Life will be simpler once you start adhering to your own personal philosophies.
Dadly Daily Declaration
Here is today’s Game and what’s going on.
Here is what I discovered today in our Dadly Daily Declaration reading from The Perfect Day Formula by Craig Ballantyne.
The title of today’s reading is “The Essential Rules for Your Life.” Let’s jump in with a few highlights first:
- There is power in having rules in place for your life.
- Don’t dismiss the idea of having rules in your life because you think it is too rigid. We all follow rules every day. Doing so keeps us out of trouble, stress-free, and productive.
- Likewise, your personal rules clearly and concisely outline acceptable behaviors for your life. Your rules state what you will and will not do. Your rules automatically dictate that you make the right decisions, making it easy to overcome obstacles and resist temptation.
- Your rules replace your reliance on willpower to get you through challenges. Your rules guide you to greater productivity and guilt-free behavior that is congruent with, and supportive of, your goals.
- With rules in place, success is almost inevitable. Your life will much easier and your progress so much more consistent and predictable.
- Think of your rules as a way to eliminate your bad habits and replace them with positive routines that make the right decisions almost automatic. Put your rules in writing and use them to improve every aspect of your life, from family to faith to finances to fitness.
Those gems lead us to today’s Dadly Daily Declaration:
Every day we get pressured into decisions that leave us full of guilt and remorse. We make better decisions when we have strong personal philosophies in place that guide us.
Wouldn’t you be better off if you could make more of the right decisions with less effort? That is where your rules come into play.
As a result of making more correct decisions and relying less on willpower, you’ll move closer to your goals and suffer less frustration. Life will be simpler once you start adhering to your own personal philosophies – and not worrying about what others think.