Artwork for podcast Faithful on the Clock
Bouncing Back from Setbacks
Episode 327th March 2022 • Faithful on the Clock • Wanda Thibodeaux
00:00:00 00:10:20

Share Episode

Shownotes

Faithful on the Clock is a podcast with the mission of getting your work and faith aligned. We want you to understand Who you're serving and why so you can get more joy and legacy from every minute spent on the clock. Thanks for joining us and taking this step toward a more fulfilling job and relationship with God!

Want to join us on social media?

We'd love to have you stay up-to-date with the show on all our platforms!

Twitter

Facebook

Pinterest

Instagram

LinkedIn

YouTube

In this episode...

Faithful on the Clock

https://faithfulontheclock.captivate.fm/episode/bouncing-back-from-setbacks

The you-know-what eventually will hit the fan. That’s life. When things go wrong in your career or business, how do you bounce back? Episode 32 of the Faithful on the Clock highlights where real resilience comes from.

Timestamps:

[00:05] - Intro

[00:41] - What inspired the episode

[01:15] - The book Supersurvivors connects survivorship and entrepreneurship, discussing what it takes for people to bounce back well.

[02:05] - Many stories in the Bible feature stories where people were able to be resilient because they had a good goal to focus or recenter on. Jacob and Rachel is a good example. This is a typical way to see resilience today.

[03:08] - Job really didn’t have a goal to recenter himself around. All he had was a sense of who God was.

[04:05] - Job doesn’t seem to reflect the modern picture of a resilient professional, but He leans into God’s power and ends up rewarded with more than he’s ever had.

[04:39] - Supervivors makes it clear that your self-perception matters in the ability to bounce back. But as a Christian, your self-perception should tie to God. The way you see what’s happening can change based on whether you realize He’s got your back.

[05:38] - Elon Musk losing 40 out of 49 satellites is a good example of a modern setback. But you don’t have to rebuild alone. Think about God’s authority, be flexible like Job, and let God take your stress so you can focus on whatever next step He puts in front of you.

[06:51] - Rebuilding does have some tricky points. But don’t worry about deficiencies, because God can close those gaps. Do try to communicate well so your hope seems balanced with a grounded sense of rationality.

[07:55] - Prayer

[08:45] - Outro/What’s coming up next


Key takeaways:

  • It’s common for people to talk about resiliency in the business space. The basic idea is that people who can bounce back well have a greater chance of success.
  • In Supersurvivors, authors David Feldman and Lee Daniel Karvetz note that successful entrepreneurs have common threads with trauma survivors. They also note that those entrepreneurs balance a sense of self-confidence with a grounded realism. 
  • Many people, like Jacob working for his wife Rachel, can bounce back because they have their eye on the prize. But Job tells the story of a man who had no goal to look forward to or focus on. 
  • Job did not have self-confidence in the way we think of self-confidence with modern entrepreneurs. But he had confidence in God, which translated to God rewarding him with even more than he had had before.
  • The confidence you need to balance grounded realism should come not from your own ego, but from the knowledge of who God is and the understanding He won’t forsake you.
  • Because God can equip you for anything, don’t worry about deficiencies as you try to bounce back. Do communicate well with openness and transparency.
  • When faced with a setback, don’t automatically dig in your heels because of sunk cost. Take a moment to pause and ask God where He wants you.


Relevant Links:

SpaceX says up to 40 Starlink satellites lost to geomagnetic storm


Supersurvivors: The Surprising Link Between Suffering and Success


CTAs:

  • When faced with a setback, don’t lean on your own ability to rebuild. Trust that your real power is with God and ask what He wants you to do.
  • Be open with people as you try to recover. The better you communicate, the more they’ll trust and help you.


What’s coming up next:

Information is everywhere…and it can be too much. How can you prevent it from burning you and your team out? Episode 33 of Faithful on the Clock provides actionable tips for simplifying your data and regaining your focus.


Support the show!

Visit the Faithful on the Clock Patreon page to choose a tier plan and become a supporting member. You'll gain access to goodies like early episode access, newsletters, and more based on the plan that's right for you.

Support this Podcast

Support this Podcast

Transcripts

[:

Another week has passed, listeners. I’m Wanda Thibodeaux, and you’ve tuned in to Faithful on the Clock, which is 100 percent dedicated to getting your faith and work aligned. Today is a show very dear to my heart, because it’s all about bouncing back after setbacks. Who hasn’t had a couple of those, right? And I want to take just roughly the next 10 minutes or so to give you some tools, give you some verses to stay strong no matter how crazy life gets. If you’re up for that, come on, follow me, I’m headin’ into it right now.

[:

This show, today, I’m gonna be honest with you, I was inspired for this first because I honestly just had a really not so great week. I haven’t really been able to get much traction on a project I’m working on, I had to redo a bunch of stuff I thought was OK, which has just felt like…bleh. And then on top of that, again, being very honest, it was the anniversary of my mother passing away, and I got thinking about all of these hardships that she’d had in her life. If anybody had setbacks, oh my gosh, she did.

[:

But bottom line, I think we talk about resilience or bouncing back from hardship a lot in the business space. And I was actually reading this amazing book by David Feldman and Lee Daniel Karvetz called Supersurvivors. And it’s all about, you know, what does it really take to bounce back and succeed after something traumatic. And the authors actually made this connection between supersurvivors and entrepreneurship, and they talked about how what gives a lot of professionals the ability to succeed is this kind of grounded sense of delusion. They have almost this almost absurd hope and confidence in themselves, but at the same time, they’re very grounded. You know, they do the homework, they figure out all the steps, and then they just keep trying as many times as it takes to eventually succeed.

[:

Now, it that context, I want to point you to the book of Job. You might have guessed I’d go there, but we’ll got there anyway. But if you read other stories in the Bible, a lot of the setbacks, people were able to deal with them because they kept their eye on the prize. They had something to work for and were so focused on that big picture that they basically said, well, I’ll do whatever I have to do to get there. Genesis 29, where Jacob ends up having to work 14 years to marry Rachel because her dad tricks him, that’s a perfect example. Jacob, he was certainly mad he’d gotten tricked, but he was able to keep moving forward because he was so in love and so sure that Rachel was the woman he wanted. And I think that’s how a lot of us approach bouncing back even today. We talk about just recentering on what we want and not letting anybody distract us. And it’s all kind of focused on making sure that we know what our resources or our strengths and weaknesses are. We always focus on turning the failure into a learning experience in that way.

[:

But Job, he really had nothing to look forward to. He didn’t have this concept of, oh, I want to rebuild this, or I’m gonna go into this land. So what was his big picture? His big picture was just God. That’s it. He didn’t just hop back into things and start a contingency or whatever. He just stood in that moment, and He stepped back, and He realized that he wasn’t entitled to anything.

Chapter 1:21, you know what he says? And I think this is really incredible. He says, ““I was born with nothing, and I will die with nothing. The Lord gave, and now he has taken away. May His name be praised!” So this is a guy, He really has no idea why he’s suffering, he has no idea what his life is going to be like in the future. And he’s absolutely miserable, he wants to just die. All Job has is this sense of who God is.

[:

So Job, he’s certainly not the picture of this, you know, puffed-out-chest, nothing-can-touch-me of the confident entrepreneur or professional we usually think of bouncing back after a failure. But he knows who he is in the sense of Who created him, He knows what God can do, and He trusts in the power God has. Not his own power, but God’s power. And he leans on that to keep speaking truth the entire time. And because of that, God ends up giving Job even more than he had had before.

[:

So the Supersurvivors book, it does kind of get across this idea that the way you view yourself, no matter what the setback is, that self-perception counts. But the thing for you as a Christian professional is that, like you can see with Job, the self-confidence you have, it’s not just your ego talking. Your self-perception is tied to God. Or at least, it should be. You can know with absolute surety that you have value, that God’s with you, and that you’re strong because He’s got your back. That does not mean that He’s gonna give you every little thing. But He’s promised He’s gonna be right there with you come what may, and I think that when you really grasp that, it can completely change the way you see what’s happening to you.

[:

And oh, gosh, I know things can happen. What was it, a couple of weeks ago, Elon Musk, I think he had, what was it, 49 satellites he was trying to get operating in space, and this geomagnetic storm just came and wiped out something like 40 of them. We’re talking millions of dollars of investment just gone. That’s certainly a setback, you know, he’s basically back to square one. But when those kinds of things happen, I think your best option is just, you know, you don’t just throw up your hands and quit. But don’t just immediately think about how you can fix it all by yourself either, because you don’t have to do that. Think about who really has the authority, like Job did. Stop and ask Him where He wants you, because when things go wrong, it’s so, so easy to just double down because of, you know sunk costs, you know, we might not want to give up if we’ve put in a lot. But if you just realize you don’t have to steer the ship, when you’re flexible and say, “You know, God, whatever you wanna do, I’m gonna praise You,” God notices. And all of that stress that comes from feeling like YOU have to rebuild it, YOU have to do everything, He just takes that. And if you’re not stressed out, if you know He’s right there, you’re gonna be able to focus on whatever He tells you the next step is. That’s where real resiliency, that ability to bounce back, that’s where that comes from.

[6:51]

All this said, I totally understand that starting on a new path or rebuilding, there can be really tricky stuff in that. For example, if something has happened, maybe your reputation took a hit, you are gonna have to put in the effort to talk to people and rebuild that trust. Maybe now you’re out of capital and you have to go through all your fundraising again. But through all of that, God can equip you for anything that can crop up. So don’t worry about deficiencies, because God can close those gaps, OK? But I do think it is really important to be a fantastic communicator. Let people know exactly what you’re gonna do and why. Be really specific about what you need from them, be honest where your concerns still are, and just let them see everything you’ve got in your toolbox–that’s that grounded side of it all that’s gonna balance the hope so you don’t seem like you’re just, you know, like you’ve got your head in the clouds somewhere or something. People will respond to that openness and transparency, I promise you.

[:

So let’s put a nice big bow on this, and I’ll close the episode out so you can get back out there and back at it.

Lord, so often we think of resilience as something that happens because there’s some rare quality in us. We think of it almost like a commodity we have to prepare in ourselves. But the confidence that can let us bounce back, real hope, that’s not built on us, on the self. That’s built on knowing You, on knowing that we connect to you and to the power you have. And when those satellites go poof, we lose money, maybe we get sick, whatever it is, let us praise you before anything else. In Jesus’ name I pray, Amen.

[:

Oh, my goodness, people. It should feel so amazing to know that, when you turn off this podcast, God is right there, He’s lovin’ on you, He’s not gonna quit. For the next week, I’m gonna be talking about information overload. Why is it so important to limit the amount of data we get, and what are some easy ways to do that for yourself and your team? And to all you listeners out there, thank you, thank you, thank you. I’m just so incredibly honored to have this time with you. Join me on Patreon.com/faithfulontheclock or use the links in the show notes to visit any of our social media channels, because I’m gonna have a big announcement THIS WEEK about something new you can participate in, so go there, follow us or sign up to support the show, and until next time, be blessed.

Chapters