Archives For Opportunity

Source – https://advisor.visualcapitalist.com/the-5-fastest-growing-industries-of-the-next-decade/

Viewing the infographic is worth the time but if you just here is the list if just want to know what they are without having to go any further:

  1. Software Publishing – Companies involved in software publishing activities such as designing, installing, and providing post-purchase support.
  2. Information Services – Companies that supply, retrieve, search for or publish information.
  3. Oil and gas extraction – Companies involved in the preparation of oil & gas up to the point of shipment from the producing property.
  4. Computer system design – Companies that primarily provide IT expertise.
  5. Outpatient care centers – Facilities where the patient is not required to stay overnight.

Because I am an academic most people would expect that my children would have been raised to believe that College or University was the certain route that one HAS to take after leaving high school. The notion of a gap year is acceptable just as long as there are plans to head into the ivory tower to pursue higher education.

As the title of this post indicates my boys aren’t going to College. My older son Levi is 20 so this will be the second year he won’t be attending college. My younger son Caleb is 18 so this would have been his first year in higher education but like his older brother is too isn’t going to College. I think that it is easier on them then it is on me because it is this time of year that find myself questioning my wife’s and my decision to raise our boys to follow their dreams and passions and to take risks rather then to the safe and certain thing like going to College. Both of my boys are pursuing their dreams of Down Hill mountain bike racing and finding some way to get paid to ride their bikes.

Seriously, they want to get paid to ride bikes. This year Levi raced as a Professional also referred as an Elite and Caleb raced as a Junior Elite so both of them are in a position to have careers as Pro riders. Unfortunately, unlike baseball, football, hockey or even road biking where professional athletes can make millions the sport of Down Hill mountain biking is so young and so extreme that only top Pros are making a reasonable living. Up an coming Pro racers like my boys have to find alternative ways to support their dreams until they can land a spot on a factory team and get some sort of an income.

But this is OK because the official racing season just ended this past weekend and both my boys have been brainstorming and exploring ways to raise money to get ready for next season. They are both looking at entrepreneurial ways to raise money—they are both looking at starting their own businesses. They have also started their off season training with intense rigour because they know they need to up their skills and ranking to get one of those few spots on a factory team. They are working harder then ever because there is no certainty in their dreams and their success is directly related to their level of commitment and hard work.

I also think that things will be OK after reading Seth Godin’s post Teaching Certainty where he points to fact that our society has put is faith in the school system that has perpetuated the certain belief that if you follow all the instructions, follow the syllabus, and do well on the test then:

After you repeat these steps obediently for more than ten years, there will be a placement office, where there will certainly be a job ready for you, with fixed hours and a career path.

But the harsh reality we are facing in our world today is that nothing is certain; we are living in a world of constant change. Godin warns:

We’ve trained people to be certain for years, and then launch them into a culture and an economy where relying on certainty does us almost no good at all.
Broken-field running, free range kids, the passionate desire to pick yourself—that seems like a more robust and resilient way to prepare, doesn’t it? Who’s teaching you what to do when the certain thing doesn’t happen?

If Godin is right then perhaps my wife and I have prepared our boys much better for this uncertain world. The odds are against them and many would find their dreams unrealistic but they both have the grit to keep on working and keep on picking themselves up. If Godin is right and uncertainty is the new norm then I can be glad that my boys aren’t going to College—at least not until they choose to use College as tool to help them pursue their dreams.

References
Godin, S. (2016, September 8). Teaching certainty. Retrieved September 14, 2016, from http://sethgodin.typepad.com/seths_blog/2016/09/teaching-certainty.html

SoB-CSLE-Flyer

Die Empty

Dwayne Harapnuik —  July 5, 2011 — Leave a comment

I have taken the the following from Todd Henry as a personal challenge:

“Do you know what the most valuable land in the world is?”…it’s the graveyard, because with all of those people are buried unfulfilled dreams, unwritten novels, masterpieces not created, businesses not started, relationships not reconciled.

We have a choice – die with un-executed dreams or … die empty.

Read the full post…

The main thing is to keep the main thing the main thing.

Stephen Covey

Every once in a while we hear a pearl of wisdom, if followed, could have a dramatic impact on our lives and the lives around us. I am not certain when Covey wrote this pithy statement but I heard it again in a wonderful sermon by David McQueen at Beltway Park this past Sunday and I haven’t stopped thinking about what my “main thing” is. Or more specifically what are the “main things” in my life that I need to keep the main things. I think we can have multiple main things or main things in specific areas of our lives.

Spiritually, my main thing is keeping a tension between grace and truth in my life. Personally, the main thing in my life is my wife and family–in that order. Professionally, my main thing is learning. I am always pondering how will this situation or circumstance improve the learning environment… how will this tool enhance learning…and what can I learn from this….

Can it be this simple? If we are to be successful in our lives I think it needs to be this simple. There is an elegance in the notion of keeping the main thing the main thing. One need not be a philosopher or any other recognized major thinker to grasp this idea. Grasping the idea may be simple but actually living it may not. We live in a world of distraction that can keep us from our main thing. I also think about my boys and other young people who may not have decided what there main thing is. What are we doing to help them find their main thing? What distractions have we allowed enter their lives that can keep them from their main thing.

When I look back on my academic career and look to the future I can honestly say that I have kept and will continue to keep my main thing the main thing. I have been very fortunate in that I am able to convert my passion into my profession…but this is a subject for another post.