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Resolution
Solution
I
will go on a diet.
I will get my spending habits under control.
I will be more patient with my kids.
I will be a better wife, daughter, sister, friend.
I will exercise regularly.
I will pray more.
Sound
familiar? If so, you're one of more than a few million North Americans who
made New Year's resolutions this year. And by about March, if you're like
most, you've either given up on your resolutions or you're about ready to
quit. How do I know? I've been a New Year's resolution dropout myself.
It
certainly wasn't because of a lack of desire; I wanted to change. Motivation
wasn't the issue, either; I was highly motivated (at least in January). I
couldn't identify the problem until I stumbled upon some old training
objectives I'd set 25 years earlier while working in student ministry. I was
amazed at how similar my ministry goals were to New Year's resolutions. As I
read through my files, I realized my difficulty in keeping resolutions was
less a matter of desire, discipline, or motivation, and more a
misunderstanding of how to set goals effectively.
New
Year's resolutions are nothing more than goals in disguise. Our problem is
we often treat resolutions as desires (I want to get in shape) or promises
(I will be a better friend), whereas goals give us a plan.
Try
these six steps for more effective resolutions:
1.
Be specific. I remember once talking with a Bible study who mentioned
her personal goal for the year was to "grow in Bible knowledge."
While her desire was admirable, I had to ask a number of questions:
"How will you know when you've grown?" "What does growth in
Bible knowledge look like?" "What steps will you take to foster
this growth?" Her goal needed to be more specific.
As I talked with this teacher, we were able to revise her goal from the
vague—"I'll grow in Bible knowledge"—to the
specific—"I'll spend 30 minutes a day in personal Bible study, 5 days
a week." Her goal now expressed not only her desire, but also the means
to accomplish it.
2.
Be realistic. During my college years I wanted to pray more. So I decided to
rise every morning at 5 A.M. and pray for an hour before breakfast. But I
also worked, and rarely got home before 2 A.M. How long did my prayer
endeavor last? About two days. And in those two days I spent more time
sleeping than praying.
If our goals or resolutions begin to overwhelm us…perhaps that is a
sign…we are not living within the limits and boundaries that God has
created for us. We are human beings. We all need to eat, sleep, and relax.
Yet, at times we push ourselves in ways that ignore these realities at least
temporarily. Then, when we can't do it anymore, we give up. Instead, we
should re-assess our goal. Perhaps it was totally unrealistic.
My
goal of early morning prayer was unrealistic in light of my work schedule,
my class schedule, and my need for sleep. When I realized that, I replaced
my original goal with a plan more suited to my schedule. I'd pray during my
15-minute breaks between afternoon classes 3 days a week. During my
afternoon break I sat on a park bench near my classrooms and prayed. Unlike
my first attempt, this three-afternoons-a-week prayer endeavor lasted the
entire semester. My prayer life grew because my goal was realistic.
3.
Include a way to measure your success. A good goal will answer the questions
of what, how, and when; it's measurable.
A friend decided to set a goal to clean out one drawer, cupboard, or closet
each week. It was a specific, realistic, measurable goal; at the end of each
week either she'd cleaned out something or she hadn't. She had a means to
track her progress.
By April, she was still going strong on her "decluttering"
routine. She explains, "The sense of accomplishment I felt as I
measured my weekly progress kept me motivated to start the next week's
clean-up. Today, my house feels less cluttered, and my life seems simpler
because I tackle overwhelming tasks by breaking them into smaller jobs and
keeping track of my progress."
4.
Think short-term and long-term. Short-term goals (cleaning one closet a
week) allow us to experience success at smaller intervals while working
toward long-term goals (decluttering an entire house).
Organizing things aren't the only areas in which to set short, and long-term
goals. You can use them in virtually any area of life: education,
child-rearing, family life, athletics, community service, church service,
personal and spiritual growth, and marriage.
When our two children were small, my wife, and I discovered how easily
parenting could cause us to grow apart. We decided to guard the health of
our marriage by setting the following goals: We'll go out on a date once a
month; we'll go away together without the kids for one overnight per year;
every five years we'll attend a marriage seminar. Over the years, we stuck
to our goals, and were able to maintain the stability of a healthy marriage.
The short-term and long-term worked!
5.
Be flexible. A friend, who's self-employed, recently faced this challenge:
"I'm trying to expand my home business, so I set some fairly aggressive
goals. Little did I know my family would become victims of the flu. Now,
healthy once again, I'm struggling to make up for lost time. I hope to get
back on track, but I never considered that life might get in the way."
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