- Loosen up, Have more fun, take self less seriously
- Spend more time outside
- Ruthlessly eliminate hurry from my life (ie slow down, take on less at home, and prioritize!)
- Don't let things fester, take 'em head on--work, friends, home issues etc.
Now that I've set
the stage for goal setting it's time to jump back into the foundation
of my goals for the year. Balance is
another thing that got way off last year and is something that is at constant
risk with all of the options and demands of life. Just the basics of being a parent of 4 kids,
manager of an organization and leader of a small group can be tough to juggle,
both from a time and an emotional and spiritual health perspective. Throw in a house and a propensity for car
projects and you've got a recipe for disaster (or burnout) if not properly
managed and balanced.
I know I've been
plugging the book The One Thing quite a bit here, and honestly I haven't read
the whole thing, but I have been picking it up from time to time and reading a
page or two and God has consistently landed me on a concept or image that
directly relates to something timely in my life. Demands on your time, energy, and focus can
shift over time but as Gary Keller says
in the book "Pursuing a balanced life means never pursuing
anything at the extremes."
There have been
several times over the past couple of years where I've seen work start to eat
into other areas of life, usually from a time perspective, but also from a
focus and emotional balance perspective as was the case last year amidst all
of the org changes we experienced.
Around this time I ran across this image in the book and thought it
painted a really good picture of what we should be trying to achieve:
The concept here is
that work is best served by bursts of short, focused efforts: a project or
initiative or maybe the setting up of an efficient organization. Thankfully, I work in an environment where
these things are typically cyclical and allow for some re-centering from time
to time, the nature of product development naturally lends itself to this and
the key for me is to synchronize this with the natural rhythm of life.
Life, on the other
hand, needs constant balancing, keeping you, your focus, emotions, and energy
on an even keel with much shorter cycles of ups and downs. This is also critical to success in your
work life and like at work, there is also a great need in life to evaluate and
prioritize the myriad of options to spend our time and energy as "It's not that we have too little time
to do all the things we need to do, it's that we feel the need to do too many
things in the time we have." (The One Thing)
"Balance"
would obviously be a pretty weak and not very actionable goal but knowing
yourself and what both throws you off and lifts you up can direct you towards
things to both watch out for and make sure you do to keep life in a healthy
path.
For example's sake,
here are some related goals for me this year:
As John Ortberg
says in The Life You've Always Wanted "God did not create people in his
own image for passivity. He is not a passive God. When we face important decisions, we must
pray, seek guidance, and exercise judgement, wisdom, initiative, choice, and
responsibility." How we spend our time each day is an important decision
and is the key and primary reason to set God-sized and God-directed goals to
ensure the decisions we make are along the path we should take.
No comments:
Post a Comment