metamoses:think daily

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a blog from dave donahue

The Feed.

The Feed is all part of a larger plan… Read the rest of this entry »

Filed under: Interdisciplinary Action, Leadership, Psychology, Seemingly Random, i love technology , , , , , ,

Book Review: Jesus Wants To Save Christians

Jesus Wants t0 Save Christians, Rob Bell & Don Golden

I am behind on my reviews… or maybe i finished this book last night. Hard to say… Read the rest of this entry »

Filed under: Book Review, Church History, Integral, Interdisciplinary Action, Leadership, Theology, church , , ,

Loving the Unknown

Change is commitment. Change is laying aside something you had and picking up something new. Change is to fully take the next step. Read the rest of this entry »

Filed under: Attitude, Leadership

Loving the Unknown

“All the things you love were once unknown to you.” – John Maxwell, The Difference Maker Read the rest of this entry »

Filed under: Attitude, Leadership

The Benjamin Revolution: Its On

here’s the cut ‘n’ paste straight from Matt Keller’s blog. Is there something closer to the source? Don’t know. Read on… Read the rest of this entry »

Filed under: Leadership, church , , , ,

Post-It Note #3

“Anything worth doing is worth delaying.” -Bottleneck Bill

“The future is that time you’ll wish you had done what you aren’t doing now.” -John C. Maxwell Read the rest of this entry »

Filed under: Interdisciplinary Action, Leadership, Seemingly Random , , , , , ,

Default to Decision

“Shall we buy a nice new car or keep the old junky one?” -Andrew Olsen Read the rest of this entry »

Filed under: Attitude, Interdisciplinary Action, Leadership , ,

Triggers, Buttons and Switches

One of the post-it notes at my desk reminds me to redirect and relearn. Read the rest of this entry »

Filed under: Attitude, Integral, Leadership, Psychology

Strength Quote: Deliberative

"It is generally agreed that the ultimate purpose of any thinking must be the satisfaction of the thinker.So in the end the purpose of thinking is to satisfy the expressed emotions." -Edward DeBono