Wednesday, July 8, 2026

Enough With The Hate: we may disagree on policies, but we must never forget we are all Americans together.

ENOUGH WITH THE HATE

You Do Not Have to Agree With Donald Trump to Stop Trying to Destroy Him

By Bill Conley

America's Favorite Life Coach

There comes a point when disagreement stops being disagreement.

There comes a point when criticism stops being criticism.

There comes a point when political opposition becomes something much darker, much more personal, and, quite frankly, much more consuming.

We are there.

For years, I have watched people speak about President Donald J. Trump with a level of anger, bitterness, disgust, and outright hatred that I find difficult to understand.

I am not talking about disagreeing with a policy.

Disagree.

I am not talking about questioning a decision.

Question it.

I am not talking about debating immigration, taxes, tariffs, foreign policy, government spending, healthcare, education, or the role of the federal government.

Debate all of it.

That is America.

That is freedom.

That is part of living in a constitutional republic where citizens are allowed to have strong opinions and express them.

But seriously, people, what has happened to us?

Some people cannot hear the name Donald Trump without becoming angry.

They cannot see his picture without making a cruel comment.

They cannot watch him speak without looking for something to mock.

They cannot hear about an accomplishment without immediately searching for a reason to dismiss it.

They cannot acknowledge one positive quality.

Not one.

Nothing.

Zero.

Think about that.

We are talking about another human being.

A father.

A grandfather.

A husband.

A businessman.

A political leader.

The President of the United States.

The Commander in Chief.

Yet there are people who speak about him as though he is not even human.

They ridicule his hair.

They criticize his weight.

They mock his voice.

They imitate his mannerisms.

They attack his family.

They question his intelligence.

They analyze every facial expression.

They dissect every sentence.

They assign motives to his every action.

They take a few words, a photograph, a clip, or a headline and build an entire story around it.

Then they share it.

They repost it.

They repeat it.

They add another insult.

Another cruel comment.

Another joke.

Another attack.

And somehow they believe Donald Trump is the one who looks bad?

I want to ask a very simple question.

What is all this hatred doing to you?

Seriously.

What is it doing to your heart?

What is it doing to your mind?

What is it doing to your relationships?

What is it doing to your peace?

What is it doing to the way you see your fellow Americans?

You say you hate Donald Trump.

Okay.

But you have never met him.

You have never sat across a kitchen table from him.

You have never had dinner with him.

You have never traveled with him.

You have never spent a private afternoon talking with him.

You have never looked into his eyes and asked him what he truly believes.

You have never been inside his mind.

You do not know his private fears.

You do not know every conversation he has with his children.

You do not know what keeps him awake at night.

You do not know every burden he carries as President of the United States.

Yet some of you speak as though you know the man better than his own family.

How?

Where did you get your information?

A television network?

A newspaper?

A TikTok video?

Facebook?

Instagram?

A podcast?

A comedian?

A politician who despises him?

A twenty-second video clip?

A headline written specifically to get your attention?

And from that, you have concluded that you understand the entire heart, soul, character, and motivation of a human being you have never met?

Come on.

We can do better than this.

We must do better than this.

The phrase "Trump Derangement Syndrome" is thrown around to describe what supporters see as an irrational or obsessive hostility toward Donald Trump. It is not a medical diagnosis, and I am not using it as one.

I am talking about a behavior.

I am talking about the inability to separate political disagreement from personal hatred.

I am talking about people allowing one man to occupy so much space in their minds that his very existence seems to control their emotions.

I am talking about waking up angry at Trump.

Going through the day angry at Trump.

Watching television and becoming angry at Trump.

Opening social media and becoming angry at Trump.

Going to dinner and talking about Trump.

Going on vacation and talking about Trump.

Going to bed angry at Trump.

At some point, you have to ask yourself a question.

Who is controlling whom?

YOU MAY NOT KNOW DONALD TRUMP AS WELL AS YOU THINK YOU DO

We live in a strange age.

People believe information equals knowledge.

It doesn't.

You can consume thousands of stories about someone and still not know that person.

You know a presentation.

You know an interpretation.

You know selected moments.

You know clips.

You know quotes.

You know headlines.

You know accusations.

You know opinions.

But do you know the human being?

Probably not.

And neither do I.

Let me be very clear about that.

I do not claim to personally know Donald Trump.

I have not spent years privately interacting with him.

Therefore, I am not going to pretend that I know every thought in his mind or every motivation in his heart.

Why, then, are so many critics willing to do exactly that?

"Trump only cares about himself."

How do you know?

"He hates these people."

How do you know?

"He wants to destroy America."

How do you know?

"He wakes up every morning thinking about revenge."

Were you in the room?

"He doesn't care about the American people."

Did he personally tell you that?

At some point, we need to recognize the difference between a fact and an assumption.

We also need to recognize the difference between someone's actions and our interpretation of those actions.

Two people can watch the exact same speech and walk away with completely different conclusions.

One person says, "He was strong."

Another says, "He was arrogant."

One says, "He was confident."

Another says, "He was narcissistic."

One says, "He was direct."

Another says, "He was cruel."

Same speech.

Same words.

Different filters.

That should tell us something.

We do not see the world exactly as it is.

We often see the world through the filter we have developed.

If you have spent years being told that Donald Trump is evil, dangerous, stupid, hateful, and corrupt, what do you think you are going to see when you watch him?

You are going to search for evidence that confirms what you already believe.

This is called confirmation bias.

We all do it.

Republicans do it.

Democrats do it.

Conservatives do it.

Liberals do it.

I do it.

You do it.

The question is whether we are mature enough to recognize it.

WHAT IF YOUR INFORMATION HAS BEEN SHAPED FOR YOU?

Here is a question many people do not want to consider.

What if some of what you believe about Donald Trump has been shaped by the information you repeatedly consume?

I said some.

Think about that word before becoming angry.

Some.

What if the programs you watch select stories they know will keep you emotionally engaged?

What if social media algorithms repeatedly show you content similar to material you have already watched?

What if outrage keeps you clicking?

What if anger keeps you watching?

What if fear keeps you coming back tomorrow?

This is not unique to one political side.

Media organizations compete for attention.

Social media platforms compete for engagement.

Political organizations compete for votes.

Commentators compete for audiences.

Anger is powerful.

Fear is powerful.

Hatred is powerful.

If someone can keep you emotionally agitated, they can often keep your attention.

Now ask yourself this.

How many positive stories about Donald Trump do you actively seek?

How many full speeches have you watched from beginning to end without someone interrupting to tell you what you are supposed to think?

How many times have you read an entire transcript instead of a headline?

How often have you intentionally listened to someone who supports him?

Not to attack them.

Not to laugh at them.

Not to prove them wrong.

Simply to understand why they believe what they believe.

If your answer is never, then perhaps your information world is smaller than you realize.

WE ELECTED A PRESIDENT, NOT A PERFECT HUMAN BEING

Donald Trump is not perfect.

There.

I said it.

Neither am I.

Neither are you.

Neither was George Washington.

Neither was Abraham Lincoln.

Neither was John F. Kennedy.

Neither was Ronald Reagan.

Neither was Barack Obama.

Neither was Joe Biden.

We do not elect perfect human beings because perfect human beings do not exist.

Presidents have personalities.

Presidents have egos.

Presidents make mistakes.

Presidents say things they later wish they had worded differently.

Presidents become angry.

Presidents misjudge situations.

Presidents trust the wrong people.

Presidents make decisions that millions of Americans disagree with.

That is the reality of leadership.

Can you imagine having nearly every word you speak recorded?

Can you imagine millions of people waiting for you to make a mistake?

Can you imagine people examining the movement of your hands?

Your facial expressions?

The way you walk?

The way you drink water?

The way you pronounce a word?

Can you imagine comedians, politicians, commentators, influencers, and strangers spending every day searching for a new way to ridicule you?

Would you survive that scrutiny?

Would I?

I doubt it.

Some people would not survive one week of having their private and public lives examined with the intensity placed upon a President of the United States.

Yet we sit comfortably in our homes and judge every moment.

SUPPORT DOES NOT MEAN BLIND OBEDIENCE

When I say support our President, I am not saying surrender your mind.

I am not saying agree with every decision.

I am not saying stop asking questions.

I am not saying ignore facts.

I am not saying abandon your values.

I am saying something much simpler.

Stop confusing hatred with patriotism.

You can disagree respectfully.

You can oppose a policy without attacking a person's humanity.

You can vote against someone without wishing them misery.

You can question a decision without mocking someone's appearance.

You can write a thoughtful argument without calling another human being vile names.

You can be a Democrat and pray for a Republican President.

You can be a Republican and pray for a Democratic President.

You can hope the President succeeds even if you did not vote for him.

Why?

Because if America succeeds, Americans benefit.

This strange idea that we should hope a President fails because we dislike him makes absolutely no sense to me.

Imagine getting on an airplane and saying, "I hate the pilot. I hope he crashes so I can prove I was right about him."

You're on the plane!

America is the plane.

We are all passengers.

You may not like the pilot.

You may question the route.

You may disagree with the altitude.

You may hate the announcements.

But hoping for disaster simply because you dislike the person in the cockpit is madness.

PRESIDENT TRUMP IS ALSO A HUMAN BEING

I wish people would remember this.

Donald Trump is a human being.

You may love him.

You may dislike him.

You may support him.

You may oppose him.

But he is human.

Do you believe he does not feel anything?

Do you believe criticism never reaches him?

Do you believe his family never hears the attacks?

Do you believe his grandchildren exist in some magical bubble where cruel words cannot enter?

Imagine waking every morning knowing that millions of people despise you.

Imagine people publicly fantasizing about your failure.

Imagine your name being used as an insult.

Imagine strangers making assumptions about your marriage, your children, your motives, your faith, your intelligence, and your mental state.

And then imagine being expected to walk into a room and lead.

Would encouragement help?

Would respect help?

Would knowing that Americans were praying for you help?

Would knowing that people wanted you to succeed help?

Of course it would.

Human beings respond to encouragement.

We respond to trust.

We respond to support.

We respond to respect.

Why do we believe a President is somehow different?

WHAT IF WE ENCOURAGED OUR PRESIDENT?

Here is a radical thought.

What if we encouraged Donald Trump?

What if we said, "Mr. President, we are praying for you."

What if we said, "Mr. President, make wise decisions."

What if we said, "Mr. President, protect our country."

What if we said, "Mr. President, seek good counsel."

What if we said, "Mr. President, remember every American, including those who did not vote for you."

What if we said, "Mr. President, we want America to succeed."

What if we offered constructive criticism instead of personal destruction?

What if political opponents stopped treating every disagreement as evidence of evil?

What if supporters were willing to admit mistakes without abandoning the person?

What if we behaved like adults?

Wouldn't that be something?

Encouragement does not weaken accountability.

Respect does not eliminate disagreement.

Kindness does not require political surrender.

You can hold someone accountable and still treat them like a human being.

STOP DIGGING THROUGH DECADES OF DIRT SIMPLY BECAUSE YOU WANT TO HATE SOMEONE

One of the strangest habits in modern culture is the relentless search for reasons to despise people.

Someone becomes prominent and armies of people begin digging.

What did they say thirty years ago?

Who did they know?

What photograph exists?

What rumor was published?

What allegation was made?

What joke did they tell?

What business deal failed?

What did an anonymous person claim?

Now, legitimate evidence and credible reporting should be examined seriously. Public officials deserve scrutiny. Presidents deserve scrutiny.

But scrutiny and obsession are not the same thing.

An allegation is not automatically proof.

A headline is not automatically the entire story.

A viral post is not automatically accurate.

A repeated claim does not become true simply because millions of people repeat it.

And an old controversy should not be stripped of context simply because someone wants a new weapon for today's political battle.

If you are actively searching every day for a reason to hate another human being, eventually you will find something.

You could do that to me.

I could do that to you.

Take every mistake you have ever made.

Every foolish sentence.

Every bad decision.

Every failed relationship.

Every moment of anger.

Every person who dislikes you.

Every rumor.

Every accusation.

Every photograph.

Every email.

Every text.

Now hand all of it to people who already hate you.

Do you think they could build an ugly picture?

Of course they could.

Would that picture represent the entirety of your life?

No.

Then why are we so comfortable doing it to others?

YOU HAVE NEVER MET HIM

This may be the most important point in this entire article.

You have never met Donald Trump.

Most of you haven't.

Yet some of you hate him.

Think about the power of that word.

Hate.

You hate a person you have never met.

You hate a person whose hand you have never shaken.

You hate a person whose eyes you have never looked into.

You hate a person with whom you have never shared a private conversation.

How did that happen?

Who introduced you to this hatred?

Where did it begin?

What story did you hear?

What program did you watch?

What commentator shaped your first impression?

What politician reinforced it?

What social media feed fed it?

And how many years have you been carrying it?

Maybe it is time to put it down.

Not because you suddenly have to vote for Donald Trump.

Not because you have to wear a red hat.

Not because you have to become a Republican.

Put it down for you.

Hatred is heavy.

Anger is exhausting.

Bitterness consumes energy.

You have a life to live.

HE IS THE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES

Donald J. Trump is the President of the United States.

He is our President.

Yes, our President.

Not simply the President of Republicans.

Not simply the President of conservatives.

Not simply the President of people who voted for him.

The President of the United States.

You do not have to like that fact.

But hatred will not change it.

He holds an office that deserves recognition and respect, even when the person occupying that office is politically opposed by millions.

I have disagreed with presidents.

You have disagreed with presidents.

That is our right.

But I believe we have lost something important when we can no longer separate respect for our country and its institutions from our personal feelings about one individual.

We can debate.

We can protest peacefully.

We can vote.

We can organize.

We can write.

We can speak.

We can disagree.

But must we hate?

Must we humiliate?

Must we destroy?

Must every sentence be dripping with contempt?

Must every family gathering become an argument?

Must every friendship be tested by politics?

Must every social media feed become a battlefield?

Enough.

CONCLUSION: SUPPORT HIM, PRAY FOR HIM, ENCOURAGE HIM, AND LET GO OF THE HATE

I know some people will read this article and immediately become angry.

They will not finish it.

They will see the name Donald Trump and their emotional reaction will begin before they consider a single word I have written.

And perhaps that proves my point.

If the name of one human being has the power to instantly change your mood, raise your blood pressure, trigger your anger, and cause you to lash out at strangers, perhaps the problem deserves examination.

I am asking you to examine it.

Not Donald Trump.

You.

Why do you hate him?

Not why do you disagree with him.

Why do you hate him?

Those are different questions.

If you disagree with his immigration policy, explain why.

If you disagree with his economic decisions, explain why.

If you disagree with his foreign policy, explain why.

If you disagree with his language, explain why.

Make your argument.

Present your facts.

Participate in democracy.

But when your argument becomes, "He's fat," what have you accomplished?

When your argument becomes a joke about his hair, what policy have you debated?

When your argument attacks his family, what problem have you solved?

When you call everyone who voted for him stupid, what American have you persuaded?

You haven't.

You have simply added more ugliness to an already angry world.

Donald Trump is not a perfect man.

He does not need me to pretend he is.

I am not asking anyone to worship him.

I am not asking anyone to blindly follow him.

I am not asking anyone to ignore legitimate questions or credible facts.

I am asking Americans to rediscover some decency.

Support our President when you believe he is right.

Question him respectfully when you believe he is wrong.

Pray that he receives wisdom.

Hope that he makes good decisions.

Encourage him to remember the enormous responsibility of his office.

Trust but verify.

Believe in America.

Forgive human imperfection.

And for goodness' sake, stop feeding yourself a daily diet of hatred.

Turn off the program that makes you furious every night.

Stop following the account that exists only to keep you angry.

Stop sharing stories you have not verified.

Stop repeating rumors because they support what you already believe.

Stop allowing politicians to convince you that your neighbor is your enemy.

Stop allowing social media to control your emotions.

Stop giving Donald Trump free rent inside your mind twenty-four hours a day.

You don't have to love his personality.

You don't have to like his style.

You don't have to agree with every word he says.

But perhaps you could remember that he is a human being.

Perhaps you could remember that he is carrying the responsibilities of the presidency.

Perhaps you could hope he succeeds for the sake of the country.

Perhaps you could encourage rather than constantly condemn.

Perhaps you could pray rather than hate.

Perhaps you could listen rather than immediately attack.

Perhaps you could consider the possibility that the picture you have been given is incomplete.

And perhaps, just perhaps, you could return to that simple lesson many of us were taught as children.

If you have nothing nice to say, don't say anything at all.

That lesson does not disappear because the person is Donald Trump.

That lesson does not disappear because you are a Democrat.

It does not disappear because you are angry.

It does not disappear because a television commentator agrees with you.

It does not disappear because your friends laugh at the insult.

It does not disappear because your cruel comment receives ten thousand likes.

Character still matters.

Kindness still matters.

Fairness still matters.

Truth still matters.

Human decency still matters.

Donald Trump is the President of the United States.

We elected him.

He is our Commander in Chief.

He is attempting to lead according to what he believes is best for America.

You may disagree with how he does it.

That is your right.

But I challenge you to do something much harder than hating him.

Give the man a fair chance.

Support what is good.

Question what concerns you.

Examine facts for yourself.

Listen to complete statements.

Consider multiple sources.

Stop allowing other people to manufacture every opinion you hold.

And remember that behind the name, behind the office, behind the podium, behind the headlines, behind the television screen, is a human being.

A human being who, like you and me, is imperfect.

A human being who can make mistakes.

A human being who can be criticized.

A human being who can be challenged.

But still a human being.

Enough with the hate.

Enough with the ridicule.

Enough with the personal destruction.

Enough with the obsession.

America has real problems to solve.

We have families to strengthen.

Children to teach.

Communities to rebuild.

Dreams to pursue.

Neighbors to help.

A future to create.

We do not have to agree on Donald Trump.

But we had better learn how to live with one another.

Support him. Trust him when trust is earned. Question him when questions are necessary. Encourage him. Pray for him. Forgive his imperfections. Hope for his success. Because hoping for the President of the United States to succeed is not surrendering your political beliefs. It is hoping that America succeeds.

And if you still cannot find one kind thing to say about a human being you have never met, perhaps the most mature thing you can do is close the app, turn off the television, stay in your own lane, and say nothing at all.

Bill Conley

America's Favorite Life Coach

Sunday, July 5, 2026

MOLLY THE MOUSE BELIEVES IN HERSELF - A Children's Story

 

MOLLY THE MOUSE BELIEVES IN HERSELF

VALUE WE ARE LEARNING:

Self-confidence means believing in yourself and recognizing that you have unique gifts and talents. Confident people understand that they do not need to be the biggest, strongest, fastest, or smartest person in the room to have value. Every person is special and important in their own way. Self-confidence grows when we focus on our strengths and continue learning and improving. In this story, Molly discovers that believing in herself allows her to accomplish things she never thought possible.

MORAL OF THE STORY:

Every person has unique gifts, talents, and abilities that make them special. Self-confidence begins when we stop comparing ourselves to others and start appreciating who we are. Being different is not a weakness but a strength. Confidence grows when we focus on what we can do instead of what we cannot do. Everyone has challenges, but those challenges do not define their worth. The world needs your talents, your ideas, and your unique perspective. Believing in yourself allows you to accomplish amazing things. You are valuable exactly as you are.

Molly the Mouse lived in a tiny cottage tucked beneath the roots of a giant maple tree.

She was cheerful, kind, and hardworking.

But Molly often felt small.

Not just physically small.

Small in importance.

Whenever she looked around Maple Meadow, she saw animals who seemed much more impressive than she was.

Daisy the Dog was strong and brave.

Callie the Cat was smart and curious.

Benny the Bunny was adventurous.

Tommy the Turtle was determined.

Freddy the Frog was athletic.

Henry the Hedgehog was wise.

Compared to them, Molly sometimes felt ordinary.

One morning she sat beside the pond watching her friends.

Daisy easily carried a large basket.

Benny leaped across a stream.

Freddy jumped from rock to rock.

Molly sighed.

"I wish I were more like them."

Just then, Grandma Mouse appeared beside her.

"What are you thinking about?"

Molly explained how she felt.

Grandma listened carefully.

Then she smiled.

"Molly, do you know what makes a diamond valuable?"

Molly shook her head.

"No."

"Because it is unique."

Molly thought about that.

Grandma continued.

"There is only one diamond exactly like another."

"What does that have to do with me?"

Grandma gently touched Molly's shoulder.

"There is only one Molly."

The words stayed with Molly all day.

A few days later, exciting news spread throughout Maple Meadow.

The annual Meadow Fair would soon begin.

One event was especially popular.

The Great Meadow Treasure Hunt.

Contestants would search for hidden clues scattered throughout the valley.

The winner would receive a beautiful blue ribbon.

Everyone planned to participate.

Molly wanted to join too.

But doubt quickly filled her mind.

"I'll never win."

"Why not?" asked Daisy.

"I'm too small."

Daisy laughed.

"What does size have to do with finding clues?"

Molly wasn't sure.

Still, she felt uncertain.

On the morning of the treasure hunt, dozens of animals gathered near the starting line.

The mayor explained the rules.

The first clue would be revealed at the sound of a whistle.

Contestants would then solve puzzles, leading to additional clues.

Finally, one clue would reveal the hidden treasure.

The whistle blew.

The hunt began.

Animals rushed in every direction.

Daisy sprinted toward the woods.

Freddy bounded across the meadow.

Benny raced down a trail.

Molly followed quietly behind.

The first clue led participants to an old stone bridge.

Many contestants searched everywhere.

Molly noticed something others missed.

A tiny piece of paper wedged between two stones.

Her small size allowed her to squeeze into places larger animals could not reach.

She carefully retrieved the clue.

"Interesting," she said.

The next clue led to a hollow log.

Again, larger contestants struggled to see inside.

Molly easily climbed in and found another clue.

Soon she realized something important.

Her small size was actually helping her.

As the hunt continued, Molly discovered other strengths too.

She paid attention to details.

She noticed patterns.

She listened carefully.

She solved puzzles others overlooked.

One clue required participants to identify a faint sound hidden among several noises.

Molly's excellent hearing helped her succeed.

Another clue required careful observation.

Her attention to detail helped again.

By afternoon, only a handful of contestants remained.

To Molly's surprise, she was one of them.

The final clue led to a large oak tree near the edge of the meadow.

Contestants searched frantically.

Branches.

Roots.

Hollows.

Leaves.

No one could find the treasure.

Then Molly noticed something unusual.

A small opening beneath one root.

It was far too small for larger animals.

But not for a mouse.

Carefully, Molly squeezed inside.

A moment later, she emerged carrying a small treasure chest.

The crowd erupted into cheers.

Molly had found it.

The mayor smiled.

"Congratulations!"

Molly could hardly believe it.

She had won.

Not because she was bigger.

Not because she was stronger.

Not because she was faster.

She had won because she used her own unique gifts.

Later that evening, Molly sat beside Grandma Mouse watching the sunset.

"You were right."

"About what?" Grandma asked.

"There is only one Molly."

Grandma smiled.

"And that's a wonderful thing."

Molly looked across the meadow.

For the first time, she no longer wished she were someone else.

Daisy was wonderful.

Callie was wonderful.

Benny was wonderful.

Tommy was wonderful.

Freddy was wonderful.

Henry was wonderful.

And Molly was wonderful too.

Not because she was better than anyone else.

But because she was uniquely herself.

From that day forward, whenever Molly felt doubtful, she remembered the treasure hunt.

She remembered the clues.

She remembered the tiny spaces only she could enter.

Most importantly, she remembered that everyone has special gifts.

And when you believe in yourself, those gifts have a chance to shine.

MORAL OF THE STORY POEM:

You do not have to be the tallest one,

Or shine brighter than the sun.

Your special gifts help make you, you,

And there is no one else quite like you too.

Believe in yourself and what you can do,

For amazing talents live inside of you.

Stand tall, be proud, and always see,

The wonderful person you're meant to be.

QUESTIONS FOR PARENTS AND CHILDREN:

  1. Why did Molly sometimes feel unimportant?
  2. What lesson did Grandma Mouse teach Molly?
  3. How did Molly's unique abilities help her during the treasure hunt?
  4. What are some special talents or strengths that you have?
  5. Why is it important not to compare yourself to other people?

 

Saturday, July 4, 2026

FREDDY THE FROG EMBRACES CHANGE - A Children's Story

 

FREDDY THE FROG EMBRACES CHANGE

VALUE WE ARE LEARNING:

Adaptability means being willing to adjust when life changes. Change can sometimes feel uncomfortable, scary, or unexpected, but it often brings new opportunities, friendships, and experiences. People who are adaptable learn how to stay positive and flexible when things do not go exactly as planned. Adaptability helps us grow, learn, and become stronger. In this story, Freddy discovers that some of life's greatest adventures begin when we embrace change instead of fearing it.

MORAL OF THE STORY:

Change is a natural part of life and often leads to wonderful new opportunities. While change can sometimes feel uncomfortable or scary, it helps us grow and learn. Adaptable people understand that they cannot control everything, but they can control how they respond. A positive attitude makes change easier to accept and enjoy. New experiences often introduce us to new friends, skills, and adventures. Every ending can become the beginning of something exciting. When we embrace change with courage and optimism, we discover possibilities we never imagined. A flexible heart is ready for life's greatest adventures.

Freddy the Frog loved his home.

He lived beside Lily Pad Pond, a peaceful little pond surrounded by tall grass, colorful flowers, and shady trees.

Every morning, Freddy woke to the sound of singing birds.

Every afternoon, he leaped from lily pad to lily pad.

Every evening, he watched the sunset reflect across the water.

Life was comfortable.

Life was familiar.

Life was exactly the way Freddy liked it.

And that was the problem.

Freddy did not like change.

Not even a little.

If someone moved a rock near the pond, Freddy noticed.

If a new flower bloomed beside the water, Freddy noticed.

If his favorite lily pad drifted to a different spot, Freddy noticed.

And every time something changed, Freddy worried.

One spring morning, Freddy noticed a large wooden sign near the pond.

He hopped closer to read it.

"Pond Improvement Project Coming Soon."

Freddy blinked.

"Pond improvement?"

He hurried to find his friends.

Soon, Daisy the Dog, Benny the Bunny, Callie the Cat, Tommy the Turtle, Henry the Hedgehog, and Molly the Mouse gathered around the sign.

"What does it mean?" Freddy asked nervously.

Tommy studied the notice.

"It says the pond will be cleaned and expanded."

Freddy gasped.

"Expanded?"

Daisy smiled.

"That sounds exciting."

"It sounds terrible," Freddy replied.

The others laughed.

But Freddy was serious.

For the next several days, he worried constantly.

"What if they remove my favorite lily pad?"

"What if everything looks different?"

"What if I don't like it?"

No matter how much his friends reassured him, Freddy remained concerned.

Then construction began.

Workers carefully cleaned the pond.

They removed fallen branches.

They cleared overgrown weeds.

They deepened parts of the water.

They added new plants and flowers.

Every day, Freddy found something new to worry about.

One afternoon, he sat on a log staring at the pond.

"It doesn't look the same."

Tommy sat beside him.

"No."

"I don't like it."

Tommy smiled gently.

"Have you given it a chance?"

Freddy crossed his arms.

"No."

Tommy chuckled.

"Maybe you should."

Freddy wasn't convinced.

The following week the project was completed.

Everyone gathered for the grand reopening.

The pond looked beautiful.

The water sparkled.

New lily pads floated across the surface.

Colorful flowers lined the shore.

A small waterfall trickled into the pond.

Butterflies fluttered everywhere.

The other animals were amazed.

Freddy wasn't.

At least not at first.

He cautiously hopped onto one of the new lily pads.

Then another.

Then another.

As he explored, he discovered something surprising.

The pond wasn't worse.

It was different.

And different wasn't necessarily bad.

The new waterfall created a pleasant sound.

The larger pond offered more places to explore.

The new flowers attracted beautiful butterflies.

The additional lily pads created exciting new paths across the water.

By lunchtime, Freddy found himself smiling.

By afternoon, he was having fun.

By evening, he was laughing.

The next morning, he invited his friends to explore the new pond.

"This waterfall is amazing," Freddy said.

Daisy grinned.

"We told you."

"And look at these flowers."

Callie laughed.

"We noticed."

"And there are so many new places to explore."

Tommy smiled knowingly.

Freddy laughed.

"Okay, okay. You were right."

A few weeks later, another change arrived.

A family of ducks moved into the pond.

At first, Freddy worried again.

"What if they take over?"

"What if they make too much noise?"

"What if I don't like them?"

But this time, something was different.

Freddy remembered the pond project.

Instead of assuming the change would be bad, he decided to give it a chance.

The ducks turned out to be wonderful neighbors.

They were friendly.

They were funny.

They shared interesting stories about places they had visited.

Soon, Freddy considered them friends.

As summer continued, Freddy began noticing something.

Many of the best things that happened that year started with a change.

The improved pond.

The new waterfall.

The duck family.

The beautiful flowers.

The expanded swimming areas.

The new adventures.

None of those things would have happened without change.

One evening, Freddy sat beside the waterfall watching the sunset.

Grandpa Frog hopped over and joined him.

"You seem happy."

"I am."

"What changed?"

Freddy laughed.

"Everything."

Grandpa smiled.

"And?"

Freddy looked across the pond.

"I learned something important."

"What?"

Freddy smiled.

"Sometimes change brings wonderful things."

Grandpa nodded.

"That's a valuable lesson."

Freddy watched the water sparkle.

For years, he had spent energy fearing change.

Now he realized something.

Change was simply part of life.

Sometimes it brought challenges.

Sometimes it brought surprises.

But often it brought opportunities.

And when you face change with an open heart, amazing things can happen.

From that day forward, whenever something new appeared in Freddy's life, he tried to remember the pond.

He remembered the waterfall.

He remembered the ducks.

Most importantly, he remembered that every ending can become the beginning of a wonderful new adventure.

MORAL OF THE STORY POEM:

Change may seem a little scary,

And sometimes make us cautious or wary.

But new adventures often start,

When we open up our heart.

New friends and opportunities grow,

When we are willing to go with the flow.

Be flexible, brave, and willing to see,

How wonderful change can truly be.

QUESTIONS FOR PARENTS AND CHILDREN:

  1. Why did Freddy worry when the pond began to change?
  2. What new things did Freddy discover after the project was finished?
  3. How did the duck family help Freddy learn about change?
  4. Can you think of a change in your life that turned out better than you expected?
  5. Why is it important to be flexible when things change?

 

 

THE TEN VALUES WE LEARNED FROM MY BOOK, PETS WE LOVE - A CHILDREN'S STORY

 

THE TEN VALUES WE LEARNED FROM MY BOOK, PETS WE LOVE

Throughout this book, our animal friends taught us ten important lessons:

🐶 Daisy taught us Loyalty

🐱 Callie taught us Curiosity and Learning

🐰 Benny taught us Courage

🐹 Ginny taught us Sharing

🐹 Holly taught us Responsibility

🐠 Goldie taught us Gratitude

🐢 Tommy taught us Perseverance

🦔 Henry taught us Respect

🐭 Molly taught us Self-Confidence

🐸 Freddy taught us Adaptability

These ten values can help children build strong character, strong friendships, and strong futures.

Never forget:

Be kind.

Be brave.

Be responsible.

Be grateful.

Believe in yourself.

And always keep learning.

Friday, July 3, 2026

A Blueprint for Encouraging the Flock: How Pastors Can Inspire Growth Without Making People Feel They Are Never Enough


A Blueprint for Encouraging the Flock

How Pastors Can Inspire Growth Without Making People Feel They Are Never Enough

For decades, millions of Christians have faithfully attended church services seeking hope, encouragement, wisdom, comfort, and a deeper connection with God. They walk through the church doors carrying burdens that few people see.

Some are grieving.

Some are battling illness.

Some are struggling financially.

Some are carrying guilt.

Some are fighting depression.

Some are trying to save a marriage.

Some are exhausted from raising children.

Some are caring for aging parents.

Some are simply trying to make it through another week.

Yet far too often, they leave the church carrying one more burden than they brought in.

The burden of feeling inadequate.

The burden of feeling they are not doing enough.

The burden of feeling they are not praying enough, believing enough, serving enough, giving enough, witnessing enough, or trusting enough.

Most pastors do not intentionally create this feeling.

In fact, most pastors deeply love their congregations and sincerely desire to help them grow spiritually.

The problem is that many sermons unintentionally emphasize what people lack rather than what they already possess.

The congregation hears challenge after challenge.

Corrective message after corrective message.

Growth message after growth message.

Improvement message after improvement message.

Over time, people can begin to believe that Christianity is one endless self-improvement project where they never quite arrive.

The result is a congregation that is spiritually striving but emotionally exhausted.

A congregation that believes in God's grace intellectually but struggles to experience it personally.

A congregation that rarely hears the words:

"You are loved."

"You are forgiven."

"You are accepted."

"You are enough."

Not because they are perfect.

Not because they have arrived.

Not because they no longer need growth.

But because God's grace is greater than their shortcomings.

The purpose of this blueprint is not to eliminate challenge from the pulpit.

Challenge has its place.

Conviction has its place.

Correction has its place.

Spiritual growth has its place.

The purpose is to restore balance.

To help pastors create sermons that inspire growth while simultaneously affirming worth.

To help believers walk out of church feeling encouraged rather than defeated.

To help congregations leave with renewed energy, renewed hope, renewed faith, and renewed confidence in God's love.

If churches can learn to balance truth with grace, challenge with encouragement, and growth with acceptance, they will create healthier believers and healthier congregations.

The following blueprint provides a practical model that pastors can use every week.

The Seven Part Encouragement Model

Part One: Begin with God's Love

Before discussing what people should do, remind them who they are.

Children of God.

Recipients of grace.

People were created in God's image.

People worthy of love.

People who matter.

People who have value.

People who are not forgotten.

A congregation should never have to wonder whether God loves them.

Tell them.

Remind them.

Repeat it often.

Part Two: Celebrate What Is Going Right

Many sermons focus almost exclusively on what needs fixing.

Instead, spend time acknowledging what people are already doing well.

Recognize faithful parents.

Faithful spouses.

Faithful workers.

Faithful volunteers.

Faithful servants.

Faithful believers who continue showing up despite life's challenges.

People need affirmation.

Not flattery.

Affirmation.

There is a difference.

Part Three: Recognize Real Life Struggles

Pastors should demonstrate that they understand the realities people face.

Acknowledge grief.

Acknowledge fear.

Acknowledge financial pressure.

Acknowledge health concerns.

Acknowledge emotional exhaustion.

When people feel understood, they become more receptive to the truth.

Part Four: Teach Grace Before Growth

Growth should always be built upon grace.

Not the other way around.

People should never leave believing they must earn God's approval.

They already have God's love.

Growth becomes a response to grace rather than an attempt to earn grace.

This distinction changes everything.

Part Five: Present One Clear Life-Giving Challenge

Instead of overwhelming people with ten areas needing improvement, focus on one.

One practical action.

One spiritual principle.

One achievable step.

People are more likely to grow when they feel capable rather than overwhelmed.

Part Six: Paint a Picture of Hope

Every sermon should answer one question:

"What does a better tomorrow look like?"

People need hope.

Hope energizes.

Hope motivates.

Hope heals.

Without hope, challenge becomes discouragement.

Part Seven: End with Encouragement

This may be the most important part of every sermon.

Before people leave, remind them:

God loves them.

God sees them.

God understands them.

God has not abandoned them.

God is still working in their lives.

They are forgiven.

They are valued.

They are accepted.

They are enough because Christ is enough.

Send them into the world encouraged, not defeated.

The Pastor's Weekly Checklist

Before delivering any sermon, ask these ten questions:

1.     Have I clearly communicated God's love?

2.     Have I reminded people of grace?

3.     Have I acknowledged the challenges they face?

4.     Have I celebrated what many are already doing right?

5.     Have I avoided creating unnecessary guilt?

6.     Have I given people practical hope?

7.     Have I provided one achievable challenge rather than overwhelming them?

8.     Will people leave feeling valued?

9.     Will people leave feeling encouraged?

10.                        Will people leave believing that God is pleased to walk beside them today?

Imagine the impact if every church member left every Sunday feeling stronger instead of weaker.

More hopeful instead of more discouraged.

More loved instead of more judged.

More accepted instead of more inadequate.

More energized instead of more exhausted.

The church should be the one place in the world where weary people are reminded that while none of us are perfect, all of us are deeply loved.

The Gospel is not primarily a message of inadequacy.

The Gospel is a message of redemption.

Not condemnation.

Grace.

Not performance.

Hope.

Not despair.

Love.

Not rejection.

Perhaps the greatest gift a pastor can give a congregation is not another reminder of how far they still have to go.

Perhaps it is a reminder of how far God's grace has already brought them.

And perhaps every believer should leave the church hearing these simple words:

"Keep growing."

"Keep trusting."

"Keep loving."

"But never forget this: God loves you today, right where you are, and His grace is sufficient for every step of the journey."