Posts

What Leaders Cross Borders More Successfully and Why

Image
What Leaders Cross Borders More Successfully—and Why Some leaders step into a new country and immediately find their footing. Others arrive with impressive résumés and stall within weeks. The difference isn’t intelligence, charisma, or even experience. It’s something quieter and far more decisive: how they interpret what they see . Crossing borders doesn’t just relocate a leader. It relocates their assumptions. The ones who thrive are those who can revise those assumptions without losing themselves. 1. They Don’t Assume Their Home-Culture Logic Is Universal Every leader carries an invisible operating system shaped by their home culture. It tells them what “respect” looks like, what “urgency” feels like, how “trust” is built, and what “competence” sounds like. Leaders who struggle abroad assume these interpretations are neutral. Leaders who succeed abroad understand that their interpretations are local , not universal. They treat their first impressions as hypotheses, not truths. This s...

🌿 Transformation Tuesday: Francis Collins — The Scientist Who Found Harmony

Image
  Francis Collins approached life through the lens of discovery. As a geneticist, he mapped the human genome — decoding the language of life itself. Yet for years, he saw that language as purely biological, not divine. His transformation began when he encountered patients whose faith sustained them through suffering. Their peace unsettled him. He realized that science could explain how life works, but not why it matters. Reading C.S. Lewis’s Mere Christianity , he found reason and faith intertwined — logic pointing toward love. Collins came to see the elegance of DNA as a signature, not an accident. He wrote that the genome is “the language of God,” a phrase that captures both his scientific awe and spiritual conviction. His conversion wasn’t a rejection of science; it was its completion — the moment when curiosity met reverence. Francis Collins reminds us that truth is not divided between lab and chapel. It’s written in both — in the code of life and the call of the soul. post i...

Publisher's pride: Books on bestseller lists - Since Sinai (Gonyou)

Image
  Today's Publisher's Pride is Since Sinai by Shannon Gonyou, which reached #81 in biographies of Judaism. Since Sinai has appeared in Amazon best-selling categories nearly every week since its release. Book Description: Raised in a heavily Catholic suburb of Detroit, Michigan, Shannon grew up focusing on two things: how to do enough good deeds to get into heaven and how to stay pure enough to escape hell. In college, she followed many of her peers into an Evangelical church known for guitars, drum, religious-based shame, and the idea that without Jesus she was nothing. But when she encountered Judaism on that same campus, a spark ignited within her and refused to be put out. Judaism felt obvious, familiar. After a falling out with her biological mother and two miscarriages, she found the courage to send the most important email of her life: she asked the local Jews by Choice program to accept her as a student. Honest and unflinching, Shannon's story of coming home to Jud...

How Individual Responses to Agent Orange Shaped Public Policy

Image
  Public policy rarely begins in committee rooms. It begins in living rooms, hospital wards, and veterans’ halls — in the voices of people who refuse to be ignored. The history of Agent Orange policy in the United States is, at its core, the story of individuals whose private suffering became public testimony. 1. From Silence to Advocacy In the years after Vietnam, most veterans faced their illnesses alone. They were told their cancers were coincidental, their neuropathies unexplained, their children’s birth defects unrelated. But silence has limits. As patterns emerged — similar diagnoses, shared experiences — veterans began to connect the dots. The first advocacy came not from institutions but from individuals : A veteran who kept meticulous notes of his symptoms and those of his unit. A widow who wrote letters to Congress after her husband’s death. A small group of veterans who met in a church basement and decided to gather data themselves. Their persistence transformed anecdote...