Late in June, I got an issue of Investor’s Business Daily. When I was looking through newspaper, I saw an interesting article about Sandy Koufax. Being the baseball enthusiast that I am, I was quickly drawn to it. You can read the IBD article here. Reading the article, I was shocked to read that Sandy Koufax was close to quitting baseball after the first 6 years of his professional career as he was struggling hard. His record after those 6 seasons was 36-40! Considering that Sandy is a Hall-of-Famer who is viewed by many as one of the best pitchers every to play major league baseball, this was very surprising. I had no idea! I thought he was great from the moment he stepped on the mound for the first time. Despite this rough start, he did not quit and ended up with a record of 165-87, going 129-47 from 1961 on. So what made the difference? How did he go from an bad to Hall-of-Famer? He did 2 things during the offseason that changed everything. He:
- worked out. Never before had he worked out and took care of his body. So he started running in hopes to better equip his body to find out exactly how good he could be a a pitcher.
- started listening to advice. People within the Dodger organization had always tried to give Sandy advice but he never listened. It was during the offseason a Dodger Scout found an issue with his pitching mechanics. Once he corrected it, he was better able to see the target. Also, Sandy started listening to his catcher, Norm Sherry. Norm told Sandy to throwing more curveballs and change-ups to keep the opposing batters guessing. Even though Sandy had heard this before, he never applied it. This time he did and it really helped!
- Contact a parent whom you trust and respect or another youth minister from another ministry or church. Ask them to come by and evaluate an upcoming ministry event (i.e., “youth group” or a social function). The key here is to have someone you know and trust while being honest with you at the same time.
- When they arrive to evaluate, give that person(s) a set of 2-3 goals you hope to accomplish during the meeting. You can also tell them what principles you value highly as a leadership team (You can look at what we value here as an example). Therefore, they will know what you are striving for and what you view as important so they will be able to discern whether or not you are hitting your mark.
- Give them a few days to collect their thoughts and/or write them down on paper. Then set up a meeting with them and your volunteer leaders to go through the evaluation together. That way you can all hear how it went, unfiltered.
- Lastly, pray through what you all heard, process and start implementing change where needed.
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