The Road to Accomplishing Your Goals

IMAGE VIA RAW PIXELS

by Tamika Burgess

In high school teachers were always stressing the importance of setting goals. I was even required to take an elective class to thoroughly learn how beneficial goal setting could be in life. Of course, just as many of my high school peers, I paid no attention to what I learned that semester. Even when I was in college, I never set goals. It just never seemed important.

One day, well after college, a friend was telling me about a first date experience. During the dinner conversation, her date asked her what her five and ten-year goals were. As we laughed at the cliché question I thought to myself, what are my five and ten-year goals? If anyone would have asked me that question I wouldn’t have had a response; I had no plans for my future. In realizing this I spent a lot of time thinking about what I wanted out of life. In doing so, I decided to start writing out yearly goals for myself.

As a new year was about to start, I wrote out my five and ten-year plans and wrote goals for the upcoming year. Feeling quite proud of myself, when the list was complete I put it in my desk drawer and went on about my business. During that year I never once looked at my list of goals, I actually forgot that I had even written them. In October of that same year, I randomly came across the list. While looking over it I knew I had written out some good goals, but they seemed unobtainable; so I gave up on them.

As another year was approaching I revisited my same goal sheet, but this time around I made two significant changes, which I still do to this day:

Keep the list visible

My list of goals hangs on the wall right in front of my desk. It’s a constant reminder of what I need to do and where I want to be.

Make a to-do list

I write each goal at the top of a separate sheet of paper, underneath it I write everything I need to do in order to accomplish that specific goal.

For example, if my goal is to get published in a specific magazine, my to-do list includes some of the following: research editor contact info, review old issues of the magazine, write my pitch, etc. Once I complete each task, I cross it off. This serves as a visual reminder that I am making progress toward accomplishing my goal.

Making these two changes has been extremely beneficial.

I now look at my goals as a destination. Having my destinations hang on the wall in front of me as I work every day keeps me focused on where I am going. The tasks on my to-do lists serve as the roadmap on how to reach each destination/how to accomplish my goals.

What are some tools and strategies you apply to achieve your goals? Share yours in the comment box below!


For Women to Women

For Women to Women, a digital resources platform and growing community designed  to celebrate and empower 20-30-something-year-old women to continually elevate themselves both in their personal and professional lives so that they can become change agents in their own lives and the world. 

http://www.forwomentowomen.com
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