I'm Back With My Second Post - My Personal Mission Statement
Individuals and businesses create missions statements to provide purpose and direction. ... Creating a personal mission statement forces clarity, helps you define purpose, and serves as the foundation for your life goals.
My mission is to live with integrity and to make a difference in the lives of others.
To fulfill this mission:
I have charity: I seek out and love everyone -- each one -- regardless of his situation.
I sacrifice: I devote my time, talents, and resources to my mission.
I inspire: I teach by example that we are all children of a loving Heavenly Father and that every Goliath can be overcome.
I am impactful: What I do makes a difference in the lives of others.
These roles take priority in achieving my mission:
Husband -- my partner is the most important person in my life. Together we contribute the fruits of harmony, industry, charity, and thrift.
Father -- I help my children experience progressively greater joy in their lives.
Son/Brother -- I am frequently "there" for support and love.
Christian -- God can count on me to keep my covenants and to serve his other children.
Neighbor -- The love of Christ is visible through my actions toward others.
Change Agent -- I am a catalyst for developing high performance in large organizations.
Scholar -- I learn important new things every day.
Writing your mission in terms of the important roles in your life gives you balance and harmony. It keeps each role clearly before you. You can review your roles frequently to make sure that you don't get totally absorbed by one role to the exclusion of others that are equally or even more important in your life.
After you identify your various roles, then you can think about the Long Term Goals are plans you make that support the principles described in your Mission Statement. These goals should represent areas you want to focus on in the near future. Typically, Long Term Goals take longer than a week to complete, but are most specific than the lifetime goals of your Mission Statement.long-term goals you want to accomplish in each of those roles.
We're into the right brain again, using imagination, creativity, conscience, and inspiration. If these goals are the extension of a mission statement based on correct principles, they will be vitally different from the goals people normally set. They will be in harmony with correct principles, with natural laws, which gives you greater power to achieve them.
They are not someone else's goals you have absorbed. They are your goals. They reflect your deepest values, your unique talent, your sense of mission. And they grow out of your chosen roles in life.
An effective goal focuses primarily on results rather than activity. It identifies where you want to be, and, in the process, helps you determine where you are. It gives you important information on how to get there, and it tells you when you have arrived. It unifies your efforts and energy. It gives meaning and purpose to all you do. And it can finally translate itself into daily activities so that you are proactive, you are in charge of your life, you are making happen each day the things that will enable you to fulfill your personal mission statement.
Roles and goals give structure and organized direction to your personal mission. If you don't yet have a personal mission statement, it's a good place to begin. Just identifying the various areas of your life and the two or three important results you feel you should accomplish in each area to move ahead gives you an overall perspective of your life and a sense of direction.