Don’t Believe In Yourself

In educational circles, I often hear teachers or administrators tell students to “Try your hardest, do your best, and believe in yourself.” This kind of stuff is intentioned as a motivational phrase.

But there’s a problem
There’s a huge logical problem with that statement. Believing in yourself is a surefire way of “wandering around in life like Gomer Pyle on valium,” to quote Dave Ramsey.

Last I checked, I am the source of pretty much all of my problems. Either me directly or my response(s) to circumstances. So why in the world should I believe in myself — one whom I know full well is capable of screwing my life up entirely?

Well that sure is a downer
Maybe, but then again, I have come to believe more heartily than ever before over these last few months that it is absolutely impossible to motivate someone. No motivational speech ever succeeds in motivating someone. Ever.

But they motivate people!
Motivational speeches do not motivate people. They may inspire people. They may provide a call to action. They may unify people. They may encourage people. But they don’t motivate people. Motivation must come from within. I want to focus on the last possibility there: encouragement.

True motivation
True motivation comes from within. False motivation comes from without. The carrot on a stick never fully works. It eventually gets boring. A great example of this is Social Security. True motivation must be cultivated and cared for. This is where encouragement comes in and plays a tremendous and decisive role. I’ll write more on this later, because my running and my updates on Facebook and the support from friends has been a huge eye-opening experience for me. But for now, I’ll leave off there and move back to the point.

Don’t believe in yourself
We’ve all experienced let-down from other people. We get our hopes up and then they turn around and drop the ball or don’t follow through or whatever. We’ve all experienced personal failure. Failure is the springboard for success. Without failure (and the subsequent learning from our mistakes), we will not move forward. When we try to avoid failure, we coincidentally avoid risk. Risk leads to either reward or disappointment. Avoiding risk leads to complacency and stagnation.

But how do we know which risks to take?
There are two ways to know which risks are worth taking. One is by learning from personal experience. This seems to be the most common one for me, and I’d venture it is the most common for most people. The other way is to learn from other people. Figure out what works for them and do the same things. Read books by them. Find out what plan
they used and stick to it precisely.

Believing in yourself works marvelously if you have a plan
f you don’t have a plan, then you are wandering. You don’t even know where you’re going, you’re just going.

We all want progress, but if you’re on the wrong road, progress means doing an about-turn and walking back to the right road; in that case, the man who turns back soonest is the most progressive.
C.S. Lewis

If you do rich people stuff, you’ll become rich people
Dave Ramsey tells us that if we want to be rich, do rich people stuff. Poor people aren’t poor because they don’t get the lucky breaks. They are poor because they do the things that poor people do. Fat people aren’t fat because of genetics. They are fat because they do fat people things. If you do rich people stuff, you’ll become rich people. If you do skinny people stuff, you’ll become skinny people. It’s that simple.

Don’t believe in yourself
Next time you are tempted to tell someone to believe in themselves, don’t. Instead, be sure they have a good solid plan, and encourage them to get with the plan and believe in it. Believe in the plan, stick to the plan, and the results will follow. The plan will work, but it’s a crock pot method, not a microwave.

The Spiritual Implications of Running and Teaching and Reading and Praying

The following is a modification of parts of a letter I recently wrote to a friend. Since a lot of what I’ve been thinking about came out in the letter, I thought it would be helpful to share it with some of my other friends.


I’m not going to go off on how teaching school is my ministry field, as I totally don’t believe that. While I may have opportunities to directly share bits and pieces of the gospel and indirectly portray a (hopefully, ideally, yet tragically not commonly) Christ-like life, there’s more to it. I’ve found for me that as I grow as a teacher, I also grow as a person. When I challenge myself to be more patient with obnoxious adolescents, I end up becoming more patient with obnoxious adults. When I challenge my band to play harder music, I begin to see room for greater discipline in various areas of my life.

So I began running back in January. I called it running, but it was more of a slightly faster-paced walk. In March, I began really running. At least it was more of a shuffle than a walk. Now, I’m trying to increase the speed. All this has really begun to help me as I see various sinful tendencies in my life. As I push harder to finish my 5-minutes of running or whatever, it strengthens the resolve in me to push harder to not eat the empanadas that some wonderful band parents brought up to me. Pineapple empanadas, no less. Or to resist the urge to yell at a kid for not being quiet as fast as I want him to. Or whatever.

Discipline in one area leads to an easier time developing discipline in other areas. This has been one of the greatest challenges in my life over the past few years. Undisciplined living is the underlying cause of almost every failure I have experienced in recent memory.

So that’s it? Just now that I’m running, I’m going to be better off. Oh, that it were that simple. But it has revealed something to me. Something amazing. Something I once knew, but didn’t know why I knew it. Are you ready?

Keep thy heart with all diligence; for out of it [are] the issues of life. — Proverbs 4:23

See, discipline is the key to life. It’s so vital that we live according to a plan. Keeping our heart, guarding our heart, defending our heart — that is absolutely the most important thing we can do as people.

How do we do that?

But I discipline my body and bring it into subjection, lest, when I have preached to others, I myself should become disqualified. – 1 Corinthians 9:27

Clearly, this doesn’t mean we have to start planning to run a marathon, but it does mean that we need to be careful what we allow into both our minds and our bodies. When I’m running, all I can do is pray for strength to continue on. Because I know the plan will get me to where I want to go. It’s a slow process, but the process works. After I finish running and my body begins to recover, I can focus more on the spiritual aspects of the larger scheme of what I’m doing. And it’s awesome.

My mind is clearer than it has been in years. I don’t feel depressed most of the time. I have something to look forward to that I know is making me stronger — physically, psychologically, and spiritually.

So I mentioned above that it is vital that we live according to a plan. Sure my running program is helping me, and I’m slowly following Dave Ramsey’s Financial Peace plan. But what about an overall life plan. It’s very very simple, and yet I know I have trouble maintaining it on an ongoing basis. Perhaps you know it too, but this little blog post thing can hopefully serve to encourage you to either get back on track or to stick with what you’re doing. It’s easy to lose sight of the fact that it really will work if you just stick to it. The plan?

Read the Bible and pray every single day. As you take care of the depth of your devotional life, God will take care of the breadth of your ministry.

Via Dolorosa

Words by Leeland Mooring
Music by Jack Mooring

He traded His crown for a crown of thorns,
He picked up His cross and laid down His sword.
He stumbled down the road bruised and beaten for me,
Jesus walked the way of grief Hallelujah!

On the Via Dolorosa,
All my sin was carried away!
And the power of hell was broken,
As He gave His life away!

He knew what was to come from the very start,
But his love for the world beat inside his heart.
He climbed the road of suffering to the hill of Calvary,
Where the saints would be redeemed. Hallelujah!

On the Via Dolorosa,
All my sin was carried away!
And the power of hell was broken,
As He gave His life away!

Jesus fixed His eyes upon the new horizon,
Soon He would arise and the world would be forgiven!
Jesus fixed His eyes upon the new horizon,
Soon He would arise and the world would be forgiven!

Hallelujah, Jesus rose again!
On the cross He shed His blood on Calvary!
I’m thankful for the journey of my King,

On the Via Dolorosa,
All my sin was carried away!
And the power of hell was broken
As He gave His life away,
As He gave His life away!

He traded His crown for a crown of thorns.

Performed by Leeland