On Achieving Goals – Part 1: Defining What You Truly Want
Alexander Graham Bell said, “What this power is I cannot say; all I know is that it exists and it becomes available only when a man is in that state of mind in which he knows exactly what he wants and is fully determined not to quit until he finds it.” Napoleon Hill said, “The starting point of all achievement is desire.” Abraham Lincoln said, “You can have anything you want – if you want it badly enough. You can be anything you want to be, do anything you set out to accomplish if you hold to that desire with singleness of purpose.”
For centuries, mankind has explored this mysterious emotional state that gets him want he wants. This power is not the law of attraction; rather, it is a power within you. The power is your power. It is self-motivation. You control whether you are self-motivated. Self-motivation will give you anything you damn well want if you want it bad enough.
Think of something you once wanted so badly that nothing stopped you from getting it. This is the passionate desire you need to achieve what you want. Contrast this passion to something you thought “would be nice”. Maybe you wanted to learn the guitar because you thought it would be a nice skill. Maybe you wanted to learn a new language to explore cultures. Maybe you wanted to go scuba diving for an adventure. Whatever “nice thing” you wanted, you didn’t achieve it because your hunger for it was deficient.
When trying to motivate yourself to learn a new language, for example, perhaps you purchased some books and CDs, but you never progressed further because you lack the emotional desire (it happened to me when I tried to learn Spanish). We can take steps forward to achieve what we want, but we fall short of our desire without the self-motivation required to carry us through our full journey. Without self-motivation, we fail.
To achieve your communication and personal development desires, goals, and dreams, I believe two characteristics need emphasis. Both deal with passion and having a fire-in-the-belly attitude. Firstly, you need to define exactly what it is you want.
1. Defining What You Want
“You will suddenly realize that the reason you never changed before was because you didn’t want to.” – Robert H. Schuller
“When you know what you want, and want it bad enough, you will find a way to get it.” – Jim Rohn
“Modern man lives under the illusion that he knows what he wants, while he actually wants what he is supposed to want.” – Erich Fromm
The first step to achieve what you want in your personal development journey is to know exactly what you want. You probably already think you know what you want, but I am pretty confident you do not truthfully know. What you think you want could be what someone else wants; a facade to get another want; a vague desire which creates a slow, unenergized pursuit.
When you do not define what you want with pure precision, you wonder through life’s jungle waiting for signs that validate your success. You have no proof you’re moving forward because you don’t know what you’re moving towards. Eventually, you get devoured by obstacles that demotivate you from trying to reach your mysterious destination.
Let’s say you want to be good at making small talk with anyone because you would love to have the skill of being able to approach someone and start a conversation. Wanting to make small talk with anyone, however, is not what you really want. What you really want is a host of outcomes small talk fulfills. What I mean by this is that you don’t want the skill of being able to talk to anyone for the sake of being able to talk to anyone – your desire to talk with anyone has hidden motives. Successfully being able to approach someone and start a conversation fulfills that want.
One reason you could want to make small talk with anyone is to control your fears when you meet new people. Another reason is to network more effectively so you can grow your business. Another is to feel secure around people. All these are emotional motives that drive your desire to make small talk. When you define your wants in the correct light, you become self-motivated to pursue that goal because it holds importance to you.
Do you want to raise happy children? Do you want what is best for your family? If you want what is best for your family, you’re probably lying to yourself. I’m not saying you don’t want what is best for your family; what I’m saying is the underlying motives behind “I want what’s best for my family” deals with your desires.
Perhaps seeing your family safe and secure makes you feel happy and comforted. Knowing your children are happy validates your parenting skills. When other parents see your successful children, you feel proud. Maybe you want successful children to make up for the failures in your life or you do not want to be frowned upon and humiliated by other parents. These outcomes are probably what you really want when desiring the best for your family.
Only when you accurately define what you want can you get what you want. You will aim with precision when focusing on a target clear to you.
I want you to do an exercise now. This exercise forms the framework for this article so you will greatly benefit from doing it. The exercise is a mental and emotional catapult successful people use to define what they want, become self-motivated, and achieve their goals.
Get out a paper and pen, and draw two columns. You will want the second column to be twice the size of the first column. This exercise is large and will take several hours. You may want to do it in two sittings, but the process should be energizing so you might be able to get it done in a single sitting.
In the first column on the left, label it “What I Want”. Obviously, under this you will write down what you want. Some people would write down goals as the heading for this column, but I don’t like using the word “goals” in combination with words that signify a deep desire because you don’t need to set goals when you want something bad enough. Your desires automatically become something you want without you sitting down and writing them as goals.
To help you determine what you want, remove all constraints around your desires. Forget about what you know or have. Stop letting the past limit your future. Remove financial, intellectual, and relationship constraints. Success is not what you know or who you know; it is how you think. You can overcome any constraint if you know how to think in an empowering manner.
It is absolutely necessary you do not reason to yourself what you want. The analytical part of your mind can hurt the emotional part. The most common form of reasoning contains “buts”. For example, “I want to work as a public speaker. But I am not good at speaking. But I don’t know how to get started. But I won’t be able to make money.” All these stupid constraints trick you into avoiding your true desires.
When we reason with “buts”, we rarely have tried to find a solution. I’ve heard people who want to become public speakers say they are not good at public speaking, yet they have not looked into how they can speak better in public. These people reason they don’t know how to get started in public speaking, but they never once looked into how they can get started. We have limiting thoughts based on limiting knowledge. It is crazy how we remove ourselves from our desires through this silly rationalizing process.
In determining your ultimate career, ask yourself what you would do if money was not a consideration. Ask yourself what you would do if you had the necessary training. Ask yourself what you would do if you knew the right people. Remove all constraints and find what greatly turns you on.
Productive Procrastination
Where does your mind drift to during the day? What you think of could be the surfacing of repressed desires you’re too afraid to let the world know about.
If you sit in your cubicle thinking about children having fun outdoors, maybe you desire to coach your child’s soccer team. Notice where your mind drifts to and think what that says about you. Procrastination can be productive.
Another thought to help you accurately define what you want is to not fall in the illusion of wanting what other people want. Society has norms and expectations that can mold your desires. I understand that everyone will not want to be married. Think deeply about what your goals really mean to you. Passion is more about caring than finding the right thing. You will be surprised at the many things you can be passionate about once you start caring.
As a verification step to knowing what you want, you can test to see if this is truly what you want by running a mental theater of what it will look, feel, smell, hear, and taste like when you achieve the goal. Rather than ask yourself, “What are my goals?” ask yourself, “What would excite me and why?” See what excites you by running through intense visualizations. The experiences that excite you (I am talking about a desire of 100 on a scale from 1 to 100 where 100 is the most intense) are what you want. They are your goal.
If you still struggle to determine your desires, remember to remove all constraints. Also, you can stop the exercise for a few hours to allow your subconscious to work and define what you want. Additionally, I recommend you get Jack Zufelt’s program How To Use The Conquering Force Within You to learn more about defining what you truly want. (I earn nothing from referring you to Jack’s program. I have two copies of it and encourage you to get your copy.)
Once you have defined what you want, write these desires down on the piece of paper under the heading “What I Want”. In the same column, and this optional, you can go one step further by using the SMART method. Having written down what you want, rephrase your want in a specific, measurable, attainable, realistic, and tangible form. Write no more than five goals for now, unless you want to do extra work, because of the time it takes to complete the exercise.
If you’re finished, well done. You have defined what you want. That completes the first part of the exercise. Few people will ever do what you just did, which sets you apart from the masses.
The next step after defining what you want is to stimulate an intense hunger to get your desire. This second step could be unnecessary, because if you really want something you will have an intense hunger to consume it. Nonetheless, we experience demotivation from failure and have our down-days for everything so the second step boosts your self-motivation. If you did not hunger, you would hardly eat. Consume the advice in part two and you will successfully be devouring your passions.
This article is continued. Read part two: On Achieving Goals – Part 2: How to Be Self-Motivated.
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Update: What Christmas present did you get for yourself? You can tell me ;-) None for me this year.
Hey Josh, I like the simplicity, and yet, the powerful message highlighted.You keep helping me always. Can’t wait to read part 2.
Hmmmm. Now I Know I want what you want – Fulfilment!
Hey,
that really helped me realize what I really want or not, really looking forward to part 2 =D
Part 2 has been written for nearly a week now. I just forgot to update the links in this first part. You can read part 2 here.
Thank you very much Josh each time i read your articles i see no body else but me with my character being define in your article.
truly most of the time i want to do what i want i cannot do it for fear and other things that kept me from doing what i want.
I really enjoy your articles.
Bye Merry Xmass
Hi Joshua,
I am reading the book by Rhonda-The secrets and guess what it works. Well, I wanted to pass my car driving test and I did. FYI-Passing a drivers test in Belgium is tougher than running for US presidency
Thanks for your blogs, It makes sense most of the times.
Rekha
Josh, great stuff this is! Please keep up the good work.
Josh! I got my answer!! I wonder how deep you are!!!good for you.