Work [in progress]

motivation | ˌmōdəˈvāSH(ə)n | 

noun: the reason or reasons one has for acting or behaving in a particular way: escape can be a strong motivation for travel

• the general desire or willingness of someone to do something: keep staff up to date and maintain interest and motivation.

New Oxford American Dictionary (American English)

Have you ever had someone ask you a question about yourself that you just didn’t seem to have an answer for? For the last year, I have developed a fascination for studying my own motives and the motivations of others. I’m always interested to learn what makes someone else tick, hoping to find explanations for why people are the way that they are. And maybe in a subconscious way, I look for clues about myself in the behaviors of other people. Sometimes in observing someone else, I can confirm or deny my own rationale for doing, thinking, and especially feeling things.

But I’ve only gotten so far with finding out who I really am below the surface with this approach. Shockingly, it has become way more challenging to come up with answers when I ask this question:

What is my why?

To take it one step further, the question I’ve been focusing on is, “What is my primary motivation in my work?” Before becoming a mom last April, I held a leadership position at a franchised fast-food restaurant. Due to the nature of the growing business, I wore many hats between the operations, restaurant marketing, human resources and administration, while serving as an assistant to the franchise owner. Out of all of my responsibilities, this role was what I was most proud of and where I kept most of my esteem.

If you’ve ever worked in food service, you’ll know that the business operates on food quality and guest satisfaction. Those two components seem straightforward until you add maintaining job fulfillment for the 100 employees who drive the business — who all come with diverse and sometimes undeclared motivations.

After staying home with Griffin, I transferred what job responsibilities I could into my new circumstances, but the basic human interaction I relied on so heavily began to shift. It’s not a surprising discovery, but somehow it shocked me at the time. Sales continued to aggressively climb into the summer and the effect of that particular cause was that the store got busier and turnover ran its course. As the hiring door kept revolving, my proximity to my co-workers dissipated. My boss, who I had worked closely with for two years was forced to focus on developing new leaders, anticipating business changes, and the growth of his second location.

Gradually, no one had unlimited time to spend on the phone with me to talk about the weather or laugh at my quotes from The Office. For someone who never likes conversations to end, I suddenly had to work on getting straight to what I needed to either ask or communicate in order to get the job done. My job became a virtual reality and I really failed at not taking things personally when my emails didn’t get returned. Abruptly, I no longer had a grip on what motivated my team and I absolutely had no idea what motivated me. Can I just tell you what naturally began to subtract from the work equation here?

Common ground.

And also a little bit of my rational mind.

The thing that saved me in the transition of becoming a mom and working from home was walking. I spent miles of pavement wrestling over who I mattered to and what responsibilities I could take on so that I could feel appreciated. I practically burned holes in my shoes as I brainstormed ways I could contribute to the business so that I wouldn’t be forgotten from home. What that produced was an insane amount of expectations that depended on everyone but myself.

  • The expectation I set on my newborn baby to behave and stay quiet so that I could make it through my list of phone calls was the opposite of nurturing.
  • The expectation that I placed on my husband to listen to what did or didn’t happen that really upset me about my work day drained both of us.
  • The expectation I subconsciously placed on my boss to relay every decision in immense detail to me so that we could consult together before anything went into implementation was not just unrealistic, but truly theatrical.

The tragic reality of my expectations was that I believed with the utmost conviction that the world owed me all of the attention, the appreciation, and the affirmation for my efforts to be Superwoman. I ignored all of the small print underlined in my thoughts that I was motivated way more by what I gained and not what I could give.

Do you know what unraveled in the wake of my indisputable mindset?

  • My son cried hours out of the day and I couldn’t even accomplish the simple tasks I used to do with my eyes shut.
    • Result: I felt like a failure at motherhood.
  • My husband took a beating from my constant negativity and disappointment in unrealistic expectations of him.
    • Result: My problems understandably so fell on deaf ears and the idea that I could do everything on my own began to take root.
  • My co-workers received promotions.
    • Result: I couldn’t be happy for them.

The business was succeeding, but I could only focus on what was failing for me. What wasn’t happening for me was receiving attention, appreciation, and affirmation in the exact way I had envisioned it being bestowed on me. My biggest drive was to prove how distinctive my work could be, how special my contributions to the world were, how no one else understood all that I did and all that I was, and just how unmatched and irreplaceable I was in the company.

I was so motivated by how other people could make me feel that I could be crushed by an email response, by my feedback not swaying a decision, or by an unanswered phone call in an instant. My productivity in both my work and my home life suffered, culminating into my newly developed skill of producing excuses in bulk for my behavior as if they came from a factory.

I couldn’t escape the question, “What’s my why?” anymore. My why stunk and I knew that I couldn’t go on living with my toxic motivations and expect to experience any happiness. It was never going to be enough. So I started praying that Jesus would help me to know his grace and his truth in his fullness. I began praying for a steadfast heart that produced sustainable joy. I am no overnight success story, not by a long shot. I will forever be a W.I.P. (that’s a work-in-progress).

Somewhere between a leadership podcast and my coffee kicking in one morning, the reminder hit me like a load of bricks that the most significant thing I can ever do in this life is what I do for other people. Dots started connecting one after the other after reading through Jesus’s parable of the talents (see Matthew 21, Luke 19). What struck me was that I don’t want to live a life wasting my work because I’m waiting for what I think I deserve first.

I don’t want to waste my job opportunity because I fear I don’t add enough value. I don’t want to get to the end of my life or this season and realize I had withheld my contributions or gifts from my company. And I really don’t want to see my work as anything less than a platform for the kingdom of God. The role I had in my mind for myself is not the role I’m in right now, which I believe with my entire heart is to learn how to be the supporting cast in a story that is much bigger than me.

It’s about time for me to own my role.

  • And owning my role means I’m not going to feel sorry for myself.
  • Owning my role means that I’m not going to focus on what I do or do not make, especially in comparison to someone else.
  • Owning my role means I will not call out other people’s failures. It means I will seize every opportunity to help and assist others by offering my time and abilities.
  • Owning my own oasis of excellence as Clay Scroggins writes means I’m not waiting around for someone to recognize what I’m doing, it means I am proactively seeking ways I can empower and encourage others.
  • Owning my responsibilities means that the excuses for why something isn’t completed will never get blamed on someone other than myself.
  • Taking ownership means that I will find joy in the success of others. That I will learn to celebrate and emotionally invest my very best in company wins, even if I am not part of the benefits they reap.
  • Owning the moment, as Carl Lentz would say, means I will say no to my own reactionary responses and I will lean into both the grace and truth that Jesus wants to take over my mindset.

It’d be a pretty amazing story if I told you that I didn’t struggle with my strong feelings and my own significance. I would love to blow your socks off by telling you that after writing this, I’ll never wrestle with wanting to give my very best to my work ever again. Wish I could say I’ll never feel sorry for myself when people disappoint me or that I don’t hope for a bigger leadership position or a larger paycheck. I think I’ll always have to choose between pressing into the now and the not yet.

But I am coming to slowly understand that when I own my role and see it the way God sees it, my motivation changes. My why becomes because I want to produce quality work so that people may know that they are supported, encouraged, and loved for who they are, not what they do. My why becomes wanting to help others feel acknowledged, appreciated, and affirmed because when we all apply ourselves to our work, the whole organization wins.

Can I just say that I am so grateful that Jesus is showing me how to live out of a steadfast heart? I am profoundly aware at how much I need a road map for life. I am praying every day that God will expose my motives and remind me of my why, even as I doubt the importance of my work. The funny thing is that as I’ve been practicing owning my role of being on the support team, the same amount of my emails go unanswered, I am not clued in to every decision that gets made, and more co-workers are receiving raises and promotions. What’s changing is me–and I am finding more of myself and my purpose in what I can give rather than what more I can gain.

Take care & take heart,
Natalie

Let’s Go Home

One of the books I read this month was called “How’s Your Soul?” by Judah Smith. As I was checking the book out of the library, I joked with the librarian that it seemed like a pretty light read. She didn’t laugh.

The question that Judah asked throughout the pages was, “When was the last time your soul went home?” It’s one of those questions that makes you sit and think hard. For me, I sat and thought so intensely I needed an intermission from the gravity of the question.
To give you more context, Judah based his book off of the Bible and how our souls were created to live at home with God. Four of the “check-ins” for the question of, “How’s your soul?” he laid out are:

  • Rest
  • Responsibility
  • Restriction
  • Relationship

Can I be honest? I feel like I’ve stunk at all four of these–equally. So when the question of how’s my soul kept coming up again and again, my untrained response was, “Not good!” every time. I have this tendency where I love to spend an eternity naming all of my problems, but can’t get out of the conversation fast enough when it comes to finding a solution. To say my follow-through needs some work would be totally fair.

I’m writing this as an absolute work-in-progress, wishing I had more substance than my candor to put on this page. Do you ever feel like you have 19 things going simultaneously, and yet you can’t seem to focus on any of them or finish just one thing well? Yeah, same. That defeating feeling is followed by “what if” and “if only” statements and then the state of my soul oddly never improves.

I’m not sure where along the lines I adopted the try harder mentality, but the pendulum dramatically will swing between that and a white flag, I-surrender-all-Jesus posture in the span of an hour on any given day. I’m exhausted by my own complexity and can imagine most people feel as if they just ran a marathon in their minds trying to track with me. If you ask Hunter, I’ve won an uncanny amount of Emmy awards and there are times I wonder if my parents secretly pay him monthly for all of his patience with me.

A few weeks ago, my friend Courtney asked me a question that helped reframe my train of thoughts.

What is something that is saving you right now?

My answer today is song lyrics. I think God created music for our souls. I think he knew that we’d struggle to find adequate words for our feelings at times and I believe that he provides multiple avenues for us to arrive at a place of worship. This song caught me off guard this week and helped me throw up my white flag a whole lot faster than my own thoughts could get me there.

I’m so grateful for moments like that. I’m in awe that Jesus is after my soul. That he provides a safe place for me to find mental and emotional rest. I love that none of my overreactions to things provoke a stronger response from Jesus than his complete understanding.

May your soul feel at home today. May you know that you are fully known and fearlessly loved just as He finds you. Take care & take heart,

Natalie

As You Find Me – Hillsong United
Written by: Joel Houston / Matt Crocker / Benjamin Hastings

I’ve been strong
And I’ve been broken within a moment
I’ve been faithful
And I’ve been reckless at every bend
I’ve held everything together
And watched it shatter
I’ve stood tall and I have crumbled
In the same breath

I have wrestled
And I have trembled toward surrender
Chased my heart adrift
And drifted home again
Plundered blessing
Till I’ve been desperate to find redemption
And every time I turn around
Lord You’re still there

I was found
Before I was lost
I was Yours
Before I was not
Grace to spare
For all my mistakes
And that part just wrecks me

And I know I don’t deserve this kind of love
Somehow this kind of love is who You are
It’s a grace I could never add up
To be somebody You still want
But somehow
You love me as You find me

Who am I
To think Your glory needs my praises
But if this borrowed breath is Yours Lord
Take it all
You are faithful and You are gracious
And I’m just grateful
To think You don’t need a single thing
And still You want my heart

If You want my heart
I won’t second guess
‘Cause I need Your love
More than anything
I’m in
I’m Yours
Your love’s too good to leave me here
Your love’s too good to leave me

Joel Houston / Matt Crocker / Benjamin Hastings

Less for More

Like the rest of the Netflix world, I watched Marie Kondo’s series titled “Tidying Up” and caught the organizational craze that is bound to flicker out by the end of the month of January. Things like organization truly sparks joy for me (that’s for you, Marie). But in the last six months as my apartment has miraculously shrunken in square footage and the baby gear has taken over, I’ve come to realize I can only organize so much of my own clutter.

Samantha Ponder is one of my favorite women in the sports industry, not only for her talent, but for the authentic way she takes on life. Listen to any podcast she’s on, watch her on Sunday NFL countdown, or follow her on Instagram–she gets humble and real in a contagious way. When I heard her tell a podcast host last summer that she had gotten rid of 70% of her stuff, I was all ears. I had this lingering feeling that I was living the Costco lifestyle of buying in bulk and ultimately watching things collect dust in my crowded cabinets.

Even now, as I scroll through Instagram and follow accounts like @lifeinjeneral (who does incredible work, by the way), I cannot get over that yes, it’s great to be organized. But for me, if I needed that many organizational bins for my makeup, guess what? I think I have too much makeup. As Sam Ponder said, she got tired of trying to reorganize all of the stuff she had in organizational bins. There was only so much she could truly rearrange before realizing her issue was beyond tidying up.

And I guess that’s what I’m getting at. No, of course there’s nothing wrong with owning things and there’s actually nothing bad about owning things even if they don’t spark joy. But for me I realized I’ve been dealing with a contentment issue. And that contentment or lack thereof has actually hindered me from opening up my heart to God’s best for me and so I’ve been on a quest of less, for more.

I’ve listened to countless podcasts, YouTube videos, and books on living with less or minimalism, if you will. While I enjoy the entertainment they’ve provided, the conclusion I’ve arrived to has been that no one can tell me what to get rid of, what to keep, how much is too much, how little is too little to live with. All of the content I’ve consumed on the subject doesn’t necessarily lead to a changed life, but I’ve humbly tried to present these thoughts to Jesus because I think they matter to Him even if they sound silly to me.

When I was a kid, my Dad would read stories about Adam Raccoon to me and my brothers. Adam Raccoon, in one of the tales gets his paw stuck inside of a jar because he’s closed his fist around an olive (if my memory serves me correctly). Adam is in danger and needs to make a run for it, but he refuses to let go of his grasp inside of the jar that is holding him hostage. It isn’t until he lets go that his paw is freed and he can make his way to safety. This may be an extreme, but I want to live a life like Adam Raccoon after he realizes the “stuff” is not ultimately what matters.

I have a tendency to spend an embarrassing amount of time on any app that makes it easy for me to scroll: Amazon, Instagram, Pinterest, Target, Hobby Lobby, and lately even my grocery apps have me thinking of “more“. So often I find myself having to work my way out of the mindset that there is something missing.

That sweater that blogger said was a must? Is it really? I don’t look good in mustard, but maybe since this blogger is telling me to swipe up, mustard will look different on me this time.
30% off? Gotta have it. Nope. No I don’t. Because every time that thing is 30% off, I buy it and have yet to use it.
IKEA IS HAVING A DRESSER SALE. I’ll need a dresser next year, so let me buy it now!

Real thoughts I’ve had this week. The hilarious thing is I unfollowed a handful of fashion bloggers that Hunter laughs at. The concept of someone going into Target, trying on clothes and posting videos of themselves talking about each item on their insta-stories is something he’s still not over. But I’m just giving you my honest struggle. I wrestle with comparison with these kinds of girls, unfollow them…but still find myself on their pages. No one to blame but myself.

So what does this practically look like for me since I’m so great at failing at it? I’m simply asking God to help me live with less, so that I can be ready for more of Jesus. More of Jesus’s character. I want to emulate more of his gratitude. His steadfastness. When I picture Jesus in need in the Bible, I don’t ever read him rushing to action. The first thing Jesus does is acknowledge his Father. Amazing. I have never truly known or experienced being in dire need, I’ve never not known where my next meal would come from and I’ve always had security in terms of basic needs.

So if even Jesus, who had everything and nothing during his 33 years of life on earth, can ask God to provide him with direction and provision, I think that’s something I can challenge myself to do, too. Sam Ponder said the reason she doesn’t regret simplifying her life so significantly is because she is now freed up to make decisions on what she will wear so much faster, she is happier with the things she truly enjoys and doesn’t have to step over the things she does not, and she’s able to press into the person God made her to be that much more readily.

I love that. Godliness with contentment is great gain. So I am choosing less–for more! Take care and take heart,

Natalie