James is a dynamic speaker and right away, my brain is
cooking, coming up with ways to implement his advice to my own situation. I’m having ideas like never before. Just as I suspected, a clearer picture of my
future starts to gel. Not only are all
the parts taking shape, but I’m getting the sequence it should come
together. By the end of the first day, I
feel like I’ve learned a week’s worth.
During the breaks, people spot my cane and offer to help me
get around. They’re interested in my
life story and my plans for sharing it.
For the first time, I realize my visual limitations make me more interesting, not less so, like I believed for years. Here and there, I get bits of advice, which breed even new ideas. I’m totally in my element. This was one of the most sublime times of my
life. Why?Because I knew I was exactly where I was meant to be, doing exactly what I was put here to do.
Telling my story, telling the stories of others, giving hope, and really making a difference in the lives of thousands--it’s was God has chosen for me to do and when I’m doing it on a larger scale, the feeling is like nothing else I’ve ever experienced.
Finally, I was getting usable advice about how to market
myself, how to think on a much larger scale than I have before. It was an up-close look at a future that is
both easier and more successful.
On the second day, Cuba Gooding Jr. speaks about having a
mission. It was a good talk but I’ve
already had mine in mind for a while. I
donate 10 percent of the What Makes Us Stronger line to charities and
organizations helping people recovery from a life crisis.
Later, Steadman Graham speaks on the importance of defining
our unique self. This resonates with
me. I’ve only recently come to terms
with my extremely unique life and how I don’t fit into any category. Not long before flying out to L.A. I realized
there’s more freedom than isolation in that because I get to define what a
middle-aged legally blind ex-diabetic writer with a kidney/pancreas transplant
looks like. Me. I own it.
I define it.At the conference, I have a light-hearted self-acceptance I haven’t felt since college. The notion finally hits home that, even legally blind, middle-aged, with two transplanted organs to take care of, I can still have off-the-wall kind of fun I hadn't had since I was younger and I had better eyesight. It turns out a long-lost side of myself was hiding at the LAX Westin.
Streadman Graham gives me plenty of things to write down. This would be the high point of the Boot
Camp. How ironic that my sitiation would take a huge plunge.
Next: Seismic Jolt
Wow, Jim! You impress me so much. Terrific post. I enjoyed it. Was a bit inspired by it. And, most of all, it made me miss you.
ReplyDelete