Living With Intention
Part 1
The Power of Intentional Living
Introduction: Stop Drifting. Start Designing.
Most people don’t design their lives — they drift through them.
Days become weeks. Weeks become years. And before long, we find ourselves busy… but not fulfilled.
In this three-part series on Living With Intention, we explore how to move from accidental living to purposeful leadership of your own life. Intentional living is not about perfection. It’s about clarity. It’s about choosing direction over distraction.
Drawing wisdom from leadership expert John C. Maxwell, we begin with a foundational truth:
“Intentional living is the bridge to your dreams. You must bridge the gap between where you are now and the dream you want to live.”
Let’s explore how.
1. What Is Intentional Living?
Intentional living is the conscious decision to live on purpose.
It means:
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Choosing direction instead of reacting to circumstances
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Designing your days instead of surviving them
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Acting from conviction instead of convenience
Without intention, life becomes reactive. With intention, life becomes strategic.
Intentional living asks powerful questions:
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Why am I doing what I’m doing?
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Does this align with who I want to become?
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Am I moving toward something meaningful?
This is where transformation begins — not with a dramatic change, but with a deliberate decision.
2. Clarify Your Values and Priorities
If you don’t decide what matters, everything will feel urgent.
Maxwell wisely says:
“You cannot overestimate the unimportance of practically everything.”
That statement is liberating.
Not everything deserves your attention. Not every opportunity deserves your energy. Intentional living requires filtering your life through your core values.
Ask yourself:
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What do I stand for?
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What kind of person do I want to become?
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What truly deserves my time?
When your values are clear:
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Decisions become easier
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Distractions lose power
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Energy becomes focused
Clarity creates momentum.
3. Set Meaningful Goals That Align With Your Vision
Intentional living is active, not passive.
It is not enough to hope for a better life — you must build one.
Maxwell reminds us:
“Goals may give focus, but dreams give power.”
Dreams inspire you. Goals move you.
When your goals align with your values:
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You stop chasing noise
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You start building legacy
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You gain resilience in adversity
Intentional goal-setting transforms vague ambition into measurable progress. It bridges the gap between where you are and where you are called to be.
4. Be Fully Present — Say Yes to the Best
In a distracted world, presence is power.
Intentional living means learning to say “no” — even to good things — so you can say “yes” to what matters most.
As Maxwell teaches:
“Learn to say ‘no’ to the good so you can say ‘yes’ to the best.”
When you embrace the present moment:
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Relationships deepen
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Opportunities become visible
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Gratitude increases
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Joy multiplies
Presence is not passive. It is disciplined attention.
And disciplined attention shapes a meaningful life.
Final Reflection: From Drift to Design
Intentional living is not about control — it is about direction.
It is about waking up each day with clarity:
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I know what matters.
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I know where I’m going.
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I know why it matters.
As Sam Njela reminds us:
“What you think about, you bring about.”
Your life moves in the direction of your focus.
In Part 2, we will explore the obstacles that prevent intentional living — and how to overcome distraction, fear, and complacency so you can thrive with purpose.
The journey of Becoming Maverick begins with a decision:
Stop drifting. Start designing.
