Monday, October 07, 2024

On Reviewing Past Annual Goals

Working on updating my 2024 "Books read" list (currently sitting at 93 books), I came across my 2024 goals created last year in December and January.

I had a pretty good laugh about it.

Every year I create a file on my computers entitled "20XX Goals".  It becomes the repository for the initial goal planning for the year, which then gets printed out and pasted into my notebook and can then be updated as needed based on "changes" - for example, in 2024 I the initial writing and then 5 separate updates following that.

Most of the goals tend to be the same over the years - perhaps a note of the fact that I do not make progress in them as I should or I am not good at making them.  I note under the "Career" aspect, it simply says "Find a Job."

The real hilarity comes in when I review my 2023 goals, made in the December/January time period of 2022.  These have some of the lofty and expansive goals of the halcyon days, prior to everything completely changing.  I have multiple-year study programs and big projects and the completion of all kinds of things on there.  

The reality of all of this, of course, has turned out to be far different than I could have imagined.

This is true if I continue to go back and re-read previous goal setting as well (on this computer I have them all the way back to 2015; in my analog notebooks I suspect they go back to the mid 2000's).  Were I to look at them again, there would undoubtedly be some in there that are more or less consistent through the years and some that were new based on completely moving in 2009.  In a way, they are a testimony to how highly one can think about one's self: I  am pretty sure that "Attending World Highland Master's Games" is on there, as is "Being wildly successful and retiring" and "Being a best selling author" as well as more prosaic goals such as "weighing less" and "being great" - after all, according to experts if you do not set those Big Hairy Terrifying Goals, you are not really going to do anything of worth.

The reality, as you who have been on this journey with me (sometimes for many years), has been completely different.

One of the things I have come to realize is that whether from years of being uptalked or simply having a "greater than I should have " self confidence, I somehow managed to adopt feelings of grandeur.  Part of this, I suspect, is due to the fact that learning and reading came very easy for me - and I knew it.  The other part is the fact that, whether by people looking out for me, design, or simply dumb luck I often managed to avoid the impact of bad decisions until later in life.  The combination of these factors gives one a skewed view of the world and one's place in it:  not everything in life comes easily and simply put, we really cannot just "be" anything that we want to be, at least without real costs that sometimes manifest themselves years later.  Nor do we have the ability to plan our lives based on the outcomes and actions of others, who have their own plans and agendas which may or may not coincide with ours.

Too often we believe ourselves to be the main characters in the play, not realizing that we are just as likely parts in the plays of others.

I will go through the exercise of goal setting again in December - I always do and at least for me, it helps me to focus my direction and intentionality somewhat.  The difference this year will be knowing what I know now - mostly the fact that life really can change on a dime and at best at this point I really am a supporting cast in the plays of others - I can perhaps set goals more in line with my actual position and station in life.

Aiming at the stars to hit the moon is good, I suppose.  But sometimes walking under the moon and stars gives a perspective that hurling through the sky can never provide.

10 comments:

  1. Nylon127:27 AM

    These days the goal is to get through the day with as few aches and pains as possible........:) Watch out TB, it happens for everybody. When my Dad had his stroke that was an inflection point for me, he and Mom came to live with me after since I had the room, neither of them could drive and I couldn't see strangers taking of them in assisted living Up North. Stuff happens.

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    1. Nylon12, at this point that remains an admirable goal for myself as well!

      You are right that it probably happens a great deal more than I think that it does. And I have seen the other side as well: people who are so married to their "program" that the do a great deal of damage in their own lives and the lives of others trying to keep on track.

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  2. I'm not one for goal setting. If I do mentally set some goals, it is more just creating focus at a certain point in time knowing full well that things will change in the future that may help, hinder or removed the necessity of meeting that goal altogether. Thus, I never go back and review goals at all. To me it is like trying to change the past, something impossible to do. All you can do is refocus on what you think will be needed for tomorrow.

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    1. Ed, we have certainly discussed this many a time before. I will say that having these written down and reviewing them is a fascinating view into my thinking at the time. Hopefully I can learn something from it.

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  3. Anonymous9:39 AM

    Priorities should set goals.

    Goals at least for me has to have smaller projects that walk me to the bigger goal.

    Most important thing about goals. You only have so much time and aging happens. Aging has a effect of reducing your ability to do something. I used to broad fork my gardens, aging I started doing it a bit every day.

    Now a young woman who share crops my property does it. I help her and watch over the critters and property.

    Goals are needed for future improvement but don't waste that critical time worrying about "failure ".

    Michael

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    1. Priorities is an excellent way to think about it, Michael.

      I have set my "goals" into what I call The Rule of Five, handily borrowed from the author Jeffrey Gitomer who himself borrowed it from an old NCR manual (five, of course, being the number of digits on one hand). Within those large categories, smaller units - goals - were identified.

      The getting older thing has definitely been on my mind this year, what with having to have made one more move and the death of my parents. The reality is that "starting over" again takes a lot of energy, letting alone trying to rebuild a life somewhere.

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    2. The reality is that "starting over" again takes a lot of energy, letting alone trying to rebuild a life somewhere.

      SO VERY TRUE. But take heart, our forefathers left Europe and did just that.

      Stuff happens, that's why you need God, His word and trusted friends to get moving forward again.

      I've been through a mobile home fire, really teaches you priorities when you have but seconds before flash over and just two hands to grab what's important.

      One of those was my beagle.

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    3. You certainly made the right choice in my eyes, Michael.

      They did indeed invent new lives. I am just working through the cost/benefit structure of those decisions.

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  4. TB, I think you've done a good job of describing human nature. We each are the center of our own universe. It's an ego thing for sure, but on the other hand, we're stuck with it. We can't get away from ourselves. Trying to view life from another's point of view is speculation at best.

    I personally think goals are a good thing. They help us prioritize and give one something specific to work toward. I like the sense of being able to make progress and maybe even accomplish something. This, as opposed to the feeling of riding around in a bumper car all day long and simply reacting to whatever I bump into. Life is full of many, many disruptions.

    I think the key is to not let goals become a measure of personal success or failure. They are simply a tool. If they teach us to pause, evaluate, and adjust, they have taught us an important life skill.

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    1. Leigh, I have to confess how shocked I am that I am so much the center of my own universe. It becomes clearer in so many ways every day; the corollary is how much I consider people to be supporting cast in my story, not vice versa.

      Goals - as you point out - can be directional in our daily lives. For me, it helps me to remind myself the things I should be working on instead of constantly bouncing back and forth between a lot of options.

      I try not to measure myself in terms of personal failure or success (which is good, considering how many of the same thing keeps show up). Learning to be flexible as life changes them is in itself a life skill.

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