Tag Archive - thomas nelson

Plan B

Plan B by Pete Wilson

I’ve been looking forward to this book for a long time. I’ve known Pete through his blog for a couple of years now, and the next time I make it to Nashville for a trip, I’m definitely making a stop at CrossPoint.TV. When I first heard that he was going to be writing a book, I was excited. Then I also found out the he would be published through Thomas Nelson, a company I have a lot of respect for.

Plan B by Pete Wilson

After watching the news for the last few weeks, I think possibly more than ever, this book came out at exactly the right time. As I watch oil creep towards the beaches in the Gulf of Mexico, and as the flood waters recede from Nashville, I think many people are seeing their “Plan A” going down the drain and are wondering what to do, and I think this book really lives up to it’s title when addressing our Plan B.

Pete has done a fantastic job with this book. I think most of us go through life expecting everything to go just as we planned it. To get that great job, find that perfect companion and get married, buy a great house and raise our 2.5 kids, and retire somewhere to gracefully live out our days watching our children and grandchildren. But realistically, that isn’t always how it happens. You’ve yet to find that perfect mate, or maybe they walked out on you because they didn’t want to be married anymore. That great job you had laid you off last year and you haven’t been able to find steady work since. Maybe you’ve had kids, and one of them develops cancer, or they take a wrong turn and end up in jail. In an instant, all those things you’ve planned for go up in flames.

Pete doesn’t pull any punches in his book, nor does he admit he has all the answers. I think that’s one of the great things about the book. For everyone, our situations are a little different, and no one has all the answers, and Pete explains how to work through Plan B in our lives, but admits that he’s walking the same path as the rest of us. I love the illustrations and stories that he uses throughout the book to illustrate different aspects of our lives and how we can learn to accept things when they don’t work out the way we intended them.

I really enjoy the part where Pete talks about idols, and how Plan A in our lives for pretty much all of us turns into an idol.

Not many of us walk around saying, “I worship my stuff. I worship my job. I worship this pleasure. I worship her. I worship my body. I worship my dream.> But the trail never lies. In the end our worship, our idolatry, is more about what we do than what we say. And I think for those of us in the midst of a Plan B we’ll discover that one of our idols all along has been a picture of the way life should be. Our idol was an expectation or a dream.

I have never thought about that before, and I think it’s very true, at least in my life. Pete also talks about how God uses our Plan B in our lives. God will always take these situations in our lives where we have pain and struggle, and will never fail at the opportunity to show us how much he loves us. God never destroys our lives, but he does allow us to make our own decisions, even when those decisions take us farther away from God.

Pete also discusses our timing versus God’s timing, especially in a Plan B situation. As Pete says, we often wonder where God is, why are things going so badly, and why do I continue to struggle through this pain for years and years. Too often, we want that pain to be over as quickly as possible, and we scream at God when it doesn’t happen in our timing. Pete talks about the fact that God’s timing is nothing like ours, and if there is a reason the pain is allowed to go on, maybe God is working in your life and his timing isn’t ready for you to be out of this season in life. A tough thing to swallow, that’s for sure, but very true.

I especially liked the illustration Pete used that explains why, when we’re in a painful situation, we think God isn’t there. In all reality, maybe we’ve pulled away from God, and he’s been right here all along, just waiting on us to come back to him. He’s never left us. This was something I’ve never really considered, and too many times I’ve asked God where he was, why wasn’t he fixing this, why weren’t my plans coming true. When in all reality, maybe I’ve been the one running from God and he’s never left me, but instead, I’ve tried to leave him.

This book was absolutely fantastic, and I would highly recommend everyone pick this up. Even if you don’t read it right now, or things are going according to your plan for life; sooner or later, you’re going to run into a Plan B, and I think this book is an excellent instruction manual to help you deal with and makes it through those situations in your life. Pete has done a fantastic job with this book, and I’m really looking forward to reading the next book that he writes.

Disclosure of Material Connection: I received this book free from Thomas Nelson Publishers as part of their Book Review Blogger program. I was not required to write a positive review. The opinions I have expressed are my own. I am disclosing this in accordance with the Federal Trade Commission’s 16 CFR, Part 255: “Guides Concerning the Use of Endorsements and Testimonials in Advertising.”

I'll Make You An Offer You Can't Refuse

I’ll Make You an Offer You Can’t Refuse: Insider Tips from a Former Mob Boss by Michael Franzese was a book I was very excited to read and review. The concept of the book sounded really interesting and I’m always looking for more tips when it comes to furthering my business knowledge.

Unfortunately, this book underperformed a little bit. It could easily just be me, since many of the reviews seem favorable for the book. For some reason the book just didn’t keep my attention like I thought it would, and I have not been able to finish it even though I’ve had the book for about 6 months. Franzese’s wisdom about the criminal underworld and how it relates to business is very consistent and accurate, and his stories specifically related to the mob are interesting and give a great insight into an organization that few ever experience, and even fewer live to tell about.

I liked this book well enough, and to some people I would think it would be very interesting. Unfortunately, it didn’t hold my attention like I expected, and I didn’t have a strong desire to pick it back up and finish it. I think there are plenty of people that would love this book, and I would still encourage you to pick it up, but it didn’t end up being a book I fell in love with.

Disclosure of Material Connection: I received this book free from Thomas Nelson Publishers as part of their Book Review Blogger program. I was not required to write a positive review. The opinions I have expressed are my own. I am disclosing this in accordance with the Federal Trade Commission’s 16 CFR, Part 255: “Guides Concerning the Use of Endorsements and Testimonials in Advertising.”

A Million Miles in a Thousand Years

[A report]
book coverSo, as part of the sweet program I am a part of with Thomas Nelson Publishers, I get the great opportunity to read books and write reviews on them. In return, I get the books for free. This book review is particularly special, in that I received Donald Miller’s new book, A Million Miles in a Thousand Years before it was released to the public. Not only that, but they also included a second copy for me to give away to someone else, and so it was given to my fellow student ministries staff and the student ministries director at my church.

Honestly, I thought this book was amazing. It hit very much at home for me since I have been working on defining my life a lot over the past year, and working on making good changes. I haven’t read any of Donald Miller’s other books, but this one makes me want to go back and read them all.

The premise of A Million Miles is that your life is a story, and is your story actually interesting? Don give a ton of examples from his life regarding how he had been living his life and just letting it pass him by, until a movie producer and writer contact him and want to turn one of his previous books into a movie. Through this process, he learns that life is a story, and your story can either be boring or it can be exciting, full of great chapters and awesome adventures. I’m not going to spoil it by telling you how Don changes his life based on this, but you definitely need to read it and find out, and it may give you a ton of insight into changes you need to make in your life to make your story more interesting.

One of the parts that struck me the most is when Don comes home and looks around his house, and it’s like no one lives there. He says his house looked like a stage on which fake props had been set. There are no pictures of anything anywhere in the house. Nothing that shows a story that he was living, with chapters from amazing events in his life. It’s basically like he wasn’t living a story at all, or it was so boring that there was nothing to display from it. This hit home for me as I sat reading this in my living room, and I looked around, and realized that I didn’t have a whole lot of pictures or mementos as well. I wasn’t living a story.

Don’s writing is very conversational in this book, and it is a great way to tell his story. At times he’s depreciating of himself, all of it making for a great vehicle for this book. I’ve taken what’s been said in this book to heart. It’s not meant to be a self-help book in any manner, and I don’t think it’s written in that way, but it does greatly make you think about how you’re living your life and if it’s worthwhile, or boring and pointless. I highly recommend you go out and pick up this book and read it. It will at least make you think…

What’s Your Story?

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