Landscape Your Way To Success With A Metaphor
Legacy signals
Legacy popularity: 938 legacy views
"They who dream by day are cognizant of many things which escape those who dream only by night." -Edgar Allan Poe
Metaphors are great in visualizing your goals. They take you to your imagination and away from the "how." The how can often be a goal killer. Goals are usually going after something not previously attained, hence, the unfamiliar. The unfamiliar can be very uncomfortable. Therefore, it is less painful to avoid the "how" by avoiding new goals. A metaphor will help you gain momentum. Some of my clients have used what I call, "Landscape Your Way to Success."
Take a moment to imagine planting a garden and the garden is your life! Visualize a circular garden divided into wedges, giving each wedge a theme. Here are nine possible themes:
Relationship w/wo partner
Career/Vocation
Family
Friends
Money
Fun/Recreation
Spirituality
Self-Care
Lifestyle nn~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Look over the garden from a broad perspective. You notice there are numerous perennials that come back year after year. Stop to analyze if some of these blooms seem to be withering. They may have lost their ability to grow from being overly processed in the same soil. Maybe it is time to dig them up, put them in the recycle bin, and sow some new seeds and plants. Other perennials are newer and worth keeping. From this place of observation, give each wedge a number code from 0-10. The lower number zero is assigned to plants not doing so well. A 10 is for those plants that have reached full bloom. Example:
Spring Landscape - Time to Plant New Seedlings to Harvest in the Fall (6 months):
Relationship: 5 - if single/divorced/not interested at this time/living with partner/married/dating
Career/Vocation: 3 - so, so, but not satisfied
Self-care: 2 - time to start to exercise & eat better
Money: 4 - tight squeeze
Friends: 7 - friends are supportive
You get the idea! Continue to fill in the rest to get the big picture of your garden. This is a great metaphor to examine the landscape of your life. Plus spring is the perfect time to think about planting new ideas to harvest in the fall.nn~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Questions Hold the Answers to Landscape:
1. What are you noticing as you look over your life landscape?
2. What feelings come up?
3. Which themes require more fertilization - nurturing - attention?nn~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Picture it is six months later, time to harvest your goals. You see a beautiful garden, full of new blooms and promises for even more. You evaluate from where you started several months ago to now. For example, compare the above numbers with the numbers below. It might look like this:
Fall Landscape - Time to Harvest - 6 months after planting in Spring:
Relationship w/wo partner: 7 - happier - having more fu
Career/Vocation: 7 - on target with career objectives - enjoying vocatio
Self-care: 5- looking good! feeling better!
Money: 6 - pressure off and re-investing
Friends: 9 - are supportive, fun to be withnn~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Questions Hold the Answers to Harvesting Your Desires:
1. What seeds did you plant to reach these higher numbers?
2. What difference would it make to be able to harvest the outcomes you desire?
3. What did you weed out of your life that wasn't growing?
4. What coaching did you pursue to help you grow your garden?nn~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Tips: Sow the Seedlings of Your Desires nn* You are the creator of your garden. You get to plant the seeds of what you want to attract. nn* Listen to your heart, not the ego, to what you are meant to plant. nn* Nourish what you plant by focusing and taking action. nn* Watch your mindless chatter committed to keeping you from succeeding. nn* Hire an experienced professional to train you in the skills to plant, nourish and harvest beyond what you already have in your garden.
"Hold fast to dreams for if dreams die, life is a broken-winged bird that cannot fly." - Langston Hughes
Remember: Anything is Possible!
Article author
About the Author
Further reading
Further Reading
Article
Diamonds and Dollars: It’s Not What Your Product or Service Is Worth. It’s What the Customer Thinks It’s Worth.
One summer while I was on vacation from college I became a tin man: selling aluminum siding and roofing door to door in the Boston area. The business has a bad reputation but our siding and our roofs were the finest available. Our prices were high but fair. In spite of what consumers always want to believe, you can’t get the best without paying for it.
Related piece
Article
A Small Change Can Make a Big difference
A Small Change Can Make a BIG Difference All the talk about the economic climate at present, both in the UK and around the world, is of doom and gloom. It even appears to be heading towards some degree of that dreaded ‘R’ word, recession. My immediate response is ...
Related piece
Article
A New Meaning To Minding Your Own Business
How would you like to be in business with no stress or strain? Today there are many authors and lecturers talking about the power of the mind. Spirituality, meditation, and visualization are now en vogue. As an entrepreneur and adviser to growing companies speaking and writing about an ...
Related piece
Article
The Multi-tasking Myth
Okay, so enough already. We hear from managers all the time about how they “multi-task” to be more effective. It may be time to really review this myth. Multi-tasking came from the home, where multiple projects can happen simultaneously. A good example might be that the laundry is ...
Related piece