Sunday, 20 October 2013

10 Tips for Personal Self Development

personal self developmentHere are 10 tips to consider for your self development . Start Now
Do something about your personal development plan today. It’s going to take some time to achieve lasting change so you need to start now. You can build on what you do today, tomorrow. Don’t become a pro at crastination! ;) “You cannot escape the responsibility of tomorrow by evading it today.”
- Abraham Lincoln
2. Baby Steps
To make a plan you need to include steps. Break a large goal into it’s smallest components. Keep the end result in mind as you focus on the smaller bite sized steps.
3. Learn From Other People
You can gain from the success of other people and you can learn from their mistakes. Your own experience is a harsh teacher so learn from the mistakes of others. If you can find a mentor or coach your task will be easier. Read as many books as you can. Here’s my top 20 books to help you maximize your personal self development plan.
If you can’t afford to buy books or don’t want to spend the money borrow them from the library or do what I did when I was homeless… I would hang out in the bookstore, read as much as I could from a book, remember the page number I was on and then the next day go back and finish.
4. Embrace Change
The world is changing all the time. Even if you do nothing you will change by default as the world turns. There is no escape from this. If people and ideas didn’t change we would all still be living in caves.
Your personal self development plan needs to include how you are going to change, what action will you take? Only action leads to results.  “I see better than I hear” comes to mind here.

5. Be Accountable

You are responsible for your own progress. You are responsible for what you are today and where you are today.
That means it’s your job to initiate the steps involved in your personal development plan. If you don’t bother, no one else will. It also means you own the result and no one else is to blame. Buck stops here!
6. Be Grateful & Recognize Your Worth
Focus on what you already have.  Think about how others benefit from what you do. If you improve yourself, those benefits will increase. Your personal development is for others, as well as for you.
7. Be Intentional
Whatever you intend becomes your reality. Find your true intention before you resolve to do something and make sure you really want what you say you want. If your goal and your intention are not aligned, then you’ll think up lots of excuses and all sorts of situations to prevent your progress.
personal self development
8. Challenge Yourself
Your goals need to be just out of reach. If you reach for an impossible target, you’re setting yourself up for a failure. If you stick to what’s easy, you’re denying yourself the satisfaction of achievement and only minimal change will occur. Find that middle ground with a stretch goal in your personal self development.
9. Follow Your Passion
It’s no good doing things that you don’t like. Chose actions that appeal to you and are in line with your values. Click here for a video on values and you’ll see how to align them with your self development plan.
Pick people to help you that you like being around. Make sure you’re following your heart while not running from the hard issues.  Become a Master in the Art of Living where people can’t tell if you’re working or playing because, to you, you’re always doing both!
10. Keep Going & NEVER Give Up
Life works in cycles and moves to a rhythm. You will have up and downs. When you hit a slow point or things don’t seem to be moving, don’t give up, keep going. There is no such thing as continual rapid advancement and that means your personal development plan needs to be achievable and balanced. Find your rhythm and go with the flow. There’s no such thing as finished personal self development. You can go on learning, changing and renewing for all of your life.

http://www.mattmorris.com/personal-development-2/personal-self-development-plan/

Thursday, 17 October 2013

You Are A Miracle

You are one of the wonders of creation, beautiful in every way, adorned with every possible gift of nature. You are conscious and are free to choose how to live, how you perceive and how you react to life. No other creature has been given so many gifts as you have. Crawl before no one and no thing, proclaim your rarity in everything you do…"



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Thursday, 25 April 2013

How to Create Your Self-Improvement Plan



I became passionate about self-improvement over a decade ago, and I started helping others with their self-improvement as a coach more than half that time ago.
I strongly believe that developing oneself is one of the best actions a person can take and that self-improvement ultimately leads to more achievements and happiness in one’s life than anything else.
However, I also realized quickly that it’s not enough to randomly read self-improvement books and apply from them whatever sound cool to you, whenever you can remember and you feel like it. Effective self-improvement requires some deliberate and careful planning.
I want to show you, drawing from my own experience, how to create a good self-improvement plan, which you can use to see the most fruitful results in your self-growth.

1. Start by Recognizing the Limits
Like it or not, you can’t achieve meaningful changes overnight.
I say this because, as a coach, a common mistake I notice people making is assuming that in just a couple of months they will be able to completely transform themselves.
Unfortunately, it’s not that simple. Developing any skill or attitude entails creating new mental associations in your brain and overriding some of the old ones. And this requires practice, time and repetition.
It’s not my intention here to discourage you from seeking self-growth. But I do wanna aid you set bold but realistic expectations on this path.
Usually, it takes a few months to develop a key skill or attitude. For example, I often work with people who are socially awkward and I help them build social confidence. And these people see amazing progress, but it generally happens in 6 to 12 months. That’s how much time it takes to move from awkward to confident socially.
The more aspects you want to improve about yourself, the more time it will take. If you have a list of 6 or 7 important changes you want to make about yourself, making these changes will likely span over a few years.
With this realistic expectation in your mind, you can move to the next logical step…
2. Prioritize Your Growth
Since you can only change so much about you in a given period of time and your time is limited, it’s crucial to select the most important skills and attitudes to develop and work on them first, and only then move to other ones.
This means you’ll have to really think about the most meaningful changes you could make about yourself.
I often like to ask my coaching clients: “If you could only change one thing about you, what would it be?”
Once they’ve identified it, I advise them to start by working on creating that change. And once they’ve achieved that change, they can ask themselves the same question again and move on to the next key change.
This is how you make the best use of your time and energy, and you bring about the most important transformations first.
3. Phrase Your Goals in A Way That Inspires You
Compare the following two personal development goals:
1. “I want to have better public speaking skills.”
2. “I want to be able to be on a stage in front of 100 people, feel comfortable and energized, speak from the heart, be coherent in what I say, and provide those people in the audience priceless information.”
That’s actually a single goal, but it’s phrased in two different ways. And I think you can see and feel the difference.
The first version sounds vague and unemotional. It doesn’t inspire you or motivate you to take action. The second version on the other hand is clear and vivid. It inspires you, it excites you and it triggers the desire to act right now.
That’s how you wanna phrase your self-improvement goals, and then write them down.
4. Set Daily Practice Activities
It’s not enough to have goals. It’s important to break them down into smaller steps, to establish daily activities you can perform to reach your goals, which you also write down. Only when you have these precise activities, you are able to take action.
For instance, if one of your goals is developing your public speaking skills, you can set specific activities such as reading a book on public speaking today, practicing speaking in front of the mirror tomorrow, an delivering a short presentation in front of a group of people the day after tomorrow.
By planning and doing these daily actions, you make genuine progress towards your goals. And soon enough, you find yourself having reached them.
5. Reward Yourself 
Progress in itself is satisfying and creates motivation to keep practicing. But you’ll sometimes run into rough patches when it’s harder to make progress, and thus it’s harder to stay motivated.
In such situations, it’s essential to incentivize yourself additionally, using some personalized incentives. And you can also add them in writing to your plan.
Think of the things you enjoy and offer them to yourself as rewards for doing your daily practice activities. From chocolate to a visit to the spa, anything that rocks your boat can work as a reward.
The key is to offer yourself instant gratification. As soon as you’ve done something, you reward yourself. We humans go nuts for instant gratification. And if you capitalize on this, you’ll keep yourself motivated throughout your personal development journey.
With the right expectations, the right goals and the right incentives as part of your self-improvement plan, you’ll make your self-development journey fun and productive. You’ll transform yourself and your life, and you’ll enjoy the process as well.
After all, ideally, self-improvement is a life-long journey, so it’s wise to take as much pleasure as you can in it.
Success!

Eduard

Read more at http://www.pickthebrain.com/blog/how-to-create-your-self-improvement-plan/#GPByfz5zvxHOP6mZ.99

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