Living the dream: How to create a 2019 vision board
The idea of envisioning your wildest dreams, harnessing the law of attraction and working to make them come true is what vision boards are all about.
Skeptical?
âA vision board is a life planning tool,â said Joyce Schwarz, author of âThe Vision Boardâ and founder of the Vision Board Institute, who describes her process as more strategic planning than magical thinking.
âItâs a way of sorting out what is crucial to your future and creating a visual map,â she said, âbut you need to put it into action⌠it doesnât just happen. UPS is not going to just deliver.â The vision board is your visual reminder when you inevitably start to stray off track, as we all do, to get back to it.
The process
Crystal Greene-El Amin, owner of Foxy and Fierce Womenâs Kickboxing Bootcamp in Hollywood, holds annual four-hour vision board-making workshops at her studio and says for her, the process starts with a 10-to 20-minute meditation. This year, itâs being held on Jan. 13.
âIt relaxes you and provides an openness to the process,â said Greene-El Amin.
What have you got to lose? You can probably make one with items you already have on hand. If youâre intrigued, hereâs how to pull off a vision board of your own.
Hands on
Both Greene-El Amin and Schwarz recommend making the vision board by hand, not digitally (i.e. Pinterest, Evernote) when possible. âThere is something very visceral about it,â said Schwarz.
Supplies include some sort of surface, such as a poster board or some cardboard, a variety of magazines, scissors, glue stick, marker â and a happy photo of yourself to put in the center.
Style
Next, decide what type of board to create: one based on a single defining image or goal, or a âkitchen sink,â picturing everything, including the designer purse youâve been coveting.
Experts warn against making a shopping list, however. âSome people list everything they ever wanted, but donât stop to think why,â said Schwarz. âItâs not a ransom note to the universe.â
Personal motivation, or the âwhy,â can vary greatly. Think: seeking new opportunities, greater freedom, better health.
You need to put it into action⌠it doesnât just happen. UPS is not going to just deliver.
— Joyce Schwarz
Goal setting
âStart with the fantasy goal,â said Greene-El Amin, âwhich is: If you could live any life, what would it look like, who would be there, how would you feel?â
On the back of the board, write the fantasy goal, followed by long-term (five to 10 years), short-term (this year) and daily goals. âItâs cool to look back on what you wrote and see⌠I wanted these things and they happened. Itâs like an outline on the back.â
Picture this
For the front of the board, a magazine clip-fest ensues. Schwarz recommends pulling color photos from a wide variety of magazines â not just your favorites. Did your heart skip a beat at a photo of a scuba school? Take note, and let yourself dream.
âIt doesnât matter if the image doesnât seem to be in line with the goal,â said Greene-El Amin, âitâs about how it makes you feel⌠rip out everything that speaks to you.â You might be surprised.
Schwarz recommends editing the number of images on the front of the board to six or eight defining photos, with a maximum of 16 so as not to overwhelm the eye.
Ultimately, the choice is personal.
Trim the images and glue them onto your backdrop.
At this point, it would be tempting to admire your handiwork, cross your fingers and walk away. Thatâs not how it works, however.
Take action
Using the board as a daily inspiration, Schwarz said the next phase is figuring out not âhowâ to reach your goals, but âwhoâ can help you get there.
Then, believe it can happen.
This is accomplished by sharing your goals with trusted people; actively looking for related opportunities â and ignoring negativity (from others as well as yourself).
Some examples: Take a class, talk with someone who might act as a mentor or follow them on social media, volunteer someplace that gets you closer to your goals, watch inspiring movies or videos, practice your craft, do research (this is a great place to put Pinterest and Evernote to good use) and connect with people who are doing what you want to do.
âYouâre putting yourself in as close a proximity to your vision as possible,â said Schwarz, âand the internet makes this so possible.â
âStart living the idea,â Schwarz added. âThis is the way it happens; itâs not magical thinking. Itâs a matter of having the resources around you and tapping into them.â
Ready to give a vision board a try?
Foxy and Fierce Womenâs Kickboxing Bootcamp is hosting its annual vision board workshop from 2 p.m. to 6 p.m. Jan. 13, at the bootcamp headquarters, upstairs at 7129 ½ Sunset Boulevard, in Los Angeles. The event is free, but reservations are required, call (323) 876-1880. Participants are asked to bring donations for a local nonprofit, My Friends Place, in support of its parenting program. Diapers, wipes, pacifiers, formula and blankets are appreciated. Old magazines are also welcome. foxyandfierce.com
Bonnie McCarthy contributes to the Los Angeles Times as a home and lifestyle design writer. She enjoys scouting for directional trends and reporting on whatâs new and next. Follow her on Twitter @ThsAmericanHome
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