1. You are all thought and no action
2. You expose your plans too early
http://omswami.com/2015/04/why-do-your-plans-fail.html
If you really want to share your plans with others because it motivates you to stay disciplined, then ideally, announce your plan of action and not the outcome. For example, your plan may be to lose 20 pounds in 2015. Don’t say, “I’m going to lose 20 pounds this year.” Instead, say, “I’ll go to the gym 5 days a week and I’m quitting desserts.” Or something like that. Hope you get the drift. When you don’t promise an outcome but action, you are able to work lot more freely and ably.
3. You give up too soon
This is the most common problem. It is the number one cause, actually. It doesn’t matter what are you after, it won’t happen in an instant. It will take its due time. If a tree takes a hundred blows to fall, you can’t get to the hundredth blow from the word go. The first 99 blows are just as important. Without the first 99, there’s no 100.
@ I think write something and you have the freedom to change every moment.
Do the thing with the minmalistic effort.thats it.
http://zenhabits.net/no-goal/
Always remember: the journey is all. The destination is beside the point.
‘A good traveller has no fixed plans, and is not intent on arriving.’ ~Lao Tzu
So how do you make a living?
Answer: Passionately! Again, not having goals doesn’t mean you stop doing things. In fact, I do many things, all the time, but I do them because I love doing them.
My great concern is not whether you have failed, but whether you are content with your failure.
~ Abraham Lincoln
@ but I think one should have a plan.
But there’s a growing number of people who have had enough of wasting vast swathes of their life doing something that they fundamentally don’t like. And look how much time the average person does spend working. If you add the work hours every week (40 plus usually), to the commuting time, to the preparation time and the recovery time, then add time outside work when you worry about work, or moan about work, or dream about other work…
It’s a wonder anyone has any time to eat and sleep…never mind do stuff that they love.
This means that if you want to spend more time in your life doing stuff that you love, then what you do for work is the lowest hanging fruit.
- See more at: http://welldoing.org/article/time-to-quit-job-do-what-you-love#sthash.MDoWJQmU.dpuf
Links
https://www.themuse.com/advice/links-we-love-quitting-your-job-the-right-way
http://tinybuddha.com/blog/4-powerful-questions-to-free-you-from-the-daze-of-fear-and-inaction/
Question 1: Be a pessimist for five minutes. What’s the worst that can happen?
2. You expose your plans too early
http://omswami.com/2015/04/why-do-your-plans-fail.html
If you really want to share your plans with others because it motivates you to stay disciplined, then ideally, announce your plan of action and not the outcome. For example, your plan may be to lose 20 pounds in 2015. Don’t say, “I’m going to lose 20 pounds this year.” Instead, say, “I’ll go to the gym 5 days a week and I’m quitting desserts.” Or something like that. Hope you get the drift. When you don’t promise an outcome but action, you are able to work lot more freely and ably.
3. You give up too soon
This is the most common problem. It is the number one cause, actually. It doesn’t matter what are you after, it won’t happen in an instant. It will take its due time. If a tree takes a hundred blows to fall, you can’t get to the hundredth blow from the word go. The first 99 blows are just as important. Without the first 99, there’s no 100.
@ I think write something and you have the freedom to change every moment.
Do the thing with the minmalistic effort.thats it.
http://zenhabits.net/no-goal/
Always remember: the journey is all. The destination is beside the point.
‘A good traveller has no fixed plans, and is not intent on arriving.’ ~Lao Tzu
So how do you make a living?
Answer: Passionately! Again, not having goals doesn’t mean you stop doing things. In fact, I do many things, all the time, but I do them because I love doing them.
My great concern is not whether you have failed, but whether you are content with your failure.
~ Abraham Lincoln
@ but I think one should have a plan.
But there’s a growing number of people who have had enough of wasting vast swathes of their life doing something that they fundamentally don’t like. And look how much time the average person does spend working. If you add the work hours every week (40 plus usually), to the commuting time, to the preparation time and the recovery time, then add time outside work when you worry about work, or moan about work, or dream about other work…
It’s a wonder anyone has any time to eat and sleep…never mind do stuff that they love.
This means that if you want to spend more time in your life doing stuff that you love, then what you do for work is the lowest hanging fruit.
- See more at: http://welldoing.org/article/time-to-quit-job-do-what-you-love#sthash.MDoWJQmU.dpuf
Links
https://www.themuse.com/advice/links-we-love-quitting-your-job-the-right-way
http://tinybuddha.com/blog/4-powerful-questions-to-free-you-from-the-daze-of-fear-and-inaction/
Question 1: Be a pessimist for five minutes. What’s the worst that can happen?
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