Take an AHA! Intermission: Guide for Knowledge Junkies #ahaLN
How to Drink Well from a Fire Hydrant
While the AHA! is new a new kind of learning format, the feeling of being drenched by an information fire hydrant is not. As I watch folks tweet and celebrate and whine about this blast of kingdom wisdom, I wanted to share a few thoughts to guide your learning experience. Consider taking a 5 minute intermission to reflect now.
What we are aiming for is not the picture of a child playing and splashing in the hydrant’s water-works. There is no learning there. We are looking for the leaders ability to sip from the hydrant (without loosing your lips!)
Three things can drive your knowledge junkie “drenching” over a learning leaders “drinking”
#1 Omission Paranoia - This problem has come with the cultural phenomenon of hyperchoice. We are constantly provided with so many options and so many evolutions of improvement with products, services, and everyday choices, that we can live overwhelmed and not even recognize it. If you are an opportunistic person like me, the problem can be worse. Eventually, an unsettled spirit creeps its way deep within our soul. The result? We live paranoid that we are going to miss out on one of the options, the “right angle” or the “winning choice.” Attending the AHA! is pure hell if you have omission paranoia. Don’t worry about what you will miss. Drink and ingest what is meaningful when you can.
#2 Hidden Jealously - One of my mentors, Howard Hendricks used to say, “You focus on the depth of your relationship with God and let God determine the scope of your ministry.” If you’re like me, there is a little commentator inside your head when you see 40 plus speakers get platformed in a cool venue like the AHA!. We wonder what we would say, how they got invited, yada, yada, yada. With these conversations in your head you really can’t drink well.
#3 Photocopied Vision - If you follow me you know that this is my continual burning platform. The longer I look under the hood of ministry teams across the country the less I am surprised by the clarity vacuum. Please know that most leaders are missing some clarity and the more you’re lacking the harder it is to sip from the hydrant. Why? True clarity provides a frame or filter through which to evaluate everything. (I call it a Vision Frame.) Robust clarity actually makes learning more aggressive and meaningful, because you continually cull out or highlight content based on the needs of your vision and strategy. You know when this “personal calling filter” is working when you can skip chapters in a book or hit pause on a AHA! presenter without a second’s thought.
What’s the answer to these challenges?
They all push me back to Jesus. Battle omission paranoia by resting in God’s goodness and sovereignty. Repent of hidden jealously. Take time and create margin to refine your ministry vision and understanding of God’s call on your life.
A potential action step: Auxano runs a process called the Vision co::Lab for this purpose and we have several starting in the next few months. It’s the polar opposite of the AHA!. Instead of spending 5 hours with 40 leaders spend 24 hours of vision coaching with a small group of 8. More info here, PDF brochure here.

Challenging Post.
I believe I have struggled with all three of the issue above.
Yet, I know that the comment from Howard Hendricks was a much needed thought for me today. As a young leader (or next-gen leader as some are called), I struggle with wanting to be as great as the young great leaders already out there making a splash. But that is the slash God is wanting them to make. It reminds me that God has a unique ministry for me to live out daily and focusing on that ministry reaches His kingdom purpose as much as the other guy.
I know at this point in my life I would rather be unique than well known. That means I have to stop being jealous, stop copying, and focus on the mission God has set out for me to be unique in. All of this is for him anyway.