How to (Really) Reach Your Goals

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We all started the year with our personal goals, but by summer, most of them have gone down the drain.

During the year, motivation starts dwindling and people start conveniently forgetting they made a resolution in the first place. If you can relate to that, don’t worry, you’re not the only one. Changes that stick, whether big or small, can be hard to accomplish.

Making a change is a journey, and we hope to help you make it through the stormy waters.

Stay in the here and now.

Don’t let your mind wander too much. It’s easy to get swept up in daydreaming.

You decided to start eating healthy this summer, and you’re already imagining yourself looking like a Victoria’s Secret Angel in a few months. While it can be a motivating thought at first, thinking so far ahead and dreaming about a possible future can also demotivate you.

Maybe you’re not reaching the goals you imagine fast enough, or you don’t really see any results from your change. Your illusion of the future cracks and you find yourself binge-watching Netflix with so much candy Charlie’s Chocolate Factory probably went out-of-stock thanks to you.

The cure for this unfortunate series of events is to be present. Don’t look to a possible future, but rather build it every day, looking forward to seeing what you achieved when the time is right.

Accept small victories.

In case you made a resolution for this summer, it’s probably something big you want to force yourself to change. . Give up chocolate. Exercise at least 4 times a week.

Whatever it was, it might be hard to go cold-turkey, and will likely make you cave sooner if that’s how you approach it.

Start small.

Try walking for 30 minutes 4 times a week. Then replace one of the walks with a workout. Then two.  Switch to dark chocolate, and limit your intake. Start small, and sign up to exercise classes 3 times a week.

Remember you have a lot of time to reach your goal, don’t go all-in from the start and lose it all by the end. Small victories can be very motivating, so create a list of small stepping stones to the big resolution, and cross one goal off the list once you reach it.

Talk about your decision.

The easiest way to stick to your decisions is to tell everyone.

That way if you give up, you’ll have to deal with the awkwardness of questions like ‘How’s it going?’ for the next several months. It’s also important to have support when you start wavering. Someone you can reach out to that will remind you why you started down this road in the first place.

Someone who knows you well enough to know the method that works best to get you motivated – whether that is tough love, or just gently nudging you forward.

Don’t be too hard on yourself.

We’re often our own worst critics.

It’s easy to find your flaws and mistakes when you’re looking for them. This is why people might tell you ‘I didn’t even notice that!’ when you point something out.

Don’t start out expecting everything to change, and then find ways to blame yourself when things don’t seem all too different. Stop finding fault in yourself, and start focusing on the good.

You made a decision to change.

That is huge! Don’t devalue that. Some people don’t even get that far. Take everything else a step at a time. You’re not in a rush. You don’t have to compete with anyone or prove anything. Go at your own pace. Be the turtle in the race, not the hare.

We hope these suggestions give you a little more motivation and help you when you start to waver on your decisions.

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