I’ve been thinking a lot about focus recently. And I’m starting to believe two things about it.
- Focus costs something
- Focus brings consistency
To illustrate this, let me share a story of when I severely lacked focus.
Lacking Focus, Lacking Consistency
One year ago, right before my 3rd daughter was born, my family was drowning in activity. At the time, we had 4 side hustles, I was working 50+ hour weeks at my full-time job, I was really involved in our local church, and we were getting ready for kid #3.
My lack of focus caused a lot of disorganization for my family, and it made doing anything consistently a challenge.
Especially family devotions.
Leading my family spiritually was something I knew I should do, but I just couldn’t seem to bring myself to consistently make family devotions happen.
I would do family devotions in spurts. One day here, one week here, then before you knew it, three months had passed and we hadn’t done anything. This was my pattern for over 8 years.
So, as busy as we were as a family last year, I didn’t think we were busy with the main things we needed to be busy with. And that was my fault.
So in October of last year, I started taking inventory of things that needed to go and things that needed to stay. I cut out a lot of our activity and trimmed down our side hustles.
The Cost and Consistency of Focus
The decision to focus cost me three things:
-
My finances. There were actual $’s lost in terms of sunk costs from our side businesses
-
My laziness. It forced me to admit I was being lazy in some areas
-
My pride. It forced me to admit that I actually needed to change
But it brought more consistency to my life than I thought was possible.
I started focusing on doing regular family devotions. They were not great at first… awkward even, but we started gaining traction.
Now, almost a year later, we are almost done reading through the Bible together as a family. And for our family, it’s one of the sweetest times we spend together each day. Praise God.
Focus has a way of bringing consistency to something you’re working on.
And the word I think is similar to this kind of focus is working heartily (Colossians 3:23). This is a wholehearted, vigorous, and enthusiastic labor for the Lord and not for man.
But this type of working heartily costs something. This is not a lazy-man’s effort. This effort is more like the ant’s diligence from Proverbs 6, one where she’s making the choice to work while the sluggard snoozes away. It requires work, and it requires change.
Focus and Fitness
Working heartily and focus have huge implications for fitness.
What would happen if you focused on your specific fitness goal? What if you took inventory on things that needed to go and things that needed to stay so you could focus on fitness? And you worked at it heartily?
And I’m not suggesting a half-hearted focus… like a “oh yeah, I probably should eat healthier/lift more/go to bed earlier” type sentiment… one that inevitably leads to spurts of activity one week here, another week there, then three months later you’re wondering where fitness went.
I’m talking about a heartily focus.
One that’s full of vigor, effort, and enthusiasm. One that is wholehearted and sincere. And one that actually costs you something and requires change… where you are Eustace the dragon staring down Aslan’s claws.
What would happen?
Well, I bet if you worked at it heartily, gave it your focus and accepted the cost… consistency would follow.
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