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Jay
Arthur
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New Year's resolutions began more than 4,000 years ago in Babylonia:
people marked the holiday by seeking a clean slate and returning any borrowed
equipment. Later the Romans, to honor Janus-the god of doorways and beginnings-(from
whom we get the month January), reviewed their deeds and vowed to improve
the next year. We all begin with good intentions, but somehow these vows
often seem to be overridden by some uncontrollable force.
So how do we turn those resolutions into reality? Beyond that,
how do we turn our dreams into reality? Because of 9/11, almost everyone
I talk to is reevaluating their life: who they are; what they're doing.
Everyone, it seems, is born with a dream or a mission, but often the winds
and tides of life push them off course.
How do you know when you're following your dream? You feel passionate
and energized by what you're doing. Even when you work hard and feel exhausted,
you feel good because in your heart you know you're doing the right thing.
How do you know when you're off course? You're constantly tired or a little
bit angry at your work, your boss, or someone. Work drains you; it doesn't
replenish you. Your relationships drain you; they don't replenish you.
Drain or the Dream? It's up to you.
Life Maps
One of the things I've found that stops people from getting motivated
is that they don't have a rich, desirable future to get motivated about.
Most people just settle for projecting their past into their future, because
they don't know how to design their destiny.
We all carry internal maps of what we want in terms of love, family,
jobs, things (like houses, cars, clothes). We all carry an internal map
of our physiology (height, weight, etc.). How can you tell what's in your
map for these things? Take a look around; what you've got is what's in
your map. Who are you attracting, personally and professionally? What
void do they fill? What kind of job do you have? How much does it pay?
What kind of people do you work with? Does your job feed you soul or just
your stomach? Where do you live? What kind of car do you drive? What kind
of activities do you engage in? If you don't like what you've got, you
might consider upgrading your map.
From working with hundreds of people, I've found that the most common
flaws are:
1. The map isn't rich enough in terms of the kind of relationships
you want, places you want to experience, activities, knowledge and things
that you want. Most people settle for far less than what they want, because
it seems easier to downgrade their dream than to hold their dream firmly
and make the internal and external changes necessary to achieve it.
TIP: Make your dream as rich in sights, sounds, smells, tastes, touch,
and feelings as you can possibly imagine.
2. The map is filled with what you don't want, what you want to
avoid, the consequences of doing something. Single people tell me they
"don't want" someone who's an alcoholic, abusive, whatever,
but the only way your mind can make sense of these images in your map
is to attract more of them. The mind tends to ignore the "don't"
and focus on the "want." Take these negatives and turn them
into positives: "I want someone who drinks responsibly and is loving,
caring, and available." Business people say: "I don't want to
work with certain kinds of people or clients." Fine! What do you
want? "I want to work with right-minded people and adoring clients."
3. The map never changes. People tell me about how they experience
the same darned thing over and over again, but they don't use this information
to change their map. Constantly tune up your dreams. Tune up your maps.
If you find something you missed, add it to your map. If you discover
something you don't like, add in what you want. You'll start to repel
things that don't match your map and attract the people, places, and events
that fulfill your map.
Dreamshifting
Most people stand in the present trying to imagine their desired future;
successful people step out into their future and experience it fully,
then they take what they've learned back into the present. I've found
that successful people know how to reorient or "shift" their
dream. And it's not hard, if you know how. Successful people start from
the dream of what they want and work their way backward to where they
are.
It's your map. No one ever tells you that you can choose to change it,
to upgrade your criteria-what you want- and your life will shift. Your
map is like your internal autopilot: change your destination and you will
automatically shift your behavior to accomplish it. I think of it as almost
effortless achievement. How do you know if you've changed your map? Your
life will change.
Back to the Future
The mind is an amazing thing. As I discuss in Motivate Everyone, you can
step out into your future and experience various possibilities, try on
different choices, and do it before you have to commit to any course of
action. Your goal is to develop a rich, desirable future that you will
be motivated to achieve, or that as a manager, your staff will be motivated
to achieve.
To do this you can leverage what psychologists call psychogeography.
Here's how:
1. Get into an open area.
2. Make where you're standing the present moment in time.
3. Look out into your future (usually in front or to your right). See
yourself in the future having achieved whatever you want.
4. Walk out along a line into your future until you fully and completely
feel that you've accomplished whatever your dream might be. For singles
it might be marriage; for a worker it might be a certain job or level
of pay; it might be a home, car, or thing; for an author it might be a
published book; and so on.
5. Take time to explore this future. What do you see, hear, feel, smell
or taste? Who are you with? What are you doing? What have you learned?
Where do you live? What are the consequences of achieving this dream?
How can you adjust your dream to reduce or eliminate the consequences?
6. Once you have a richer "map" of this future, decide if you
want it. If it's still not quite right, how can you tune it up to make
it even more desirable, more motivating? It's your map…make it better!
7. When you're ready, take a step back toward the present. Notice what
you did to get from here to your dream. Take another step back. This is
what project managers call "backward planning."
8. Revisit this future as often as you want. The more you visit, the more
vivid you make it, the sooner it arrives.
This is the essence of the planning techniques Peter Schwartz describes
in the Art of the Long View. This is also how everyone I've studied creates
outstanding results in their lives.
So if you want to lose weight, step into the future, look into the mirror
and see the new slimmer you, feel what it feels like to be slimmer, feel
what your new clothes feel like, hear the complements people give you.
Chunk it down into 10 pound increments, instead of 50 or 100 which may
seem impossible.
If you want to make more money, imagine what it will be like to provide
so much value that you are rewarded with more income; feel it; experience
what you can now afford that you couldn't before.
If you want a better relationship with your spouse, see, hear, feel,
smell, taste it. When you change your internal map, your behavior will
change, and your spouse will change in response to the new you.
If you want your staff to be motivated, create a vivid dream for them
to pursue. Have them help you create it. Have your team step out into
their collective future and experience what it feels like to have accomplished
so much in just one year.
Get the idea? New Year's resolutions rarely work because they are just
an auditory commitment to a vague future. But when you create a rich,
detailed, sensory specific map of what that shift will look, sound, feel,
smell, taste like, your autopilot will shift toward it. And the more you
reinforce the dream by revisiting it, the quicker your life will shift
to the life you've always dreamed.
What's your dream?

Motivate Everyone Hardcover Book $22.95 plus S&H
© 2006 Jay Arthur (888) 468-1537
knowwareman@qimacros.com
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