Orrin Woodward on LIFE & Leadership

Inc Magazine Top 20 Leader shares his personal, professional, and financial secrets.

  • Orrin Woodward

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    Former Guinness World Record Holder for largest book signing ever, Orrin Woodward is a NY Times bestselling author of And Justice For All along with RESOLVED & coauthor of LeaderShift and Launching a Leadership Revolution. His books have sold over one million copies in the financial, leadership and liberty fields. RESOLVED: 13 Resolutions For LIFE made the Top 100 All-Time Best Leadership Books and the 13 Resolutions are the framework for the top selling Mental Fitness Challenge personal development program.

    Orrin made the Top 20 Inc. Magazine Leadership list & has co-founded two multi-million dollar leadership companies. Currently, he serves as the Chairman of the Board of the LIFE. He has a B.S. degree from GMI-EMI (now Kettering University) in manufacturing systems engineering. He holds four U.S. patents, and won an exclusive National Technical Benchmarking Award.

    This blog is an Alltop selection and ranked in HR's Top 100 Blogs for Management & Leadership.

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Mentoring – Learning to Keep Score

Posted by Orrin Woodward on December 14, 2010

Here is video #5 in the mentoring series with Art Jonak and Orjan Saele.  It’s the scoreboard that reveals the truth of your personal performance.  Don’t run from the data, but learn from it.  In God we trust, all others must have data. Enjoy, Orrin Woodward

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AKpcvpLnSik&w=640&h=385]

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Mentors Provide Perspective

Posted by Orrin Woodward on December 9, 2010

Here is the fourth video of the mentoring series with my friends Art Jonak and Orjan Saele.  Enjoy. God Bless, Orrin Woodward

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zlFxM8A2r6A&w=640&h=385]

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Preparing for Mentorship

Posted by Orrin Woodward on December 7, 2010

Here is the third installment of the mentoring series by Art Jonak, Orjan Saele, myself recorded while in Norway.  Enjoy. God Bless, Orrin Woodward
[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SNoRY9UgXlk&w=640&h=385]

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Choosing the Right Mentor

Posted by Orrin Woodward on December 6, 2010

Here is an audio recorded in Oslo, Norway.  Orjan Saele and I were interviewed by Art Jonak on mentoring.  This is the 2nd of a multiple part interview series, where we share some key nuggets to help you move on, in the success journey.  God Bless, Orrin Woodward

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2XknFxvd1b8&w=640&h=385]

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The Master’s Hand & Vicarious Victories

Posted by Orrin Woodward on December 4, 2010

I can remember growing up, watching the Dallas Cowboys religiously every Sunday afternoon.  I watched every game possible, as I was sure that my (yes, I owned them in my imagination) Cowboys played better when I cheered them on.  Year after year, I supported the team, collecting the football cards, studying all the statistics, and buying every football magazine to keep abreast of the latest roster developments.  What was I paid for this magnificent display of loyalty you ask?  Absolutely nothing, in fact, I paid out money, an item in short supply, for the joy of vicariously being part of the Tom Landry’s legendary Cowboy organization.  As I grew older, my fanaticism diminished slightly, but even as a newly married young man, with responsibilities of my own, working all week, getting my MBA at night, I still watched the games.  While the game was on, in an attempt to impress my friends and family, I would predict the plays by studying the Cowboy’s formations.  My fans would ‘ooh’ and ‘ah’ in approval at another play predicted successfully.  When the Cowboys started winning Super Bowls, Troy Aikman received a huge salary increase, Emmitt Smith hit the pay dirt with his new contract, and so did Michael Irvin, but I, on the other hand, was still busted, offered no loyalty bonus as the Cowboys biggest fan (Ok, I had plenty of competition here).  There are times in a person’s life, just a few, where truth whispers to you, not quite audible, but  distinctly there.  Most choose to ignore it, changing the channel on the TV, turning up the radio, or grabbing another beer, which is what I tried to do, but I couldn’t shake it.  Eventually, the whisper turned into a roar, it blared in my mind, consuming my thoughts, making me nauseous, unable to enjoy the game, so I walked into the another room to think.  Many question arose in my mind. Why was I spending so much time watching other people win in life, while I plodded along in anonymity.  Why is my life seemingly incomplete, unless I catch the latest game?  Is this huge time commitment really taking me where I want to go in life?

Thankfully, I had parents who had taught me the American Dream, the belief in our country and the ability for anyone willing, to accomplish anything that they set their heart and mind to do.  I had, only months before, been introduced to a community building business, and had started reading and listening to grow myself.   That day, I made a decision to stop watching other people’s success and start creating my own success.  Through God’s grace, a loving wife, hard work, and great friendships developed along the way, Laurie and I converted the hours spent watching sports into the hours necessary to build our business, eventually leaving our jobs, freeing up lots of time.  Over the years, I have seen many other people, faced with the same time challenges, make different decisions, choosing the sports teams success over their own success.  If that is what someone wants to do, then more power to them, as I believe in freedom that strongly.  But I knew, that many of my friends, really wanted to win, but didn’t seem capable of overcoming the inertia of their LazyBoy chair to get into action.  They wanted to win, would have loved the results of winning, but never seemed to do what it takes to be a champion.  This success paradox puzzled me for years.   But as a leader, I focused on serving those who were ready to change, while loving and encouraging the rest of the community who weren’t ready to make that level of commitment to success, hoping that eventually they would come around.

Several days ago, while contemplating why nearly everyone loves sports excellence, yet only a few love personal excellence, I had an epiphany, finally answering the success paradox.  The more I thought about it, the stronger I feel that my hypothesis, for why more people don’t pursue personal success, will stand the scrutiny of reason and time.  I believe human beings are designed to win, being hard wired to strive for excellence in life, but, due to man’s fallen nature, the wires are crossed, being misconnected at birth.  People do not strive for success because they believe they are unworthy and incapable of winning, so they seek out victories vicariously through people, teams, or bands that are winning around them.  Here is how the Bible explains the consequences of man’s violations of God’s law and the subsequent fall from grace, Genesis 3:18/19 reads:

Thorns also and thistles shall it bring forth to thee; and thou shalt eat the herb of the field; In the sweat of thy face shalt thou eat bread, till thou return unto the ground; for out of it wast thou taken: for dust thou [art], and unto dust shalt thou return.

God’s original hard wiring proceeded from dream development directly to dream accomplishment, with little struggle to bring forth results.  But after man’s fall, work was brought work into the equation, forcing man and woman to work hard (thorns and thistles), enduring pain to bring children and the fruits of all labor into the world.  Mankind still loved winning, but now had this alien principle, of painful labor to overcome, in order to experience victories.  One cannot go from dream to victory without experiencing the struggle step, earning a living by the sweat of your brow.   Thus my hypothesis, because of the faulty wiring due to the fall, people want success, but not the hard work and long hours associated with it. In an effort to obtain the results without the work, people are drawn to the perceived shortcut, living vicariously off of other people’s victories through being a fan, not a performer.  In other words, people experience a feeling of success through their favorite sports team, without having to endure the level of pain and discipline needed to really win.  This is the vicarious victory, the feeling of accomplishment when the team wins, sharing in the celebration, feeling part of the winning team, but conveniently skipping the pain of the process involved in becoming a winner.  But the real victory in life is who people become in the dream, struggle, victory process, so by shortcutting the process, they shortcut their own personal development.

One might be thinking, if the struggle is now part of the process after the fall, why not just rewire the brain to achieve success according to the new rules of life?  That is a great question, leading me to the next success thought.   We are all born to win, even after the painful fall, but desperately need reprogramming from the Master programmer.  Without His reprogramming, people believe that they are unworthy of greatness, believing life’s trials and tribulations beyond their ability to overcome, misunderstanding the effects of the fall, they internalize the pain, believing they are worthless, instead of allowing the pain of rebellion to lead them back to their Maker, a Maker who would reveal to them their true destiny.  The truth is that we are made in the image of God and have endless potential inside of us, accomplishing greatness when we serve our Maker and others.  The reminds me of the inspiring poem written my Myra Brooks Welch called The Touch of the Master’s Hand:

It was battered and scarred,
    And the auctioneer thought it
    Hardly worth his while
    To waste his time on the old violin,
    But he held it up with a smile.
    “What am I bid, good people”, he cried,
    “Who starts the bidding for me?”
    “One dollar, one dollar, Do I hear two?”
    “Two dollars, who makes it three?”
    “Three dollars once, three dollars twice, going for three”,

    But, No,
    From the room far back a grey haired man
    Came forward and picked up the bow,
    Then wiping the dust from the old violin
    And tightening up the strings,
    He played a melody, pure and sweet,
    As sweet as the angel sings.

    The music ceased and the auctioneer
    With a voice that was quiet and low,
    Said “What now am I bid for this old violin?”
    As he held it aloft with its’ bow.
    “One thousand, one thousand, Do I hear two?”
    “Two thousand, Who makes it three?”
    “Three thousand once, three thousand twice,
    Going and gone”, said he.

    The audience cheered,
    But some of them cried,
    “We just don’t understand.”
    “What changed its’ worth?”
    Swift came the reply.
    “The Touch of the Masters Hand.”

    And many a man with life out of tune,
    All battered with bourbon and gin,
    Is auctioned cheap to a thoughtless crowd
    Much like that old violin.
    A mess of pottage, a glass of wine,
    A game and he travels on.
    He is going once, he is going twice,
    He is going and almost gone.
    But the Master comes,
    And the foolish crowd never can quite understand,
    The worth of a soul and the change that is wrought
    By the Touch of the Master’s Hand.

My dear reader, you are the the beautiful violin, having a worth beyond any asking price, lacking only the touch of the Master’s hand to accomplish your life’s purpose.  Inside of each person is talents and skills beyond imagination, but unless the wires are reconnected to the new conditions of life, people will wander aimlessly, wondering why life is so hard, and their dreams seem so far away. Do not succumb to the negativity surrounding you, but search out the Master to be reprogrammed for true greatness.

But can’t you just reprogram yourself, without the need of the Master’s help?  Sadly, to a certain extent, yes.  But the problem is that self programmed people move through life with themselves as the center of existence.  A person can become moral, hardworking, and successful financially without the master, literally becoming prideful at his own work, but can never experience true joy, unless he is one of the Master’s instruments.  I have lived portions of my life in all three conditions.  For a time, I believed that I was junk, acting out this faulty belief system, hurting myself and others. For a time, I believed I was the programmer, developing a pride in my professional success, while attempting to ignore my personal misery.  But finally, mercifully, came the touch of the Master, and my life has never been the same since.  From my vantage point, the one essential attribute, lacking in our modern world is belief.  Belief, not in yourself through your own reprogramming, but a belief in the God of the universe and in his Son, the Master who touches the human hearts, changing them forever.  No longer will one need to pursue victories vicariously through their favorite sports teams, movie stars or rock bands, as they will have the Master Himself, pursuing victories for Him in their lives.  I still enjoy winning sports teams, but they are no longer define my life, as I have my own life to live, focusing on winning the race set before me, pressing towards my mark in life.  No longer will you feel unworthy of success, because you will know that you were designed by the Master with a specific purpose in mind.  No longer will you run to experience the elation of success vicariously, because you will live the Dream, Struggle, Victory process in your own life, developing into a leader so that you can serve the Master and others.  Moreover, when people truly believe in themselves, they will pursue their own personal and professional excellence with as much ardor and passion as they formerly pursued their vicarious excellence?  Don’t misunderstand me, I think being fans of successful people is important and I encourage my kids to have heroes, not to displace their own success, but merely as models for what is possible to those who dream, believe and achieve.

Imagine if all of sports fans, who love watching successful coaches lead their teams, chose to live a life of excellence to the same standards of excellence that they hold their sports teams up to?  Can you imagine if all of the fans, fans who expect nothing less than excellence from their favorite teams, developed the same high expectations for their families and work teams?  Fans that pay good money to see excellence in sporting events, will, in their personal and professional lives, no longer tolerate mediocrity, holding to the same success standards in their own lives, that they expect from their favorite sports teams?  The paradox of success is solved only when we view life through a Biblical lens.  Several day ago, I asked why the paradox existed.  Why fans, who love excellence in competitive sports enough to pay for the right to experience it, will not apply the same standards of excellence in their own competitive professions, even though others are paying for the right to experience it.  The answer to the paradox is lack of belief in themselves and their purpose in life.  The are beautiful people, with amazing potential, with great passion (we can see that at every sporting event), but missing out on their purpose in life, due to the faulty wiring at birth.

As a life coach, for the last 18 years, I have mentored many people through the reprogramming process.  Nothing brings greater joy to me on this earth, than having a front row seat, watching the Master hands restore a work of art to its original beauty.  I used to be a fan of a sports team, a team that I had never met, spent hours of my time, never to be restored, watched other people pursue their dreams as I buried my own.  Now I am called to mentor the greatest group of leaders in the world, spending hours of my time serving these masterpieces, pursuing my destiny by helping others pursue theirs.  I am a blessed man already, but my dreams are even bigger.  I dream of a world where all people, that are willing, can pursue excellence.  I dream of a world where all people are free to pursue their God given visions.  I dream of a world, where men and women have the courage to dream, the perseverance to struggle and the humbleness to be victorious, having corrected their hard wiring, by a touch of the Master’s hand, no longer afraid to become what they were called to be. God Bless, Orrin Woodward

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Lou Holtz – Goal Setting Success

Posted by Orrin Woodward on December 1, 2010

How does a young man from a broken home, his parents having separated while he was in college, having no wealth or contacts, become one of the all time greats in his field?  Even more impressive, add on a lisp, an undersized physique, and low self-esteem, to make Lou Holtz’s rise to success in football, one of the most inspiring stories in America.  Proving, yet again, that it isn’t where you start, but where you (and your team) finish that counts.  I highly recommend Lou Holtz’s autobiography, Wins, Losses, and Lessons, a thought provoking read, teaching how to overcome life’s challenges through the power of goals and attitude. I will have Lou share in his own words many times in the foregoing article, as he explains the secrets of his lifetime success. Lou speaks to audiences across the country, sharing how goal setting and a positive attitude helped in transforming his life:

“I’ve been amazed at how many people have wanted to talk about my list over the years. I can’t believe more people don’t have a similar list of goals. Some of them are personal things-like ones pertaining to being a father or those of a financial nature. They’re just something to shoot for-to experience. That’s why I say to our athletes and my children – be a participant, don’t be a spectator. Do things. Just decide what you want to do and then ask the question, ‘What’s important now?’ Now what do I have to do to accomplish such and such? And that will tell you the action you have to take. It’s not a wish list, it’s a set of things I wanted to accomplish and it really hasn’t changed that much.”

Lou went from a fired assistant coach in 1967, to the College Football Hall of Fame, forty years later, but his success foundation was laid years earlier, as a young boy growing up on the Pennsylvania/Ohio border.  The Holtz family was poor, in fact, Lou said his family needed a raise to qualify as poor.  But, like the Biblical admonition, that money doesn’t answer all things, money cannot buy love. Many people, seeking a life of ease, want to avoid challenges, but young Lou learned early, from his challenges, growing to persevere and succeed, no matter what.  Lou discusses his childhood from his autobiography:

“Yes, we were poor, but we always had one another. Unlike some of today’s young people, I never suffered from depression, never needed therapy, never contemplated injuring myself or others, and never fretted over all the things I didn’t have.  I was a happy, normal kid, because I knew God and my family loved me.  That was all that mattered. Today, we live in an age and a place that makes the lost city of El Dorado look like a slum, but too many people’s riches leave them empty. They buy more and more things, attend more parties, eat at more fine restaurants, lease all the right cars, and max out credit cards in the hopes of filling some void.  Unfortunately, material goods are never a substitute for a family’s love.  I never had that problem. We never had any material goods, but I had lots of people who loved me.”

No one in the Holtz clan went to college, not his dad, who quit school in the third grade, nor his mom, even though she had graduated valedictorian of her high school class.  When Lou’s high school coach visited his parents, suggesting that Lou should attend college and become a coach, the Holtz family didn’t know how to respond.  Lacking the funds and the grades necessary to attend, Lou thought the idea ludicrous.  But thanks to a familial love, his mom accepted a night job to help in financing college, that, along with Lou signing up for the ROTC, allowed him to enroll at Kent State.  Many times, life seems to be a series of random events, but, after the passing of time, the events weave together, creating patterns out of the perceived chaos.  In Lou’s case, a key turning point, came shortly before leaving for college, transforming an unmotivated youth into a determined young man.  It occurred at a local grocery store, as Lou was picking up several items, he happened to hear two ladies in a conversation in the aisle one over from him.  Lou tells the story:

“Mrs Hoback said, “I can’t believe Anne Marie Holtz is wasting her money sending that boy, Lou, to college.”

Mrs Toft then said, “I know what you mean. She took a night job and everything. It’s such a waste.”

They didn’t know I’d overheard them, since I was one aisle over, but those comments cut me deeply and burned inside me throughout my freshman year.  I knew that my mother was sacrificing for me, but to have her friends, the people in my town, think that I was not worth the effort, that I was bound to fail, turned my wounded feelings into something quite different.  My ‘want’ to do well became a fiery determination. I would do whatever it took to pass, especially as a freshman, a year when the adjustment to college life can take its toll.”

Did you notice that Lou turned this rejection into energy?  This is a crucial point when setting goals, since many will laugh at you and your goals, at least if you set big goals.  The more they laugh, the more determined you need to become, to finish what you start.  Lou did complete college, moving into a coaching career, leading us up to another breakthrough moment in his life – being fired, in 1967, as an assistant coach at South Carolina.  When the head coach left for another post, all the assistant coaches were left in the lurch, losing their coaching positions. Since Lou had just bought a house, moving to South Carolina for the now lost job, the available funds were as low as his available opportunities.  Beth, his wife, in a gesture of confidence and goodwill, bought him the classic book, The Magic of Thinking Big, by David Schwarz.  Lou devoured the book, and, like every hungry student, followed the instructions explained, writing out his goals.  Lou captured 107 written goals, some of them crazy at the time, since fired assistant coaches don’t live in the same stratosphere as his list demanded.  But that’s exactly the point, a fired assistant coach cannot achieve this, but any man or woman with a dream, a goal and commitment can, simply because, they will develop into the person necessary to fulfill their goals and dreams.  Lou shares again:

“I’ve always felt it was extremely important to set goals for yourself. After the 1967 season, our entire staff was fired at South Carolina where I was an assistant. My wife bought me a book entitled The Magic of Thinking Big by David Schwartz. So I sat down and made a list of all the things I still wanted to accomplish in life, and there were 107 of them. Some of them involved traveling, some of them were a little crazy, some I’ll never reach – I don’t know if I’m ever going to learn a foreign language. I’m not going to be a scratch golfer. Some of them have happened, like appearing on The Tonight Show and being invited for dinner at the White House. But my life changed after I made that list. I think I’ve accomplished 95 of them. My wife disagreed about the list, though. She thought I should have added something about getting a job.”

Lou’s life is a model of the ups and downs that happen in everybody’s life, regardless of one’s goals and attitudes.  But, in order to accomplish goals, one must accept responsibility for the results, whether good and the bad in nature.  In fact, you only lose in life, when you blame someone else for your results.  Lou refused to make excuses, building his life around personal responsibility.  Lou teaches:

“Life provides all of us with a series of choices. The choices we make determine how successful we are.  When you acknowledge that you and only your are responsible and accountable for the choices you make, and when you refuse to blame others for the choices you have made, you have in your hands the blueprint for success. When you allow others to choose your path so that you can then blame someone else when things don’t go your way, you are fooling no one and cheating no one but yourself.  When you accept the fact that you are in your present condition, good or bad, because of the choices you have made, you will then find yourself capable of changing your situation by making better choices.  No one but you determines your success in life. Making the right choices paves your way.”

Think about all of the sports fans, who love watching successful coaches lead their teams, cheering them on when they win, exhorting them when the game is close, or even booing them when they fail, not living up to expectations.  I wonder how many of these fans, fans who expect nothing less than excellence from their favorite teams, have the same high expectations for their occupational teams, ie, their work or business teams?  High achievement requires disciplined thinking, thus the goal setting, personal responsibility and work ethic genre taught by Holtz and all other winning coaches.  But, why is it, that many of these same fans, fans that pay good money to see excellence during the sporting event, will, in their own professional lives, live with mediocrity, seeming to ignore the success standards and principles, that they demand of their favorite sports teams?  Have you ever thought about this paradox?   Why do fans, who love excellence in competitive sports, enough to pay for the right to experience it real time, will not apply the same excellence in their own competitive professions, even though others are paying for the right to experience it real time.  Don’t the customers or employers have the same right to witness excellence in the workplace that fans at the sporting event have?  As a leadership consultant, I have shared success principles across America for over eighteen years, with many in attendance taking the information and thriving; while others, believing that success principles are not for them, remain oblivious to their own dismal results. Imagine the quality of products and services across the world, if everyone took their professional excellence, as seriously, as they did their professional sports.  Success principles apply to all, regardless of race, creed, color or age, since all of us must compete to bring out the excellence within us, demanding more from ourselves to produce a personal best performance, satisfying the high demands of our customer and employers.  In the same way, professional sports teams must demand more from themselves, producing their personal best performances night after night, satisfying the high demands of their fans.

Lou Holtz went on to set many coaching records, some perhaps never to be broken.  For example, he helped four separate schools finish in the Top 10 rankings, a feat never before accomplished.  Sadly, even with achievments of this caliber, he still received his share of criticism.  All great achievers must have a thick skin, as most people view life as a huge game called King of the Hill.  Do you remember playing King of the Hill when you were a kid, a game where one person or group of people, battle to get to the top of the hill, by knocking off those currently on top?  The new King reaches the top, only to be knocked off by another group still climbing upward.  Since criticism is the easiest way to knock someone off the mountaintop, requiring no effort, no courage, and no results, most non-achievers try this method against the champions in life.  It’s a common fact, that the smallest minds with the smallest ideas will always criticize the biggest minds with the biggest ideas.  Here is Lou’s perspective on critics:

“The only people who aren’t going to be criticized are those who do absolutely nothing. And the critics, the people who just observe, are never on the inside, never really had to make decisions that affect people’s lives. It’s easy for people on the outside to stand back and constantly second guess. I welcome all the suggestions in the world from people who have been involved in doing something … but somebody who has never done anything except observe and criticize, I don’t weigh that at all. I think when you get near the end of your life, you don’t regret what you’ve done … and I don’t regret anything I’ve done. The things I regret are the things I didn’t do. Maybe I didn’t spend as much time with my family or wasn’t as patient with coaches and players as I’d like to. But the higher up you go and the more things you try to accomplish, the more people try to find fault. There are so many things in life that are not fair. You work all your life to do something and people try to tear you down. You can’t control it or do anything about it. When you look at the options of dealing with criticism, there’s really only one option – to pray to God that you have the courage and the strength that you won’t become bitter and move on with your life.”

Wise advice from a modern sage of success.  Lou’s life is an inspiration to anyone who is ready to make the success leap. Your life will change direction, only when, like the captain of a ship, you seize the helm by settting goals. Perhaps its time to take goal setting seriously.  Dust off that paper where you once wrote your goals.  Better yet, start with a fresh piece of paper, and dare to dream bigger. Goal setting works, reading Lou Holtz’s life story leaves no doubt about it, but until it’s applied to your life, it’s has no power to transform.  God Bless, Orrin Woodward

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Leadership Control & Influence

Posted by Orrin Woodward on November 30, 2010

Don’t let the issues outside of your control, stop you from addressing issues inside of your control.

If I have seen it once, I have seen it a thousand times, a talented person with a willingness to work, stopped cold by dwelling on issues outside of his control.  This type of thinking takes on many forms, but let me give you an example to help you recognize it in your own thinking.  Suppose you are looking at attending a certain school, learning that one of your friends attended the school, you seek him out to learn from his experiences.  If he shares that he quit the school because it was too hard, requiring too many hours of studying and not enough for play, that doesn’t mean you shouldn’t attend. If you have a dream, and are willing to work, it doesn’t tell you anything about your potential experiences at the school; since education, like nearly all life, is a matter of personal responsibility.  But, if your friends failed attempt at school, blocks your dream to even apply, then two failures have occurred, one a failure of action, the other a failure of thinking.  How do you control your friends work ethic?  How do you know if your friend was truly committed to the school and his dreams? Why are you letting your friends actions hinder your opportunities?  Leaders can only control themselves and the decisions they make, with others, they have only influence, not control.

There are numerous examples of poor thinking in allowing issues outside of your control to affect the issues inside of your control. Here are some other poor thinking scenarios:

1.  I don’t attend church because a hypocrite goes there.  Why allow a hypocrite to stop you from learning Truth for you and your family?
2. I am not a business owner because I had a bad experience with a business person. Why allow a bad business person to deny you of future opportunities?
3. I don’t go to doctors because I had a bad experience with a doctor.  Why threaten your health because of one doctor’s incompetence.
4. I don’t read, because a teacher told me that I was dyslexic and would never be able to read. Why allow a teacher’s label to halt your personal growth.
5. I don’t talk to people because my parents told me that I was shy.  Why allow your parents label, when you were a child, to hinder your future?
6. I don’t attempt great things for God, because my family has never accomplished anything great.  Why allow your family’s past to hinder its future?
7. I don’t save money, because I was told that I would always be in debt.  Why allow someone’s poor thinking on money become your thinking?
8. I don’t dream, because I saw my friend dream and fail.  Why not learn from failures versus become one?
9. I am not getting married because so many people get divorces.  Why not learn the successful marriages versus focus on the failed ones.
10. I am not having children because the world is so messed up.  Why not learn how to prepare children for life versus deny them the opportunity for life?

I could go on and on, but I think you get the point.  Instead of allowing the things that you don’t control (other peoples thoughts and actions), to create your reality, why not focus on the things that you do control (your thoughts and actions)?  I grew up in Columbiaville, Michigan, a small village with few, if any, big thinkers.  It would have been easy to succumb to the ‘stinking thinking’ around Laurie and myself, but through God’s Grace, and a ton of effort, we broke free from the mold.  Instead of dwelling on our parents faults, since all parents have them, Laurie and I focused on our parents strengths.  We learned work ethic and the ability to think from our parents, and applied to every endeavor we undertook.  One of the keys to breaking out is to major on your majors, not on the failed minors of others.  Yes, people will let you down, shame on them, but that shouldn’t stop you from fulfilling your purpose.  Yes, your family may hurt you at times, but that doesn’t stop end your responsibility to love and lead them.  Yes, your vision, like a ship, may take on water every now and then, but leaders understand that it’s part of the journey, rebuilding the ship bigger and stronger.  Your dream cannot be stolen, but through poor thinking, it can be surrendered.  Life is much easier, since Laurie and I decided to press on regardless of the actions of others, that we were in the game no matter what.  This released the stress and anxiety, felt by most people, created when not truly committed to a course of action.  Leaders decide, backing the decision with full commitment, making the decision right by overwhelming passion and effort.

Did we have setbacks? Of course.  Did we have people make promises while not following through?  Many examples.  Did we stay the course?  To the best of our ability and know how, an emphatic yes.  We cannot control other peoples poor decisions, but the last thing we should do, is to compound the mistake by piling on.  Laurie and I have witnessed many people, with more talent than us, sabotage their own success by allowing poor thinking to take root in their minds.  Usually, by the time the weeds have ruined their thinking, they no longer are interested in hearing the advice to help pull the weeds, even getting offended at the suggestion that they are growing weeds. I do my best to help point out the improper thinking, if they are willing to listen, but, at the end of the day, people are responsible for the fruit, or lack of fruit, produced in their minds, pulling weeds when identified is standard fare for leaders.  Thus, one of the biggest weeds that can grow, if not pulled quickly, is permitting issues outside of your control to hinder your attitude and actions on the issues inside of your control.  For example, if you aren’t reading, listening and learning daily in your chosen field, thinking what’s the use, since you aren’t getting the results in life that you want, then you are revealing a huge weed in your own thinking.  It takes time to develop master in any field, in fact it takes 10,000 hours according to Malcolm Gladwell and Geoff Colvin, both authors who write on achievement, but most quit in despair long before this. By allowing things outside of your control, a lack of 10,000 hours when you start something new, to stop you from doing what is inside of your control, building up the hours to reach 10,000 for mastery in your field, you ensure that mastery will never arrive in any field.  It truly is that simple, though not that easy.

Success in life, is simply a matter of staying focused on the areas that you control, surrendering to God the areas that are outside of your control.  What  a leader discovers is, that others, influenced by their example, address issues, improving the community through a leader’s influence, not control.  The community, inspired by the leaders courage, in confronting and changing areas of control, make the tough changes in their lives to grow.  None of this would have happened, if the leader would have dwelled upon areas that he doesn’t control.  It was only because the leader stayed the course, even when it hurt, that it strengthened the resolve of others to change their lives.  Are you that type of leader for your family, community, and team?

One of the best decisions that a leader will ever make in life is to be “all in”, in whatever field that s/he is pursuing.  Greatness doesn’t happen to those who dabble, nor to those who deliberate, but only to those who decide. Laurie and I are “all in” for our 8F’s – Faith, Family, Friends, Freedom, Finances, Fitness, Following, and Fun.  What are you “all in” for in life?  Life has become so much fuller by learning the secret of sacrifice.  When Laurie and I sacrifice our current conveniences for our convictions, we receive a ten fold return on, not only on our own 8F’s, but also in the joy of seeing others develop their 8F’s.  Look back upon your own life, didn’t you achieve more when you kept your mind focused on the areas that you could control, instead of dwelling upon what you didn’t control?  Today is the day to start thinking like the leader you plan on becoming. God Bless, Orrin Woodward

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Find the Success Fork in the Road

Posted by Orrin Woodward on November 27, 2010

It’s before 7 AM, on a foggy Saturday morning, and my mind is mulling over the personal development habits that produce champions.  Every person reading this blog, everyone, without exception, can become a champion by changing his daily habits.  One of the problems in life, probably due to the Biblical fall of man, is that bad habits are easy to develop, while good habits are hard to develop.  Think about it, no one ever creates a plan to get out of shape, but many have performed the task admirably, myself included.  On the other hand, there have been seasons in my life, where through discipline, I have been in great shape.  I know that I can do both, but one takes constant discipline, the other doesn’t.  How many things in life is this true of?  Do you pick whatever habits feel good at the moment, accepting whatever long term results that come with it, or contrarily, do you choose the habits that are inconvenient in the moment, but produce the long term results that you desire in life.  Today, as you read this, you stand at a fork in the road.  If you haven’t produced the results that you yearn for, look no further than your daily habits.  Look at your road.  Can you see the long term results developing from your habits?  Are you happy with these results in your life? If you are, then forge ahead, but if you aren’t, then perhaps today is the day, in which you take a different road.  

The champions road is available to all, and nearly all would love the results of a championship life, not just the monetary rewards, although that doesn’t hurt :), as much as the feeling of satisfaction created by a life well lived.  One may be thinking, if that is true, then why don’t more people choose the success path?  Simply put, the path is uninviting, having briars, thorns, and burrs scattered over the trail.  In fact, it’s hard to even recognize the fork in the roads, since the success road is loaded with painful reminders that it’s off the beaten trail.  Even the people who truly want to change, will suffer greatly from walking down the “road less traveled”, wondering if they made the right choice as they are poked again and again by the burrs, thorns and pickers.  This is the moment of truth in one’s life.  Do you turn back, yielding to the pain of the moment by surrendering your dreams for the comfort of the well traveled road to mediocrity?  Most people who start on the success road will not finish, turning back when the going gets tough, but that doesn’t have to be your destiny, because you don’t have to be like “most people”.

I have walked down both roads at different seasons in my life, learning many lesson along the way. I learned that the success road in life is hard, don’t let anyone mislead you on this point, requiring a pain tolerance beyond what most people are willing to endure in our pampered age, but, over time, the road will get progressively easier.  Conversely, the road to mediocrity is easy, requiring little upfront pain, with plenty of company to encourage you on your road to mediocrity, but, over time, the road will get progressively harder.  With each mile, the mediocrity path becomes more of a burden, drinking to its dregs from the ‘purposeless life’ cup. The road to mediocrity becomes littered with hurting people, dealing with the pain of their self centered lives.  By focusing only on their own challenges, having no time to serve the hurting people around them, suffering from the regret filled pain of a purposeless life, the road to mediocrity becomes a long walk of quiet desperation.  Don’t let the fabled ease and comfort of the road to mediocrity fool you as life has its price that must be paid in full, either a life full of discipline or full of regret, the choice is yours.

Winners choose the success road, enduring the hardships, knowing that success lies on the other side of the pain, while others choose the mediocrity road, seeing only the perceived comfort, believing the lie, that life can be lived successfully without paying a price.  Sadly, it’s only after many wasted years, that people realize, that from listening to the wrong people (the masses living in mediocrity), that they have sold God’s purpose filled plan for self’s pampered filled pretensions.  The good news is that it doesn’t have to end this way.  At any moment in time, one can get off the road of mediocrity and find the straight and narrow path, leading to success.

By finding a mentor, one who has walked further down the road of success, one finds, not only a friend, but a model, an example of someone who endured the pain to live a life of significance.  I learned from my mentors, that if they can journey down the success road, then I can too, leaving behind my habits of mediocrity and replacing with the habits of success.  Where are you on life’s journey?  What road are you traveling on?  Are you living with discipline or with regret?  Perhaps you are you ready to find a different road, discovering the fork that leads to purpose filled success?  It’s your life, it’s your choice, and it’s your pain, either discipline or regret. Choose wisely. God Bless, Orrin Woodward

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Thanksgiving Thankfulness

Posted by Orrin Woodward on November 25, 2010

On Thanksgiving morning, as I sit at my desk, overlooking the Bay of St. Lucie, watching the sun rise out of the water, I am thinking thankful thoughts for all the blessings in my life. Blessings that begin with my freedom to enjoy my faith, just as you have the freedom to enjoy your faith.  As a Christian, I ponder the immensity of God’s love for us. How is it possible for a sinful man to be reconciled to a Holy God?  The answer, after many years of personal struggle, toil, and pain, along with God’s patient grace, that Jesus Christ laid my sins upon Him, and, laid His righteousness upon me, still makes me pause in thankful wonder. That God Himself, would offer unmerited mercy to men, men deserving of eternal punishment by their sins, but receiving full pardons by the finished work of Jesus Christ, should make all, even the hardest of hearts, repent.  God’s grace is sufficient to forgive all penitent sinners, which means His grace is sufficient for you and I.  This was my first area of thankfulness on this Thanksgiving day.

Still in a reflective mood, my thoughts move to my beautiful wife (Laurie) of eighteen years, a wife who patiently bears with her husband’s faults and foibles, a wife who has loved me even when I was unloveable, truly representing the spirit of Christ on earth towards everyone she meets.  My marriage to Laurie, although tough on both of us for the first five years, as we learned our roles and responsibilities, has, among many blessings, produced four phenomenal children.  I love spending time with Laurie and the kids daily, reviewing different lessons learned in life, discussing the principles that work, as well as the principles that don’t work, preparing our kids for the toughest school that they will ever attend, the school of life.  The thoughts, questions, and ideas, generated from these family discussions, have taught me as much as I will ever teach them, forcing me to dig deeper into my understanding of the world and the challenges involved in growing up in society today.  On this day of Thanksgiving, don’t forget, amidst the Turkey and football games, to hug your family, thanking them for the joy that only family can bring to life.

This leads me to my friends, friends who have been there for the ups and downs of this journey called life.  Living life, without friends, is like watching a movie without color; one may be able to follow the plot, but he loses the enjoyment of the unfolding story.  I want to thank all of our friends personally, for their encouragement to us when we hurt, for their fidelity to truth when we err, for their tears of pain when we suffer, for their mirth and joy when we celebrate. Because of our faithful friends, friends who share their lives with us, the Woodward family is the most thankful of families, having the movie of life come alive, not just by knowing the plot, but enjoying the unfolding story, filled with color and content.  May all of us be thankful on this Thanksgiving day, remembering to share our thankfulness to all those who make our life worth living.  God Bless, Orrin Woodward

Posted in Faith, Family | 1 Comment »

Historical Examples for Leadership Studies

Posted by Orrin Woodward on November 19, 2010

Chris Brady and I discuss the use of historical example in our Launching a Leadership Revolution book in this video.  So many people, exhausted by history teachers with little imagination, have grown to dislike history.  But history is an amazing field to study human behavior in action.  I can’t imagine where I would be if I could only learn from my own struggles, but thankfully, I learned the power of reading to live vicariously through the leadership challenges of others.  Both Chris and I read voraciously to continue growing in the field of leadership. What are you waiting for?  Start reading and learning on your own leadership journey.  God Bless, Orrin Woodward

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=akZNEXbGZtE&w=480&h=385]

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