Career Goals and Stress
"Keep interested in your own career, however humble;
it is a real possession in the
changing fortunes of time." Max Ehrmann "Desiderata"
When it comes to career success, direction and focus are
crucial. But beyond direction, how effective is it to have
goals?
Requirements for Effective Goal-Setting
Much has been researched and written about the effectiveness
of
goal setting. The findings say that :
Difficult goals lead to higher performance than easy
goals.Difficult goals lead to higher performance than
"do your best" goals.Setting specific goals results
in
more precise performance than setting "do your best"
goals.
Just having the goal is not enough. You must develop a strategy
to make it happen. What are the activities you need to perform
everyday? Plan those activities, but also stay alert and open
to
new ways to achieve your goals as they present themselves.
There are three critical requirements that dictate how well
goal setting will work:
1. Commitment to your goals.
2. Periodically reviewing where you stand regarding goal achievement
(getting feedback).
3. Belief that you can achieve your goals (self-confidence
and self-efficacy).
You need to genuinely desire the goals you set. If you don't
like your job and don't want to be there, then it is difficult
to be committed. It's also crucial that you believe that you
can
achieve the goals you set for yourself.
Stress and Goal Setting
Goals create striving which results in more stress. So how
do you deal with this stress? Since I am notoriously poor
at pacing myself, I created a structure to help me with this
process. My plan includes eating a healthy diet and exercising
regularly, but also not scheduling clients on Fridays. I never
work past 8 p.m. I plan vacations and weekends
away, and schedule social events with friends at least once
per week. Part of my stress management program also involves
not over-booking myself with social activities so that I have
time to retreat for rest and recuperation.
As I approached graduation from college many years ago, I
wrote
a poem about goal setting which I titled, "My Brook and
I."
I remember the brook streaming though the woods; spending
hours
around it, building forts, wiping the mud off me with skunk
cabbage.
I remember the brook on sunny days; Water babbling over stones
and rocks, pieces of wood; making the water ripple the way
it
did.
I wondered what happened to the brook traveling away from
my
yard. I had a goal for my brook to flow to the ocean...but
then
what?
I see goals for myself thwarted, rearranged, fulfilled. But
the
goal for my brook; What happened to it?
Deepak Chopra, in The Seven Spiritual Laws of Success, says
that
if we want to have a successful career, we should first center
ourselves and then release our intentions (our career goals)
to
the universe. We should not be attached to the way these goals
develop, or to the exact outcome, but leave the details to
the
universe. We can get the same results through effort and trying,
he says, but the result is stress, which can lead to heart
attacks and other physical illnesses.
Sometimes we focus more on our unhappiness with our present
situation, than on what we want to achieve. Chopra says that
we
should accept where we are now, be fully present in the moment
and concentrate on our deepest intentions (goals).
Goals should be difficult, but achievable with persistent
effort. Goals that are too extreme, such as doubling your
income
in one year, can only discourage you. Goals work because you
persist and focus your efforts in a specific direction. Without
that direction, we can find ourselves floating through our
lives, more at the mercy of outside forces that are not devoted
to our welfare or success. But we can manage our goals in
a way
that does not create undo stress by not being attached to
the
exact way they are achieved.
Having set goals the brook and I build toward them. The brook
unable to know... about a pipe in the ground, a seeping marsh,
a
dam. Myself not knowing the course I will follow. Knowing
what I
want, yet finding it hard to grasp.
I remember years of competition, of struggle, of acceptance.
Then discovering what is real, important; myself, my friends,
expression; a soft kitten purring on my lap; peace.
Being more than a doctor, a lawyer. Knowing comfort, relaxation.
Being myself.
Approaching the completion of one goal, I set new ones. But
fulfilling them means going away, sorrow. Like the brook moves
on, streams to the river... the ocean. Saying goodbye to
familiar things, friends. Facing a reoccurrence of similar
past
memories, painful.
Conclusion
In my business I set performance goals for myself every year.
I
also set goals for relationships, finances, home, physical
and
mental health, as well as spiritual development. I can attest
to
the fact that the more specific the goal, and the more
frequently I review that goal and focus on it, the more likely
I
am to meet that goal. It helps to write down your goals, read
through them periodically, visualize them and keep a picture
journal that represents the achievement of those goals. But
it
also helps to listen to the feedback from the universe, and
make
adjustments to those goals when necessary. We should have
a
career plan, but be flexible with how it unfolds.
I know a word...self-fulfillment. Being vulnerable, can I
take
chances? Being strong, grinding ahead through disappointments.
Being weak, letting go of crippled goals. Like a brook who
misses the river, finding another happiness.
Being motivated, seeking what I am after, But not too
aggressive. Being easy, tension-free.
Making it through the insecurity Like cool water in a brook;
not
knowing what will come. Traveling through the seasons of time.
Molding myself to the environment like the brook makes its
path
through nature. Sliding over any obstacles the brook continues
over rocks, pieces of wood. Freezing in the rough, cold spots;
melting in the warm. Praying for a map free of dams to follow
in
a steady, unchartered progression. My brook and I.
About the author: Debbie Brown is a career consultant and
executive coach who works primarily with professionla, attorneys
and entrepreneurs. www.DandBconsulting.com Debbie@DandBconsulting.com