Jennifer Broadley is a qualified executive coach and the founder of Successful Single Parenting. For more information and a FR*EE Special Report “ The 5 Secrets for Successful Single Parenting” visit: www.SuccessfulSingleParenting.com
Goal Setting, Goal Getting!
How often do you decide that you want something different for your life? Better relationships with your children, ex-partner or friends. Better fitness, more money, a bigger house, a more flexible job, a ‘cooler’ wardrobe, a new relationship, or simply more ‘me time’.
Well, I’m here to tell you that you can have it all. And you deserve the very best. And there are no limits to what you can achieve when your decisions, discipline and mindset are all in alignment. Here are my top 5 tips:
1. Invest Time
About 99% of people invest more time planning a holiday than they do planning their life. For single parents it’s all the more important to be clear about the future you want for yourself because time is a premium and we’re the number 1 influence in our children’s lives (for now!). So, take 2 hours with a pen and paper and invest in some future-thinking. Ask yourself: Where do I want to be in 12 months time?
2. Be Specific
When you’re designing your goals, it’s important to be specific. So instead of ‘I’d like to lose weight’, say ‘I weigh 10 stone or less by 12 March 2010’. The reason the detail is important is because it’s linked to the detail of your commitment physically, emotionally and spiritually.
3. Write It Down
This is SO important I’m going to say it again. WRITE IT DOWN. Write it in the present tense like you’ve already achieved it and add an emotion to it. So ‘I’m so happy and grateful for the extra £5,000 I received in my March ‘10 pay review – woohoo!’
We single parents carry enough information in our heads: children’s routines, school kit, play dates, shopping lists, banking information, work details, passport renewal dates (that’s in my head right now!). Your goal will get lost in the ‘soup’ of your memory. So, write your goal down on a card and carry it with you at all times.
4. Read Your Goal Daily
In fact, I want you to read your goal 3 times a day. If you’re on the tube traveling to work, take out your goal card and read it. If you’re waiting for the kettle to boil, read it. If you’re walking to collect the kids from school, read it. And when you read it, engage your imagination. BE the person who’s achieved what the card states. Imagine how your life will be when you’ve achieved it.
5. Be Grateful
Every day as you move towards the goal you’ve set yourself, thank the Universe (or God, or Source, or Sprit, or the Divine, or Nature – whatever is your spiritual anchorage) that it’s bringing you closer to the achievement of this goal. Now, I say this with great sincerity: being grateful IS the key to goals being achieved with ease (and getting everything you want from life)! Gratefulness positions you for ‘speed’ in accessing the highest parts of you. And it delivers momentum as you achieve one goal and move swiftly on to the next.
When you put this 5-step process into action it will change your life. Have fun. And email me when you achieve your first goal so that I can celebrate with you!!
- Related Videos
- Related Articles
- Ask / Related Q&A
- From Good to Great – 5 Simple Strategies for Successful Single Parenting
- Single Parent Resources: 5 Reminders of Your Infinite Resourcefulness and Why It’s Counter-Productive to Enter into a Comparison Mindset!
- Holidays for Single Parents – Seasonal Strategies
- Working Single Parents
- Single Parenting Strategies: My Top 5 on How To Succeed with Work Time, Home Time and Down Time
- Single Parenting Strategies: My Top 5 on How To Succeed with Work Time, Home Time and Down Time
- Single Parenting Strategies: My Top 5 on How To Succeed with Work Time, Home Time and Down Time
- 10 Work-Life Balance – 5 Tips On How To Be An Excellent Single Parenting All-Rounder!




Facts About Chickenpox - Is Chickenpox Life Threatening to Your Children?
By: Amy Chan | 27/11/2009It is important as a parent for you to understand the facts about chickenpox. For most kids, the chickenpox virus only causes some irritation but for a small minority it can be life-threatening. Chickenpox is a very contagious disease that most children contract during their early years, and this mostly happens...
Grade Schooler Q&A
By: babyfreefaq | 27/11/2009What would you do if your 5 year feeble asked if Santa is concrete? I told him yes but I feel like such a lair. He also asked if Jesus and Mickey Mouse are definite. I told him that Mickey Mouse is a cartoon character and in Disney World it is lately a costume. I told him that Jesus is real of...
Wondering What to Do with Your Baby Einstein Refund? – Take a Look at Music is…MATH!
By: Tom Dewell | 27/11/2009The Disney-owned baby Einstein product seems to have taught most infants only how to watch television. But there is an alternative that uses audio as a "passive learning system", absorbed at the child's own speed, while still allowing critical interaction with parents or caregivers at the same time. Music is…MATH! does just that.
How to Stop Other Kids From Bullying Your Overweight Child - Useful Tips to Parents of Overweight Child
By: Irsan Komarga | 26/11/2009Bullies are your kid's number one enemies. They are the instigator of many problems of overweight kids. There are a lot of bullies everywhere, in school, classroom, playground, and sometimes your neighbor's kids. So what can you do if your kids are bullied in school? The first thing you should do...
Does discipline really change the behavior of children?
By: Mark Lakewood | 26/11/2009Discipline was never intended to have an effect on children. The thoughts that children experience (free will) resulting from the discipline is the only thing that can effect behavior change.
Good Parenting Tips
By: Mia Ava | 26/11/2009Most parents are overly anxious to get the latest about parenting, trying to make sure that they are doing exactly the right thing. There is nothing wrong with that as all parents are generally well-meaning and only want what is best for their children. However, there is something that you have to understand. There is indeed a science to good parenting, in fact it is one of the most researched topic in the field of social science.
High School Drug Use
By: Mia Ava | 26/11/2009It is amazing how fast things can change; how pure innocence can turn to arrogance and adventurism. It seems up until your first year in high school, you feel safe from anything. You are preoccupied with life as how you knew it from the start, when in school you’re intrigued to hear rumors in junior high, they're usually about who likes who, and who broke up with who. It just seems so naive. But when you stepped into high school, it becomes an entirely different ballgame.
Modeling Integrity as a Person and as a Parent
By: Jennifer Broadley | 11/11/2009 | ParentingYou know one of the reasons we can end up single parenting is that we no longer share the same values as our children’s other parent and our respect and understanding of that person alters to the point of break down.
Quality Time - When Your Kids Are With Your Ex!
By: Jennifer Broadley | 23/10/2009 | Home & FamilyThere’s now doubt about it, when I first became a single parent, which was from day 1 ( I left my marriage when I was 3 months pregnant), I wanted so much to separate my ‘new life with my daughter (who I adored from the first second I saw her) from my old life with my ex-husband (who I simply couldn’t find any polite words for!!).
Vision Boards - Get Creative, Inspired & Focused!
By: Jennifer Broadley | 16/10/2009 | ParentingThere’s a huge raising up of global consciousness around the fact that our limitations rarely come from our government, our society, our family or our friends. Our limitations come from our mindset. We can positively influence our mindset by choosing the environments we spend time in
Holidays for Single Parents – Seasonal Strategies
By: Jennifer Broadley | 17/09/2009 | ParentingAs the end of the year comes round yet again, there’s an expectation for peace and good family time from we parents … and a desire for presents and sweets galore from the children! How do we come together in the compromise and make our shared year end a success of us all? Read on as I share my top 7 tips – hope they’re helpful:
Making More Money
By: Jennifer Broadley | 11/09/2009 | ParentingThe thing about single parents and work is that we’ve got to be way more innovative in our thinking, our planning and our dedication to delivering value in our workplaces. When there are 2 parents contributing to finances and to homemaking there’s often more support and more choices to fall back on.
Working Single Parents
By: Jennifer Broadley | 01/09/2009 | ParentingWe’ve all had feelings of guilt about the fact that we’re at work when our children are being looked after by other adults. At the outset of this phase for me (7 years ago), I found it hard to get my head around. But I’ve come to understand that there are benefits to being a working single parent and they’re totally worth focusing on.
Single Parenting Strategies: My Top 5 on How To Succeed with Work Time, Home Time and Down Time
By: Jennifer Broadley | 17/08/2009 | ParentingI remember going back to work after maternity leave (of about 14 weeks!) and how I had discussed with my boss before going back that I’d have to leave by 5pm each day, no exceptions.