Site icon Impact 360 Institute

The Purpose of Purpose and the Mission of Mission in Our Lives

Most everyone has dreams about what they want to accomplish. In the perfect sense these aspirations are what get us up each day and keep us pushing forward. The fact one wants to be a really good kindergarten teacher sustains that person through what is sometimes the drudgeries of the required education. The fact someone wants to own their own business someday gives them the drive to work in the background of another business while they are learning the ropes. It can be hard sometimes, however, to hold on to the larger dreams when they seem far away and buried under the requirements of the day. This is why we all need a clear understanding of the difference between where we want to go ultimately and what it takes to get there.

Sadly, the omnipresence of social media plays a discouraging role for many in this pursuit. Both the propensity for people only to put great things about their life on their media feeds and the fact that on any given day one can see a gifted prodigy of sorts doing something amazing can lead a person to feeling that they are missing out or are not experiencing the success that others are experiencing. Although we may not like it the fact remains true that for most people the important achievements in one’s professional life are still earned and not given. This means that generally they don’t happen overnight but instead come in time as natural rewards for sustained efforts. This also means one has to have a defined perspective in order to have the type of patience it takes to achieve the most meaningful goals. This perspective has to include a healthy look at having both long and short term goals which align together to weave the tapestry of a meaningful career. One way to think of this is as having both a mission and a purpose to one’s life. These words are often interchanged but have two different meanings. A mission is something that has clear objectives and an end date inherent to it. A purpose is something more aspirational, something that is continually being refined and pursued. Here is how these two can apply toward your goals.

A mission is a season (can be months or years) where one has a deep focus on a specific set of objectives.

These objectives can be a very defined set of talents or skills to develop, utilize, or leverage in order to get one to their next defined goal. In one’s work this can serve to provide incentive to some of the drudgeries and routines. What one most often finds is the one who is trustworthy, efficient, and action-oriented are the ones who get the next leadership opportunities. The ones who gripe about their work while doing only the minimal amount to get by will be the ones who later also gripe about being overlooked for promotions. Staying steady and solving problems is what gets one noticed. Sometimes one will get overlooked and when that happens one simply has to buckle down and seek to demonstrate they should not be overlooked in the future. It’s this steady series of missions, of being the best one can at what is important in the current job that moves people ahead toward future opportunities.

So, if this is the way it works for most people then what role do the sometime drudgeries play? Why does one have to wait on opportunities to do more of what they want to do? Though not always fun there is great value and possible unseen opportunity in the “mission” aspects of one’s career. Here are a few:

In essence your missions are a series of seasons which connect together to reflect your purpose. That doesn’t mean every season’s mission is a perfect alignment to your overall purpose. In fact, sometimes the mission seasons are as valuable for teaching one what they don’t want to do before they get too deep into it as a profession. The important thing is for one to see each season’s mission as the opportunity that it reflects as it moves toward fulfilling a great purpose.

We’ll dive into that aspect in part 2!

Exit mobile version