Posts Tagged ‘New Year’

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If you don’t know where you’re going …

Friday, December 18th, 2009
… any road will get you there.  This is a quotation often attributed to Lewis Carroll - mistakenly.  But it sounds good. 
 
Goal Setting

Goal Setting

The actual text of Alice’s conversation with the Cheshire cat, from Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland is:
 
“Would you tell me, please, which way I ought to go from here?” asked Alice
“That depends a good deal on where you want to get to,” said the Cat.
“I don’t much care where–” said Alice.
“Then it doesn’t matter which way you go,” said the Cat.
“–so long as I get SOMEWHERE,” Alice added as an explanation.
“Oh, you’re sure to do that,” said the Cat, “if you only walk long enough.”
 
This brought to mind, for me, how I deal (or don’t deal) with goal setting.  We’ve talked about this before I know, but it’s an issue that comes up again and again for people.  I’ve likened it to heading off in the direction of your destination, but without a map and just hoping that eventually you’ll end up where you want to go.
 
Listen, I have a very poor sense of direction and when I set off somewhere -even WITH a map - I often end up somewhere else!  I dread to think where I’d be without one.
 
But when it comes to life goals, I’m in a dilemma.  If I’m trying to live “in the now” how can I have long term goals?  And - if I have goals, then  how can I be living in the now?
 
As a mother I’ve become used to reacting to everyone elses’ needs, all day, everyday.  That’s normal.  You have to be able to respond to whatever situation crops up, often involving picking someone up unexpectedly, cleaning cuts and worse, and searching the household for something that can be used (always at the last minute) for a class project that you only find out about on the morning it has to be submitted!
 
So how can I turn this around?  How can I set and achieve my own goals?
 
Well I’m proud to tell you I’ve started.  As always, I’ve had to get to grips with goal setting in a small way first, before I can replicate it elsewhere.  For me the key was firstly to acknowledge my previous successes.  I had difficulty with that, I felt awkward and unworthy praising myself for things I expected to succeed at anyway.  Perfectionist tendencies!  But I’ve been working on that for more than a year now and I’ve made real progress.
 
The most useful change in my pattern was to start acknowledge my past successes, and beginning to feel proud of myself.  Then I began to be able to look forward to setting new targets for myself, and praising myself for those successes.  I suppose, up until that, there was no psychological “reward” for my achievements, so there was no joy in setting up new goals and targets.
 
This is an ongoing process, so - if I think about Alice (above) - I can see how I was always going somewhere, but without any direction there was a lot of energy spent getting places I wasn’t sure I wanted to go!
 

New Year - New Outlook

Monday, January 12th, 2009
Aaaaagggghhhh! And so the nightmare of year-beginning starts. I began a programme of coaching for myself last year. It’s like a lot of professions, if you’re giving help to others - you have to be getting help yourself. Also, in December I did a five day course to update my own coaching skills. So now, at the start of a new year, I am up to my proverbials in reading lists, blog entries, newsletters for the new website (which will go live soon, I promise), new website etc.
 
All this at a time of year when I do most of my self-questioning. You can see the problem straight away, can’t you? Eternally self-defeating. And then I can add to that the feeling that if I can’t coach myself to perfection, how can I help anyone else?
 
Now THERE is the crux of the problem. Perfectionism. I have borrowed a wonderful phrase from one of the Jack Canfield coaches I spoke to - “I’m Daria, and I’m a recovering perfectionist”. I love it, because perfectionism is something that is so ingrained that you really do have to tackle it on a day-by-day, minute-by-minute basis. Perfectionism is the worst kind of “ism” because there is no end to it. It pervades every aspect of your life. Nothing is ever “perfect” and especially not yourself. And what is the outcome of all that striving? Just that - more striving. They say that you get what you focus on, and perfectionists don’t focus on perfection (you see how twisted this is?) they focus on Imperfection. They (and by “they” of course I mean “we” or “I”) focus on how we aim for perfection, but miss. So we are focusing on the “missing” instead of the excellent work we have done, the excellent result we have already achieved.
 
No matter how big a pain in the face we are to you (the rest of the world) we are an even bigger pain in the face to ourselves. So have a little pity, and a boot ready to kick us up the backside when we need to get outside of our own attempts at perfection, and back into the real world where everyone is always doing the best they can.
 
So the best thing I can do for myself (and perhaps help you) is to share with you something my own coach sent me last year (thanks Sheri):
 
 
 
Perfection VS Excellence
Perfection is being right   Excellence is willing to be wrong
Perfection is fear   Excellence is taking a risk
Perfection is anger and frustration   Excellence is powerful
Perfection is control   Excellence is spontaneous
Perfection is judgement   Excellence is accepting
Perfection is taking   Excellence is giving
Perfection is doubt   Excellence is confidence
Perfection is pressure   Excellence is natural
Perfection is destination   Excellence is the journey
 
 
Here’s to the journey - for 2009!
 
 

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