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| Well, I thought I'd kick off the first topic in the Personal Effectiveness forum... One of the best techniques I have learnt for goal attainment and daily motivation is the practice of writing out your long-term goals (and affirmations) in full each and every day. This is something I picked up from one of Brian Tracey's books and when I eventually tried it, I was suprised by the results. I became so much more focused and motivated each day and I began to make very quick progress towards achieving goals that I had set some time ago but up until that point had only written down once or twice. Has anyone else tried this? What results did you see? Personally this has to be one of the most effective techniques I had tried for keeping a steady focus on your goals and maintaining a high level of motivation! The reason it works is of course very simple, it keeps your goals and aspirations very clearly in mind - and this has a positive effect on the decisions you make throughout the day. It becomes much easier to relate your daily activities to your long term goals, which provides you with motivation. In addition if you cannot relate an activity or task to one of your goals - you are more likely to question whether or not you should be doing it in the first place! I'd be interested to hear about your experiences with this or any other techniques that you use to keep focused and motivated on a daily basis?
__________________ Chris Hayford Totalblue Interactive "Character is the ability to carry out a worthy decision, after the emotion of that decision has passed." - Hyrum Smith Last edited by Chris : 11-02-2006 at 01:59 AM. |
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| I have used the writing lists technique and it definitely works for me. It feels like I actually got something accomplished when I can cross it off of a list. It also keeps me focused. I am VERY forgetful and easily distracted because I have a million "goals" swimming around in my head at any given moment. My problem is that if I don't do it first thing, I get distracted and forget to write a list. I need to get in the habit of starting a new list every night with "WRITE TODAY'S LIST" on the top so I don't forget.
__________________ ~ Trina ~ Contrary to Reality "Yes, the long war on Christianity. I pray that one day we may live in an America where Christians can worship freely! In broad daylight! Openly wearing the symbols of their religion…. perhaps around their necks? And maybe — dare I dream it? — maybe one day there can be an openly Christian President. Or, perhaps, 43 of them. Consecutively." — Jon Stewart |
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| Hi Trina, actually I was referring to writing down long-term goals (like fitness, income, career goals) rather than daily tasks but I realise I didn't make this clear in my original post! (Have edited it slightly now!). But, in terms of daily tasks lists - I agree, it is that real sense of accomplishment that makes it work so well. It has become a time-management cliché but it does work! You get a feel-good factor which motivates you to go on and complete your next task (well in theory anyway!) But I have the same problem, I haven't yet formed a solid daily habit of doing this and like you, I easily get distracted first thing and can then sail through the day working on whatever seems most important at the time, without a clear list of what I actually need to achieve.
__________________ Chris Hayford Totalblue Interactive "Character is the ability to carry out a worthy decision, after the emotion of that decision has passed." - Hyrum Smith |
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| When you said write them down every day I assumed that you meant daily goals. Sorry!! As for long term goals, I need to figure out exactly what they are first. LOL. I have a few goals, things like keep practicing with my photography and maintaining a good marriage. Nothing really specific though. Sometimes I feel lazy or unfocused because I don't have big dreams and grand goals in life. I just want to be happy with who I love doing what I love.
__________________ ~ Trina ~ Contrary to Reality "Yes, the long war on Christianity. I pray that one day we may live in an America where Christians can worship freely! In broad daylight! Openly wearing the symbols of their religion…. perhaps around their necks? And maybe — dare I dream it? — maybe one day there can be an openly Christian President. Or, perhaps, 43 of them. Consecutively." — Jon Stewart |
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| Well that sounds like an first-class goal to me!
__________________ Chris Hayford Totalblue Interactive "Character is the ability to carry out a worthy decision, after the emotion of that decision has passed." - Hyrum Smith |
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Regards, From Shannan Last edited by Yynatago : 11-02-2006 at 07:22 AM. |
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__________________ ~ Trina ~ Contrary to Reality "Yes, the long war on Christianity. I pray that one day we may live in an America where Christians can worship freely! In broad daylight! Openly wearing the symbols of their religion…. perhaps around their necks? And maybe — dare I dream it? — maybe one day there can be an openly Christian President. Or, perhaps, 43 of them. Consecutively." — Jon Stewart |
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| Personally, I have a daily or weekly to do list that I put in a notepad file which resides in my startup items folder in Start > Programs. That way every time I start my computer up I've got my to do list staring me in the face, and its really easy to add things or cross things off. And whenever I'm looking for something to do I know exactly where to look. As far as long term goals, I have those written down somewhere...but most of my daily or weekly goals are baby steps towards my bigger, long term goals, and I find doing it this way keeps me on track for my larger goals. |
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I've read the book and I think it is very good. If properly implemented, it greatly improves productivity, if you have a fragmented lifestyle common between those who spend a lot of time online, or live in a large city. It took a bit of effort to actually set up the system that works for me, but when it is up and running, it helps a lot. The stress is gone, more and more is done every day. Beautifull.
__________________ Ilya. |
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| I run a project called 101 Things in 1001 Days (it's not originally my idea, I just run a blog with the brazilian version of the original project). The project consists of having people list 101 things/goals they want to accomplish in 1001 days and posting this list and the progress in their blogs. People list both short and long term goals. As more and more people join the project, I've started getting more and more feedback. What people usually tell me is that: 1) Creating the list is an exercise in itself. It forces them to take a deeper look on what they really want and define/redefine their goals more consciously. 2) Because most of these lists are public (people post them in their blogs) and because people report their progress in their blogs too, they feel more motivated and commited. 3) Having such a list keeps them very focused. This is the general feedback I usually get. I have a list of my own and I noticed that it helped me a great deal! I definitely stayed more focused, I've already accomplished several of my goals - both short and long term - and many of the short term goals are steps to long term goals anyway. I don't know if writing your long term goals on a daily basis is effective or not, I suppose it might work for some people while to others this would seem redundant, but because I'm getting all this feedback, I'm starting to believe that keeping a list visible/accessible and taking a look at it constantly definitely helps. People have been telling me about different methods they are using to keep them focused and I had this one person tell me that for each and every item of her list, she associated an image to represent them and put them all in a folder. Every night before bed she looks at these images and thinks about which steps she's going to take the next day to get closer to those goals that are prioritary at that particular moment. I found this method very interesting (and I also believe it is helpful for intention manifestation, but that's subject for another forum Anyway, just my 2 cents. Bottom line is, I think different methods work for different people. If you find something that works for you, stick with it. :-) Last edited by Patricia : 11-02-2006 at 11:01 AM. Reason: Missed a link. |
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| I think that writing down my long term goals every day would drive me loopy...after about three days! However I can see the attraction of having them written down and clearly on my radar. What I decide to do each and every day (to do lists) may not always get me nearer to those goals but having them there means that I know when I am straying from my ultimate destination. I am also intertesed in using a system like GTD. I have the book, I've read it...I now just need to put it into practice! My plan is to blog my experience of applying GTD on a new site I'm building with Chris Hayford. Please drop-in and give me support - I will need it! |
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Anyway, I realize this is getting off topic, as the original question was about methods for keeping ourselves focused on long term goals, so after this, maybe we should open a topic to discuss the project idea specifically, what do you think? If people feel this could be an interesting topic to discuss, I'll open a thread for it and then edit this post with the link to it. I would certainly love to do that, I'm really interested in getting more and more feedback and ideas, because apparently many people are getting very good results from participating in the project. So, please let me know. |
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- daily to do stuff, that are not necessarily related to long term goals and - steps towards long term goals Personally, to me, my long term goals are pretty clear and present on my mind at all times. I do have them written down (for a different purpose), but I don't feel the need to be reminded of them on a daily basis. It's the short term goals and to do items that I really need to keep track of. And even though I don't do that systematically, I prefer to have separate lists to each of those. Short term goals would go on a somewhat "permanent" list and to do items are listed on a "disposable" list that I throw away after everything gets done. |
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| Hi Chris, I did exactly as you described for a month and saw amazing results even in the first week. I wrote only 9-10 longterm goals every day -not reading previous days' notes. It also helps to clarify your goals when you write them again and again and you begin to catch some conflicts inside you. Also please read 'It Works' by R. H. Jarrett written in 1926 (you can buy it from amazon.com but it is public domain now, so you can find some links in the internet): It Works I guess this book is the father of every other personel development book. |
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| Writing goals down every day sounds like a good idea.I think that keeping the goals fresh in your mind would definitely make things clearer. I did something like this. I printed out some pieces of paper with individual goals on them and i put them in my room and next to my computer so i see them every day. I also put pictures of what my goals will lead to next to my computer so I stay motivated to continue to work towards my goals. |
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| Hi everyone, whenever I write out a goal (long or short term), I always include how doing it or achieving it will make me feel emotionally. This is a great motivator both on a day to day basis, and over a longer period of time. Then, as you are writing, the feelings of motivation and momentum grow right away. I've gotten some great results from this! I think this is because I relate more to the feeling of doing something rather than just the idea of it... Last edited by JJH : 11-06-2006 at 03:25 AM. |
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| I don't write down my goals often. I think I done that once or twice during a retreat as per the facilitators' instructions. My goals are engraved in my cranium and heart. I think and feel about it everyday from the time I wake up to the time I sleep. So I guess I don't have to write that down.
__________________ http://miloriano.com: You |


