Years ago, I attended my first boy scout camp at Camp Little Lemhi outside Palisades, Idaho. It was there I had my first experience with paddling a canoe. A few years ago, friends introduced me to a lake kayak and I was sold. Since then, I have taken every chance I could get to dip an oar into the water. I love the tranquility and peace found will paddling around a lake or shoreline. While there are many techniques I have learned over the years, one of the most applicable across life is to keep an oar in the water.

Canoes and kayaks have very little draft, how much of the craft is below the water. Sitting on top of the water means there is little to keep the boat from being pushed around by the wind and the current. The lack of a rudder means all the steering must be completed by the person paddling. In short, the oar becomes the method of propulsion AND steering. These important tasks only happen when keeping an oar in the water.

A little oar makes a big difference

The oar blade is wide and thin, When pulled through the water, the wide surface powers the boat forward. When flipped sideways, the narrow blade becomes a rudder, able to direct the craft in the desired direction. I have always marveled somewhat that a 17 foot kayak can easily be directed by a 6 inch rudder. By contrast, an 1100 foot air craft carrier’s rudder is only 22 feet long.

My scout advisor taught me a few different methods for controlling my craft, including a couple different stroke styles. However, the one lesson he pounded into our heads time and again was the only way it worked was if we kept our oar in the water. Perhaps he really wanted us to quit splashing around, but the lesson is profound. Keep the oar in the water and it puts the boat at your command. Take the oar out of the water and the boat becomes instantly at the command of the current and the wind.

Oars in life

There are many analogies and lessons that can be made to our lives and the oar. Today, I am thinking about how goals are like an oar. Goals don’t have to be very big in size or scope to keep us tracking toward a greater destination. Working toward something, no matter how small, means we are not just allowing the current of life to sweep us along. A goal focuses our efforts and moves us along.

When I made the goal of getting up earlier in the morning, I had no idea how much change that little difference would make to my life. When I get up and get my “Three R’s” of Reading, Writing and Running complete before breakfast, the rest of my day goes much more smoothly. My day becomes more productive. When I sleep in, I have to fight harder to get everything done that I should.

Put an oar in the water

Goals are simple desires to improve ourselves. Without action, though, they are just hopes for someday. Putting the oar in the water, so to speak, is the only way the goal will benefit us. A little speed develops with each stroke or action. Pulling against the resistance of life helps us gain speed to where we want to go. A few small successes and we have momentum. Then we can settle into a steady rhythm, using the oar or goal to guide us.

When I feel adrift in my life, I realize it is time to do as my scout advisor suggested and put an oar in the water. Make a goal and start pulling. it doesn’t take long to get under way to somewhere special.

 

It must be time for me to make some changes. Everywhere I look, people seem to be talking about making small changes. Michael Hyatt had a great podcast about making small, incremental changes. This morning, J.D. Roth over at Get Rich Slowly talked about trying Just One Thing every day. As I have hinted here recently, I am thinking of making some fairly large changes in my life, but I have to admit, making large changes scares me. Listening to the advice of these and other people over the last couple weeks has helped me understand something about change: tiny changes make a huge difference over time.

I have always been fascinated by flying and how to navigate over long distances. When a pilot flies to a faraway place, she doesn’t set an exact course and then forget about it of the rest of the trip. Constant, tiny course corrections are required over the entire duration of the flight. One degree difference in course doesn’t make a difference immediately, but over the span of hours at high speed, it builds to a difference of hundreds of miles. Consequently, pilots must constantly adjust their heading so the airplane arrives precisely as desired.

I want to be in a different place in my life this time next year. To get there, I need to make changes in what I doing today. The necessary alterations don’t seem all that big today, so it doesn’t seem all that important at times to make the tiny adjustments. I can easily talk myself out of the effort to make that one small course correction today, because it doesn’t seem all that important. However, over time, those tiny changes add up.

Fifteen months ago, I started writing with the goal of gaining discipline in my life. Thinking about it the morning, I thought I may have written around 100 articles. As of today, I have amassed 230 blog posts. I was surprised to see it more than double my expectations. Small, daily changes will do that. As I finished my run on Saturday, the application I use for tracking informed me I have completed nearly 200 miles over this same fifteen months. I haven’t been great at the discipline of running, but 200 miles is a far sight better than I would have predicted when I started. The point is through small, daily changes, I have made great progress.

Now I want more change. Here are the steps I am going to take to make it successful.

  1. Write down a specific goal.
  2. Break the goal down into one month milestones.
  3. Define daily actions to achieve the next milestone.
  4. Find an accountability buddy for a daily progress report.
  5. Track the progress and put the chart where I see it.

Sounds pretty basic, doesn’t it? That is the point. Daily tiny shifts in habit become radical changes. I am going to write on these topics over the next few days, so I would love to hear your perspective. What has worked for you? Which works better for you – tiny change or dramatic change? How do you keep momentum? What do you want to change? Have you been surprised where a tiny shift has led you? I would love to hear your successes (and failures). Please leave a comment and let’s learn together.

 

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Happy April, everyone. I am going to take a short break this next week. It is Spring Break for the schools and I’m going to join them. I appreciate your support day in and day out.

I have been doing a lot of thinking the last couple weeks about where I should take this blog. I am curious as to what you enjoy reading. Do you like discussion on productivity? Perhaps you enjoy the book reviews? I have talked at length about building a professional network. Has that been helpful? What would you like to hear more about? Productivity tools? Woodworking? Goal setting and achievement? Please leave a comment and let me know.

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