Saturday 29 December 2012

NOT FUNNY!



You’re getting some laughs but at whose expense? Humour is important to add into your talk, but there are some things that you need to be aware of that your audience will not tell you to your face but have shared behind your back especially if you are working with young adults or older. There are 5 Things that people do to get laughs but really...THEY ARE NOT FUNNY. 

 YOU ARE NOT FUNNY WHEN...

1.     You Make Fun of Others. This includes other races, other faiths, or a specific person in your audience. Though you may get laughs it is at the expense of another. Females tend to be more empathic and concerned about the needs of others, making this kind of humour a turn off. Instead point the finger at yourself.  Self-deprecating humour is the way to go as no one involuntarily is put on the spot and you don’t have to worry about offending. Plus you help others learn to laugh at their own circumstances.

2.     You Speak With A Lisp to Mimic Gays. It’s hurtful. There are students that have questions about  their sexual identity and they are watching you wondering if they can confide in you, looking for safe places and safe people to disclose their secret or struggle. Students will not even think about inviting their gay friends to your youth group or church even if they are laughing. Why? Cause You are not SAFE! Plus... YOU ARE NOT FUNNY!
The Golden Rule of Comedy & Humour. If you are Spanish...You can make fun of Spanish people. If you have blonde hair you can make fun of blonde’s. If you have one arm, you can make jokes about people with disabilities. BUT to make jokes about Jews, people’s accents, Lesbians or Blacks when you are not one...You are treading on thin ice.
3.     You Tell Your Inside Jokes That Only Two People Get! I’ve seen people get up on stage and they thank whoever brought them there and for the next 10 minutes the front row filled with staff members are cracking themselves up, bantering back and forth. Yeah, it looks like the audience is having a good time, people are laughing, but they are not laughing with you because they can’t...They don’t get it. They’re laughing because it’s funny to see other’s laugh. But what have you really done? Excluded your audience. Keep your message inclusive so you can win all people. People are tired of cliques so don’t create a barrier between you and them in your message. If something happened that was funny, set it up to your audience and then let the jokes fly so they can join in the laughter too.

4.     You Find Yourself Adding “I Guess You Had To Be There” At The End of Your Story. Yeah, what seems funny in your head does not always translate well to your audience. Before you go public with what you are wanting to share, test it, practice it first. Check out Freytag’s Pyramid to help guide you as you tell your story. You do need and intro (setting up the characters and the setting) followed by Rising Action, Climax, Falling Action and the Dénouement which is the conclusion or the resolving of the story. Remember that in English class!

5.     You Swear. They are not real laughs. Those are awkward, nervous I-can’t-believe-you-said-that laughs especially in a faith base or professional platform. Over time your influence will dwindle as swears are withdrawals out of your credibility and respect account. Don’t Do it. It’s not worth it.

Laughter is not always an indicator that you are funny. I have often given a half hearted laugh, just because I was in the front row or I was embarrassed for the speaker or comedian. Stay away from the above as we approach 2013 and you will continue to win over your audience. Not just one but many. 

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A member of the Canadian Association of Professional Speakers (CAPS) Alison has dedicated her time to developing her gift of Public Speaking so that her listeners would believe the truth that she shares and to raise up other strong youth communicator’s in Canada. She has been speaking full time for four years and is currently enrolled in Youth Speakers University.
 

Wednesday 26 December 2012

Christmas Cheer

Merry Christmas to all of you loyal readers of Canadian Youth Worker!

I'll get back to some more "serious" writing next week but for this week I wanted to share with you a couple of "lighter" items to help spread some holiday cheer.

The first is yet another example of child-like faith - this time from my 9 year-old Jacob.  It's the note that he left for Santa Claus on Christmas eve.



The second is my annual Vancouver Canucks Christmas Carol.  We've done these for a few years now...and this year we cover the classic "This Christmas".  Enjoy!


Clayton Imoo is husband to Gail and father to sons Sean Isaiah and Jacob Isaac and daughter Kayla Marie.  He has served as the Director of the Office of Youth and Young Adult Ministry of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Vancouver for the past ten years.  Learn more about him at http://www.claytonimoo.com or follow him @claytonimoo

Saturday 22 December 2012

Going Slow with Dr. Low

The Pauses

You may have heard phrases like, "Life is what happens in the margins".  In other words, life is what happens in the regular moments in life; the ordinary, mundane events that happen every day.  I've heard people call these moments the "cracks" or the "pauses" but whatever you call them the message is the same; if we fill our lives with too much busyness and are always running ahead to the next thing (physically or even just in our heads) we can miss the gifts and opportunities God gives us in the present moment.

Christmas is the perfect opportunity to practice pausing and being in the moment.  Are you taking the time to sit, rest and pay attention to the beauty of the moment or are you fussing around, taking photos, making videos and wondering who you can talk to next rather than being present with who and what God has in front of you?

All year I have been blogging about slowing down - to fight against the world's (and the church's) compulsion to run, to chase, to impress and to stay busy with scattered activity.  Just like in the video link below there is value to be found when slowing down and pausing at God's invitation.  Listen to His voice, in the special ways He speaks to you, and respond with obedience to His call to soak up the present moment and recognize God in the day to day.

Merry Christmas!

Check out this really cool link to see the difference pauses can make.

Friday 21 December 2012

Three Ways to Connect with Teenagers During Christmas Break


Let’s face it, Christmas break brings an entirely new and short menu of ministry venues: Christmas Eve services, family trips, New Years Eve parties and regular late nights. Even during this short break there are plenty of opportunities for ministry during these two weeks.

But what are some of the best arenas where teenagers actually open up and talk during the Christmas break? And what are some tools we can give our adult leaders to seek out these times?

Here’s two ways that we can connect with teenagers during these Christmas break:

3) Scheduled: have your small group or a small group of students and other youth workers over to your house. This can be a relaxing time to eat all your chocolates and cookies while watching a Christmas movie or to play a group board game together. This time should be relaxed and fun. No agenda or Bible study, just a time to hang out and enjoy your time together.

2) Non-Scheduled Scheduled: post that your family is going to a public event (skating/mall shopping/McDonalds for lunch/etc…) and say that youth are welcome to join you there. This is a low key time together where they will see you with your family and where you will not have any responsibilities for a youth group event. Make sure they know that they are responsible for their own costs.

1) You Fill In the Blank: … yeah… I left this blank on purpose because you all probably have the best ideas! Use the comments below to let us in on your #1 tip for connecting with young people this Christmas Break!

Rick Warren: Our nation is grieving right now

Pastor Rick Warren on finding peace in wake of CT shooting on FOXNews

Monday 17 December 2012

Spiritual Practice of the Week: Advent


I light this candle for joy today.
In Advent we focus on hope, we wage peace, we bring joy alive, and we contemplate where love is born.
 I like this quote:
"Joy is the jam on the toast of life. It adds flavor, keeps it from being too dry, and makes it easier to swallow."
Perhaps our task as people of faith is to find places where joy can add flavour and help us from becoming too dry, stagnant, less alive. 
May we find those moments where Joy can creep in even in the midst of children dying, even in the midst of financial hardship, even in the midst of tears and fear.
This poem was written by Judith Hill on September 11.2001.  It has words of us today in these short days after such horrible tragedy in Newtown, Connecticut    
The question is:  How can we focus on hope, wage peace, bring joy alive and contemplate where love is born in these waiting days of Advent?  How can I be ready of Love to arrive; for Christ to be born?   

Wage Peace with your breath.
Breathe in firemen and rubble,
breathe out whole buildings and flocks of red wing blackbirds.
Breathe in terrorists
and breathe out sleeping children and fresh mown fields.
Breathe in confusion and breathe out maple trees.
Breathe in the fallen and breathe out lifelong friendships intact.
Wage peace with your listening: hearing sirens, pray loud.
Remember your tools: flower seeds, clothes pins, clean rivers.
Make soup.
Play music, memorize the words for thank you in 3 languages.
Learn to knit, and make a hat.
Think of chaos as dancing raspberries,
imagine grief
as the outbreath of beauty
or the gesture of fish.
Swim for the other side.
Wage peace.
Never has the word seemed so fresh and precious:
Have a cup of tea and rejoice.
Act as if armistice has already arrived.
Celebrate today.
Judith Hill 

Beer, Food, & Student Ministry at Christmas



Probably you've noticed, but attitudes towards Christmas food and drink are often at odds with each other. 

On one hand, we rightly applaud the many volunteers of the Operation Red Nose campaign for keeping the eggnog and rum off the road. On the other hand, we sing songs that include phrases like “Oh, bring us a figgy pudding…and a cup of good cheer/We won’t go until we get some, so bring some out here.” In other words, nobody is planning to leave the party until they’ve had their fill of “Christmas cheer,” which, in all likelihood, is referring to a cup of Christmas beer, as opposed to a cup full of Christmas good times.

On the topic of alcohol, while many churches and pastors condemn the over-indulgence of holiday spirits, it is also not uncommon for these same people to eat until they could actually fill out that big jolly red suit. While gym memberships and bottle recyclers make a fortune in January, excess of both food and drink are explicitly condemned throughout Christian Scripture. In the church, well-mixed hops get the evil-eye and the roasted turkey gets a feast. 

Why is this?

Most feasts, by the way, are meant to be shared with our families and loved ones. Yet the extra hours and stress spent at work so that we can somehow manage to pay the over-inflated Christmas prices are, at best, taken out on our families in the form of fighting, dysfunction, and all around Grinchyness. 

Unfortunately, many of the homes and families your youth ministry touches, the turkey isn’t the only one to be feathered and skinned in the mad rush for consumption during the holiday season. Kids feel it the most. 

Anyhow, all this to say, during Christmas season fight the urge to make your youth ministry calendar busier than it already is. Slow it down, give families room to breathe, and let your youth ministry be characterized by the mystery and anticipation of Emanuel, God with us.

Singer, songwriter, and author Michael Card says it this way, “The celebration of the birth of Jesus should be ever new, however; the scenery of Christmas has become too familiar and comfortable. It blocks our view into the depth of the stark mystery of it all…Perhaps the reason so many of us find it difficult to celebrate the birthday of Jesus is that we have confined the celebration, in many ways, to a single day… and, at that, a day that’s become more cluttered than any other day of the year, a day that better represents the noise and business of all our other days.”

Happy Ho! Ho!
-Jer

Jeremy is a youth ministry veteran based out of Whistler, BC. You can stalk him on Twitter or find reasons not to like him via www.whistlerisawesome.com where he sits as Editor-In-Chief. 

Saturday 15 December 2012

Public Speaking Tips: Do's & Don'ts On Addressing Tragedies (Connecticut Shooting)




I was a youth pastor in my mid twenties when the twin towers fell on 9/11. The killings at Columbine were still fresh in my mind. I was furious with evil  emotionally charged. I did and said some crazy things when I was in the High School that day talking to students. CRAZY THINGS!

When historical tragedy takes place how do you deal with it? What do you say to students? This blog is about the do’s and don’ts in speaking about immediate current events. 


1.     DO - Take Care of You. Deal with the issue inside of you first. When the news came across the radio about the shooting in Connecticut I cried, I then bawled and then I was angry and then cried again. Before you go speaking about the issues, you need time to process what has happened  first.  

2.     DO NOT - Be Over ZEALOUS! During these times we can call our students to some big commitments or call them to an action that is not necessarily God’s idea but is emotionally charged. Encourage your students or even as a youth group to pray and seek God out in how you all can be an answer.

Mental Note: What God says to you is for YOU not your students. What you are feeling convicted or called to do is for you alone and does not mean God is asking your students to do the same. God will speak to your students. Ask them what He’s saying to them. 


3.      DO – Get all the facts. Think like a Chief police officer instead of a reporter. Don’t speculate or assume anything. Wait till the reports are in before speaking to them. And make sure your information is accurate as students will share what they hear you say.

4.     DO NOT – Speak to What You Do Not Know. Be careful how you use your platform as you can guide your audience to a certain/your conclusion which could lead to judgment and misguided information.  Judgment is then cast on to people like the shooter and their family when you don’t have information on them. That’s wrong. You don’t know their story. You didn’t walk in their shoes. Stick to the Facts. 

5.     DO – Help students Process.  2 Kings 1:16 “Is there no God in Israel to answer your question?” Have students turn to God. They too are emotionally charged. Some angered, others fearful, and some may be indifferent because they don’t know what to do with the information. It can be so easy to turn to media for answers or for them to turn to you. God speaks through His word so guide them to it. 

6.     DO NOT – Be Overwhelmed or Give Into Despair. What you do matters. Like the butterfly effect in the Chaos theory, small change can result in large differences at a later state. Let your students know every bit of good counts. Kindness and prayer is powerful. Prayer walks around their school makes a difference. Saying hello to someone they don’t normally speak to has an effect. The time you spend with students over lunch is making a difference. Be aware of how much media you and your students absorb. Time spent on your knees instead of in front of the tv will help bring a clear perspective on faith, hope and love.

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A member of the Canadian Association of Professional Speakers (CAPS) Alison has dedicated her time to developing her gift of Public Speaking so that her listeners would believe the truth that she shares and to raise up other strong youth communicator’s in Canada. She has been speaking full time for four years and is currently enrolled in Youth Speakers University.
Speaking Tips are from Alison’s Public Speaking Enhancement Workshop for any inquires message her today. http://www.inspiringteengreatness.com