We've been talking a lot about goals at the school and on the blog over the past few weeks and its led to many interesting discussions on the impacts, both positive and negative, that goals can have in your life.
One of the core reasons to set goals and work to achieve them, is to build happiness, fulfillment, and sense of self. That is the true goal. If you're using your goals to beat yourself up or hold yourself back, i.e. "I set a goal to pass my next rank exam on X date and then I didn't pass, I suck.", you need to change your strategy regarding goals.
1. Use goals to check up on yourself not beat up on yourself.
I like to set a goal, build a plan that involves a daily or weekly discipline/rhythm, and then forget about the goal for a while and just enjoy the process.
Use the goal to set a nav point and then periodically pop your head up, take a look at the goal and see if you're on track. If you're not, ask yourself if you're truly invested in the goal, and if you are, figure out how you need to change your plans and rhythms to get back on course. Don't spend any time on negatively judging yourself if you're off track, just take it as useful data for resetting your course or looking at the goal itself.
2. Fail Forward
When you don't achieve a particular goal, take stock of what you have achieved and build a new goal from there. If you made it 60% of the way there, you've got a 60% head start on your next goal. Everyone fails, it's what you do with that failure that makes a difference; if you scrap all your progress in self-recrimination then you'll have achieved nothing. Follow John Maxwell's advice and "stop failing backwards and start failing forward!"
3. Set Effort Goals and Celebrate Effort as Highly as Result
An alternate goal to "Pass the exam in January.", is "Do the exam in January." Being there is every bit as worthy. Choose a component of your study and just work on practicing that component, don't even worry about getting better at it. My 5 minutes a day goal (I make sure to train at least 5 minutes each day) is not about achieving a result, its just about making sure I get the sword in my hand (and in my mind) everyday. By celebrating the efforts, I make the journey more fun and more rewarding.
4. Remember Rhythm
Big things are achieved in small steps. Make this idea part of your life philosophy and you'll be surprised at where a thousand small steps will take you.
Devon