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It’s January, and vision boards are now in season. Apparently everyone makes one. Everyone but me.

Even more surprising, apparently everyone but me has glossy magazines for inspiring cutouts! It appears that I’m the only woman on earth who isn’t subscribed to fashion, travel and home decor magazines.

What’s wrong with me?

First of all, I like our planet, so I stopped my paper magazine subscriptions long ago. With the sole exception of Stanford Alumni Magazine. Don’t criticize, I paid a few hundred bucks for a lifelong subscription as a broke recent graduate. It was a gut wrenching decision, and hell yeah, I plan to live a long life and make good of that investment!

When I did subscribe to a paper magazine, it was to National Geographic. My husband had a subscription for a gourmet cooking magazine. I guilted him into unsubscribing after they filled half a bookshelf. So if I attempt to create a physical vision board from our magazines, my glorious inspiring future would be marine iguanas in the Galapagos eating Alain Ducasse’s crêpes suzette, or worse, attempting to make them!

(Original image before I desecrated it by Dave Emsley from Pixabay)

Can you tell I’m feeling bitterly inadequate by all this cutting and designing and gluing and pasting? I imagine myself invited to a vision board party (yes, Kimberly, I’m looking at you. I don’t care that you’re in Australia and there are no flights now.) All the women there have light summer dresses. They float around like fairies, and their vision boards are perfect. So is mine. It has the beautiful beach house, gorgeous nature images, and visuals that immerse me in my dream life. None of those giant pandas eating primavera pizza.

(Apologies to OyeHaHa and Bruno Marques Designer from Pixabay for this overlay)

 

But the truth is, that while I have a little vision board envy (ok, not little) I take issue with visualization. I’ve bitched written about it already: https://shlomittassa.com/2020/03/01/the-problem-with-visualization/

And while that post was my first stab at how to improve visualization, now I have a real expert on my side! Vindication at last! The lovely Denise Duffield-Thomas, author, speaker, and money mindset mentor, just released a great video series as part of her annual launch of the Money Bootcamp (this is not an affiliate link.) 

 

I love Denise DT! I read all 3 of her books. Well, listened to them on Audible. She narrates them herself, in her lovely Australian accent. She laughs a lot as she narrates; I feel like we’re out drinking coffee. 

 

(Side note: No easy feat, she ties for first place as my favorite narrator with Malcolm Gladwell. Very different personalities, but equally charming.)

 

So in the third video in the series, about the future, Denise takes us through an exercise of meeting our future self. The problem is that we tend to think that our more successful version would be near perfect, and that creates a huge barrier.

 

When you look at your vision board, do you imagine yourself exactly as you are now? Or do you look better/younger/healthier? Have nicer clothes? Do your partner or family look perfect? Those picture-perfect magazine cut-outs might not be doing you any good. 

 

It might cause you to feel that to achieve this future, you need to change everything about yourself. Perhaps you can’t imagine it being your life at all.

 

So for the “visit your future self” exercise, Denise recommends imagining a time not that far away into the future. It can be just a few months away, maybe a year.

 

I was envisioning December 2021. Not even a full year from now.

 

As Denise takes you through the visualization, she asks you to look for the differences, which could be extremely subtle, like your posture or the look in your eyes. It might be just the energy of that slightly older, wiser version of yourself. 

 

Then, take that feeling and “try it on” like a coat. 

 

The goal is to integrate your current self and your future self, so that by taking actions that are aligned with that only somewhat more successful/productive/wealthy/calm version of yourself, you gradually become it.

 

So pick a milestone that represents a significant enough change, but isn’t too far and perfect.

 

Can you do this with a traditional vision board? Probably so, as the images should represent feelings, more than anything else. 

 

To me, most magazine images appear way too polished. So between Vogue Paris and the secrets of the Amazon, I’m sticking with my own imagination, fast-forward a few months ahead.

 

PS – If you got hungry (and can cook better than an iguana) here is the crepes recipe…. 

PPS – If you’re feeling stuck and overwhelmed, I’m offering a few FREE coaching calls. Sign up here to chat about how not to make a vision board and still feel so much better. 🙂

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