Skip to main content

Task yourself!

Making it big is everyone's desire. No one wants anything small, except where necessary. Even our goals without caution are so big and sometimes even unrealistic. But, i guess it's how we are configured.

If horses were wishes, they say, beggars will ride on them. Everyone can wish, and everyone can act, but not everyone will act without being compelled to. Task yourself: write out short term goals either on a weekly or daily basis, put it on your sticky note and anywhere it won't be out of sight, check it often. That's tasking yourself. You can let someone know you have some goals to achieve by the week's end. It helps!

In your head or mind, your goal is a mere wish, and it will look complex; putting it down in writing simplifies the whole thing, giving it a view of reality, making it look like a task.

If you don't task yourself, you might not get it done.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Break The Limit

If your life were a book, and you were the author, how will you want your story to be written?

LESSONS FROM THE ANT

The Ants have always been a pointer to the way-to-living for human. Their lifestyle has always amazed man. Though little, feeble creatures as they seem and appear, they are loaded with lessons. Little wonder the proverbs gives the counsel: "go to the ants, thou sluggard; consider her ways and be wise". The ant teaches wisdom, which is learned by observation—lesson from the ants. #1- Activity with foresight

Building Capacity

The teen and youth ages are transitory periods. The adulthood is dependent on them and the childhood look forward to them. Major changes occur that shapes one during this period. Decisions and choices during this period are key too. The parable of the talents illustrates a scenario of three servants- their ages not told. They were given talents which can be likened to an investment. The spotlight is on the fact that they were given according to their "ability" and not "piety." A mentor once said they were given to capacity. If piety were a consideration, the servant who ended up with one talent should have had the most: he was pious; he feared his master the most  and wouldn't want to offend him in any way; but he hadn't capacity worth investing more than one talent. The above is an evidence that proves the fact that nobody is willing to invest much in anybody without capacity, enough to contain. The amount of content is dependent on the capacity of ...