Monday, September 29, 2014

Appreciating Where You Are

It’s strange to me that only two years ago I was a student leader at AU, because it seems like an eternity. For those of you that don’t know me, I graduated in 2013. I am currently the youth director at a wonderful urban ministry in San Francisco. I have a beautiful wife. I have everything I dreamed of. Life is amazing…but, not a day goes by that I don’t wish I was back at Anderson. It’s not Chick-Fil-A, the smell outside of Rice Hall, or the football team’s winning streak that I desire, but the community and intimacy that I had at AU.

I live in a city of one million crammed into a city the size of Anderson; therefore I rarely see a familiar face. It’s quite the transition from the valley, and not having that community is hard. I miss fourth floor Smith. I miss 10:07. I miss authenticity. I miss it all. The best four years of my life were at AU. I don’t say all of this to scare you, but instead to hopefully make you appreciate where you’re at.

Take a minute and just reflect on your time at AU thus far. The ridiculous things you did in your hall or apartment. The ups and downs of being a student leader. You are blessed, and I hope that you know that.

Justin with his good friends from AU.
I would like to think that I learned a few things during my time at AU, and hopefully they are beneficial to you in some way…so here they are.

1.   Get to know people outside of student leadership. Yes, you have great people around you and I encourage you to get to know them, but hang out with people who are different than you. Music majors, athletes, social club members, whoever it may be. Try to not create divisions as a body of Christ.
2.   Get to know your bosses. Many of you probably already know them, but get to know them on a deeper level. They are there because they love you and want to get to know you better. You can gain some of the greatest friendships by getting to know them better.
3.   Don’t place yourself on a pedestal because you are a student leader, and furthermore, don’t place other student leaders on a pedestal.
4.   Be vulnerable and show that you are not perfect. There is often pressure on student leaders to seem perfect. You’re not, and that is okay. 
5.   Upperclassmen: mentor those who are younger than you. Underclassmen: seek that mentorship.
6.   Try to avoid being cynical about administration or other groups on campus. Something that seems so significant now will seem like nothing a couple years later. You don’t need to police those who you believe are doing wrong. Take the plank out of your own eye.
7.   Create time for just you. Go on a walk and talk to God. If you don’t create that space for yourself, you will burn out quickly. If you want to effectively show His love in the best way possible, understand that you aren’t superman. You can’t do it all for your mentor group or hall.
8.   Last, and most importantly, remember why you are a student leader. You are doing it out of love. God is always with you and He is well aware of the joys and sorrows you go through. Take everything to Him.

Justin hammocking with his wife, Sage.

I don’t know most of you (Sam, Connor, and Shawn… I love you guys), but I know what you are going through. You are doing great things for the Kingdom. Know that I am praying for you daily.

God bless.
Justin Brandman
Peer Mentor, 2010-2012
Student Leadership Intern, 2012-2013

Monday, September 22, 2014

5 Things I Wish I Knew as a Student Leader

As I sit in my home in Fort Collins, Colorado contemplating what to write to this lovely community of students leaders, I am honored and humbled. Life truly comes full circle and occasionally the times you need this advice the most, you’re asked to dish it out. Thank you to Courtney for asking me to be a part of this project, and thank you to you – anyone reading this (and extra kudos to anyone who gets to the end)!

Let me start off with a quick introduction. My name is Libby Sparks (known in the AU world as Libby Lalande). I started at AU in 2009 and graduated in 2012 with a Spanish and International Studies degree. In my three years at Anderson, I served in student leadership twice. My sophomore year, I served as a Discipleship Coordinator in Rice Hall (2AB!) and my junior/senior year as a part of ULC. That year I also was a part of starting up and coordinating a short-lived but much needed group on campus, with the help and supervision of Abby Knowles and Lisa Pay, called the GAP.  Beyond this and a few other leadership roles here and there, I was a normal student. I attended CAB events, was an IM captain, worked in Health Services and ate way too many cookies on a daily basis in the MP. I look back at my AU years fondly and truly cherish every relationship built and memory made. I thought I had myself all figured out but today I want to share with you a few things I wish I knew in my time as a student leader. I’ll call it Five Things I Wish I Knew as a Student Leader (I know, creative).

1. Perfection is overrated.
As a downright perfectionist, the first song I want to sing to you is one about perfection. It’s overrated, it’s self-destructive, and it’s downright stupid. No one is perfect and no one is expecting you to be. Titles and rules and roles are a good excuse to have the highest standards and beat yourself up when you can’t perform well. After all, people are watching. But let me stand here as a survivor and say chill out. All those standards that you set for yourself (but convince yourself are set for you) are fluid. In a world without Jesus, they would be the end all be all, but we don’t live in that world. We, especially you, live in a world and a community that values grace above lots of other things. Cherish that. Live in that grace. The swear word that slipped out in front of the freshman, the time you got a little too caught up in your relationship, the time that you had to choose between a friend in need or a floor event…give yourself grace. You’re not expected to make every decision “right”. As a student leader, you’re not being asked to pass every class with flying colors, attend every event, or be the most creative planner that AU has ever seen. You’re being asked to be present and to walk with others. Do you want to follow a perfect leader that makes you feel like your best isn’t enough? Or do you want to follow someone who laughs at themselves, grows in their mistakes, and invites you to encounter Jesus? Be a part of breaking down that wall that gets built at so many Christian colleges – life is not a competition and perfection is terribly overrated.

2. College – and student leadership – is a time to explore your gifts.
When I was in your shoes, I told myself “Here is what you’re good at. Now go use it.” Because of this, I graduated with a major that I thoroughly enjoyed but forgot to see if there was something more fitting out there. I accepted roles in churches and work and friendships that maybe could have been better given to someone else. I forgot to take advantage of being in a place with endless resources. In your time as a leader, if you find you aren’t enjoying something as much as you thought, count it as a win. When you are offered options, try a few out. If you put yourself in a box only to find that box smashed into a million pieces – success! Don’t limit yourself to what you think you are best at or think you can do. Stretch yourself and take daring chances. It could turn out for the best.

3. You don’t have it all together (and you don’t need to).
I know, this sounds a little like #2 and probably #1 but I’m going to take it a different way, I was just breaking you in. Emotionally, spiritually, mentally – it’s okay to break sometimes. Or all the time, if that’s your thing. Either way, I highly suggest seeing a free (!!!) counselor in the wonderful Counseling Services office. Work through some of that past hurt and baggage. I did, but unfortunately I was so lost in being a perfectionist, I tried to be my counselor’s very best client with no problems (I know, I was so far gone…). I spent far too much time trying to convince myself that I really knew who I was in college and as a student leader I forgot to feel. The moments that you feel anger, pain, anxiety, stress, or “negative” emotions – allow yourself to truly feel them. Don’t tell yourself that those aren’t something you do or have as a student leader. Don’t ignore the invitations to go deeper into the hardened and darkest parts of your soul because the truth is, you don’t have it all together and you shouldn’t. Embrace all of who you are and the fact that diving in to that hard stuff is a way to learn more about yourself and give opportunities to God and those around you to pour out love. Have cry sessions in your supervisor’s office, talk to your friends and peers about the hurt in your life, and know that it’s completely acceptable to lead with a limp.

4. Post-grad life is hard.
Having the above mentality can truly hurt you once the cap and gown have been worn and put away in the closet. This one isn’t as much so advice as it is making you aware. Never again will you live in a five minute walking distance to all of your very best friends. And your mentor. And your professors.  Never again will you be in the same season as most of your peers. Never again will you have the opportunity to participate in fun activities every weekend. One of the best and worst things about college is the fact that everything is at your fingertips and the fact that it is an environment that fosters growth and relationship. Honestly, once you graduate, life won’t be easy for you or anyone that you walked with (don’t let people try and tell you otherwise). The people, in my experience, that it has been less of a difficult transition for are those who have experienced hardship and who leaned into it. The ones who have started dealing with their addictions, who have struggled to pay the rent, or have experienced loss in some way. They don’t walk with ease into the “real world” but they didn’t turn the blind eye to it in college. My advice for you beyond these five things is this: find a mentor. Open up to your friends. Reach deep down inside and wrestle with that doubt or that lingering thorn in your side. Question the views of God that have been handed to you your whole Christian life. Ask the hard questions. Find a church that really values you and your gifts and forces you to think. And please, oh please, don’t run away.

5. Vulnerability is the greatest gift.
If you have heard nothing else I’ve said, or just think it’s a repetitious mess, hear this: vulnerability is a gift and is one of the most necessary parts of being a leader. Think of the relationships that mean the most to you – are those just people with whom you find yourself laughing in the Haven or taking midnight runs to Deluxe? Maybe, but most likely the laughing happens after a long heart-to-heart and that Deluxe run included some tears or voiced frustrations. Ladies and gentlemen, BE VULNERABLE; as students, as friends, as leaders. Find your voice in those moments that make you want to run away. When someone who cares asks you how you are doing, don’t say the cop out answer or play the game of “fine” to see if they “really know you”. Be honest and be open. Ladies and gentlemen, don’t put on the happy I’ve-got-this-leadership-thing-down during your ULC or RA or CAB meetings. Use that community as a safe place to talk about the struggles you’re having as a leader. Don’t compete and try to one-up, life is way too short for that. If you’re feeling inadequate, voice that. When you aren’t sure of the solution to a problem, ask! Please use your opportunity to lead others as an opportunity to create safe places where everyone feels valued. And the best way, in my opinion, to do that is by being vulnerable yourself. This place of honesty and truthfulness about what’s truly going on in your heart is the best place to start as a leader and the best place to conquer fears. Vulnerability makes us present and throws all the “shoulds” out the window. I could preach this all day long, but I’ll leave you with one of our very favorite GAP leader sayings (thanks to Ms. Pay): Stop should-ing on yourself. If you have questions on vulnerability, I suggest watching Brene Brown’s TED talk or reading her phenomenal books about her journey through research.

Libby with her husband Brad on their month-long trek around Europe this summer.
So, here I leave you. I have no authority or extra expertise that qualifies me to give you this advice. This is just from one AU student leader to another. If anything stated here strikes a chord with just one person, then I consider this a success. So go. Enjoy. Explore. Search. Long. Wander. Laugh. Cry. Question. Dream. Open up. And please, oh please, have a soft serve ice cream sundae for me at the Marketplace, extra Oreos.

Should you want to continue the conversation about anything expressed in this post, please look me up. My e-mail elcsparks@gmail.com just loves getting new messages and I (like many others) get giddy when that red “1” pops up on my Facebook inbox. Thank you for allowing me to share, and thank you for getting (mostly) through my un-qualified advice.

I’m rooting for you all.
With love,
Libby Sparks
Rice Hall DC, 2010-2011
ULC, 2011-2012

Monday, September 15, 2014

The Power of Words

When I first accepted the position of ULC Director, I immediately knew I wanted to begin some type of blog as a platform for part of my encouragement to the student leaders.  I have always found that I express myself best through writing.  Having recently taken up the blogger lifestyle myself, I felt what better way of leading and serving than to utilize the same passion and expression of my heart through writing, in my job? 

I can’t tell you what exactly this blog will look like over the course of the year.  I can’t tell you how often it will be read by leaders on this campus.  I can’t tell you how the Spirit of God will speak through those who write for this blog.  I can’t even tell you who all will write for it.  However, I can tell you some of the inspiration behind the title, and my vision for this form of ministry. 

So here goes nothing--> I’m a words person.  Words of affirmation are my second love language, and by and far, the words spoken by various people over the course of my twenty-one years have helped shape me into the person I am today.  I often say that words can hurt, but even more so, words can heal.  I am sure all of you can think of a specific moment (or more) in your life where someone said something to you that hurt – and because of that part of you changed.  Perhaps someone said something that has stuck with you for years, because you have found part of your identity and purpose in it.  Perhaps it was something that made you question your gifts and abilities, your call, your faith and beliefs, your worth.  In my mind, whoever coined the phrase “sticks and stones can break my bones, but words can never hurt me,” wasn’t being very realistic, because there are times when the words of someone can and do hurt.

It is my hope, however, that there have been far more times in your life where someone (or a number of people) have spoken words of truth and encouragement into your life, that have also changed you in some way.  Perhaps you have a good friend who calls you out on things when you are being a tad ridiculous.  Perhaps you have someone in your life who allows and encourages you to feel exactly what you are feeling in a moment, and the words they speak are so accepting and affirming that you feel a sense of peace that surpasses all understanding.  Perhaps they are words that remind you WHOSE you are in moments when you seem to have forgotten.  Perhaps they are words that strike a heart chord in such a way that you never look at life and the gift of a day the same way again.  Perhaps they are words that are so timely and uplifting that a greater power must have been at work.  The power of words and phrases continues to amaze me and it is my prayer for you that the words you would speak, as well as the words that would be spoken to you would be a reflection of whose you are, and would bring life.

This year we have begun using the word IMPACT to describe ourselves as leaders serving under the Department of Student Life.  We each play an important role in the life of our campus community, and individually, as well as corporately, we make an IMPACT.  When trying to come up with a name for this blog, I felt compelled to create a phrase using IMPACT as an acronym.  First off, this blog has a fairly simple title – IMPACT.  That part is not very creative.  However, just below the title you will find words that speak directly to my heart for what this blog has the potential to be.  IMPACT: Inspiring. Motivating. Passionate. Active. Community. Transformative.

Let me explain--> It is the desire of ULC to inspire and motivate each of you as you live into and serve out of who you are in your individual roles.  Everyone on the ULC staff has served in a leadership position in some way during our time at AU, and so we know how important it is to know there are people who are praying for you and acknowledging the good and difficult work you are doing.  We also have a desire for IMPACT to be a community of servants who are passionate about what they are doing, as well as actively pursuing their work as though they were serving Christ.  Colossians 3:23 says, Whatever you do, work at it with all your heart, as working for the Lord, not for human masters.”  I feel compelled to ask, who are you serving this day?

Lastly, you are all leaders in your own way – you have been selected for the role you are in and you have been given an opportunity to lead and serve those around you.  You have the ability to transform the lives you encounter because of the opportunity you’ve been given.

IMPACT Leaders 2014-2015
Friends, thank you for being you.  Thank you for giving your time, energy and self to our community.  You are appreciated.  You matter.  You make a difference.  It is my hope and prayer that this blog would inspire and motive you to be a passionate, active community of leaders who have the power to be transformative, both on our campus, and in our world. 

Until next time,
Courtney Rice
ULC Director, 2014-2015
Morrison Hall RA, 2013-2014