Making Great Decisions: For a Life Without Limits
By T.D. Jakes
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About this ebook
The star of BET’s Mind, Body & Soul, and featured guest speaker on Oprah’s Lifeclass, Potter’s House pastor, T.D. Jakes turns his attention to the topic of relationships, guiding you on the right track to making decisions you will benefit from for the rest of your life. In the vein of Joel Osteen’s Become a Better You and Dr. Phil’s Life Strategies, the New York Times bestselling Making Great Decisions gives you the psychological and practical tools you need to reflect, discern, and decide the next step toward strong relationships in your life. “Remember,” writes T.D. Jakes, “your tomorrow is no better than the decisions you make today.”
“My promise is that if you read this book, you will be equipped, you will know all you need to know about making foolproof relational decisions,” writes T.D. Jakes. Choosing the right partner, at home or at work, is one of the most consequential decisions we’ll ever make. How can we be sure that we’re choosing wisely? How do we know if we’re doing the right thing when we change careers? By breaking our decisions down into their five crucial components:
-Research: gathering information
-Roadwork: removing obstacles
-Rewards: listing choices and visualizing consequences
-Revelation: narrowing your options and making your selection
-Rearview: looking back and adjusting as necessary to stay on course
Clear-sighted, realistic, and spiritually uplifting, Making Great Decisions is one of those rare books that can change lives.
T.D. Jakes
T.D. Jakes is the CEO of TDJ Enterprises, LLP, as well as the founder and senior pastor of The Potter’s House of Dallas, Inc. He’s also the New York Times bestselling author of numerous books, including, Crushing, Soar!, Making Great Decisions (previously titled Before You Do), Reposition Yourself: Living Life Without Limits, and Let It Go: Forgive So You Can Be Forgiven, a New York Times, USA TODAY, and Publishers Weekly bestseller. He has won and been nominated for numerous awards, including Essence magazine’s President’s Award in 2007 for Reposition Yourself, a Grammy in 2004, and NAACP Image awards. He has been the host of national radio and television broadcasts, was the star of BET’s Mind, Body and Soul, and is regularly featured on the highly rated Dr. Phil Show and Oprah’s Lifeclass. He lives in Dallas with his wife and five children. Visit T.D. Jakes online at TDJakes.com or follow his Twitter @BishopJakes.
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Making Great Decisions - T.D. Jakes
Introduction: Before You Decide
Nothing is more difficult, and therefore more precious, than to be able to decide.
—Napoleon Bonaparte
A milestone moment stared me in the face. Like every father, I had anticipated this situation. I knew I would be uncertain of my heart’s response, except I knew I would feel a tender pang when I remembered the long ago little girl in pigtails begging me to push her higher and higher on the playground swing. That little girl once ran to me for comforting hugs, a compliment on her newest selection of hairstyle, or an advance in her allowance to purchase the latest CD. Now that little girl had blossomed into a beautiful young woman and she was now standing before me, asking for the largest gift I could possibly bestow—her freedom.
I realized that our meeting for the big ask was a formality. Today, at a certain age, young people inform you, more than they request. In fact, by all intents and purposes my little girl and her groom-to-be were grown. But you and I know that it takes a lifetime to really be grown. Consequently, I thought I would use this sober moment to impart some wisdom that I now share with you.
Faced with the prospect of a new life-season for both of us—her season would change from daughter to wife and my season would change from father to father-in-law, I stood before my daughter with a mixture of emotions that swirled in my heart like paints blended on an artist’s palette. The reds and yellows of my joy blended with the blues and violets of the loss of her childhood. All of it was bordered by bridal white.
The room was warm and filled with the sounds of a busy restaurant. I heard the lethargic sound of a sax played from the stage. It whimsically moved from note to note and provided the room a somber, yet titillating, atmosphere of sensual relaxation. I looked at the soon-to-be newlyweds; they were clearly nervous, especially the groom-to-be, as we began a conversation that I considered one of the most important that we would ever have together. As the waiter brought over a steaming bowl of clam chowder, I started my own piping hot conversation. Clearly, there were many more important issues here than white rice or brown or such ceremonial ones as style of garter belts and flavor of cake icing. This was the greatest step they would ever make, in my opinion, and it was a decision that is too often romanticized. My focus was not on the wedding or the size of her train.
Grasping for a starting point, I muttered something to my daughter like, You have grown up over night. It was only yesterday that you were in pigtails and looking for barrettes.
She laughed with some embarrassment as I shared a family story about her pouting and taking all of her clothes off when her mother and I were in an all-night prayer service. She was three years old and had had enough. It was a hilarious moment that we often laughed about. We have laughed out loud remembering Sarah with the annoyed look on her face and a pile of clothes on the old church’s wooden floor. Her thumb was in her mouth and a look of disdain for the full-blazed service that went on and on and on. I told her fiancé, You have no idea what a pistol you have in my daughter,
and we all smiled at the memory.
I was trying to break the ice to some new, unexplored conversation; we had not talked to this extent before.
Being a minister, I have seen far too many blissfully beautiful weddings that ended in horrendously heinous divorces. So my focus wasn’t on the wedding plans, but on the far more difficult process of marriage that would follow it. I know that more times than not, Stella may get her groove back only to find out that she has been kicked in the groin by domestic violence or the emotionally painful consequences of not thinking through the next move carefully and holistically!
I did not want my daughter hurt. I wanted her to understand the long-term consequences of her relationship decisions. While the colorful kaleidoscope of emotions turned within me as I envisioned my baby girl all in white walking down the aisle, I welcomed the opportunity to address both of them regarding this pivotal, life-altering, sacred decision.
My wife and I had already reluctantly given our blessing on their engagement and impending nuptials, yet I knew that my real opportunity for penetrating their romantic buzz with the reality of married life now lay before me. Both my daughter and her groom were young: He was twenty-one and she was nineteen. Ideally, we would have liked them to have been older. I believe that marriage is for fully grown people. The groom, of course, was new to me, but I knew that my daughter had always been a precocious child. Now as she stood before me, a young lady, I wanted her to enter into this decision, as the vows say, not unadvisedly but reverently in the fear of God. And maybe with a little fear of me! Okay, I admit it, I was acting like a typical father of the bride, but what do you expect? This was my first child to marry, and I was as anxious as a cat in a room full of rocking chairs! I attempted to regain my composure as I continued.
What do you see when you look at each other?
I asked, smiling innocently enough.
My daughter and her young man giggled and sputtered out something along the lines of my true love
and the one I want to spend the rest of my life with.
I nodded and then launched into my thoughts on the outrageous implications of marriage. "I hope you see not only the face of your sweetie pie but the face that you’ll wake up next to for the rest of your life. The face that you will watch age alongside your own. This will be the face you run to when life seems cold and pains are unbearable. This is the face of your partner of choice. The one you chose like a warrior chooses a weapon or an artist her medium. He is, she is, your weapon of choice when you fight layoffs, mounting bills, pressure, and unimaginable challenge. It’s the face that will be beside you if and when the labor pains race through your body and you birth children together. And it may be the face you look to when you have to bury one or the other of you prematurely.
"It’s the face that you will watch convulse with the aches and pains of disease and injury. It’s the face that will comfort you and the hand you will squeeze when your mother and I pass from this earth and are lowered into the ground.
In my thirty-plus years of ministry I have seen couples face really difficult things, from parenting children with Down syndrome to rushing to the hospital to find that their teenagers had been crushed in a car accident. So my perspectives are not romanticized by the commercials and soap operas of today. Life is not always easy for people, you know.
My daughter’s calamari had grown cold.
I couldn’t help but notice it, but still, I continued. They looked ashen, facing perhaps for the first time the enormous ramifications of the decision before them and the certainty of unpredictable scenarios ahead. They now began to glimpse what many don’t learn until they are much older. Both her mother and I knew that life could be brutal and challenging and riddled with unimaginable circumstances.
Blinding Love
Now that I had their attention, I continued on even more soberly, through an entrée and into a dessert. I was almost preaching by this time! "Marriage is taken so lightly that people feel like they’re shopping for a new car. They find one they like but know that if it breaks down or they simply grow tired of it, they can trade it in for a newer, shinier model in a few years. Neither of you wants that. You probably cannot even imagine that situation. Yet you must be as deliberate as possible, as logical, objective, and thoughtful in your decision to commit, cohabitate, and commingle your DNA.
"The fresh euphoria of love leaves us intoxicated and blinds us to the realities that await us in any close relationship: bills to be paid, diapers to be changed, cars to be repaired, homes to be moved, jobs to be completed, and on and on, throughout all the seasons of life. This is what you’re committing to.
You’re not committing to a lifetime of good chemistry or shared ideals or that tingling feeling inside.
I’ll spare you the rest of my minisermon.
I did not wish to dissuade them, dampen their enthusiasm, or disguise the joys that married life can afford. I’m an overprotective father, yes, but my words were not only due to that. I earnestly believe that every relationship decision must be made with an appropriate level of care and deliberation in regard to the impact this choice will have on your life.
And no other choice leaves as many footprints alongside your own on life’s journey as the decision to unite yourself with another person, a partner, a spouse. The ripples that detonate in your life’s pond when the stone of marriage is dropped can become a rhythmic tide of joyful companionship or a tsunami of tortured tantrums. So much of the climate of the rest of your life comes down to this one decision.
I cannot count how many times I have stood before couples all dressed in white and asked them, Do you take this woman to be your lawfully wedded wife, to live together after God’s ordinance? Do you promise to love her, cherish her?…Do you take him for better or for worse, richer or poorer, in sickness and health?
After completing these essential vows, I usually then ask them, Do you?
And they say, I do.
I have also often wanted to say to them, Before you do, maybe you should know the facts.
REGRETS
Life is too short for regrets. That is why it is so important for you to know who you are, what is important to you, and how you want to exist and proceed in the world. This way, when things happen—and things will happen in life, good and bad: you lose your job, someone gets sick or dies, your child gets in trouble in school, or your best friend asks you to participate in something you don’t agree with—you will easily be able to decide what to do in the moment and, later, have no regrets.
Regrets are meant to teach us what to do better next time. Considering what you could have done differently to prevent whatever situation you regret is a good way to keep from repeating the same mistakes again in the future. Learning to make decisions in the moment based on who you truly are, and taking actions based on love, kindness, and forgiveness, always with the highest spirit in mind, is the best way to avoid having regrets later.
Due Diligence
Decisions are like falling dominoes in a line, each one toppling one irreversible consequence against another. Our screenwriters and novelists love to examine the power of one single choice and its effects on those caught in its gravity. Whether it’s Jimmy Stewart’s character in It’s a Wonderful Life or Denzel Washington’s character in Déjà Vu, the power of one individual decision can never be underestimated. Fortunes have been gained and lost, marriages mended and torn, children born or buried, all because of one person’s decision, which may have seemed of little importance at the time.
In the soon-to-be-released Screen Gems film based on my book, Not Easily Broken, the character Dave and his wife, Clarice, never understood on their wedding day that life has a way of knocking you down. But they soon learn that the wedding is easier than the life that comes after it! And believe it or not, weddings are less expensive than many of the mistakes couples make after it. If you see the movie, you’ll be reminded that life brings real challenges, and people often give way to pressure and succumb to the pain, losing sight of the passion that first brought them together. They begin to realize that every decision affects them both along with the quality of their marriage. They often drift apart on the raft of bills into the bleak sea of anger and disappointment.
Of course, we cannot scrutinize, analyze, and fantasize about each and every decision we make, or we will become paralyzed by fear, afraid to get out of bed in the morning and choose between Corn Flakes and Cocoa Puffs. Worrying whether to wear the blue dress or the brown skirt are not important decisions. Those are not the kinds of decisions I am talking about.
The larger, more significant relationship decisions of life—who and when to date, court, and marry, shared lifestyle choices and friendships—demand that we bring everything we have to the table to ensure that we make the best choices and never look back. Most of us have learned, some the hard way, the importance of relationships. But do we move into these decisions in a way that will insure positive results?
This is what I want to explore with you in this book. Your future is as strong as the decisions that precede it.
I have good news for you: We can make relationship decisions with a confidence, faith, and fortitude that allows us the freedom to enjoy a contented, fulfilled life.
It’s all in how we approach the decisions. My mother used to say that ignorance is expensive. She was absolutely right. It costs to be uninformed or even under-informed. Recently, I was given a rare and unique opportunity to purchase a highly respected marketing firm. It was and is a thriving business with an impressive list of highly financed companies. I was intrigued. It has an impeccable history, and I was elated to be given the option to proceed into what could have been a very lucrative deal for all concerned. But I seldom allow my elation to override my innate, God-given sensitivity and propensity to caution.
I felt that the terms were conceivable and the profit margins looked plausible. Still I spent much money and time engaging a professional firm to do the due diligence that I feel is a mandatory prerequisite before I do business on that level.
After researching stacks of documents, tax returns, financials, employee backgrounds, and contracts between the entity and its clients, I decided that, although it was a good deal, it was not a good fit for where I am in life right now. It wasn’t consistent with the life plan I have in place for myself and my family. So, yes, I walked away from what might have been a great deal, because the timing wasn’t right for me.
One of the board members, who I assume might have underestimated my proclivity to get the facts first, said, You are not just a preacher; you are an astute businessman.
I smiled but realized that more than that, I am a person who can’t afford to make a bad choice and face a setback. At this season in life I have to make every move count. I do not have the life span at fifty to recover from a massive setback economically, emotionally, or spiritually that could result from a bad decision.
Even my own attorneys and accountants were surprised at the amount of money and time I invested in making this decision. Several said, You did all of that and still walked away?
The money I spent investigating it might have seemed wasted to them, but not to me.
I know that like the issues I raised to my daughter, you cannot make great decisions if you do not take seriously the consequences of that decision and base your decision on thorough information!
CHANGING YOUR MIND AFTER YOU’VE MADE A DECISION
One of the pitfalls of decision making is wanting to change your mind after you’ve made a decision. You’ve probably heard the term buyer’s remorse.
That describes the feeling you have when you make a purchase, usually a large or expensive one like a car, a house, or an expensive luxury vacation, and then regret having spent the money. The excitement and over-the-moon feeling you had when you made the decision to spend the money is quickly replaced by a horrible, nagging feeling that you made a big mistake.
Changing your mind frequently once you’ve decided to do something could be a sign that you are not taking an adequate amount of time to consider all of your options or the ramifications of your decisions before you make them. Life is too short to live with regrets. If you find yourself second-guessing yourself regarding a decision you’ve made, remember that feeling of angst and uncertainty the next time you have a decision to make and think twice, weighing all of your options, before proceeding ahead.
Pull the Trigger
So often I hear people use the expression just pull the trigger,
meaning commit to a decision and take action. Let’s think through this image for a moment. Some questions must be answered before any of us has any business pulling a trigger on any decision of consequence. What gun are you using? How was the weapon assembled? And perhaps, most important of all, what is the target at which you are shooting?
You may laugh at me for being so literal-minded here, but I think you understand where I’m going with this metaphor. The act of pulling the trigger takes only a couple of seconds. But selecting the weapon, understanding how to operate it, and making sure that it’s aimed in precisely the right direction, are equally important as pulling the trigger, yet often overlooked. All of these preparations must be made before you pull the trigger or else you can find yourself shooting a water pistol at a burning house. Or, in other words, making choices when you are unprepared, un-equipped, and uncomfortable.
Toward this goal of choosing and using the correct weapon for making bull’s-eye relationship decisions, I ask that you make an important decision affecting your future right now. I challenge you to share some of your precious time with me between the covers of this book in order to come away with a better, clearer, stronger idea of how to make life-changing, regret-free decisions about whom you relate to.
You’ll see that I believe relationship decisions come down to five crucial components:
Research: gathering information and collecting data
Roadwork: removing obstacles and clearing the path
Rewards: listing choices and imagining their consequences
Revelation: narrowing your options and making your selection
Rearview: looking back and adjusting as necessary to stay on course
Romantic relationships and the selection of a spouse are the core of the book; however, the skills and information I wish to share are not exclusively for seeking companionship. What you learn about decision making can be applied to any area of your life. I will share some ways in which you can protect yourself from the highly expensive and emotionally devastating consequences of making impulsive decisions. And I can help you prevent losing time in procrastination, which is often caused by the fear of making the wrong decision. All major decisions require due diligence and dilatory deliberation, whether you’re choosing a husband, selecting a major in college, acquiring property, deciding on a new career, buying a company, or determining where you will live.
My goal is to help you realize, like my then soon-to-be married daughter, that some decisions are so significant that you want to make them with as much certainty as possible. If you do, you’ll move confidently into the future with no regrets trailing after you like tissue paper on your shoe. My promise is that if you read this book, you will be equipped, you will know all you need to know about making foolproof relational decisions.
You have probably wished that you could see into the future in order to make a decision now. I can’t grant you the power of prophecy, but I can help you know all you need to know to move confidently into the future…before you do.
one
Before You Take the First Step—Reflect, Discern
A journey of a thousand miles begins with the first step.
—Chinese proverb
I can trace every success or failure in my life back to something I did or didn’t decide effectively. Whether in the course of developing relationships, doing business, selecting investments, or accepting invitations, I’ve found a direct correlation between my location on life’s highway and my decisions to turn, exit, stop, or start. Extenuating circumstances beyond my control were always involved, yet more times than not, I was a victim or victor of my own making, achieving or failing because I did or did not put in place the necessary prerequisites to accomplish my desired goals. Now, to be sure, I am not a self-flagellating individual who uses this premise to blame and belittle myself for past decisions and their consequences. No, I am saying that my decisions set the course of my life.
I have now been married to the same woman, the mother of my children, for over twenty-five years. That relationship decision has set the climate of my life much like a thermostat on a heating system sets the temperature in a room. In keeping with this concept, persons in a room may not know that the temperature is affected by the smallest incremental movement of a drop of mercury in a device at an unnoticed location. In spite of its invisibility to the inhabitants of the room it still affects the comfort level of everyone present. Similarly, my key relationship decision, and many other decisions I have made, affect me and all those around me. Good results are a direct reflection of my ability to think through, discern correctly, and move succinctly from the trajectory of my last decision.
WE ALL HAVE OUR OWN UNIQUE DECISION-MAKING PROCESS
Sometimes we have to make a small decision such as choosing a new hair style or whether to paint the bedroom sky blue or periwinkle. Other times decisions are larger, such as whether or not to move to a new city for a better job, or to keep an old one. We each have our own style and ways to approach the decision-making process. Some of us tend to know exactly what we want. We make up our minds quickly and act immediately. Others prefer to deliberate for a long time, weighing all the angles and options before deciding what to do.
Reflect—Discern—Decide
Good decision making in relationships, business, anything, results from a process of reflection—discernment—decision. This truth recently emerged in a new light for me. I have had the same COO in my for-profit company for nearly ten years. It was interesting to me to note an observation he made about me. Often people who work with you notice things about you that you have not realized about yourself.
He advised some business constituents that it was unwise to approach me with a presentation that was long and laborious. He had noticed what I jokingly refer to as my ADD (Attention Deficit Disorder), that my attention wearied quickly during presentations like those that included the history of a company and who the founder married in 1802. I really would rather be spared the guillotine of losing my head in the details that are largely irrelevant to what I need to decide. In other words, cut to the chase, answer my questions, and leave me to my own thoughts.
He also shared with them that the hardest part of doing business with me was the millions of questions I ask in the name of doing due diligence. I smiled at my COO’s remarks and thought they were an accurate depiction of my inward reality. Even my staff members on the not-for-profit side of my organization have learned to come to me expecting multiple questions and to be armed with the answers before setting the meeting.
I do not apologize for this proclivity; I believe that good leaders anticipate tough questions and have at their disposal the answers that predict issues, struggles, and maladies that are inherent in the normal processes of doing business.
Sound decisions are based on great information, so the more significant the question, the more due diligence I require. I believe important decisions demand stewardship. If we are to be good stewards of great opportunities, we must show respect for those opportunities by the level of diligence to which we prepare for the next move.
Relationship decisions are among the most opportune choices in your life, and I remind you that no others leave as many footprints alongside your own on life’s journey as those you make to unite yourself with another person emotionally, sexually, spiritually.
Curb Appeal
Several years ago, my wife and I purchased a new home. We did so after selling our previous home and nearly doubling our initial expenditure for it. I searched ardently through the better neighborhoods in our city trying to find a home that would yield a similar return in the future should we decide to sell. I had found a good house in a great neighborhood and