Motivation - Going for It!
Ever thought of becoming a magistrate, opening a soft
furnishings shop, training as a counsellor, planting a show
garden, writing for the local paper? All of us have dreams, yet
too few pursue them. Going after the dream can feel so daunting
it's often easier to have the fantasy than to live it. Here's my
basic philosophy. I don't want to get to 80, look back at my
life and think "Ooops! I wish I had...!" I want to know I've
lived all the life I've been given, whatever that means. So what
are your dreams?
What's Holding You Back? I might fail (public humiliation) I
might succeed (other people's high expectations) It's too
difficult at my age I'll never find the time People will think
I'm 'too big for my boots' I don't know how to begin Who am I?
There are other people far more qualified I don't have enough
self-confidence
It's All Right To Be Frightened
Fear, concern, anxiety are natural feelings so don't expect to
be entering a new venture without some pretty intense emotions.
You have to decide whether you're going to give them more room
in your head than the excitement, anticipation and joy that are
equally present. If you listen too much to the anxious feelings,
they'll tell you to stop before you begin. Get an image in your
head of you at your most successful and let her have more room
than the 'little' you that will keep you small if you let her.
Draw a self-portrait of your successful self. Start a scrapbook
and put her on page one. One of my scrapbooks is filled with
cartoons, my own drawings (really bad ones I might add!), poetry
(mine and others), clippings from magazines and newspapers,
anything that helped me define my dream.
Identify The Skills You Already Have
Being a homemaker requires courage, tenacity, planning,
determination and flexibility. All those qualities are also
required for any new venture. For one month keep a journal in
your scrapbook of everything you do in your daily life and the
qualities and skills you use to do them. Then imagine yourself
in your new activity and list the skills you'll need, marking a
tick next to the ones you already have. In some cases you may
need retraining (studying to be a counsellor, for instance), but
in most cases I have found that people already have the skills
and qualities they'll need for a new vocation.
Get A Support Structure In Place Before You Begin
Two is a support group. Get more if you can and schedule regular
weekly meetings. They need only last an hour. Part of their
purpose is to help keep you on track. At the beginning tell your
support group your long-term aspirations and at least one
short-term goal per week. Other people's jobs are to encourage,
brainstorm new ideas and tell you you are wonderful. This is no
joke. When the going gets difficult, you need to have people on
your side whatever happens. A few good words from someone you
trust can brighten anyone's day. Make sure you do not include
anyone who will tell you why your ideas won't work. It's fine to
have someone point out some of the pitfalls, but you do not need
negativity - it just feeds the little you.
Dream With Your Feet On The Ground
Be realistic. You may dream of being a ballet dancer at 45, but
it's mighty unlikely to happen. However, you could get involved
in set design, costume-making or any number of related areas.
One of the problems that people with impossible dreams encounter
is that they make them so big, that not only is it unlikely
they'll be able to achieve them, it is equally likely that they
will be the best excuse never to begin. I'm a great believer in
impossible dreams (I have them myself!), but make sure they can
be broken down into 'bite-size' chunks, so that you can see a
beginning, middle and end to each chunk. If my dream is to be a
Booker prize winner I can stay in my head autographing first
editions and never start the first page. Or I can keep a journal
every day, send a short piece into the parish newsletter and
write letters to the editor of my favourite magazine as a way of
practising my skills as a writer.
Start Networking - You Know More People Than You Think
Go through your address book and see if there's anyone amongst
your current friends, relatives and acquaintances who knows
something about the area you are interested in. Don't think in
terms of what they can do, rather what or who they know.
Identify who's already doing what you want to do and ask to pick
their brains. It may seem quite a bold thing to ask but, in my
experience, people are usually quite generous about telling
others what they know (good for their ego too) and will give not
only useful pointers but will alert you of pitfalls as well.
Learn To Sell Yourself
If you don't think you have something to offer, why should
anyone else? You don't have to wave a banner to sell yourself,
but self-deprecation won't do it either. An exercise to do with
your support group is to imagine yourself as a product. What's
special about you the product? Why would someone want to 'buy'
this product? Who are your 'customers'? How will you reach them?
Odd questions to ask yourself, but they will put a new slant on
looking at yourself more objectively. Then you need to create a
Marketing Plan to launch this new product onto the world.
Create Your Marketing Plan: Back To The Future
I know this sounds obvious, but the number of people I've met
who have huge dreams and no plans astonishes me. The best way to
make a plan that I know is to start with your end point and work
backwards. Begin with your goal and think of what would have
happened just before you reached it, then what would have
happened just before that, and so on till you reach the present
day. Draw a graph of what needs to happen when and be clear
about the milestones - those key elements that must be in place
for your plan to work well. Put people's names next to the
milestones. And most important of all, make sure you create a
budget so you know what resources you'll have to call upon at
each stage.
A plan should make you feel supported, secure and freed up. If
it feels like a burden, you've got the wrong plan.
Celebrate Small Wins
Small steps lead to big accomplishments. But sometimes we can be
so fixated on the end result that we don't enjoy the small
triumphs that happen along the way. Every phone call, every
letter, every new idea, (however far-fetched) I look upon as a
win. I suppose one definition of a win is that it something I
haven't done before - whether it's successful or not. The mere
fact of me giving it a try is my success. Set small, easy
short-term goals, and give yourself breathing room. Double the
amount of time you think it will take to achieve any of your
goals.
Be Willing To Change Your Dream
Few get it right the first time. Ask any bank manager and they
will tell you that the majority of new ventures fail in the
first year. That's as true for new businesses as it is for a
small home industry. It's actually the journey that counts as
much as the end result. If the goal is everything then it's
unlikely you'll take pleasure in how you get there. The true
accomplishment is in the trying. You may find that half way
through setting up your soft furnishing shop you don't really
have the temperament to work with the public all day long. You
could look on that as a failure. However, at the same time you
might have realised that your real passion is for interior
design. Changing you mind does not mean you are a failure. It
means you've changed your mind!
In my own case, I look at one of the scrapbooks I created
fourteen years ago, and I still find it inspiring, even though
much of what I wanted to accomplish didn't happen. What did
happen is that I created a tangible 'forum' for my dreams and
aspirations that helped me get clear about what I wanted. I
still live my dreams; I'm just more willing to let them change.