Changing Our Goals Everyday: An Exercise in Daily Personal Evolution

Posted on 11 Feb, 2008

3 Comments so far »

  1. Laurie said,

    Wrote on February 17, 2008 @ 8:18 pm

    This is a great one and one that really speaks to me right now. I love the idea of “growing” our goals– it’s obviously good to persevere and not just wishy-washily change our focus because things get too hard, but it’s also really easy to lose touch with our goals over time. I love the way you described that and I think it’s something that people don’t talk much about. I’ll have to experiment with this and see if it works for me, though– every day sounds like a lot! I’d worry that I might be tempted to add things that aren’t that important to me, making the goal less realistic or less honest. Do you struggle with that?

  2. Clay Collins said,

    Wrote on February 17, 2008 @ 8:41 pm

    @Laurie: So, regarding this:

    “I’d worry that I might be tempted to add things that aren’t that important to me, making the goal less realistic or less honest.”

    These are the very reasons why I wanted to revise my goals every day. Do you know how Digg works? It’s kind of like that. The goals (or elements of goals) that can stand my daily scrutiny get to stay and the ones that don’t feel authentic get cut. The goals have to stand the test of time.

    As for being unrealistic, I think it’s ok. If I have an unrealistic goal that says for a week or a month, and that seems to resonate with me every day, then I keep it, hold it in my mind, and try to think about how to make it real. About two months ago having a lifestyle where I didn’t have to physically be anywhere, where I had unlimited mobility, seemed really unrealistic. But that’s my reality now.

    What got me thinking about this was the section on “dreamlining” in Timothy Ferriss’s book, the Four Hour Work Week.

    I’m really jazzed that you liked the post :-).

  3. Laurie said,

    Wrote on February 17, 2008 @ 10:47 pm

    Ok, it just clicked when you used the Digg analogy! Now I get it. So one day I might add something silly that I don’t really care about, but if I TRULY don’t care about it, then it won’t stay on my goals list for long. I think you’re totally right on about that!

    I’ve thought about this a bunch with regard to my “mission statement”. For awhile I felt chained to parts of it even if when they didn’t always resonate with me, but I recently realized that it’s actually OK to make changes to it. The parts that really matter will continue to matter and I’ll continue to use them as a guidepost in my daily decisions.

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