Shai Linne with "Spread His Fame." from Grace EV Free on Vimeo.
Tuesday, April 20, 2010
Thursday, April 15, 2010
Unbeatable Re-enlistment
I love re-enlistments. This one can't be beat.U.S. Marine Becomes First Blind Double Amputee to Re-Enlist
He has no legs and no eyesight, but Marine Cpl. Matthew Bradford has four more years of military service ahead of him after becoming the first blind double-amputee to re-enlist.
He has no legs and no eyesight, but Marine Cpl. Matthew Bradford has four more years of military service ahead of him after becoming the first blind double-amputee to re-enlist.The rifleman was injured in January 2007 in Iraq when a roadside bomb exploded right under him, the San Antonio Express-News reported.
But after years at the Center for the Intrepid, a privately funded, cutting-edge rehabilitation center, Bradford, 23, has learned to walk with prosthetic limbs and navigate without his vision, and he only regrets that he can’t return to combat duty in Iraq, the paper reported.
Instead the Kentucky native will head to Camp Lejeune, N.C., where he will work with other wounded Marines in hopes of helping them cope with anger, depression and other issues.
"I'm paving the road for the rest of them who want to stay in but think they can't," he told the Express-News. "I'm ready to get back to work."
Click here to read more on this story from the San Antonio Express-News.
Tuesday, April 13, 2010
How To Create A Movement
Sunday, April 11, 2010
I Am Second

Awesome site! Powwweeerrrfuuul! Click the link, watch the video. This is intense, what he describes is real, and it is what we do. After you watch Chris watch a few other videos. Then share them - I'll post a few more.
I Am Second: Iraq War Vet
Saturday, April 10, 2010
Missing Ship's Movement
The "Too Late" Lieby Andree Seu
A man sits on the dock with head in hands, wailing for the ships that have sailed—as he is missing the ship that is sailing. This is a story of my life, of living in regret over past losses, even as I am losing the present moment’s possibilities.
In my 20s I thought all was lost. I chose despair and plunged headlong into a funk—and more disaster. In my 30s, when I saw what I had done, I plunged into yet more despair rather than learn my lesson. I lamented that I had been wrong in my 20s to think it was too late then—but that surely it was really too late now! So I dug into a costly depression. Despair over former fatal choices was itself the fatal choice that I continued to make. It is shameful to tell you all this. But at my age, I am grateful to serve as even a bad example if it will help someone.
Satan, with sweet rationalizations, tempts us to sin. And then, when we have followed his counsel, he switches sides to be the Accuser. It is hard to see this for what it is—the last lie in his quiver—because it comes with a semblance of righteousness: “I have sinned so badly that I have no right to joy again.” This is counterfeit repentance. Scripture tells us how to know a false repentance from a true one. The former kills, but the latter brings good things into your life:
“I rejoice, not because you were grieved, but because you were grieved into repenting. For you felt a godly grief, so that you suffered no loss through us. For godly grief produces a repentance that leads to salvation without regret, whereas worldly grief produces death” (2 Corinthians 7:9-10).
I am a watchman calling out from the milestone of 58 years, to you coming up behind me at 28 and 38 and 48. And this is what I cry: Never say it’s “too late,” and it’s “no use,” no matter what you have done—and I do not doubt you have done plenty. The command to repent and believe is not issued to pretty good people but to the ungodly. If the gospel is not good for your present estate it’s not good for anything. Christ still stands at the door and knocks. The words “Nothing is impossible with God” (Luke 1:37) are still true. “Do not fear; only believe” (Mark 5:36) is still addressed to you. You are not the one person in history that God’s grace is not going to work for. To refuse to believe in His love and to put your hope in Him—“Today, while it is still today” (Hebrews 3:13)—is to miss the boat that’s docked and waiting.
Friday, April 9, 2010
Tri-perspectival Leadership
Wednesday, April 7, 2010
Atitila The Hun On Navy Leadership
I have to post this one from Naval Leadership:Repost - Attila the Hun on Navy Leadership
One of my favorites.
Advice and Counsel
- Written reports are only useful if read by your audience.
- An officer with Sailors who always agree with him reaps the counsel of mediocrity.
- An officer never kills the Sailor bearing bad news, he kills the Sailors that fail to deliver bad news.
- An officer who asks the wrong questions always hears the wrong answers.
- An officer never asks a question for which he doesn't want to hear the answer.
Character
- The greatness of an officer is measured by the sacrifices he is willing to make for the good of the squadron.
- Seldom are self-centered, conceited and self-admiring officers great leaders, but they are great idolizers of themselves.
- Great officers never take themselves too seriously.
- An officer adapts-he doesn't compromise.
- Weak officers surround themselves with weak Sailors.
- Strong officers surround themselves with strong Sailors.
Courage
- Officers must learn early that working through a hardship is an experience that influences them all the
days of their lives. - Successful officers learn to deal with adversity and to overcome mistakes.
Decision Making
- Every decision involves some risk.
- Time does not always improve a situation for an officer or his Sailors.
- Errors are inescapable when the unqualified are allowed to exercise judgment and make decisions.
- Quick decisions are not always the best decisions. On the other hand, unhurried decisions are not always
the best decisions. - Officers should never rush into confrontations.
- The ability to make difficult decisions separates leaders from followers.
Delegation
- Officers never place their Sailors in situations where their weaknesses will prevail over their
strengths. - Good Sailors will almost always achieve what their leaders expect from them.
- An officer never expects his Sailors to act beyond their wisdom or understanding.
- An officer always gives tough assignments to Sailors who can rise to the occasion.
- Abdication is not delegation. Abdication is a sign of weakness. Delegation is a sign of strength.
Developing Subordinates
- Strong Sailors have strong weaknesses. An officer's duty is to make Sailors strengths prevail.
- Sailors learn less from success than they do from failure.
- Sailors learn much faster when faced with adversity.
- A good officer takes risks by delegating to an inexperienced Sailor in order to strengthen his leadership
abilities. - Sailors are best prepared to become Chiefs when given appropriate challenges at successively higher levels of responsibility.
If it were easy to be a Chief, every Sailor would be one. - Without challenge, a Sailor's potential and a squadron's potential is never realized.
Goals
- Superficial goals lead to superficial results.
- As a squadron, we would accomplish more if officers, Chiefs and Sailors behaved as though squadron goals were as important to them as personal goals.
- Critical to a Sailor's success is a clear understanding of what the CO wants.
- A Sailor's goal should always be worthy of his efforts.
- A Sailor without purpose will never know when he has achieved it.
- Officers should always aim high, going after things that will make a difference rather than seeking the safe
path of mediocrity.
Leaders and Leadership
- Officers should always appoint there best Sailors to the best positions, no matter how much they are needed in their current job.
- An officer knows he is responsible for the welfare of his Sailors and acts accordingly.
- Being a leader is often a lonely job.
- Shared risk-taking will weld the relationship of an officer and his Sailors.
- Strong officers stimulate and inspire the performance of their Sailors.
- The best officers develop the ability to ask the right questions at the right time.
- An officer can never be in charge if he bring up the rear.
Perceptions
- An officer who takes himself too seriously has lost his perspective.
- A Sailor's perception is reality for him.
- Sailors who appear to be busy are not always working.
Problems and Solutions
- We all need to focus on opportunities rather than on problems.
- Some of us spend too much time coming up with solutions for which there are no problems.
Reward and Punishment
- If leader has failed, so likewise have his subordinate leaders.
- If you tell a Sailor he is doing a good job when he isn't, he will not listen long and, worse, will not believe
praise when it is justified.
Tolerance
- Every Sailor has value-even if only to serve as a bad example.
- To experience the strength of Sailors we must tolerate some of their weaknesses.
- Suffer long for mediocre but loyal Sailors. Suffer not for competent but disloyal Sailors.
Training
- Adequate training of Sailors is essential to war and cannot be disregarded by officers in more peaceful
times. - The consequence for not adequately training your Sailors is their failure to accomplish that which is expected of them.

