How to get clear on meaningful goals


“If you don't know where you want to go, then it doesn't matter which path you take.”

Lewis Carroll


Before 2020, I had never:

  • Considered my dreams

  • Named my desires

  • Pictured my future

My people-pleasing kept my attention on all 8,258,501,407 people except myself.

My chameleon tendency—mirroring someone’s tone, expressions, or posture during social interactions—left me without a clear sense of who I was or what I wanted.

Image by Charles Negre

Planning something as simple as dinner with a friend used to expose a blind spot I couldn’t see at the time.

Friend: “Dinner at mine or should we go out?”

Me: “I’m easy—what do you want?”

I told myself I was being flexible.
But in truth her preference felt easier than naming my own.

If she was happy, I could relax.


The strange part is, I did know things:

  • I knew I didn’t want a loud place.

  • I knew I didn’t want to go to the movies.

But knowing what I didn’t want isn’t the same as knowing myself.
It’s like getting into a cab and the driver asks,

Driver: “Where do you want to go?” and all you offer is

Me: “Anywhere is fine—just not the airport.”

There’s no direction in that.
No ownership.
No relationship with your own desire.

And that’s the place I was living from.


Alice in Wonderland

“Which road do I take?” Alice asked.

“Where do you want to go?” responded the Cheshire cat.

“I don't know,” she answered.

“Then,” said the cat, “it doesn't matter.”


To know where you want to go—especially when it comes to a meaningful goal—you need to know what you want.

I learned to get clear on who I am and what I want by looking at a few simple things:

  1. my core values

  2. my natural strengths

  3. my most passionate interests


Additionally, I learnt to find quality questions that invite me to stretch my imagination.

The questions below are designed to help you get clearer on your meaningful goals. They’ll show you what actually matters to you.

Getting clear on meaningful goals

  1. If you were to live life fully-what is the first change you would make?

  2. What would a home run—in your life/career-look like this week?

  3. What are 3 things that would make a big difference in your life?

  4. What would have happened in 3/6/12 months that means your life/career/business is doing better than you could have expected?

  5. What are 3 things you would love to do before you die?

  6. What do you want to accomplish this year?

  7. What do you want in the next 10 years of your life?

  8. If you were to look back 3 years from now—what must have happened?

  9. What is your dream for this lifetime?

Your answers don’t need to be 100% clear and accurate.
The act of reflecting is what sharpens the picture.
What starts out pixelated becomes clearer, and that clarity becomes a map for your future.


The quality of your life is determined by the quality of the questions you ask yourself.


 

From a pixelated dream

To a hi-resolution dream