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Step 1
Step One: Find the right motivator by identifying your core values.
The first step is to identify what's most important to you. Let's use weight loss as an example. Health and fitness might not be one of your fundamental core values, so a vision of a trim body and vibrant energy might not be emotionally compelling; hence, you won't lose weight.
On the other hand, competition or community may be important to you. A vision of winning a half-marathon or meeting new friends at the gym will help encourage you to shed weight. Or perhaps family is a core value.
Staying healthy for your children or spouse may be the perfect motivator.
Identify your core values by creating a bulleted list of what's important to you. Don't edit your thoughts. Instead, list as many values as you can. Then, cull your list by grouping similar items and crossing off the minor ones. Select no more than seven values; four is an ideal number.
Whether you choose values such as family, success, integrity, or spirituality, creating a list of your core values is imperative to developing a powerful vision. -
Step 2
Step Two: Create a vision and focus on it, not the goal itself.
Vision is the catalyst that amplifies your ability to achieve goals and resolutions. As you work toward your goals, vision engenders the drive, passion, and resilience necessary to create momentum and stay the course.
Let's continue with our weight loss example. You set a New Year's resolution to lose twenty pounds. You've got many reasons to do so: your doctor says you should, you know you'll feel better, and you'll love the way you look in your new clothes. March arrives and your pants are even tighter than they were in January. Why? You didn't have a vision.
If you had crafted a clear vision of your goal, the results would have been quite different. Your vision could have included seeing yourself running through the neighborhood on a warm spring day, waving to the neighbors as you pass. As you sped by, some of the neighbors may have commented on how good you look.
A vision is a compelling description of your ideal future. It's a movie in your mind that shows in vivid detail where you want to be. At its most powerful, a vision involves all the senses and is emotionally evocative.
Some clients who want to project a more powerful image in the workplace use their personal brands as their visions. For example, a founder of a nonprofit agency selected Glenda the Good Witch from the Wizard of Oz as her brand. When she goes out in public she envisions Glenda. "And I hold my head a little higher," she says. -
Step 3
Step Three: Take it one day at a time.
"How do you eat an elephant?" the old saw asks. "One bite at a time." Meet your goal one day at a time.
Let's go back to our weight loss example. You'll probably find it's easier to achieve your ideal weight if you set specific daily goals, such as eliminating starches from your diet, drinking eight glasses of water, and completing a thirty-minute workout. Also, checking off these goals daily will help motivate you. Rewards offer yet another motivation.
Reward yourself for setting and meeting daily goals. Having something to look forward to always makes it easier to do the hard things. Rewards can be as simple as taking a few minutes to listen to your favorite song, sipping a cup of hot tea, or puttering in the garden.















Comments
Blackbear said
on 3/21/2008 OMG! I'm sooooo glad you came to EHOW!!!!!!!