The topic of “Success” keeps showing up in my conversations lately.
~ What is it?
~ How do I get it?
~ What do I do to keep it?
Earl Nightingale, the great American speaker and author, defined it as "…a PROGRESSIVE REALIZATION of a WORTHY GOAL or IDEAL."
What I love about this definition is that there is no such place as Success-ville, or Success-land.
It’s not a destination by which you arrive once you own “x” - or - do “y”.
Success is moving forward – progressing – on the path of your Divine mission, purpose, and calling.
That’s exactly why when you’re stagnant, it feels crummy.
You were DESTINED for success and that requires steady progression.
My husband and I have a Couples Commitment Conversation several times a week. It's part of our commitment to being 1% better each day... as individuals and for each other.
~ Where have I / we moved forward?
~ How have I / we improved – as individuals and as a couple?
Asking and answering those questions keeps us focused on the progress of our journey towards our goals.
So, how do you know if your end goal is truly “worthy”?
A goal that is worthy to you is dependent on what your vision of success is based on your God-given mission.
How I define success is unique to me. How you define success is unique to you.
And it’s different than how my husband, clients, and many of my friends define it.
As long as I’m moving forward on my journey and towards something worthwhile as it relates to my Divine purpose... I experience success.
For me success is about progress – or "progressive realization" and taking action on the work I'm called to birth at this moment in time.
When you feel off-balance it’s because the INTERNAL BAROMETER is STRONGER than what the EXTERNAL MEASUREMENT shows.
Read that again...
Stay the course. Understand success happens one word - and - action at a time. Keep on moving... so that when you measure externally, you're seeing the needle move towards the goals on your God-given mission.
ACTION: The Upside Challenge for the week is to review your definition of success while keeping in mind your unique purpose.
Design a simple way to measure your progress. Put that routine of measuring in your calendar.
Refuse stagnation.