“Resolutions are popular because everyone feels they
could use a little improvement.” Marilu Henner
Okay, I’ll admit it – I’m a dog person. If
you’re a cat person, I’ll pray for you J. Since it’s that
time of year when everyone is making behavior modifications, I thought that our
big chocolate lab, Ernie could use a little behavior modification. So
I’m going to suggest to him that in 2015…
* He stop trying to find the few remaining
clean pieces of carpet in the house when he’s about to throw up.
* He won’t lick family members faces after
eating animal elimination or his own regurgitation. (Door-to-door salesman are
of course, open season).
* He won’t chew pens or markers, especially
red or pink ones.
* When in the car, he won’t insist on having
the window rolled down when it’s raining.
* He’ll remember that the sofa isn’t a face
towel. Neither are family members’ pants legs.
* That his head doesn’t belong in the frig or
his nose on the counter, and that he’ll stop staring at anyone eating like he’s
a starving 3rd world child.
* And that he not shake the rain out of his fur
after coming back inside.
It’s that time of year. Have you made some
New Year’s resolutions? You’ve probably made some health and financially
related ones. Can I suggest some resolutions you might not have considered?
There not in any particular order, just something to think about.
To spend more time in actual
conversations rather than on social media. Want extra money? Put $1.00
in a jar every time you’re out for a meal and see people sharing a meal with
someone but they’re on their phone. Put $5.00 in a jar for your spouse if
you’re the one doing it. I know sometimes there are emergencies, but most of
the time that’s not the case. We don’t always need to be connected. If you’re
in the car with someone, talk to them, not on your phone to someone miles away.
To spend more time having significant conversations.
Sometimes days can go by with the conversations we have with our
friends, family members and co-workers going no deeper than surface-level
chit-chat. Though there’s nothing wrong with joking around, theorizing about
the latest episode of your favorite TV series, or even strategizing about the
Packers. But if we’re not intentional about regularly engaging in deeper
conversations—that challenge us spiritually, intellectually and socially—too
often, those types of talks become rare or non-existent.soci
To do more and complain less. Ours
is a complaining culture. There’s seemingly always something wrong. We need to
ask ourselves, “what good will this do other than raise my blood pressure?” Complaining
may give some momentary relief from frustrations, but working on solutions to
the problems in our world can actually take steps forward in fixing things that
are broken. While we may not be able to “fix” it, often we can take proactive
steps that we have control over. And we can always pray!
To spend more time thanking and less worrying.
Every moment spent worrying is wasted, not to mention, it’s counterproductive.
Francis Chan said, “Worry implies that we don’t quite trust that God is big
enough, powerful enough, or loving enough to take care of the what’s happening
in our lives.” We worry about that which we have no control over but we
rarely thank God (or others) for our many blessings. Maybe it would help to
keep a diary or log of your daily blessings.
To spend time getting to know God
better. Be honest, when we feel rushed, what’s the first thing we cut
back on – our spiritual life. We skip reading our Bibles, our prayer life
becomes little more than a quick verbal text, we skip church and can’t ever
find the time to be in a small group. If we wait until we have time, it won’t ever
happen. Spending time with the Lord, like spending time with a close friend has
to be intentional and scheduled. J. Oswald Sanders wisely observed, “It is
impossible for a believer, no matter what his experience, to keep right with
God if he will not take the trouble to spend time with God. Spend plenty of
time with Him; let other things go, but don't neglect Him.”
To try something new every week, if not
every day. When is the last time you tried out a different ethnic food.
With the Internet recipes from around the world at right at your fingertips.
Break out of your routine. Do something different and new. Listen to new music.
With Spotify and Pandora, keeping up with new music releases and styles has
never been easier. If you read fiction, read a biography. If you read serious
books, switch to fiction. If you’re always watching TV or surfing the Net, turn
it off and pick up a book. Even switch where you sit in your family room or at
the dinner table. Try a different version of the Bible. If you watch one news
channel, watch one from the opposite spectrum.
Cut yourself and others some slack.
Most of us are wound too tight and far too stressed. If it won’t matter next
week, it probably doesn’t matter today. In this social media era, where
everyone’s opinion gets a platform, it’s easy to fall into the trap of getting
angry at our friends over things they say that we don’t agree with. Outrage is way
overrated. Commit to being offended less and reserving your anger for issues
that really matter.
And when you make a mistake or even sin,
remember, it’s ALL died for. If you’re good at beating yourself up, please make
sure that you also affirm yourself and tell yourself what you’re enjoying. Thank
God for His grace! For some reason, dark and negative self-talk is acceptable
but self-affirmation, gratitude and enjoyment is psycho babble. It’s not and we
need more of it. It may result in us not looking like we suck on lemons. God
doesn’t expect perfection from us and we’re silly to expect it of ourselves.
To challenge my own opinions and presuppositions
more often. These are polarized days. Being able to take a stand for
what you believe is admirable, but so is listening to the other side and
putting yourself in someone else’s shoes. Even if we don’t change our position,
questioning our own long-held presuppositions doesn’t just challenge our
beliefs—it can actually strengthen them.
To spend more time with people you care
about. While it’s often more convenient to go to the drive-thru, eat
lunch at your desk or use dinnertime to catch up on Netflix, it’s not good for
us. There’s nothing wrong with doing this occasionally, but when eating on the
run becomes a lifestyle, we end up depriving ourselves and others in our life of
moments that could be used to build deeper relationships. At the very least
schedule to meet a friend for coffee or lunch. If you don’t schedule it, it’s
not going to happen.
God has given us everything we need to enjoy
life (1 Timothy 6:17). So are you? If not, why not? Maybe it’s time for some
significant change.