Last night I was encouraged to revisit my vision, to keep it before me so I can chase after it. It’s hard to chase after something that was once in front of you, but now in a notebook on a shelf fading away due to time…
It all started with at church where Pastor Eric Clark encouraged us with one of the main scriptures was coming from Habakkuk 2:3:
“For the vision is yet for an appointed time; But at the end it will speak, and it will not lie. Though it tarries, wait for it; Because it will surely come, It will not tarry.”
He also added two things:
As I had a little mini hansei session, I reflected on this in my thinking chair, I am thankful for coming this far. But I had to look at the vision, and see what is on track, and what is extra I just added that looked good. I’ve added new tools to my arsenal to get me to where I want to go, so I wanted you to do the same for yours.
Applying this kaizen approach to our vision:
Eliminating Defects
Wasteful Inventory
Wasteful Excess Processing
Eliminating Wasteful Producing
Eliminating Wasteful Waiting
Eliminating Wasteful Transportation
The Seven Mudas: Wasteful Motion
5 Keys To A Kaizen Mindset
Kaizen and the Compound Effect
Small Visual Rewards
Mastery through Consistency: Don’t break the chain!
Small Beginnings Can Lead To A Big Finish
Accomplishing Things Through Kaizen
The Upper and Lower Intelligence Conflict
Unbalanced Ikigai and Procrastination 2
Unbalanced Ikigai and Procrastination
4 Areas of Your Ikigai
Hansei Applications
5 Step Hansei During Your Tea Time
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
Every L Podcast
The Empty Rooms of Gorski Manor
The Secret Room | True Stories
Things Fell Apart
This is Love