Saturday, January 29, 2011

Making Changes

My project has fallen by the wayside as I've slipped back (two steps forward, one step back, right?) and returned to being who I don't want to be, but who I naturally tend toward. It's unfortunate, but true.

I'm going to keep trying, and I'm hoping February will be better for me, but I can already tell that the way I was going about my project was completely wrong for me.

I was trying to follow the example of Gretchen Rubin, whose book The Happiness Project got me thinking about my own happiness and prompted me to begin this project in the first place. I think that this is why I've had a lot of trouble. I was ignoring my own strengths and weaknesses and trying to force myself into a spot that was unnatural and inherently difficult for me.

Like only focusing on certain goals each month. Yes, this is a good way to lay groundwork, and is important, but when I had a chance to begin Crossfit courses (and join a gym) for a reduced cost I deliberated instead of jumping at the chance. I wanted to put off beginning on energy-related goals until February, and now that it's almost February I find that I may have to put off some of my energy related goals anyway, because of some health problems that have cropped up (TMJ specifically; I do not feel that I can safely begin a month-long Paleo diet and high-energy exercise routine while being limited to a mostly, if not completely, liquid diet). Also, putting goals off until some arbitrary date in the future made me feel less excited about them by the time I got to enact them.

So, from now on I'm going to add goals as I think of them. Each month I'm going to spend extra time thinking about and working on specific tasks (as I've been doing), but I'm not going to ignore or forego goals just because "it isn't time yet."

I'm also going to look at my goals not so much as something to be achieved - so not so much like goals - but more like habits that I'm trying to learn and ingrain in myself. I think that changing the end point to something that really isn't ever complete from something set in stone is a good idea for me. It fits with my desire to always be improving and making my life better, and I believe that I will feel less of the failure-guilt if I don't do well for a few days - because for some reason there seems to be a difference between failing to maintain a habit and failing to reach a goal. Both are failing in their own way, of course, and I fully admit that this is mostly buggering about with semantics, but failing to maintain something sounds and feels much less dour and permanent than failing to reach something.

1 comment:

  1. chel i love this blog! i have had many of the same struggles over the years. i admire your ideas to make life better. i can tell you that your life will continually get better just because you are thinking about it. one better day is a better life! and thinking of things as habits to incorporate is a much better idea, and i don't think it's the same thing as a goal. a goal is either complete or incomplete, and working on a habit is an ongoing process. line upon line, you know? it took me a long time to figure that out, and only one month for you to figure it out. life is ongoing, and each day is a new journey.

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