Do you have know what your goals are? Are you working to achieve them? Have you created a plan? Have you listed all the things you'll have to achieve to reach your goal? You're serious about reaching your goal, so it's likely you've done all those things. Maybe you're already partly done with your plan and you think you're doing all you can to achieve the goal. But, has the progress stopped? Maybe you're spinning your wheels thinking you'll never get any traction and start moving.
I read a book a few years ago that dealt with something related to those questions. How do we normally go about trying to achieve a goal? We write the goal down, put an action plan together, put the actions in sequence, and start working toward the goal. We try to list everything that we think we're going to have to do to reach the goal. Dates might be given for the completion of each major step.
That's all good, in fact, these things are probably recommended in just about every book you read about setting and achieving goals.
So, why aren't you making progress? Here's the tip (well, one of them) I found in that book. If you've created a list of things that you believe you'll have to do to reach your goal, you must also be willing to do everything on that list! You could have 5 items or 105 on your list, it wouldn't matter. You have to be willing to do each and every one of them.
Every one? Yes. If there's one thing on that list that causes you to say "No, I won't do that, but I'll worry about it when I get there," you've probably doomed yourself to failure. You haven't even started working the items, but you have almost no chance of succeeding. Why is that?
If you're committed to your plan you're committed to doing everything on your list. If you're not willing to do all of them, you're not committed to your plan! In fact, you're really not committed to your goal because you've set a limit on its value to you. You are setting yourself up to fail! And, commitment is one of the most important things you need to accomplish a goal!
Why is that? Look at what's really happening. If you've identified an action you believe is necessary that you are not willing to do, you've reduced or destroyed your motivation for doing the steps leading up to it. Think about it. Assume your plan has 31 items on the list. Item 22 is the one you won't be willing to do.
You get started and work through items 1 through 11. Great! Now it's time to get started on number 12. You start making excuses for not getting on with the plan. You're not excited about getting started on number 12, but you don't know why. Number 12 is something you're really interested in, and it's not a big item. You could knock it out quickly and be ready for number 13. So, what's going on?
Well, number 13 is one closer to that dreaded number 22, and you don't know what you're going to do when you get to that one. Your emotional commitment drops. Why? Because you're not looking at number 12 with excitement, you're looking ahead at number 22 with dread, and the dread is killing the excitement.
The sad part of this (and this is what the book reminded me of) is that you might not really need to do number 22. For a long-term goal, the problem item might not come up for a year or two and there might be a totally different solution available by then. It might not even be a problem! You are being blocked by something that may not even exist.
This is why you have to commit to doing all the items on your list. Once you do that, you're truly committed; and you have every reason to expect to succeed. Don't let a lack of commitment destroy your chances for success.
Copyright (c) 2008 Dale Stuemke
To Achieve The Goal
Many people set goal or goals and attempted to achieve them within certain set time frame. But very few can achieve their goal. How many times we have heard of people setting a “New Year Resolution" but every year they are just updating this resolution with a new “target end date". Why is it that most people cannot achieve their goal but few people can? What makes these few individual so special that they can achieve goal, at times beyond the imagination of many people?
What makes ordinary people achieving the extraordinary? Apart from having a clear goal in mind, one key element is “a Compelling Reason". Most people fail to achieve their goal because they lack of a compelling reason.
A compelling reason provides the crucial motivational force for one to focus and continuously push themselves to their limit, out of their comfort zone and eventually achieving their goal. A compelling reason is also the power that assists the individual to overcome every challenge that comes along the way towards the journey of success.
A goal without the backing of a compelling reason is merely a paper talk and will continue to be only existed as a written New Year Resolution.
Therefore for every individual to be able to achieve their goal, they not only must have a clear goal in mind, they must confront themselves to identify the reason why they want to achieve the goal. The failure of achieving the goal must provide a consequence that put the person in an extremely uncomfortable state.
Does this mean that all those who do not achieve their goal did not have a compelling reason to their goal? No, it is usually not the case. What is lacking is the awareness of the compelling reason. The reason is in their subconscious mind. Therefore to bring out the awareness of such compelling reason, require a conscious effort.
One technique is to magnify the effect. Magnify the effect of the consequence of achieving the goal. By visualizing the kind of joy when achieving the goal, for example the ability to travel around the world. Magnify the effect of the consequence of not achieving the goal. Visualize the kind of pain that you are suffering when not achieving the goal. For a person who wants to be able to retire young at age of 45, he can imagine himself at the age of 55 still have to continue working for others, doing work that are not part of his passion, working long hour and only getting a fraction of his pay when he was 10 years ago.
Like what Anthony Robbins mentioned, everything we do is to avoid pain and to achieve pleasure. By magnifying the pain when not achieving the goal and magnifying the joy of achieving it, it will help to bring it to the conscious awareness of the compelling reason for pursuing the goal.
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Dale Stuemke has sinced written about articles on various topics from self improvement and motivation, self improvement and motivation and Mind Power. Dale Stuemke has learned that dreams and goals are achieved with a good plan, focused effort, good mentorship, and commitment. Humans are designed to be achievers. Visualizing the future and setting goals is uniquely human! Receive Dale's FREE 29-page rep. Dale Stuemke's top article generates over 880 views. to your Favourites.