Where I want to be v. Where I am…

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


Jim, thanks for sharing.  Still laughing.  Source: thechocolatebrigade

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Comments

  1. I know the feeling.

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  2. So, upward and onward, right?

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  3. But maybe where we think we want to be when we’re young isn’t always the best goal for us to have. Maybe that little sideways diversion we see at the bottom left of the chart represents the road not taken (“and that has made all the difference,” we’ll say when we’re old).

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  4. Hummmmm…. Need a little push in the right direction?

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  5. Um…hey King? You’re LEADING and INSPIRING people…and we all think you’re heading in the right direction. So, I get it…this was just a test to see if we follow your humor as well as we serve…I have no doubt we passed…;-)

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  6. LOL…OOOooops, wrong way.

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  7. Alex Jones says:

    Ha ha, distraction is a major problem for many.

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  8. Oh…so true! My line from “where I am” would look like a zigzag…wrong direction..wait..lets move back into the right direction…

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  9. The moment of Truth (Tra raa ra dum dum!!)

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  10. Clearly you are not talking about yourself. This is an interesting question you are posing, us, right?

    I love it. Is there a test you can do to find out how many degrees of deviation there are between “headed” and “want”? The Headed versus Want deviation correlator?

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    • ROFL. The Deviation Correlator. Genius! Actually, you and Mimi both nailed it. I actually feel that I am up in the top right quadrant. But I’m around so many that feel that they are in the bottom left. And it is one of the few posts that I can attest to that has little direct applicability to me. (That’s today of course. I turn of the screw and we could be down rummaging around the bottom).

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  11. lkanigan says:

    Does anyone get to where they want in a straight line?

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  12. We all start out in life sitting on the bottom line, I take it? We should find a way of not letting people leave the bottom line until they know where their “where I want to be” point is. Then they wouldn’t have to make any corrections.

    Wish I had done that. Wouldn’t have spent 18 years training as a musician and then decided I should go and work for a brewery!

    Ah, if only it was that easy…….

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    • Musician training for 18 years. Wow. You can’t say you didn’t stick with it! I’m one of the lucky ones who seemed to know where they wanted to go. And a string of good luck took me there. I can understand why this can be a difficult and not straightforward path for many. (Aspiring musicians for example) 🙂

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