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The Wednesday Call with Andy Albright

The Wednesday Call with Andy Albright is a weekly program that is designed to help you grow and improve in business and life. Through simple yet effective teaching principles, Andy Albright helps people move from where they are to where they want to be in as little time as possible. If you are looking for an opportunity to change your life for the better, The Wednesday Call should be part of your weekly schedule. Through this show, Andy reveals all of his business and live strategies to help people see how they find a new career through National Agents Alliance and help people all across the United States at the same time. The Wednesday Call helps people learn how to make a living working as little or as much as they choose to each week. This program originates from NAA headquarters in Burlington, N.C. where Andy Albright, who co-founded NAA in 2002, was born and raised. Special guests appear on the show regularly and include successful business minds, athletes, entrepreneurs and people making an impact in a number of different areas in the world. You’ll enjoy the podcast if you are an entrepreneur that is ready to explode in your professional career, enjoy hearing inspirational stories and messages from everyday people just like you, or maybe you are a lifelong learner who continually seeks growth and improvement in your life. Regardless of where you are, The Wednesday Call offers educational nuggets for new listeners and old. We hope you enjoy listening and keep coming back for more!
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Now displaying: March, 2018
Mar 28, 2018

On this episode of The Wednesday Call podcast, your guest host Stephen Davies discusses "How A Team Operates."

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Mar 21, 2018

On this week’s episode of The Wednesday Call, Andy Albright and Jeff Bright continued their series covering The Alliance’s 8 Core Values with the third value, Integrity.

“Truth never damages a cause that is great,” Mahatma Gandhi.

Integrity: Telling myself the truth

Honesty: Telling the truth to other people

Character: What God knows of us

Reputation: What others think of us

Integrity is the mother of all virtues. It is a firm adherence to a code of moral values. It is incoruptability. It begins when we deal justly with ourselves. Integrity is the light that shines for a disciplined conscience.

Integrity comes when you take disciplined conscience and add it to an authentic mindset and an ethical competence.

Disciplined conscience and discerning judgment

Assists in distinguishing right from wrong.

Guilt plus Loyalty

Guilt – realization of your responsibility to yourself not to violate internal moral code creating a moral compass. Acute awareness (remorse) and restitution (forgiveness)

Guidance system: allows you to be able to explain your actions and discover the reason for the thought.

Intuitive feelings vs. subjective emotions.

Loyalty – strong feeling of support and allegiance (heart of all virtues). Unwavering commitment. Requires priority thinking. Devotion and faithfulness. Obligation and adherence to a creed or promise.

“When we judge our own heart guilty, if we treat it gently, in a spirit of pity rather than anger, encouraging it to amendment, its repentance will be much deeper and more lasting than if stirred up in vehemence and wrath. This being forceful irrational emotion and revengeful anger.

Moral: Our gentleness toward ourselves. What we want is a quiet, steady, firm displeasure at our own faults. So then, when you have fallen, lift up your heart by humbling yourself without marveling that you fell.

“Is it money? Is it fame? Is it coming down with the loud pipes and the rain? Big chillin’, only for the power in your name. Tell me who you loyal to. Is it unconditional when ‘rari don’t start? Is it love for the streets when the lights get dark? Tell me when your loyalty is comin’ from the heart.” – Kendrick Lamar

Moral: Damned or blessed; depends on who or what you’re loyal to.

Authentic Mindset (conscious self): true to one’s personality (act who you are/behavior). Spirit (like who you are/attitude). Character (know who you are/awareness).

Transparency and Sincerity

Transparency is needed to create trust and dialogue. Lack of hidden agendas and full disclosure defends insecurity.

Openness (accessibility)

Predictability (legitimacy)

Sincerity meaning free from pretense, deceit and hypocrisy.

Real (genuine)

Proven (factual)

“Sunlight is the best disinfectant.” William O. Douglas

“Evil is nourished and grows by concealment.” Virgil

First hint of trouble: “don’t tell nobody” or “this is a secret.”

In Flames song “Transparent”

“Consume all the obsene

Persuade the most hideous and ugly

Under every pile and stone

A rebirth, for you to find

Freedom is to be able

To go in any direction

So take the uncertain path

One foot in the open

Ten feet ahead

don’t lie to yourself

“When pure sincerity forms within, it is outwardly realized in other people’s hearts.” Lao Tzu

“Sincerity is moral truth.” George Henry Lewes

Sincerity: “The road we need to travel for a better way of life; an attitude we need to take if we want to survive. Come on give me sincerity. But we’re always saying we don’t have the time. We really sympathize, well, maybe another time; don’t think about tomorrow; do it wile you’ve got the chance: sincerity.” Lisa Stansfield

Ethical Competence: Practicing a code of conduct that ensures honesty (avoiding deceitful behavior) and promotes consistency (creating the prevailing standards of decency).

Honesty plus Consistency

Honesty: It can force any dysfunction in your life to the surface. It is our true moral compass.

Truthfulness: There are different shades of truth telling. When we tell little white lies, we become progressively color blind. It is better to remain silent than to speak lies.

Wisdom: Cannot realize your wise potential without producing honest thoughts.

Consistency: Conformity (being norm compliant) leads to becoming uniform (creating regularity) which causes accuracy in our beliefs and our conduct. Beliefs, and your word. Conduct and your reputation.

“Honesty is the first chapter in the book of wisdom.” Thomas Jefferson

“No legacy is so rich as honesty.” William Shakespeare

The Billy Joel song “Honesty” talks about this subject.

“If you search for tenderness

It isn’t hard to find

You can have the love you need to live

But if you look for truthfulness

You might just as well be blind

It always seems to be so hard to give

Honesty is such a lonely word

Everyone is so untrue

Honesty is hardly ever heard

And mostly what I need from you!”

“If a man vow a vow unto the Lord, or swear an oath to bind his soul with a bond; he shall not break his word, he shall do according to all that proceedeth out of his mouth.” Numbers 30:2

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Mar 14, 2018

 On this episode of The Wednesday Call podcast, Andy Albright and Jeff Bright discuss the role of service in The Alliance and explain why it matters so much. 

What is the recipe for service? The Alliance believes it is maturity plus optimism plus civil courage. That adds up to service. 

Do you have a responsible attitude, do you have a positive outlook and do you operate out of selfless behavior? 

When you have a healthy identity, it leads to a greater meaning and purpose. When you have high moral authority it leads to proper alignment in all you do. 

When you exercise trust it offers unity. When you have hope it creates a bond. 

When you have the right mix of mercy and grace, then you understand sympathy and empathy through intimacy and awareness. 

Maturity: The ability to respond in an appropriate manner according to the circumstances in ones surroundings which is directly tied to one’s recognition of one’s meaning and purpose. This correlates into a need to serve others … in a move away from a cognitive approach to a moral development called moral authority. 

Do you have a healthy identity? Meaning vs. purpose … the what vs. why. 

Add moral authority. This is observable and relentless. It is lawful alignment. Accepting years of wisdom over minutes of emotionally clouded judgment. Walking the walk. 

Honor vs. judgmental

Obedience vs. reactionary

Judgment vs. resentful 

Recognition of a person’s influence by their efforts to demonstrate personal commitment to follow through objectively with the fullest extent of reason creating right conduct. Belief, information and action. 

Optimism: a disposition or tendency to look on the more favorable outcome which in turn creates hopefulness. This correlates into a service mindset. 

Optimism 

Trust (unity) plus hope (bond). Trust involves acceptance (creates safe environment), agreement (promotes supportive environment) and alignment (establishes strength in numbers). Hope is about attraction, affection and attachment. This deals with emotional state, courting state and a shared state.

Civil courage: a choice to stand up for something right/just and a willingness to recognize and confront issues/tasks in the face of popular opposition/discouragement as well as personal loss. With this display of moral courage comes possible negative social consequences which require one not to react to such attacks. 

This is when you have a spark, get through the honeymoon phase and end up together in the end. Don’t engage in arguments that only make the situation worse. 

It is like the old military story that says, “Where am I, where’s my buddy and where’s the enemy?” If you can’t answer that, you might be in trouble.

“Don’t sweat it and don’t stir it.” Andy Albright

Civil Courage: Mercy plus Grace

Mercy (sympathy) leads to merited compassion toward lawbreakers and sinners. Too many people think God is not giving them what they deserve in terms of punishment of what is derived out of pity. 

Grace (empathy) is about unmerited favor from God. This happens when you are devoted toward the befitting. God giving us what we do not deserve. Blessings! 

Dr. Cornell West talks about having the civil courage to stand up and do something about things that are wrong even when it is not popular. 

Service 

When courtesy meets devotion. Satisfaction meets going the extra mile. 

Service-minded people get up every day looking forward to helping people and finding solutions.  

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Mar 8, 2018

On this episode of The Wednesday Call podcast, Andy Albright introduces you to NC State football coach Dave Doeren, who delivered the keynote speech at The Alliance's NatCon18 men's seminar in January in Burlington, N.C.

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