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Wednesday, January 26, 2011

What's Important Now? WIN

One of the wittiest, most inspiring coaches of our generation, whether speaking about football or life, is my fellow-West Virginian, Coach Lou Holtz.  

As a retired football coach from the College of William and Mary, North Carolina State, the University of Arkansas, the University of Minnesota, Notre Dame, and the University of South Carolina, Holtz is in the record books among the top 15 winningest coaches in college football history. 

Holtz’ fame was built on the success of his teams on the football field. But the success those teams enjoyed came about chiefly through the instruction, work ethic, passion, and imagination of Lou Holtz himself.



Notre Dame Stadium

In his book Winning Every Day,  Holtz talks about an acronym based on lessons he developed while coaching and doing motivational speaking. It's called WIN, and it stands for What’s Important Now?


When we don't focus and prioritize, we fail to accomplish our goals. We become so distracted that we sometimes feel like giving up. It’s at this point we must think WIN, prioritize, and re-focus our efforts. 


Hell's Canyon - Snake River
Lou Holtz not only developed but also applied the WIN principle. He set goals in every area of his life, and set out to accomplish them. One goal was to raft the Snake River. He tells about the trip that promised to be a fun, family bonding experience — spending four days and three nights together on the river.


What began as fun actually became a fight for survival when Holtz tumbled off the raft into the waters of Snake River in Hell's Canyon, and was pummeled by the violent waters. Two people had drowned there shortly before his party arrived.


Realizing he was under the boat with no way to get up for air, Holtz first tried sinking deeper to allow the boat to shoot past him. No luck. As the grip of fear started to choke him, he shook it back. He focused on the words he had used to inspire others as they were about to give up:  What's Important Now?  It kept him focused and probably saved his life.

No one had shown Holtz hand-walking - a technique used by experienced rafters - using your hands to propel yourself along the bottom of the boat until you are free of it. By concentrating on the crisis of the moment, Holtz had to determine what was important now, and do that. He began to put one hand in front of the other and walked himself under the boat until he could surface and draw a breath of fresh air.

Holtz applies this philosophy beyond the football field.  Quoting Oliver Wendell Holmes, he says, "What lies behind you, and what lies ahead of you is of very little importance when it is compared to what lies within you."


What is important to you right now? That’s something only you can determine, but it’s the thing you should be focusing and spending your time on. Decide for yourself: What’s Important Now. We can WIN by focusing on our pre-determined, personal priorities.

That's what I think...what do you think?

Friday, January 21, 2011

Roe v Wade versus Common Sense and Morality

January 22, 2011, marks the 38th anniversary of the landmark Supreme Court decision Roe versus Wade. This ruling was based on the due process clause of the 14th Amendment to the US Constitution, an amendment that was added nearly 100 years earlier to guarantee a right to privacy in contracts. The Court decided that contract privacy extended to a woman's decision to have an abortion, a contract she makes with a doctor. The right to an abortion is granted up to the time of viability, the time at which a baby can live outside the womb.






Ironically, this same 14th Amendment says, "...nor shall any State deprive any person of life..." All the legalese is ridiculous since everyone who is honest with himself knows that the baby is already a person. Even without the issues of morality and legal rights, science has shown that a baby in the womb can feel pain, cry, and respond to stimuli long before the usual age of viability, 28 week or seven months into the pregnancy.







Common sense is all we need to determine that abortion is murder. But if common sense does not prevail, we can look to God's Word for the answer. Psalm 139:13-14 says: "For you created my inmost being; you knit me together in my mother's womb. I praise you because I am fearfully and wonderfully made, your works are wonderful, I know that full well." (NIV)





God said He decided to make Jeremiah a prophet before he was even born: "Before I formed you in the womb, I knew you, before you were born I set you apart. I appointed you as a prophet to the nations." Jeremiah 1:5



When Jesus' mother Mary entered the home of Elisabeth and greeted her, the baby John the Baptist responded to her voice: " As soon as the sound of your greeting reached my ears, the baby in my womb leaped for joy." Luke 1:44



My heart goes out to young women who are pregnant and alone. Still, I cannot fathom anything worse than the guilt a mother must feel knowing she has participated in killing her own child. I have read that this guilt plagues her for her entire life and is relived yearly on that date.



The recent news of the abortionist in Philadelphia charged with Infanticide - murdering eight babies who lived through his grisly acts - should remind us that every abortion, legal or illegal, is murder. This doctor and others like him have killed more than 35 million babies since Roe v Wade became the law of the land. May God have mercy on a nation that throws our children away like so much medical waste.




Abraham Lincoln said, "Nothing stamped with the Divine image and likeness was sent into the world to be trodden on...by its fellows." Who among us would be arrogant enough to set him/herself up to decide who should live and who is unworthy of life?




That's what I think...what do you think?