Want to discover what is holding you back? Take the limits quiz now.
Growing up, basketball was my thing. Curling up on the couch with a bag of burnt microwave popcorn and watching the Syracuse Orangemen with my father was a treat. I played on a house league in elementary and I was promoted to first string in junior high. But when I turned fifteen, my professional basketball career came to a screeching halt. High school tryouts were two days long. On day one, I struggled to keep up with the older girls. I had gone from feeling like a superstar to feeling like I didn’t quite measure up. I chucked my sweat-drenched clothes in my locker and slammed the door of my parent’s station wagon.
“I’m not going back tomorrow.” I murmured.
“Why? What happened?”, inquired my dad.
“I SUCK. That’s what happened. I missed too many shots. I’m not as fast as the rest of them. The older girls were whispering. I just feel out of place. I don’t even want to be on the team, anyways.”
And that was that. The abrupt end of my basketball career. I spent the next four years of high school making banana splits at DQ rather than making three pointers.
But don’t we all do this in life? WE GIVE UP ON THE THINGS WE LOVE BECAUSE WE ARE AFRAID. Fear is the thief that robs us from all God has called us to do. Fear comes in three forms:
1. FEAR OF FEEDBACK
Have you ever been to a kids sporting event and their is that one obnoxious parent on the sidelines that won’t shut-up? I’m all about cheering for our kids, but this parent wants to criticize everyone; the coach, the ref, the other players. No matter what, in life you’re always gonna have someone screaming from the sidelines. Those who are often the most vocal are the ones who have way too much time on their hands and the irony is they aren’t even in the game themselves. Guess what? NO ONE ON THE BLEACHERS CAN DISQUALIFY YOU!
2. FEAR OF FAILURE
If you can drowned out the noise from the sidelines, the next battle you have to face is between your two ears. We are our own worst critics. The loudest voice is often our own. Someone looks at us a certain way and we interpret it to mean we don’t measure up. We take a statement or remark and twist it into rejection. We are constantly looking for ways to disqualify ourselves because WE ARE AFRAID TO TRY AND FAIL. And guess what? FAILURE DOESN’T DISQUALIFY YOU!
3. FEAR OF FALLING
If you push past the outer critics, and ignore you’re inner critic, you still have one more mountain to conquer and that hurdle has the word RISK written on it with a bold, black sharpie. When my sons first learned to ice skate they tackled the task with two unique approaches: Jeremiah, my oldest, is cautious, calculating, and slow-moving. Isaac, my six year old is impulsive, hyper, and free. When Jeremiah takes to the ice, he grabs on to the side of the rink and takes painstakingly slow baby steps like an eighty year old grandma. Isaac on the other hand, runs out on to the ice full force and falls smack dab on his face. But guess what? Both of them fall, repeatedly. Both of them get hurt. But who do you think learned to skate first? The one who gave it his all and chose not let fear rob him of his destiny. FALLING DOES NOT DISQUALIFY YOU!
“Life is not a journey to the grave with the intention of arriving safely in a well preserved body but rather to skid in broadside, thoroughly used up, totally worn out, and loudly proclaiming, “Wow what a ride!”