Friday, 30 November 2012

The Passing Of A Mentor Father


Romans 1

Amplified Bible (AMP)

10 I keep pleading that somehow by God’s will I may now at last prosper and come to you.
11 For I am yearning to see you, that I may impart and share with you some spiritual gift to strengthen and establish you;
12 That is, that we may be mutually strengthened and encouraged and comforted by each other’s faith, both yours and mine.

It was a sad day when I received the news that my spiritual father and mentor had passed away. For many years we had walked and fellowshipped together.
Initially, it was with a sense of loss that I received  the news, simply because

Tuesday, 27 November 2012

Be At Peace Mentor

1 Peter 4:8
Above all things have intense and unfailing love for one another, for love covers a multitude of sins [forgives and disregards the offenses of others]. 


Everyone has the opportunity to get offended or contribute to an offense. Mentor fathers not perfect by any means have to deal with this as a challenge as well on many occasions.

The skill of discerning when a mentee is giving an opinion, or stating a true condition, expressing an insight, or questioning for motive and clarity sake, rather than questioning

Saturday, 26 November 2011

Mentor Believer

Whenever we assume good faith, born of good motives and inner security, we appeal to the good in others.
Stephen Covey

People have a desperate need for someone to believe in them. they have hidden potential. desires, dreams, visions, passions, perspectives and graces that could contribute to groups, communities and society at large, but they are lacking that one person that believes enough in them

Wednesday, 23 November 2011

The Mentors Integrity

Instructors instruct and teach;
Trainers train

But
Mentor/fathers influence by being an example, by building relationship, by wise counsel and guidance and coaching.

Mentor/fathers know it is a vital habit to be individuals of absolute integrity.

Our ability to make and keep promises is one measure of faith in ourselves and of our integrity.
Stephen Covey.

Integrity means I keep my commitments to myself and to others.
It means I live true to my own personal values and principles.
Of course,

Wednesday, 31 August 2011

What Do You Have, Mentor?

As a mentor/father you need a conscious knowing of, and confidence in, your value and worth internally. Many people and mentors do not really know what they value and why. Without this intrinsic confident self-awareness, you cannot deal with others in a relationship with security and assurance. 

If you do not know and have a deep sense of knowing your value, your worth, and secure contentment with who you are, you cannot convey and impart it to another.
But to do that you also have to be able to

Monday, 29 August 2011

I Can’t Talk to My Mentor!

Great works are performed not by strength but by perseverance.
Samuel Johnson
  Mentor/Father, you are going to need a good dose of perseverance to influence mentee’s (or children or others).
Perseverance is the ability to be patient and restful with another when everything around you is screaming for attention.
Often we find ourselves in times of stress and anguish, reacting to people in our lives with hasty anger and punishment in one form or another, without having given them the time to communicate with us what they are experiencing.
“Don’t bug me!” is sometimes the message we convey by our intolerance and short snide response to an enquiry or when they show a lack of keeping up with us. Patient perseverance involves a refusal to retaliate, a refusal to be overwhelmed, to permit my demeanour toward a mentee, to be affected by my surroundings.
We may say the wrong thing or become sarcastic when we are stressed and impatient. Or we just refuse to communicate and rather communicate a sulky attitude – “I will punish and show you!” attitude.
Basically, we reject the person and remove them from our space, by the defence mechanisms of our emotions. The result is, more than likely, going to be withdrawal and even despair from the mentee. It will breed a lack of trust, feelings of inferiority, counter dependence, inadequacy, and low self-esteem.
Bear in mind, that if you are doing it once, then you are doing it in other forms on most occasions as well.
Perseverance is a state of character and heart that is a characteristic and discipline actively part of your make–up as a mentor/father, but also as a mature human being.
It means being able to be merciful under even extreme pressure. It is not a passive resignation, but a conscious knowledge that everyone is on a journey. That everyone has the need to be significant and accepted and loved and acknowledged.
It means to exercise understanding and patience toward others, to be merciful. It means we have self-restraint before moving to any form action.
The result is giving the mentee, the sense of being accepted and important, conveying by our attitude and demeanour, that they are valuable.
One man that I viewed as a mentor, never seemed to have time for me. Always, always, he would have some excuse or other that there was a pressing need that didn’t allow him to listen, understand or spend any time with me. People around me who would witness these encounters would ask why he was rejecting me like this. That is exactly what it is – rejection.
I have learnt that even though I may be busy or not agree with the individual, but having an empathetic attitude of interest and genuine perseverance, allowed me to influence them so that they trust and receive from me, not for any accomplishments, but for the fact that I made time to listen, understand and accept them.
Over the years I have seen and experienced so many leaders that do the same. If it’s an inconvenient time, say so, but give the mentee or person, an alternative, to show and impart a sense of their value and uniqueness.

Do you have time for people? Ever?
When you do is it always on your terms?
Are your relationships suffering because you don’t have time for significant and insignificant others in your life?
Is it irritating, or do you take time, to listen to their feelings and experiences?
Are people around you sensitive and removed because of your harsh, closed, I’m-not-interested attitude toward them?
Or do others feel you are approachable, interested and involved in who they are what they are going through, and what insights they have to offer?

Friday, 26 August 2011

Guard The Tongue.


Courage is the quality of every quality at its highest testing point.
Stephen Covey

Guarding what you say and how you say it takes tremendous courage and self control.
Derogatory or negative words can inflict wounds beyond anything we could physically do to a person. Words last longer, go deeper, and influence than we sometimes can imagine.

Some people take great delight in boasting about their ability to tell someone off, putting others in their place, sarcastically bring them down to size and tell them exactly how 'they feel' about them.

But the Bible says:
We all stumble in many ways. If anyone is never at fault in WHAT HE SAYS, he is a perfect man, able to keep HIS WHOLE BODY in check. James 3.2

Perfect here is not, as in, never a fault, but rather a mature, fully grown up person. Someone who is emotionally mature enough to keep themselves in control, even as a mentor(verse 1).

Isn't that amazing?
Keep your tongue in check and controlled and you keep your whole body bridled or mastered.

Weighing your words before speaking, especially when you are stressed, under pressure, tired, frustrated, and irritated, takes tremendous self-discipline. But this could mean the difference in destroying someone's life and purpose, or at least inflicting wounds that create callous insensitive hearts or an mentee that does the same to others.

You must be a reference point, a model, an example of someone who can guard their words so that you do not react to situations, without a self-discipline or self-control.

Much can be said about the power of words to build, encourage, acknowledge, love, and empathise with another person, or to tear down, wound, destroy, break down, discourage, manipulate and divide from another person.
But really the idea here is that we see the vital place of making control of or tongue a habit and behaviour that we can live as mentor/fathers, to be seen by those we mentor and father.

Do you think before you speak?
Or do you mouth off and then regret what you have said afterwards, if at all?
How measured are your words?
Do you personally have mastery in this habit, this element?
Can you honestly say, under all conditions, that you are able to choose your words and not react with negative words?
Are you in the habit of building people with your words?