5 Facts About Goal Setting
These practical tips on goal setting can help make it easier to set and
reach goals:
- Specific, realistic
goals work best. When it comes to making a change, the people who
succeed are those who set realistic, specific goals. "I'm going to
recycle all my plastic bottles, soda cans, and magazines" is a much
more doable goal than "I'm going to do more for the
environment." And that makes it easier to stick with.
- It takes time for a
change to become an established habit. It will probably take a
couple of months before any changes — like getting up half an hour early
to exercise — become a routine part of your life. That's because your
brain needs time to get used to the idea that this new thing you're doing
is part of your regular routine.
- Repeating a goal
makes it stick. Say your goal out loud each morning to remind
yourself of what you want and what you're working for. (Writing it down
works too.) Every time you remind yourself of your goal, you're training
your brain to make it happen.
- Pleasing other people
doesn't work. The key to making any change is to find the desire
within yourself — you have to do it because you want it, not because a
girlfriend, boyfriend, coach, parent, or someone else wants you to. It
will be harder to stay on track and motivated if you're doing something
out of obligation to another person.
- Roadblocks don't mean
failure. Slip-ups are actually part of the learning process as
you retrain your brain into a new way of thinking. It may take a few tries
to reach a goal. But that's OK — it's normal to mess up or give up a few
times when trying to make a change. So remember that everyone slips up and
don't beat yourself up about it. Just remind yourself to get back on
track.
http://kidshealth.org/teen/drug_alcohol/getting_help/goals_tips.html
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