Find out your strengths
While this may seem like a no-brainer, you would be surprised how many people I talk to about this who don’t know their strengths. Fortunately as a Joshua’s Men alumni, you have gone through StrengthFinders 2.0 and found your strengths. I wonder if I were to ask you to name your strengths, could you? I know I had to look back at mine. Go back, look and reflect on your strengths. Has anything changed since you took the inventory? If not, what are your strengths? This leads me to the 2nd way to stay in your strength zone.
Are your priorities in line with your strengths?
Since you are leaders you are good at many things, but are you prioritizing your life in conjunction with your strengths? I have discovered when my priorities get out of whack it is usually because I have strayed away from my strength zone. It is only when I make sure that my priorities line up with my strengths that I feel like I am running on all cylinders. I will admit though that it is very easy for other priorities to sneak in and lure me out of my strength zone. It could be the pressure I put on myself or that I allow others to put on me to try to be “all things to all people”. However, in order for me to be effective I need to stay within my strength zone by making sure my priorities are in line with my strengths.
Evaluation
In Pennsylvania, where I grew up, there are lots of roads that go up and down mountains. One absolute must for those roads are guardrails, because the drop off the side of the road can be very precarious and steep. So if a driver gets distracted or the car starts to pull to that side of the road, there is protection from falling off the side of the mountain. It is the same way with our priorities. We need to have a system in place in our lives, where we have those “protections” for us to not lose our priorities and thus leave our strength zone. It can be through self-evaluation, where those times of feelings stressed and overwhelmed can many times be signals our priorities are askew, and we are outside our strength zones. Our spouses can be a great evaluator when our priorities are messed up and we are functioning outside of our strength zone. They can be the ones that can help us focus our priorities and get back on track.There are going to be times in our lives due to circumstances, when we have to function outside of our strength zones. There will be other times when by our own action or inaction our priorities get eschew, and we get drawn out of our strength zone. Either way, in order to be effective leaders, we need to get our priorities in line and live in our strength zone.
Conversation:
- What are those times in your life when your priorities were off and you were not in your strength zone?
- How do you feel when you are living your life in your strength zone?
Recommended Book
Overload is not having time to finish the book you are reading on stress. Margin is having time to read it twice. Overload is fatigue. Margin is energy. Overload is red ink. Margin is black ink. Overload is hurry. Margin is calm. Overload is anxiety. Margin is security. Overload is the disease of our time. Margin is the cure. Margin is the space that once existed between ourselves and our limits. It is something held in reserve for contingencies or unanticipated situations. In Margin, Dr. Richard Swenson provides a prescription against the danger of overloaded lives. Focusing on margin in four key areas-emotional energy, physical energy, time, and finances-he offers an overall picture of health that employs contentment, simplicity, balance, and rest. If you yearn for relief from the pain and pressure of overload, take a lifelong dose of Margin. The benefits of good health, financial stability, fulfilling relationships, and availability for Gods purposes will follow you all your days.