Make it a Pleasant Journey
The worth of any goal is not in the destination, but in the quality
of the process that gets you there. Many of us believe we must suffer
pain, work long hours, and be miserable in order to achieve a great and
worthwhile goal. This is just not true.
If the journey to success is not enjoyable, you more than likely have
set a goal that is not worthwhile. It's time to reevaluate.
How do you set goals? Very carefully, I hope. The problem (or
opportunity) is if you set out to accomplish a worthwhile goal and if
you dedicate your life, energy, focus, dreams and waking hours to its
achievement, there is no way you won't, short of death, achieve it.
Because you have a vision, a dream, or a goal doesn't mean you will be
happy along the way or even after you achieve the goal. Your most
important decision is to choose goals that will provide a pleasant
experience along the way and give you satisfaction upon accomplishment.
Here are a few ideas about how to set goals:
- Make a list of all the things in life you might accomplish. Don't
place limits. Dream big dreams. Anything is possible. Stretch beyond the
limits. The French philosopher Teilhard de Chardin wrote: "Our duty as
men (and women) is to proceed as if limits to our ability did not exist.
We are collaborators in creation."
- After each item on your list, carefully identify the reasons you want
what you want.
- Add two more columns to the list. Look at each goal and put down your
strengths and weaknesses as it pertains to achievement of the goal.
- Ask yourself how much satisfaction you would feel along the way
shoring up the weaknesses or exploiting your strengths.
- Prioritize your list. Put the number one goal on top.
- Go to work on number one. Action-Hustle-Hurry! Think about it. Put it
on a card and keep it in front of you. Enroll others to help. Tell
everybody who will listen about the magnificent journey you have
undertaken. If someone laughs or makes fun of you, write the person's
name and date on your card. After you have achieved your magnificent
dream, be sure to look up the individual and show them the time and date
they said it couldn't be done.
When it's all over, it's better to have had the excitement of a
magnificent dream, to have overcome obstacles and to have suffered
setbacks and triumphs than to drift through life one dreary day to the
next.
Make it a pleasant journey.
Back to Founder’s Keepers
|