SHOW / EPISODE

Why Five-Year Plans Are Useless

2m | Jul 8, 2019

Many people are starting to whisper that five-year plans are bunk. They're right. Learn why in this episode - and what to do instead.


Transcript:


Five-year plans are useless. They lock you into a path, and if you deviate from that path, you see it as a failure. If you don’t deviate from that path, you dedicate yourself to that five-year goal, once you arrive, even if you know it isn’t a fit for you.  


If you embrace every deviation from your path, you see that you learn new skills and gain insights. If you allow yourself to change course when you’re forcing an issue, you find methods and trajectories that are frictionless.  


Failure isn’t bad. It’s a sign that the activity wasn’t a good fit. Fantastic. Move on. Try something else. See if it’s better.  


Remove friction when it comes to money, contentment, loving relationships, creativity, and well-being.


Don’t follow a rigid five-year plan. Seek out good things in each area - money, contentment, relationships, creativity, and well-being. Acknowledge the good things and release the rest. Honor the skills and insights you learned. Notice when the good things you have induce further good things, and let any emerging not-so-good things fade.


Do this and you’ll find that your life in five years is aligned with the actual you. A  plot you came up with and put to paper - a five-year plan - won’t be. Life isn’t lived on paper. Life is lived in experiences. An Unforced Garden Life is built by having experiences, being aware of them, noticing whether or not they’re good things - whether they’re effortless, fun, and good for you - and valuing and prioritizing the good things.


Here’s your homework. Make a list of which activities are good things in your life. Effortless, fun, good for you. Jot down how much time you spend on each one of them per week. Select one activity on the list and double the time you spend on it. After a week, reflect on how that went, and, if it went well, commit to prioritizing that activity.


That’s it for this episode. If you enjoyed it, please share it with someone.





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