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80: Luck of the Draw

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Manage episode 454617137 series 3479351
Content provided by Serving Nonprofits by Chany Reon Ockert Consulting, LLC, CFRE, Serving Nonprofits by Chany Reon Ockert Consulting, LLC, and CFRE. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Serving Nonprofits by Chany Reon Ockert Consulting, LLC, CFRE, Serving Nonprofits by Chany Reon Ockert Consulting, LLC, and CFRE or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://staging.podcastplayer.com/legal.

"...In the same way, as you are unable to take care of all of your fellow people, treated as the luck of the draw when the time and circumstance brings some into closer contact with you than others."
This week, I’m reading a quote from De Doctrina Christiana by Augustine, published in 397 AD.
Reflection questions:

  • Is there an area of your work where you need to step back and apply this framework: accepting our limits, focusing on what we can do, and releasing that which we can’t do or whom we can’t help?

  • Related, what do you need to let go of and find freedom in that release?

Reflection on the quote:
Have you ever been overwhelmed by the sheer need of our work, and yet feel a bit crushed by limits we face in our work? While we often feel like our challenges are new, that we face problems no one else has ever encountered. But history, as they say, rhymes. The human condition, with all its complexities and contradictions, remains constant. The needs have overwhelmed those who care for over a thousand years.
When we feel that weight of the world on our shoulders, the overwhelming sense of need, the constant pull to do more, to be more, this quote gives us some practical wisdom. We first accept that our ability to help is constrained by our circumstances. We can’t do everything. We can’t solve every problem, heal every wound, or right every wrong. Second, we identify what we have, especially our time, resources, and capacity. Third, we prioritize that which we can do. We can cause change in our own local communities, focusing our efforts on those within our reach. Finally, there is freedom in seeing that sometimes it’s just the luck of the draw for whom we can help or for what we can do.
This work has entered the public domain.
What do you think? Send me a text.

To explore fundraising coaching deeper and to schedule an exploratory session, visit ServingNonprofits.com.
Music credit: Woeisuhmebop

  continue reading

98 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 454617137 series 3479351
Content provided by Serving Nonprofits by Chany Reon Ockert Consulting, LLC, CFRE, Serving Nonprofits by Chany Reon Ockert Consulting, LLC, and CFRE. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Serving Nonprofits by Chany Reon Ockert Consulting, LLC, CFRE, Serving Nonprofits by Chany Reon Ockert Consulting, LLC, and CFRE or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://staging.podcastplayer.com/legal.

"...In the same way, as you are unable to take care of all of your fellow people, treated as the luck of the draw when the time and circumstance brings some into closer contact with you than others."
This week, I’m reading a quote from De Doctrina Christiana by Augustine, published in 397 AD.
Reflection questions:

  • Is there an area of your work where you need to step back and apply this framework: accepting our limits, focusing on what we can do, and releasing that which we can’t do or whom we can’t help?

  • Related, what do you need to let go of and find freedom in that release?

Reflection on the quote:
Have you ever been overwhelmed by the sheer need of our work, and yet feel a bit crushed by limits we face in our work? While we often feel like our challenges are new, that we face problems no one else has ever encountered. But history, as they say, rhymes. The human condition, with all its complexities and contradictions, remains constant. The needs have overwhelmed those who care for over a thousand years.
When we feel that weight of the world on our shoulders, the overwhelming sense of need, the constant pull to do more, to be more, this quote gives us some practical wisdom. We first accept that our ability to help is constrained by our circumstances. We can’t do everything. We can’t solve every problem, heal every wound, or right every wrong. Second, we identify what we have, especially our time, resources, and capacity. Third, we prioritize that which we can do. We can cause change in our own local communities, focusing our efforts on those within our reach. Finally, there is freedom in seeing that sometimes it’s just the luck of the draw for whom we can help or for what we can do.
This work has entered the public domain.
What do you think? Send me a text.

To explore fundraising coaching deeper and to schedule an exploratory session, visit ServingNonprofits.com.
Music credit: Woeisuhmebop

  continue reading

98 episodes

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