Your Will-power starts with your Why-Power! Personal Power Mastery
Your Will-power starts with your Why-Power! Personal Power
Mastery
by Douglas Vermeeren, Personal Power Mastery
by Douglas Vermeeren, Personal Power Mastery
Too often I have people that attend my seminars ask about the
idea of motivation. Most of their questions and comments revolve around the
challenge that have experienced in the past about not being able to stay
motivated. They often share how they’ve thought out their goals and they really
know what they want. They even confess that the things they have set goals
around really are going to serve them best in the long run. They stress in
their explanation that they are bewildered by how they just can’t follow the
logical plans that were so well-laid.
The challenge does not rest in their desires or even their
well-laid plans. The challenge lies in how our brain actually chooses the
activities it will support. Without getting into a long explanation this
particular post actually addresses a few of the various “powers” we discuss in
Personal Power Mastery. I could have easily positioned this topic with The
Power of Focus, The Power of Momentum, The Power of Thought, The Power of
Values and others. Today I’m going to position this article and solution that I
want to discuss squarely on The Power of Values.
To get to the heart of the matter as quickly as possible I’m
simple going to share that our actions and motivation only coincidences with
our highest values. In other words, we give our attention to the things that
are most valuable to us. And by the way that is with every activity throughout
every moment of the day.
Let me share an example from the lives of one of my students.
(But it might as well be my life as I am sometimes guilty of the same thing)
One of my students Shane works at home. He is a home based entrepreneur. He has
three small children who are now in school but are at home during the summer.
Shane loves his business which is web design and social media marketing.
However his highest value is his family and especially spending time with his
wife and children and seeing them happy.
Recently Shane was telling to Doug Vermeeren about a day at home during the summer. He had a lot
of work to do and several clients counting on him with a handful of projects.
Just as he was getting started his wife and kids appeared on the scene and
pointed out the beautiful sunny day outside. Shane’s highest values are his
family and so his attention shifted there.
Within a few moments plans were made to go to the zoo for day.
Obviously Shane’s highest value caused him to stop working and he went with the
family to the zoo. Thankfully after the kids went to bed Shane was able to
catch up on his work.
Thankfully this was a happy ending but for too many people it is
not. They are constantly placing their real value on immediate gratification,
the current Netflix series or even taking a nap. This misplacement of activity
is the primary reason most people never accomplish their goals and dreams.
But how do you stay motivated with what matter most to you in
the long term? How do you stay focused on the goals that you know will give you
best rewards? How do you do what you logically know you should do and keep
recommitting to do?
The first thing to understand is the emotional part of your
brain is more important than the logical part of your brain. Your brain does
not seek out logical activities as the priority. It does seek to satisfy the
emotional demands first because those necessities are closely tied to our
survival instincts.
So if you want to create more success and stay focused with the
logical goals the question really becomes how do you make the Logical more
emotional?
There are several techniques that we share in the Personal Power
Mastery live sessions but the one I’d like to focus on here is the seek out
more important emotional reasons why the goals you’ve chosen are important to
you. Why do you really want these things in your life? And the more powerful
and emotionally connective your answers for why are the more power you will
have to get to your goals.
As the article title infers – Your will-power with be a
reflection of your why-power. If you have no reason why, when emotional
disruptions appear in your day you will have no will power to stick to the task
at hand.
Emotional connections to your goals and dreams help you to
create boundaries that keep you on task.
Exercise for today – Consider your top tasks for the week. What
do you really need to get done in order to make progress towards you’re really
big goals? Take some time right now and come up with some strong emotional
reasons why these activities need to get done by Doug Vermeeren.
Source By: Doug Vermeeren
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