Make no little
plans; they have no magic to stir men’s blood and probably they will not be
realized. Make big plans, aim high in hope and work, remembering that a noble,
logical diagram once recorded will never die, but long after we are gone will
be a living thing, asserting itself with ever-growing insistency.
Your goals should be big enough, bold enough, and exciting
enough, to turn you on, if they are, and if your goals point you in the right
direction, you’ll notice that some strange things will start to happen. You’ll
start to get excited about taking your goals on, you’ll start to get better at
what you do, and doors will start opening up for you.
It’s not a lack of talent, but a lack of goals, that causes
one’s life to stagnate. Remember: If you are having a hard time getting out of
bed in the morning, its because you have no new goals. Deciding not to have a
specific goal IS a specific goal.
The size of our future goals will determine our future life
style. It’s as simple as that but not easy. George Foreman, twice Heavy Weight Boxing Champion said, “If
I see what I want, real good in my mind, I don’t notice any pain in getting
it.”
When we make a commitment to accomplishment––not to waiting
passively for change, but to making change happen––the resulting improvement in
morale becomes a vote of confidence for our life.
A goal’s main purpose is to help develop undeveloped
potential. The goal motivates us to action. We work hard and overcome
obstacles, and the achieved goal becomes a reward for the effort.
Experiencing temporary setbacks is not a crime. Low aim is!
So, what are you aiming for? Your goals should make sense for where you’ve
been, where you are now, and where you’re headed.
Be sure you set goals that are: (1) Exciting. (2) Realistic.
(3) Measurable. (4) Attainable.
The best goals will energize you and motivate you to take
action! Goals will bring your life’s energy into focus. Dreaming without ever
focusing will dissipate your precious energy and waste your precious time.
Think of goals as “dreams with deadlines,” as someone once put it.
Your goals should be too exciting, too powerful, too rooted
in what you already find exhilarating for you to ignore. If the goal doesn’t motivate you
instantly, it needs to be revised!
Point to Ponder Before You Go On: Whatever comes to us in life, we create first in
our minds. Whether we know it or not, our best dreams and goals––those that
motivate us in a positive direction––are our Creator’s contribution to our
personal suggstion box. Judge your goals by the pictures they create in your
mind and by how much they motivate you.
1 comment:
I like the concept of making goals exciting before we develop the rest of it. Good thoughts in all of these articles about goal-setting and achievement. Thanks!
I don't know if you said this originally or not, but I've attributed it to you for years..."If you don't know what to do every day, instead of or in addition to what you're now doing, you don't have a goal, you have a fantasy."
If you didn't say it, you certainly COULD have! :-)
Tina Lewis Rowe
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