So this week I finally managed to put some 2014 goals to paper.
Yes, I know it is April.
What surprised me was my supreme reluctance to undertake this task. It is a little surprising - even to me. It is not as if I did not spend time working on these at the end of the 2013 with my usual process of dividing and subdividing. It is not as if I did not draft them and have the available for final approval. I just could not bring myself to do them.
I came up with excuses of course. At first my excuse was that I did not have a planner/book for 2014 (I changed formats this year). But then I got one. Then my excuse became "Well, I am not really sure that these are my goals" - but I made no forward movement in actually writing them down. Then my excuse became "I am not sure that these are really the goals that I should be striving for - I need to have less, more focused goals." And so on. You get the idea.
But on Monday night I finally made myself write them down.
The odd thing to me was that as soon as I wrote them down I found that I could (or was close to) crossing almost half of them off already. In April. That has almost never happened. That should have made me happy, correct? It did not really - instead I sat looking at the ones that were remaining.
Of the eight listed, six of them are completely within my control to accomplish. They are everything a goal should be: specific, time bound, concise, clear. The problem is the two that are neither of these yet are the most important: the most important of these is find a new job/career.
Why did I sigh? Bogha Frois said it concisely to me more clearly than I could have said it to myself: because it ultimately out of your control. I could work and study and search and find, only to find myself at the point that this is not something I can achieve.
It bothers me even as I think about it now. I have eight goals listed, four of which I am super close to having achieved. Why is it I cannot look at those accomplishments and instead focus only on that which I have not done?
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