The Death Clock

>> Monday, October 27, 2008

Seeing the evidence of genius all around me, my own littleness fairly stared me in the face.
I. Beecher Stowe.


It appears that I will live to the ripe old age of 92 and my exact date of passing according to thedeathclock.com will be Monday, October 15, 2057. I have 1,545,880,244 seconds left to live... actually every time I reload the page the date changes but the year 2057 remains approximately the same.

Wow, 1,545,880,244 seconds...it sounds like Bill Gates portfolio when converted to dollars but in time-travel it sounds fleeting. What am I going to do with those waning moments?

Some years back I started a "bucket-list" (before the movie was conceived). It consisted of a leather bound handcrafted journal that I received as a gift. I counted the pages and found 110 blank canvases. 110 things I wanted to create, learn, divine, accomplish in this lifetime.

It started humbly....

* Owning a house was a huge one after being an apartment dweller for all my life - check
*Purchasing an SUV - done
* Visiting Mexico - Si~
*Seeing the musical "Cats" - check
*Gaining a fluent foreign language - yup (fluent enough to get me into trouble)

The list goes on ...but why, then, the underlying grumble in life. What to do when you should be content with all you have but still the twinge of discontent wriggles in your stomach?
Still that twinkle....that "what's it all about", "is this all there is" feeling.

Are you doing all you can to remain true to your life goals and bucket list?

Are you selling short and selling out?

Here's how to remain steadfast in your efforts to stay due North.

First you must have a set of written goals
The mind is a terrible thing to count on and relying on memory will fail miserably. Even better is a goal board - a montage of visual cues to keep you reaching for the stars. Pull out some old magazines and start clipping.

Keep the list where you can see it daily.
I forgot this key factor and tucked my list into a drawer for safe keeping only to find a year had passed without being reminded of the things I wanted to accomplish; too easy to do in the day to day minutiae.

Work on one bullet point at a time
Big goals need concentration and effort. Perhaps you pride yourself on multi-tasking but it is far better to put your whole self into the task and revel in the awareness than to spread thin and lose the adventure. After all, your list is about the experience not about merely crossing off a to-do item.

Test your limits
Can
you remember a time when you accomplished something you had never done before? What is the one thing you'd most like to change about the world? About yourself? What is the biggest fear in your life? What are you afraid of losing? Go beyond the comfort zone in your goal-setting; it's easy to buy an airline ticket to a villa in Tuscany. Far harder to visit an orphanage in the Ukraine.



Embrace Imperfection

Completing a marathon is noteworthy. So what if you didn't finish 1st or 101st, the fact that you crossed the finish line is admirable. Celebrate your success; the journey is the destination.


Find your Passion

When you discover something that makes time stand still or over which you lose track of the clock...you have found your passion. Even if you never got paid to do it you would continue.


Revisit your ideas of success and goals annually Our lives, values and priorities change and morph more than we would like to admit. Some of our ideas no longer hold a sparkle, while others vie for our attention as situations change.

Document the kudos and experience

Pictures, ephemera, memorabilia will give reflection in years to come and a benchmark of what you are able to achieve.


Tick, tock....come on! Only
1,545,876,644 seconds left..Times a-wasting~

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