SPOTTING
SPOTTING
~recognizing high and low places
At times you will achieve more than you believe you are capable. At times your confidence will be greater than your results. Do you mark these peaks and valleys, returning to them for future planning?
We all work with highs and lows. We all react and respond. At times we are whole-heartedly engaged, and sometimes we are just going through the motions. This is life. This is balance.
But . . . when you plan for the Highest results, do you know what pieces of self and resources should be recruited? Do you know how to set your self up for success, and how to avoid actions that have previously led to short-falls?
Think of the last event in which you engaged below your target desire. Were you fully invested? Did you pre-educate your self? Were you thorough, or did you skip over some important aspects in your planning?
Most of us can conceive of a better plan once we have fallen short: the perfect action or the perfect words. Do you allow this to become a pattern, or do you take action to maximize future results? How do you weed out the obstacles, including the hidden motivations and fears that hold you back?
Let us return to the analogy of the writer. If you promised that your story or book would be done by a certain date, how close did you come? If you did not reach your goal, what was to blame: daily goals, weekly goals, research, feeling unqualified compared to your heroes, inability to focus, procrastination (and many more)?
To reach a Primary Agenda, you must build the Secondary Agendas. You must clearly be aware of the highs and lows in your behavior and beliefs and effectively Spot which components of a process support you, and which do not. Spotting these fluctuations is the first step in addressing them.
So, if I am a writer who does not meet my daily expected output, how do I change this? Am I lacking focus (or allowing for distractions)? Am I physically or emotionally unwell (and how might these goals, if perceived to be difficult, heighten those effects)? Be clear and motivated.
Even if you are not a writer in the earthly sense, you ARE writing your story. You ARE your own book, and many other characters live in that book with you. When you lift the story you are writing, you lift all of your characters. When your story proceeds at a lively pace, with truth and exposition, you flesh-out the life.
You are an author. What is it you are writing? Are you producing your pages on pace with your goals? Have you discovered your deepest purpose, or working on its collaboration in your life? Understand your character's voice and motivation; understand how the other characters see you.
Spotting the infrastructure of highs and lows will help you to reach more easily and fall less frequently. Be your own editor. Allow your character to grow. And most of all, allow your character to speak in a confident, honest voice.
Blessed Be This Day
This is a Direct Voice Communication from my Tribe, Spirit Elders who share their wisdoms with me from the other side of the veil.
Archives: May 15, 2020
visuals by Walks With Fire
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