Clarity

If a lack of clarity prevents you from taking action, then find or develop a process to gain sufficient clarity to act. Stop acting like this is an unsolvable problem. It isn’t. One basic method begins with writing a mission statement that encapsulates the core purpose of your life. Mission Statement Your mission statement is your proposed contract with life. It basically answers two questions: What do you want to contribute? What do you want to receive? I recently updated my company’s mission statement. Here’s the current version. Pavlina’s mission is: to explore, clarify, and elegantly codify conscious growth to challenge the status quo, to take intelligent risks, and to experiment to strengthen our global society’s alignment with truth, love, and power to advance conscious growth ambitiously, tenaciously, and sustainably to balance inspired innovation, co-creative teamwork, and disciplined execution to progressively embrace the highest standards of excellence and mastery and to lead and inspire with authority, audacity, playfulness, and love The giving and receiving aspects of this company mission are tightly woven together. I deeply enjoy the process of working on conscious growth. The people I work with generally feel the same. But that doesn’t have to be the case. You could have a mission that sees you contributing and receiving through different channels. I also have a personal mission statement, which has a lot in common with th...
Source: Steve Pavlina's Personal Development Blog - Category: Life Coaches Authors: Tags: Balance Goals & Goal Setting Motivation Planning Productivity Self-Discipline Success Time Management Source Type: blogs