Envisioning the African/Edenic Future: The Path to Our Self-Actualization in Freedom
[2023-02-01 13:44:53]
John Elliott Churchville, Ph.D., J. D. Writer, scholar activist, educator, leader coach, extreme African centralization, Africa / Eden liberation theologian, social change entrepreneur, franchise consultant, lawyer. He is the founder and chief executive officer of the Churchville Triad Consulting Group, Revenue Cycle Management Consulting and Service Company, and Federal Tax-Free Charity Association of the IRS, Liberation Fellowship Community Development Corporation. Part 501 (c) (3) Code, a member of the Advisory Committee of the Temple University African American Studies Division, and a researcher at the Molefi Kete Asante African Center Institute. Since the 1960s to the present, John has been elected to take photos of the Congress Library and the Smithsonian Institution's joint civil rights history project since working at the innovative community organization in southwestern Georgia, Mississippi delta, and Philadelphia, Pennsylvania It was done. He interviewed the National African American History and Culture Museum in Washington, DC and the Charles L. Blockson African American Collection at Temple University in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania for 2.5 hours. Registration of civil rights voters in the southwestern part of Georgia and the Mississippi delta in the early 1960s, the creation and guidance of independent African-American city-center youth between the early 1960s and the latter half of the 1970s 1980s From the early 1980s the school served as the director of the international criminal organization's national criminal justice program and financing activities, from the early 1980's to the development of financial services, insurance and securities brokerage firms and registered investment advisory services. Since the 1990s he has served as farmer's rights, criminal defense, Erdlov, heritage planning and corporate affairs attorney, and since 2004 he has been a proponent of environmental and social justice and leadership / organization development and strategic planning consultant. , Founder and Senior Pastor of the Jesus Christ Liberation Church, Executive Director of G'Town Restoration Corporation from 2014 to 2016, Franchise Adviser of the Churchville Triad Group, and Managing Partner of the Churchville Triad Consulting Group from 2017
Candidates who understand their trajectory will be able to modify the course. The course correction may be the reason for the interview. The best candidate imagines their future self and plans to become that way. Without the goal of maximizing the possibilities of people, orbits are usually vague and random. Performance is the simplest and most specific variable to measure. An efficient person completes the X task within Y time. They are considered the most valuable people. In companies with high possibilities and solid tracks, they are extremely valuable - but you need to set a trajectory to create this possibility for people and make the performers successful. A performance without tracks is called improvisation.
When planning for myself, such as setting goals for weight loss, writing books, learning languages, we actually plan for ourselves in the future. You are thinking about how you wish for your future life, and when you think about the future, your brain easily takes action and easily watches the value of bringing long-term benefits can do. However, when there is a need to make a decision, there is no longer any choice for yourself in the future. Now you are now, your brain is thinking about the current self. Researchers discovered that the current self really likes immediate satisfaction rather than long term compensation. That's why you might feel the power to change your life by going to bed, but when you wake up you notice that you are in the old mode. Your brain will emphasize long-term benefits in the future, but it will feel comfortable as soon as it is now.
We have an increasingly blind youth ... blind people, they can not really imagine the future and have a pure