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Friday, September 13, 2024

Write the Vision -- Play the Movie


A few weeks ago, I spoke to my bonus granddaughter, Addie, about "playing the movie". She is determined to be a nurse practitioner. This is her high school senior year and she is already casting vision about her future.

"Playing the movie" is the practice of seeing the end before making decisions. It’s like “think before you speak or act”, because the outcome might be good or it can be very, very bad.

I encouraged Addie to "Play the movie!" That means being forward thinking about her future -- to be absolutely relentless in making decisions -- no wishy washy "maybe I will or maybe I won't" mindset.

To cast the vision is like "playing the movie" of envisioning the outcome before taking action. It’s also like the law of cause and effect. For example: "I would love to stay up and watch that TV special, but how will I feel tomorrow if I stay up late? Or, "This dress looks great on me, but how will it feel next month when I have to pay the credit card bill?"

What if someone "played the movie” before being tempted to steal that item from the store. Maybe "playing the movie" would keep them from making a bad decision that would cause them to go to jail, or even worse, to lose their family and reputation.

In the middle of an argument, we may want to blow off steam, but when we "play the movie" we'll ask ourselves "Where will this end up if I say that? Silence is golden. I'll choose silence."

What if Addie, our soon-to-be nursing student, couldn’t deal with so much studying because she wanted to have more freedom to hang out with her friends? BUT, she "played the movie"! She saw herself in the movie foregoing “the fun” because her future is far more important than the temporary fun.

She saw herself graduating nursing school and scoring that job in a well-known cardiologist’s office and she did so well that she soon became a nurse practitioner and achieved many awards and accolades.

Playing that movie would help her to stay the course and press through because it would be worth the sacrifice in the end.

What if they “played the movie” before buying the fishing boat on credit? Maybe the movie showed that they really didn’t have enough time to spend at the lake or the temptations it would be to miss church on the weekends or the extra hours that they would have to work to pay off the boat on credit and the hours away from the family because of those extra hours working?

I'm owning this concept of “playing the movie” because it gives me a reality check! Just maybe “playing the movie” can be a significant principle that will keep us on track in a positive way and keep us dialed into God's ways that are so much higher than our ways!

Proverbs 21:20-22 “The wise man saves for the future, the foolish man spends whatever he gets. The man who tries to be good, loving and kind finds life, righteousness, and honor.”

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