I’m calling it: our society’s obsession with setting goals has gone too far.
I’m a goal-setter. A stubborn three-year-planner. A hardened list-maker.
Yep, in true Type A personality style, I’m into day-by-day planners, I’ve mastered annotated flow charts, and I’m practically an expert in vision boards.
But I’ve recently had a bit of an epiphany and it boiled down to this one simple realisation: as a society, our obsession with setting goals has gone too far.
Here’s how this revelation came to me…
During a long layover at an international airport, stuck in a bookstore with some seriously limited reading options (what is it with airports and self-help books?), I ended up picking up a title called something like How To Reach Your Goals.
The book’s author — one of those American motivational speaker-types with a mega-watt grin — seemed obsessed with writing down his life goals on tiny cards, then reading these goals back to himself.
This guy would tape said goals on his fridge, above his bed, and on the back of the toilet door, as a constant reminder of where he envisioned him future self. It required at least an active committment of an hour per day, he said, but this constant reading and rereading and re-rereading of goal, he swore, could be credited with his considerable success (ie. selling a self-help book that appeared in airport lounges around the world.)
Well, after reading this book for seven hours straight en route to Sydney from New York (it was that or watching Bride Wars for the third time, alright?), I decided to try his recipe for goal-setting. So right there, on the plane, I amped up my goal-hitting regimen by determining my own set of 30 ‘bucket list items’ in the very specific, descriptive terms suggested by the book.