Welcome to Insight for Growth℠!

 by renidbumpas@gmail.com

“Surely you don’t disbelieve the prophecies, because you had a hand in bringing them about yourself? You don’t really suppose, do you, that all your adventures and escapes were managed by mere luck, just for your sole benefit? You are a very fine person, Mr. Baggins, and I am very fond of you; but you are only quite a little fellow in a wide world after all!”  J.R.R. Tolkien, The Hobbit

About our Insight for Growth Founder, Reni Bumpas

Thanks for stopping by! If you don’t know me, I’ll share a little about myself and why I started Insight for Growth℠. 

If you want to know the meaning behind the logo, click here.

While this site is NOT about me…but a place to share some things I think might be helpful, if you’re like me, you like to know a little something about who’s behind the name. It adds to or takes away from their credibility, helping you know whether or not you want to give your time and attention to them.

That’s why I love reading referrals before I try a new restaurant, hotel, product, book, or whatever… because I HATE wasting time and resources on something that’s not worth it. The way I see it, we all have limits of both, and I want to steward both wisely.

So…the purpose of this post is to introduce myself to help you know the paths that have led me to share the insights I share here. And to let you know some of the areas where you can expect to find  insights.

As a 52 year-old woman, it’s certainly not as if I’ve finally arrived and know so so much. If anything, I continue to discover how little I know. And I shouldn’t be surprised to continue to learn that I didn’t know what I didn’t know.

But having been privileged to be a wife, mom, teacher, coach, consultant, writer, editor, speaker, and executive director, I’ve come across MANY valuable resources  in my pursuit to do whatever I do with excellence. Life in each of those roles would have been so much easier if someone had said, “Oh, I heard you’re a _____ now. Here’s a resource list with links, and everything, or training.”

So…my hope is to make life a little easier for others…to share some of what I’ve learned…to help individuals, families, and organizations reach their potential.

Early years as a broken girl with no peace

I grew up mostly in Oxford, MS, the oldest of three children in a busted up home.

I thought everyone else in the world was happy besides me, and if I just had a happy home with a mom and dad who loved each other and everyone got along, and friends who liked me, then I’d be happy too.

Though I’m convinced now that my parents loved me, when I was growing up, I wasn’t sure they did.

(On a side note, a book that helped me understand the gap between my parents telling me they loved me and my not feeling loved was Ross Campbell, MD’s How to Really Love Your Child. Though I read it to help me be a better mother, it actually gave me much insight that was a vehicle of healing and personal development.)

God made me the kind of person who values harmony. Ironic that my name, Reni, which is a derivative of Irene, actually means peace.

College and a new life with peace

“Those who are wise will take all this to heart. They will see in our history the faithful love of the Lord.” Psalm 107:43

As a freshman in college, I became a Christian. For some, knowing I’m a Christian may raise all kinds of red flags, for others it may mean nothing, and others may want to give me a hug. Until they talk to me. These days, when you say you’re a Christian, it can mean all kinds of things…

So, to be clear, let me explain.

The lack of peace and love I felt drove me to seek it by trying to win the approval of others–with writing and leadership endeavors at school, my first jobs in the work force as a high schooler, and then with my appearance.

Nothing I did satisfied the emptiness and longing that was like a vacuum in my soul.

My freshman year of college, the God who revealed Himself in the Bible and in the person and work of Jesus Christ, revealed Himself to me, assuring me that He loved me with a never-letting go, stick-to-you kind of love, and that if I would simply surrender myself to Him, He would love me like that. That basically, He would be my God and Father, and I would be His girl. And so I accepted His invitation to be His.

From that point on, my chief aim became to know Him and love Him, and to become more like His Son, and to love people the way Jesus did.

So, if you’re interested in knowing more about what it means to be a Christian and how to grow as a Christian, you may find the resources here helpful.

I graduated in 1988 from Mississippi State with a bachelor’s in educational psychology, and certification to teach psychology, sociology, and English. Upon graduation, I spent the next four years working in Student Affairs at Hinds Community College in Raymond, MS.

Many of the certifications and trainings I now hold were first introduced to me in those early years, and using them personally, with teams, and later with my family deepened my appreciation of their value.

As a wife and mother

“God places the lonely in families…” Psalm 68:6

One of God’s sweetest blessings began July 31, 1988, when He introduced me to my best friend and husband, Wally Bumpas, Jr. Though Wally has loved me unlike any other person, and beautifully fulfills the biblical admonishment for husbands to love their wives like Christ loved the church, and gave Himself for her, he is still a sinner. As am I.

For two sinners to live together is difficult. To actually enjoy one another and keep enjoying one another and working together as one is almost impossible, apart from grace. God has given us this kind of grace. Though it’s a bit scary to write about it publicly, because that little superstitious kid voice tells you you’re going to jinx it.

Still, there are insights and wisdom God has given us along the way that we would be remiss not to share.

And being a parent is not for the weary of heart. It is, as someone put it, “like having your heart walk around outside your body, completely unprotected.” 

So, I will share resources that have been helpful in both of these roles, as well as some excerpts from prayer journals. Oftentimes I’ve found the times I’ve grown the most have been the times I’ve struggled the most.

But it was during those dark times I often felt most alone. My hope is that in sharing these struggles and excerpts, it will help you feel you are not alone.

As a writer

My mom introduced me to journaling when I was eight, just after my parents divorced. Years later, as a lonely high school sophomore, I walked the halls between classes, speaking to no one, wondering if anyone was as lonely as I was. For perhaps the first time ever, I looked into the faces of the people I passed by. Really looked. I saw their humanness. I wondered what their lives were like. If they were lonely like me. If they ever felt like the misfit I did. And it hit me. If I could write a book capturing the gaping hole I felt inside, perhaps it would help others feel they were not so alone.

Years later, in a scene from the movie Shadowlands, C.S. Lewis tells a student, “we read to know we’re not alone.” That sentiment captured my heart. I wanted to write to help people know they’re not alone.

God blessed me with a wealth of good teachers and writers who taught me much about grammar and writing. Growing up in a college town like Oxford had the major plus of being surrounded by educated people who sharpened my writing skills, especially Dr. Lynne Murchison, who taught my English classes in 11th and 12 grades.

One of my teachers said, “You can’t be a good writer without being a good reader.”

By the time I was in college, my tastes had graduated from Stephen King and Harlequins to Elisabeth Elliott and much nonfiction. I also loved allegory I discovered in Hind’s Feet in High Places and The Pilgrim’s Progress

Soon afterward, I discovered C.S. Lewis, Jane Austen, and L. M. Montgomery’s Anne of Green Gables as well as kindled a new interest in Charles Dickens as well as John Grisham and Nicholas Sparks.

In 2005, I joined an online critique group called the Pennwrights. The “Pennies” as we fondly referred to ourselves, taught me and helped me sharpen the craft of writing fiction as I wrote Running Away to Home.

Books they encouraged us to read that I found most helpful include Renni Browne and Dave King’s Self-Editing for Fiction WritersDebra Dixon’s GMC: Goal, Motivation, ConflictStephen King’s On WritingSol Stein’s On Writingand Nancy Kress’s Beginnings, Middles, and Ends.

As a non-profit executive director

In August 1999, a year after God called my husband to pastor First Presbyterian Church, Dyersburg, TN, the school our church started hosted a community-wide conference with Dr. Peter Marshall as the speaker.

As Dr. Marshall spoke about the history of revival, he explained that revival was always accompanied by mercy ministries, and he began reeling off potential mercy ministries we might have. In the midst of a chain of possibilities, he mentioned “pregnancy center,” and at that moment, a noticeable hush went over the room, because all the others, we were all basically nodding that we already had them.

Within a few months a steering committee was formed, and because no one else was willing, a friend and I agreed to serve as co-chairs. Then she moved. But God blessed. Everyone pitched in, and within six months the steering committee transitioned to the first board of Life Choices, and I was privileged to serve as chair.

Though I knew nothing beforehand about serving on a nonprofit, much less as the chair, God was faithful to surround me with people with expertise: a couple of CPAs, an attorney, and others who had served on nonprofit boards, a manual we followed to the letter, and similar pregnancy centers who could pass on their training.

We contracted with Life Steward to learn much about successful event planning. It was beautiful to see God bring together people from a variety of churches and denominations work together to birth Life Choices. The Grand Opening was just four days after one of the darkest times in our nation’s history, September 15, 2001.

Then, fast-forward to 2006, quite unexpectedly, God called me to serve as executive director (ED). Before being called as ED, I had NO IDEA all that I didn’t know. I participated in countless trainings to learn about nonprofit governance, best practices, fund-raising, grant-writing, HR, marketing, donor relations, and more. It seemed every time I turned around, I was learning more that I didn’t know, so I kept reading, participating in webinars, and going to conferences and trainings.

Just four months after I stepped in as ED, we began the process to convert our pregnancy center to a medical clinic. Operating under the medical license of a local physician required our entire team, including our board become educated about best practices for a medical clinic.

Additionally, as a clinic that contracted with numerous schools in West Tennessee to provide positive youth development and abstinence education, it became critical that I learn how to walk the tight rope of a ministry serving in public schools with public funds, and leading our team, including our board, how to do likewise.

One of the things I found most helpful was focusing on the goals and values we have in common rather than the ways we are different.

As a consultant and life coach

In 2013, I began consulting with Sparrow Solutions Group, a training and education company we had worked with, to do board and executive director consulting and training. Eager to share some of what I’d learned with others, after retiring from Life Choices in 2014, I began doing more consulting. And more trainings and certifications.

In 2017, God called Wally and me to French Camp Academy  (FCA) to serve as house parents, and I also serve in a new position as Life Coach Coordinator. Almost a year before we came to FCA, the board had passed an initiative “to assess students emotionally, physically, spiritually, and vocationally and help them develop a Christ-centered life plan where their gifts, abilities, and talents will be enhanced to prepare them for the next stage of life.”

That spring, I developed a training program, and over the summer over 75 staff participated in three different trainings to become FCA Certified Life Coaches. The training includes MBTI® as well as discussions about spiritual gifts, SHAPE (check out the book S.H.A.P.E. by Erik Rees!!) and life purpose, and also includes coaching basics like asking good questions, listening skills, and setting SMART goals.

The senior class of 2018 is the first class to be matched with FCA Life Coaches. While it’s not possible for me to coach a ton of people, I have provided links and resources for encouragement and support.

Thanks for reading.

God Shaped You for a Purpose

If you were going to take a trip what would you need?

  • A suitcase or some kind of travel bag?
  • A vehicle or some mode of transportation?
  • Clothing
  • Toiletries

You might think of other things. But did you think about how you would need to know WHERE you were going? And then you’d probably need directions or a GPS?

Living without purpose is like taking a trip without a destination in mind. You’ll never know if you’re on the right road. And you’ll always be trying to figure out where you’re going.

Living with purpose gives you confidence that you’re on the right track, and that in itself gives you a sense of fulfillment and can help you get there, even through life’s most treacherous paths.

If you’ve ever wondered why you’re here, why you even exist,you are NOT alone!

Did you know that the wisest man who ever lived–at least the Bible calls him that– wrote a whole book about trying to find purpose in life?

In the beginning of Ecclesiastes, he’s convinced that in his search for meaning, that life is pretty much meaningless. But by the end of the book, after talking about how he’s enjoyed everything this world has to offer when it comes to pleasure, riches, and philosophy, he concludes that meaning in life is found in knowing God and living for Him.

The Bible records clear purpose statements of both Jesus and Paul.

  • Jesus: “I have come to seek and to save that which was lost.”
  • Paul: “We proclaim Him, admonishing every man and teaching every man with all wisdom, so that we may present every man complete in Christ. For this purpose also I labor, striving according to His power, which mightily works within me.” 1:28-29

What about you?

Rick Warren’s best-sellingThe Purpose-Driven Life has sold millions of copies for a reason.

S.H.A.P.E.

In preparing to coach high school students to think about their purpose, a friend introduced me to the acronym S.H.A.P.E., her psychology professor had taught her in college.

  • S is for Spiritual gifts
  • H is for Heart or what we are passionate about
  • A is for Abilities
  • P is for Personality
  • E is for Experiences

My friend had no idea where the SHAPE acronym came from. As I began searching online, I found an inventory I adapted for our students, and from what I can tell, it looked like the acronym was adapted by Rick Warren also, so I gave him credit on the SHAPE assessment  inventory, which I’m also providing here as a resource.

I love how this acronym takes into consideration a complete picture of the whole person. Can you think of any part of who you are that it leaves out? I can’t.

Another aspect I like about the SHAPE acronym is that it takes into consideration that you may have abilities that don’t fit your passions. Or you may have passions that drive you to develop or learn skills and abilities. Or how your experiences may have driven your passions. All this insight is so helpful as you determine your purpose.

If you’ll take the time to think through your SHAPE, it can help you determine your purpose and write a personal life purpose statement.

I recently discovered that S.H.A.P.E. is actually the title of a book by Erik Rees, and the forward is by Rick Warren. I’m super impressed by Erik Rees’s site, One Arrow Ventures. His S.H.A.P.E. book has great reviews, so I’ve ordered a copy, but based on what I see, I would recommend it.

The themes on the One Arrow Ventures site of helping people find and fulfill their purpose fits the values of Insight for Growth.

After you complete the SHAPE inventory, if you’ll write a personal life purpose statement, that statement can be like your personal road map to help you as you make decisions, both small and large.

Writing Your Life Purpose Statement

About five hundred years ago when a group of pastors and church leaders got together in London, England, to come up with a summary of beliefs that Christians hold in common, they started with man’s purpose, and they said it is to “glorify God and enjoy Him forever.”

Seeing that people often set glorifying God at odds with enjoying Him, pastor and author John Piper set out to understand how these two seemingly opposing motivations could be held together so closely.

In doing so, he recognized what others before him, like Jonathan Edwards and C.S. Lewis, and indeed many of the psalmists had described: that we are most satisfied in Him when we are glorifying Him. And He is most glorified in us when we are enjoying Him.

And so Piper modified the answer slightly to “Man’s chief end is to glorify God by enjoying Him forever.”

A Christian could easily adopt either of these purpose statements as his own, making it personal by saying, “My purpose in life is to glorify God by enjoying Him,” and it would be fine. Awesome actually. It could be the driving force of your life that instills ownership, that fuels your passion for whatever you do.

Walt Disney’s purpose statement was simple, “to create happiness for others.” That purpose then became the driving force behind everything they did at Disneyland. They could say, “clean up the place, sweep the place, work all night, but whatever you do is contributing to creating happiness for others.”

So, you could simply say that your purpose is to glorify God by enjoying Him forever.

But what if you made it a little more specific? What if you considered your SHAPE—your spiritual gifts, your heart or what you are passionate about, your abilities, personality, and experiences, and recognized that every bit of who you are has been shaped by God to make you uniquely you, with your own unique purpose?

How has God uniquely shaped you to enjoy and glorify Him? What things do you enjoy that not everyone enjoys? What things can you do that not everyone can do?

In the 1981 movie Chariots of Fire, Eric Liddell, who broke the 1924 World Record when he won the Gold Olympic medal in the 400M, tells his sister Jenny, “I believe God made me for a purpose. But He also made me fast, and when I run, I feel His pleasure.”

How are you uniquely able to glorify Him because of how He has shaped you? When do you uniquely feel His pleasure? When I first heard the acronym SHAPE, I wanted to add a D at the end for Designed to capture the reality that every part of a person’s SHAPE has been Designed or SHAPED by God.

As you begin to work on your own personal purpose statement, reflect over the SHAPE inventory you completed. You may also find it helpful to go through the steps in Dr. Julie Connor’s article included in the link provided, Write a Personal Purpose Statement.

Here are a couple of ways you might begin your personal purpose statement:

  • My purpose is…
  • I exist to…

You’ll want to keep it short, no more than a couple of sentences so that you can remember it! If someone asks you what your purpose it, you should be able to say it. If you can’t, it’s either too long or too complicated, or you haven’t owned it. Remember the KISS principle: Keep it Simple, Sweetie!

As you complete the SHAPE inventory, think about where you find your greatest joy. If you are a Christian, pray about how you can glorify God and consider how what gives you the greatest joy may be what glorifies Him the most.

Then brainstorm, using positive words, present tense and start brainstorming and creating drafts. Scribble as much as you want. Get a thesaurus to help. After you’re happy with it, try it on for awhile–share it with close friends and family. Modify if you want. Then post and share on social media and other places.

Once you have your purpose statement written, use it as a gauge in your decision-making, asking yourself which choice is more likely to help you achieve your purpose, or which is most consistent with your purpose.

My purpose is to use my love for writing and encouraging others to help people see how great God’s love is.

What’s yours?

Celebrating the Gift You Are

Coaching girls

 by renidbumpas@gmail.com

personality-differences-300x200

 “I praise You, because I am fearfully and wonderfully made.” Ps. 139:14

I still remember the first time I heard those words from David’s psalm. Surrounded by hundreds of beautiful college girls at South Padre Island, TX, for a spring break trip with a campus ministry, I could not relate. I did not think God had made me wonderfully at all. I didn’t particularly care for how I looked—especially when I compared myself to the beauty queens or tomboys. And as far as my personality, people were nice to me, but it seemed more like they were putting up with me, not that anyone especially sought me out to be my friend.

Four months before this trip, I’d convinced myself I had nothing to offer…and so I had decided to take my life.

In that critical moment, however, God had persuaded me that He had offered everything for me. So, rather than taking my life, I gave it to Him.

And thus began my celebration of life. And not just life in general, but my life.

As I listened to the cute young speaker share how she’d recently married her own prince, I thought how easy it was for her to say she was wonderfully made. But as she went on about God how had created each one of us with our own stories and families, the shape of our face, eye color, and body-build, as well as our personalities, the message began to sink in that each and every one of us were made in His image to reflect His glory.

Sally Lloyd Jones captures the idea beautifully in her Jesus Storybook Bible after God breathed life into Adam and Eve:

            “When they opened their eyes, the first thing they ever saw was God’s face. And when God saw them, He was like a new dad. ‘You look like Me,’ He said. ‘You’re the most beautiful thing I’ve ever made!’

            God loved them with all of His heart. And they were lovely because He loved them.”

I began to believe that God looked at me like a new dad seeing his own face when he holds his bundle of joy. I began to believe that I truly was fearfully and wonderfully made. And I praised Him. My heart rejoiced over Him with singing.

Isn’t it amazing to stop and consider how God delights in you? To muse over the reality that He rejoices over you with singing? That you are the apple of His eye? To know that He did not spare His own Son, but gave Him up for you?

It was that spring that I first took the MBTI®, or Myers-Briggs Type Indicator®, instrument. For the first time ever, I gained insight into what I’d previously seen as quirks and shortcomings, and I also began to celebrate not only my strengths, but to have a deeper appreciation of the gifts and preferences of others. Rather than coveting the gifts of others, I began to rejoice over them and see how God had created each person beautifully and uniquely as He wove us together in a beautiful tapestry of life.

I’d always been organizationally challenged and could easily overextend myself as I enthusiastically went from one activity to the next, wanting to say ‘yes’ to everything. The insight I gained from MBTI® helped me to appreciate how He has gifted some to be more organized naturally and to keep their feet planted and to develop structures and refinement for visionaries and idea people like me. This awareness helped me intentionally hone my enthusiasm and energy to areas where I was most passionate and to look to my personality counterparts for structure.

MBTI certified logo

But what I’ve come to appreciate most about the MBTI® has taken years to uncover. Like a precious gift, it is a tool God has used to open my heart to celebrate with deeper joy my husband, children, coworkers, board members, and all kinds of people God has placed in my life.

While the MBTI® describes sixteen distinct personality types, understanding the nuts and bolts of the theory can be the key to beginning the celebration of one another.

NOTE: If you haven’t taken the MBTI® and verified your type with a certified professional, let me encourage you to do that. There are all kinds of online instruments; however, the MBTI® has gone through extensive studies for reliability and validity, having been used for 50 years. Being trademark protected means it is a psychological instrument you can trust. If you don’t see the trademark, you may find yourself getting information that confuses you or that doesn’t seem consistent, reliable, or valid. http://www.myersbriggs.org/my-mbti-personality-type/mbti-basics/different-from-other-questionnaires.htm

Isabel Briggs Myers developed the instrument after she and her mother, Katharine C. Briggs, studied and applied their understanding of the ideas of psychologist Carl Jung, as they observed personalities of their family and friends.

One of my favorite aspects of learning about the MBTI® is how Jung theorized that we all have certain preferences we’re born with—like being left or right handed. That one hand is dominant and we use it naturally with ease. We use our other hand as well—it helps us like an auxiliary. But to use it for a primary task would take considerable concentration and effort. However, with practice and nurture, we can become better at using it for that task and even develop proficiency. For example, a right-handed painter can become so skilled in using his left hand for corners and edging that he can use it as easily and naturally for painting as he does his right hand. But, he is still right-hand dominant naturally.

personality-3x4

Our personality preferences are like that. There are eight preferences, arranged in four pairs. With each one, we have a natural preference that we’re born with. However, if we practice using or nurturing a preference, particularly in a work or school situation, we can become so good at it, we can think of that preference as natural.

For example, the last pair of letters, J-P, has to do with how you approach the outside world. Do you seek to organize and control it or to simply experience it?

My natural preference (P) is organizationally challenged. Some might call me scattered. I actually just like to keep my options open and be flexible. However, because of the negative reinforcement I got for typically being disorganized and late, I developed ways to compensate. I learned to use tools like Excel and a filing system and a calendar with notifications. And a timer. So, people who don’t know me well are often surprised to hear me say that I’m not naturally organized. However, for me, trying to be organized is like writing with my left hand. I can do it, but it takes much more energy and time than it would for someone who is organized naturally.

At the same time, as I began developing organizational skills and gained some success, organizing became fun for me. In some areas I’m quite proficient. Taking the MBTI® with the mindset of all the benefits of organizing would skew my results. It’s only going to report what I indicate as I use the instrument.

In the same way, people who are P-types may love the liberty they feel in some more flexible positions.  But when they learn of the liability that can be created if they say or do something they shouldn’t, they may see the value of structure and a systematic plan. If they take the MBTI® after they’ve just gone through training that puts a structure or plan in place, they could feel so positive about structure and organization compared to the disorganization that may be more typical, that they input responses that causes skewed the results.

Likewise, a J-type who naturally wants to organize and control the environment may come to appreciate the flexibility and last-minute resourcefulness of their P-counter-types. They may find themselves wishing they were less-controlling, and as they learn to let go and find that it can actually be fun to loosen up, they could skew the results if they took the MBTI® in that mindset.

The purpose of the MBTI® is to help you assess your natural preferences—what comes easiest and most naturally for you—like which hand you write with naturally. As you understand your natural preferences, you are able to determine your MBTI® Type, which unlocks a world of self and other awareness and understanding.

That’s why, when you take the MBTI® with a certified practitioner, one of the first things we tell you before you complete the assessment is to not think about how you are at work or school, where you may have developed or nurtured skills that might make it difficult for you to choose which word is most like you. It is in your discovery of who you are naturally that you can most benefit from and assist those around you. This understanding becomes a tool to help you celebrate more deeply all the people God has placed in your home, work, and everywhere else in your life, as well who God has created you to be.

For example, one of the wisest decisions I ever made as an executive director was hiring an assistant and a development manager who could compensate and complement for my being a P-type. By hiring a J, I didn’t have to work so hard at organizing, because I knew it came naturally for her, and I could depend on her to help me. Communicating openly about her being a J and me being a P strengthened our relationship and the fun we had working together as a team.

Most people are familiar with the terms represented by first pair of letters, E-I, but they probably don’t know that Jung coined the terms, ‘extrovert’ and ‘introvert,’ and unfortunately, the terms have been widely misused and misunderstood. People commonly think of extroverts as outgoing and talk a lot and introverts as shy and quiet, when in reality extroverts may in fact be really good listeners, and introverts may not be shy at all and can be quite talkative when it comes to a topic about which they are knowledgeable and or passionate.

Knowing that extroverts typically think out loud and learn best through talking things through and discussing, while introverts work out their ideas by reflecting on them privately is important information for everyone on your team and in your family. Extroverts are typically impulsive—acting or speaking first, and then thinking about it later, while introverts tend to take their time in making a decision—thinking first, then acting or speaking. Extroverts tend to be doers—they tend to be action-oriented. Introverts tend to be thinkers—they are more deliberate in what they say and do.

As an extrovert who is married to an introvert with three introverted children and one extroverted child, I celebrate both extroverts and introverts. I easily say and do things I later regret because of my impulsivity. My husband may get a text or an email and never respond simply because he wants to think about it first and isn’t quick to act.

So, I’ve learned that sometimes I need to take a little time before responding. Or when talking to someone, to clarify that I’m simply thinking out loud. And I’ve encouraged my husband that the person on the other end can’t read his mind—that they don’t know that he’s thinking about it, and they need to hear from him.

And since people tend to interpret silence negatively, I encourage us both to respond with a simple, “Let me give it some thought and get back to you,” which helps us work within our natural preference while being considerate of others.

As an ED, being aware of the introverts on my board who were going to want more information before making a decision gave me valuable insight and helped me be better prepared and to send them resources or materials they could read. Being aware that I am an extrovert and that both my board and staff might see me as impulsive helped me to slow down and make sure that everyone had the information they needed before moving forward with various projects. It helped me to know that introverts weren’t trying to make my life difficult. They were being true to who they were. Recognizing that God made each one of us and that in His wisdom, He sets people in places to serve Him, helped me to celebrate what each one brought to the table.

In work, family, and play, there are times we need to be quick on our feet and other times we need to take a moment to reflect before acting or speaking. Just being aware of this difference and knowing our natural preference can help us look at a situation and make a decision based on the needs of the moment. Knowing that what comes easiest for us is not always best can help us seek out those team members who have our opposite preference and sharpen us, enabling us to make better decisions for our organization.

Whether God made you a J or P, or an E or I, He celebrates you, and so do I. He created you with your natural preferences and likely you have nurtured other skills and preferences through life experiences, but there is only one YOU. God placed you where you are at this time for His purpose. (Acts 17:26)

Reni Bumpas
MBTI® Certified Facilitator

Note: A modified version of this post was first published at SparrowSolutionsGroup.com.