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How do you make your goals? SMART, stretched, not impossible

This week, I tried doing “big” personal goals (kindly note the word try before you read any further!). It was the first time I wrote them down intentionally, for as far as I can remember. It may seem weird from someone as focused as I am, but the truth is, I may be focused but not formally goal oriented. The first time I considered doing this was 2016 when I was finishing The Happiness Trap, the book my therapist recommended to me. In the end, it spoke about setting long-term goals aligned with your values that can help give direction. At the time it felt a bit counter-intuitive to do it. My diagnosis was that I was a “perfectionist” and most of my achievements were not seen as nearly enough compared with what I wanted to do. So would I not be setting myself a trap to write down goals? I decided not to risk it and stayed away from doing the homework on those last chapters, knowing that one day in life I would come back to it.

But Sara really, you are writing all this and you have never done goals before?

The Background

I naturally have, so let me start by sharing the bits that I had done prior to this year’s exercise, and then share what I am doing differently this year:

The Trigger

So why do I want to do anything different this year? Well, my friend Mina showed me this book by MiGoals excitingly just before school ended. She thought I would love it given my bullet journal & intentional living passion and ran me through the main concepts at school pick-up time (yes, one of those rare ones I attended). As had happened before, I got a bit scared. But it was early December and I parked the idea for a bit – I did not decide to do it or reject it, I used the fact that I had too many things to do at that point in time and pretended to forget… But then year-end came and with it a brand new bullet journal that I was certain I wanted to enhance and further.

"What if I included proper goals and some of the migoals concepts into my bullet journal?"

The Process

It was a neat idea if only I was having a normal routine where the time for myself was allowed and I did not have my fellow flu alongside me. If only I had a CEO day in my life. I could, but it was not a priority to do so at the time. As per my first sentence, I did not conclude my goals, but I concluded it was not something you do on the go and then it’s done. It was actually extremely valuable to go through the thought process, understand how to frame short and long-term goals and, most importantly, for the KPI-obsessed in me, to determine how to measure each goal and to ensure I can monitor the outcomes. This will so be included in my 2019 bullet journal. And it was also important to get me to write this because as I am writing, my brain is boiling and I could be scribbling my goals on the side and finally bring them into paper. I won’t, I will hang on just a little bit longer.

You will know by now I can put a structure to anything, and the more I can pass my brain through a framework the better I can get it to work in a successful manner. So let’s talk about how you can think of your goals.

The migoals planner outlines a framework for long-term goals and short/medium-term goals. I started with the more immediate ones and found myself in front of a blank sheet of paper. It is still blank by the way. I almost panicked thinking “OMG, I have no goals, I can’t be normal“. Then I went through the initial migoals thoughts for inspiration.

Why do we need goals anyway?

  1. Goals give you direction
  2. Goals help you focus on the important things
  3. Goals help you build self-belief
  4. Goals help you increase your odds of success
  5. Goals motivate you to be your best self

With that in mind, I thought – “I must be able to write down some goals”.

SMART Goals

I am someone with direction, I must focus on the important things and I definitely want to believe that I can succeed in being my best self. Come on Sara, work out some goals. I kept reading hoping the book would help me out. It then started giving me a structure, and I could hear my brain cells finally starting to move along, just as Little Girl C asked me for help with her Lego. Goals must be SMART.

A consultant’s framework?

Sara, you have just repeated a consultant framework on what goals are. Everyone knows goals are meant to be SMART.

I apologise if the example is nearly not as deep as you would have hoped for. But only by really ensuring that these 5 conditions are met can I even begin to think of what would qualify as goals for me. In the meantime, I have written too much for anyone in a decent commute time with more articles to go through. So I just decided this is too big of a topic and I will leave all else dwindling in my mind for a series on goals. And yes, I have written down some by now, as soon as I got to the long-term goals section.

This is but the beginning but enjoy the first steps. Remember,

People that have written goals are 42% more likely to achieve them.

2020 Update: Go here for a downloadable template for your goal setting, now refined and improved from my 2019 experiment

Photo by Danielle MacInnes on Unsplash

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