Before You Set That Goal Again, Read This

Before You Set That Goal Again, Read This

Avoiding the self-blame loop no one warned you about.

Let’s talk about the goal you’ve been setting for, what… five years now?

 

You know the one.

 

You really mean it every time.
You get inspired.
You swear this year will be different.

 

And then, somehow, you end up right back here again.

 

So before you decide you’re just bad at follow-through, let’s clear something up:

 

You don’t keep setting the same goals because you’re lazy, undisciplined, or lacking willpower.

 

You do it because something deeper hasn’t shifted yet.

This Isn’t a Discipline Problem. It’s a Pattern.

Most people think change fails because they didn’t try hard enough.

 

So they respond by - adding more rules - tightening the plan - shaming themselves into motivation, and promising to ‘be more consistent this time.’

 

That approach sounds logical.
It’s also why nothing changes.

 

Because you’re not fighting a habit problem -
you’re bumping up against an identity pattern.

 

And patterns don’t break because you yelled at yourself louder.

You Don’t Live According to Goals

- You Live According to What Feels Safe

Here’s the part no one likes to admit:

 

You will always default to the version of life that feels familiar, not the one that sounds best on paper.

 

That’s not a character flaw.
That’s how the nervous system works.

 

So if a goal threatens your:

- sense of stability,

- role as ‘the responsible one,’

- identity as the reliable one,

- belonging, approval, or predictability...

 

Your system quietly says, ‘Hard pass.’

 

Not because the goal is wrong -
but because your identity hasn’t caught up yet.

Why Willpower Keeps Ghosting You

Willpower is not a personality trait.
It’s a resource.

 

And it drains fast when you’re asking yourself to live in a way that doesn’t feel aligned, safe, or true yet.

 

That’s why so many goals are built on:

- exhaustion instead of clarity,

- pressure instead of conviction,

- comparison instead of calling.

 

So of course they don’t last.

 

You’re trying to force behavior change without changing the operating system underneath it.

If a Goal Keeps Coming Back, It’s Trying to Tell You Something

Here’s the reframe most people miss:

 

Recurring goals are not evidence of failure.
They’re evidence of unfinished work.

 

They usually point to things like:

👉 priorities you haven’t clearly named

👉 an identity you’ve outgrown but haven’t released

👉beliefs that made sense once, but don’t anymore

 

You may want peace -
but still be living like your worth depends on performance.

 

You may want freedom -
but still be governed by responsibility.

 

You may want alignment -
but still believe safety comes from staying predictable.

 

Until those drivers are addressed, goals will keep recycling.

 

Not because you’re stuck.
Because you’re protecting something.

Faith Doesn’t Ask You to Try Harder

- It Asks You to Tell the Truth

This is where faith absolutely helps.

 

Transformation in Scripture isn’t about grinding.
It’s about renewal.

 

Renewal happens when:

💫 what’s really governing your life is brought into the light

💫 misalignment is named without shame

💫 identity is gently realigned

💫 old patterns are released instead of fought

 

That work is quieter than goal-setting.
Less dramatic.
And way more effective.

 

Because when identity shifts, behavior follows - without force.

What to Do Instead of Setting the Same Goal Again

Before you set another goal, ask this instead:

 

🤔 What version of myself feels safe living this way?

🤔 What am I afraid I’ll lose if this actually works?

🤔 What identity am I still operating from by default?

 

Those questions will take you further than any checklist ever will.

Because clarity creates change, while pressure just creates resistance.

A Gentle Reality Check

(Because Someone Has to Say It)

If you keep setting the same goals every year, you’re not broken.

You’re just trying to skip a step.

 

And that step isn’t more discipline.
It’s purpose-based alignment with your unique genius zone!

 

When your priorities, beliefs, and identity line up,
change stops feeling like self-betrayal.

 

It starts feeling inevitable.

 

And THAT my friend, is where your calling comes alive and you’re able to function within your full God-given strengths.

 

If you’re not sure where to begin, then you can try the FREE version of Pinpoint Your Intrinsic Drivers! It’s called the Core Priorities Snapshot, and it gives you a chance to test out the process before committing to more - plus you’ll get a discount to upgrade if it resonates with you.

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