Do you get a lingering sense of emptiness from an unachieved goal?
When the goal is important, I really need to achieve it. Otherwise, there's a nagging sense of the incomplete. It tugs, it pulls, it drags me down. Why set a goal if not to achieve it?
A goal unachieved leaves an empty spot to fill.
Fill that spot. Achieve that goal. Then move on to the next noble and exciting goal.
Not happening? Maybe the problem is in the design of your plan. When our goal is compelling we need a plan carefully designed to get done what needs to get done to achieve that goal. Design that plan, then work it. Act relentlessly on your plan, and your goal is yours to achieve.
What lingering goal needs your attention? Maybe it's the plan.
-- Doug Smith
When the goal is important, I really need to achieve it. Otherwise, there's a nagging sense of the incomplete. It tugs, it pulls, it drags me down. Why set a goal if not to achieve it?
A goal unachieved leaves an empty spot to fill.
Fill that spot. Achieve that goal. Then move on to the next noble and exciting goal.
Not happening? Maybe the problem is in the design of your plan. When our goal is compelling we need a plan carefully designed to get done what needs to get done to achieve that goal. Design that plan, then work it. Act relentlessly on your plan, and your goal is yours to achieve.
What lingering goal needs your attention? Maybe it's the plan.
-- Doug Smith
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