Tuesday, March 2, 2010

You Will Get There By Taking Small Steps

Inch by inch, life is a cinch. Yard by yard, it's real hard.

Are you procrastinating, overwhelmed by the size of an important task you need to complete? When faced with a big job, you need to think small.

It is easy to become paralyzed when the job you need to do seems too big to handle. In those situations it's helpful to remember the salami image. There's no way in the world you can stuff an entire salami in your mouth, but you can polish it off easily one slice at a time. The thinner the slices, the easier it is to do.

It's crucial to break any big job into doable steps. When you are faced with a daunting task, first identify the steps necessary to reach your goal. The smaller the steps, the easier they are to accomplish. Once you get moving by taking those baby steps, you develop momentum. That momentum will help you move forward, allowing you to enjoy the task as you go.

Here the operative word is "doable."Most people stymie themselves with demands that are unrealistic. Unwilling to be satisfied with small steps, they end up doing nothing. It is important to delight in any progress you make while working toward a goal, no matter how small that progress may seem.

Recently, a client came to me seeking help to finish his doctoral dissertation. He needed a Ph.D. in order to get the job he wanted and he could not get his Ph.D. until his dissertation was complete. He'd been working on the dissertation for over a year. By the time my client came to see me he had done no work on it at all for several months and was completely stuck.

My client and I identified fifteen small steps that could enable him to move forward. We determined that he could expect to complete the first two of those steps by our next session.

"I couldn't be happy with that," he protested. "I'd feel like I hadn't done enough if THAT were all I accomplished! I'd need to get at least five of those steps done to feel satisfied."

Of course, accomplishing just one of those steps would be an improvement over the inertia he'd been experiencing for months. However, even three of the steps we had identified would have been too much to realistically accomplish in one week, let alone five of them. Overwhelmed with so much, my client would have eventually fallen back into his old pattern of doing nothing.

How often do you find you are like my client? Unable to live up to unrealistic expectations, do you end up doing nothing at all?

If there is an important project that you are stuck on, ask yourself, "Am I insisting on too much from myself?" If your expectations are unrealistic, you may thwart your own progress.

Examine whatever daunting task you are facing. Break it down into the smallest possible steps. Set realistic goals that are related to accomplishing those steps. By giving yourself permission to take baby steps, you'll begin moving in the right direction. The progress you make will encourage you to keep going. In this way you will eventually achieve your goal.

In fact, my client felt terrific after completing the two small steps he set out to do that first week. Getting at least something done was a definite improvement over the inactivity of the preceding months. The following week he accomplished the next small segment. It wasn't long before he was rolling ahead toward completing his dissertation.

When you allow yourself to be satisfied with baby steps, you, too, will achieve your goals and make your good life better.

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