The Ultimate Goal Achievement Guide
Essentials To Achieving Your
Eluding Goals
The Ultimate Goal Achievement Guide
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The Ultimate Goal Achievement Guide
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The Ultimate Goal Achievement Guide
The Ultimate Goal Achievement Guide:
Essentials to Achieving
Your Eluding Goals
The Achievement Mindset
Driving Force
Long-Term Strategist
Anchoring Goals
Define a Course of Action (Clarity through Specific Goals)
Characteristics of an Achiever
Paralyzing Emotions
The Ultimate Goal Achievement Guide
Introduction
What does it mean to be unreasonable? Sure, we can take the dictionary
definition of the word but that just gives us a cold relationship with other
words. It lacks the societal and personal explanation of a word that is often
misunderstood. Most people will look at “unreasonable” as negative ignoring
the word’s ability to shape their lives. But how can a word that is synonymous
with senseless, foolish, and silly able to change our lives?
Consider the societal relationship with the word through the use of this
quote by George Bernard Shaw:
The reasonable man adapts himself to the world; the unreasonable man
persists in trying to adapt the world to himself. Therefore, all progress
depends on the unreasonable man.
In this quote we discover the root to why so many of our goals and dreams
go unfulfilled. We allow the world to define us. We conform to what society
thinks is best. In some cases, this can be considered a good thing. Laws
that protect and keep us from harming others are a prime example. On the
other hand it places constraints on our aspirations, goals, and ideas that can
be helpful to society. They deemed these ideas, goals, and aspirations as
“unrealistic”, “unreasonable”, and “unattainable” simply because they do not
fall into the norm of what everyone else is doing.Would there be common
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luxuries like electricity, plastic, transportation, and communication, if it
weren’t for those who decided not to settle for what was reasonable and to
push the boundaries to create, develop, and expand beyond what the norm
has to offer? Companies like Apple, Tesla, and Amazon.com; people like
Tony Fadell, Sal Khan, and Thomas Edison.
The Ultimate Goal Achievement Guide gives you the tools to change your
relationship with your aspirations, goals, and ideas. You are the captain of
your fate and must make the quality decision to be unreasonable about your
potential. You must not accept the limitations that anyone, regardless of
their relationship, places on you.
As you go through these pages you will notice that there is less information
on goal setting as there is about goal achieving. There are countless
resources out there that will give you the mechanics of goal setting but very
few that deal with the mental recalibration required to achieve your goals.
This resource and other resources offered through Mind Venue focuses on
(re)calibrating the mind towards high achievement.
It is my sincere hope that you will incorporate the information contained in
these pages into every facet of your life, beginning with the establishment of
suitable goals.
Ralph Plaskett
The Ultimate Goal Achievement Guide
The Achievement Mindset
The Achievement Mindset is:
¥¥ The confidence to reach goals;
¥¥ not considering the options of failure; and
¥¥ knowing that obstacles will come, but you will overcome each.
I am amazed by how much effort our school systems focus on teaching
memorized skills, but so little time on developing the mind with what
most call “soft skills.”
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Every athlete, successful businessperson, and influential leader knows
that without the proper frame of mind achievement isn’t possible. Our
environment--the people, places, and things that we interact with-always yields itself to our mind and associated attributes like our
habits. In other words, our external yields itself to our internal.
The skills that we learn and practice are critical to our achievement but
without the proper frame of mind, those skills become useless. Among
other things, the achievement mindset is responsible for the greatest
innovators, leaders, star athletes, entrepreneurs, parents and mentors.
But at the end of the day, achievement is a quality decision supported
first by a positive self-image and then the appropriate knowledge and
skills.
Choices are hard, especially in an environment that has countless
options. Often, large amounts of options cause us to be indecisive. We
think to ourselves, “What happens if I make the wrong choice?” This
fear paralyzes us from making any choice at all.
The result is that our minds are consumed with the possibilities of
failure instead of the possibilities of success. We are more fearful of
failure than we are living an average, forgetful life. As odd as it may
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sound, the process to achieve success is unfamiliar therefore we are
fearful, hesitant and paralyzed by the unknown. This is why we make
decisions that are most familiar to us.
The choice to establish a goal and work on achieving it is a bold one,
yet the reward is far greater than you can imagine.
Failure is not an option.
Unfortunately there isn’t a magical pill that you and I can swallow to
make life easier, but there are things that we can do to make it more
manageable.
Correctly relating to our environment is a critical step in making quality
decisions needed to achieve. The idea is to concentrate our efforts
toward overcoming our own combative minds rather than focus our
energy on destructive emotions, ideas and thoughts. I remember my
cousin asking me during our junior year of college, “How are you able
to do it all?”
At that time, I was taking a full course load, working two more-thanpart-time jobs, juggling a relationship, managing several student
associations, and enjoying the college party life. To say the least, I was
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busy. What my cousin was trying to ask was why my grades were not
slipping.
How was I able to do all that I was doing with an equal level of success
in each area?
My answer: Failure wasn’t an option. I had no other choice.
Sure, I could have chosen to cut back on some of my extracurricular
activities, but I knew that my future success depended on my current
success in everything that I was doing. I refocused my mind from
thinking of how overwhelming the activities were, to thinking about the
results of those activities would produce.
In essence, I focused on the future.
The relationship with my environment could have easily been one that
caused me to give in to stress and quit activities that had an impact on
my future. But like any successful relationship, I made a quality decision
to put things into perspective in an effort to obtain the desired
outcome.
This required serious mental recalibration. Why? Because I had a
history of quitting when things got rough. My habits and thought
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processes were self-defeating. They caused me to give in instead of
rise to the occasion. I never liked failure. I’m not sure who does.
When I realized that what I was doing was failing my future, I changed
my relationship with my environment in order to overcome difficult
situations.
You see, failure doesn’t have to be an option that you choose.
Failure is not who you are and does not determine what future
outcomes will be.
The barrier between you and your goals is your relationship with your
environment. It is the way that you interpret your life’s activities. Your
mind is very much like a fertile farmland. It will produce whatever you
plant and nurture.
What are you planting and nurturing? Is it producing the outcome that
you desire?
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Driving Force
What is your consuming desire to achieve your goals?
External yields itself to the internal.
In other words, it is mind over matter. You are able to become the
master of your circumstances when you appropriately place those
circumstances into the right perspective. As it relates to achieving your
goals, the one thing that is preventing you from achieving them is your
relationship with the goals.
In order to successfully accomplish any goal you must possess the drive
to achieve it.
The Ultimate Goal Achievement Guide
Goals themselves, no matter how well thought-out, are simply
intentions that need to develop into activity. That activity requires fuel
to keep the momentum going. Think of your goal as a car journey. You
can complete this journey, but only when you take the necessary steps
to do so. To achieve your goals you must get started. You need to turn
the ignition and get the car started, if you will. To gain momentum you
have to push forward in your activities—press down on the gas pedal
and get the car moving. You can keep moving and keep that force
going as long as something doesn’t get in your way. Simple, right?
With that being said, what is driving you to or away from accomplishing
your goals?
This driving force is an important attribute to accomplish your goals. It
is also the missing link for so many people whose goals, ambitions, and
dreams have been eluding them.
This driving force is like a coin. On one side it has the ability to create
the life that you desire and on the other the ability to hold you to a life
of mediocrity. The choice is yours and yours alone of which side of the
coin you choose.
The Ultimate Goal Achievement Guide
Choose a driving force
When we hear stories of achievement, we are often told about
something that helped the achiever overcome obstacles – to pursue
the goal, no matter what.
This could be a promise made to a love one, a boiling frustration, or a
social cause. All of these are consuming desires that drive a person to
achieve beyond their normal ability. This consuming desire gives you
and I the ability to rise above the situation and jump over hurdles that
would cause others to crumble.
What this desire gives you is the ability to strive for a cause greater
than yourself. No longer are your goals anchored simply to yourself.
Now you are striving to reach your goals because of what it will mean
to others (more on this later).
As much as we hate to admit it, people are influenced by our actions
every day. They are either inspired or disheartened by what we say or
do. If they see us crumble, with no other example to emulate, they too
will believe that their hopes, dreams, goals, and aspirations are not
achievable. Fear will establish a permanent space in their mind.
The Ultimate Goal Achievement Guide
Fear can be used as a motivator, however it is best known for its ability
to inhibit the pursuit of everything, if allowed. This paralyzing force
against forward progress is often linked to the fear of the unknown.
Consider how you would move around in a pitch-black room. You are
nervous because you cannot see what is in front of you. You are fearful
of stumbling over something and falling. So what do you do? What can
you do?
You either stay in one spot, hoping that a source of light will appear,
or you improvise by getting on all fours and feeling your way around
until you find your way. Few people will improvise. Most will be
overwhelmed with fear that paralyzes them from taking action. They
are unfamiliar with the space so they take no action. They become
complacent in the box that they created for themselves because at
least in that box, there is a familiar feeling.
Successful goal achievement is best aided when there is a driving force
that helps you move past each milestone until the goal is achieved.
Being prepared with a clearly defined goal and a plan that breaks
down that goal to manageable parts is part of the equation. The
other side of that equation are the intangibles that will cause you to
successfully execute your plan and accomplish your goal.
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Long-Term Strategist
Short-term thinking is like being nearsighted - the things in the
distance are blurry; without the proper lens you are bound to fall and
pass over opportunities repeatedly.
Quitting too soon is the #1 culprit as to why people don’t achieve their
goals! Goal setting--and more importantly, goal achieving--requires
long-term thinking and planning - at least for the goals that are worth
putting effort into.
Unfortunately it seems as if long-term anything is considered to
be a like a plague that causes entire towns to be abandoned. We
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have become a culture that has difficulty looking beyond immediate
gratification and “the now.” Technology has helped create a culture
that expects results immediately. Nearly every aspect of our everyday
lives is provided to us significantly faster than it was in the previous
decade.
We can obtain steaming-hot food within minutes with microwaves,
convection ovens, and drive-through windows. We communicate at
high-speed through text messages, Google Chat, and video calls (i.e.
FaceTime or Skype). We travel faster and longer with energy-efficient
and environmentally friendly vehicles, bullet trains, and expanding
public transportation. We can even watch what we want, when we want
to, where we want to, and on any device that suits us with digital video
recorders (DVRs) and streaming services like Netflix.
Everything is literally at our fingertips. It is no wonder we have difficulty
setting goals and achieving them. We are distracted and growing
increasingly impatient.
In an effort to not sound like a grandfather advocating the “good
‘ole days,” technology is wonderful but like anything else, you must
understand the advantages as well as the disadvantages.
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You may have heard the saying “Rome wasn’t built in a day.” As cliché
as this statement may be, understanding the historical significance of
the Roman Empire will give you an appreciation for long-term thinking
and planning.
The Roman Empire enjoyed unprecedented stability and prosperity
for nearly five centuries. Its expansion in Europe, Africa, Asia, and
the Mediterranean created lasting influence by the way of religion,
philosophy, architecture, forms of government and law that we are still
experiencing today.
But prior to peace and prosperity the Romans encountered 500 years
of civil wars and instability. To become a significant force in history, it
took long-term planning, influence, and execution, execution and more
execution.
Absolutely nothing of significance was ever achieved with only today in
mind.
Imagine walking through a forest. A hiking trip through a forest
can be a very rewarding experience. Not only do you get to enjoy
nature’s beauty, but it gives you the opportunity to clear your head
and gain perspective. While you are in a forest, it is difficult to see
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your destination beyond the trees. You might be able to see a short
distance but the trees block your view of the longer distance. However,
if you were to view that same forest from a different vantage point--–
from on top of a cliff or mountain--you would be able to clearly see
where you are and where you are going.
The benefit of long-term thinking and planning is that it allows for you
to see things in a different light than if you simply planned for the now.
You gain a larger perspective, have better insight, and are able to plan
for things otherwise missed with short-term vision.
The thing about “the now” is that it is already here and it will take care
of itself.
As much as short-term planning has it place, short-term thinking is
detrimental to the achievement of anything worthwhile. And let’s be
honest, time is a precious commodity. It is impossible to regain it when
it is lost, or put on hold. This is why without the proper lens of longterm planning you are bound to pass over opportunities, time and time
again.
The Ultimate Goal Achievement Guide
Anchoring Goals
It is not sufficient to simply create goals. We must create grand goals.
We must create goals that are anchored so that they don’t drift away.
What is a goal if not an aspiration of something not yet achieved?
Everyone has goals but few achieve them. Why? Is there some secret
formula that only achievers know about? Do they have some level
of information that the rest of the world doesn’t? Well, in part they
do, but rather than being secret information, it is information often
overlooked due to its perceived simplicity.
Goal setting surely isn’t rocket science, yet so many treat it as if it is.
This is because goal setting causes people to do things that they are
either unfamiliar or uncomfortable with. It causes us to do difficult
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things like commit, be accountable, think long-term, and face rejection
and other aspects of failure. Who wants to do that? Yet, to accomplish
anything worthwhile, we must establish clearly defined goals.
In short, goals setting requires – even demands – establishing specific
future accomplishments. This is where many people fall short. They
miss the most important part – clearly defined and specific goals.
How do you accomplish something if you don’t know what you
are going to accomplish first? It is like going on a road trip but not
knowing where you are going or which route you are going to take.
At the beginning of every year, people make New Year’s resolutions
in the hope of improving themselves. You hear things like – “I
want to lose weight,” “I will drink less,” “I will spend more time with
family,” “I will…” 99 percent of the time, none of their resolutions are
accomplished. More often than not, the resolutions don’t even last
through the first two months of the year. Why? Their resolutions or
goals are not anchored to anything or anyone.
Anchoring Your Goals
Often, people do not establish specific goals because they are
fearful of not accomplishing it. They think that if a specific goal isn’t
established then they wouldn’t have to worry about fear, rejection, or
failure when the goal isn’t achieved. But which one is worse – never
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achieving the goal or only achieving 80% of the goal? Achieving some
level of a specifically defined goal is far better than achieving nothing
at all.
Your goals must be anchored to specific accomplishments. This is
where people fall short when creating their New Year’s resolutions.
Without specifics, the goal becomes fluid and difficult to accomplish.
Have you ever seen a boat on water with a mild current? After a while,
the current moves the boat from its original destination. But when
it is anchored, the boat remains steadfast. This current is a great
representation of life. Sometimes it is a mild current and other times it
is turbulent. Either way, you can guarantee that life will do its best to
distract you from accomplishing your goals. The only way to counteract
this is to have an anchor.
Having specific goals is not the only anchor. The second anchor
involves an act that takes many people outside of their comfort zone.
It is the act of accountability. You have told someone about your goals
that will then hold you accountable to achieve them. In addition to
accountability, you now have something to strive for.
One of the most annoying feelings is when friends ask you, “How is X
going?” or “Have you accomplished X yet?” When you are honest, it’s
painful to provide a negative response. Your friends give you puzzled
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looks as if you’ve committed some heinous crime. This will cause
you to push even more to accomplish your goals so that you do not
disappoint your friends.
It is the ‘ole peer pressure trick.
When you anchor your goal to someone who will hold you
accountable, it causes the extra push that everyone needs to do
something outside of his or her comfort zone.
Establish Grand Goals
There should be a right mix of goals that you establish. If you have set
your goal too small, too soon, or too unrealistic you will abandon them.
If your goals are easily accomplished then, in my book, they aren’t real
goals. They were simply tasks that you wanted or needed to get done.
Goals, on the other hand, are grand. They require effort, faith, and
number of personal acceleration principles.
The only truly, completely successful person is the one who attempts
nothing. If you aim low enough with small goals you will always
achieve, you have adopted an existence that few will find exciting-including yourself. Only a grand goal is sufficient to create the
excitement necessary to achieve anything worthwhile.
The Ultimate Goal Achievement Guide
Consider any sport or game of wit. How much better do you become
if you always play a weaker opponent? The truth of the matter is you
wouldn’t improve and the game would lack the challenge for you to
continue playing. Even worse, if you continue to play the opponent
that you know you can beat, your skills will diminish.
When you establish grand goals they will bring out the best in you.
When you are at your best and you do your best every minute, every
hour, and every day, you'll find those goals exciting to achieve. As long
as you strive for those larger-than-your-current-life goals, something
of significance will occur. You may not reach your goals on the first try,
but it is better to strive for something big and come up short than to
not strive at all.
Small plans have no capacity to stir you to action. At the end of the
day, whether your accomplishments have worth to you or to those you
love will depend on what you attempted every bit as much as what you
accomplished.
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5 Define a Course of Action
For each goal, plan out how you can best achieve it including timelines
to hold yourself accountable.
Benjamin Franklin once said, “If you fail to plan, you plan to fail.” There
is much truth to that axiom.
If you ask others what their plans are for next week or month, you may
be surprised at the answers. Their response often reveals that they
don't know their plans or how they are going to accomplish something.
In short, they have thought very little about tomorrow, much less next
week.
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Try this experiment: Ask everybody you know, or even random people
on the street, what their goals are – personal, financial, or any type of
goal. I am more than confident that most will not have an answer.
Now, what if you ask, “What are you doing to guarantee failure?” What
would their answer be?
Nobody in their right mind is working towards failure—at least not
intentionally. Everybody you talk to will be absolutely convinced
that he or she is in hot pursuit of success. And yet, as you ask these
questions you will observe that achievement is rarely planned. It is
definitely a distressing thought: We work, day after day, in pursuit of
failure.
Why wouldn’t people have answers to these seemingly simple
questions? Is this because there is a lack of opportunity? I would argue
not. We live in an age of unprecedented opportunity. The question is
whether you will recognize the available opportunities and go above
and beyond to generate more of them.
Each opportunity requires a journey. The journey requires a specific
vision of an end-state that represents success. Successfully meeting
each of your objectives along the journey requires that you have some
specific knowledge of what the end will be, against which you will be
able to measure success.
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So what am I saying here? In order to reach your grand goals there are
specific steps that you and I must take. Sometimes these steps require
additional information that we must turn into knowledge. Without it,
we wouldn’t be able to get to our end state of accomplishing our goal.
As you might imagine, this requires more work than most people will
admit to taking on. This is exactly why so many New Year’s resolutions
do not last past February – there is no clearly defined goal and
therefore no plan on how to achieve it. But the question you have to
ask yourself is, “Do I plan to fail?”
Define a Course of Action
No one wants to plan to fail; yet without clearly defined specific goals,
you and I are bound to. We drift away from what we want to achieve
and chase the next shiny object.
The clearly defined specific goal that you create is a picture of what
the end-state looks like. In order to get to that end state, specific steps
have to be taken. Without them, achieving the goal is impossible.
It is like building a puzzle. Some goals are simple enough that they
only have a handful of puzzle pieces. Others are so grand that they
are like a complicated jigsaw puzzle with hundreds of pieces. Either
way, understanding how the picture will look in the end will help you
accomplish your goals, one step--or puzzle piece--at a time.
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So how do you take a future accomplishment and boil it down to
actionable steps that you can do on a consistent basis?
Consider the following goal: “I want to lose 60lbs in six months.”
Sounds simple, right? But do you know how many people actually
accomplish this goal? Of those who have committed to the goal of
weight loss, 95% fail to accomplish it in the long-term. Why? Because
they lack clearly defined goals (among other reasons).
At the surface level, you will have to lose 10lbs a month to achieve
your goal. But how you go about losing that weight is important. If
you do more weight lifting, you will build muscle mass that will work
against your weight loss goal. However, if you perform more cardio
training, you position yourself to lose more weight.
But exercising is only half of the battle. Dieting is equally--if not more-important in contributing to weight loss. What you eat, how often you
eat, and how much you eat are all-important factors in losing weight.
Simply leaving it to chance will not help in weight loss.
Determining a course of action is important to accomplishing the
goal. If nothing else, having a plan reduces anxiety because you have
reduced the concern of the unknown.
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6 Characteristics of an Achiever
Is what I am doing helping me to achieve my goals?
Everything that exists has characteristics that make it what it is.
Likewise, a goal achiever, such as you, has certain characteristics
that are common among all goal achievers. Although there are no
shortages of common goal-achiever characteristics, I want to cover
only a few that, above all else, describe who an achiever is at their
core.
The Ultimate Goal Achievement Guide
Passion:
Have you ever heard a success story in which someone made it by
doing something they could not care less about?
That would be insane.
Success is linked to having a strong interest and desire in something.
You don’t become one of the world’s most loved entertainers if you
don’t have a passion for the thing that you do and enjoy. You don’t
become a successful real estate tycoon if you don’t have a passion for
business, investing, and property. And you don’t become the world’s
most renowned athlete if you didn’t have a passion for the game.
Passion plays a significant role in moving through obstacles to
achievement. Without it, we crumble under the pressure of countless
stumbling blocks and quit. But because we have a strong interest and
desire for the very thing that we are passionate about, we are able to
weather the storms.
Persistence:
My wife once told me that one of the reasons she decided to date me
was because I was persistent. She saw something in me that she valued
and saw as translatable to other areas of life.
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Persistence is a common characteristic of achievers, regardless of
what you are seeking to accomplish. The result of my persistence,
in this case, was that I was able to marry the love of my life. Goal
accomplished! But it didn’t come without obstacles.
The very meaning of persistence is that you continue, even when
faced with roadblocks. I am reminded of a show called WipeOUT.
The premise of the show is that average people go through multiple
obstacle courses to win a cash prize. As you might imagine, the
courses aren’t easy and each contestant continually gets wiped out.
Yet, they continue to get up and run through the course until they are
able to make it to the finish line.
Why would someone but themselves through such a thing?
It is because of the light at the end of the tunnel.
Keeping your goals, and the subsequent results of accomplishing your
goals, in front of you is a great motivator to help you preserver through
the challenges.
Persuasion:
People view persuasion as the act of convincing others of something.
Although this is true, it also means to have a deep conviction or belief
yourself. In other words, it takes faith to be a goal achiever.
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Why faith?
Your goal is something that you have never seen or experienced
before. It may not even exist in the lives of anyone you know. Yet, you
know that your goals are achievable even if there isn’t proof.
You are fully persuaded!
This characteristic is the most prominent of all goal-achiever
characteristics. For many, it is the driving force that wakes them up and
keeps them going.
If you look at any of the world’s achievers, both past and present, you
will see that they were convinced of their beliefs of what the future
holds.
The Wright Brothers, American inventors and aviation pioneers, were
convinced of man’s ability to fly. Charles Goodyear, the American
inventor of vulcanized rubber, was convinced that rubber could be
put to better use if it was more stable. In both of these examples,
these men underwent years of trials and tests of their faith before they
were able to see the fruits of their labor. Whether it takes you five
weeks, five months or five years, deep conviction of your goals is a
characteristic that you cannot do without.
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7 Paralyzing Emotions
You will become frustrated, and even angry, during the process of
achieving your goals. Use these emotions as a fuel to push you further
in your achievement. The alternative? Being paralyzed in that emotion.
Fact of life: Things never seem to go the way you want them to.
Murphy’s Law states that if it can go wrong, it will go wrong. Although I
am not one to subscribe to such a negative outlook on life, it would be
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wise to plan for the possibility of Murphy messing things up.
Undoubtedly, Murphy’s Law will cause you to get frustrated, upset,
or even angry. It is OK. Anger is a healthy emotion as long as you
appropriately relate to it. Anger, like many emotions, has the tendency
to build up within you. If it isn’t released, it has the ability to become
overwhelming and lead to a negative reaction. This is why we all need
safe and productive outlets for our emotions. Some of us exercise,
others draw or write and others clear their heads through meditation.
Whatever way you choose to do so, know that it is an important part of
your mental wellbeing.
In the pursuit of your goals you will find that frustration and anger will
come up time and time again. It is a simple fact of life. This is why it is
important for you and I to have a firm grasp on our emotions. Without
a good handle on them, our emotions will cause us to experience
highs and lows. The highs are great but the lows are rarely welcome.
One of the most well known negative emotions is the paralyzing
emotion of fear. Others that have the ability to stop progress in its
tracks are anger, shame, disappointment, and regret. These and others
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have the ability to not only stop you from pursuing your goals, but
even turn you around and move away from achievement.
Here is where I stomp my feet again about how the external must yield
itself to the internal. When you are paralyzed by your emotions it has
the potential to cause physical reactions such as a heightened heart
rate, tense muscles, and trouble focusing. These are common reactions
to your emotions. However, through the ability of controlling your
emotions you are able to lessen the impact of these paralyzing physical
functions. Or better yet, control your emotions by using them as fuel to
accomplish your goals.
When was the last time that you saw a Steven Seagal movie? Seagal
movies always include awesome fight scenes. What you may not know
is that the martial arts style that Seagal uses is called Aikido. In Aikido,
the attacker’s energy is used against them by blending the motion
of the attacker and redirecting the force of the attack rather than
opposing it head-on. This requires little physical strength and energy
since the attacker is doing most of the work.
The Ultimate Goal Achievement Guide
Now imagine using this same concept on paralyzing emotions like the
ones we described above. It is natural to either fight or flee from a
physically aggressive or dangerous situation. When we choose to fight,
we do so with brute force, exerting energy and effort.
Likewise, when we take paralyzing emotions head on, we exert energy
and effort against an opponent. Now if we use the fear, anger, or
frustration as a fuel in accomplishing our goals we have redirected
what was once negative energy into positive and productive energy.
Easier said than done, right?
Handling Emotions
Why are you angry, upset or frustrated? Why are you fearful?
Beginning to answer these questions will give you the ability to utilize
the negative energy of the paralyzing emotions into positive energy.
You cannot force your emotions to be fuel to accomplishing your goals
until you come to grips with why they exist. Sometimes the answer is
a difficult pill to swallow, but it provides you with the liberty needed
The Ultimate Goal Achievement Guide
to move these emotions out of the “paralyzing” category to the “goal–
accomplishment” category.
For instance, you may be disappointed with yourself for not having a
certain skill that you could have obtained freely, or for not listening
to wise advice and experiencing a setback. You may be angry at what
someone said or. Knowing the source of your emotion will help you
deal with it.
In the case of being angry with someone, forgiving them is the ultimate
liberation and the best fuel to accomplishing your goals. In the case
of being angry with yourself for not having a certain skill, the only way
to solve this problem is to forgive yourself and then obtain that skillset
either through study or leveraging someone who already has it.
I know this may sound strange compared to many of the goal setting
and achievement material you may have be familiar with, but this is for
good reason. Those materials avoid the most critical element in goal
achievement--you. Much of your success balances on your ability to
rightly relate to your emotions.
The Ultimate Goal Achievement Guide
[BONUS-1] Impact-Driven
When your goals include things outside of yourself, you are more
inclined to achieve them; especially if they include things you are
already passionate about. Create an impact beyond yourself.
Robert Browning wrote, “A man’s reach exceeds his grasp.”
It is every human’s desire for their reach, their influence and their ability
to assist to extend beyond what they can do themselves. This is why
so many of us seek to succeed in a worthwhile area. Some of it is a
The Ultimate Goal Achievement Guide
sense of pride, while it can also be categorized as a sense of duty to
humanity. However you categorize it, being impact-driven can be an
excellent motivator to goal accomplishment.
I’m sure that you have heard the saying, “You are your own worst
enemy.”
What this axiom is attempting to say is that you and I are our own
stumbling block. We can come up with some of the wildest reasons
why we shouldn’t do something. We can sabotage our own progress
because of paralyzing emotions like the ones we spoke about earlier.
We can develop and perpetuate a self-defeating belief, simply because
we do not possess a positive self-image.
But when you take yourself out of the equation, complex thoughts
becomes simple.
When you consider the benefits that achieving your goals can do for
you, your family, your community or an association or organization
The Ultimate Goal Achievement Guide
that you are involved in, you tend to view goal-achievement from
a different lens. You are achieving goals for others rather than just
yourself.
Selflessness is something that I like to believe is a natural trait of
humanity. If my belief is true, then it only makes sense to create and
pursue goals that benefit others as much as ourselves.
In recent years, there has been a huge rise in social entrepreneurship.
It is the ultimate win-win scenario. Being able to develop innovative
solutions to social problems and measure success, in part by the
return on society, provides the goal-achiever both a feeling of selfaccomplishment and a sense of duty to humanity.
Even if you don’t pursue goals that are completely social in nature,
having a few that fall outside of the realm of being self-involved is a
great motivator. When your goals include things outside of yourself,
you are more inclined to achieve them.
The Ultimate Goal Achievement Guide
[BONUS-2] Risk vs Reward
The achievement of anything crosses the threshold of the unknown, yet
in that space of is the opportunity for reward. Push pass uncertainty to
achieve!
Imagine that you are in a pitch black room. There is absolutely no light.
There are no windows. It is so dark, you cannot see your hand directly
in front of your face. What do you do? How do you react? You have
two options: Move around in an effort to find a way out or don’t move
in hopes that someone will find you.
The Ultimate Goal Achievement Guide
Scary thought, isn’t it? Yet, this is exactly the situation we find
ourselves in when we establish our goals. The purpose of the goal is
to accomplish something that you have never done before. The goal is
the dark room. The goal is a risk that we are taking.
At first, the risk seems to be overwhelming. So overwhelming that it
may not seem worth pursuing. But here is the thing: The achievement
of anything crosses the threshold of the unknown, and in that space of
the unknown, there is opportunity for reward. Going back to the dark
room example, the reward is being able to find a way out of that room
by risking obstacles that you cannot see.
When you see these words--risk and reward--they do not automatically
lend themselves to be thought of as opposing forces. Yet, when you
consider their counterbalance relationship, you will see that one cannot
exist without the other. One is the yin and the other the yang.
Often when you take a greater calculated risk, the outcome, if
successful, is a greater reward. Likewise if you take a small risk, the
reward is equally as small. The problem that most of us face is that we
are excited about the reward but unwilling to take the risks even when
we understand the counterbalanced relationship. We are afraid of
moving around in the dark room.
The Ultimate Goal Achievement Guide
When we aspire to achieve our goals, we are breaking into to new and
uncharted territory. This uncertainty stops most of us in our tracks if we
don’t have the appropriate motivation to achieve our goals.
But how much risk is uncertainty and how much of that uncertainty can
be reduced?
Calculated Risks
In everything that we do, there is a risk. Often we don’t think of them
because we have become accustom to evaluating the outcomes of
everyday decisions without a second thought. When we calculate a risk
we often do three things: (1) Assess the risk, (2) evaluate its worth, and
(3) determine a course of action.
When it comes to the bigger decisions in our lives we focus on the risks
first, just like our everyday decisions, but we look at it from a different
point-of-view. In our minds, we highlight the negatives to such an
extent that the positives--the rewards-- are out numbered. Then, when
we begin to calculate risk, we evaluate its worth much lower than if we
looked at the risk from an objective standpoint. And of course, most
often we determine that the best course of action is to do nothing at
all. Thus, our goals never get off the ground.
The Ultimate Goal Achievement Guide
But what happens if we slow down the risk evaluation process and truly
look at the risk of not working toward the achievement of our goals?
What would we see?
At the least, we are able to better evaluate the value of taking the risk.
Looking through this lens, we can visualize both processes of either
taking or not taking the risk. We can see that the accomplishment
of our goals have the ability to create a life we desire. We can see a
future where we push pass uncertainty in an effort to achieve our goals.
I know of no one who can tell you exactly how the future is going to
turn out. Even with all of the wonders of this world, there is no one
that can tell you exactly what the future holds because your future is
completely determined by you--the decisions you do or do not make.
This is as wonderful as it is terrifying.
Without the proper relationship with your environment (remember that
your environment is anything that has influence over you--mentally,
physically, emotionally, etc.) you run the risk of living a life full of
potential. Evaluate the risk and reap the rewards that come along with
the accomplishment of your goals.
The Ultimate Goal Achievement Guide
Conclusion
Here are the next steps…
Print The Ultimate Goal Achievement Guide Blueprint and post it next
to your workstation. Use it as a point of reference to developing your
goals and achieving them every day.
With this resource and the other resources at MindVenue.com, you are
well on your way to achieving your life’s dreams.
The Ultimate Goal Achievement Guide
The Ultimate Goal Achievement Guide