February 10, 2021

How to Get Back on Track with Quarterly Goals

No matter how skilled we may be at developing solid rhythms, we all know what it’s like for life to get a little bit “off track.”

Whatever has thrown us off, we could all benefit from one key tip: set three focus goals for the rest of the quarter.

How exactly do quarterly goals help to get us back on track?

Imagine writing down your three main goals first thing in the morning, and then connecting with your motivating “why” for each one. You’ve just set up an accountability mechanism for yourself. You’ll start to become acutely aware of when you’re spending your time on non-essential things.

Then you’ll have a choice. Will you waste your discretionary time on every little distraction that comes your way? Or will you invest your time? In those quiet moments while the kids are still eating lunch, you could be making imperfect progress towards the completion of your essential focus goals. In that afternoon slump, you could be resting and recharging for your goals through meditation, prayer, journaling, playing, or exercise.

Studies show that we’re on average spending 8+ years of our lives just watching TV, and 6+ years of our lives on social media. But you don’t have to let 6-14 of the most productive, amazing years of your life slip away while you’re binging screens.

That’s a pretty motivating thought, isn’t it?

Here are three things to keep in mind when it comes to setting quarterly goals:

  • Make your 3 focus goals realistic. What are three things you can realistically do in the rest of this quarter? What do we mean by realistically? Well, if you had the goal to start your 5am habit when you’re just 6 weeks postpartum, you probably should reconsider and bench that during a season that needs rest. Chart out goals that are contextualized for the season you are in.
  • Make your 3 focus goals exciting. What things will REALLY move the needle forward in your life? What goals will really feel like they were worth the effort to craft an intentional lifestyle around making them happen? They don’t have to be exciting to anyone else but you. For instance, two of Shelby’s seasonal goals have to do with major home organization projects. Someone else might feel their eyes cross in boredom at the very thought of that. But Shelby has visualized what her life would be like if she mastered those areas of home organization. Her “why” for getting her digital and physical information organized is to replace the hours of time and frustration she spends every week hunting for files with writing peacefully with a cup of coffee in hand. Her “why” for getting her healthy kitchen streamlined is to cultivate an atmosphere of feasting and plenty at the family table.
  • Make your 3 focus goals easy to remember. The aim here is that these three overarching goals for the rest of your quarter will pop into your mind the moment you sit down to waste time on the mindless scroll. So you’ve got to make them super memorable. If your goal is to save $336.67 for a trip to the beach, round that puppy up to $340. Then when the thought, “save $340 by the end of the quarter” pops into your mind, you can take a few minutes to do some budgeting instead of spacing out and scrolling Facebook. If you have a benchmark for your business, make it really concrete so you know how you’re doing (i.e. instead of, “replace 3 days worth of income per week,”—bc, honestly, who can do financial math like that on the fly?!—say, “enroll 20 new students”). Then when you pull up Instagram, you can spend the next 20 minutes engaging with your ideal customer instead of stalking the cousin of that friend from high school.

​Writing down your quarterly goals with bite-sized action steps below them on a weekly basis is a game-changer. (The flex space on our week spread is an amazing place to do this.) And our day spread has a research-based section for writing down your seasonal goals every single morning, and then connecting them to your “why.”

World Class leaders and influencers constantly trace their abilities to successfully execute high-level intentions to their daily ritual of revisiting their goals. This is pro-level stuff, guys.​

A key to change is knowing what you want to do with those 6-14 amazing years you have hiding in the nooks and crannies of your day.

Envision your potential. Keep top of mind three quarterly goals that align with your core calling. Adopt a progress-over-perfection mindset about it all.

…then pull out that planner and make space to thrive.

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Are you on Instagram? Don’t miss our lovely Galentines Giveaway happening this weekend on Instagram! We will be giving away the full Evergreen Planner system to one lucky winner! That includes one of our genuine leather Covers and a Getting Started Kit. You won’t want to miss this!

February 3, 2021

Reversing Limiting Beliefs

Last week, we saw how the Gospel has dealt a fatal blow to the legitimacy of the limiting beliefs holding you back from serious personal growth.Then, you were prompted to pull out your planner and make a bullet-point list in response to this question:

What are the limiting beliefs holding you back from getting serious about your core calling?

Today, we wanted to share with you the EXACT limiting beliefs journaling exercise that changed the Shelby and Kyle’s lives forever.

Limiting Beliefs Reversal Exercise

This exercise is incredibly simple. Grab your planner, and use some of the flex space to answer the following series of questions for each limiting belief you hold:

  • What is one limiting belief I hold?
  • Is it true?
  • How do I react when I believe the thought is true?
  • Who would I be without that thought?
  • What biblical principle backs this?
  • What is my new choice?
Here is an example from Kyle’s actual worksheet back in 2015 (shared with his permission, of course!):
  • What is one limiting belief you hold? I’ll never be financially successful.
  • Is it true? No
  • How do I react when I believe the thought is true? I get discouraged from working diligently to come up with viable solutions for income.
  • Who would I be without that thought? I would work confidently to build our income and savings.
  • What biblical principle backs this? Psalm 128:1-2, “Blessed is every one that feareth the LORD; that walketh in his ways. For thou shalt eat the labour of thine hands: happy shalt thou be, and it shall be well with thee.”
  • What is my new choice? To labor diligently and confidently steward the time, resources, and opportunities God has given me to increase our income and savings for the future, as well to help others and to leave an inheritance for our children.
Here’s an example of how he worked through a limiting belief that was true.
  • What is one limiting belief you hold? I don’t trust God’s providence in uncertain times
  • Is it true? Yes
  • Is it absolutely true? This is my usual reaction.
  • How do I react when I believe the thought is true? I become despondent and fearful, and cannot think straight because of paralysis.
  • Who would I be without that thought? I would confidently trust in God’s providence through troubling times.
  • What biblical principle backs this? Psalm 37:25, “I have been young, and now am old; yet have I not seen the righteous forsaken, nor his seed begging bread.” Psalm 94:14, “For the LORD will not cast off his people, neither will he forsake his inheritance.”
  • What is my new choice? To rejoice in the future, confident that God owns the future and is directing our steps. Our duty is to obey Him and work diligently with our hands, prudently.

 

What were the life-changing results of this journaling exercise for Kyle and Shelby? It honestly marked a turning point in their thought lives. Instead of allowing limiting beliefs to run amok and paralyze all attempts at progress, they became very intentional to reverse these thoughts and make healthier choices with their brain power. It laid the foundations for Kyle and Shelby to go from broke and barely making it, to steadily building real wealth (instead of debt) and diversifying their streams of income. It made space for the abundance mindset and personal growth they needed to provide real value in the marketplace, strategize solutions, and trust God with the rest.

If you feel stuck, this exercise is a powerful starting point for arresting a negative thoughts and emotional patterns and reversing it with intention. Out of the heart flow the springs of life. We love that our planner system gives us a very practical way to guard our hearts with all diligence.

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Are you ready to launch into an entirely new way of planning? We created the Evergreen Planner System because we felt continually limited by each planner we tried. The Getting Started Kit is the perfect way to try two of our core products – the Annual and the Monthly. Don’t wait until we launch our next subscription box – get the tools you need today!

January 27, 2021

Confronting Limiting Beliefs

Have you ever heard of the phrase, “limiting beliefs?”

The first time Shelby heard that phrase, she thought it was a little bit woo-woo. But then her husband did a limiting beliefs exercise back in November 2015, and—get this—it literally changed their lives.

Here’s why: Limiting beliefs are, well, limiting. They hedge in the brain from considering certain possibilities altogether.

Limiting beliefs are not always harmful. For instance: one limiting belief you may have is that, if you jump off your roof, you won’t be able to fly. That’s a sound limiting belief. You’re legitimately not equipped to fly, and to consider jumping off of your roof without a good gameplan for landing on the ground is actually pretty dangerous. That limiting belief was encoded into your brain through hundreds of experiments with jumping off of various objects when you were a kid, and then finding that the force of gravity was a constant that you’d have to grapple with for the rest of your life.

But some limiting beliefs are not based on unchangeable realities, such as the force of gravity. Some limiting beliefs are present because of fear, guilt, or doctrinal error (and usually a mixture of the three).

Learning from the Wright Brothers

Before the advent of airplanes, many people believed that humans shouldn’t fly. That is an example of an unhealthy limiting belief. Fear said that any attempts to build flying machines were far too dangerous, guilt said humans don’t deserve that kind of freedom, and doctrinal error said that if God wanted humans to fly, He would’ve attached wings to their body!

Confidence studied the flying power God endowed to the birds, knowing we are worth more to God than the sparrow.

A clean conscience considered the wildly abundant possibilities of progress.

Bravery calculated risks and found ways to overcome barriers.

The Wright Brothers were deeply impacted by the Word of God, professed Christ from a young age, and reportedly lived out a Christian ethic. They did not let limiting beliefs hedge their brains in from considering the possibilities of controlled, sustained flight. They seemed to have a laser focus on their core calling, diligently studying God’s creative solutions for endowing birds with flight, humbly dividing labor according to their individual strengths, patiently moving forward, and ultimately overcoming every obstacle between themselves and the skies.

They pioneered a technology that surpassed all of the expectations of their contemporaries, revolutionized global transportation and industry, laid the foundations for future generations of engineers, and ultimately have been used to spread the Gospel in unreached communities as well as rescue and radically improve countless lives.

It’s true that the secondary agents of progress are not always seeking the glory of God. Yet an even more profound truth is that since Christ took charge of this planet, it’s a whole new world that’s burgeoning with hope, and rapidly advancing.

And if you’re a child of God, truly, there are no limits on your personal growth. Your heart to serve others by making positive change in their lives was put there by the God of the Universe. He has zealously undertaken to fill up every deficit within you with the overflow of His grace, so that your work can be sacred and effectual in more ways than you can imagine. Sanctification has serious practical implications. So when it comes to redeeming the time and making an impact, what are you waiting for?

Next week, we’ll be sharing the exact Limiting Beliefs Reversal journaling exercise that Kyle did that marked a turning point in the Shepherds’ lives. Since then, Shelby has done this same exercise at pivotal moments in her life, when she needed radical clarity so she could boldly move forward in the things that mattered most.

In preparation for that, take time to pull out your planner and jot down a bullet-point list in response to this question: What are the limiting beliefs holding you back from getting serious about your core calling?

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Are you ready to launch into an entirely new way of planning? We created the Evergreen Planner System because we felt continually limited by each planner we tried. The Getting Started Kit is the perfect way to try two of our core products – the Annual and the Monthly. Don’t wait until we launch our next subscription box – get the tools you need today!

January 13, 2021

Freeing Up Mental Bandwidth for Growth

A few weeks ago I (Shelby) wrote about how while there are no silver bullets in life, for my family, margin was the closest thing that we found to one.

This next tip is definitely a close second.

Having margin in your schedule to think, dream, rest, adjust, and plan is an incredible gift. But if your only productivity super power is designing ways to pad your schedule with margin, you might find yourself with lots of time to strategize, but not a lot of fruit to show for it.

Life may still feel like it’s “getting in the way.”

Perhaps you made that space in your schedule for launching the business (or attending that class, or building that addition, or tackling that debt) that will revolutionize your family’s future, but today still feels like the homefront is in an unnecessary state of survival mode. You feel like every time you turn around, something is undone, overdue, or undermanaged. You’re high on dreams, clear on goals, but low on the mental organization necessary to execute because your environment feels chaotic.

If this describes you, take heart! You can begin to free up even more (!!) mental bandwidth by leaning in to your basic responsibilities.

The Stress of Procrastination Clutters Your Brain

Avoiding or procrastinating basic responsibilities is a common ailment. The source of this resistance can be so many things including our childhoods, our personalities, and our fallen human nature.

But harboring resistance to the core responsibilities on our plates creates so much mental and environmental background noise that it makes it nearly impossible to truly focus on the things that matter most. It also hampers growth.

This is because a strong life grows from the inside out. If your core responsibilities are neglected, anything you build has a shaky foundation. All of your hard-won margin begins to be eaten up in putting out fires, patching up holes, and recovering lost ground.

Think about it:

If you build a strong running habit but neglect the basic responsibility of eating on a regular basis, you start to throw your blood sugar out of whack. Your blood sugar roller coaster soon begins to jack with your circadian rhythm, and before you know it, getting up at 6am to run becomes an impossibility.

If you set income goals for a five-figure month, but you neglect the basic responsibility of answering your team’s questions on a regular basis, you start to severely outpace your company’s systems. You might land an amazing deal / client / collab, but if your team doesn’t have what they need to properly steward the incredible new opportunity, you could easily end up worse off than before.

If you show up for personal goals but neglect the basic responsibility of responding with intention to your children, their lack of boundaries and chaotic attempts to meet their own needs begin to crowd out your progress with so much persistence that you begin to see them as the problem. The heart you had for personal growth gets lost in a victim mentality.

In the back of your mind, you know these things, even if you’re not actively considering them. The stress that results from avoiding or procrastinating basic responsibilities such as self care, home management, and team leadership is stress that runs like a computer program in the background, eating up mental bandwidth and margin at alarming rates.

Pretty soon, the consequences that come from procrastinating the basics overcome the advantages of instant gratification. Overwhelm settles in. Life seems to have “gotten in the way” of growth again.

Since basic responsibilities are, well, basic responsibilities, the only thing to be done in this instance is to fully lean in.

Productivity Super Power #2: Acceptance

So if we describe margin-making as Productivity Super Power #1, we could describe acceptance as Super Power #2.

When it comes to consistently getting things done, so many of the answers lie in having the right mindset.

We can (and should) make those braindumped lists, highlighting the essentials and then delegating and purging whatever we can. But at the end of the day, no matter how creatively we minimize our load, we still have those essentials to tend.

Here’s an example of my short list of essentials:

  • communion with the Lord
  • managing self care
  • communion with my husband
  • communion with my children
  • keeping my home
  • teaching my children
  • growing Evergreen Planner
  • supporting my local church
  • communion with other Christians
  • being a voice for the oppressed

I can (and should) find ways to delegate aspects of these essentials. I can hire someone to clean my house, coach me in health, or handle basic customer service inquiries. I can (and should) also find ways to keep these essentials trimmed and focused. I can replace going through the motions of Bible reading with studying out an issue in Scripture that is causing conflict. I can replace obsession over homeschool schedules with a robust daily rhythm of reading aloud to my kids. I can stop over-complicating dietary changes and simply add in a daily salad or green shake.

But with all of these clever tweaks for outsourcing and essentializing, I still have basic responsibilities that take forethought, effort, and follow-through.

I still need to make space to pray, eat, date my husband, shower, sit with my baby, do the dishes, fold the laundry, schedule the appointment, clean out the carport, make the dinner for a grieving family, listen to hurting friend, build out the sales funnel, show up for the webinar, write the email, tidy the office, make the trip, show up on time, etc., etc., etc.

With all my care to avoid useless busy-ness, the essentials still remain, and my life stays full.

The most detrimental thing I can do in the face of this is to avoid, procrastinate, or resent my basic responsibilities. Instead, I must lean into them with a heart of acceptance.

Diligence Flows Out of You

When you hear the word “diligence,” what is your inner response?

In the early days of my productivity journey, the word “diligence” invoked feelings of unending hustle. I thought that diligent people mustered up fresh energy to do every little thing on their lists. Because I personally felt that the basics (such as getting ready in the morning, making meals, cleaning the house, responding to a misbehaving child, writing content, conducting an interview, packing for a trip, etc., etc.) were each these projects that needed to be tackled, I was absolutely dazzled (and pretty intimidated) by the people in my life who seemed to move through their responsibilities effortlessly.

But as I studied the most diligent people in my life, I began to observe something.

They accepted their basic responsibilities as… well… basic.

They didn’t have to muster up fresh energy for each little thing because, for them, accomplishing their basic responsibilities was as mentally simple, automated, and non-negotiable as walking or brushing their teeth.

Diligence flowed out of them.

When I began to accept my basic responsibilities for what they were and leaned into them, the overwhelm began to fade.

​How to Build Diligence Into Your Life

At the beginning of my productivity journey, focusing on my basic responsibilities took up all of my time. I was really “adulting” for the first time in so many different areas of life that it was pretty mentally taxing. But I persevered, beginning to realize that literally any skill or habit could become as second nature to me as checking my social media notifications or putting on shoes before heading to town.

Pretty soon, I didn’t have to convince myself to make my bed first thing in the morning. I had slept in the bed, and having a made bed set the stage for peace and productivity in that room, so I accepted that making the bed was just basic to my day. With that inner acceptance in place, there was no resistance when I started in toward making my bed (even though there were plenty of other things that could vie for that three minutes of my time). Once making my bed became muscle memory, I anchored it to happen before I even opened my door and left my bedroom first thing in the morning, and it soon became as automatic as eating breakfast.

After I mastered making my bed, I turned toward the kitchen. I accepted that eating meant that washing dishes, wiping countertops, and sweeping floors were a basic element in my lifestyle. I stopped asking myself if I were too tired to clean the kitchen before bed and started to just see it as part of what happens in the evening. Soon, the motions of getting the kitchen clean also became muscle memory, and I anchored it to happen before I brushed my teeth, filled up my waterbottle, and got into my pajamas. It soon became as automatic as getting under the covers at night.

These two automated habits (making my bed and cleaning my kitchen) are on such autopilot in my life that I can use the time it takes for me to do either one as a mental opportunity to work through complex problems, develop solutions, write content, imagine important conversations, and prioritize my next steps.

But that freed up mental bandwidth for growth could only come after a season of acceptance and leaning in. It’s a process, but it’s a process that’s worth every single second.

By naming, accepting, and leaning into your basic responsibilities, you can set the stage to create solid habits in every area of life. You can take the guesswork, decision-fatigue, and overwhelm out of the core structures of your life. You can become faithful in little so that you’ve exercised the muscles needed to grow your influence.

You are firming up the solid foundation you need to begin stacking your efforts with confidence as you reach for your biggest dreams.