So how do you set an intention?
If you've read the last two morning's posts and can see how intention relates to you, you're halfway there.
There are two parts to setting an intention:
So how do you set an intention?
If you've read the last two morning's posts and can see how intention relates to you, you're halfway there.
There are two parts to setting an intention:
This is part of the "transforming busy and overwhelm" blog series I mentioned yesterday.
[4-minute read, 727 words]
The power and quality of your leadership is directly related to the power and quality of your intention...
It's so easy to let life and our days happen "to" us. With the best of quiet intentions we say we want to have a good day, create a great meeting, take care of our bodies, be an awesome partner in relationship (or parent, spouse, friend, etc.), show up as a solid leader, and rock our results. And then life happens.
We get "busy," we start our day answering emails (getting sucked into other peoples' intentions), our schedule slips, we run late, we spend big cycles trying to catch up and recover from each meeting, we have multiple demands, and we forget to be present. Before you know it, we're overwhelmed, the day is gone, it's 8 p.m. and all we can wonder is "What were my original plans?" and "Where did the day go?" and "Hand me the remote."
Last year I went to the doctor for my physical and was told that while my all systems were running awesome (BP, blood work, etc. – thank God), my BMI (body-mass-index) put me in the “high” category – had I tried exercise? My body fat was 20.5% at the time (healthy), I exercised five days a week, prioritized sleep, and ate super clean 93% of the time (wine, chocolate, and a really good taco are necessary pleasures in my world), and I felt great. I was grateful I understood BMI. I was also grateful that my body felt solid, that I felt healthy, and that I knew I was taking care of myself. That was my measurement.
© 2002-2024 ACI/Anese Cavanaugh. Speaker. Author. Creator of the IEP Method®