The Power of Goal Setting and the Words We Use
How many times have you caught yourself saying “I’ll try to…”?
“I’ll try to eat better.”
“I’ll try to grow my business.”
“I’ll try to exercise more.”
It sounds like a goal, but in reality, it’s a loophole.
"Trying” leaves space for excuses. It gives us an easy way out when life gets busy or motivation dips.
The Importance of Goal Setting
Whether you’re working on your health, building a business, or striving for personal growth, setting goals gives you direction. A goal is like a destination on a map—you can wander without one, but you won’t get where you truly want to go.
The Words We Use Matter
Language has power.
Saying “I’ll try” keeps your goal optional. Saying “I will” makes it a commitment.
Think about the difference:
“I’ll try to lose 10 pounds.” → Already assumes you might fail.
“I will lose 10 pounds by December 1st.” → Sets intention and timeline.
Steps to Set Strong Goals
Be Specific – Instead of “I’ll get healthier,” say, “I will walk 30 minutes, 5 days a week.”
Use Present Tense – “I am building my business” feels stronger than “I’ll try to build my business.”
Set a Timeline – Deadlines create focus.
Write It Down – A written goal is 42% more likely to be achieved.
Align It With Your Why – Connect it to your deeper reason (energy, freedom, confidence, financial independence).
Call to Action
This week, look at your goals. Are you giving yourself a way out with “try”? Or are you committing with “I will”? Rewrite them in powerful, committed language—and see how your energy shifts.
Words matter.
How are you speaking your goals?
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