Puzzled why mandating positive morale failed.
Karl Edwards
My reading list just gets longer and longer.
800-CEO-Read announced their 2011 awards for best business books.
You can read the entire book summaries on their blog post here.
The winners are:
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Head over to 800-CEO-Read’s website and check out the many resources they make available.
Enjoy!
Today is the first working Monday of the new year. All the schools are back in session. The morning commute here in Los Angeles is packed again. The neighbors are all back from their holiday family trips.
Happy New Year! Or is it?
For many this is a tough year to celebrate the ringing in of a new year.
The economy is still limping along. Unemployment is still a painful reality, either for themselves or someone they know personally.
Job security feels fragile when one can be so easily replaced.
Bosses are afraid of making mistakes, which is resulting in a depressing risk-averse conservatism in decision-making.
The advent of a new calendar year does present an opportunity, though.
Even if the optimism isn’t built in this year, we can choose to use the calendar to our advantage. Even if (especially if?) our spirits and energies are low, we can use the tool of the new year to choose an attitude shift within ourselves.
Even if circumstances are difficult and the outlook is bleak, we can choose to face and confront this reality rather than complain about it or wish it were otherwise.Â
Yes, for many people it would be dishonest to exult “Happy New Year!” That things are difficult doesn’t mean, though, that it has to be a bad year.
So choose yourself a “Meaningful New Year!”. Give yourself a “Proactive New Year!”
There is no power in the world that can stop you from choosing to have an empowered, responsible, determined, creative, persevering, generous, and life-enhancing new year.
To those for whom this is a particularly difficult season, I pray we find our way together to making it a deeply worthwhile season.
On your side,
– Karl Edwards
How does faith inform one’s job when the subject is work?Join us for a one-day workshop designed to equip and empower the working believer.
When:
February 4, 2012, Saturday
9:00 a.m. – 3:00 p.m.
Where:
Vineyard Christian Fellowship
3838 S. Centinela Avenue
Los Angeles, CA 90066
(click here for map)
Cost:
$25 (lunch included)
Sometimes the best thing we can do is simply say good-bye.
To revel in our victories or stew in our defeats is to overlook the ever-moving hands on the clock.
We cling to the past at our own peril.
Here on the last day of the year, we pause to say good-bye to 2011.
For some of us it was a year of heartbreak, unemployment and/or assaults on our health.
For some of us it was a year of discovery, achievement and/or new beginnings.
Here on the last day of the year we pause to both give thanks and to learn.
In order to move boldly into the new year we need to do both, give thanks and learn.
Both getting stuck in the past or relying on the past are mistakes that can cost us dearly going into the future.
Giving thanks helps us put our triumphs and tragedies into perspective so that we don’t give them too much power over us either in blind over-confidence or paralyzing fear.
Learning allows us to leverage and transform our gains and losses into something that will resource and fuel our future.
Good-bye 2011. We pause to give thanks and learn from you.
Tomorrow we greet the new year. Stronger and wiser we will build on what has gone before.
Tomorrow we begin anew.