Goal Setting & Planning
"The difference between a goal and a dream is the written word."
-Gene Donohue
| Key Points |
Enjoying yourself on your path of life is important!
When you have achieved a goal, take the time to enjoy the satisfaction of having
done so. Absorb the implications of the goal achievement, and observe the progress you
have made towards other goals. If the goal was a significant one, reward yourself
appropriately.
With the experience of having achieved this goal, review the rest of your goal plans:
f you achieved the goal too easily, make your next goals harder
If the goal took a dispiriting length of time to achieve, make the next goals a little
easier
If you learned something that would lead you to change other goals, do so
If while achieving the goal you noticed a deficit in your skills, decide whether to set
goals to fix this.
Failure to meet goals does not matter as long as you learn from it. Feed lessons learned
back into your goal-setting program.
Remember too that your goals will change as you mature - adjust them regularly to
reflect this growth in your personality. If goals do not hold any attraction any longer,
then let them go. Goal-setting is your servant, not your master - it should bring you real
pleasure, satisfaction and a sense of achievement.
| There are seven tools of transformation. These tools are: | ||||
last updated 2002-10-5 |
