Goal
Setting - Powerful Written Goals In 7 Easy Steps!
The car is packed and you're
ready to go, your first ever cross-country trip. From the White Mountains of
New Hampshire to the rolling hills of San Francisco, you're going to see it
all. You put the car in gear and off
you go. First stop, the Baseball Hall of Fame in Cooperstown, New York. A little while into the trip
you need to check the map because you've reached an intersection you're not
familiar with. You panic for a moment because you realize you've forgotten
your map. But you say the heck with it
because you know where you're going. You take a right, change the radio
station and keep on going. Unfortunately, you never reach your destination. Too many of us treat goal
setting the same way. We dream about where we want to go, but we don't have a
map to get there. What is a map? In essence, the
written word. What is the difference between
a dream and a goal? Once again, the written word. But we need to do more then
simply scribble down some ideas on a piece of paper. Our goals need to be
complete and focused, much like a road map, and that is the purpose behind
the rest of this article. If you follow the 7 steps I've
outlined below you will be well on your way to becoming an expert in building
the road maps to your goals. Life consists in what a |
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1. Make sure the goal you are working for is
something you really want, not just something that sounds good.
I remember when I started
taking baseball umpiring more seriously. I began to set my sites on the NCAA
Division 1 level. Why? I knew there was no way I could get onto the road to the
major leagues, so the next best thing was the highest college level. Pretty
cool, right. Wrong.
Sure, when I was talking to
people about my umpiring goals it sounded pretty good, and many people were
quite impressed. Fortunately I began to see through my own charade.
I have been involved in youth
sports for a long time. I've coached, I've been the President of leagues, I've
been a treasurer and I'm currently an Assistant State Commissioner for Cal
Ripken Baseball. Youth sports is where I belong, it is where my heart belongs,
not on some college diamond where the only thing at stake is a high draft spot.
When setting goals it is very
important to remember that your goals must be consistent with your values.
2. A goal
can not contradict any of your other goals.
For example, you can't buy a
$750,000 house if your income goal is only $50,000 per year. This is called
non-integrated thinking and will sabotage all of the hard work you put into
your goals. Non-integrated thinking can also hamper your everyday thoughts as
well. We should continually strive to eliminate contradictory ideas from our
thinking.
3.
Develop goals in the 6 areas of life:
Family and Home
Financial and Career
Spiritual and Ethical
Physical and Health
Social and Cultural
Mental and Educational
Setting goals in each area of
life will ensure a more balanced life as you begin to examine and change the
fundamentals of everyday living. Setting goals in each area of life also helps
in eliminating the non-integrated thinking we talked about in the 2nd step.
4. Write
your goal in the positive instead of the negative.
Work for what you want, not for
what you want to leave behind. Part of the reason why we write down and examine
our goals is to create a set of instructions for our subconscious mind to carry
out. Your subconscious mind is a very efficient tool, it can not determine
right from wrong and it does not judge. It's only function is to carry out its
instructions. The more positive instructions you give it, the more positive
results you will get.
Thinking positively in everyday
life will also help in your growth as a human being. Don't limit it to goal
setting.
5. Write
your goal out in complete detail.
Instead of writing "A new
home," write "A 4,000 square foot contemporary with 4 bedrooms and 3
baths and a view of the mountain on 20 acres of land.
Once again we are giving the
subconscious mind a detailed set of instructions to work on. The more information
you give it, the more clear the final outcome becomes. The more precise the
outcome, the more efficient the subconscious mind can become.
Can you close your eyes and
visualize the home I described above? Walk around the house. Stand on the porch
off the master bedroom and see the fog lifting off the mountain. Look down at
the garden full of tomatoes, green beans and cucumbers. And off to the right is
the other garden full of a mums, carnations and roses. Can you see it? So can
your subconscious mind.
6. By all
means, make sure your goal is high enough.
Shoot for the moon, if you miss
you'll still be in the stars. Earlier I talked about my umpiring goals and how
making it to the top level of college umpiring did not mix with my values. Some
of you might be saying that I'm not setting my goals high enough. Not so. I
still have very high goals for my umpiring career at the youth level. My
ultimate goal is to be chosen to umpire a Babe Ruth World Series and to do so
as a crew chief. If I never make it, everything I do to reach that goal will
make me a better umpire and a better person. If I make it, but don't go as a
crew chief, then I am still among the top youth umpires in the nation. Shoot
for the moon!
7. This
is the most important, write down your goals.
Writing down your goals creates
the roadmap to your success. Although just the act of writing them down can set
the process in motion, it is also extremely important to review your goals
frequently. Remember, the more focused you are on your goals the more likely
you are to accomplish them.
Sometimes we realize we have to
revise a goal as circumstances and other goals change, much like I did with my
umpiring. If you need to change a goal do not consider it a failure, consider
it a victory as you had the insight to realize something was different.
So your goals
are written down.
Now what?
First of all, unless someone is
critical to helping you achieve your goal(s), do not freely share your goals
with others. The negative attitude from friends, family and neighbors can drag
you down quickly. It's very important that your self-talk (the thoughts in your
head) are positive.
Reviewing your goals daily is a
crucial part of your success and must become part of your routine. Each morning
when you wake up read your list of goals that are written in the positive.
Visualize the completed goal, see the new home, smell the leather seats in your
new car, feel the cold hard cash in your hands. Then each night, right before
you go to bed, repeat the process. This process will start both your
subconscious and conscious mind on working towards the goal. This will also
begin to replace any of the negative self-talk you may have and replace it with
positive self-talk.
Every time you make a decision
during the day, ask yourself this question, "Does it take me closer to, or
further from my goal." If the answer is "closer to," then you've
made the right decision. If the answer is "further from," well, you
know what to do.
If you follow this process
everyday you will be on your way to achieving unlimited success in every aspect
of your life.
The difference between a goal
and a dream is the written word.
-Gene Donohue