together. Some will argue that the relationship will be better afterwards and that it is weak sauce to avoid it, but my experience says “punishment leadership” has a high price tag with it.
So, I have a few “rules” I’m trying to lead by before passing out punishments:
  1. DON’T ASK OTHERS TO DO WHAT I’M UNWILLING TO DO. If I ask my kids to keep their room clean, then I need to. If I ask my players to give me their best effort, then I need to do that as a coach. If I ask my students to turn off their cell, I should unplug too.
  2. AVOID SURPRISE CONSEQUENCES. I don’t want to ever surprise my kids, students, or players with a consequence for their actions. My kids should know clearly what is expected of them and what the consequences will be for not doing it. I can’t pass out a restriction without first making sure they clearly understood the expectations and what would happen if they ignored them. If I’m going to make my players run for not paying attention, I should have told them clearly that’s what I was going to do before practice even officially started.
  3. PUBLIC STUFF GETS PUBLIC CORRECTION. PRIVATE STUFF GETS PRIVATE CORRECTION. If you make a big deal of something in front of a crowd, I’ll correct you in that crowd. If you make a mistake as a player in a drill, I’ll pull you aside and correct you quietly. If a player says something disrespectful to me in front of the team, I’ll correct them in front of the team. I rarely if ever call anyone out from the stage as a youth pastor. I default to private confrontation and use public settings only when I seem to have very few if any other leadership options.
  4. OFFER CONSTRUCTIVE SOLUTIONS FIRST: Before punishing, I try and offer alternative solutions. Before telling a player to run laps or taking away a privilege from a child or whatever, I try and tell them that there is another option. The consequence then to some degree become their choice. This isn’t avoidance of leadership on my part, I think it’s a way for me to keep leading instead of simply punishing. Thus, “If you do ___________”, we can continue our relationship and I don’t have to stop leading so I can simply be a cop.
  5. ONLY AS A LAST RESORT, LEAD FROM POSITION: If I have to say, “because I’m the dad and I said so”, my leadership level dropped to the lowest common denominator. I try and avoid it at all costs. If I have to use this one, it is me throwing in the towel and saying, we can’t do anything more until you realize this. I’m the coach, and you will listen to me. I’m the pastor, and you can’t behave like this. Period. There’s a time for it, but I try and only use it as a last resort.

I DON’T GIVE A RIP

… about stuff I probably should.

In fact, I’ve been stewing on this for a while now. I think this is a BIG piece of my jacked up self. I think it affects so much of my emotional, physical, spiritual, and relational energy cuz I waste too much of it on stuff that doesn’t matter.
For the last 3 thursdays… I have shown up to teach my kids soccer at 4pm and there’s been a dad there sitting on a bucket of baseballs teaching his kid to hit and pitch. They practice for 20 minutes and leave. I wonder how many days they do that? Even though I left my office at 3pm to get my kid from school so that I could be there to coach 2 teams for 3 hours of soccer, but somehow I still feel like a tool.
What has that Dad said no to in order to be there? Why do I do this? Why does he? What really matters?
For sure I care about stuff I should just say, “skip it” to and I don’t care about stuff I should probably pay a lot of attention to. Call it what you want, but I think it’s a daily wrestling match when deciding what to even accomplish on my to do list.
Sadly, I think I even care about stuff God doesn’t care about and I don’t care enough about stuff God does care about.
On the one side. This is ridiculous. I can’t possibly care about all that God cares about the way He cares about it.
  • the poor
  • the homeless
  • the sick
  • the dying
  • the helpless
  • the hurting
  • the lonely
  • the spoiled
  • the desperate
  • the complacent
  • the happy
  • the carefree
  • the …. there is no one that God doesn’t care about.
In our world of social needs, there seems to be an endless list of dying children, water shortages, disease victims, budget shortages, health care needs, struggling business and families and ….. it seems ENDLESS and overwhelming- the list is so long and so baffling that I sometimes want to quit for sake of the sheer volume of things I don’t care about.
So I do my part. One step at a time. One day at a time. Trusting God to be WAAAY bigger than I am. I’m saying yes to some things and no to others. Each day trying to get it right. I think I fail at it more than I’d like to admit. I dunno.
Maybe I should give a rip.
Maybe I should go to bed.

YEAH FOR FRIENDS WITH CAMERAS

Our church has a grip of photographers at it.  Lots of them helped me capture the moment of baptizing Tyler.  Once I gather all the shots from those with the clicks… I’ll see if I can’t create some kinda collage.  But here’s 5 more I got today from Jonathon Cervantes.

TYLER GETS BAPTIZED

I had the joy of baptizing Tyler today. This was an answer to prayer and the second of our five kids that I have baptized- TJ did it several years ago. I hope to one day have the pleasure of having baptized all 5! Maybe the next 3 will choose to do it at the same time… that will make quite the pic! Anyway, it is such a great joy as they choose on their own to make this step.
When Tyler came out into the water I reminded him that he didn’t have to do this for “us”. He wanted to do it a year ago, but we thought he was too young to truly be ready. Tyler said he knew that it was his decision and he was excited to do it. It was great to be able to pray for him and celebrate this step of faith in his young life.
Oh by the grace of God go I. (thanks to sarah tolson photography for the pic!)