Every Family Needs a Vision

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Do you have a vision that you live for each day?

Scripture has this to say:

Proverbs 29:18: “Where there is no vision, the people perish.”

I believe in this scripture. A couple of years ago I was basically a leaf blown by the wind. I had no purpose for my life. I just went where ever the “wind blew me.” I got up, I went to class, I came home, I did nothing.

I had no idea what I wanted to do with my life and I had no purpose. This caused me to go through a time where I was almost lifeless. Then I came across Proverbs 29:18. This scripture kept coming up. My family kept talking about it, I read it in several books, I heard someone preach on it… Then suddenly it just clicked.

I needed a reason to get up each morning. I need a purpose so I could spend my days productively. This is why I think having a vision is so important.

I labeled this post family vision but, your vision does not have to line up with your other family members. It can be your own personal vision and one that you might share with your own family someday.

This is my family’s vision that has become my own personal vision.

Our vision is:

Love3 iKAN Love3 -Love3 stands for Love God, Love yourself, and Love others. iKAN stands for Influencing Kingdoms And Nations. So our vision means to Love God, Love yourself, and Love others to Influence Kingdoms And Nations to Love God, Love themselves, and Love others.

What are some of your family/personal visions?

I pray that each of you seeks God until He gives you your own vision! I then pray that you live each day focused on your vision!

Thank you for your support!

Love, Kathleen 🙂

How I Get Things Done, Part 1

I’m often asked a question that stumps me. Even my closest friends ask this: “How do you get so much accomplished? You are so busy. You have such little time to get so much done.” I’m going to tell you a bit about that.

I was raised in a home that displayed an extreme work ethic. My mother worked hard all the days of her life. She was faithful, committed, and timely. She had an extreme character and work ethic. Her yes meant yes, and her no meant no. She taught me that.
I worked hard since my first job when I turned sixteen years old. After I started my first job, it was only a matter of weeks before I became a supervisor. On my next job, the same thing happened. I was head of the movie theater I worked at. In my next job, I was a sales clerk at Wal-Mart, and within a matter of two months, I was promoted to customer service manager because of my work ethic.
If you allow your yes to mean yes and your no to mean no, you are able to dig in and do hard work. Roll up your sleeves. Be present. Show up. Be reliable. Do what you say you are going to do. Work hard. You will see the fruits of your labor.
From the time I was young, my mom was always so relational and fun. She wasn’t a hugger or a toucher. I think that’s because her dad died at a young age and her mom didn’t really raise her children in demonstrative relationships. They were less touchy-feely. But she loved people. She invested in people. She was a light where she went, with a smile on her face and the fun she brought.
She taught me how to do the same. I was one of those people at one point or another. I was a light. I was funny. I shared stuff. I gave things away. I blessed people because she taught me to do so. Because of this, in every place I worked, people liked me. I was enjoyable. I encouraged others. I spoke life into people. At this point, I don’t even think I knew life and death were on my tongue. Yet, I spoke life.
When I went to work at an accounting firm when I graduated from college, every single client I had offered me a job to work with them. It was first and foremost because of my work ethic. I would work until I solved the problem in front of me.
The second most important thing was that I was relational. I treated everyone from the janitor to the president as if they were valuable. It didn’t matter what their role was. I saw them as a person who had value. My clients recognized this. They recognized I love people.
What burns my flame every single day is I don’t want to waste a day of my life because I don’t have enough of them left. I don’t want any single person to feel unloved. I used to feel rejected and excluded every day. I don’t want people to feel the same way. I want them to know they are valued, I value them, and they are loved.
Those are the two things that drive me. The reason I do ministry, whether it’s small or large, is because of those two reasons. I know I’m called to look at the ant and not be a lazy sluggard. I have so much to give. God has given me so much that I have no choice but to give it back out to people so they will know how truly loved they are. They are included, they are part of God’s family, and there is no rejection of man that can overcome the love of God. This is what drives me.