| |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
experiencelifemag.com
Print › | Back ›
The Long View
Planning for the next month is one thing. Planning for 20 years down the road is entirely different. Here's why shaping your chosen future is most definitely worth the stretch, and how you can get started, now.
By Wanda Urbanska |
July-August 2006 |
Discover Your Goals
Start Today
Solid Ground
Resources
When invited to daydream about the distant future, you can probably
conjure up some powerfully appealing images. Perhaps you can see relaxing at
your cabin or vacation home, opening that long-dreamed-about restaurant,
traveling year-round to exotic lands, or starting a foundation. The
biggest challenge most of us encounter in contemplating “someday” lies not
so much in envisioning attractive outcomes. Rather, it lies in drafting the road
maps that will put us on a path to our desired destinations. Particularly when
those travel plans project a time of arrival that’s, say, five, 10 or even 20
years down the road. The person who plans for the future is a rarity in
America today, says Florida-based goal-setting guru Gary Ryan Blair. “The 30-day
mentality is where the vast majority of us live — where decisions are based on
the quick fix.” Indeed, Blair estimates that fully 90 percent of us do not plan
for the future. The few of us who do plan, he says, have an enormous edge over
the rest of the pack for one simple reason: “Your life will not go according to
plan if you do not have a plan.” Planning can play an important role in
helping you create a more fulfilling life, not just in the future, but now. When
you set goals and achieve them, you feel a deep sense of satisfaction. “Having a
long-term plan makes you the initiator, and it supports you in living your
chosen life,” says Maurice Elvekrog, PhD, a licensed psychologist and chartered
financial analyst in Bloomfield Hills, Mich. “True satisfaction in life comes
from achieving those goals that you’ve set for yourself.” Setting and
achieving even small goals can help you feel empowered to achieve more: When you
reach a goal, you are inspired to reach another — and another and another.
Developing a plan starts with a few simple steps: determining your goals,
identifying action steps and pinpointing a deadline for achieving results.
The process is not unlike planning a trip, according to Elizabeth Barbour, a
life coach in Asheville, N.C. You need to decide where you’re going and when,
and how long you plan to stay. You need to book a flight, buy a ticket and start
packing your bags. When you develop a similar approach for your life, you’ll
begin to see results.
Discover Your Goals
Many people have goals in place but no plan to achieve
them. Others are so overscheduled in the present that they can’t easily discern
what their future goals might look like. Indeed, many clients come to Barbour’s
door because they have a sense that their lives are rudderless. She often asks
clients who are uncertain of their long-term goals to create a collage of their
“ideal life” out of magazine pictures. Working with images helps them think
outside the box and zero in on specific goals. Next, Barbour challenges
clients to visualize how they would feel if they were to get what they want.
This feeling step, she explains, helps transport people into that place of
acting “as if” they are where they want to be. Feeling your goals enables you to
“try on” your dreams before committing to them. You may dream of wealth, for
instance, but discover that your desire for wealth is rooted in having the
freedom to travel, be creative or spend time with loved ones. To get at your
goals, start by considering your values. Look at the experiences that have given
you the most satisfaction and the people you have most admired. Develop a short
list of 10 or so core values that you see as essential to you. As possible goals
come to the fore, test them against the list. The more powerfully your goals
resonate with your values, the more satisfying they’ll be to achieve. Once
you feel comfortable with where you want to be and what’s motivating you, the
next step is developing a plan of “inspired action” designed to help you achieve
those results. If you are planning 20 years out, project
yourself into that future, and looking backward from that place of success, ask:
How did I achieve this? What strengths did I employ to get here? What empowering
skills, beliefs and boundaries did I develop? What changes and choices did I
make? What support did I seek? Then, on paper, start breaking those answers
down into logical steps you can begin assigning to a timeline. Include steps you
can take now, in a few years and several years hence. For example, an inspired
action step for several years down the road might involve getting an advanced
degree, or taking a job within a company recognized in your chosen field. A
supportive initiating action step for next year might involve a cross-country
move to attend your chosen school. A step you can do right now might involve
inviting two people to lunch for networking or starting to put a modest, monthly
deposit into an investment fund to help pay for tuition, training or career
transition.
Start Today
In the sage words of President Calvin Coolidge: “We cannot do
everything at once, but we can do something at once.” Get the better of
procrastination by taking one small step today, even if it’s just making a
single phone call. You’ll find that taking a long-term view and committing to a
practical plan of action will lend more focus, more purpose and, yes, even more
pleasure to your path. Wanda Urbanska is host-producer with Frank Levering
of Simple Living with Wanda Urbanska, which airs on PBS stations nationwide. For
more information visit www.simplelivingtv.net.
Solid Ground
Laying the groundwork for your financial future is a core component of any good
long-term life strategy, says financial educator Ruth L. Hayden. That’s because
until your financial house is in order, other quality-of-life priorities — like
taking care of your body, maintaining a values-based perspective and managing
your stress — can linger on the back burner of “someday, when I can afford it”
almost indefinitely. Hayden, the author of numerous personal-finance
books, asserts that the single best move you can make to secure your financial
future is to embrace the habit of spending less than you earn. “The rule is:
You can’t spend more than 90 percent of the money you earn,” Hayden advises.
She counsels most of her clients to deposit 10 percent of every paycheck into a
savings or investment vehicle before it ever sees the inside of their
checking account. Making this a second-nature habit (like brushing your teeth or
locking your car door) is the very best way, says Hayden, to build toward
long-term goals like buying a house, starting a business or being able to retire
early. Goal-setting guru Gary Ryan Blair notes that each of us stands to
benefit from asking, “‘What are the consequences of today’s decisions in 20
years?’” He cites an often-repeated example of the person who starts saving $50
a week at age 21. “At a 9.5 percent return,” Blair says, “he’ll have a bit shy
of $3 million at age 65.” Financial planning — like any form of goal setting
— can start at any age. The most important step is to shift your mindset from a
have-it-now mentality to one of planning for tomorrow. “Even the worst investing
decision is better than not doing anything,” Hayden points out. “If you pick the
worst-performing mutual fund for your 401(k), you’re still going to have more
money than if you spend it at Nordstrom.”
Resources
BOOKS Start Where You Are: Retirement Planning in a Changing World by
Ruth L. Hayden (Kirk House Publishers, 2003) Goal Setting 101: How to Set
and Achieve a Goal! by Gary Ryan Blair (Blair Pub House, 2000) The Best
Year of Your Life: Dream It, Plan It, Live It by Debbie Ford
(HarperSanFrancisco, 2005) WEB www.coachfederation.org —
International Coach Federation
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
The Long View
Planning for the next month is one thing. Planning for 20 years down the road is entirely different. Here's why shaping your chosen future is most definitely worth the stretch, and how you can get started, now.
By Wanda Urbanska | Life Balance Department, July-August 2006 |
Discover Your Goals
Start Today
Solid Ground
Resources
When invited to daydream about the distant future, you can probably
conjure up some powerfully appealing images. Perhaps you can see relaxing at
your cabin or vacation home, opening that long-dreamed-about restaurant,
traveling year-round to exotic lands, or starting a foundation. The
biggest challenge most of us encounter in contemplating “someday” lies not
so much in envisioning attractive outcomes. Rather, it lies in drafting the road
maps that will put us on a path to our desired destinations. Particularly when
those travel plans project a time of arrival that’s, say, five, 10 or even 20
years down the road. The person who plans for the future is a rarity in
America today, says Florida-based goal-setting guru Gary Ryan Blair. “The 30-day
mentality is where the vast majority of us live — where decisions are based on
the quick fix.” Indeed, Blair estimates that fully 90 percent of us do not plan
for the future. The few of us who do plan, he says, have an enormous edge over
the rest of the pack for one simple reason: “Your life will not go according to
plan if you do not have a plan.” Planning can play an important role in
helping you create a more fulfilling life, not just in the future, but now. When
you set goals and achieve them, you feel a deep sense of satisfaction. “Having a
long-term plan makes you the initiator, and it supports you in living your
chosen life,” says Maurice Elvekrog, PhD, a licensed psychologist and chartered
financial analyst in Bloomfield Hills, Mich. “True satisfaction in life comes
from achieving those goals that you’ve set for yourself.” Setting and
achieving even small goals can help you feel empowered to achieve more: When you
reach a goal, you are inspired to reach another — and another and another.
Developing a plan starts with a few simple steps: determining your goals,
identifying action steps and pinpointing a deadline for achieving results.
The process is not unlike planning a trip, according to Elizabeth Barbour, a
life coach in Asheville, N.C. You need to decide where you’re going and when,
and how long you plan to stay. You need to book a flight, buy a ticket and start
packing your bags. When you develop a similar approach for your life, you’ll
begin to see results.
Discover Your Goals (Back to Top)
Many people have goals in place but no plan to achieve
them. Others are so overscheduled in the present that they can’t easily discern
what their future goals might look like. Indeed, many clients come to Barbour’s
door because they have a sense that their lives are rudderless. She often asks
clients who are uncertain of their long-term goals to create a collage of their
“ideal life” out of magazine pictures. Working with images helps them think
outside the box and zero in on specific goals. Next, Barbour challenges
clients to visualize how they would feel if they were to get what they want.
This feeling step, she explains, helps transport people into that place of
acting “as if” they are where they want to be. Feeling your goals enables you to
“try on” your dreams before committing to them. You may dream of wealth, for
instance, but discover that your desire for wealth is rooted in having the
freedom to travel, be creative or spend time with loved ones. To get at your
goals, start by considering your values. Look at the experiences that have given
you the most satisfaction and the people you have most admired. Develop a short
list of 10 or so core values that you see as essential to you. As possible goals
come to the fore, test them against the list. The more powerfully your goals
resonate with your values, the more satisfying they’ll be to achieve. Once
you feel comfortable with where you want to be and what’s motivating you, the
next step is developing a plan of “inspired action” designed to help you achieve
those results. If you are planning 20 years out, project
yourself into that future, and looking backward from that place of success, ask:
How did I achieve this? What strengths did I employ to get here? What empowering
skills, beliefs and boundaries did I develop? What changes and choices did I
make? What support did I seek? Then, on paper, start breaking those answers
down into logical steps you can begin assigning to a timeline. Include steps you
can take now, in a few years and several years hence. For example, an inspired
action step for several years down the road might involve getting an advanced
degree, or taking a job within a company recognized in your chosen field. A
supportive initiating action step for next year might involve a cross-country
move to attend your chosen school. A step you can do right now might involve
inviting two people to lunch for networking or starting to put a modest, monthly
deposit into an investment fund to help pay for tuition, training or career
transition.
Start Today (Back to Top)
In the sage words of President Calvin Coolidge: “We cannot do
everything at once, but we can do something at once.” Get the better of
procrastination by taking one small step today, even if it’s just making a
single phone call. You’ll find that taking a long-term view and committing to a
practical plan of action will lend more focus, more purpose and, yes, even more
pleasure to your path. Wanda Urbanska is host-producer with Frank Levering
of Simple Living with Wanda Urbanska, which airs on PBS stations nationwide. For
more information visit www.simplelivingtv.net.
Solid Ground (Back to Top)
Laying the groundwork for your financial future is a core component of any good
long-term life strategy, says financial educator Ruth L. Hayden. That’s because
until your financial house is in order, other quality-of-life priorities — like
taking care of your body, maintaining a values-based perspective and managing
your stress — can linger on the back burner of “someday, when I can afford it”
almost indefinitely. Hayden, the author of numerous personal-finance
books, asserts that the single best move you can make to secure your financial
future is to embrace the habit of spending less than you earn. “The rule is:
You can’t spend more than 90 percent of the money you earn,” Hayden advises.
She counsels most of her clients to deposit 10 percent of every paycheck into a
savings or investment vehicle before it ever sees the inside of their
checking account. Making this a second-nature habit (like brushing your teeth or
locking your car door) is the very best way, says Hayden, to build toward
long-term goals like buying a house, starting a business or being able to retire
early. Goal-setting guru Gary Ryan Blair notes that each of us stands to
benefit from asking, “‘What are the consequences of today’s decisions in 20
years?’” He cites an often-repeated example of the person who starts saving $50
a week at age 21. “At a 9.5 percent return,” Blair says, “he’ll have a bit shy
of $3 million at age 65.” Financial planning — like any form of goal setting
— can start at any age. The most important step is to shift your mindset from a
have-it-now mentality to one of planning for tomorrow. “Even the worst investing
decision is better than not doing anything,” Hayden points out. “If you pick the
worst-performing mutual fund for your 401(k), you’re still going to have more
money than if you spend it at Nordstrom.”
Resources (Back to Top)
BOOKS Start Where You Are: Retirement Planning in a Changing World by
Ruth L. Hayden (Kirk House Publishers, 2003) Goal Setting 101: How to Set
and Achieve a Goal! by Gary Ryan Blair (Blair Pub House, 2000) The Best
Year of Your Life: Dream It, Plan It, Live It by Debbie Ford
(HarperSanFrancisco, 2005) WEB www.coachfederation.org —
International Coach Federation
Print | Share
| Comment
|
|