Share:

.

Trying to keep New Year Resolutions or make a change? Ditch ideal goals and focus on inspired actions.

As a tradition, every year people make New Year resolutions but often we’re left feeling like a U2 song, “nothing changes on New Year’s day” or the Talking Heads song, “same as it ever was, same as it ever was.”

Numerous articles are written on how to change extolling the powers of will, goals, and visualization, even advising what your resolutions should be.

Goals have their place when it comes to project planning and reminders to keep us on track.

But when it comes to personal resolutions, end goals may unnecessarily set us up for judgment and failure or even limit our true potential.

Thing is we don’t need end goals to start making significant change. In fact excessive thinking, talking, and planning to reach some perfect goal only delays the pure actions which can lead to great results.

Profound change comes about not from any ideals or goals but from a realization of cause and effect – how our actions impact our health, lives, society, and the world.

Change is not just an important matter in our personal lives, it’s an imperative for our world right now. Our personal change impacts our relationships, family, and the world in ways we may not even realize.

Goals vs. Intent

Before we get into the heart of change, we have to understand why we’re even trying to change. What’s the motivation behind our resolutions? What are we really striving for? What are we hoping happens if we meet our goals?

Resolutions often begin with a judgement about what we are not and the ideals we would like to be. Starting from judgement we’re setting ourselves up for emotional distress and giving up if we don’t meet expectations.

Often the core intent of our goals is to find happiness, acceptance, and love. Even our quests for success, security, diets, exercise, and relationships can be traced back to these core intents for happiness, acceptance, and love.

Problem is we’re already starting on the wrong foot if we feel happiness, acceptance, and love come to us from the outside world, that we have to find it, that we have to work for it. Whereas these are all internal matters, found within.

Often we sabotage those very core intents as we struggle towards external goals and rewards without reaching any true satisfaction. Unfulfilled, we’re in a constant cycle of trading one goal for the next.

But if happiness, acceptance, and love is our real intent, why don’t we straight forwardly aim for that and discover what brings this about, not from the outside world or any relationship, but from discovering the wealth within us.

When we stop looking outside ourselves for validation and realize the inherent wealth within us, this brings about an entirely different perspective. Then our goals are no longer what we want from the world or what we would like to be, but how we can better serve the world, how we can best share our time, talents, and skills within the context of our life.

I Want to Change, But…

For change to happen, we have to face our conflicting thoughts and desires, not judge ourselves, but just notice the conflict of interest.

For example, we may have read that excess sugar is terrible for our bodies leading to all kinds of health challenges, but we like sugary snacks and carbs. We may be inclined to exercise, but we like the comfort of a routine without exercise.

Changing habits requires recognition of the consequences. If you’re not aware of it, then research it, explore it – even that is action towards change.

Personal understanding of why you’re doing something is a far more powerful motivator in the moments when it counts.

When there’s a tipping point of realization, change is inevitable.

See, if there’s a hot stove top, we don’t have to think twice about not touching it.

When the cause and effects are crystal clear, there is not even a decision to be made, no place for contradiction. The mind is clear and unified in it’s action.

Before Halloween, I asked my neighbor’s son who’s 10 year old, “so hey are you going trick or treating?” He replied without second thought, “Jeff, I may get dressed up and hang out with friends, but I doubt I’ll go trick or treating, I mean it’s just begging for sugar which is not really good for you.”

What? A completely different paradigm than most kids his age. He made no goals, no plans, and no resolutions – just pure recognition. Out of that recognition comes a completely different way of being.

Inspired Action

Awareness is the catalyst for change.

Honest change requires honest awareness. When you clearly see the cause and effect of things, you are naturally inspired to act. Action is how things get done.

When there is inspiration, small acts are all it takes to move you in the right direction.

Inspired action has a momentum and ripple effect.

For example even buying a book, signing up for a class, or a coach doesn’t take so long to do but it sets up an entirely new trajectory.

Once our decision and priorities are clearly made, new actions and habits naturally follow.

Without judgment of living up to some end goal, we are free to simply act out of awareness, to explore possibilities, and enjoy the journey.

.

– Jeff Singh –

.

This is a preliminary article for a topic we’ll continue to explore through AwakeFree.com

Meanwhile check out these related articles…

Find Your Purpose

Blazing Movement of Understanding

.

Subscribe Subscribe for Updates! Enter a good email for more Articles & Videos from AwakeFree.com. Yes, Awesome! Social Let's Get Social Connect... Share This... Sponsor Become a Sponsor If this resonates with you, please Support the Work with PayPal to help get this message of understanding to the world when it is so much needed. We’re finding good ways to give back greater value to supporters in kind with advance copies of books, production credits, supporting material, and personal coaching. Become a Sponsor

Original content here is published under these license terms: X License Type: Attribution License Abstract: You may copy this content, create derivative work from it, and re-publish it, provided you include an overt attribution to the author(s). License URL: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/

Share: