5/27/2023 0 Comments Coaching wheel of life![]() We become skilful in some areas (e.g., Business & Career, Wealth & Lifestyle), which makes us favour them further. We all love (or feel forced) to improve some parts of life more than others.Īnd that’s fine… For a while… But it can also create major issues. If you’re wondering where this wheel idea originally came from, it was Paul Meyer.8. Use your wheel (or non-wheel) to do a regular health-check of your life balance, every 3 or 6 months – depending on your results! Stick it in a drawer and forget about it? Nooooo! What goals can you create in these areas, to start making improvements? What now? The areas that score the highest have the biggest shortfall.In a 4th column, calculate the difference.In another 3rd column, give each a score to realistically aim for.In a 2nd column, score each with the current level of satisfaction (10 being totally satisfied).You don’t want the list to be too long, between 8-16 is workable. Group them into themes that make sense to you. Things that can get overlooked in the a typical ‘Wheel of Life’ exercise: Start by creating a list of all dimensions of your life – including past dimensions that you think are relevant. In essence, it’s a gap analysis – find the biggest gaps so you can start to minimise them. Do it on paper, or in a spreadsheet where you can make calculations and sort the list. So if you like that sort of thing, here’s another method you can use to make your diagnosis more thorough and personalised. Plot them onto a blank wheel – here is one you can download.Īlternatively, ditch the wheel completely. ![]()
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