Read Who Are You Meant to Be? Online
Authors: Anne Dranitsaris,
Fears and underlying beliefs triggered while envisioning my desired future state | Impact on my desired future state (what I recorded in my Planner) |
I was afraid my siblings would laugh at me when I told them that I envisioned myself a thought leader. | I found myself writing that I was going to be a well-known author. |
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Note: You may need to revise your desired future state if your fears and beliefs diminished what you wrote. Challenge yourself to not let your fears or beliefs limit your description of your desired future state.
Planner Section 3: Define Your Plan
What needs to happen for me to move to action?
What barriers will I encounter?
In this section, you need to use your left rational brain to define how you are going to move from your current state to your desired state. This includes defining the strategies you will focus on (what) and the specific actions, experiences, or activities you will complete (how) in order to achieve your goals. You also have to identify the barriers or resistance you are likely to experience as you move to action so that you are prepared to address them. Use your notes from step 1 to complete this section, particularly those on possible actions to take to fully use your Predominant Style. This ensures the likelihood of your predominant need being met. It also identifies the activities that you need to demonstrate more frequently in order to strengthen your SA System.
Consider the following as you complete the “what” of your plan:
Max (Leader) had expected to get the branch manager role when his boss retired, but instead senior management brought someone in from a branch across the city. For the past several months, Max did everything he could to show management that the guy they brought in was a total loser. Max interrupted him in meetings to show how much more he knew than his boss and was always giving his opinions to coworkers about how incompetent management was because of way they made their decisions. He was convinced he knew best.
Max was blindsided when he was called in to his manager’s office and told that if his attitude and behavior didn’t change, he would no longer be on the management track. Waking up from his self-protective stupor, Max finally realized that he felt that his career was out of his control and he was acting out his anxiety. He knew that he needed to find a way to get his need to be in control met, and decided he could first get some control over his attitude. He volunteered to lead an office reorganization project, and at home he volunteered to coach his son’s soccer team.
Consider the following as you complete the “how” of your plan:
Consider the following as you identify the “barriers” to your plan:
Tips for Completing This Section Based on Your Predominant Style
Leader or Intellectual:
Your Predominant Style possesses a natural confidence and arrogance about its abilities, so be aware of the tendency to do this entire exercise from this quadrant of the brain, and the possibility of being hijacked by the needs of your Associate Styles should you not take them into consideration (e.g., not acknowledging emotional barriers or how to handle them).
Performer or Visionary:
Acknowledge any resistance you may feel to defining your plan and making it “real,” noticing how it can affect your mood, and then proceed with the activity anyway. Resist the urge to think you are above “limiting” yourself by developing a plan to follow. Your brain will benefit and grow so much when you hold yourself to the planning process instead of resisting and jumping from one thing to another.
Socializer or Artist:
Make sure you factor yourself in. People of these Styles can have difficulty putting themselves first for fear of being considered selfish or unhelpful. Defining your goals objectively may mean putting limits on behaviors and relationships patterns you have tolerated in your life. Push past your resistance by remembering that the changes you make will enhance the quality of all your relationships.
Adventurer or Stabilizer:
Focus on identifying the overall actions and objectives that you want to achieve, knowing that you will detail the steps of how to do this in the next section. If you can’t figure out the necessary action, get someone to help you. When defining actions and activities, don’t simply do those that are easy or that allow you to avoid pain or discomfort.
At Home
Consider changes in the way your relationships work, how you behave with others or what you expect from other people, the role you play in your personal life, how you parent or interact with your children, and/or how you negotiate to increase the frequency with which your predominant need is met. Consider how you will shift from your SP System and/or strengthen your SA System to achieve your desired future state in your personal life.
Here is an example:
What I am going to do?
Record your approach to achieving your desired future state.
Increase the extent my predominant need as a Performer gets met in my primary relationship.
How I am going to do it?
List specific activities you will do or experiences you will seek to develop your brain’s neural pathways.
When I am going to do it
? Write down dates so you can monitor.
Barriers I am likely to encounter.
Identify what will get in the way and how you can address when it happens.
What I am going to do?
Record your approach to achieving your desired future state.
1.
2.
3.
How I am going to do it?
List specific activities you will do or experiences you will seek to develop your brain’s neural pathways.
1.
2.
3.
When I am going to do it
? Write down dates so you can monitor.
1.
2.
3.
Barriers I am likely to encounter.
Identify what will get in the way and how you can address when it happens.
1.
2.
3.
At Work or School
Consider changes in your current role, what you do (job) or who you do it for (company), how you interact with your boss or team, or how you negotiate for more opportunity to get your need met at work; or, if at school, what you study and how you participate, that would allow you to better get your predominant need met. Consider how you will shift from your SP System and/or strengthen your SA System to achieve your desired future state at work or at school.
Here is an example:
What I am going to do?
Record your approach to achieving your desired future state.
How I am going to do it?
List specific activities you will do or experiences you will seek to develop your brain’s neural pathways.
When I am going to do it
? Write down dates so you can monitor.
Barriers I am likely to encounter.
Identify what will get in the way and how you can address when it happens.
What I am going to do?
Record your approach to achieving your desired future state.
1.
2.
3.
How I am going to do it?
List specific activities you will do or experiences you will seek to develop your brain’s neural pathways.
1.
2.
3.
When I am going to do it
? Write down dates so you can monitor.
1.
2.
3.
Barriers I am likely to encounter.
Identify what will get in the way and how you can address when it happens.
1.
2.
3.
In Social Activities
Consider changes in your social activities. Think about who you spend time with and what you do when you spend time together, what role you play with your friends, and how you interact in social settings. Think about what you might do to increase the frequency of getting your predominant need met. Consider what you can do to shift from self-protective to self-actualizing behaviors when you are with your friends and/or how you could strengthen your SA System through your social activities.
Here is an example:
What I am going to do?
Record your approach to achieving your desired future state.
Use my SA Socializer so I can have more consistency and intimacy in my relationships with friends.
How I am going to do it?
List specific activities you will do or experiences you will seek to develop your brain’s neural pathways.
When I am going to do it
? Write down dates so you can monitor.
Barriers I am likely to encounter.
Identify what will get in the way and how you can address when it happens.