Day 57 – A Plan Has Two Requirements

  1. Exists
  2. Simple

When we talk about progress—whether it’s in our personal lives, professional goals, or even just getting through a challenging season—one truth becomes glaringly clear: you need a plan. Without a plan, it’s like setting out on a road trip with no map, no GPS, and no clue where the gas stations are. You might get somewhere, but odds are it won’t be where you intended, and the journey will feel haphazard at best.

But there’s a caveat here, and it’s critical. A plan doesn’t just need to exist; it also needs to be simple. Simplicity is the secret sauce that keeps a plan actionable, keeps you focused, and keeps your momentum alive.

Let’s break this down.

The First Requirement: A Plan Must Exist

We can’t overlook the obvious. Without a plan, you’re wandering. No one climbs a mountain by accident. No one finishes a marathon by just winging it. The same goes for life’s challenges. A plan gives you focus, a direction to point your energy toward.

When you create a plan, you set a marker in the distance. You’re no longer just surviving the chaos; you’re stepping into intentionality. It doesn’t have to be a masterpiece, either. A simple list of what needs to be done or a bullet-point sketch of your goals is enough. The key is that you’re no longer reacting; you’re responding. You’re moving with purpose.

But here’s where we often go wrong.

The Second Requirement: A Plan Must Be Simple

If the first requirement of a plan is its existence, the second is that it must be simple. This is where so many of us trip up. We try to craft the perfect strategy, complete with every contingency, every possible twist or turn mapped out. Before we know it, our plan becomes so detailed that executing it feels like running a marathon in a straightjacket.

The more complex a plan is, the harder it becomes to follow. Complexity breeds confusion, and confusion breeds procrastination. Before long, we’ve spent more time trying to untangle our plan than we’ve spent actually moving toward our goals.

Here’s the truth: A simple plan is a usable plan.

  • Instead of 10 action steps, pick three.
  • Instead of mapping out every outcome, focus on the next one.
  • Instead of perfect, aim for doable.

When your plan is simple, you remove the mental barriers that keep you stuck. Simplicity gives you clarity, and clarity is where focus thrives.

Why Simplicity Matters

Simplicity isn’t just a preference—it’s a necessity. Life is already complicated. We juggle work, family, health, finances, and all the unexpected curveballs that come our way. If your plan adds to that complexity, you’re setting yourself up to lose focus.

A simple plan cuts through the noise. It doesn’t demand perfection; it just asks for action. You don’t have to figure out the entire journey—just the next step. And once you take that step, you’ll find clarity for the step after that.

A Challenge for You

So here’s the challenge:

  1. Make a plan. It doesn’t have to be fancy—just write down what you want to accomplish and one or two actions that will get you started.
  2. Keep it simple. Ask yourself, “Can I actually do this today? Tomorrow?” If it feels overwhelming, trim it down.

You’ll be amazed at how much more focused and effective you feel when your plan checks both boxes: it exists, and it’s simple.

Because at the end of the day, progress isn’t about doing it all; it’s about doing what matters. And that starts with a plan that works—for you.

Let’s keep it simple. Let’s move forward. One step at a time.

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