Guest guest Posted October 22, 2011 Report Share Posted October 22, 2011 Complex, you bet! I think any way you slice it with goals: public, private, tiny steps, little chunks, realistic, big leaps, there is much more to here worth paying attention to. Our new member a got it right when she cautioned recently about giving away stuff if it's coming from a " should place " , a must place. Yes, and in my experience even seemingly realistic, small, practical goals don't work all that well to the degree they come from this place. I think too it's all more elusive than I had realized. Noticing lately for example it can get really noisy when I start to even speak goals. Even inside my head! Especially inside my head! So what I'm noticing now is there is a whole chorus that joins in with the: " I want " . The moment I am noticing " I want " (x, y, z), there is also: " oh, yeah, ya think so? Hmm..we'll watch and just see how that goes.. " and there is " you go girl...this is your time to shine! " and there is also " that's fine, just be careful, make sure the goal is realistic or else you'll blow it " ... and then " oh, sounds like last time when you said you'd do it, here we go again " .. and so on and so forth. So very useful to even notice the whole audience in here, sitting with the longing as I even language up goals. It's distracting enough to start letting others know what I'm doing. But the noise starts here, inside, with my history. With respect to verbalizing goals with others.. I'm reminded of a thread we had here a a good while back wherein Steve noted a time he found it very useful to not verbalize change he was doing (announce to others) for a period..where he deliberately didn't tell anyone what he was doing (think it was something about pattern smashing and we were discussing pros and cons of explaining with others). There was a time he choose to say nothing and just did the new behavior, didn't explain anything. You might say that in itself was new behavior, a goal related to being with yourself regardless of outcome..don't explain and notice what happens as you are doing a new thing and not apologizing or otherwise trying to explain, have folks understand so they won't judge or whatever. I remember being very struck by those comments. I'm sure there are plenty other times he does find it useful to let select others know. So not to make that a new rule, naturally. So back to present moment acceptance of whatever is there, whoever is there. Slow down, back up, stay in your skin and pay attention when you start to get in touch with the " I want " ...what else is also there? Stay present. What am I envisioning now? Breathe. Who's there? How old? What does she want? Might I sit with her kindly some and make room for all her hopes and dreams. Look at just how lovely she is with her longing. Until today, I've largely been ignoring the whole chorus that emerges with the longing itself when goals are made. As though goals are a separate process you can tease away and " do in isolation " from defusion, acceptance, values. I'll be bringing this new chorus awareness in with my new therapist, as she's big on goals and while it's helpful as a guide, I'm noticing I can get so caught up with all the lists and the wanting to do good that this and this larger chorus going on goes un-noticed. I still really like the whispering to god suggestion. ;-) kind regards, terry > > > > > >  > > > Hi Terry, > > >  > > > I didn't catch the thread you mentioned but the problem with declaring goals rings true for me. As a part of DBT I was asked to make 3 goals which I said I would like to meet by the end of DBT classes (6 months). > > >  > > > 1. Maintain/build relationship with my daughter (she left me) > > > 2. Get a job (I was still unemployed when I'd finished, despite numerous interviews) > > > 3. To function autonomously, to finish therapy and continue to move on, (6 months after DBT I'm still seeing the therapist) > > >  > > > I didn't even make one of my goals. That devastated me and made me feel totally incompetent as I felt it had nothing to do with a lack of effort, just everyday skills. > > >  > > > At least I have a job now...one out of three is a start at least. > > >  > > > All the best, > > >  > > > Lou > > >  > > >  > > >  > > >  > > > > > > From: " theresa.linder@ " <theresa.linder@> > > > To: ACT_for_the_Public > > > Sent: Monday, 17 October 2011 5:37 AM > > > Subject: Declaring goals publicly not always best idea > > > > > > > > >  > > > Anyone catch the thread on the other forum? Some of the problems that ensue from declaring goals out loud are ones that really resonated! > > > > > > kind regards, > > > Terry > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 7, 2011 Report Share Posted December 7, 2011 Hi Lou, My thoughts about this have changed even since I last commented on this, at least I think they have. Or grown more nuanced as I sit with this and since I've made a few recent shifts in my life. I think this is the kind of thing that is very individual where awareness and honesty and trial and error and holding lightly with one-self is key. It's a practice of self-expression, and like anything else better when approached with curiosity and self-kindness. Some things I notice I'm doing now I hadn't in the past: I look to see what am I looking for when I speak my goal to another? To feel less alone? To make the goal more real? To sound like I'm " doing at least something (to myself, others)? I need to keep that question active. There is nothing wrong with any of these goals about speaking the goal, but just noticing the desire is very useful. As I learn to grow more self-compassionate and embrace more and more (acceptance), I am getting what an inside job this is and ironically, with that, it's very nice to share my goals and values with a trusted few, probably because it's really more okay now if they don't understand, don't get it, say something that feels judgmental and so forth. I think too that it helps to start the committed action steps without telling too many people. And another thing I notice is staying humble when I am talking about my process helps me stay grounded..like adding in " I have a long way to go, but this feels good so far, it's a good journey.. " Or joke about what my experience is right now as I'm telling... " Now that I've said this I'm off sugar, let's go get that piece of pie! " So I'm more present moment focussed as I speak the goals I guess, and this helps because that's what they are really, they don't happen out there, they're happening now, including my thoughts and fears about failing with them... And how I tell on myself matters too--am I describing to another from a place of convincing myself or them, being right...like I'm an object or a commercial? " I lost 10 pounds in 10 days using this product (and you should too)! " . If I stray too far from the value that inspired the committed action step (or vs. versa), and have it be about reasoning, about I figured this out finally..then the whole telling begins to hollow out... Also, some are just able to listen better, with less judgment, more interest than others for a variety of reasons. I make sure to notice that and tell more to these people more of the time than the other group. No sense making things more difficult for others or myself. Anyway, just random thoughts..great question. > > > > Anyone catch the thread on the other forum? Some of the problems that ensue from declaring goals out loud are ones that really resonated! > > > > kind regards, > > Terry > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.