Since today is the Last Day of the 4th month of the year, it’s a good
time to update your goals. How are you doing so far with the goals you
set (or refreshed) at the beginning of the year? Are you making good
progress? Are you drifting or stuck? Did you fail to set intelligent
goals to begin with?
In my experience, choosing the right goals to begin with is
incredibly important if you want to make real progress and enjoy that
wonderful feeling of flow. So let me share some of my recent discoveries
on how to set goals more consciously.
The Classical Approach
In the past I used to set goals with a focus on covering the
different areas of my life. I’d set goals for my health, work/business,
contribution, finances, social life, relationships, personal growth,
spiritual path, etc. This worked okay for the most part, and I
maintained this approach for many years. I even wrote some articles
recommending this approach.
This wasn’t an approach I devised. It was basically something I
inherited from various personal development books I read. The approach
seemed sound, so I used it by default. Initially I couldn’t see anything
wrong with it.
However, as I continued using this approach I often felt myself
getting stuck or sidetracked. Sometimes I’d look at my goals, and while
they seemed pretty intelligent on the surface, I
felt like something was
missing. I didn’t feel as motivated as I expected.
I kept tweaking the categories, but something was definitely off.
I experimented by letting go of goals for a while and just going with
the flow, but that produced even worse results. I know some people are
fans of that style, but it hasn’t worked well for me. I make much better
progress — and I’m generally happier and more fulfilled — when I wield
greater conscious control over the direction of my life.
Recently I’ve found an approach that works much better, so let me share that with you now.
Goals From Identity
Instead of thinking of goals as specific accomplishments I want to
rack up in each part of my life, I began thinking of goals as a means of
self-expression. Some part of my personality wants to be expressed, and
a strong goal can help me focus that desire for self-expression. As
this expression manifests in reality, the result is a feeling of
satisfaction or fulfillment.
For example, some part of me obviously loves to learn, grow, and
explore. I love traveling, especially to new places. I love meeting new
people and having new experiences. This desire is deeply rooted in me,
but it’s not limited to any particular category like health or career
development.
Another part of me loves to teach. I find it rewarding to write,
speak, and otherwise communicate in ways that help people grow. This
desire isn’t limited to one particular area in terms of what I enjoy
teaching, so I may help people improve their health, relationships,
career path, etc. That’s one reason I write and speak about so many
different topics and refuse to limit myself to one specific
niche. Furthermore, I don’t constrain this form of self-expression to my
career path. I freely share guidance with friends in my personal life
just as I do this work professionally. I don’t turn off this aspect of
my personality at the end of the workday.
I began thinking of simple labels I could use for these different
aspects of my personality where I seem to have a strong need for
self-expression. Eventually I came up with the following list:
- The Explorer – The part of me that loves to learn, grow, and explore. This part loves traveling, making new friends, and new experiences.
- The Guide – The part of me that loves to teach and help people grow. This part especially loves to express himself through writing and speaking.
- The A-Player – The part of me that enjoys being effective, efficient, and successful. He’s competent and confident. He doesn’t need praise or acknowledgement to function well, and negative criticism just bounces off of him. He trusts himself. And he especially likes to connect and work with other A-players.
- The Member – The part of me that loves to connect with interesting people, to volunteer, to be social, and to belong. This part of me served as President of a non-profit association, was active in Toastmasters, was a member of the Transformational Leadership Council, administered multiple successful discussion forums, and hosted public meet-ups in different cities.
- The Champion – The part of me that loves to eat healthy, exercise regularly, and pop out of bed well before dawn. This part loves to keep training to become stronger, faster, smarter. He ensures that I have abundant physical and mental energy.
- The Master – The part of me that loves to be in control. He has a strong need for order, structure, and neatness. He stays calm under pressure and is very good at managing his emotions. This part especially loves D/s play. He welcomes responsibility and likes to be in charge.
This is a work in progress, so the list isn’t complete, but I like
what I have so far. For the sake of simplicity, I think I’ll limit this
list to a maximum of seven items.
Now instead of setting goals with the classical approach, I use this
identity-based approach. I begin by deepening my understanding of the
parts of me that crave expression. Then I set goals to give a voice to
those desires.
For example, The Explorer will be going to New York City this month.
The Guide will be speaking at a number of events this year (and he’s
writing this blog post). The Champion is currently starting on Week 5 of
the Insanity workout program (which is insanely challenging) —
he’s been pretty happy lately since I’m bouncing around with extra
energy and a higher than usual metabolism.
The Member has been feeling dissatisfied lately. I had a very social
time traveling through Europe for a month, but after returning home to
Vegas, I slacked off and let my social life become a bit dry. This
feeling of dissatisfaction tells me it’s time for some fresh goals and
pursuits to express this aspect of my personality. It would also be nice
to express this aspect more evenly instead of yo-yo’ing so much between
super social times and slower times.
Some goals are inspired by just one aspect of my personality, while
other goals are suggested by multiple aspects. The key here is that
every aspect needs at least one current goal to express itself.
Sometimes these personality aspects align somewhat with the
categories from the classical coverage approach, but they aren’t so
limited. For instance, The Champion often aligns with health goals, but
that same personality aspect can push me to raise my standards in my
social life as well. And The Explorer can also get involved in setting
health goals, such as by suggesting new 30-day trials.
I think the main thing missing from my list above would be the part
of me that loves caring, intimacy, cuddling, not harming animals, etc. I
haven’t come up with a good label for that part yet, but when I do,
I’ll include it as well, and I’ll make sure I have some goals to express
that part of my personality more fully. What I have above is just a
first draft, so I’ll probably refactor it significantly in the weeks
ahead. But even though it’s a bit rough, I wanted to share it now
instead of waiting till it’s perfect. An imperfect idea shared
immediately is generally superior to a perfect idea delayed
indefinitely.
It would be ideal for the personality aspects to exhibit loose coupling and strong coherence.
Loose coupling means that there’s little overlap between each aspect.
Strong coherence means that they’re very crisply defined without too
much fuzziness at the edges. We may not be able to achieve such rigidity
with personality aspects that are integrated into our neural nets, but
if we can come up with abstractions that adhere to these standards as
much as possible, it can assist us greatly in understanding how to set
more congruent goals.
Often the mere act of deciding to pay more attention to a particular
aspect of self-expression is enough to kick-start it and get some fresh
energy moving. For instance, when I decided it was time to open up and
start being more social while I’m in Vegas, a friend texted me and said
he and some other people I know are in town for a week. We’re having
dinner tomorrow. It might sound a bit hokey to say this, but I do
believe there are aspects of ourselves that are superconsciously
connected somehow. When we energetically open ourselves to new
experiences, we may receive compatible invitations and opportunities
even when it appears that we haven’t taken action yet. I think that
deciding to move forward is a valid form of action itself though, one
that the universe seems to acknowledge with positive feedback at times.
Another benefit of using this approach is that you can bring more
aspects of your personality to bear on your existing goals and
activities. I normally play disc golf with friends each weekend while
I’m in town. Disc golf has been a fun hobby of mine for years. To me
it’s a time to have fun and joke around, but I normally don’t take the
game itself too seriously. Within the context of personality expression,
however, I realized that I could likely play better if I really tried
to play my very best, which some aspects of my personality would really
like to see (A-Player, Champion, Master). So I went out last Saturday
and tried to bring my A-game to the experience, while still having fun
and joking around as usual. I ended up tying my personal best score on
that course, a score that I made years ago and have never matched until
now. I actually feel that I have a good shot of beating it, perhaps even
this summer. Interestingly, my friends seemed to rise to a greater
level of skill as well. They played extremely well and got significantly
better than usual scores too. Between the three of us, we scored five
2s (getting the disc in the basket in only 2 throws), which is pretty
amazing for our group. Normally we can go a whole game without anyone
scoring a 2. The best part is that we all seemed to have a really good
time. To me the experience felt richer and more exciting than usual.
In the past I told myself that disc golf was just a recreational
activity, something I do on the side for fun. I wasn’t interested in
pushing myself to play my best. A sloppy throw here and there wasn’t a
big deal to me. But my personality apparently enjoys it when I try to do
my best anyway. Even a strictly recreational/fun activity can be made
richer and more satisfying by inviting more of myself into the
experience.
Consider how you can apply this idea to some activity in your own
life. How can you inject more of your personality into your work, play,
relationships, etc?
Losing the Cage
One advantage to this approach is that you won’t ignore significant
aspects of your personality, which is easy to do with the classical
coverage-based approach.
A problem I had in the past was not paying enough attention to my
need for exploration and fresh experiences. This part was especially
squashed when I was broke, and it also felt caged when I was married.
Four years ago I had never been outside the USA. Now my passport is
halfway filled up with stamps. This type of change is very fulfilling.
In the past I would still set some travel goals, but they were
usually my lowest priority goals. Career and contribution and
relationships were always more important, and travel was just an
optional tack-on entertainment category, often listed as “Travel/Fun.”
As I began pushing myself to do more traveling, I realized it wasn’t a
diversion or an escape for me. It was an immersive growth experience,
and I found it deeply satisfying most of the time. This helped me to
stop treating this category of goals as something optional and
recreational. I realized that this is an important aspect of my
personality that needs to be expressed. Otherwise I just don’t feel like
I’m really being me. Now I’m finally treating this aspect of my
personality with a high degree of respect, at least on the same footing
as any other types of goals.
I think you’ll find it immensely satisfying when you finally start
expressing a part of your personality that’s previously been caged or
squashed. That’s definitely been the case for me.
It’s easy to verbally acknowledge an aspect of your personality that
you recognize. It takes little effort to say, “I like to travel too.”
But it’s another thing to set specific goals in this area (travel to
where? when are you leaving?) and to begin working on these goals
seriously, as if your life depended on it. I’d say you’re not really
serious till your flight is booked.
Also note that your strongest goals will satisfy multiple aspects of
your personality. Last year I decided to do more public speaking, and
this was an easy goal to accomplish because it aligns so well with
aspects of my personality that desire expression. The Explorer gets to
travel. The Guide gets to teach. The Member gets to connect with new
people. The A-Player gets to thoroughly prepare. The Champion enjoys the
challenge. And The Master loves to direct the audience to stretch
themselves (with their permission of course).
Own Your Goals
If you were to come up with a similar list of personality aspects for
yourself, what would you include? I encourage you to brainstorm a first
stab at such a list right now. How well do you know yourself?
Note that you don’t need to list every little piece of your
personality. Try to only list the strongest and most pervasive aspects,
the ones that keep trying to express themselves again and again — and
when they aren’t being expressed, you feel trapped, stuck, or depressed.
Do your best to generalize these aspects as much as possible. For
instance, if you like coffee and you need to drink it every day, is it
because you like to indulge in the sensual experience of it? Do you do
it for social reasons? Do you crave the stimulation of the caffeine? Any
or all of these could be aspects of your personality looking for
expression.
Notice what you catch yourself doing in your spare moments. What aspects of your personality might you be trying to express?
When you really take ownership of your personality… when you can look
at your list and say, “Yup, that’s me!” then I think you’ll find it
much easier to claim full ownership of the goals that arise from this
approach. You’ll finally be setting goals that are truly you — not your
parents’ goals for you, not society’s goals for you, and not merely some
marketing-implanted desire for the latest iStuff.
Integration
A major benefit to this approach is that it will help you set more
holistic, intelligently integrated goals. You’ll develop a better
understanding of which goals are wise choices for you, and which aren’t.
I can see that public speaking is a great fit for my personality.
That’s probably why I love it so much. I currently have engagements
booked through March of next year, and I’m always looking for more.
Speaking-related goals are very congruent, and so I find them fairly
easy to achieve. Working on these goals is a labor of love.
On the other hand, developing new products is much more challenging
for me. I can eventually accomplish such goals, but they take a lot
longer, and my progress is slower. Such goals satisfy some aspects of my
personality like The A-Player and The Guide, but they don’t do much to
satisfy other aspects like The Explorer and The Member. This awareness
suggests that I could develop products faster if I could align the
process with more aspects of my personality. For instance, one thing
that helps is working with other people on a product instead of working
solo. I’m currently working with an audio engineer on the new Subjective
Reality audio program, and this is indeed helping to move things along
since we can collaborate on some aspects of the project.
I’ll cover this personality-based approach to goal setting in more
detail in the upcoming Subjective Reality program since this ties in
with your avatar’s identity and the story you create with your avatar,
but I wanted to share the rough version of this now in the hopes that
you’ll find it worthy of some experimentation.
If you try this approach, please let me know
what you come up with for the list of your personality aspects. And
especially let me know if you find this approach helpful in setting new
goals that you otherwise might not have considered.
The Guide is now satisfied.
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