Friday, September 4, 2009

Lesson 11: Our Competitive Selves




I've been reading this book called Compassion by Henri Nouwen and Donald McNeill who are suppose to be legit. Anyways, out of all the chapters that I've read, chapter 1 has spoke to be the most when Nouwen rights about our competitive selves.

Nouwen points out that when we look at ourselves, we have to recognize that competition, not compassion, is our main motivation in life. When I first read this I didn't relate to it because I didn't think I was that competative of a person. But then, Nouwen continued by saying, "Our whole sense of self is dependent upon the way we compare ourselves with others and upon the differences we can identify." As soon as I read this, I said, "that's me," I gain a lot of my value based on how I am in comparison to others. And it is upon these positive or negative distinctions that much of our self-esteem depends.

I don't want my value based on how I compare myself with others. I don't want my self-esteem based on that either. Rather I want my value to based on God.

"To receive a new self, a new identity, which depends not on what we can achieve, but on what we are willing to receive is the mysetery of the Christian life." I want to freely recieve from God and accept his love.

Wednesday, July 29, 2009

Quotes that have been speaking to me




"What you can't let go of controls you, masters you and you become its slave. Own nothing, but be owned by only Christ & you will be FREE..." JMA

"Life is a beautiful thing, cherish every moment every friendship, never let unforgiveness get between u & the one u love, live w/ no regrets" JMA

"When Satan reminds us of our past, we should remind him of his future."

"When you forgive someone, you set the prisoner free, to find out the prisoner is you." KV

"FEAR = False Evidence Appearing Real"

"FAITH = Full Assurance In The Heart"

"BUSY = Being Under Satan's Yoke"

"If you don't know what the truth is how are you going to fight the lie?" NV

"If God doesn't give you a miracle, you are a miracle of God for someone else." NV

"The worst place you can ever be is believing that you don't need Him, thank God we need Him."

"I don't know what tomorrow holds for me, but i know who holds my tomorrows"

Saturday, July 18, 2009

Lesson 10: You can truly love others only after you've learned to love yourself




WOW, so I looked back at this old blog that a bunch of people in my class use to write in and I found some AMAZING stuff.

Here's an excert from a post from my friend slyvia:

From the sermon "Life and Love" by Kris Vallotton.

"Every time someone loves you more than you love you, you will sabotage your relationship with them."

"You sabotage relationships with people you really value ... Everybody whom I wanted to like me, like I had a high value for them, I would be afraid that if they got to know me, they wouldn't like me, so I would build a case against them before they had a chance to build a case against me, so I could reject them before they had a chance to reject me ... The problem is you don't love yourself."

"Do you understand that Jesus said, 'Love your neighbor AS you love yourself'?"

"I can't love you more than I love me. You say, 'Well, yes, I can.' No, you can't. Jesus said, 'Love your neighbor as you love yourself.' I can't give you what I don't have. If I possess it in this temple, it works on me before it ever works on you."

"People like us that have these struggles, we're really good givers. But what can't we do? Receive. Why? Because receiving means that I will have to let you give to someone who doesn't deserve. And what happens when someone who doesn't deserve it gets stuff? Then they begin to self destruct, because then you just gave a guilty party something they shouldn't have."

Donald Miller, author of Blue Like Jazz writes "And so I have come to understand that strength, inner strength, comes from receiving love as much as it comes from giving it. I think apart from the idea that I am a sinner and God forgives me, this is the greatest lesson I have ever learned. When you get it, it changes you. My friend Julie from Seattle told me that the main prayer she prays for her husband is that he will be able to receive love. And this is the prayer I pray for all my friends because it is the key to happiness. God's love will never change us if we don't accept."

About a 2 years ago, I thought I loved myself, but since then, I realize that I have a long way to go to truly loving myself and learning the greatest lesson that God forgives me. I can't wait for that to change me and for me to find happiness through it.

Tuesday, July 14, 2009

Lesson 9: It's okay to have expectations, just don't let the expectations weigh more than the friendship


























I realized that the closer I get to be friends with people, the more expectations I have on them. I have expectations for them to be there for me, I expect them to respond to my emails, I expect them to respond to my phonecalls, and sometimes I can have unreasonable expectations. In college, I've had many arguments with friends, especially my roommate, where I have gotten mad at him for not meeting my expectations. Sometimes the arguments and frustrations would get to a point where I wouldn't talk with my roommate for days--that's when I let my expectations go over the friendship, which is not good. I find most of the time I have expectations because I want there to be evidence, I want there to be proof that I am cared about and loved by my friends. Yet, people aren't perfect, and I can't expect them be. People will never meet my expectations and I can't let that get in between my friendship and relationships that I have. I need to trust that I am loved and be okay with that.

Monday, July 6, 2009

Sunsets & Sunrises

Somethings in Hawaii, I can never get in LA. One of the things I love is seeing God's beauty through nature. I love the sunsets and I love the sunrises.

Here's a sunset:


And here's a sunrise:



Beautiful.

Thursday, July 2, 2009

Lesson 8: Difference between Faith and Fear



Again, this is from a previous blog I had. I almost forgot that I wrote this post, and yet it speaks to me a lot during this time in my life. Unless quoted otherwise, these are all quotes from Kris Vallotton.

Trials don't test your character, they test your faith.

When we trust ourselves, we're only at peace when we are in charge, but when we trust God, we are at peace all the time.
-John Paul Jackson

You can tell the size of a man by the size of the problem that it takes to discourage him.

All negative emotions evolve out of fear.
All positive emotions evolve out of faith.

What really causes fear is not what happens to us, but the stories that we make up that happens to us.
What steals our peace isn't what happens to us, but the stories that we make up that we believe that happen to us.
Don't believe all your thoughts, not all your thoughts are from you.

Faith is the assurance of things hope for, the convictions of things not yet seen.
Fear is the assurance of things you haven't hope for, the convictions of things you haven't seen.

Fear is faith in the wrong world.

Saturday, June 27, 2009

Lesson 7: Discovery of the Two Selves




Today I started to read this book called, The Inner Game of Tennis, by W. Timonthy Gallwey. It's a book that looks at the mental side to the game of tennis. In the second chapter, the book talks about the discovery of the two selves, which is about the way tennis players talk to themselves on the court. Usually there is instructor (I) telling the doer (myself) to perform the action. "I'm talking to myself" says most people.

For clarity, Gallway calls the "teller" Self 1 and the "doer" Self 2. He says that sometimes Self 1 can be very hard on Self 2. Self 1 can complain to Self 2, criticize and not trust Self 2. He is responsible for the error, but he heaps the blame on Self 2 and then, by condemning it further, undermines his one confidence in Self 2. As a result, the tennis player gets worse and frustration builds.

After thinking about this concept of the two selves, I realize that not only do I find myself criticizing and blaming myself while I'm playing tennis, but also just in my daily life. Today, a bunch of my friends, family, and family friends were going to eat at Goma Tei, a Japanese restaurant. It closed at 9:30, and I got their at 9:25. The kitchen closed at 9:30 and we needed to order. At the time, I only thought that it was just going to by my parents and friends coming to dinner, so I called all of them and ordered food for them. However, at 9:40, a bunch of my family friends come in, people who I didn't order food for. I honestly didn't know that they were coming and I felt sooo bad. "I" was blaming "myself" for something that was a miscommunication error. I think that not only in this incident, but there are several other incidences where I can be really hard on myself for something that's not my fault. I think that blaming myself and being hard on myself has resolved in my lack of confidence and self-esteem. I need to understand that I'm not perfect and I can't make things perfect. I need to know that it's okay if things don't go well. I need to stop blaming myself and to start having confidence in myself.

Tuesday, June 16, 2009

Lesson 6: Share your Time




I had another blog before with a bunch of friends, but the blog kind of died. While I was reading it over again, I found some interesting posts that I posted. Some of them I don't even remember posting, especially this one, the one that stook out to me the most. This is a story I heard in church more than a year ago:

A man came home from work late again, tired and irritated, to find his 5 year old son waiting for him at the door. “Daddy, may I ask you a question?”
“Yeah, sure, what is it?” replied the man.
“Daddy, how much money do you make an hour?
“That’s none of your business! What makes you ask such a thing?” the man said angrily.
“I just want to know. Please tell me, how much do you make an hour?” pleaded the little boy.
“If you must know, I make $20.00 an hour.”
“Oh,” the little boy replied, head bowed. Looking up, he said, “Daddy, may I borrow $10.00 please?”

The father was furious. “If the only reason you wanted to know how much money I make is just so you can borrow some to buy a silly toy or some other nonsense, then you march yourself straight to your room and go to bed. Think about why you’re being so selfish. I work long, hard hours everyday and don’t have time for such childish games.”

The little boy quietly went to his room and shut the door. The man sat down and started to get even madder about the little boy’s questioning. How dare him ask such questions only to get some money.

After an hour or so, the man had calmed down, and started to think he may have been a little hard on his son. Maybe there was something he really needed to buy with that $10.00, and he really didn’t ask for money very often. The man went to the door of the little boy’s room and opened the door. “Are you asleep son?” he asked.

“No daddy, I’m awake,” replied the boy.

“I’ve been thinking, maybe I was too hard on you earlier,” said the man. “It’s been a long day and I took my aggravation out on you. Here’s that $10.00 you asked for.”

The little boy sat straight up, beaming. “Oh, thank you daddy!” he yelled. Then, reaching under his pillow, he pulled out some more crumpled up bills. The man, seeing that the boy already had money, started to get angry again. The little boy slowly counted out his money, then looked up at the man.

“Why did you want more money if you already had some?” the father grumbled.
“Because I didn’t have enough, but now I do,” the little boy replied.
“Daddy, I have $20.00 now. Can I buy an hour of your time?”

-----

Earlier this year I read a book called Purpose Driven Life that also had some great wise quotes about time and love.

"Relationships, not achievements or acquisitions of things are what matters most in life."

"When you give someone your time, you are giving them a portion of your life that you will never get back. Your time is your life. That is why the greatest gift anyone can give someone is your time."

"The best use of life is love. The best expression of love is time. The best time to love is now."

Friday, June 12, 2009

Lesson 5: One person can't be the only one growing a garden



A couple months ago, I wrote a blog post on my Legacy Movement blog about Friendships and Relations being like a garden.

I wrote this:
Someone once told me that your heart is like a garden full of flowers. Some will walk by your garden and see nothing. Some will walk into your garden and steal flowers. And others will come into your garden and not only help you to remove the weeds, but also plant more flowers for you. These are the friends you should keep. These are the relationships that you should keep. Guard your garden, guard your heart.

However, I'd like to add something:
Sometimes you realize that you've had only one person plant flowers for you to the point of being dependent on that person and not wanting others to come in. There is only so much one person can do to grow a garden. Sometimes you need to let that person go, to allow space for other people to enter your garden and to allow your garden to grow even more.

Monday, June 8, 2009

Lesson 4: Wild at Heart



Last Christmas, I received a book called Wild at Heart by John Eldredge, and this summer I finally started to get into this book. Almost every guy I know who read this book recommend it and so it became the first of my list of books to finish up this summer. In Wild at Heart , John Eldredge, who is a Christian, writes about discovering the secret of a man's soul. In this book, Eldredge writes that there are three desires in every man that are pretty universal and a clue into masculinity itself.
They may be misplaced, forgotten, or misdirected, but in the heart of every man is a desperate desire for a battle to fight, an adventure to live, and a beauty to rescue. I want you to think of the films men love, the things they do with their free time, and especially the aspirations of little boys and see if I am not right on this.
While thinking about the films that men love and also the roles that men play in these movies, I realized that men often fill at least one of these three desires. Thinking back to my childhood, I see how true these desires were when I was young. Yet today, I think I've lost the desires to fight a battle or sometimes live an adventures life. I agree with Eldredge who writes that men were created to be wild at heart. This summer I'm encouraged to be more brave, to be more adventurous, to fight (and possibly find a beauty to rescue).

Thursday, June 4, 2009

Lesson 3: Clear the Clutter and Focus on your Passion

I can't believe it, but I'm a senior now in college. Through my time at college I've had many board positions and opportunities for various organizations on campus. My sophomore year I started with being the Publicity Director for the Chinese American Student Association (CASA), Project Director for Students in Free Enterprise (SIFE), a leader for Intervarsity, and I wanted to start my own clothing company. It was somewhat hectic, but manageable. Coming into Junior year, I became the Alumni Director for (CASA), Project Director and VP of Marketing for SIFE, Director of Chapter Management for Beta Alpha Psi (that I quickly dropped out of), continuing with Legacy Movement (the company I started), and I was taking on an even more challening coarse load. I felt that I needed to be involved in all these extra curricular activities so that it would look good on my resume. I was even taking classes that I didn't even enjoy for a Finance Concentration, a concentration where I knew made the most money.

The result of all of this was a pretty chaotic semester and half committing myself to the things that I was invovled with. John Ortberg, who I mentioned in the previous post mentioned that

"Life is cluttered when we are weighed down by the burden of all the things we have failed to say no to. The comes the clutter of forgetting important dates, of missing appointments, of not following through." I can definitely say that I am guilty of living a cluttered life. "

In retrospect, I found that only the activities that I was passionate about almost always produced the best result. While I was taking up all these officer positions to have a good resume so that I can be hired, almost ALL of the job offers I got came from experience from my work with Legacy Movement and the classes that really liked (Entreprenuership and Business Communication). The best fruit came from doing things that I was passionate about. So this last year of college, I'm going to truly stick to what I know best. I will be leaving the Finance concentration to concentrate on Marketing, I will continue to work on Legacy Movement, and I will continue to serve my fellowship in Intervarsity. Everything else will be dropped. I'm so relieved, and I'm also happy.

Posted via email from Brian Chung

Monday, June 1, 2009

Lesson 2: Slow Down

I recently read an article by John Ortbery called The Life You've Always Wanted, which talked about slowing your life down.  I really resonated with this article.  I've really rushed through life and I'm learning to slow things down. 

We all live in a hurried world; we buy things that will helps us hurry, we order fast food, and we try to get to places as fast as we can.  The problem with having a hurried lifestyle is that it can keep us from living well and have us rushed and preoccupied that we will settle for a mediocre version of it.  Ortbery writes that "We will just skim our lives instead of actually living them."

Here are some symptops to a hurried lifestyle:

  • Constantly speeding up daily activities: wanting to be in the fastes lane on the freeway, wanting to be in the shortest line in the grocery market to the point that we keep track of the person who would hav ebeen me in the other lane
  • Multiple-tasking: out of the desperate need to hurry, we find ourselves doing or thinking more than one thing at time, for example, in car, we don't just drive, but we also drink, eat, talk on the phone, etc.
  • Clutter:  we have a bunch of books that we say we're going to read, we buy time saving gadgets that we end up not using
  • Superficiality:  the need to feel like we need to understand everything--even the smallest thing--minutely and exactly
  • An Inability to Love:  Love always takes time and time is one thing hurried people don't have
  • Sunset Fatigue: We're just too tired and too trained to love people whom we have made deep promises with
I am guilty of constantly speeding up daily activities, having a lot of clutter, and I find myself constantly rushing through things.  So, this summer I will try to slow things down, clean out my closet, set time in solitude (away from a hurried lifestyle), and actually live life!

Posted via email from Brian Chung

Lesson 1: The greatest trap is self-rejection

Last week, I was at a retreat where I read a excerpt of Henri Nouwen's book Life of the Beloved, where he writes that the greatest trap is the trap of self-rejection.

I think we all know what I'm talking about. I often fall in the trap of believing the negative voices that say that "I'm not good enough; I'm ugly; I'm worthless." And even though I am still give words of affirmation and receive praise from my peers, somehow all these signs of love aren't sufficient to convince me that I am the Beloved. Nouwen writes, "Aren't you like me, hoping that some person, thing, or event will come along to give you that final feeling of inner well-being you desire? Don't you often hope: 'may this book, idea, course, trip, job, country, or relationship fulfill my deepest desire.' " "As soon as someone accuses me or critcizes me, as soon as I am rejected, left alone, or abandoned, I find myself thinking: 'Well, that proves once again that I am nobody.' Instead of taking a critical look at the circumstances or trying to understand my own and others' limitations, I tend to blame myself--not just for what i did, but for who I am."

But the truth is that you and I are beloved. It is the most intimate truth of all human beings. And I am learning to reject and rebuke these negative lies that I hear. (Matt 3:17)

Posted via email from Brian Chung

Beginnings

This summer I wanted to start a blog.  So here it is!

So what is this blog about?

Now, I'm not he best writer, and I can't promise anything that revelational.  But, what I can promise is for this blog to be a place where I can record the lessons I've learned, to keep track of them myself, and a place where I can hopefully pass on those lessons to you, the readers.

So here it goes, let the journey of lessons begin.


Posted via email from Brian Chung