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7 Steps to Achieve Your Dreams Sooner Than Planned

Authors
  • Name
    Ron Edmondson
I love and encourage dreaming because I think it’s healthy emotionally and the process helps us accomplish great things personally and for God. We are told we serve a big, creative God, whose thoughts will always be bigger and better than ours, so dreaming should be natural to believers. Dreaming stretches the vision of churches and organizations, it fuels creativity, and many great opportunities develop first as a dream. The reality is that more people have dreams than attain them. Perhaps you have dreams you have yet to accomplish. I certainly do. One reason dreams never come true is that we don’t have a system in place to work toward them. I love to be an encourager for people with great dreams, so with that in mind, here are some steps to help you move toward reaching your dreams: 1. Identify your dream. This is where you list specifically what the dream would look like. Obviously, it needs to be attainable, but don’t be afraid for it to be a stretch either. For example, suppose your dream is to be an author. That’s a dream you can accomplish, but it may not be attainable to be the next Max Lucado. 2. Make an action plan. Write down specific action steps you can take toward attaining your goal. (The writing down part is important). Sticking with the idea of being an author, perhaps you could start with a blog for which you post regularly to build the discipline of writing. Then move to outlining chapters. Then you might set aside a few hours a week to actually write the book. Record realistic dates to begin/complete each step. 3. Develop accountability. Most of us work harder when we know someone is going to challenge us to do so. Consider the success of programs like Weight Watchers. Accountability works, so share your plan of action with a few people who will continue to challenge you to completion. 4. Share the load. Even though it is your dream, the best ideas are accomplished when people work together toward a common vision. Don’t be afraid to invite others to help you accomplish your dream as needed. 5. Take a risk. If you really want to succeed, you must be willing to risk failure. Every great dream has an element of risk involved, and the ones who achieve their dreams are the ones wiling to assume the risk. 6. Stay consistent. If you want to achieve your dreams, you will have to keep at the task, even during the setbacks. Push yourself to complete scheduled action steps, even on days you may not want to do anything. This is how habits are developed. Many give up too soon, often just before the tipping point toward success occurs. Unless you know it’s time to try another dream, stay consistent with the one in front of you. 7. Get started now. The longer you wait, the more you delay achievement and the less likely you are to begin. If you know the dream is worth achieving, if you are confidant it’s a God-honoring, morally right and worthy dream, then start today! What is one dream you have yet to attain? Why not take one meaningful step to get started today?