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For All She's WorthSample

For All She's Worth

DAY 5 OF 5

Same Difference

What’s the difference between a rut and a groove?

Nothing.

When you look up each of these words in the dictionary, the first definitions are identical: a narrow channel or path in a surface. They appear to be synonymous.

But you hardly ever use “groove” in the same way as you do “rut.” In fact, they are often considered opposites.

So it has to be all in the way you look at it.

In music or art or sports or politics, we use the term groove to describe someone who has hit his stride while a rut indicates that a person has become uninteresting or bored in his pursuits.

How do you know if you’re in a groove or in a rut?

There are four stages of growth and learning that may help you self-evaluate. Psychologist Abraham Maslow developed this theory in the 1940s. Here it is in a nutshell:

Stage 1. Unconscious Incompetence. You don’t know that you don’t know something. (Ignorance is bliss, they say.)

Stage 2. Conscious Incompetence. You become aware that you are incompetent at something and crave to learn more.

Stage 3. Conscious Competence. You develop a skill in an area but still desire to build your level of expertise.

Stage 4. Unconscious Competence. You are good at your skill and it now comes naturally. You can do this in your sleep. (It’s also sometimes called “phoning it in.”)

Which one of these stages do you think would qualify as a groove? Which one can get you stuck in a rut? Which stages can include dangerous potholes or deep ravines?

There may be something comforting about consistency in a routine especially if you’ve truly hit Stage 4. But not for some people. The rest of us who may be still approaching the state of unconscious competence have to drop back to Stage 3 or Stage 2 just for the variety. We have to look for a new skill or a new way of doing the usual stuff so we don’t go mad from swatting at the angst bug.

Maybe we need to break out of the rut and find our groove.

Isaiah writes about God’s coming adventures. He says,

“Behold, I am going to do something new,
Now it will spring up;
Will you not be aware of it?
I will even make a roadway in the wilderness,
Rivers in the desert.” Isaiah 43:19




Scripture

Day 4

About this Plan

For All She's Worth

Women, and perhaps men, struggle with self-worth. Realize that God's view of you may be very different from what the world says you are.

We would like to thank Nan Corbitt Allen for providing this plan. For more information, please visit: https://nancorbittallen.com

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