『Episode 3: Vague Goals, Vague Results』のカバーアート

Episode 3: Vague Goals, Vague Results

Episode 3: Vague Goals, Vague Results

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概要

If you’ve ever felt like you’re “working hard” but not getting where you want to go, this episode is for you.

In this episode of Set Your Mind, Dr. Stephen Ginsberg explores why vague goals lead to vague outcomes—and how specificity is one of the most undertrained (and underestimated) skills in performance.

Using a simple GPS analogy and a powerful on-course story with an elite college golfer, Dr. Ginsberg breaks down the difference between knowing what you want and knowing exactly how you’re going to get there.

What You’ll Learn in This Episode

  • Why most people set goals the way they give directions to a GPS—vaguely
  • How specificity instantly improves focus, commitment, and execution
  • The difference between outcome goals (the what) and process goals (the how)
  • Why results are delayed feedback—and habits come first
  • How vague daily habits quietly sabotage big goals
  • A simple, actionable framework you can apply this week

Key Concepts

  • Specificity as a performance skill
  • Outcome goals vs. process goals
  • Habits as leading indicators
  • Clear targets create clearer swings—on and off the course

“Outcomes are a lagging measure of the habits that precede them.” — James Clear

This Week’s Mental Training Challenge

  1. Choose one specific goal you want to achieve in the next seven days
    • Not a season-long goal
    • Not a someday goal
    • This week
  2. Identify two specific habits you will commit to every day that move you toward that goal
  3. Be:
    • Precise
    • Realistic
    • Consistent

Clear goal. Clear habits. Clear week.

Why This Matters

You don’t need a new swing. You don’t need more motivation. You need a clearer target.

Because vague goals deliver vague results—but specificity gives you a fighting chance.

About the Host

Dr. Stephen Ginsberg is a clinical psychologist and performance consultant who works with golfers, teams, and high performers to train the mind with the same intention they train the body.

*Music Credit: “Kong” by Bonobo; Courtesy of Ninja Tune Records

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