|
11 Questions to Kickstart Your Dream
By Keith Varnum
What’s
your dream? Want to give your vision a jumpstart? Write down your goals
and use these questions to speed up delivery of your dream.
1. What’s your highest priority this lifetime?
What’s
most important for you to experience, explore or embrace this time
around? Until you answer this question, your life goals will be off
purpose. Unaligned with your inner passion, your intentions will lack
the power to attract the people and situations necessary to become a
reality.
Get
clued into your true joy. What
activities turned you on as a child? What are your hobbies now?
When your goals are aligned with your soul purpose, synchronicity kicks
in to guide you to your target. When you intuit and own your unique
essence and calling, assistance will flow to you from every earthly and
heavenly source.
2. Is this your
dream, or someone else’s?
Are
your goals your own choice, or what others think you should strive for?
Do you want to look back in your old
age and wish you had followed your passion? Will you regret
having “played it safe?”
Is it selfish to go after your own dream?
What
joy can you give to others if you haven’t given it to yourself first?
You have a divine right to listen to your heart. You have a social
obligation to follow your dream. Only then can you fulfill your destiny
and make the earthly contribution you were born to make.
3. Do you
really, really want this dream?
Do you
bound out of bed every morning to pursue your vision? Or is it a
lukewarm dream you chase because it sounds meaningful? Only the
Real McCoy will generate enough energy to manifest itself in the world.
4. Are you
settling for less than?
Are you resigned to
accepting less than your full share of love, health and success this
lifetime? Have you compromised and sacrificed your dream to death?
Anything short of
living your true passions will never make you happy. Do you want to
arrive at the Pearly Gates with the regret of not marrying that one
captivating person, starting that fun business, or seeing that exotic
part of the world you always wanted to visit?
5. Is your dream
actually just a means to some other dream?
Is your
goal the ultimate end in itself, or merely a limited means to that end?
Isn’t it really the new car itself you want, rather than the money—the
means—to buy the new car? More to the core, isn’t it really a renewed
sense of self-worth you desire, rather than the new car or house to
impress the family and neighbors? And isn’t it really happiness you
want, rather than the picture-perfect mate, job or body?
Focus
on the experience you want to create, not the physical form that may—or
may not—bring you that experience.
6. What will you
feel like when you reach your dream?
Personal passion fuels a vision. Dive into the thrill and exhilaration
of the feeling of living your dream. Every moment you can, drink
in the joy of having your goal.
The
Hawaiian Kahuna say, “Where your creative attention flows, so flows your
life.” Is your daily attention feeding your dream? As the TV public
service announcement reminds us, “It’s midnight. Do you know where your
children are?” Hey, in your life, it’s high noon! Do you know where your
creative excitement is flowing?
It’s
high time you manifested your aspirations. Dynamic, satisfying creations
are nurtured with love and care as a flower in a garden.
7. How will you
benefit from getting your dream?
Get
specific about the benefits you’ll receive from achieving your vision.
Write down these pluses so they will sink in as motivators. What exactly
would happen if you made a lot of money doing something you love? How
would you approach your life differently if you allowed people to love
and support you? What would you do with more vitality and health?
8. What steps
can you take today toward your dream?
Don’t
defer your dream. Set up supports and systems around you to instantly
translate your intentions into action. Jump on every opportunity that is
in line with your purpose and vision.
Keep
the momentum going. No matter how hectic life gets, pledge to take at
least one action a day. Even the smallest actions—jotting down a new
idea, reading a single page, or making one phone call—can start to add
up.
Are
there smaller projects that lead to your larger dream that can give you
pleasure in the meantime? If the dream is to run a marathon, train for a
local fun-run first. And find a way to measure your progress. Track
those little wins—by writing in a journal or telling a friend.
9. Are you
telling yourself: “I can’t have my dream?”
Most
people don’t believe they can live their dream. Either their belief
system has them believing they can’t make a living doing what they love,
or they feel they don’t deserve their dream. To avoid the pain of
feeling they can’t have their dream, people often keep their dream so
buried they can’t remember they ever had a dream.
Everyone has a dream! And everyone is destined to fulfill that purpose.
Why wait?
10. Are you
afraid of getting your dream?
Statistically, more heart attacks occur when “good” things happen, than
when “bad” things happen! Getting your dream is life-threatening! Of
course, realizing your dream is only threatening to your old experience
of yourself and your life—you know, the one that’s boring—or paining—you
to death!
Change is scary. Find a way to move the energy of fear. The only way to
avoid feeling fear is to avoid living altogether!
11. Do you
really need to accomplish your dream?
Do you
really need to achieve your goals to be happy? Enter the “hootless
state”—where you no longer give a hoot if the exact “picture” of your
dream comes true. Without the interference of the ego’s push, pressure
and micro managing, you have a much better chance of being in the right
vibration—space—to attract real happiness. When you relax your grip on
the exact way your future “has” to unfold, you give the Universe more
flexibility in how it can fulfill your wishes.
And,
on a higher plane, what if our true task here on Earth is simply to be
who we already are in our essential nature—with or without manifesting
our specific goals? What if the essence of who we are is enough? |