Living With Intention: Part 1 The Power of Intentional Living

Living With Intention 

Part 1

The Power of Intentional Living

Introduction: Stop Drifting. Start Designing.

Most people don’t design their lives — they drift through them.

Days become weeks. Weeks become years. And before long, we find ourselves busy… but not fulfilled.

In this three-part series on Living With Intention, we explore how to move from accidental living to purposeful leadership of your own life. Intentional living is not about perfection. It’s about clarity. It’s about choosing direction over distraction.

Drawing wisdom from leadership expert John C. Maxwell, we begin with a foundational truth:

“Intentional living is the bridge to your dreams. You must bridge the gap between where you are now and the dream you want to live.”

Let’s explore how.


1. What Is Intentional Living?

Intentional living is the conscious decision to live on purpose.

It means:

  • Choosing direction instead of reacting to circumstances

  • Designing your days instead of surviving them

  • Acting from conviction instead of convenience

Without intention, life becomes reactive. With intention, life becomes strategic.

Intentional living asks powerful questions:

  • Why am I doing what I’m doing?

  • Does this align with who I want to become?

  • Am I moving toward something meaningful?

This is where transformation begins — not with a dramatic change, but with a deliberate decision.


2. Clarify Your Values and Priorities

If you don’t decide what matters, everything will feel urgent.

Maxwell wisely says:

“You cannot overestimate the unimportance of practically everything.”

That statement is liberating.

Not everything deserves your attention. Not every opportunity deserves your energy. Intentional living requires filtering your life through your core values.

Ask yourself:

  • What do I stand for?

  • What kind of person do I want to become?

  • What truly deserves my time?

When your values are clear:

  • Decisions become easier

  • Distractions lose power

  • Energy becomes focused

Clarity creates momentum.


3. Set Meaningful Goals That Align With Your Vision

Intentional living is active, not passive.

It is not enough to hope for a better life — you must build one.

Maxwell reminds us:

“Goals may give focus, but dreams give power.”

Dreams inspire you. Goals move you.

When your goals align with your values:

  • You stop chasing noise

  • You start building legacy

  • You gain resilience in adversity

Intentional goal-setting transforms vague ambition into measurable progress. It bridges the gap between where you are and where you are called to be.


4. Be Fully Present — Say Yes to the Best

In a distracted world, presence is power.

Intentional living means learning to say “no” — even to good things — so you can say “yes” to what matters most.

As Maxwell teaches:

“Learn to say ‘no’ to the good so you can say ‘yes’ to the best.”

When you embrace the present moment:

  • Relationships deepen

  • Opportunities become visible

  • Gratitude increases

  • Joy multiplies

Presence is not passive. It is disciplined attention.

And disciplined attention shapes a meaningful life.


Final Reflection: From Drift to Design

Intentional living is not about control — it is about direction.

It is about waking up each day with clarity:

  • I know what matters.

  • I know where I’m going.

  • I know why it matters.

As Sam Njela reminds us:

“What you think about, you bring about.”

Your life moves in the direction of your focus.

In Part 2, we will explore the obstacles that prevent intentional living — and how to overcome distraction, fear, and complacency so you can thrive with purpose.

The journey of Becoming Maverick begins with a decision:

Stop drifting. Start designing.

Shalom!

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Living With Intention: Part 2 Overcoming the Obstacles to Intentional Living

Living With Intention 

Part 2

Overcoming the Obstacles to Intentional Living

Introduction: Why Good Intentions Aren’t Enough

In Part 1, we established that intentional living is the bridge between where you are and where you are called to be. But here’s the truth:

Clarity alone is not enough.

Many people know what they should do — yet still feel stuck. The gap between intention and action is where most dreams fade.

To close that gap, we must confront the obstacles that sabotage intentional living. Drawing again from the leadership wisdom of John C. Maxwell, we explore how to move from knowing… to doing.


1. Overcoming Fear and Uncertainty

Fear is the silent architect of average lives.

It whispers:

  • What if you fail?

  • What if you’re not ready?

  • What if it doesn’t work?

Intentional living requires courage — not the absence of fear, but action in spite of it.

Maxwell reminds us:

“You’ll never change your life until you change something you do daily.”

Transformation is not dramatic. It is disciplined.

Start small:

  • Make one brave decision.

  • Have one uncomfortable conversation.

  • Take one step toward growth.

Courage compounds. What feels impossible today becomes normal tomorrow.

Mavericks are not fearless — they are forward-moving.


2. Breaking Free from Procrastination

Procrastination is not laziness. It is misplaced priority.

When we delay what matters most, we unintentionally choose distraction over destiny.

Maxwell teaches:

“The secret of your success is determined by your daily agenda.”

Your calendar reveals your commitment.

To overcome procrastination:

  • Break goals into manageable actions

  • Schedule what matters

  • Set clear deadlines

  • Remove decision fatigue

Intentional living is built in the ordinary rhythm of daily discipline. It is not the occasional burst of motivation that shapes your future — it is consistent action.

Small, daily decisions determine long-term direction.


3. Cultivating Resilience in Adversity

Challenges are not interruptions to intentional living — they are part of it.

Every meaningful pursuit will test you.

Maxwell wisely says:

“The difference between average people and achieving people is their perception and response to failure.”

Failure is feedback.
Setbacks are teachers.
Resistance builds strength.

Resilience means:

  • Refusing to quit when momentum slows

  • Adjusting strategy without abandoning vision

  • Learning instead of blaming

Intentional living requires emotional maturity — the ability to stay aligned with your purpose even when circumstances are misaligned with your expectations.

Adversity does not define you. Your response does.


4. Eliminating Distractions and Guarding Your Focus

We live in an age of constant noise.

Notifications. Opinions. Endless scrolling. Competing demands.

Without discipline, distraction becomes the default setting of life.

Maxwell reminds us:

“Learn to say ‘no’ to the good so you can say ‘yes’ to the best.”

Not everything urgent is important.
Not everything good is necessary.

Intentional living demands:

  • Digital boundaries

  • Clear priorities

  • Strategic “no’s”

  • Focused energy

What you feed grows.
What you starve fades.

Guard your attention — it is your most valuable resource.


Final Reflection: From Intention to Action

Living with intention is not about inspiration — it is about implementation.

You will face fear.
You will battle distraction.
You will encounter setbacks.
You will wrestle with procrastination.

But here is the truth:

Every obstacle you overcome strengthens your capacity for purposeful living.

As Sam Njela reminds us:

What you think about, you bring about.”

Where your focus goes, your life follows.

In Part 3, we will explore the rewards of intentional living — how it transforms personal growth, relationships, leadership, and overall well-being.

Becoming Maverick is not about rebellion.

It is about responsibility.

Responsibility for your growth.
Responsibility for your choices.
Responsibility for your direction.

And that journey continues with one intentional step today.

Shalom!

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Thriving with Intentional Living

Living With Intention (Part 3)

Thriving Through Intentional Living

Introduction: From Surviving to Thriving

In Part 1, we defined intentional living.
In Part 2, we confronted the obstacles that try to derail it.

Now we arrive at the reward.

Intentional living is not just about structure, discipline, or productivity. It is about transformation. It is about becoming the kind of person who thrives — not by accident, but by design.

As leadership expert John C. Maxwell reminds us, intentional living is not a one-time decision. It is a daily commitment to growth, alignment, and purposeful action.

Let’s explore what thriving with intention truly looks like.


1. Personal Growth Is No Longer Optional

Maxwell famously said:

“Change is inevitable. Growth is optional.”

Life will change whether you prepare for it or not.
Intentional living ensures you grow through it — not just go through it.

Thriving means:

  • Setting goals that stretch you

  • Pursuing knowledge consistently

  • Reflecting honestly

  • Adjusting strategically

When you live intentionally, growth becomes a lifestyle. You stop waiting for motivation. You build momentum.

Growth compounds. And over time, small intentional decisions create extraordinary outcomes.


2. Intentional Relationships Create Strong Foundations

Success without connection is hollow.

Intentional living reshapes how we approach relationships. It shifts us from convenience to commitment.

Maxwell teaches:

“People don’t care how much you know until they know how much you care.”

Thriving with intention means:

  • Listening more than speaking

  • Showing up consistently

  • Investing time in what truly matters

  • Leading with empathy

Relationships flourish when they are nurtured deliberately.

In a distracted world, presence becomes one of the most powerful gifts you can give.


3. Aligning Priorities Creates Inner Peace

Thriving is not about doing more. It is about aligning better.

Maxwell reminds us:

“A leader is one who knows the way, goes the way, and shows the way.”

You are the leader of your own life.

Intentional living calls you to align:

  • Your time with your values

  • Your energy with your purpose

  • Your habits with your long-term vision

When your actions reflect your priorities, internal conflict decreases. Stress reduces. Clarity increases.

Alignment produces peace.

And peace fuels performance.


4. Living With Intention Creates Ripple Effects

Intentional living does not stop with you.

Maxwell states:

“Leadership is not about titles, positions, or flowcharts. It is about one life influencing another.”

When you live with clarity and conviction:

  • Others notice

  • Others gain courage

  • Others begin to believe change is possible

Your discipline inspires.
Your growth influences.
Your example leads.

Thriving with intention means becoming a catalyst — a person whose life quietly raises the standard in every room they enter.

This is where Becoming Maverick becomes real. Not rebellion for the sake of difference, but responsibility for the sake of impact.


Final Reflection: Intentional Living Is a Lifelong Commitment

Intentional living is not a destination you arrive at.

It is a daily decision:

  • To grow

  • To focus

  • To align

  • To influence

You will not live perfectly. But you can live purposefully.

As Sam Njela reminds us:

“What you think about, you bring about.”

Your focus shapes your future.

Across this three-part journey, we’ve seen:

  • How to define intentional living

  • How to overcome its obstacles

  • How to thrive through disciplined alignment

Now the question is not What did you learn?

The question is:

What will you do differently tomorrow?

Becoming Maverick is not about standing apart from the world.

It is about standing firm in your purpose.

Live deliberately.
Grow consistently.
Lead courageously.
And thrive intentionally.

Life Is Worth Living – Part 1

Unveiling Your Life’s Purpose: A Journey of Meaning and Fulfillment

Introduction

Life is not merely about existing — it is about becoming.

Too often we move through our days busy, distracted, and driven by expectations that are not truly our own. Yet deep within every human being is a longing for significance — a desire to know that our life matters.

As Myles Munroe once said,

“The greatest tragedy in life is not death, but a life without purpose.”

Purpose is what gives meaning to our effort, direction to our decisions, and fulfillment to our journey. When we live with purpose, even ordinary days carry extraordinary weight.

This is where our journey begins.



1. Reflective Journaling: Listening to Your Inner Voice

Before you can discover your purpose, you must slow down long enough to hear yourself think.

Set aside intentional time — free from noise and distraction — and begin reflecting on your life honestly. Use these guiding questions:

  • What activities make you lose track of time because they energise you?

  • What problems in the world stir your heart?

  • What talents, skills, or natural strengths do others often affirm in you?

  • What values do you refuse to compromise on?

Purpose is often found at the intersection of your passion, your gifting, and the needs around you.

Write freely. Don’t edit yourself. Patterns will begin to emerge.


2. Create a Vision Board: Make the Invisible Visible

Clarity grows when vision becomes visible.

Create a dreamboard (vision board) that represents the life you feel called to build. Include:

  • Images that reflect impact and contribution

  • Words that define your values

  • Quotes that awaken courage

  • Symbols of growth, service, leadership, or creativity

Place it where you will see it daily. Vision fades when it is hidden — but it strengthens when it is seen consistently.

This is not about material ambition; it is about intentional direction.


3. Build Community: Purpose Grows in Relationship

You were never meant to walk alone.

Seek out people who are also pursuing growth and intentional living. Conversations with like-minded individuals sharpen your thinking, expand your perspective, and strengthen your courage.

Community does three powerful things:

  • It affirms your strengths.

  • It challenges your blind spots.

  • It reminds you why you started when motivation fades.

Purpose flourishes in connection.


4. Practice Gratitude: Anchor Your Heart in Abundance

A purposeful life is not built from dissatisfaction — it is built from appreciation.

Each day, write down three things you are grateful for. They may be simple:

  • A meaningful conversation

  • A lesson learned through failure

  • The opportunity to try again

Gratitude shifts your focus from what is missing to what is already present. It cultivates resilience, humility, and joy — essential foundations for living with intention.


Closing Reflection

Purpose is not discovered overnight. It unfolds as you reflect, act, connect, and grow.

Life is worth living — not because it is easy, but because it is meaningful when lived intentionally.

As we continue this trilogy, we will explore how resilience strengthens purpose when challenges arise. Because once you discover why you are here, you must also learn how to endure the storms that test that calling.

Your journey toward becoming a Maverick has begun.


Life Is Worth Living – Part 2

Rising Strong: Embracing Resilience in the Face of Challenges

Introduction

If purpose gives life direction, resilience gives it durability.

No meaningful life unfolds without resistance. Setbacks are not detours from the path — they are part of it. The question is never if you will face adversity, but who you will become because of it.

As Earl Nightingale once said:

“When you face a setback, you can either be setback or you can be up set.”

Resilience is the difference.


1. Understanding Resilience: Strength Under Pressure

Resilience is not toughness without emotion.
It is not pretending things do not hurt.

Resilience is the ability to absorb impact without losing identity. It is choosing growth over bitterness. It is learning to bend without breaking.

Resilient individuals:

  • Accept reality without denial.

  • Take responsibility without self-condemnation.

  • Adapt without abandoning their values.

They do not avoid storms — they learn how to navigate them.


2. The Power of Mindset: Turning Obstacles into Teachers

Your mindset determines whether a setback defines you or develops you.

A fixed mindset says:

  • “This always happens to me.”

  • “I’m not good enough.”

  • “This is the end.”

A growth mindset asks:

  • “What is this teaching me?”

  • “How can I grow through this?”

  • “What strength is being forged here?”

Every challenge carries a hidden invitation — to mature, to refine, to strengthen.

When you shift your perspective, obstacles become stepping stones.


3. Embracing Self-Compassion: Strength with Kindness

Resilience without self-compassion becomes harshness.

In moments of failure or disappointment, speak to yourself the way you would speak to someone you deeply care about.

Self-compassion means:

  • Acknowledging pain without exaggerating it.

  • Taking responsibility without shaming yourself.

  • Allowing room for imperfection.

You are allowed to stumble. You are not required to stay down.


4. Cultivating Inner Strength: Grounded in Stillness

In a noisy world, inner strength is built in quiet spaces.

Practices such as mindfulness, reflection, prayer, or meditation anchor you. They help you respond rather than react. They allow clarity to rise above chaos.

Resilience is strengthened when you:

  • Pause before responding.

  • Breathe before reacting.

  • Reflect before deciding.

Inner stability creates outer endurance.


Closing Reflection

Resilience is what turns survival into growth.

When you rise after falling, you gain more than momentum — you gain perspective, humility, and depth.

Purpose shows you why to move forward.
Resilience teaches you how.

In Part Three, we will explore the powerful truth that even purpose and resilience are incomplete without connection — because life is not meant to be lived alone.g.

Life Is Worth Living – Part 3

The Impact of Meaningful Connections: Nurturing the Essence of Life

Introduction

You can have purpose.
You can have resilience.
But without connection, life feels incomplete.

We are wired for relationship. We flourish not in isolation, but in belonging.

As Jordan Peterson has said:

“Meaning is what emerges when your mind, body, and soul are all focused on the same thing.”

Often, that “same thing” includes people — shared vision, shared struggle, shared growth.

Meaning deepens in connection.


1. The Essence of Connection: We Are Wired for Belonging

Human connection is not a luxury — it is essential.

Meaningful relationships:

  • Strengthen emotional health.

  • Provide perspective during hardship.

  • Amplify joy during success.

When we feel seen, heard, and valued, we become more fully ourselves.

Isolation shrinks us.
Connection expands us.


2. Cultivating Authentic Relationships: The Courage to Be Real

Authentic relationships require vulnerability.

They grow when we:

  • Listen without interrupting.

  • Speak honestly without attacking.

  • Empathise without judging.

Surface-level interactions may entertain us, but deep relationships transform us.

True connection says:
“I see you.”
“I value you.”
“You matter.”

And in that exchange, both people grow.


3. Giving and Receiving Love: The Circulation of Life

Love is not merely emotion — it is action.

It is:

  • Showing up consistently.

  • Offering encouragement.

  • Serving without always needing recognition.

There is profound power in both giving and receiving love. Many people struggle more with receiving than giving — yet both are necessary for wholeness.

Love creates momentum. It multiplies. It ripples outward.


4. Finding Purpose Through Connection

Often, our greatest sense of purpose is discovered in how we impact others.

Whether through:

  • Family,

  • Friendship,

  • Mentorship,

  • Leadership,

  • Or service to a cause greater than ourselves —

Purpose expands when it is shared.

Connection turns personal growth into collective impact.


Final Reflection: The Trilogy Comes Together

Life is worth living because:

  • Purpose gives it direction.

  • Resilience gives it strength.

  • Connection gives it depth.

When these three intersect, life becomes meaningful.

As you continue your Becoming Maverick journey, remember:

You are here for a reason.
You are stronger than you think.
And you were never meant to walk alone.

Let’s continue building lives of purpose, courage, and meaningful connection — together.

Reclaiming Your Maverick Spirit: The Journey of Teshuvah and Personal Growth


Reclaiming Your Maverick Spirit: The Journey of Teshuvah and Personal Growth

Introduction

In the pursuit of becoming true mavericks in our lives, we all face moments where we miss the mark or make choices that hurt ourselves and others. In the Jewish tradition, the concept of teshuvah (תשובה), meaning “to return” or “to turn back,” offers timeless guidance. Teshuvah teaches us to acknowledge our mistakes, take ownership, and embrace a path of healing and transformation.

In this three-part series, we explore teshuvah through a modern lens—drawing on science, psychology, and personal development—to help you reclaim your maverick spirit and nurture personal growth.


Part 1: Recognizing the Power of Teshuvah

Life is full of moments when we fall short or act in ways misaligned with our values. Teshuvah reminds us that mistakes are natural and essential for growth. Its core lies in self-reflection and genuine repentance: looking inward, assessing our behavior honestly, and identifying areas for improvement.

Modern Wisdom Meets Tradition

Psychology and neuroscience highlight the power of self-awareness. Understanding our emotions, motivations, and triggers allows us to make conscious choices, rather than being swept away by habits or reactions. Teshuvah aligns perfectly with this insight, encouraging deliberate reflection and course correction.

Personal Development and Teshuvah

Practices like goal-setting, continuous learning, and mindful living complement teshuvah. They help us embrace a growth mindset, return to our authentic selves, and step confidently into our potential.

Conclusion:
Teshuvah empowers us to recognize our mistakes, own our actions, and start a journey of transformation. By blending this ancient wisdom with modern insights, we reclaim our maverick spirit and pave the way for personal and relational growth. As Sam Njela wisely said, What You Think About You Bring About.”

Next up: In Part 2, we explore practical strategies to deepen self-reflection, embrace vulnerability, and cultivate transformation.

Shalom!

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