-
The words on the popsicle stick: “For God to use me the way HE wants.”
For me to leave my safe and comfortable career in car sales took a huge leap of faith. After I was fired from my job in 2013, I thought I was beginning to listen to God. I may have been for a bit, but I really wasn’t truly listening. And then during Lent in 2015, I really began listening. I couldn’t help but listen. He forced me to listen. Through the rest of the year I struggled against what I thought God was calling me to do. And then when the decision was made to step away and go into this new adventure, I really thought I was in tune with his will for me. Yet, I found out I wasn’t. So, the words on the popsicle stick are vital to me. I walked into this new adventure because I thought He told me to. What he was really saying was, “Leave your job, and follow me.” I did the first part. The second part? Not so much. Now over 6 months into this new adventure, I’ve yet to set aside the time to properly seek what He truly wants me to do. I’ve still been fooling myself thinking it is Voice Over and Writing and Speaking. It may well be those things, in part, but the whole is not those things. He has something planned for me. I need to be still, search, listen, and obey. What I’ve been doing so far may very well be leading me to my true calling, but I need to remain in tune with Him for direction. And while my wife and I planned for this, it is hard. We are getting to the end of the funds. And maybe that’s what He wants. When the money isn’t there, we all tend to FINALLY put our full dependence on Him. So now you know. Even through all the listening and leaping, I still need to humble myself and be patient. I need to wait on the Lord.
Thank you so much to my friend, Michele, for handing me a popsicle stick at the Launch Out Conference in Atlanta in April.
Author Archives: Rick
“I Am…”
I am…
I am
a brother.
I am
a son.
I am
a father.
I am
a husband.
I am
tired.
I am
weak.
I am
forgiven.
I am
redeemed.
I am
a child of the one true king.
I am
second.
I am
listening.
I am…
Social Media Friends
Yes, you read that correctly. “Fake Friends”
In a time now past, my wife identified my online friends as “fake friends”.
Why? Why would she do this? And more importantly, to me anyway, was she correct in identifying hundreds of people I interacted with online as being “fake”?
Good question. And then one day we met some of them in person at a conference in Nashville. Suddenly these people had faces and voices and full bodies instead of simply a profile pic. These online personalities were suddenly real people. Face to face conversation occurred.
Is that what makes online relationships real? Face to face personal contact?
Or, can an online relationship be true friendship without ever meeting in person. Does 2D need to become 3D or IRL (In Real Life) before a friendship has validation?
I’m going to argue for a “no” answer to the question.
Some of my best friends only exist in online interactions. Without ever meeting in person, I have developed incredibly solid friendships with dozens of people.
As of this moment, I have 1,632 “Friends” on Facebook.
Undoubtedly I don’t interact daily with each of them. But, there are a few I interact with every single day and I would miss them if a day went by without touching base with them.
I know some of you don’t think online friends can be true friends.
I know others of you would fade into the background of life if not for your online friends.
I also know how much joy I have when I get to meet one of these online friends in person.
Deep, deep, personal relationships have been developed online. I thank God everyday for these relationships. I can’t imagine my life without these people. I can’t imagine not having the interaction, the community, the family.
A year ago my best friend moved to South Carolina. I miss him. We’ve known each other for over 36 years. We’ve had our ups and downs. We’ve not talked to each other for months on end because one of us was stupid, which turned into both of us being stupid, but we always came back together.
I miss not being able to have breakfast with him on a morning I need him or he needs me.
But now he’s in South Carolina. How do we continue?
We become online friends.
It still takes work. Lots of work. Intentional work. The exact same work an in-person, 3D, IRL friendship takes.
And now I need to admit, I need to put in more work. I need to be intentional with my now 2D, online friend. He moved away, but in this age of technology we don’t need to move away from our almost 4 decade friendship.
So, Eric? Expect an email, or a Facebook message, or a text, or a Skype request.
That’s what I’m going to do. Be intentional. Online.
What are you going to do?