Reflection/Why I’m Grateful:
Tonight, we had dinner with KTE. It’s been six to eight years since we sat down together—probably before I left United Way. You know how you run into people and, lacking better words, say, “Let’s connect for dinner”? It’s something we do as a reflex. It sounds better than, “We should grab a workout.” But let’s be honest—most of the time, we don’t really mean it.
Years ago, I stopped saying it unless I meant it. I don’t initiate if I don’t genuinely want to connect. And if it’s someone I actually would like to spend time with, and they say it without meaning it—I call it out. Literally. I’ll say, “You don’t really mean that.”
I think that’s what prompted his wife to make this dinner a priority. And I’m glad she did. The evening was meaningful. He’s from the generation ahead of mine, with a long and storied career. Hearing about his upbringing—a Romanian mother and German father, modest means—was inspiring. I love learning what motivates people, what drives them. That dinner filled me up.
Who have you been meaning to reconnect with—and do you mean it?
Question for Reflection
How do you approach and make the most of slow days?
— Reflection Question
Hi, I’m Orvin Kimbrough, volunteer, board director, chairman, and CEO. I help professionals move from feeling stuck to being strengthened by reshaping how they think, lead, and live. My work focuses on confidence, leadership, and influence through mindset shifts, expanded networks, and bold, values-aligned action. My perspective is rooted in lived experience, from growing up in foster care to leading complex institutions as a CEO and shaped by faith, resilience, and a deep belief in human potential.
Books for Every Stage
A memoir often described as a leadership guide wrapped in an honest, relatable story of perseverance, healing, and growth. It explores how pain can be reframed into purpose and how ordinary people build meaningful lives through courage and clarity.
Written for teens and young adults, this book encourages confidence, resilience, and identity formation during the years when self-belief is being shaped.
A children’s book that gently introduces big ideas like belonging, courage, and hope, helping young readers see themselves as more than their circumstances
INTRODUCING: The Thriver’s Path™
This blog is part of The Thriver’s Path™—a growing ecosystem of writing, courses, reflections, and community designed to help people of all ages reframe their thinking, reclaim their agency, and take their next meaningful move.
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