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Michael Hyatt

Your best year ever

First, clarify your most important goals across all areas of life. Envision your ideal future self and outcomes. Then, break these big goals down into actionable monthly and weekly plans. Next, build your self-confidence to go after your goals. Affirm that you deserve your best year and adopt a growth mindset to pursue new challenges. Visualize yourself succeeding. Furthermore, leverage motivation through accountability partners, rewards, tracking progress, celebrating small wins, and reviewing lessons learned. Create structures and rituals to stay on track through the ups and downs. Finally, make intentional, values-based choices daily. Stay present to what matters most this year. Persist through obstacles with courage, creativity, and support. Sustain effort and flexibility to achieve personal growth and breakthrough results. With clarity, courage, motivation, and commitment, this proven five-step process enables you to close the gap between reality and your dreams. By design, 2023 can become your best year ever across all domains.

Your best year ever
Your best year ever

book.chapter Phase 1 - believe.

Achieving the best year of your life begins with the belief in its possibility. The extent of your accomplishments is directly tied to your self-belief. To witness remarkable results in the coming year, it's crucial to elevate your belief system. This involves a three-pronged approach: discarding limiting beliefs, embracing liberating truths, and vividly imagining your breakthrough year. It's a well-acknowledged fact that our expectations shape our experiences. Echoing the words of a wise Serbian monk, "Our thoughts determine our lives," it's evident that both positive and negative thinking have a profound impact on our lives. Acknowledging this gives you the power to enhance your life by intentionally altering your mindset. Everyone harbors limiting beliefs, which are perceptions of impossibility based on past experiences, personal convictions, and other factors. To progress, these must be replaced with liberating truths that shift your perspective. A classic example is the belief that airplanes could not surpass 768 mph, the speed of sound at sea level. Chuck Yeager, not bound by this limiting belief, broke the sound barrier on October 14, 1947, proving that what was once deemed impossible was indeed achievable. This illustrates how liberating truths can propel us beyond perceived limitations. Limiting beliefs about the world, oneself, and others are common. They manifest as black and white thinking, personalizing, catastrophizing, and universalizing. These beliefs often stem from various sources, including social media, news, past relationships, personal experiences, and one's social circle. They are characterized by "scarcity" thinking, which is pessimistic and assumes limited resources and insurmountable obstacles. In contrast, liberating truths are founded on "abundance" thinking, which is optimistic and assumes the potential for learning and growth despite challenges. To cultivate a dynamic self-belief, it's essential to replace limiting beliefs with liberating truths. This can be achieved through a six-step process: identifying a limiting belief, determining its origin, assessing its accuracy, crafting an empowering truth, testing this new belief, and embracing it to act boldly. This process underscores that you are not bound by limiting beliefs; you have the power to adopt truths that empower you to confidently pursue your goals. For instance, the belief that a lack of resources hinders achievement is a common limiting belief. However, research indicates that resource constraints can actually foster creativity and ingenuity, enabling people to overcome challenges. A liberating truth in this context is the belief that, despite starting with insufficient resources, creativity, resilience, and confidence can help secure the necessary resources to progress. This aligns with Muhammad Ali's assertion that "Impossible is not a fact. It's an opinion."

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