We were not a wealthy family. In fact, we were a poor family. In fact, we were po’ folk, but my parents made our lives rich. We were a happy family. I loved sports, and as long as I could play, I was fine. There’s a picture of me in my Little League uniform: skinny, big smile, big Afro with my Little League cap perched on the top of it. And there’s this big rip in my jeans. I didn’t care; my family didn’t care about things like that. It’s like we didn’t know we were poor, so it didn’t matter. My mother worked hard, and we were always close to not making it, but she always gave us Special K (which for po’ folks…name brands were a big deal), which she’d buy in bulk. You’d look in our cabinets and there’d be nothing but Special K.

My parents didn’t have much money to spend, but they had lots of love to spend on us, and we were happy. My father loved to spend time with us. He’d say, “We’re going on a family drive,” and we would all pile into the station wagon. Some of my best memories were when all seven of us were packed into our station wagon for family trips. There’s a video of all seven of us (when I was even younger) getting out of a VW Beetle…parents in front, my three sisters in the back seat and us two boys in the back window. My father loved taking family trips. Once we drove all the way from Los Angeles to Seattle, and I still don’t how five kids survived in that tiny space for such a long time without a Nintendo DS, an iPod or PS3. If it hadn’t been for Mom and Dad’s great sense of humor, I think we kids could have done some serious damage to one another. But my parents always had us laughing.

I remember especially one time we all drove to Big Bear Mountain, which is a recreational park in southern California. We began to talk about what we would like to accomplish. We began to dream; we began to think big in that small space.

Then when we drove up and there were all these people skiing. I had never seen anyone ski before, not in person. Somebody in the car said, People like us don’t ski.” That didn’t seem right to me then and it doesn’t seem right to me now. You can do anything you want, you can be anything you want. Anything is possible.

Dad loved his family and wanted each of his kids to reach our full potential. Then one day a police officer showed up at our front door. As I listened to the officer tell my Mom that Dad had been in an accident and wouldn’t be coming home, I felt that the wonderful life I had enjoyed for eleven years was over. That night I heard my Mom wailing in her bedroom. I had never heard anyone cry that way before, nor have I heard it since.

I was keenly aware that I was living a bad dream. Someone had dished up a meal for me that I didn’t want to swallow, and for months and months it was like as if I had a stomach-ache every minute. But no matter how much I tried, I couldn’t spit it out, couldn’t send it back, couldn’t get rid of the awful taste in my mouth that came from the news of my Dad’s death. I didn’t know what to do. My mother had to work all the time to keep us alive. She worked at Winchell’s, a donut shop, and sometimes she would be working a two shifts a day, and she would come home exhausted.

All the rest of us had to find new ways to live a life that had the biggest hole in the world. I watched my sisters and my brother find their own ways to to live, their own ways to soothe the pain or deaden it. My oldest sister, Bernalee did her best with the rest of us. My other sisters, Paige and Viola focused their attention on school or jobs. My brother, Randy tried to numb himself with alcohol, as he had watched other people do.

Two years after my father died, my sister Viola was in a car accident and fell into a coma. We had all come to her bedside and watched over her, prayed for her,but she never regained consciousness. I was old enough to hurt and young enough to find it difficult to express my grief. I wanted to scream, “Hey, I didn’t order this. I don’t want to listen to my mother cry in her room at night. I can’t stand this pain. I want my father and my sister back.” At an early age, I began trying to make sense of the senselessness around me, and I had a deep desire within me to fix everyone else’s pain…which is partly why I do what I do today. I knew there had to be a better reality than the one I was facing. I envisioned that reality, and it came true.

Many of you have been through tremendous hurts and pain. Some, because of choices you made, others because of things that were handed to you. Jesus said, “Come to me, all you who are weary and burdened, and I will give you rest. Take my yoke upon you and learn from me, for I am gentle and humble in heart, and you will find rest for your souls.” There is a hope. There is a peace. You do not have to stay in the setback. You can choose to live life to the fullest.

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Momentum expresses your inner cry for more. It moves you forward to succeed and to be happy in life. The dictionary says that momentum means “strength or force gained by motion through the development of events.” We are talking about a rhythm, a pace, a stride that gains strength and force as we move forward and things happen in our lives.

Do you ever notice how much energy little kids have? Seriously, it is like they have had an IV of sugar injected into them in the middle of the night, so by the time they wake up they are raring to go! They are full of life and excited about what the new day will bring. They chase the ice cream truck, fly kites, climb trees, and splash in mud puddles. Their life is about momentum.

Kids know how to have a good time. Most of the time they seem happy and run around without a care in the world. They don’t stress, because they know their needs will be met for the most part. On the other hand, adults can be all over the place. One minute we are up and going, and the next minute we are down and out; one minute we are happy about life, and the next minute we are discouraged. We get down and out and discouraged when setbacks cause a break in our stride, our pace, our momentum.

My goal is to help you get your momentum back if you’ve lost it and sustain it if you already are experiencing it. Your life isn’t meant to be a series of disappointments, nor is it intended to be ordinary and stuck in a rut. However, stuff happens! You are not perfect, and thank God, He knows that. He has an extraordinary plan to bring you through the rough spots so you can keep your momentum.

“I know what I’m doing. I have it all planned out—plans to take care of you, not abandon you, plans to give you the future you hope for.” Jeremiah 29:11 MSG

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One morning, in the diner I was frequenting, I saw an old friend, Marvin, looking morose. When I asked him what was the matter, I could barely hear him. “No, no, I’m fine,” he said. “Just had some setbacks. I think maybe I have to rethink what I doing.” When I asked him why, he didn’t really give me a clear answer.

I see this a lot. When people get down, it’s like their voice gets down too – down to a whisper. Marvin had been on a roll with his new job in a computer game company, taking to it like a fish to water. When he started, he did everything he was asked to do, and he did it fast. He started early; he stayed late. He listened to everyone and he thought about what he heard.

“So then they asked me to evaluate some new game proposals. I was psyched. I spent three days and nights working on it. I had everything together – sales, reviews, industry expectations, stock prices – everything. I went to the meeting with all the suits. I even bought a suit.” I looked at him surprised. “Well, I bought a sport jacket and a tie.” “And what happened”, I asked. Marvin explains, “What happened? I’ll tell you what happened. The Man – the guy who sits at the end of the table, can’t be fifty-five, whose fingers are too clunky to use even a Wii, who’s always chewing on a pencil; that guy says, ‘Its garbage.’

“That’s all?” I asked. “That’s all. Moves on to the next project. I’m looking around the room and nobody’s looking back at me. I might as well be dead.” “That’s tough”, I said trying to find the words to say. Marvin grumbled under his voice, “I might as well be back at my old job. At least there, nobody noticed me.”

I could hardly hear him again, but I know he’s really saying: It’s too hard. Nobody cares. I don’t need this kind of rejection after I worked so hard. Even when you are on the path, when you know your goals, when you are letting your passion drive you, sometimes you are going to go off the road.

I worked once with a running back in the NFL. He was at the top of his career, then one season, he began fumbling the ball. He’d get tackled and lose the ball. It became such a fear for him, that he was afraid to carry to carry the football at all, especially in crucial situations. I was able to work with him, but the problem plagued him for the rest of his career. Even worse, he took the problem into his personal life. After he retired from the NFL, he received all kinds of offers for business opportunities that he could get involved in. But, he decided not to take up any of them because he was afraid he would fumble it. His fear had become his vision in life. He was shrinking back from life, not rushing forward to grasp it. That’s the way Marvin was feeling as well.

“So do you really want to go back to your old job?” I asked Marvin. Marvin answered, “Yes. No. I mean, I don’t want to get dumped on like that again. What if I don’t have the talent anyway? Why get beat up all the time? This isn’t the first time I screwed up, you know. Even at the last job, they were always telling me what I did wrong.”

During the most difficult times in our lives, we are growing, changing, and learning, even when we don’t realize it.

Think about such a time in your life. It may be difficult to think about, but it will be worth the effort. (And the more you do it, the easier it will become.) Start with something that happened many years ago. How did you react? Did you lash out? Did you pull back within yourself for weeks or months? Did you reach out to others for help?

Now looking back years later, does it seem like a turning point in your life? What strengths did you gain from it?

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