Quicker, faster, hurry and now. These are words we are all too familiar with as we attempt to keep up with all our responsibilities as leaders.
In fact, the ability to handle an increasing pace and greater pressure is a common leadership lid to break through in a growing organization. If not in actual tasks, but in responsibility.
However, though we may typically feel the need to keep moving fast, there are some things in a leader’s life that simply cannot be rushed and still realize the desired outcomes.
This doesn’t mean that every time a more measured pace is needed that it also requires a lot of time.
Haven’t you said to yourself something like, “If I just had fifteen minutes to focus and think this through, I could make a good decision.” I sure have many times.
You might need fifteen minutes, or an hour, or three hours. The point is not to assume the purpose of the article is that all things requiring a thoughtful and deliberate approach also require days or even weeks of time.
The point is that if your life as a leader is one of constant hurry, little margin, and skimpy time for deeper thought, process, and connection, eventually the quality of your life and leadership will begin to break down.
Escaping the tyranny of hurry requires an intentional cultivation of margin and the discipline to use that time wisely.
I’ve found that the most rewarding, productive and enjoyable use of that time thrives on an inner disposition that is closely connected to our walk with God.
These 4 dispositional attributes are key:
- Focused not distracted – knowing our calling and purpose helps us say no to the good things and say yes to the right things.
- At peace not anxious – low-grade anxiety is common and hurry doesn’t help it. Quiet moments with God bring peace we can’t manufacture.
- Prepared not winging it – slowing down gives us an opportunity to do the deeper work. If you only have an hour or two, come prepared to use the time well, or you end up right back in a hurry.
- Hopeful not worried – we invest much of our time to solving problems in order to move forward, and our faith in God overcomes our worry about problems to come.
5 Life-Changing Things You Can’t Do in a Hurry
If you could add one, what would it be? Tell us in the comments below.
1. Have a difficult conversation with a productive outcome.
Many of the great breakthroughs in life come from an honest yet difficult conversation. Rarely can we solve conflict, restore a relationship, find unity, or bridge a chasm in a hurry. It takes courage, honesty and time.
Of the mistakes I’ve made as a leader one near the top of the list is attempting to have a hard conversation in a hurry. It just doesn’t work, but worse, it devalues the other person or persons in the conversation. It communicates we already have the answer, and they need to catch up quickly.
Let’s be honest about our time and our attempt to not always be in a hurry. The truth is that we can’t have every tough conversation that presents itself to us. Right?
What are the difficult conversations that only you can handle, and which ones can you have someone else take care of?
2. Listen to someone who is hurting, in a way they know you care.
For those of us in ministry, much of why we love what we do is because we love and care about people. How ironic that we can find ourselves in a such a hurry to meet the deepest needs of those people because there is so much to do.
As an aside, I sometimes wonder that if we have too much to do, perhaps we’re doing things that God hasn’t asked us to do, or doesn’t need us to do. That’s perhaps a bit philosophical, I get the realities of leadership, but I still wonder.
Some of the most powerful life-changing moments for a person come because you showed up and you listened. That human connection made a way for God’s presence and power to break through.
I’ll bet you can recall some times where you didn’t say much, and quite possibly nothing profound, and yet years, (maybe decades) later, someone says those moments you spent with them changed the direction and quality of their life.
The ministry of presence should never be underestimated.
3. Think through solving a complex problem that has layers to the solution.
Church leadership is largely about making progress, solving problems and helping people. And we simply cannot solve significant or complex problems in a hurry.
Next to our time in prayer, think time is a leader’s greatest asset. It’s when we take time to truly think that we have new ideas, fresh ways to communicate, and creative solutions to challenging problems.
Solving complex problems is more like playing chess than checkers. It’s usually nuanced and layered and each move you make affects the next one. And the more time that elapses the more the situation (the chess board) changes on you.
Thinking several moves ahead, anticipating moves that will be made by others, and staying focused on real solutions that advance the mission of the church, not just making the pressure go away, takes focused time in thought.
What’s the most complex problem you are working on right now?
4. Connect with a friend at a heart level so the relationship takes new ground.
Relationships are either moving forward and getting stronger or moving backward and becoming more distant. They never simply “remain the same.” There is no neutral in a relationship.
The reason movement is difficult to discern is because relationships typically change (improve or decline) very slowly. Therefore, they give the appearance of remaining the same … but they don’t.
This isn’t something to fret about, it’s part of life. And those acquaintances that have become a bit more distant can still be appreciated and enjoyed, but they don’t provide the deeper connection that the heart longs for among those closer to us.
For any relationship to move forward and take new ground, a heart-level authentic connection and transparency are required, and neither of these happen in a hurry.
Like I mentioned in the introduction, this doesn’t always require a great deal of time, but it can’t be in a hurry.
Who is on your mind these days that you are overdue for a good cup of coffee?
5. Pray in a way that you have time to hear from God and internalize his words.
God cannot be rushed. If you want to hear more from him, set aside the time and space where you are not in a hurry.
Once again, this may or may not be a lengthy amount of time, but it’s how you come to the table. Come to God unhurried, come ready and seeking, come anticipating.
And yes, God most certainly can whisper incredible wisdom to you at any moment throughout the day, while that is true, when we set aside unhurried time we’re more likely to discern his voice.
This article originally appeared on DanReiland.com and is reposted here by permission.