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Showing posts from August, 2019

Re-re-revisiting My Personal Mission Statement - Again, Again…

My very first blog post was from May 10, 2013. In that post, I wrote about my  Personal Mission Statement 2012 . I only found it fitting to revisit the Mission Statement two & a half years later and see if anything had changed,  Revisiting My Personal Mission Statement   (November 12, 2015). Then I experienced more of this thing called like, and you guessed it, I decided to  Re-Revisit Personal Mission Statement   (August 2017). So... guess what?! Its Personal Mission Statement Time! I have found that when I feel like I am missing purpose or had a major shift in life, this statement needs to be re-visit ( not necessarily re-done but  re-understood ) - again, approximately 2 years later.  There is a bit of a difference this time; I have introduced a Vision Statement to the equation. The Vision Statement is my ultimate life goal, what am I working towards. The Mission Statement is how I plan to achieve the Vision.  Here were a few questions that I have kept in mind as I reviewe

Thoughts to My Past: Decisions

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If I could write myself a letter at 17 & 23 ( ask me privately why I chose those years of my life... ) this is what it would say to me, as an "adult." The focus of this letter is decisions, the process of moving in spite of fear to conquer failure. Sometimes we don’t make the best ones but the best part is we learn ( sometimes… I think…I think we sometimes learn ). Tiffany, I am writing you this letter as a 32-year-old woman, who still has to make decisions. I am certain that nowhere in your wildest dreams did you ever think that you would be capable of making the decisions that you have made. Moving where you have moved. Going where you have gone. Some horrible, but taught you the most. Some amazing, and changed your life in ways you are still seeing ( there is one in particular that fills your heart every time you think about it ). Some that required nothing more of you than to be still and wait. We have had to accept it as a truth that decision making neve