August 22, 2009

Walking in Circles

Another interesting article from a study that found that people naturally walk in circles.

Again, another thing that I learned and teach in my survival classes. Each one of us is either right or left dominant. And that usually translates to our dominant foot being just slightly bigger/longer than our non-dominant foot. (There are ambidextrous folks out there as well but usually one foot is still bigger/longer than the other).

The other thing that happens is that when we walk, we have what's called a punch step with our dominant foot and a feeler step with our non-dominant foot. Punch step means that we strike the surface harder than a feeler step. Feeler step is that cautionary step that never wants to entirely commit and the stride ends up being shorter.

For example, I am a right dominant ambidextrous walker. When I walk I can feel my right foot hit the earth harder than my left foot does. When I'm on unsure terrain, I often use my left foot to scan the ground to feel for a place to put my foot while my right foot supports my weight.

This means that we have a slightly longer stride on our dominant side.

Translation: we will walk in a circle naturally without thinking about it.

Again, don't believe me? Try it for yourself.

August 21, 2009

August 20, 2009

Full Circle


Vocational Path thus far:

Pre-1998 - Carpentry/Construction
1998 - Received a calling to ministry
1999 - Entered Manchester College as Religion major
2000 - Ministry Summer Service, Call to Pastoral Ministry, Licensed to Ministry
2001 - Pastor at Bethel Center CoB (interest in spiritual formation)
2002 - Pastor at West Manchester CoB (interest in masculine spirituality & rites of passage)
2005 - Back to Manchester (interested in teaching Old Testament)
2006 - IPFW, Anthropology major (w/ Native American Studies cert.)
2007 - Tracker School
2009 - Wilderness Awareness School
2010??

It has been helpful to see the patterns that have emerged in my vocational training. For the better part of 1998 to 2005, I sensed that my calling was to be in pastoral ministry in a congregational setting. Since late 2005 and into 2006, I have sensed a stronger more specific call to outdoor education/ministry. Affirmations and a passion for wilderness skills has reinvigorated my soul and I now understand to which ministry I am called.

I have question marks after 2010 not because I don't know what I want to do, rather because I'm not certain which field my journey at WAS will direct me. Right now, I am deeply interested in wilderness therapy programs. Here's one in particular that has my interest.

There is a six-fold reason that I am drawn towards this work:
1. I would get to teach wilderness survival skills
2. I would get to mentor troubled youth and young adults in a nature setting
3. The opportunity to transform and change lives (which is ministry to me)
4. I see this work as a modern form of initiation for youth to find their place in society
5. The emotional, mental, physical and spiritual health benefits for my life (esp. physical & spiritual)
6. The pay is great, along with benefits and the work 8/off 6 schedule

To a degree, I see the wilderness therapy programs as coming full circle in my understanding and calling in life. It's great to get to see how the elements of the vocational path (posted above) all seem to come to a head with wilderness therapy.

More to come...

August 17, 2009

Jumping not Teetering

It's been three weeks since I've posted and there's a reason for that. I've been intentional about Discernment, Prayer, Solitude, Wilderness time, Journaling, Conversations, Phone Calls, Apprehension/Excitement and Affirmations.

I have taken the leap of faith and said YES to the Anake Outdoor School at Wilderness Awareness School in Duvall, WA. In 3 weeks, I will be heading out to the Pacific Northwest so there's a lot to be doing and planning.

Keep my wife and I in your thoughts and prayers during this transition as she will be staying back in Illinois for a few months to keep working until she is able to secure work in the Seattle area.

The adventure begins!
It's about making something happen instead of waiting for something to happen.