I’ve always been obsessed with the future. As a child, I dreamed of asking my house robot to fly my car for me. If you’d told me about an impending vast network of connected computers, I’d have been thrilled at the prospect. After all, what results could that possibly produce except uniting humanity through better communication, which would surely bring about world peace!
But my natural inclination to focus on the future also brings me stress, anxiety and difficulty enjoying the present moment.
Most of my present moments, in fact, are spent dreaming of future moments. Which is a bit silly when you think about it. For example, I motivate myself during projects by imagining the moment of completion. But when that moment actually arrives, I barely take time to enjoy it. I’m already focused on the next thing.
I’m like the proverbial donkey chasing a carrot, except I’m clever-stupid enough to have built the carrot/stick machine for myself.
Still, this tendency isn’t the worst thing. Dreaming of success at least provides a means of motivating myself. But it’s important—for morale, motivation and enjoyment of life—to occasionally pause and celebrate some wins. Or, at least acknowledge them. Otherwise, what’s even the point of a win?!
If the only reward for completing a task is another task, then we’re depriving ourselves of an important source of joy.
What even is a win?
Like most activities that are good for me, I find acknowledging and enjoying wins to be easier said than done.
In the rare and easy case, where I can look back over recent months and see a string of achievements, I still have to fight my instincts. I have to step back and take time to reflect on the achievements and to enjoy my accomplishments.
Sometimes, though, the wins aren’t such low-hanging fruit. There have been periods—sometimes lengthy ones—when “wins” feel far off. There’s little joy to be had in looking back on an endless series of setbacks.
However, even outside of times of crisis, it’s amazing how much of my life is spent feeling as if I haven’t achieved anything. Usually the sense that I’ve achieved nothing is due to being so hyper-focused on one specific goal that I ignore all the other positives in my life. But when I actually look back, I consistently recognize that I achieved a lot without realizing it.
Partial wins count
Sometimes my wins are vague and not all that reassuring: “I made it through the month!” feels like lowering the bar. Other times, I have to allow myself a partial win. This doesn’t come naturally to me—my instinct is to assess every end result against my initial goals and then throw it into a bucket marked either “success” or “failure.”
But wins are still wins, even if they aren’t the wins I planned for and dreamed of—and even if they’re partial. Learning something from failure is a win. Growth during a tough time is a win. Why deprive myself of joy by denigrating my own accomplishments?
In order to make our wins visible, we have to look back through a positive lens. Otherwise, we can easily discount every accomplishment, or convince ourselves that nothing we did matters because we never got that One Thing that we really wanted. But it’s pointless to compare our lives to what we can imagine, because we can always imagine something better.
Living in reality means acknowledging the positives—however small—as well as being real about the negatives.
Wins in boring times
The hardest times to reflect on sometimes aren’t the worst ones. The most trying times tend to offer us obvious lessons. But life doesn’t usually coast along at the extremes: endless triumph or constant setbacks. Often, life just kinda… happens. There aren’t any particularly big wins, or any massive disasters.
I find these times to be, in their own way, more frustrating than anything. But we can learn a lot from these times of doldrums. They can be indicators that it’s time for a change. We can use the feeling of being stuck as fuel to make that change. And, guess what? Making a long-needed life change is a WIN. For example, I once had a whole year where it felt like nothing happened. Reflecting on those twelve months inspired me into the most life-changing year I’d had in a decade.
How to celebrate wins more easily
Imagine if, twelve months from reading this post, you didn’t have to try to acknowledge your successes. You can get there by putting in a little effort ahead of time, and making a habit of celebrating wins big and small. Here are two easy techniques to implement the habit:
1. Choose your goals
This is a whole topic in itself, but I find it helpful to always have goals of many different sizes. It’s great to dream big, but if I have a massive goal (like going to the moon) then I should also have an easily achievable goal (like going for a nice walk more often) to go along with it.
My brain likes to imagine that easy goals are pointless, as if goals are only worthwhile if they’re literally impossible. But actually being able to achieve a goal should count in a goals favor, not against it!
Try this: Set an ambitious, exciting goal—something that makes your spine tingle. And set multiple small goals: achievable things that will make you feel good about yourself
2. Dump your “to do” list and make a “have done” list
Again, this works well on multiple scales. You could keep a daily diary of little things you’ve achieved. Or you could work at a larger scale by ticking off days on a calendar when you kept to a good habit or made progress (even partial progress) towards a goal. At a huge scale, you could keep a physical list of big wins that you update as they occur.
Then, set a time in future to look over the evidence. It doesn’t have to be anything deep. Even just five minutes of flicking through your daily “have done” list will remind you of all that you’ve accomplished.
It’s great to have a carrot to work towards, but you’ve got to let yourself catch it and eat it occasionally. You’re worth it, and you’re winning—whether you see it or not.
Your turn
How do you reflect back over your accomplishments? Do you have any wins—whether big, small or in the middle!—to share with the community? Let us know in the comments!
Maryske says
I love this:
“My brain likes to imagine that easy goals are pointless, as if goals are only worthwhile if they’re literally impossible. But actually being able to achieve a goal should count in a goals favor, not against it!”
As well as your other advice here about dumping your to-do lists. As someone who tends to work on/play with 83 projects simultaneously, yet completes very very few of them (or so it feels…), the feeling of actually *reaching* a goal is something I experience but rarely. You’re right: maybe the goals are simply too big; I’ll need to downscale them a bit.
Thanks for yet another insightful column, Neil! When are you going to publish your collection of Putty columns for kindle or so? 🙂
Neil Hughes says
Hahaha, thanks for the idea ? I’m really happy the article was helpful! Sounds like you’re probably reaching a tonne of sub-goals even if you rarely reach what you think of as “the” goal – worth enjoying those and maybe enough of them will add up to “the” goal someday 😀
Jess says
Making this mindset shift has been a huge game-changer for me! One of the ways I like to look back on wins and positive moments is by creating photo books. I’m always a bit behind – getting last year’s photo books put together and printed this year – but it feels great to look back on a collection of moments, memories, messes, and successes and realize just how much I accomplished in that time. I guess that’s more about reflecting on the past than living in the present, but even if it’s a bit of a delayed sense of acknowledgment it certainly helps me remember that even the smallest steps today are indeed leading to something. I’ll just have to wait for the next photo book to find out what that is! 🙂
Neil Hughes says
Awesome! And this sounds great – memories are definitely for enjoying, it’s not like they’re any use for anything else! Congratulations in advance on the memories in your next photo book 🙂
Ibro says
“Have a I’ve done list”. Pure Gold. Will definitely start this.
Neil Hughes says
Fantastic! I hope it’s helpful for you, or at least less stress-inducing than a ‘todo’ list 🙂
Nadine says
This has made me notice another of the benefits of a weekly catch up with 2 friends who went on the same midlife revolution course as me. As well as urging each other on, we also celebrate wins both big and small along the way.
Neil Hughes says
Good point, getting groups around us to help us celebrate each other’s wins is super important. Thank you for the reminder!
Jane says
Thanks for the great article, Neil. I was nodding my head all the way through. Amazing how easy it is to dismiss the small achievements. I love the idea of a have done list. I used a short version of this last year when I was reviewing my current life goals, and I was amazed to see I’d done a lot of the things I’d dreamed of as a kid – maybe not as “big” or “dramatic” as I’d hoped, but I’d done them. And I’d never built in any kind of recognition, reward, or “way-to-gos”!
Why are multipods so freaking hard on themselves and self-critical? This seems a trait that really holds us back and stops us from achieving and/or recognizing more wins. At least, it has held me back from achieving so much more, with it’s blend of perfectionism, procrastination, and “not good enough”.
Neil Hughes says
Ahhh that’s so interesting, Jane! Thank you for sharing! It’s fascinating that you achieved so many of your childhood dreams but never managed to celebrate them at the time – just goes to show how our goalposts are ever-shifting unless we nail them down and insist on celebrating what we’ve done. Hope you can retroactively enjoy all those achievements – and more! – now 🙂
Jane says
Yes! Nailing down the goalposts! A perfect analogy for establishing a place where we actually recognize the win. My goalposts have been ever-moving. Thanks, Neil!
Aurélia Tison says
Interesting and helpful article. Thank you Neil.
Neil Hughes says
Thanks Aurélia, I’m really happy it resonated with you 🙂
Susanna says
Thank you for this article.
Actually one connected topic is the value we recognize to the goals we reach and the effort we invested. I am used to set goals which imply a level of challenge higher than my capacities or not always fairly balanced with the external condition out of my control. Most of the time the context where it happened was anyway kind of my confort zone. I have almost always obtained the results I was looking for. Never perfect as I wished.
And..I usually consider the effort done as “normal”, as something which doesn’t deserve a prize, because “you can do it”, “it is in your capacities, if you work hard on it”, “it is not special what you did, it is simply what you had to”.
The point is not that I don’t recognize the importance of the goal, but the value of my effort. That’s why I see rarely something to celebrate. I simply did “my job” and also not perfectly. So, even if the challenge was over my capacities, there is nothing special to celebrate.
In 3 years, working almost 12hrs each day, 25-28 days in a month I brought a no-profit organization back to life. It meant dealing with things where I was a very beginner. I have been in the organization for 7years before as activist. Very high goals+low skills+ confort zone+awarness of the required effort from the beginning=nothing to be celebrated even if it finally reborn.
When I discovered this mechanism, I changed the nature of the bet: small result as a goal, but out my confort zone. This means hard challange for me. I am working on my self now, I am trying to give space to me as first: understanding my feelings, making my body sane through sports, keeping space for pleasure. Never done before. I didn’t fix a level that I want reach. I need to feel strong, calm, balanced and accept when I don’t. For the first time I’m working torwards something which is not recognised immediately as “productive” for the society, and this a revolutionary value for me.
Low expectations for goal means low level of anxiety. At the same time, my curiosity is feeded on daily basis thanks to these new worlds. But they are very new (in terms of activities, values, environments, people, languages), so out of my confort zones. In this sens, I recognise clearly the huge effort required by these challenges for me. Therefore, celebrating any small step done became obvious, authomatic, daily. Celebration as a daily deserved practise.
To leave an image I could say that: before I climbed mountains only with running shoes, reaching the half height and going back satisfied to start with another mountain with running shoes and a raincoat this time, reaching again the half and start again. Without beers between the climbs. Now I am swimming in the sea without a precise direction, getting surprised of each new fish I meet or each new flowing I perceive. Each time it happens, I call everyone around me to try the flow and celebrate with me the discovery lying for a while in the boat with a beer (before diving again).
Patrick says
Thank you Neil, great article. I defenitly am guilty not celebrating my achievements and know the feeling very well of haven’t done anything. Sometimes I look back and am mostly surprised what and how much I’ve done. I do not set goals on purpose. I have my vision to strive for and that is: the things I create have to make fun. The things I do are in a todo list, what are also kind of goals actually. I think I will try to make a have done list. And I should celebrate more;)