Wednesday, June 13, 2012

The Traveler's Gift discussion questions


General Questions
1. How does the book exemplify the differences between people who encounter despair? Is your experience different or similar?
2. Why is it important that David visited the historical figures during crucial moments in history? 3. Andrews incorporates facts and details about American history into the book. How does histori-
cal knowledge lead to success in the future?
4. HowdoesAndrewsexploretheimportanceofassociationswithotherpeople?Howarerelationships integrally connected to wisdom? How do the relationships between David and the seven histori- cal figures support this point?
5. What is the significance of the title? What importance does time travel have in the story? How does time travel change David’s life?
About the Seven Decisions for Success 
1. What do you think Andrews accomplishes by placing the Seven Decisions at the end of each
visit with a historical figure?
2. How do these documents contribute to your understanding of David Ponder’s journey?
3. Do you think the Seven Decisions would have been just as significant if the historical characters visited David in his present time, similar to Scrooge being visited by the ghosts in Charles Dickens’s A Christmas Carol?
4. Do you think the Seven Decisions would have carried less impact if David hadn’t become distinguished and wealthy at the end of the book? Are his fame and fortune a fulfillment of the Seven Decisions, or merely a by-product?
About the Historical Figures 1. Talkaboutthethemeofleadershipinthebook.Whichhistoricalfigurestalkaboutleadership,
and how do those comments directly relate to the person speaking?
2. What overall definition of leadership does Andrews offer?
3. The historical figures are bridges between life and death, between past, present, and future. How does this define their messages to David?
4. Each historical figure personally embodies a particular decision. Having broader knowledge of their lives beyond this book, what evidence do you see that any of them also included the other decisions in their lives?
The Main Character: David Ponder 1. The book begins during a crossroads in David’s life. How does David’s mind-set about his
personal crisis change by the end of the book?
2. Discuss the criticisms the seven historical characters make about David. Do you think they should have been tougher on him? Easier?
3. How did your opinion of David change throughout the book?
4. David is locked in a constant struggle with himself. In what ways does his behavior echo the struggles faced by the historical figures in the novel? What types of consequences can these conflicts have?
5. What is David’s attitude toward the past? Toward the future? How are these attitudes changed by the end of the book?
Chapter 3: Harry S. Truman The First Decision: The Buck Stops Here
1. President Harry Truman tells David, “You have chosen the pathway to your present desti- nation. The responsibility for your situation is yours.” Do you believe that an individual’s present state is solely determined by personal choice and responsibility? Why or why not?
2. Truman says, “Our thinking creates a pathway to success or failure.” Can you remember a particular instance when your thinking created success? Can you remember a particular instance when your thinking led to failure? Have you seen evidence of this truism in the lives of others?
3. Why does Andrews consider challenges a gift? 
Chapter 4: King Solomon
The Second Decision: I will Seek Wisdom
1. King Solomon says, “We, as humans, are always in a process of change. Therefore, we might as well guide the direction in which we change.” How will the decision to “seek wis- dom” help you guide the direction in which you change?
2. Why does Andrews consider the people with whom we associate to be a critical component to seeking wisdom?
3. What point is King Solomon making when he directs David to understand that “serving is a way we can place value on one another”? He says, “A wise man is a server.” Why?
Chapter 5: Joshua Chamberlain The Third Decision: I Am a Person of Action
1. In what ways is Joshua Chamberlain’s tobacco pouch symbolic? What does the pouch look like? Why is the physical description repeated throughout the book?
2. The book opens with a quotation by Joshua Chamberlain, an obscure figure in American history. How does this quote set the stage for the book?
3. Why do you think Andrews chose to begin with a quote by Chamberlain instead of one by the other historical characters in the book?
Chapter 6: Christopher Columbus The Fourth Decision: I Have a Decided Heart
1. Through Columbus, what does Andrews say about the world’s perception of madness and its definition of reality?
2. When does persistence toward a goal become insanity and when is it an admirable trait for success?
3. In what ways are Columbus’s passion and decided heart essential to his leadership? 
Chapter 7: Anne Frank
The Fifth Decision: Today I Will Choose to Be Happy 
1. Do you think the pictures hanging in Anne Frank’s room are a metaphor for a stagnant life
of failure, or do they represent a vibrant life of success?
2. Is Anne’s life considered a success in this book? Why or why not?
3. Why does Anne consider her personality, her habits, even her speech to be determined by choices she makes?
Chapter 8: Abraham Lincoln The Sixth Decision: I Will Greet This Day with a Forgiving Spirit
1. President Abraham Lincoln tells David that the key to his future is forgiveness. Why is forgiveness such an important step for David at this point in his life? Whom does he need to forgive?
2. Is the Decision of Forgiveness of greater importance than the other Decisions? 
3. Why does Lincoln encourage David to become a “lighthouse” of personal growth and power?

Chapter 9: Gabriel The Seventh Decision: I Will Persist Without Exception
1. David visits the archangel Gabriel in “the place that never was,” a large celestial warehouse that holds the lost dreams of humanity. Why is it important that David’s last visit with a his- torical figure occurs in this place?
2. What does he learn from Gabriel about circumstances and opportunities?
3. Talk about the treatment of “fear” in the book. What is the relationship between fear and success? Why does Gabriel say that faith and fear are the same?
Questions for Personal Reflection
1. Does what you’ve read in this book help your own times of crisis?
2. TheTraveler’sGiftunderscorestheimportanceofrisingabovetheopinionsofothers.How do your self-perceptions dictate your success? What advice does David receive for differ- entiating between wise counsel and criticism? How can you apply this advice to your life right now?
3. Andrews gives a prescribed method for absorbing the Seven Decisions—reading each deci- sion aloud, morning and night, for twenty-one days and sharing the decisions with others. Is this something you can implement in your life? If you did, how could it change your future? If enough individual futures were changed, could it change civilization?
4. Why might The Traveler’s Gift be a vital book for our country/planet at this time?
5. Each historical character refers to faith in some way. What do you think Andrews is suggest- ing about the connection between faith and success? How does the book’s overall message define success as a combination of personal initiative and divine motivation?
Final Bonus Questions
1. Dreams are a recurring motif in the book. How does each historical figure emphasize the importance of dreams as vehicles for success? What is the purpose of dreams? At the end, David briefly worries that his journey has all been a dream. How is this significant to the meaning of dreams?
2. At the end of the book, the speaker in the arena says, “Until you have accomplished what you were put on earth to do, you will not—you cannot—be harmed.” How is this concept of a “hedge of thorns,” or divine protection, fitting to the magical journey David has taken? Do you believe this type of protection is possible?
© Andy Andrews 2002

Tuesday, June 12, 2012

Who is Andy Andrews?


BIOGRAPHY
Andy Andrews, who has been hailed by a New York Times writer as someone who has qui- etly become “one of the most influential people in America,” is a best-selling novelist and in-demand corporate speaker for the world’s largest organiza- tions. He has spoken at the request of four United States presidents and at military bases worldwide. He is the author of The New York Times Best Sellers The Noticer and The Traveler’s Gift—the international best seller that has sold more than 1.5 million copies and has been translated into 20 languages since its 2002 release. Andy lives in Orange Beach, Alabama, with his wife, Polly, and their two sons.

1 Andy started his career as a comedian
Andy was voted “Comedian of the Year” by more than 1,000 colleges and universities nationwide for two consecutive years. In addition to that, the National Association of Cam- pus Activities (NACA) member schools named him “Enter- tainer of the Year” in 1987. Andy was in good company; the honorees from the two previous years were The Police and Huey Lewis and the News.
2 Andy has performed in front of 80,000 people at one time.
The largest crowd Andy ever entertained was in Chattanooga, Tennessee. As the opening act, Andy entertained 80,000 people who had flocked to the River- boat Festival for a performance by Patti Labelle.
3 The Traveler’s Gift was turned down by 51 publishers.
I said to myself, “I know you don’t know what to do now, Andy, but if you did know, what would you do? As I thought about the situation, the realization dawned that there must be someone who is more important than the publisher and who could influence his/her decision. That person, I finally determined, was a publisher’s spouse. The first spouse to read the manuscript stayed up all night to do so. Subsequently, her husband published the book, and it sold more than a million copies. If I had given up after 51 rejections, that success would not have happened.”
4 Fishing is Andy’s passion
“I don’t have a boat now, but if I did, it would be a fishing boat. I always tell my wife: You can ride on a fishing boat, but you can’t fish on a riding boat!” Andy loves to fish the saltwater of the Gulf of Mexico, and often ventures far offshore to pursue this passion. “Being a hundred miles out at night,” he says, “is like fishing on another planet!”
5 Summer is Andy’s favorite time of year.
“I love summer...the laughter of my boys in the dark back- yard...their smell before bath time (like a copper penny)...and cool summer pajamas. I get out in the backyard some after- noons and throw the ball with Peyton and Eli Manning (aka Austin and Adam). They tell me what I’m supposed to be doing. It’s great!”
turned my life around, and they can be applied by anyone who is committed to leading a more successful and fulfilling life.” To Learn More About Andy, Please visit:
6
Andy lost both of his parents at the age of 19
Larry and Joyce Andrews, his parents, met at Howard College (now Samford University) in Birmingham, Alabama, where they both majored in music. His father was a minister of music at large churches, while Andy’s mom played the piano, organ, and directed the chil- dren’s choir programs. Andy lived a relatively normal life until the age of 19, when both of his parents died—his mother from cancer, his father in an automobile accident. “I took a bad situation and made it much worse,” he says now. Within the span of a year, young Andy found himself literally home- less, sleeping occasionally under a pier on the gulf coast or in someone’s garage.
7
Andy loves history.
He has read several hundred biographies of influential men and women throughout history. “In studying these stories, I identified the principles that are the foundations for a remark- able life. These principles turned my life around, and they can be applied by anyone who is committed to leading a more successful and fulfilling life.” These principles laid the foundation for Andy’s book, The Traveler’s Gift.
8While he is an accomplished author, Andy does not like to write.
“I don’t like writing at all. I love having written. You don’t have to like everything you do, but you do have to desire the result enough to make you do something. People who can discipline themselves to do what they don’t like to do live a wholly different life.”
9
Andy has a secret board of directors.

Andy wrote about the impor- tance of creating a board of directors to guide the direction of a company in Mastering the Seven Decisions. “I recom- mend creating a personal board of directors and not telling them they are on it. That way, it doesn’t cost you a dime...but it also doesn’t cost you any embarrassment; you get honest answers.”
10 Joan Rivers threw a surprise birthday party for Andy
Joan Rivers once surprised Andy backstage with a birth- day cake. The impromptu party took place during the first of what would be several week- long engagements with her at Caesar’s Palace in Las Vegas. Andy went on to tour as Joan’s opening act for two years during the time she was guest hosting “The Tonight Show” for Johnny Carson. Joan later invited Andy to appear on the opening night of the talk show she hosted for Fox Television.

July book: The Traveler's Gift by Andy Andrews

Elizabeth has picked our July book: The Traveler's Gift by Andy Andrews.

WHAT MAKES THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN FAILURE AND SUCCESS?
Forty-six-year-old David Ponder feels like a total failure. Once a high-flying executive in a Fortune 500 company, he now works a part-time, minimum wage job and struggles to support his family. Then, an even greater crisis hits: his daughter becomes ill, and he can’t afford to get her the medical help she needs. When his car skids on an icy road, he wonders if he even cares to survive the crash.
But an extraordinary experience awaits David Ponder. He finds himself traveling back in time, meeting leaders and heroes at crucial moments in their lives—from Abraham Lincoln to Anne Frank. By the time his journey is over, he has received seven secrets for success—and a second chance. The Traveler's Gift offers a modern day parable of one man's choices—and the attitudes that make the difference between failure and success.

SEE VIDEO
http://youtu.be/Z_CQjZ9-iqg


The Traveler's Gift Highlights:

- Good Morning America's "Read This!" book selection for May 2003
- Hit the New York Times Bestseller list and remained there for 17 weeks
- Reached #5 on the New York Times Business Bestseller list
- Wall Street Journal, USA Today, and Publisher's Weekly Bestseller
- Translated into nearly 20 languages including Braille