If you had a job, or if you have a job, chances are you get either a quarterly, semi-annual, or yearly review. You sit down with your boss and he or she goes over you and your performance. Chances are just as good that you don’t take time to do this for yourself. What I try to do is schedule a time every six months on my calendar to do a personal inventory. During this time I take an honest look at where I am compared to where I believe I should be in several areas of my life. When you take time to do a personal inventory it gives you a chance to do three things; reflect, assess, and dream.
Reflect – Look back at the past 6 – 28 months and think about all you have done. If you keep a journal, and you should, take this time to look at all you have accomplished. Look at your one year goals from last year and see where you are with them. Genuinely asses where you were and what you have done since your last inventory. Don’t take this time to mark failures and fall into a pity party. Leave the failure behind and move on. This is a time to get caught up and ready for the future.
(If you don’t journal because it is to hard or inconvenient try Penzu.com. It is a free app you can use on your computer to jot down notes in an online journal that is convenient. I have a pro account so I can use it on my phone and tablet no matter where I am. )
Assessment - Think about where you are right now. I use a 1 – 10 scale and ask myself these questions:
- How is my health?
- How am I doing spiritually?
- How am I doing as a husband?
- How am I doing as a father?
- How am I doing financially?
- How are my relationships with friends and colleagues?
- Am I happy?
- Do I feel confident about the future?
These don’t have to be your questions, but they’re my questions. They’re pertinent to me and my family and situation. I may add questions to clarify those, but those are important to me to help me start thinking. Asking , “Where am I with this,” or “How am I doing with this,” will help you understand what you need to change and what you need to focus on for the future. You need to know exactly what you need to do or stop doing.
Dream – What do you want to accomplish over the next 6 months to a year? Reread and rewrite your short-term goals to make them as clear as possible. Take what you learned from your assessment phase and turn it into goals here. What you do in the future is built right here. So take some time and plan well.









Who’s Talking