Simple steps to change your life

Start with a simple statement: what do you want to be?

Are you hoping to someday be a writer, a musician, a designer, a programmer, a polyglot, a carpenter, a manga artist, an entrepreneur, an expert at something?

How do you get there? Do you write your intention on a piece of paper, and put it in a bottle and launch it to sea, hoping it will manifest? No. The universe isn’t going to make this happen. You are.

Do you set yourself a big goal to complete by the end of the year, or in three months? Sure, but that doesn’t get the job done. In fact, if you think back on most examples in your life, setting big long-term goals probably doesn’t work very often. How many times has this strategy been successful?

I’m going to lay down the law here, based on many many experiments I’ve done in the last 7 years: nothing will change unless you make a daily change.

I’ve tried weekly action steps, things that I do every other day, big bold monthly goals, lots of other permutations. None of them work except daily changes.

If you’re not willing to make it a daily change, you don’t really want to change your life in this way. You only like the idea of learning to draw/speak Japanese/play guitar/program in php/etc. You don’t really want to do it.

So make a daily change. Let’s dig into how it’s done!

How to Turn an Aspiration Into a Daily Change
Let’s name a few aspirations:

lose weight
write a book
stop procrastinating
fall in love
be happy
travel the world
drink more water
learn Spanish
save money
take more pictures
read more books
How do you turn those lofty ideas into daily changes? Think about what you could do every day that would make the change happen, or at least get you closer to the goal. Sometimes that’s not always easy, but let’s look at some ideas:

lose weight – start walking every day, for 10 minutes at first, then 15 after a week, then 20 … once you are walking for 30-40 minutes a day, make another change — drink water instead of soda.
write a book – write for 10 minutes a day.
stop procrastinating – I can already hear the ironic (and original!) jokes about how people will deal with procrastination later (har!). Anyway, a daily action: set a Most Important Task each morning, then work on it for 10 minutes before opening your browser/mobile device.
fall in love – go somewhere each day and meet/social with new people. Or do daily things that make you a fascinating person.
be happy – do something each day to make the world better, to help people.
travel the world – save money (see next item). Or start selling your stuff, so you can carry your belongings on a backpack and start hitchhiking.
save money – start cutting out smaller expenses. Start cooking and eating at home. Sell your car and bike/walk/take the train. Start looking for a smaller home. Do free stuff instead of buying things.
drink more water – drink water when you wake up, then every time you take a break (once an hour).
learn Spanish – study Spanish sentences in Anki and listen to Pimsleur tapes 10 minutes a day.
take more pictures – take pictures at lunch (but dear jeebus, not of your lunch) and post them to your blog.
read more books – read every morning and before you go to bed.
You get the idea. Not all of these are perfect ideas, but you could come up with something that works better for you. Point is, do it daily.

How to Implement Daily Changes
This method is fairly simple, and if you really implement it, nearly foolproof:

One Change at a Time. You can break this rule, but don’t be surprised if you fail. Do one change for a month before considering a second. Only add another change if you were successful at the first.
Start Small. OK, I’ve said this two bajillion times. No one ever does it, though. Start with 10 minutes or less. Five minutes is better if it’s a hard change. If you fail at that, drop it to 2 minutes.
Do it at the same time each day. OK, not literally at the same minute, like at 6:00 a.m., but after the same trigger in your daily routine — after you drink your first cup of coffee in the morning, after you arrive at work, after you get home, after you brush your teeth, shower, eat breakfast, wake up, eat lunch, turn on your computer, first see your wife each day.
Make a huge commitment to someone. Or multiple people. Make sure it’s someone whose opinion you respect. For example, I made a commitment to studying/coding PHP at least 10 minutes each day to my friend Tynan. I’ve made commitments to my wife, to other friends, to readers of this blog, to readers of a newspaper on Guam, to my kids, and more.
Be accountable. Taking my programming example with Tynan … each day I have to update a Google spreadsheet each day showing how many minutes I programmed/studied each day, and he can (and does) check that shared spreadsheet. The tool you use doesn’t matter — you can post to Facebook or Twitter, email someone, mark it on a calendar, report in person. Just make sure you’re accountable each day, not each month. And make sure the person is checking. If they don’t check on you, you need to find a new accountability partner or group.
Have consequences. The most important consequence for doing or not doing the daily habit is that if you don’t, the people will respect you less, and if you do, they’ll respect you more. If your accountability system isn’t set up this way, find another way to do it. You might need to change who you’re accountable to. But you can add other fun consequences: one friend made a promise to Facebook friends that he’d donate $50 to Mitt Romney’s campaign (this was last year) each time he didn’t follow through on a commitment. I’ve made a promise to eat whale sushi (I won’t fail, because eating a whale is repugnant to me, like eating a cow or a child). I’ve promised to sing a Japanese song in front of strangers if I failed. The consequences can also be positive — a big reward each week if you don’t miss a day, for example. Make the consequences bigger if you miss two straight days, and huge if you miss three.
Enjoy the change. If you don’t do this, you might as well find another change to make. If the daily action feels tedious and chore-like, then you are doing it wrong. Find a way to enjoy it, or you won’t stick to it long. Or find some other change you enjoy more.
That’s it. Seven pretty simple steps, and you’ve got a changed life. None of these steps is impossible — in fact, you can put them into action today.

Pranay Tripathi

pranaytripathi10@gmail.com

Advertisement

Kya Yeh Zindagi Hai

जिंदगी बनाने के लिए, घर से दूर निकल आया हूँ,
सपनो को पाने की चाहत में, अपनों को दूर छोड़ आया हूँ,

सुख साधन कितने ही समेट लूं, मेरा घर आज भी याद आता है,
चाहूं तो सारी दुनिया को नाप लूं, आखिर में माँ के हाथ का खाना याद आता है,

बीमार जब होता हूँ तो इलाज तो मिल जाता है,
पर जब दवा न काम आती तो माँ का दुलार याद आता है,

अब तो बस कोसता हूँ अपने आप को, की क्या करने चला आया हूँ,
जिंदगी बनाना चाहता था मैं और जिंदगी से ही दूर चला आया हूँ…

Deepak Rathi

deepakrathi.566@gmail.com

SPSU

With the stoke of mid-day, we bring to you yet another surprise, another tool to help you ‘Give Voice To Your Thoughts‘… CampusWriting today is happy to announce the launch the release and start of 9 centers across the country to help connect better to your thoughts and to provide you a better way to open up to your thoughts & emotions…

These openings are result of constant support from your side and would be headed by a group of 9 youth figures whose profiles are also online. The continuous growth of visitors on the portal and more visitors concentrating from these cities have helped us to choose these 9 cities across India for the start. We look forth to bringing the cause to every single youth in India and we hope to make a little yet remarkable and memorable difference to people’s lives…

Browse through the individual websites below and share your stories with over 13lac regular visitors @CampusWriting

CampusWriting * Bangalore

CampusWriting * Bhopal

CampusWriting * Chennai

CampusWriting * Coimbatore

CampusWriting * Delhi

CampusWriting * Lucknow

CampusWriting * Kanpur

CampusWriting * Mumbai

CampusWriting * Udaipur

“We don’t judge a post by the number of hits, shares or starts… We judge it with the number of souls it could heal and the number of hearts it could touch…”

Stand Up

'Campus Writing'

The shadows egging me on

The motive making me strong

No time to stand and stare

The goal is all i got to my aim

I ain’t weak , I ain’t meek 

I have myself that’s all i need 

Give me time I’ll stand up

Don’t underestimate coz all i got is me

They ll be falcies They ll be pain 

But all i got is me

Don’t underestimate for I ain’t weak

I ain’t meek

Give me time and I ll 

Stand Up

Vini Katyal

Amity university

View original post

Love-lish!

'Campus Writing'

Love can conquer everything in this whole wide world, except of-course love of a greater intensity . . . 

Ynxda Shazam

Sir Padampat Singhania University, Udaipur

zoybattlethal@gmail.com

http://zoyebshazam.wordpress.com/

View original post

Enter your email address to follow this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

Join 16,339 other subscribers

Disclaimer:

'CampusWriting*Udaipur' is strictly a sharing system(text, pictures,video) on human emotions. All the content seen on this page are strictly user-generated. 'CampusWriting*Udaipur' is not responsible for any kind of disputes arising on the grounds of plagiarism. Any copied material would be removed once reported at cw4udaipur@gmail.com OR khizar@campuswriting.com

‘CampusWriting.com’

Protected by Copyscape Duplicate Content Detection Software
QR Code generator
'Campus Writing'

Let Creativity Run Wild..!