Showing posts with label gratitude. Show all posts
Showing posts with label gratitude. Show all posts

Thursday, December 20, 2018

Week 14: My Last Lecture

{For your last journal entry/blog post take the time to write your own last lecture. If you had one final lecture to share with a group of students on what you have learned from this course, what would you share? What would be your last bit of advice to someone wanting to begin the entrepreneur journey? What words of advice, direction, or caution would you give him or her if you had only one chance to give your own last lecture? Write your last lecture about your experiences and answer the above stated questions. This assignment is the capstone to everything that you have been learning. This final entry will be worth 25 points instead of the usual 10 for each journal entry.}


With just a couple days of the semester remaining, I'm considering all that I have learned in B183: Intro to Entrepreneurship. It's been an interesting class, to say the least. I didn't know what to expect, really. At first, I was somewhat surprised by how much personal reflection and introspection was required of me. Now I am grateful for all of that time considering and pondering on my abilities, desires, needs, and passions. I'm also thankful for the opportunity and challenge to determine and state my core values, create my own set of ethical guardrails, and declare a personal code of ethics. Each of these challenges, along with other academic learning about entrepreneurship have made this class experience a good and worthwhile one.

If I were to give advice to someone seeking it for the purposes of benefiting their own entrepreneurial journey, I would tell them that they first need to know themselves before they can go about the entrepreneurial business of making the world a better place. That isn't to say that one needs to uncover every layer or mystery about themselves, but to know in their core who they are in the universe. For me, it's knowing that I am a daughter of God with limitless potential. I am a woman capable of much good. I know that I have something marvelous to offer the world, that my presence here on earth is to both my advantage and the advantage of others who come into contact with me. In knowing who I am, I also know who everyone else is: a son or daughter of God, with limitless potential and power to create amazing things and achieve the unimaginable. By first having at least a bit of a grip on one's true self, a proper foundation is in place for beginning an entrepreneurial journey.

Once we know who we are, we can better determine and define what we will and won't do. Knowing and actively remembering that we come from the Divine, we are more likely to behave with a higher sense of decorum. When commencing an entrepreneurial journey, it's so important to set ethical guardrails in place along either side of the path to where we want to go. Ethical guardrails are the "I will never" actions that keep us from becoming immoral and behaving badly in business and in life. Staying within our ethical guardrails ensures that we keep a clear conscience as we go about the business of making the world a better place and bettering our own personal lives too.

For a budding entrepreneur, I'd highly advise letting the mind dream. Purposely make time in the day to ponder, meditate, and allow the spirit within our bodies to work its magic, so to say. Each of us has limitless potential, but we stifle ourselves. We allow others to diminish our creative light. We end up settling with and believing the sad platitudes in life; that it is what it is. Dreaming is important because it allows us to be more in touch with the spiritual and less cumbered by the physical. We are spirits in mortal flesh. One day our flesh will be perfected/immortal, but until then, our flesh is a mortal overlay that can drown out what our spirits already know. Dreaming is detachment from flesh in a way. Dreaming can help us "remember" what our spirits already knew from before we were born. God sent us here with gifts, blessings, talents, and testimonies, and if we dare to dream, we can put all those things beautifully into motion for good. Dreaming allows us to gravitate toward our God-given desires, abilities, and inclinations. This is how we can change the world for the better.

President Thomas S. Monson said, 
"What an exciting life is available to each one of us today! We can be explorers in spirit with a mandate to make this world better by discovering improved ways of living and doing things. God left the world unfinished for man to work his skill. He left the electricity in the cloud, the oil in the earth. He left the rivers unbridged and the forests unfelled, and the cities unbuilt. God gives to man the challenge of raw materials, not the ease of finished things. He leaves the pictures unpainted and the music unsung and the problems unsolved that man might know the joys and glories of creation." 
By giving ourselves permission to dream and then do, we become the creators that God designed us to be in this life.

One last bit of advice I'd offer to someone wanting to spread their entrepreneurial wings is to seek to know their true calling in life. Knowing who we are at our cores is crucial in knowing what it is that we are to do with ourselves. Adhering to a firm and true set of ethics in life will allow for clearer vision. With clear eyes and a solid foundation of self, knowing what to do with ourselves as we walk ahead in business gives great purpose and satisfaction in life. Figuring out what we do better than anyone else, and loving that about ourselves is how we begin to understand our life's callings. When we can turn our righteous endeavors and passions into something marketable that will positively change the world, then we have truly gotten a good grip on our life's calling.

However, it is important to know that not everyone who has a desire to be an entrepreneur can or will succeed at being an entrepreneur. Not every entrepreneurial mind has been given the talents, skills, or blessings to be an entrepreneur. The markets in life don't necessarily always want or will always pay for our genius and creativity. But no matter what, it is important and necessary that in order to have a happy and full life, we must know who we truly are. We must choose to live a higher law. We must do that which God gave us talents, blessings, and abilities to do. And if it so happens that the entrepreneurial calling isn't ours, we should take heart. In a BYU devotional on June 1, 2010, Jeffrey Thompson said, 
"Finding your calling in life may not be a matter of finding the one right job. Instead, it may be that your calling is to bring your unique spiritual gifts to whatever position the Lord blesses you with."
In the end, we need to do the very best we can with what we have, and express gratitude in all things, every day. For the entrepreneur, there is no slacking or coasting our way to success and happiness all the while. An entrepreneur's journey is intentional and personal, and it will always make the entrepreneur see themselves and life in a more true and revealing light.

Thursday, December 13, 2018

Week 13: A Journey of Gratitude

This week you will make your thirteenth journal entry/blog post. Reflect upon the things that you are learning and experiencing so far in this course. What are you looking forward to learning and experiencing? What did you learn from the readings and videos this week?

It's such a nice experience to begin my weekly lessons with spiritual talks that most certainly translate well into temporal life. This week is about gratitude. The opening reading/talk was by President Thomas S. Monson from April 1992 called "An Attitude of Gratitude." It is one of his hallmark talks and has been oft quoted for the past 26 years. I found his words particularly moving this week as I've studied the concept of gratitude in business. "We can lift ourselves, and others as well, when we refuse to remain in the realm of negative thought and cultivate an attitude of gratitude." I've heard that countless times since 1992, yet I never once thought about it specifically in business terms. Oh sure, I've thought that in every aspect of my life, I must exercise and practice gratitude. I've been in yucky work situations where I told myself I just needed to be grateful. But I hadn't every pondered the whole talk and his teachings on gratitude through the lens of employment or business creation. Early in the talk, he spoke about the plagues of today: selfishness; greed; indulgence; cruelty; crime. Of course now I see how this talk relates to business! If I aim to bless the lives of my family and others with the fruits of my labors, then I had better be going about my business with an attitude of gratitude for my abilities, blessings, and all goodness from the Lord. Failing to do so will leave me feeling less full or abundant, and I may be tempted to choose the wrong in those times. 

"Chance favors only the prepared mind." ~Louis Pasteur

The parable of the sower comes to mind as I ponder on Pasteur's thought. I must prepare myself, my mind, my home, my résumé, and my life to be able to do all that is required of me and to be ready to encounter whatever dragons I may be called to slay. How terrible would it be for a brilliant opportunity to just pass me by because I was too lazy/oblivious/unprepared to get ready for it.

I like something that Larry North said. To the effect, he said that I shouldn't just collect advice, but that I must use it. Again, another parable comes to mind... the parable of the talents. Use it or lose it!

I'm really looking forward to learning more in this journey. Right now I'm just so thankful that I get to FINALLY go to school. I know I have a long road ahead of me, but how cool is it that I'm actually on that road! God is good.

Friday, October 19, 2018

Week 5: A Hero's Journey & My Reflections

Reflect upon the things that you are learning and experiencing so far in this course. What are you looking forward to learning and experiencing? What did you learn from the readings and videos this week? 
Be sure to comment on the key takeaways from the 22-minute video "A Hero's Journey" in this journal entry.


As I've been reading and studying this week, I've been impressed by how very important it is for me to use the spiritual gifts I've been given, to develop them so they aren't lost or weak. It's also been impressed upon my mind and heart to seek for certain necessary gifts of the spirit that are yet to be mine. 

In reading "Are Successful Entrepreneurs Born or Made: Is the Secret to Success: Skill, Character, or Luck?" it was confirmed to me that everyone is born with the power to succeed at whatever they are drawn to or wherever they find themselves. It's what we do with that power that makes all the difference. Drawing on spiritual gifts enhances the power to succeed. If I don't have a necessary spiritual gift or talent to do well, I have every right to seek that gift of the spirit. It can grow and develop within me so long as I work at it prayerfully and faithfully. I read that Calvin Coolidge once said, "Persistence and determination alone are omnipotent. The slogan "press on" has solved and always will solve the problems of the human race." I really think he was on to something. By replacing "persistence and determination" with "faith and endurance" I feel more confident with the sentiment.

My key takeaways from the video "A Hero's Journey":
  1. I have a mission in life, and it will succeed beyond my wildest dreams IF I have faith and courage, and I choose to ACT. This process of acting with faith and courage will change me into a creature that right now only the good Lord can fully understand. I am excited and invigorated by this truth.
  2. I need to become world-class at something! I need to seek the observations of others in determining what my specific excellence in this life really is. By seeking these observations from those who know me, I will be able to see myself--my abilities, strengths, talents, and gifts in new light. This light will be immensely valuable in figuring out what I can, ought, and need to do with my life.
  3. There is great power in finding someone in my life for whom I'm truly grateful, but have yet to thank. I am to write a one-page letter to this person, find them, and read it to them in person. Talk about vulnerability! But this charge to express gratitude in this manner is humbling and lovely too. I am considering my life, the people who have come and go within it, and pondering on the gratitude I've yet to express.