How many goals should I have?

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The problem with our modern obsession with "more" is that we treat our focus like a limitless resource. We collect goals like digital photos, piling them up in the cloud of our minds until they become a blurry mess of "eventually."

But focus is not a sunset; it’s a spotlight. The wider you try to cast the beam, the dimmer the light becomes. If you want to illuminate anything with clarity, you have to narrow the aperture.

The Law of Diminishing Intent

There is a mathematical reality to our energy. If you have 100 points of focus and you spread them across 20 goals, you are giving each one 5 points of effort. That is not enough to overcome the friction of resistance. You aren't making progress; you’re just shivering in twenty different directions.

However, if you put those 100 points into two goals, you have 50 points of pressure behind each. This is how breakthroughs happen.

The Rule of Three

In the architecture of a balanced life, I’ve found that three is the magic number for active, high-intensity goals.

  1. The Professional Goal: Something that pushes your craft or career forward.

  2. The Personal Goal: Something that feeds your body or your soul (health, a hobby, a language).

  3. The "Keep-the-Lights-On" Goal: A habit-based goal aimed at maintaining your foundation (financial stability, household organization).

Anything more than three and you are no longer setting goals; you are writing a wish list for a version of yourself that doesn't exist.


The Capacity Audit: How Many Can You Carry?

Number of Goals Result Psychological State
1 Rapid, deep progress. Singular Focus (The Flow State)
2-3 Steady, balanced growth. Sustainable Intent (The Sweet Spot)
4-6 Fragmented movement. Low-level Anxiety (The "Hustle" Trap)
7+ Total stagnation. Overwhelm and Paralysis (The Crash)

The Lesson of the "Open Loop"

I once had a notebook filled with "Current Goals." There were twelve of them. I felt very important writing them down. But at the end of every month, I would look at the list and feel a profound sense of failure. I had made 1% progress on all of them and 0% progress on myself.

Each unfinished goal is an open loop in your brain. It’s a background process running on your mental operating system, eating up RAM. Every time you see that unfinished "Learn Guitar" goal, your brain takes a tiny hit of guilt.

I decided to perform a "Goal Decathlon." I picked the top two and ruthlessly deleted the rest. I didn't "put them on hold"—I struck through them. The relief was instantaneous. By giving myself permission not to do those ten things, I finally had the energy to do the two that mattered.

Seasonal Goal-Setting

We often forget that life has seasons. There are "Sprinting Seasons" where you might be able to handle three ambitious goals because work is quiet and your health is good. There are also "Survival Seasons"—new parenthood, a family crisis, a health setback—where your only goal should be: "Keep the foundation solid."

Effective goal-setting requires the humility to acknowledge your current capacity.

  • The Audit: Look at your list. If you feel tired just reading it, you have too many.

  • The "Waitlist" Technique: Maintain a "Someday/Maybe" list. When you finish one of your top three goals, you earn the right to pull one from the waitlist.

The Provocation: Are You Collecting Goals or Achieving Them?

We use the act of setting a goal as a substitute for the discomfort of doing the work. Setting ten goals feels like progress, but it’s actually a form of sophisticated procrastination. It’s easier to plan a decade than it is to focus on an hour.

The most successful people don't have the most goals; they have the most finished goals.

How many "open loops" are currently draining your battery? What would happen if you had the courage to close all but one?

Small hinges swing big doors. Focus on the hinge.

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