How to Create a Vision for Your Life - YouTube

Channel: The Art of Improvement

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I used to think it was a silly waste of time to think about a vision for my life. Who does
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that? It seems to touchy-feely, too Tony Robbins-ish. But then, as I started learning how to change
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my life and my habits, I realized something: people avoid creating a vision for their lives
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because they believe the exercise is futile. Why make a vision when it’s impossible to
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accomplish those things anyway? I’ve also noticed something over the past
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several years: the most interesting, accomplished people I know all have a vision for their
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lives. They seem to know what comes next, like they’ve seen the future.
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On the other hand, people I meet or know who are stuck and have that hopeless look in their
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eyes, like they’re just passing time in life without joy or aspiration, those people
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don’t have a vision. In fact, many of them don’t even have long-term goals. This was
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painfully clear at my recent high school reunion. Does having a vision make you better able
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to change your life, or does being able to change your life make having a vision possible?
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Being able to change your life and having a vision for it are the yin and yang of living
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a great life. They’re interdependent and complimentary of one another. One will jump-start
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the other. Find the motivation to change your life, and you’ll be able to create a vision
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for it. Or, create a vision for your life and then learn how to change it.
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What’s the difference between a life vision and long-term goals?
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Goals are individual experiences and accomplishments you strive for. A vision is the bigger picture.
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Your life’s vision defines who you want to be, what you want to be known for and the
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set of experiences and accomplishments you aim for. Your vision helps define the goals
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by giving you a framework to evaluate those goals.
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Your vision becomes your why. Your vision should aim to answer questions
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like: What life do you want to have lived at age
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20, 30, 40, 50, 60, 70 and 80? What kinds of people do you want to be surrounded
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by? What do you believe you’re capable of in
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life? What are the greatest things you could accomplish, given the right circumstances,
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resources and motivation? What do you wish you could change about the
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world? What could you contribute to the world that would make you feel proud and content?
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When you die, what would you want people to say and remember about you?
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In fact, start by answering those questions and your vision should be easy to create.
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How to Create Your Life’s Vision First, you need to identify what matters in
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life. This is where that college philosophy class should come in handy. You need to go
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deep and existential here. What is the real meaning of life? How should you live your
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life? Your answer to “what matters in life”
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won’t be perfect, and that’s OK. The point is to put a stake in the ground to work towards,
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and you can change your answer whenever you review your life’s vision.
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Regardless of your answer, there will be things you want to do or be, and there are resources
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needed to support those experiences and accomplishments. Next, make a list of the categories of things
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that matter to you. Here are the categories currently on my list:
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Health — exercise, diet, mindfulness, perspective
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Ability — skills, knowledge, character Relationships — curate and cultivate
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them Time — using what time you have wisely
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Wealth — creating the value necessary to support goals
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Experiences Accomplishments
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Contentment — being happy with who you are, perhaps the ultimate goal
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Your list can and should look different. It’s all about what matters to you, and what you
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want out of your brief time on this planet. Now, for each of your categories, write down
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what you want or need from each. Think about the things you want to accomplish or experience,
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and work backwards to understand how the other categories should support your life’s vision.
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Finally, craft a statement that describes what your ideal life looks like. I know, it
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might seem cheesy, but this entire exercise can be incredibly fun and rewarding. I just
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refreshed my life’s vision while on vacation in Hawaii for 10 days. It was the perfect
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setting to get all introspective. Your vision statement will consist of an overall
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description of your ideal life, combined with a list of areas that matter most, and high-level
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goals for each area. What’s next?
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If all you do is this exercise, you will likely see some benefits, as your vision will stick
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in the back of your mind and you’ll unconsciously work towards it.
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However, if you want the best chance of making your vision happen, you’ll need to go further.
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You need to build a system for yourself, where you review your vision and goals regularly,
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and update your action plan for accomplishing those goals.
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Your main priority should be making your system a habit, something that you do no matter what,
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that you don’t have to think about or remind yourself about. Start with calendar reminders
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and task list items and build life planning time into your daily and weekly routines until
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it becomes habit.