What’s Yours Definition For Success?

What’s Yours Definition For Success?

SUCCESS :
“ALL DEPENDS ON 2nd LETTER “

Success is a very subjective term, and it doesn’t mean exactly the same thing to two different people. Not knowing how you define success in your life can make the process of becoming successful even more challenging.

It’s like fumbling around in the dark to find something when the light switch is right next to you, if only you would stop grasping in the dark and focus on the light switch.


What’s On Your List?

When is the last time you thought about success and what being successful means in your life? Does your definition of success match up with where you’re focusing your time and energy every day?

Not only doing an exercise like this give you a chance to reevaluate your priorities but also help clarify the direction you need to go in order to reach your goals, but it can also serve as an effective way to brainstorm things in your life and work that you may want to try doing differently.

Look at Your Proudest Achievements

Grab a piece of paper and a pen, and write down the five accomplishments you’re proudest of.

Maybe that’s, “Paid off my student loans in five years,” “Taught myself how to code,” or “Left my job and started freelancing full-time.”

Note that these don’t have to be your “biggest” accomplishments, but rather the ones you feel most positively about. Sure, everyone’s impressed that you graduated from a top-tier school, but you might be prouder that you beat your fear of heights or moved to a new city.

After you’ve got five accomplishments, try to identify a common thread or two. Did all of your accomplishments require courage? Selflessness? Persistence? Intelligence? Caring?

The common themes tell you what defines your long-term vision of success. For example, my common theme was “creativity”—when I figure out an unexpected or innovative way of solving a problem, I feel really successful.

 

Challenge Your Assumptions
On the other side of the paper, make a list of things that have proved to be less satisfying than you’d thought they be.

I’ll give you one of mine. When I was in my training period, I wanted to conduct seminars and workshops to the School children. And I accomplished my goal.

Well, I’m still very proud of reaching the milestone—but that doesn’t gave me the thrill I thought it would, as I wanted to reach at more high level.

By acknowledging the “successes” that didn’t make you happy, you can start to replace society’s definitions with your own.

Create Levels of Success
Success usually implies a goal that took weeks, months, or even years to make happen.

However, part of defining your own vision of the word means identifying what it would mean in the next couple days, hours, or even minutes.

I’ve implemented this concept by adding a new section to my to-do list called “real success.”
For example, one item was “To train 10,000+ people in one year.”

This goal helped me toward bigger version of success & help achieve what i wanted.

Before this, I wouldn’t consider myself successful until I’d made those ultimate goals come true. But by re-framing progress itself as success, I felt much more accomplished and proud.


“Define your own success”

is one of those goals that sounds awesome but is hard to implement.


We at I.M.Possible Training Solutions can’t handover your success directly in your hands but definitely can help you to SHAPE you for your Success.


We Do Mentoring On:

Career Choosing
Goal Setting
Pursuing Passion
Self Motivation
Presentation Skill
Public Speaking Skill

& Many More…

Whatsapp/Inquire Us On:

9913236189 / 9510036189

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