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Last updated on September 15th, 2023 at 01:50 pm
I made a big plan for digging into my Powersheets goals for the very first time.
I bought a brand new set of pens and set up a morning where my husband would stay home with our kid so I could go on a coffee date with myself.
It was a big deal for me.
Never before had I given much thought to goal setting. It was something I’d done before that left a bad taste in my mouth.
But many of my favorite people to follow online kept talking about the Powersheets by Cultivate What Matters.
So for the first time ever, I invested in my own Powersheets for 2019.
But personally, over the last couple of years, I learned that setting goals aren’t about achieving the goals.
It’s about becoming focused and intentional. It’s about stretching and growing.
If you’re interested in using the Powersheets by Cultivate What Matters, here are my takeaways from using them for the last two years.
Figuring out your Powersheets goals is a process
As I sipped my coffee and worked through the first few sections of the Powersheets, I realized I needed more than a two-hour coffee date to do this.
The first section digs into who you are, your past, and starting to figure out ideas for goals. By the end, you choose a word for the year (something I had never done before).
The next section is where you set your goals for the year, but the pages have you ruminating and thinking a lot.
This process is so good for me. It prevents me from going down rabbit trails while also having me consider things I normally wouldn’t.
Goals change with the seasons
The Powersheets goals are broken into seasonal quarters for a reason. Anyone who made goals for 2020 appreciates this!
At the beginning of each quarter, you rewrite your goals —meaning you can copy down your original goals, edit them, or create brand new ones.
The best thing is that you’re given permission. For some reason, having someone tell you it’s ok makes it ok.
Life comes in seasons, and I appreciate that the team at Cultivate What Matters gets that. And there’s the freedom to rewrite and change your goals anytime.
Review your goals every month
Each month there’s the opportunity to decide what you want to focus on. Using the Tending List, you write down the actions you need to take to reach the specific goals you’re focusing on for the month.
The Tending List is perforated so it can be torn out and place somewhere where you can see it, but I just keep mine open on my desk.
At the end of each month, there’s a Month in Review page. I’m one of those people who just move on to the next thing. But this page makes me pause and think about what I’ve learned and actually see what progress I’ve made.
What the Powersheets are NOT
The Powersheets are not daily planners. Although they added a monthly spread to the 2020 Powersheets, it’s still not a planner.
I supplement my Powersheets with my Day Designer Planner. I drill down my weeks to focus in on the Powersheets goals written on my Tending List.
This goal setting exercise is an essential part of my weekly planning process.
Creating Powersheets goals made me intentional
I am a big believer in the Powersheets. I had goals before but I never wrote them down. I never knew if I made any progress. Now I can flip back through the planner and see how far I’ve come —or more importantly, know that I’ve made progress.
What do you think? Are the Powersheets the right goal-setting tool for you?
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